8,475 research outputs found
EPR before EPR: a 1930 Einstein-Bohr thought experiment revisited
In 1930 Einstein argued against consistency of the time-energy uncertainty
relation by discussing a thought experiment involving a measurement of mass of
the box which emitted a photon. Bohr seemingly triumphed over Einstein by
arguing that the Einstein's own general theory of relativity saves the
consistency of quantum mechanics. We revisit this thought experiment from a
modern point of view at a level suitable for undergraduate readership and find
that neither Einstein nor Bohr was right. Instead, this thought experiment
should be thought of as an early example of a system demonstrating nonlocal
"EPR" quantum correlations, five years before the famous
Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen paper.Comment: 11 pages, revised, accepted for publication in Eur. J. Phy
Efficiency diagnostic and advantages of procalcitonin and C-reactive protein in the early diagnosis of sepsis
The goal of our study is to assess the diagnostic profi tability of procalcitonin (PCT) in septic shock and another biomarker as C-reactive protein (CRP). Results: Fifty-four septic patients were assessed, 66% were males; mean age, 63 years. Eighty-eight percent was diagnosed as septic shock and 11% severe sepsis. Seventy-six percent were medical patients. Positive blood cultures in 42.5%. Sepsis origin: respiratory 46%, neurological 5%,
digestive 37% and urinary 3%. Average SOFA score was 10.4.
Conclusions: PCT and CRP have the same efficiency in early sepsis diagnosis. The PCT and CRP effi ciency diagnostic together is signifi cant but small. We suggest using both with the doubt of sepsis.Ye
Anemia profile in critical septic patients hospitalized in the ICU
This article is part of the supplement: 31st International Symposium on Intensive Care and Emergency MedicineThe aim was to describe the anemia profile of medical or surgical patients with severe sepsis or septic shock in the ICU, assessing severity scale, length of stay and mortality. The prevalence of microcytic anemia is more than one-half of our septic patients. There are iron metabolism disorders without significant differences between medical and surgical patients. Transferrin, a protein related to malnutrition, inflammatory response and organ dysfunction, is significantly lower in the most severe patients with higher organ dysfunction scores.Ye
Jackknife resampling technique on mocks: an alternative method for covariance matrix estimation
We present a fast and robust alternative method to compute covariance matrix
in case of cosmology studies. Our method is based on the jackknife resampling
applied on simulation mock catalogues. Using a set of 600 BOSS DR11 mock
catalogues as a reference, we find that the jackknife technique gives a similar
galaxy clustering covariance matrix estimate by requiring a smaller number of
mocks. A comparison of convergence rates show that 7 times fewer
simulations are needed to get a similar accuracy on variance. We expect this
technique to be applied in any analysis where the number of available N-body
simulations is low.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures, 2 table
Disinvestment in healthcare: An overview of HTA agencies and organizations activities at European level
Background: In an era of a growing economic pressure for all health systems, the interest for "disinvestment" in healthcare increased. In this context, evidence based approaches such as Health Technology Assessment (HTA) are needed both to invest and to disinvest in health technologies. In order to investigate the extent of application of HTA in this field, methodological projects/frameworks, case studies, dissemination initiatives on disinvestment released by HTA agencies and organizations located in Europe were searched. Methods: In July 2015, the websites of HTA agencies and organizations belonging to the European network for HTA (EUnetHTA) and the International Network of Agencies for HTA (INAHTA) were accessed and searched through the use of the term "disinvestment". Retrieved deliverables were considered eligible if they reported methodological projects/frameworks, case studies and dissemination initiatives focused on disinvestment in healthcare. Results: 62 HTA agencies/organizations were accessed and eight methodological projects/frameworks, one case study and one dissemination initiative were found starting from 2007. With respect to methodological projects/frameworks, two were delivered in Austria, one in Italy, two in Spain and three in U.K. As for the case study and the dissemination initiative, both came from U.K. The majority of deliverables were aimed at making an overview of existing disinvestment approaches and at identifying challenges in their introduction. Conclusions: Today, in a healthcare context characterized by resource scarcity and increasing service demand, "disinvestment" from low-value services and reinvestment in high-value ones is a key strategy that may be supported by HTA. The lack of evaluation of technologies in use, in particular at the end of their lifecycle, may be due to the scant availability of frameworks and guidelines for identification and assessment of obsolete technologies that was shown by our work. Although several projects were carried out in different countries, most remain constrained to the field of research. Disinvestment is a relatively new concept in HTA that could pose challenges also from a methodological point of view. To tackle these challenges, it is necessary to construct experiences at international level with the aim to develop new methodological approaches to produce and grow evidence on disinvestment policies and practices
A Farm-Level Evaluation of Conditions Under Which Farmers Will Supply Biomass Feedstocks for Energy Production
This study evaluated the risk management potential of including biomass crops as a diversification strategy for a grain farm in northwest Tennessee. Results indicate that adding biomass crops to the farm enterprise mix could improve mean net revenues and reduced net revenue variability.Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,
Effect of Xylanase on the Technological Behaviour of Wheat Flours
The objective of this work is to investigate the effect of enzyme xylanase on the technological behaviour of wheat flours, particularly in alveograms and bread making, using two flour qualities and two bread making methods. The enzyme used was xylanase from Bacillus subtilis which is sold for mainly for baking applications. Breads were made applying both the French and the pan bread methods. Experts scored the external and internal characteristics of breads. Increase in enzyme concentration produced a decrease in maximum pressure (P) and tensile strength/extensibility (P/L) but deformation energy (W) remained almost constant in the alveogram. This means that the water released by the hydrolysis of insoluble pentosans has reduced the tenacity of the dough. The higher the enzyme concentration, the lower the dough consistency during kneading. Besides, the greatest improvement of quality was produced when xylanase was added to low quality flour and when the French type bread making method was applied.Fil: Osella, C.. Universidad Nacional del Litoral. Facultad de Ingeniería Química. Instituto de Tecnología de Los Alimentos; ArgentinaFil: de la Torre, M. A. G.. Universidad Nacional del Litoral. Facultad de Ingeniería Química. Instituto de Tecnología de Los Alimentos; ArgentinaFil: Erben, Melina. Universidad Nacional del Litoral. Facultad de Ingeniería Química. Instituto de Tecnología de Los Alimentos; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Santa Fe; ArgentinaFil: Gallardo, A.. Universidad Nacional del Litoral. Facultad de Ingeniería Química. Instituto de Tecnología de Los Alimentos; ArgentinaFil: Sanchez, H.. Universidad Nacional del Litoral. Facultad de Ingeniería Química. Instituto de Tecnología de Los Alimentos; Argentin
Anion-π and lone pair-π interactions with s-tetrazine-based ligands
Most of traditional and contemporary interest in s-tetrazine derivatives focuses onto their redox properties, reactivity and energy density. In recent times, however, an increasing number of reports highlighted the possible usefulness of the s-tetrazine moiety as a binding site for anionic and electron rich species, according to the high and positive quadrupolar moment of this heterocycle and the consequent strength of anion-π and lone pair-π interactions. Herein, after giving a quick perspective on s-tetrazine properties and on how they foster these types of π interactions, we present statistical and critical examination of the available structural data, doing justice to the debated topic of the existence and directionality of anion- and lone pair-π interactions. Finally, available literature material concerning the usage of s-tetrazine as supramolecular binding site in solution, i.e. paving the way to applications such as molecular recognition and sensing, is presented and discussed.Financial support from the Spanish MINECO (project MAT2014-
60104-C2-2-R) and MCIU (RTI2018-101558-B-C21) and from
Italian MIUR (project 2015MP34H3) are gratefully acknowledged
Supramolecular forces and their interplay in stabilizing complexes of organic anions: tuning binding selectivity in water
How do different supramolecular forces contribute to the stabilization of complexes of organic anions in water? Oftentimes, when debating such a theme, we refer to broad concepts like positive or negative cooperative effects; the focus of the present work is rather on their interplay, i.e. on the way different kinds of stabilizing interactions (salt bridges, H-bonds, anion–π interactions, π–π stacking, solvent effects, etc.) dialogue among themselves. What happens if we tune the strengths of salt bridges by altering the basicity of the anion? What if we change the geometry of the charged group? How does shifting towards more hydrophilic or hydrophobic anions impact the stability of complexes in water? What happens in the solid state? Will aromatic anions go for a π–π stacking or an anion–π interaction mode and do they all behave in the same manner? Does the host/guest size make any difference? What if we play with regiochemistry: will one of the isomers be selectively recognized? Here we present a case study featuring the tetrazine-based ligands L1 and L2 and a series of selected organic anions; potentiometric, NMR, and XRD data and in silico simulations are employed to render such a complex picture.Financial support from the Italian MIUR (project 2015MP34H3) and from the Spanish MINECO (project MAT2014-60104-C2-2-R) is gratefully acknowledged
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