28,935 research outputs found
Do Childhood Vaccines Have Non-Specific Effects on Mortality
A recent article by Kristensen et al. suggested that measles vaccine and bacille Calmette–Guérin (BCG) vaccine might\ud
reduce mortality beyond what is expected simply from protection against measles and tuberculosis. Previous reviews of the potential effects of childhood vaccines on mortality have not considered methodological features of reviewed studies. Methodological considerations play an especially important role in observational assessments, in which selection factors for vaccination may be difficult to ascertain. We reviewed 782 English language articles on vaccines and childhood mortality and found only a few whose design met the criteria for methodological rigor. The data reviewed suggest that measles vaccine delivers its promised reduction in mortality, but there is insufficient evidence to suggest a mortality benefit above that caused by its effect on measles disease and its sequelae. Our review of the available data in the literature reinforces how difficult answering these considerations has been and how important study design will be in determining the effect of specific vaccines on all-cause mortality.\u
On the origins of the compressive cochlear nonlinearity
Various simple mathematical models of the dynamics of the organ of Corti in the mammalian cochlea are analysed. The models are assessed against their ability to explain the compressive nonlinear response of the basilar membrane. The speci fic models considered are: phenomenological Hopf and cusp normal forms, a recently-proposed description combining active hair-bundle motility and somatic motility, a reduction thereof, and finally a new model highlighting the importance of the coupling between the nonlinear transduction current and somatic motility. The overall conclusion is that neither a Hopf bifurcation nor cusp bifurcation are necessary for realistic compressive nonlinearity. Moreover, two physiological models are discussed showing compressive nonlinearities similar to experimental observations without the need for tuning near any bifurcation
Avalanches and Dynamical Correlations in supercooled liquids
We identify the pattern of microscopic dynamical relaxation for a two
dimensional glass forming liquid. On short timescales, bursts of irreversible
particle motion, called cage jumps, aggregate into clusters. On larger time
scales, clusters aggregate both spatially and temporally into avalanches. This
propagation of mobility, or dynamic facilitation, takes place along the soft
regions of the systems, which have been identified by computing
isoconfigurational Debye-Waller maps. Our results characterize the way in which
dynamical heterogeneity evolves in moderately supercooled liquids and reveal
that it is astonishingly similar to the one found for dense glassy granular
media.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Dynamic facilitation explains democratic particle motion of metabasin transitions
Transitions between metabasins in supercooled liquids seem to occur through
rapid "democratic" collective particle rearrangements. Here we show that this
apparent homogeneous particle motion is a direct consequence of dynamic
facilitation. We do so by studying metabasin transitions in facilitated spin
models and constrained lattice gases. We find that metabasin transitions occur
through a sequence of locally facilitated events taking place over a relatively
short time frame. When observed on small enough spatial windows these events
appear sudden and homogeneous. Our results indicate that metabasin transitions
are essentially "non-democratic" in origin and yet another manifestation of
dynamical heterogeneity in glass formers.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure
Clyde tributaries : report of urban stream sediment and surface water geochemistry for Glasgow
This report presents the results of an urban drainage geochemical survey carried out jointly by the British Geological Survey (BGS) and Glasgow City Council (GCC) during June 2003. 118 stream sediment and 122 surface water samples were collected at a sample density of 1 per 1 km2 from all tributaries draining into the River Clyde within the GCC administrative area. The study was carried out as part of the BGS systematic Geochemical Surveys of Urban Environments (GSUE) programme.
Stream sediment and surface water samples underwent analysis for approximately 46 chemical elements including contaminants such as As, Al, Cd, Cu, Cr, Ni, Pb, Se, V and Zn according to standard GSUE procedures. In addition, parameters such as ammonium, asbestos and Hg as well as organic contaminants such as total petroleum hydrocarbons (TPH), polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH), poly-chlorinated biphenyls (PCB) and organo-tin compounds were assessed.
The aim of the project was to provide an overview of urban drainage geochemistry in Glasgow to link to an on-going sister project, which is investigating the geochemistry of the Clyde estuary. This report presents the initial findings of the Clyde tributaries survey but it is envisaged that the data will be interpreted in more detail as part of a wider Clyde basin study once the Clyde estuary survey is completed
Supersymmetric Quantum Mechanics for String-Bits
We develop possible versions of supersymmetric single particle quantum
mechanics, with application to superstring-bit models in view. We focus
principally on space dimensions , the transverse dimensionalities of
superstring in space-time dimensions. These are the cases for which
``classical'' superstring makes sense, and also the values of for which
Hooke's force law is compatible with the simplest superparticle dynamics. The
basic question we address is: When is it possible to replace such harmonic
force laws with more general ones, including forces which vanish at large
distances? This is an important question because forces between string-bits
that do not fall off with distance will almost certainly destroy cluster
decomposition. We show that the answer is affirmative for , negative for
, and so far inconclusive for .Comment: 17 pages, Late
Prompt neutrino fluxes in the atmosphere with PROSA parton distribution functions
Effects on atmospheric prompt neutrino fluxes of present uncertainties
affecting the nucleon composition are studied by using the PROSA fit to parton
distribution functions (PDFs). The PROSA fit extends the precision of the PDFs
to low x, which is the kinematic region of relevance for high-energy neutrino
production, by taking into account LHCb data on charm and bottom
hadroproduction. In the range of neutrino energies explored by present Very
Large Volume Neutrino Telescopes, it is found that PDF uncertainties are far
smaller with respect to those due to renormalization and factorization scale
variation and to assumptions on the cosmic ray composition, which at present
dominate and limit our knowledge of prompt neutrino fluxes. A discussion is
presented on how these uncertainties affect the expected number of atmospheric
prompt neutrino events in the analysis of high-energy events characterized by
interaction vertices fully contained within the instrumented volume of the
detector, performed by the IceCube collaboration.Comment: 36 pages, 17 figures, 1 tabl
Phases of a fermionic model with chiral condensates and Cooper pairs in 1+1 dimensions
We study the phase structure of a 4-fermi model with three bare coupling
constants, which potentially has three types of bound states. This model is a
generalization of the model discussed previously by A. Chodos et al. [Phys.
Rev. D 61, 045011 (2000)], which contained both chiral condensates and Cooper
pairs. For this generalization we find that there are two independent
renormalized coupling constants which determine the phase structure at finite
density and temperature. We find that the vacuum can be in one of three
distinct phases depending on the value of these two renormalized coupling
constants
Supersymmetric approach to exactly solvable systems with position-dependent effective masses
We discuss the relationship between exact solvability of the Schr\"{o}dinger
equation with a position-dependent mass and the ordering ambiguity in the
Hamiltonian operator within the frame of supersymmetric quantum mechanics. The
one-dimensional Schr\"{o}dinger equation, derived from the general form of the
effective mass Hamiltonian, is solved exactly for a system with exponentially
changing mass in the presence of a potential with similar behaviour, and the
corresponding supersymmetric partner Hamiltonians are related to the
effective-mass Hamiltonians proposed in the literature.Comment: 12 pages article in LaTEX (uses standard article.sty). Please check
http://www1.gantep.edu.tr/~ozer for other studies of Nuclear Physics Group at
University of Gaziantep. [arXiv admin note: excessive overlap with
quant-ph/0306065 and "Supersymmetric approach to quantum systems with
position-dependent effective mass" by A. R. Plastino, A. Rigo, M. Casas, F.
Garcias, and A. Plastino - Phys. Rev. A 60, 4318 - 4325 (1999)
Liquid Chromatography Electron Capture Dissociation Tandem Mass Spectrometry (LC-ECD-MS/MS) versus Liquid Chromatography Collision-induced Dissociation Tandem Mass Spectrometry (LC-CID-MS/MS) for the Identification of Proteins
Electron capture dissociation (ECD) offers many advantages over the more traditional fragmentation techniques for the analysis of peptides and proteins, although the question remains: How suitable is ECD for incorporation within proteomic strategies for the identification of proteins? Here, we compare LC-ECD-MS/MS and LC-CID-MS/MS as techniques for the identification of proteins.Experiments were performed on a hybrid linear ion trap–Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometer. Replicate analyses of a six-protein (bovine serum albumin, apo-transferrin,lysozyme, cytochrome c, alcohol dehydrogenase, and β-galactosidase) tryptic digest were performed and the results analyzed on the basis of overall protein sequence coverage and sequence tag lengths within individual peptides. The results show that although protein coverage was lower for LC-ECDMS/MS than for LC-CID-MS/MS, LC-ECD-MS/MS resulted in longer peptide sequence tags,providing greater confidence in protein assignment
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