8,405 research outputs found

    Japanese Studies in Ireland

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    Management preferences in stage I non-seminomatous germ cell tumours of the testis: an investigation among patients, controls and oncologists.

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    Increasingly, treatment choices leading to the same survival outcome can be offered to cancer patients (e.g. mastectomy or conservative surgery in early breast cancer). Two approaches available for post-orchidectomy, stage I patients with non-seminomatous germ cell tumours of the testis (NSGCTT), particularly those at high risk of relapse, include immediate adjuvant chemotherapy (two courses) or surveillance, with chemotherapy (typically four courses) given only on relapse. The aim of this study was to investigate which approach patients prefer. Questionnaires were given to newly diagnosed NSGCTT patients, to patients with previous experience of the two options and to non-cancer controls, including specialist testicular tumour oncologists. Participants were asked to choose between immediate chemotherapy, surveillance or for the doctor to decide, at recurrence risk levels ranging from 10% to 90%. Questionnaires were returned by 207 subjects in nine different groups. The risk thresholds at which subjects' management preference changed, within apparently homogeneous groups, varied greatly, although at least one subject in each group selected adjuvant chemotherapy at the lowest (10%) level of risk. Subjects tended to favour options of which they had previous experience. Cancer patients wanted the doctor to decide more frequently than controls. The wide variability observed makes it difficult to predict which option an individual will select. Personality factors and personal circumstances, other than specific experience and knowledge, are obviously influential. Many patients would prefer their doctor to decide, but variability among oncologists is as great as that among their patients

    Turning points in a qualitatively different social space: young adults’ reflections of alternative provision

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    There is a wealth of evidence suggesting that after being marginalised and excluded from school young people who attend Alternative Provision settings report positive relationships and experiences of learning. There is however very little research which explores the longer term outcomes of attending this sort of provision. Retrospective life history interviews were undertaken with 18 young adults in their early to mid-20s who had attended Alternative Provision in England. Interviews focused on schooling, exclusion, attending Alternative Provision and the impact of this on what they had done since leaving school up to their present situation. Analysis showed that the experience of attending Alternative Provision frequently constituted a turning point in a young person’s life story. This was due to the qualitatively different kind of social space experienced there

    Optimal Transport, Convection, Magnetic Relaxation and Generalized Boussinesq equations

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    We establish a connection between Optimal Transport Theory and classical Convection Theory for geophysical flows. Our starting point is the model designed few years ago by Angenent, Haker and Tannenbaum to solve some Optimal Transport problems. This model can be seen as a generalization of the Darcy-Boussinesq equations, which is a degenerate version of the Navier-Stokes-Boussinesq (NSB) equations. In a unified framework, we relate different variants of the NSB equations (in particular what we call the generalized Hydrostatic-Boussinesq equations) to various models involving Optimal Transport (and the related Monge-Ampere equation. This includes the 2D semi-geostrophic equations and some fully non-linear versions of the so-called high-field limit of the Vlasov-Poisson system and of the Keller-Segel for Chemotaxis. Finally, we show how a ``stringy'' generalization of the AHT model can be related to the magnetic relaxation model studied by Arnold and Moffatt to obtain stationary solutions of the Euler equations with prescribed topology

    Constraining Lyman-alpha spatial offsets at 3<z<5.53<z<5.5 from VANDELS slit spectroscopy

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    We constrain the distribution of spatially offset Lyman-alpha emission (Lyα\alpha) relative to rest-frame ultraviolet emission in 300\sim300 high redshift (3<z<5.53<z<5.5) Lyman-break galaxies (LBGs) exhibiting Lyα\alpha emission from VANDELS, a VLT/VIMOS slit-spectroscopic survey of the CANDELS Ultra Deep Survey and Chandra Deep Field South fields (0.2 deg2{\simeq0.2}~\mathrm{deg}^2 total). Because slit spectroscopy compresses two-dimensional spatial information into one spatial dimension, we use Bayesian inference to recover the underlying Lyα\alpha spatial offset distribution. We model the distribution using a 2D circular Gaussian, defined by a single parameter σr,Lyα\sigma_{r,\mathrm{Ly}\alpha}, the standard deviation expressed in polar coordinates. Over the entire redshift range of our sample (3<z<5.53<z<5.5), we find σr,Lyα=1.700.08+0.09\sigma_{r,\mathrm{Ly}\alpha}=1.70^{+0.09}_{-0.08} kpc (68%68\% conf.), corresponding to 0.25\sim0.25 arcsec at z=4.5\langle z\rangle=4.5. We also find that σr,Lyα\sigma_{r,\mathrm{Ly}\alpha} decreases significantly with redshift. Because Lyα\alpha spatial offsets can cause slit-losses, the decrease in σr,Lyα\sigma_{r,\mathrm{Ly}\alpha} with redshift can partially explain the increase in the fraction of Lyα\alpha emitters observed in the literature over this same interval, although uncertainties are still too large to reach a strong conclusion. If σr,Lyα\sigma_{r,\mathrm{Ly}\alpha} continues to decrease into the reionization epoch, then the decrease in Lyα\alpha transmission from galaxies observed during this epoch might require an even higher neutral hydrogen fraction than what is currently inferred. Conversely, if spatial offsets increase with the increasing opacity of the IGM, slit losses may explain some of the drop in Lyα\alpha transmission observed at z>6z>6. Spatially resolved observations of Lyα\alpha and UV continuum at 6<z<86<z<8 are needed to settle the issue.Comment: Submitted to MNRA

    Sampling Time Effects for Persistence and Survival in Step Structural Fluctuations

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    The effects of sampling rate and total measurement time have been determined for single-point measurements of step fluctuations within the context of first-passage properties. Time dependent STM has been used to evaluate step fluctuations on Ag(111) films grown on mica as a function of temperature (300-410 K), on screw dislocations on the facets of Pb crystallites at 320K, and on Al-terminated Si(111) over the temperature range 770K - 970K. Although the fundamental time constant for step fluctuations on Ag and Al/Si varies by orders of magnitude over the temperature ranges of measurement, no dependence of the persistence amplitude on temperature is observed. Instead, the persistence probability is found to scale directly with t/Dt where Dt is the time interval used for sampling. Survival probabilities show a more complex scaling dependence which includes both the sampling interval and the total measurement time tm. Scaling with t/Dt occurs only when Dt/tm is a constant. We show that this observation is equivalent to theoretical predictions that the survival probability will scale as Dt/L^z, where L is the effective length of a step. This implies that the survival probability for large systems, when measured with fixed values of tm or Dt should also show little or no temperature dependence.Comment: 27 pages, 10 figure
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