1,929 research outputs found

    A Psychological Network Approach to Attitudes and Preventive Behaviors During Pandemics: A COVID-19 Study in the United Kingdom and the Netherlands

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    Preventive behaviors are crucial to prevent the spread of the coronavirus causing COVID-19. We adopted a complex psychological systems approach to obtain a descriptive account of the network of attitudes and behaviors related to COVID-19. A survey study (N = 1,022) was conducted with subsamples from the United Kingdom (n = 502) and the Netherlands (n = 520). The results highlight the importance of people’s support for, and perceived efficacy of, the measures and preventive behaviors. This also applies to the perceived norm of family and friends adopting these behaviors. The networks in both countries were largely similar but also showed notable differences. The interplay of psychological factors in the networks is also highlighted, resulting in our appeal to policy makers to take complexity and mutual dependence of psychological factors into account. Future research should study the effects of interventions aimed at these factors, including effects on the network, to make causal inferences

    Morphological and Molecular Characterization of Retinoic Acid-Induced Limb Duplications in Mice

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    AbstractThis study reports a morphological, skeletal, and molecular characterization of the supernumerary limbs induced by systemic administration of all-transretinoic acid to egg-cylinder stage mouse embryos. As initially described by Rutledgeet al.(Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA91, 5436, 1994), we have found that oral administration of all-transretinoic acid (70 mg/kg body weight) at 5.5 days postcoitum induced the formation of supernumerary limbs. Most often, these arose as a pair of extra buds located caudally and ventrally to the normal (orthotopic) hindlimb buds without duplication of the lower body axis. The resulting one or two supernumerary hindlimbs were connected to an imperfectly mirror-image-duplicated pelvic girdle. Variable truncations of the stylopodium and zeugopodium skeleton, as well as abnormal splitting of the distal skeleton, were frequently observed. The apical ectodermal ridge of the extra limb buds expressed expected growth factor genes. However, an ectopic anterior expression ofSonic hedgehogandHoxd-13was seen in the supernumerary buds, suggesting that these buds would incorporate potential polarizing cells of the hindlimb or genital field and generate an ectopic polarizing zone. This is consistent with the reverse orientation of most supernumerary limbs at later stages. Some of the buds did not express limb-specific markers and were thus expected to degenerate or form nonlimb structures, as observed in an adult specimen. Less frequently, extra limb buds with normal polarity were associated to a duplicated lower body axis. Retinoic acid also generated a novel type of duplication in which “twin” hindlimbs with two parallel apical ectodermal ridges and zones of polarizing activity arose on one side of the embryo

    Fracture et déclenchement des avalanches de plaque : conditions critiques pour la propagation de la fracture

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    International audienceThe failure of a weak snow layer buried below cohesive slab layers is a necessary, but insufficient, condition for the release of a dry-snow slab avalanche. The size of the crack in the weak layer must also exceed a critical length to propagate across a slope. In contrast to pioneering shear-based approaches, recent developments account for weak layer collapse and allow for better explaining typical observations of remote triggering from low-angle terrain. However, these new models predict a critical length for crack propagation that is almost independent of slope angle, a rather surprising and counterintuitive result. Based on discrete element simulations we propose a new analytical expression for the critical crack length. This new model reconciles past approaches by considering for the first time the complex interplay between slab elasticity and the mechanical behavior of the weak layer including its structural collapse. The crack begins to propagate when the stress induced by slab loading and deformation at the crack tip exceeds the limit given by the failure envelope of the weak layer. The model can reproduce crack propagation on low-angle terrain and the decrease in critical length with increasing slope angle as modeled in numerical experiments. The good agreement of our new model with extensive field data and the ease of implementation in the snow cover model SNOWPACK opens a promising prospect for improving avalanche forecasting

    Hybridizing Lead-Acid Batteries with Supercapacitors: A Methodology

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    Hybridizing a lead–acid battery energy storage system (ESS) with supercapacitors is a promising solution to cope with the increased battery degradation in standalone microgrids that suffer from irregular electricity profiles. There are many studies in the literature on such hybrid energy storage systems (HESS), usually examining the various hybridization aspects separately. This paper provides a holistic look at the design of an HESS. A new control scheme is proposed that applies power filtering to smooth out the battery profile, while strictly adhering to the supercapacitors’ voltage limits. A new lead–acid battery model is introduced, which accounts for the combined effects of a microcycle’s depth of discharge (DoD) and battery temperature, usually considered separately in the literature. Furthermore, a sensitivity analysis on the thermal parameters and an economic analysis were performed using a 90-day electricity profile from an actual DC microgrid in India to infer the hybridization benefit. The results show that the hybridization is beneficial mainly at poor thermal conditions and highlight the need for a battery degradation model that considers both the DoD effect with microcycle resolution and temperate impact to accurately assess the gain from such a hybridization
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