269 research outputs found

    What is the prevalence, and what are the clinical correlates, of insulin resistance in young people presenting for mental health care? A cross-sectional study

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    Objectives: To report the distribution and predictors of insulin resistance (IR) in young people presenting to primary care-based mental health services. Design: Cross-sectional. Setting: Headspace-linked clinics operated by the Brain and Mind Centre of the University of Sydney. Participants: 768 young people (66% female, mean age 19.7±3.5, range 12–30 years). Main outcome measures: IR was estimated using the updated homeostatic model assessment (HOMA2-IR). Height and weight were collected from direct measurement or self-report for body mass index (BMI). Results: For BMI, 20.6% of the cohort were overweight and 10.2% were obese. However,6.9 mmol/L). By contrast, 9.9% had a HOMA2-IR score \u3e2.0 (suggesting development of IR) and 11.7% (n=90) had a score between 1.5 and 2. Further, there was a positive correlation between BMI and HOMA2-IR (r=0.44, p Conclusions: Emerging IR is evident in a significant subgroup of young people presenting to primary care based mental health services. While the major modifiable risk factor is BMI, a large proportion of the variance is not accounted for by other demographic, clinical or treatment factors. Given the early emergence of IR, secondary prevention interventions may need to commence prior to the development of full-threshold or major mood or psychotic disorders

    Spherical and deformed structures in Pb189

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    γ-ray spectroscopy of high-spin states of the neutron-deficient nucleus Pb189 has been conducted with the Gd158(Ar36,5n) and Er164(Si29,4n) reactions. With the first of these, detection of evaporation residues and mass gating were used to unambiguously assign a number of prompt γ-ray transitions to Pb189. With the second reaction and a pulsed beam, an isomer with a mean life of 32 μs was found. Although inconclusive, the available evidence favors identification of the isomer with the 332+ state of the ν(i13/2)-3 configuration. The levels observed below the isomer can be identified with states involving three different structures: the neutron (i13/2)-3 multiplet in the spherical well; a prolate-deformed band involving mixed i13/2 neutron orbitals; and a state with the oblate π(2p-2h)0+ν(i13/ 2)-1 configuration. The evidence for structures associated with different shapes is supported by the observation of E0 components in some of the Jπ→Jπ transitions linking them

    Can forest management based on natural disturbances maintain ecological resilience?

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    Given the increasingly global stresses on forests, many ecologists argue that managers must maintain ecological resilience: the capacity of ecosystems to absorb disturbances without undergoing fundamental change. In this review we ask: Can the emerging paradigm of natural-disturbance-based management (NDBM) maintain ecological resilience in managed forests? Applying resilience theory requires careful articulation of the ecosystem state under consideration, the disturbances and stresses that affect the persistence of possible alternative states, and the spatial and temporal scales of management relevance. Implementing NDBM while maintaining resilience means recognizing that (i) biodiversity is important for long-term ecosystem persistence, (ii) natural disturbances play a critical role as a generator of structural and compositional heterogeneity at multiple scales, and (iii) traditional management tends to produce forests more homogeneous than those disturbed naturally and increases the likelihood of unexpected catastrophic change by constraining variation of key environmental processes. NDBM may maintain resilience if silvicultural strategies retain the structures and processes that perpetuate desired states while reducing those that enhance resilience of undesirable states. Such strategies require an understanding of harvesting impacts on slow ecosystem processes, such as seed-bank or nutrient dynamics, which in the long term can lead to ecological surprises by altering the forest's capacity to reorganize after disturbance

    High-K isomers in neutron-rich hafnium nuclei at and beyond the stability line

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    Pulsed 238U and 208Pb beams have been used to populate multi-quasiparticle high-K isomers in neutron-rich hafnium isotopes at and beyond the line of b-stability, via inelastic excitation and transfer. Spectroscopic properties and configuration assignments of several new high-K isomers are compared with earlier theoretical predictions. A striking example of the robustness of the K quantum number is demonstrated by the observed competition between E1 and E3 decay modes in 180Hf, the heaviest stable isotope of the element

    Inelastic excitation of new high-spin yrast isomers in 180Ta

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    For the first time, six-quasiparticle isomers have been observed in the meta-stable nucleus 18073Ta107. Two new high-spin isomers were populated following deep-inelastic reactions with a pulsed 23892U beam incident on a thick 18072Hf target. Out-of-beam γ-ray events were collected using the Gammasphere germanium detector array. In addition to the known four-quasiparticle isomers, yrast Kπ = (22-) and K≥23 six-quasiparticle isomers have been observed with microsecond half-lives. These are the highest-spin isomers observed using the technique of deep-inelastic excitation. The assignments are compared to predictions made by BCS and Lipkin-Nogami multiquasiparticle calculations

    The programme on ecosystem change and society (PECS)–a decade of deepening social-ecological research through a place-based focus

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    The Programme on Ecosystem Change and Society (PECS) was established in 2011, and is now one of the major international social-ecological systems (SES) research networks. During this time, SES research has undergone a phase of rapid growth and has grown into an influential branch of sustainability science. In this Perspective, we argue that SES research has also deepened over the past decade, and helped to shed light on key dimensions of SES dynamics (e.g. system feedbacks, aspects of system design, goals and paradigms) that can lead to tangible action for solving the major sustainability challenges of our time. We suggest four ways in which the growth of place-based SES research, fostered by networks such as PECS, has contributed to these developments, namely by: 1) shedding light on transformational change, 2) revealing the social dynamics shaping SES, 3) bringing together diverse types of knowledge, and 4) encouraging reflexive researchers

    Yrast three-quasiparticle K isomers in neutron-rich 181Hf

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    New high-K orbitals have been identified in the neutron-rich 181Hf nucleus via one-neutron transfer from a pulsed 238U beam onto a stable 180Hf target. Yrast three-quasiparticle high-K isomers, with half-lives as long as 1.5 ms, have been populated. The decay scheme of 181Hf has been extended to (25/2-). Blocked BCS calculations, including residual interactions, compare well with the experimental results

    Paleobiology of titanosaurs: reproduction, development, histology, pneumaticity, locomotion and neuroanatomy from the South American fossil record

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    Fil: García, Rodolfo A.. Instituto de Investigación en Paleobiología y Geología. Museo Provincial Carlos Ameghino. Cipolletti; ArgentinaFil: Salgado, Leonardo. Instituto de Investigación en Paleobiología y Geología. General Roca. Río Negro; ArgentinaFil: Fernández, Mariela. Inibioma-Centro Regional Universitario Bariloche. Bariloche. Río Negro; ArgentinaFil: Cerda, Ignacio A.. Instituto de Investigación en Paleobiología y Geología. Museo Provincial Carlos Ameghino. Cipolletti; ArgentinaFil: Carabajal, Ariana Paulina. Museo Carmen Funes. Plaza Huincul. Neuquén; ArgentinaFil: Otero, Alejandro. Museo de La Plata. Universidad Nacional de La Plata; ArgentinaFil: Coria, Rodolfo A.. Instituto de Paleobiología y Geología. Universidad Nacional de Río Negro. Neuquén; ArgentinaFil: Fiorelli, Lucas E.. Centro Regional de Investigaciones Científicas y Transferencia Tecnológica. Anillaco. La Rioja; Argentin

    High-spin, multiparticle isomers in Sb121,123

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    Isomers in near-spherical Z=51, antimony isotopes are reported here for the first time using fusion-fission reactions between Al27 and a pulsed Hf178 beam of energy, 1150 MeV. γ rays were observed from the decay of isomeric states with half-lives, T1/2=200(30) and 52(3)μs, and angular momenta I=(252) and Iπ=232+, in Sb121,123, respectively. These states are proposed to correspond to ν(h112)2 configurations, coupled to an odd d52 or g72 proton. Nanosecond isomers were also identified at Iπ=192- [T1/2=8.5(5) ns] in Sb121 and Iπ=(152-) [T1/2=37(4) ns] in Sb123. Information on spins and parities of states in these nuclei was obtained using a combination of angular correlation and intensity-balance measurements. The configurations of states in these nuclei are discussed using a combination of spin/energy systematics and shell-model calculations for neighboring tin isotones and antimony isotopes
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