238 research outputs found
Echo in Optical Lattices: Stimulated Revival of Breathing Oscillations
We analyze a stimulated revival (echo) effect for the breathing modes of the
atomic oscillations in optical lattices. The effect arises from the dephasing
due to the weak anharmonicity being partly reversed in time by means of
additional parametric excitation of the optical lattice. The shape of the echo
response is obtained by numerically simulating the equation of motion for the
atoms with subsequent averaging over the thermal initial conditions. A
qualitative analysis of the phenomenon shows that the suggested echo mechanism
combines the features of both spin and phonon echoes.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figure
A double-ended queue with catastrophes and repairs, and a jump-diffusion approximation
Consider a system performing a continuous-time random walk on the integers,
subject to catastrophes occurring at constant rate, and followed by
exponentially-distributed repair times. After any repair the system starts anew
from state zero. We study both the transient and steady-state probability laws
of the stochastic process that describes the state of the system. We then
derive a heavy-traffic approximation to the model that yields a jump-diffusion
process. The latter is equivalent to a Wiener process subject to randomly
occurring jumps, whose probability law is obtained. The goodness of the
approximation is finally discussed.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures, paper accepted by "Methodology and Computing in
Applied Probability", the final publication is available at
http://www.springerlink.co
Exploring psychological need satisfaction from gambling participation and the moderating influence of game preferences
Psychological needs are satisfied through leisure participation, which in turn influences subjective well-being. The present study explored the psychological needs reported to be satisfied through gambling participation and examined associations between need satisfaction, game preferences and subjective well-being. A heterogeneous, self-selected sample of 1446 participants was recruited, through the Internet gambling provider Kindred Group Plc, for an online questionnaire survey. Five psychological need dimensions of gambling were identified, using exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses on calibration and validation samples, respectively: mastery, detachment, self-affirmation, risk and excitement, and affiliation. Challenge and mastery need satisfaction was higher for poker than for sports betting, horse racing, slots or casino table games; both self-affirmation and affiliation were also higher for poker than for sports betting and slots. By comparison, detachment was higher for slots than for sports gambling. While there were no significant variations in stress levels between the different forms of gambling, happiness ratings were lower for slots compared with sports betting and poker. This study provides insight into how distinctive patterns of play may satisfy different psychological needs and provides preliminary insights into how gambling patterns may prove adaptive or maladaptive as leisure choices
Antibiotic prescribing in UK care homes 2016-2017: retrospective cohort study of linked data.
BACKGROUND: Older people living in care homes are particularly susceptible to infections and antibiotics are therefore used frequently for this population. However, there is limited information on antibiotic prescribing in this setting. This study aimed to investigate the frequency, patterns and risk factors for antibiotic prescribing in a large chain of UK care homes. METHODS: Retrospective cohort study of administrative data from a large chain of UK care homes (resident and care home-level) linked to individual-level pharmacy data. Residents aged 65 years or older between 1 January 2016 and 31 December 2017 were included. Antibiotics were classified by type and as new or repeated prescriptions. Rates of antibiotic prescribing were calculated and modelled using multilevel negative binomial regression. RESULTS: 13,487 residents of 135 homes were included. The median age was 85; 63% residents were female. 28,689 antibiotic prescriptions were dispensed, the majority were penicillins (11,327, 39%), sulfonamides and trimethoprim (5818, 20%), or other antibacterials (4665, 16%). 8433 (30%) were repeat prescriptions. The crude rate of antibiotic prescriptions was 2.68 per resident year (95% confidence interval (CI) 2.64-2.71). Increased antibiotic prescribing was associated with residents requiring more medical assistance (adjusted incidence rate ratio for nursing opposed to residential care 1.21, 95% CI 1.13-1.30). Prescribing rates varied widely by care home but there were no significant associations with the care home-level characteristics available in routine data. CONCLUSIONS: Rates of antibiotic prescribing in care homes are high and there is substantial variation between homes. Further research is needed to understand the drivers of this variation to enable development of effective stewardship approaches that target the influences of prescribing
Late Holocene climate: Natural or anthropogenic?
For more than a decade, scientists have argued about the warmth of the current interglaciation. Was the warmth of the preindustrial late Holocene natural in origin, the result of orbital changes that had not yet driven the system into a new glacial state? Or was it in considerable degree the result of humans intervening in the climate system through greenhouse gas emissions from early agriculture? Here we summarize new evidence that moves this debate forward by testing both hypotheses. By comparing late Holocene responses to those that occurred during previous interglaciations (in section 2), we assess whether the late Holocene responses look different (and thus anthropogenic) or similar (and thus natural). This comparison reveals anomalous (anthropogenic) signals. In section 3, we review paleoecological and archaeological syntheses that provide ground truth evidence on early anthropogenic releases of greenhouse gases. The available data document large early anthropogenic emissions consistent with the anthropogenic ice core anomalies, but more information is needed to constrain their size. A final section compares natural and anthropogenic interpretations of the δ13C trend in ice core CO2
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