1,980 research outputs found
The Forest, The Trees, The Bark, The Pith: An Intensive Look at the Circulation Rates of Primary Texts in Ten Major Literature Areas at the University of Oregon Libraries
This poster looks at the circulation rate for literary primary texts, which constitute a unique area of collecting in academic libraries: while they do not in most cases meet immediate research needs, it is assumed that libraries ought to acquire them, for reasons including future research needs, preservation of the cultural record, and the ability of members of the intellectual community to stay current, those these remain primarily tacit. The circulation trends of contemporary literary works in ten areas of literature (English, American, German, French, Italian, Spanish, Latin American, Chinese, Japanese, and Russian) over the past twenty years at the University of Oregon Knight Library are presented and the circulation turnover rate (CTR), for each of these subject areas are presented. Sample graphs allow for the comparison of circulation rates and numbers of books across time, and serve as examples of the utility of such visualizations of the numbers. The key question raised by the study is what makes a good CTR for a particular region of the collection? The poster concludes by summarizing the considerations that bear on the interpretation of the CTR as an index of how the collection is “working.
Observational Intensity Bias Associated with Illness Adjustment: Cross Sectional Analysis of Insurance Claims
Objective: To determine the bias associated with frequency of visits by physicians in adjusting for illness, using diagnoses recorded in administrative databases.
Setting: Claims data from the US Medicare program for services provided in 2007 among 306 US hospital referral regions.
Design: Cross sectional analysis. Participants 20% sample of fee for service Medicare beneficiaries residing in the United States in 2007 (n=5 153 877)
Ranking Hospitals on Surgical Mortality: The Importance of Reliability Adjustment
We examined the implications of reliability adjustment on hospital mortality with surgery.We used national Medicare data (2003–2006) for three surgical procedures: coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG), abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) repair, and pancreatic resection.We conducted an observational study to evaluate the impact of reliability adjustment on hospital mortality rankings. Using hierarchical modeling, we adjusted hospital mortality for reliability using empirical Bayes techniques. We assessed the implication of this adjustment on the apparent variation across hospitals and the ability of historical hospital mortality rates (2003–2004) to forecast future mortality (2005–2006).The net effect of reliability adjustment was to greatly diminish apparent variation for all three operations. Reliability adjustment was also particularly important for identifying hospitals with the lowest future mortality. Without reliability adjustment, hospitals in the “best” quintile (2003–2004) with pancreatic resection had a mortality of 7.6 percent in 2005–2006; with reliability adjustment, the “best” hospital quintile had a mortality of 2.7 percent in 2005–2006. For AAA repair, reliability adjustment also improved the ability to identify hospitals with lower future mortality. For CABG, the benefits of reliability adjustment were limited to the lowest volume hospitals.Reliability adjustment results in more stable estimates of mortality that better forecast future performance. This statistical technique is crucial for helping patients select the best hospitals for specific procedures, particularly uncommon ones, and should be used for public reporting of hospital mortality.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/79322/1/HESR_1158_sm_appendix2.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/79322/2/j.1475-6773.2010.01158.x.pd
Ursinus College Alumni Journal, March 1955
President\u27s page • General Electric Company aids alumni giving • Rev. A. G. Gonser, Founders\u27 Day speaker • General Motors Corporation announces scholarship program • Dr. Scheffey becomes President of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia • Record crowd attends Old Timers\u27 Day • Chemistry Department changes curriculum • Report from the registrar\u27s office • Dr. Heiges passes away • Evelyn Glazier Henzel \u2732 elected to state office • Lloyd Hoagey \u2728 and family featured in national advertising program • South Jersey alumni group bring prospective students to campus • Regional group meetings planned • Lost classmates • Ron Kichline \u2716 honored by football officials • Dean Clawson publishes mathematical paper • 1955 Loyalty Fund campaign ahead of last year • Alumni elections • Goings on in the Physics Department • History Department requests magazines • Varsity Club banquet • Theatre group presents TV show • Missing Ruby issues • Curtain Club presents My Three Angels for spring play • Sports review: Football season 1954; Basketball 1954-1955; Soccer season 1954; Larry Zartman \u2755 makes All-American soccer list; Wrestling report 1954-55; Alumnae sports; Sisters receive tennis rankings • 25th anniversary of Sigma Rho Lambda • Dr. C. Grove Haines \u2727, Director of Johns Hopkins University Center in Bologna, Italy • Necrology • News about ourselves • Engagements • Weddings • Birthshttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/alumnijournal/1053/thumbnail.jp
Do pain-related beliefs influence adherence to multidisciplinary rehabilitation? A systematic review
OBJECTIVES: To understand how pain-related cognitions predict and influence treatment retention and adherence during and after a multidisciplinary rehabilitation program. METHODS: Electronic databases including Medline, CINAHL, PsycINFO, Academic Search Complete, and Scopus were used to search three combinations of keywords: chronic pain, beliefs, and treatment adherence. RESULTS: The search strategy yielded 591 results, with an additional 12 studies identified through reference screening. 81 full-text papers were assessed for eligibility and 10 papers met the inclusion and exclusion criteria for this review. The pain-related beliefs that have been measured in relation to treatment adherence include: pain-specific self-efficacy, perceived disability, catastrophizing, control beliefs, fear-avoidance beliefs, perceived benefits and barriers, as well as other less commonly measured beliefs. The most common pain-related belief investigated in relation to treatment adherence was pain-related self-efficacy. Findings for the pain-related beliefs investigated among the studies were mixed. Collectively, all of the aforementioned pain-related beliefs, excluding control beliefs, were found to influence treatment adherence behaviours. DISCUSSION: The findings suggest that treatment adherence is determined by a combination of pain-related beliefs either supporting or inhibiting chronic pain patients\u27 ability to adhere to treatment recommendations over time. In the studies reviewed, self-efficacy appears to be the most commonly researched predictor of treatment adherence, its effects also influencing other pain-related beliefs. More refined and standardised methodologies, consistent descriptions of pain-related beliefs and methods of measurement will improve our understanding of adherence behaviours
Topologies Refining the Cantor Topology on X ω
International audienceThe space of one-sided infinite words plays a crucial rĂ´le in several parts of Theoretical Computer Science. Usually, it is convenient to regard this space as a metric space, the Cantor-space. It turned out that for several purposes topologies other than the one of the Cantor-space are useful, e.g. for studying fragments of first-order logic over infinite words or for a topological characterisation of random infinite words. It is shown that both of these topologies refine the topology of the Cantor-space. Moreover, from common features of these topologies we extract properties which characterise a large class of topologies. It turns out that, for this general class of topologies, the corresponding closure and interior operators respect the shift operations and also, to some respect, the definability of sets of infinite words by finite automata
Enter exitrons
Staiger D, Simpson GG. Enter exitrons. Genome Biology. 2015;16(1): 136.Exitrons are exon-like introns located within protein-coding exons. Removal or retention of exitrons through alternative splicing increases proteome complexity and thus adds to phenotypic diversity
Ursinus College Alumni Journal, November 1954
Two new preceptresses join administrative staff • Ursinus freshman honored by school group • Ursinus college evening school registration increases • Ursinus faculty member presents TV program • Three new members join the Ursinus faculty • Eight-week summer session at Ursinus • 1954-55 academic year opens with 685 students • Williams named dean at Buena Vista College • South Jersey alumni group holds annual dinner dance • Alumni booster group organizes • McKee named dean at New York University • Ursinus colony at University of Delaware • Dr. Robert McAllister directs polio tests • Bunny Harshaw Vosters \u2740 Middle States tennis champion • Dr. Cornelius Weygandt honored by Dr. Wm. J. Phillips • Christian education in India • College supply store under new management • Sports review • 1954 soccer prospects • Women\u27s varsity hockey • Ursinus women\u27s alumni hockey team plays Irish touring team • Ursinus 1954 football squad • Alumni give over $20,000 • Irene Heinly, class secretary explains the success of the class of 1911 • 1954 loyalty fund report • Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Reinhart attribute the success of \u2749 to the aid of the vice chairmen • Report of 1954 loyalty fund campaign • Contributors for the 1954 loyalty fund campaign • UC Messiah chorus largest in history • Curtain Club plans fall production • News about ourselves • Engagements • Weddings • Births • Necrologyhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/alumnijournal/1051/thumbnail.jp
CLIP and complementary methods
RNA molecules start assembling into ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complexes during transcription. Dynamic RNP assembly, largely directed by cis-acting elements on the RNA, coordinates all processes in which the RNA is involved. To identify the sites bound by a specific RNA-binding protein on endogenous RNAs, cross-linking and immunoprecipitation (CLIP) and complementary, proximity-based methods have been developed. In this Primer, we discuss the main variants of these protein-centric methods and the strategies for their optimization and quality assessment, as well as RNA-centric methods that identify the protein partners of a specific RNA. We summarize the main challenges of computational CLIP data analysis, how to handle various sources of background and how to identify functionally relevant binding regions. We outline the various applications of CLIP and available databases for data sharing. We discuss the prospect of integrating data obtained by CLIP with complementary methods to gain a comprehensive view of RNP assembly and remodelling, unravel the spatial and temporal dynamics of RNPs in specific cell types and subcellular compartments and understand how defects in RNPs can lead to disease. Finally, we present open questions in the field and give directions for further development and applications
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