11,180 research outputs found
Individual and contextual determinants of children's and adolescents’ mental health care use:A systematic review
To improve the access to children's mental health care, knowledge on the determinants of care use is important. Where previous systematic reviews mainly focus on parent-related factors, we are the first to systematically review individual and contextual determinants of mental health care use in children under the age of 18 years old. Five electronic databases were searched for studies on determinants of children's and adolescents’ mental health care use. Twenty-two longitudinal, population-based, quantitative studies were included based on eight inclusion criteria. The Behavioural Model of Health Service Use by Andersen was used for data synthesis. The quality of all studies was rated as high. Seven determinants were labelled with ‘good evidence’ of an association in this systematic review, namely screening programs for mental health problems, family composition, previous mental health care use, overall problem level, externalising behaviour, delinquent behaviour and impact/impairment. No association was found with age, urbanisation, and somatic complaints. Evidence was inconsistent for gender, socioeconomic position, ethnic background, internalising behaviour, aggressive behaviour and depression/anxiety. Little evidence was found for 27 determinants. This systematic review found ‘good evidence’ for seven determinants of children's mental health care use which could be used to improve the access to care. Quality of studies, direction for future research and implications for policy and practice are discussed. More insight is needed in contextual factors and factors for which limited or inconsistent evidence was found. These insights will contribute to decreasing the discrepancies in mental health care use and facilitating earlier intervention
Research on mechanisms of alloy strengthening. Part 1 - Strengthening through fine particle dispersion. Part 2 - Control of structure and properties by means of rapid quenching of liquid metals /splat cooling/ Semiannual report
Alloy strengthening mechanisms - strengthening by fine particle dispersion, and structure and properties control by rapid quenching or splat cooling of liquid metal
Assessing Human Error Against a Benchmark of Perfection
An increasing number of domains are providing us with detailed trace data on
human decisions in settings where we can evaluate the quality of these
decisions via an algorithm. Motivated by this development, an emerging line of
work has begun to consider whether we can characterize and predict the kinds of
decisions where people are likely to make errors.
To investigate what a general framework for human error prediction might look
like, we focus on a model system with a rich history in the behavioral
sciences: the decisions made by chess players as they select moves in a game.
We carry out our analysis at a large scale, employing datasets with several
million recorded games, and using chess tablebases to acquire a form of ground
truth for a subset of chess positions that have been completely solved by
computers but remain challenging even for the best players in the world.
We organize our analysis around three categories of features that we argue
are present in most settings where the analysis of human error is applicable:
the skill of the decision-maker, the time available to make the decision, and
the inherent difficulty of the decision. We identify rich structure in all
three of these categories of features, and find strong evidence that in our
domain, features describing the inherent difficulty of an instance are
significantly more powerful than features based on skill or time.Comment: KDD 2016; 10 page
Interstellar Carbon in Translucent Sightlines
We report interstellar C II column densities or upper limits determined from
weak absorption of the 2325.4029 A intersystem transition observed in six
translucent sightlines with STIS. The sightlines sample a wide range of
interstellar characteristics including total-to-selective extinction, R_{V} =
2.6 - 5.1; average hydrogen density along the sightline, = 3 - 14
cm^{-3}; and fraction of H in molecular form, 0 - 40%. Four of the sightlines,
those toward HD 37021, HD 37061, HD 147888 and HD 207198, have interstellar
gas-phase abundances that are consistent with the diffuse sightline ratio of
161 +/- 17 carbon atoms in the gas per million hydrogen nuclei. We note that
while it has a gas-phase carbon abundance that is consistent with the other
sightlines, a large fraction of the C II toward HD 37061 is in an excited
state. The sightline toward HD 152590 has a measured interstellar gas-phase
carbon abundance that is well above the diffuse sightline average; the column
density of C in this sightline may be overestimated due to noise structure in
the data. Toward HD 27778 we find a 3 sigma abundance upper limit of <108 C
atoms in the gas per million H, a substantially enhanced depletion of C as
compared to the diffuse sightline value. The interstellar characteristics
toward HD 27778 are otherwise not extreme among the sample except for an
unusually large abundance of CO molecules in the gas.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
Local and global properties of conformally flat initial data for black hole collisions
We study physical properties of conformal initial value data for single and
binary black hole configurations obtained using conformal-imaging and
conformal-puncture methods. We investigate how the total mass M_tot of a
dataset with two black holes depends on the configuration of linear or angular
momentum and separation of the holes. The asymptotic behavior of M_tot with
increasing separation allows us to make conclusions about an unphysical
``junk'' gravitation field introduced in the solutions by the conformal
approaches. We also calculate the spatial distribution of scalar invariants of
the Riemann tensor which determine the gravitational tidal forces. For single
black hole configurations, these are compared to known analytical solutions.
Spatial distribution of the invariants allows us to make certain conclusions
about the local distribution of the additional field in the numerical datasets
Fowler-Nordheim-like local injection of photoelectrons from a silicon tip
Tunneling between a photo-excited p-type silicon tip and a gold surface is
studied as a function of tip bias, tip/sample distance and light intensity. In
order to extend the range of application of future spin injection experiments,
the measurements are carried out under nitrogen gas at room temperature. It is
found that while tunneling of valence band electrons is described by a standard
process between the semiconductor valence band and the metal, the tunneling of
photoelectrons obeys a Fowler-Nordheim-like process directly from the
conduction band. In the latter case, the bias dependence of the photocurrent as
a function of distance is in agreement with theoretical predictions which
include image charge effects. Quantitative analysis of the bias dependence of
the dark and photocurrent spectra gives reasonable values for the distance, and
for the tip and metal work functions. For small distances image charge effects
induce a vanishing of the barrier and the bias dependence of the photocurrent
is exponential. In common with many works on field emission, fluctuations in
the tunneling currents are observed. These are mainly attributed to changes in
the prefactor for the tunneling photocurrent, which we suggest is caused by an
electric-field-induced modification of the thickness of the natural oxide layer
covering the tip apex.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev.
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