353 research outputs found

    David Lancashire (Art Forum)

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    After studying fine arts in the United Kingdom, David settled in Australia. Here, he worked for large advertising agencies and design studios before starting his own practice. David's work has appeared in numerous Australian and European graphic design publications. He is a multiple award recipient, including from the prestigious Goethe Institute. David is one of only five Australian designers admitted to Alliance Graphique Internationale. In 1999 he was admitted to the Victorian Government Design Hall of Fame. David has directed projects for Australian National Council of the Arts in Kakadu National Park. Included were the Bowali Visitor Centre and the Warradjan Aboriginal Cultural Centre. Most recently David directed design of the Bunjilaka Aboriginal Centre at Melbourne Museum. David draws inspiration for his works on paper from the artifacts and ancient rituals of indigenous Australians. In this lecture he discusses his work

    Evaluation of Commercial Connectors for Active Neural Implants.

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    Multichannel connectors enable part-replacement of implanted active neural interfaces. For pre-clinical investigation, commercially available miniature connectors enable high channel counts with reduced size and cost. In this paper, Omnetics Nano Circular connectors were encapsulated with medical grade silicone, and assembled using an approach proposed used in surgery. Three 11-pin connectors were tested in PBS for 336 days with cyclic loading for a total of 66 days. A single connector failed with current leakage between channels due to moisture at the connecting interface, and with corrosion at 3 solder joints. The surviving connectors maintained a low contact impedance and high between-channel impedance over 336 days. Inspection of the failed sample emphasizes the need for stress relief near implanted connectors and void-free encapsulation

    An active microchannel neural interface with artifact reduction

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    High-density neural electrodes in microchannel interfaces require in-situ amplification of the neural signals and rejection of high-voltage stimulus pulses leaking to the channel in order to adequately detect neural signals in the presence of concurrent stimulation. This paper presents the design of an active microchannel neural interface in 0.18 μm CMOS employing neural recording and stimulation. To reduce stimulus artifacts, a novel method is proposed that disconnects the recording module during concurrent channel stimulation and automatically applies detection and reduction of stimulus artifacts from adjacent channels using a tunable filter. Simulations show that the method provides at least 54 dB artifact attenuation

    Charge Balancing Strategies: Electronics Design Impact on Safety and Electrode Stability

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    Twelve-year follow-up of conservative management of postnatal urinary and faecal incontinence and prolapse outcomes : randomised controlled trial

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    © 2013 Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists. Funded by Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, London, UK; Health Research Council of New Zealand. Grant Number: RG 819/06 New Zealand Lottery Grant Board Health Services Research Unit, University of Aberdeen Chief Scientist Office of the Scottish Government Health DirectoratesPeer reviewedPostprin

    Parental cigarette smoking and childhood risks of hepatoblastoma: OSCC data

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    Historically health care data and especially health care cost data were not collected by disease. This is due on one side to a lack of readily available information on the diagnosis that led to the health care given and on the other side to the diversity of actors and organizations taking charge of patients. This results in a major difficulty of linking together incompatible and separate data. A few countries have tried to desagregate their global health cost data in a top-down approach. The limits of such undertakings appeared however quickly, not the least because of the difficulties in allocating the expenditures by sector and disease. Other approaches, probably more fecund in the long run, such as the one used by the SEER-Medicare database in the U.S. favour the linkage of individual patient clinical and cost data in a bottom-up approach. However one should not ignore the potential bias problems raised by the use of even large databases such as this one. A major advantage of clinical trials for costing purposes is that they include homogeneous groups of patients randomly allocated to several treatments for comparative purposes. They are therefore potentially better adapted for comparing new treatments with standard reference care

    Faecal incontinence persisting after childbirth : a 12 year longitudinal study

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    © 2012 The Authors BJOG An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology © 2012 RCOG.Peer reviewedPostprin

    The risk of colorectal cancer with symptoms at different ages and between the sexes: a case-control study

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    © 2009 Hamilton et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.Colorectal cancer is generally diagnosed following a symptomatic presentation to primary care. Although the presenting features of the cancer are well described, the risks they convey are less well known. This study aimed to quantify the risk of cancer for different symptoms, across age groups and in both sexes

    Plasmid-encoded Tet B tetracycline resistance in Haemophilus parasuis

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    The complete sequence of two plasmids, pHS-Tet (5.1 kb) and pHS-Rec (9.5 kb), isolated from Haemophilus parasuis strain HS1543 has been obtained. Plasmid pHS-Tet contains four open reading frames including a tet(B) tetracycline resistance gene which unusually did not have an associated tetR repressor gene. From a total of 45 H. parasuis isolates surveyed (15 international reference strains, 15 field isolates selected for their genetic diversity, and 15 recent Australian field isolates), 2 tetracycline-resistant field isolates (HS226 and HS1859) were identified. Analysis of three additional isolates from the same disease outbreak as strain HS1859 revealed a further tetracycline-resistant H. parasuis strain (HS1857, serovar 8) and a tetracycline-resistant Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae strain (HS1861). An approximately 10.6-kb plasmid was identified in field isolate HS226 and outbreak strains HS1857, HS1859, and HS1861. Southern hybridization analysis of these plasmids showed that the Tet B determinant was present, and restriction digest comparisons suggest that these plasmids are related. This is believed to be the first report of native H. parasuis plasmids and Tet B-mediated tetracycline resistance in this microorganism

    FlaME: Flash Molecular Editor - a 2D structure input tool for the web

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>So far, there have been no Flash-based web tools available for chemical structure input. The authors herein present a feasibility study, aiming at the development of a compact and easy-to-use 2D structure editor, using Adobe's Flash technology and its programming language, ActionScript. As a reference model application from the Java world, we selected the Java Molecular Editor (JME). In this feasibility study, we made an attempt to realize a subset of JME's functionality in the Flash Molecular Editor (FlaME) utility. These basic capabilities are: structure input, editing and depiction of single molecules, data import and export in molfile format.</p> <p>Implementation</p> <p>The result of molecular diagram sketching in FlaME is accessible in V2000 molfile format. By integrating the molecular editor into a web page, its communication with the HTML elements on this page is established using the two JavaScript functions, <it>getMol() </it>and <it>setMol()</it>. In addition, structures can be copied to the <it>system clipboard</it>.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>A first attempt was made to create a compact single-file application for 2D molecular structure input/editing on the web, based on Flash technology. With the application examples presented in this article, it could be demonstrated that the Flash methods are principally well-suited to provide the requisite communication between the Flash object (application) and the HTML elements on a web page, using JavaScript functions.</p
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