637 research outputs found
Intoxicated eyewitnesses:the effect of a fully balanced placebo design on event memory and metacognitive control
Few studies have examined the impact of alcohol on metacognition for witnessed events. We used a 2x2 balanced placebo design, where mock-witnesses expected and drank alcohol, did not expect but drank alcohol, did not expect nor drank alcohol, or expected but did not drink alcohol. Participants watched a mock-crime in a bar-lab, followed by free recall and a cued-recall test with or without the option to reply ‘don’t know’ (DK). Intoxicated mock-witnesses’ free recall was less complete but not less accurate. During cued-recall, alcohol led to lower accuracy, and reverse placebo participants gave more erroneous and fewer correct responses. Permitting and clarifying DK responses was associated with fewer errors and more correct responses for sober individuals; and intoxicated witnesses were less likely to opt out of erroneous responding to unanswerable questions. Our findings highlight the practical and theoretical importance of examining pharmacological effects of alcohol and expectancies in real-life settings
The Surviving Sepsis Campaign: Basic/Translational Science Research Priorities∗
© 2020 by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Objectives: Expound upon priorities for basic/translational science identified in a recent paper by a group of experts assigned by the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine. Data Sources: Original paper, search of the literature. Study Selection: By several members of the original task force with specific expertise in basic/translational science. Data Extraction: None. Data Synthesis: None. Conclusions: In the first of a series of follow-up reports to the original paper, several members of the original task force with specific expertise provided a more in-depth analysis of the five identified priorities directly related to basic/translational science. This analysis expounds on what is known about the question and what was identified as priorities for ongoing research. It is hoped that this analysis will aid the development of future research initiatives
Mars oxygen production system design
The design and construction phase is summarized of the Mars oxygen demonstration project. The basic hardware required to produce oxygen from simulated Mars atmosphere was assembled and tested. Some design problems still remain with the sample collection and storage system. In addition, design and development of computer compatible data acquisition and control instrumentation is ongoing
Epidemiology of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus colonization in a surgical intensive care unit
Average stresses and force fluctuations in non-cohesive granular materials
A lattice model is presented for investigating the fluctuations in static
granular materials under gravitationally induced stress. The model is similar
in spirit to the scalar q-model of Coppersmith et al., but ensures balance of
all components of forces and torques at each site. The geometric randomness in
real granular materials is modeled by choosing random variables at each site,
consistent with the assumption of cohesionless grains. Configurations of the
model can be generated rapidly, allowing the statistical study of relatively
large systems. For a 2D system with rough walls, the model generates
configurations consistent with continuum theories for the average stresses
(unlike the q-model) without requiring the assumption of a constitutive
relation. For a 2D system with periodic boundary conditions, the model
generates single-grain force distributions similar to those obtained from the
q-model with a singular distribution of q's.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures. Uses aps,epsfig,graphicx,floats,revte
Quantizing Charged Magnetic Domain Walls: Strings on a Lattice
The discovery by Tranquada et al. of an ordered phase of charged domain walls
in the high-Tc cuprates leads us to consider the possible existence of a
quantum domain-wall liquid. We propose minimal models for the quantization, by
meandering fluctuations, of isolated charged domain walls. These correspond to
lattice string models. The simplest model of this kind, a directed lattice
string, can be mapped onto a quantum spin chain or on a classical
two-dimensional solid-on-solid surface model. The model exhibits a rich phase
diagram, containing several rough phases with low-lying excitations as well as
ordered phases which are gapped.Comment: 4 two-column pages, including the 3 Postscript figure
Daily bathing with chlorhexidine-based soap and the prevention of Staphylococcus aureus transmission and infection
OBJECTIVE: Determine if daily bathing with chlorhexidine-based soap decreased methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) transmission and ICU-acquired S. aureus infection among ICU patients. DESIGN: Prospective pre-post-intervention study with control unit SETTING: 1,250 bed tertiary-care teaching hospital PATIENTS: Medical and surgical intensive care unit (ICU) patients METHODS: Active surveillance for MRSA colonization was performed in both ICUs. In June 2005, a chlorhexidine bathing protocol was implemented in the surgical ICU. Changes in S. aureus transmission and infection rate before and after implementation were analyzed using time-series methodology. RESULTS: The intervention unit had a 20.68% decrease in MRSA acquisition after institution of the bathing protocol [pre-intervention 12.64 vs. post-intervention 10.03 cases/1000 patient-days-at-risk (95% CI: −5.19 – −0.04, p = 0.046)]. There was no significant change in MRSA acquisition in the control ICU during the study period [10.97 pre-June 2005 vs. 11.33/1000 patient-days at risk post-June 2005 (95% CI −37.40 – 15.19, p = 0.40)]. There was a 20.77% decrease in all S. aureus (including MRSA) acquisition in the intervention ICU from 2002-2007 [19.73 pre-intervention to 15.63 cases per 1000 patient-days at risk post-intervention (95% CI −7.25 – −0.95, p=0.012)]. The incidence of ICU-acquired MRSA infections decreased by 41.37% in the intervention ICU (1.96 pre-intervention vs. 1.15 infections per 1000 patient-days at risk post-intervention; p=0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Institution of daily chlorhexidine bathing in an ICU resulted in a decrease in the transmission of S. aureus, including MRSA. These data support the use of routine daily chlorhexidine baths to decrease rates of S. aureus transmission and infections
Reentrant Melting of Soliton Lattice Phase in Bilayer Quantum Hall System
At large parallel magnetic field , the ground state of bilayer
quantum Hall system forms uniform soliton lattice phase. The soliton lattice
will melt due to the proliferation of unbound dislocations at certain finite
temperature leading to the Kosterlitz-Thouless (KT) melting. We calculate the
KT phase boundary by numerically solving the newly developed set of Bethe
ansatz equations, which fully take into account the thermal fluctuations of
soliton walls. We predict that within certain ranges of , the
soliton lattice will melt at . Interestingly enough, as temperature
decreases, it melts at certain temperature lower than exhibiting
the reentrant behaviour of the soliton liquid phase.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figure
How Valid Are Measures of Children’s Self-Concept/ Self-Esteem? Factors and Content Validity in Three Widely Used Scales
Children’s self-esteem/self-concept, a core psychological construct, has been measured in an overwhelming number of studies, and the widespread use of such measures should indicate they have well-established content validity, internal consistency and factor structures. This study, sampling a demographically representative cohort in late childhood/early adolescence in Dublin, Ireland (total n = 651), examined three major self-esteem/self-concept scales designed for late childhood/early adolescence: Piers-Harris Self-Concept Scale for Children 2 (Piers et al. 2002), Self-Description Questionnaire I (Marsh 1992) and Self-Perception Profile for Children (Harter 1985). It also examined findings in light of the salient self factors identified by participants in a linked mixed-methods study. The factor structure of Piers-Harris Self-Concept Scale was not replicated. The Self-Description Questionnaire I and Self-Perception Profile for Children were replicated only in part although in similar ways. In all three scales, a global/ appearance self evaluation factor accounted for the largest variance in factor analyses. Sport/athletic ability, school ability, school enjoyment, maths and reading ability/enjoyment, behaviour, peer popularity, and parent factors were also identified but did not always reflect existing scale structures. Notably, the factors extracted, or items present in these scales, often did not reflect young people’s priorities, such as friendship over popularity, the importance of family and extended family members, and the significance of incremental personal mastery in activities rather than assessing oneself as comparatively good at preferred activities. The findings raise questions about how self-esteem/self-concept scales are used and interpreted in research with children and young people
Phase transitions in the antiferromagnetic XY model with a kagome lattice
The ground state of the antiferromagnetic XY model with a kagome lattice is
characterized by a well developed accidental degeneracy. As a consequence the
phase transition in this system consists in unbinding of pairs of fractional
vortices. Addition of the next-to-nearest neighbors (NNN) interaction leads to
stabilization of the long-range order in chirality (staggered chirality). We
show that the phase transition, related with destruction of this long-range
order, can happen as a separate phase transition below the temperature of the
fractional vortex pairs unbinding only if the NNN coupling is extremely weak,
and find how the temperature of this transition depends on coupling constants.
We also demonstarte that the antiferromagnetic ordering of chiralities and,
accordingly, the presence of the second phase transition are induced by the
free energy of spin wave fluctuations even in absence of the NNN coupling.Comment: 10 pages (Revtex) + 8 figures (in 2 postscript files
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