10,468 research outputs found
Urban growth drivers in a Europe of sticky people and implicit boundaries
We investigate urban GDP pc growth across the EU12 using data for functionally defined cities - rather than administrative regions. We test hypotheses on the role of human capital, EU integration and fragmentation of urban government and explore spatial dependence and mechanisms of spatial interaction. Results are acceptable on standard econometric tests without measures of spatial interaction but there is spatial dependence. If variables reflecting spatial adjustment are included, they are statistically significant and eliminate spatial dependence. Not only do the results now provide consistent estimates of parameters, they also support relevant theoretical insights and show national borders are still significant barriers to economic adjustment. People in Europe are sticky so it is unreasonable to assume spatial disparities will disappear. Our findings also imply that cities in Europe form national rather than a single continental system
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Less-structured time in children's daily lives predicts self-directed executive functioning.
Executive functions (EFs) in childhood predict important life outcomes. Thus, there is great interest in attempts to improve EFs early in life. Many interventions are led by trained adults, including structured training activities in the lab, and less-structured activities implemented in schools. Such programs have yielded gains in children's externally-driven executive functioning, where they are instructed on what goal-directed actions to carry out and when. However, it is less clear how children's experiences relate to their development of self-directed executive functioning, where they must determine on their own what goal-directed actions to carry out and when. We hypothesized that time spent in less-structured activities would give children opportunities to practice self-directed executive functioning, and lead to benefits. To investigate this possibility, we collected information from parents about their 6-7 year-old children's daily, annual, and typical schedules. We categorized children's activities as "structured" or "less-structured" based on categorization schemes from prior studies on child leisure time use. We assessed children's self-directed executive functioning using a well-established verbal fluency task, in which children generate members of a category and can decide on their own when to switch from one subcategory to another. The more time that children spent in less-structured activities, the better their self-directed executive functioning. The opposite was true of structured activities, which predicted poorer self-directed executive functioning. These relationships were robust (holding across increasingly strict classifications of structured and less-structured time) and specific (time use did not predict externally-driven executive functioning). We discuss implications, caveats, and ways in which potential interpretations can be distinguished in future work, to advance an understanding of this fundamental aspect of growing up
Fully integrated transport approach to heavy ion reactions with an intermediate hydrodynamic stage
We present a coupled Boltzmann and hydrodynamics approach to relativistic
heavy ion reactions. This hybrid approach is based on the Ultra-relativistic
Quantum Molecular Dynamics (UrQMD) transport approach with an intermediate
hydrodynamical evolution for the hot and dense stage of the collision.
Event-by-event fluctuations are directly taken into account via the
non-equilibrium initial conditions generated by the initial collisions and
string fragmentations in the microscopic UrQMD model. After a (3+1)-dimensional
ideal hydrodynamic evolution, the hydrodynamical fields are mapped to hadrons
via the Cooper-Frye equation and the subsequent hadronic cascade calculation
within UrQMD proceeds to incorporate the important final state effects for a
realistic freeze-out. This implementation allows to compare pure microscopic
transport calculations with hydrodynamic calculations using exactly the same
initial conditions and freeze-out procedure. The effects of the change in the
underlying dynamics - ideal fluid dynamics vs. non-equilibrium transport theory
- will be explored. The freeze-out and initial state parameter dependences are
investigated for different observables. Furthermore, the time evolution of the
baryon density and particle yields are discussed. We find that the final pion
and proton multiplicities are lower in the hybrid model calculation due to the
isentropic hydrodynamic expansion while the yields for strange particles are
enhanced due to the local equilibrium in the hydrodynamic evolution. The
results of the different calculations for the mean transverse mass excitation
function, rapidity and transverse mass spectra for different particle species
at three different beam energies are discussed in the context of the available
data.Comment: 20 pages, 21 figures, 1 additional figure, minor corrections and
revised figures for clarity, version published in PR
A Thermodynamic-Based Interpretation of Protein Expression Heterogeneity in Different Glioblastoma Multiforme Tumors Identifies Tumor-Specific Unbalanced Processes
We describe a thermodynamic-motivated, information theoretic analysis of proteomic data collected from a series of 8 glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) tumors. GBMs are considered here as prototypes of heterogeneous cancers. That heterogeneity is viewed here as manifesting in different unbalanced biological processes that are associated with thermodynamic-like constraints. The analysis yields a molecular description of a stable steady state that is common across all tumors. It also resolves molecular descriptions of unbalanced processes that are shared by several tumors, such as hyperactivated phosphoprotein signaling networks. Further, it resolves unbalanced processes that provide unique classifiers of tumor subgroups. The results of the theoretical interpretation are compared against those of statistical multivariate methods and are shown to provide a superior level of resolution for identifying unbalanced processes in GBM tumors. The identification of specific constraints for each GBM tumor suggests tumor-specific combination therapies that may reverse this imbalance
Story in health and social care
This paper offers a brief consideration of how narrative, in the form of people‟s own stories, potentially figures in health and social care provision as part of the impulse towards patient-centred care. The rise of the epistemological legitimacy of patients‟ stories is sketched here. The paper draws upon relevant literature and original writing to consider the ways in which stories can mislead as well as illuminate the process of making individual treatment care plans
Light scalars as tetraquarks or two-meson states from large Nc and unitarized Chiral Perturbation Theory
By means of unitarized Chiral Perturbation Theory it is possible to obtain a
remarkable description of meson-meson scattering amplitudes up to 1.2 GeV, and
generate poles associated to scalar and vector resonances. Since Chiral
Perturbation Theory is the QCD low energy effective theory, it is possible then
to study its large Nc limit where qqbar states are easily identified. The
vectors thus generated follow closely a qqbar behavior, whereas the light
scalar poles follow the large Nc behavior expected for a dominant tetraquark or
two-meson structure.Comment: Invited Brief Report to appear in Modern Physcis Letters A. 15 page
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Hippurate: the natural history of a mammalian-microbial co-metabolite
Hippurate, the glycine conjugate of benzoic acid, is a normal constituent of the endogenous urinary metabolite profile and has long been associated with the microbial degradation of certain dietary components, hepatic function and toluene exposure, and is also commonly used as a measure of renal clearance. Here we discuss the potential relevance of hippurate excretion with regards to normal endogenous metabolism and trends in excretion relating to gender, age, and the intestinal microbiota. Additionally, the significance of hippurate excretion with regards to disease states including obesity, diabetes, gastrointestinal diseases, impaired renal function, psychological disorders and autism, as well as toxicity and parasitic infection, are considered
Provinciality and the Art World: The Midland Group 1961- 1977
This paper takes as its focus the Midland Group Gallery in order to first, make a case for the consideration of the geographies of art galleries. Second, highlight the importance of galleries in the context of cultural geographies of the sixties. Third, discuss the role of provinciality in the operation of art worlds. In so doing it explicates one set of geographies surrounding the gallery
– those of the local, regional and international networks that connected to produce art works and art space. It reveals how the interactions between places and practices outside of metropolitan and regional hierarchies provides a more nuanced insight into how art worlds operated during the
sixties, a period of growing internationalism of art, and how contested definitions of the provincial played an integral role in this. The paper charts the operations of the Midland Group Gallery and the spaces that it occupied to demonstrate how it was representative of a post-war
discourse of provincialism and a corresponding re-evaluation of regional cultural activity
Crossing Symmetry Violation of Unitarized Pion-Pion Amplitude in the Resonance Region
Pion-pion scattering amplitude obtained from one-loop Chiral Perturbation
Theory (ChPT) is crossing symmetric, however the corresponding partial wave
amplitudes do not respect exact unitarity relation. There are different
approaches to get unitarized partial wave amplitudes from ChPT. Here we
consider the inverse amplitude method (IAM) that is often used to fit pion-pion
phase shifts to experimental data, by adjusting free parameters. We measure the
amount of crossing symmetry violation (CSV) in this case and we show that
crossing symmetry is badly violated by the IAM unitarized ChPT amplitude in the
resonance region. Important CSV also occurs when all free parameters are set
equal to zero.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Hercules X-1: Empirical Models of UV Emission Lines
The UV emission lines of Hercules X-1, resolved with the HST GHRS and STIS,
can be divided into broad (FWHM 750 km/s) and narrow (FWHM 150 km/s)
components. The broad lines can be unambiguously identified with emission from
an accretion disk which rotates prograde with the orbit. The narrow lines,
previously identified with the X-ray illuminated atmosphere of the companion
star, are blueshifted at both phi=0.2 and phi=0.8 and the line flux at phi=0.2
is 0.2 of the flux at phi=0.8. Line ratio diagnostics show that the density of
the narrow line region is log n=13.4+/-0.2 and the temperature is
T=1.0+/-0.2x10^5 K. The symmetry of the eclipse ingress suggests that the line
emission on the surface of the disk is left-right symmetric relative to the
orbit. Model fits to the O V, Si IV, and He II line profiles agree with this
result, but fits to the N V lines suggest that the receding side of the disk is
brighter. We note that there are narrow absorption components in the N V lines
with blueshifts of 500 km/s.Comment: To be published in the Astrophysical Journa
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