219 research outputs found
Older adults' physical activity after lockdown: Testing the health action process approach and the moderating role of fear of Covid-19.
The coronavirus pandemic has influenced many lives, particularly older adults'. Although isolation protects from infection, health behaviors like physical activity (PA) are important to reinstate after lockdown. However, fear of Covid-19 may act as a barrier, for example, by preventing people from going outside. Based on the health action process approach (HAPA), we investigated whether and why older adults' PA changed after lockdown, and whether fear of Covid-19 moderates the intention-behavior relationship. Participants of this longitudinal study aged 65+ from German-speaking Europe completed an online questionnaire about their PA, fear of Covid-19, and HAPA factors in April and May 2020. Data were analyzed using multiple linear regressions. Results showed that moderate to vigorous activity (MVPA) remained stable after lockdown and that self-efficacy most robustly influenced the intention to be active. PA was not explained by any volitional factor but was strongly related to past PA. Interestingly, the relationship of past and future MVPA was attenuated by fear of Covid-19, but this finding was not robust when outliers were removed. In conclusion, self-efficacy is the most important motivator for PA in older adults after an interruption like a lockdown. Strong physical activity habits may facilitate PA after a period of isolation
Greater Expectations?
Physically Unclonable Functions (PUFs) are key tools in the construction of lightweight authentication and key exchange protocols. So far, all existing PUF-based authentication protocols follow the same paradigm: A resource-constrained prover, holding a PUF, wants to authenticate to a resource-rich verifier, who has access to a database of pre-measured PUF challenge-response pairs (CRPs). In this paper we consider application scenarios where all previous PUF-based authentication schemes fail to work: The verifier is resource-constrained (and holds a PUF), while the prover is resource-rich (and holds a CRP-database). We construct the first and efficient PUF-based authentication protocol for this setting, which we call converse PUF-based authentication. We provide an extensive security analysis against passive adversaries, show that a minor modification also allows for authenticated key exchange and propose a concrete instantiation using controlled Arbiter PUFs
Photonuclear Reactions of Three-Nucleon Systems
We discuss the available data for the differential and the total cross
section for the photodisintegration of He and H and the corresponding
inverse reactions below MeV by comparing with our calculations
using realistic interactions. The theoretical results agree within the
errorbars with the data for the total cross sections. Excellent agreement is
achieved for the angular distribution in case of He, whereas for H a
discrepancy between theory and experiment is found.Comment: 11 pages (twocolumn), 12 postscript figures included, uses psfig,
RevTe
Far-Infrared to Millimeter Astrophysical Dust Emission. II: Comparison of the Two-Level Systems (TLS) model with Astronomical Data
In a previous paper we proposed a new model for the emission by amorphous
astronomical dust grains, based on solid-state physics. The model uses a
description of the Disordered Charge Distribution (DCD) combined with the
presence of Two-Level Systems (TLS) defects in the amorphous solid composing
the grains. The goal of this paper is to confront this new model to
astronomical observations of different Galactic environments in the FIR/submm,
in order to derive a set of canonical model parameters to be used as a Galactic
reference to be compared to in future Galactic and extragalactic studies. We
confront the TLS model with existing astronomical data. We consider the average
emission spectrum at high latitudes in our Galaxy as measured with FIRAS and
WMAP, as well as the emission from Galactic compact sources observed with
Archeops, for which an inverse relationship between the dust temperature and
the emissivity spectral index has been evidenced. We show that, unlike models
previously proposed which often invoke two dust components at different
temperatures, the TLS model successfully reproduces both the shape of the
Galactic SED and its evolution with temperature as observed in the Archeops
data. The best TLS model parameters indicate a charge coherence length of
\simeq 13 nm and other model parameters in broad agreement with expectations
from laboratory studies of dust analogs. We conclude that the millimeter excess
emission, which is often attributed to the presence of very cold dust in the
diffuse ISM, is likely caused solely by TLS emission in disordered amorphous
dust grains. We discuss the implications of the new model, in terms of mass
determinations from millimeter continuum observations and the expected
variations of the emissivity spectral index with wavelength and dust
temperature. The implications for the analysis of the Herschel and Planck
satellite data are discussed.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A (16 pages, 9 figures, 6 tables
Dynamic Searchable Encryption with Access Control
We present a searchable encryption scheme for dynamic document collections in a multi-user scenario. Our scheme features fine-grained access control to search results, as well as access control to operations such as adding documents to the document
collection, or changing individual documents. The scheme features verifiability of search results. Our scheme also satisfies the forward privacy notion crucial for the security of dynamic searchable encryption schemes
The ACOS CO_2 retrieval algorithm – Part 1: Description and validation against synthetic observations
This work describes the NASA Atmospheric CO_2 Observations from Space (ACOS) X_(CO_2) retrieval algorithm, and its performance on highly realistic, simulated observations. These tests, restricted to observations over land, are used to evaluate retrieval errors in the face of realistic clouds and aerosols, polarized non-Lambertian surfaces, imperfect meteorology, and uncorrelated instrument noise. We find that post-retrieval filters are essential to eliminate the poorest retrievals, which arise primarily due to imperfect cloud screening. The remaining retrievals have RMS errors of approximately 1 ppm. Modeled instrument noise, based on the Greenhouse Gases Observing SATellite (GOSAT) in-flight performance, accounts for less than half the total error in these retrievals. A small fraction of unfiltered clouds, particularly thin cirrus, lead to a small positive bias of ~0.3 ppm. Overall, systematic errors due to imperfect characterization of clouds and aerosols dominate the error budget, while errors due to other simplifying assumptions, in particular those related to the prior meteorological fields, appear small
A social role for churches and cultural demarcation:how German MEPs represent religion in the European Parliament
This study deals with the question of how German members of the European Parliament (MEPs) represent the German model of religion–state relations at the European level. Based on a survey and interviews with German MEPs as well as a content-analysis of German MEPs’ speeches, motions and parliamentary questions during the seventh term of the European Parliament (EP), our study demonstrates that this model is represented in three dimensions. First, German MEPs reflect the close cooperation between the churches and the state in Germany, primarily on social issues, through largely church- and religion-friendly attitudes and relatively frequent contacts with religious interest-groups. Second, by referring to religious freedoms and minorities primarily outside the EU and by placing Islam in considerably more critical contexts than Christianity, German MEPs create a cultural demarcation line between Islam and Christianity through their parliamentary activities, which is similar to, though less politicised than, cultural boundaries often produced in public debates in Germany. Third, our study illustrates similar patterns of religious affiliation and subjective religiosity among German parliamentarians in both the EP and the national Parliament, which to some degree also reflect societal trends in Germany. Yet our data also suggest that European political elites are more religious than the average German population. If the presence of religion in terms of religious interest-groups and arguments is included, the EP appears to be more secularist than the German Parliament
Emergence of qualia from brain activity or from an interaction of proto-consciousness with the brain: which one is the weirder? Available evidence and a research agenda
This contribution to the science of consciousness aims at comparing how two different theories can
explain the emergence of different qualia experiences, meta-awareness, meta-cognition, the placebo
effect, out-of-body experiences, cognitive therapy and meditation-induced brain changes, etc.
The first theory postulates that qualia experiences derive from specific neural patterns, the second
one, that qualia experiences derive from the interaction of a proto-consciousness with the brain\u2019s
neural activity. From this comparison it will be possible to judge which one seems to better explain
the different qualia experiences and to offer a more promising research agenda
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