438 research outputs found
Electron-neutrino scattering off nuclei from two different theoretical perspectives
We analyze charged-current electron-neutrino cross sections on Carbon. We
consider two different theoretical approaches, on one hand the Continuum Random
Phase Approximation (CRPA) which allows a description of giant resonances and
quasielastic excitations, on the other hand the RPA-based calculations which
are able to describe multinucleon emission and coherent and incoherent pion
production as well as quasielastic excitations. We compare the two approaches
in the genuine quasielastic channel, and find a satisfactory agreement between
them at large energies while at low energies the collective giant resonances
show up only in the CRPA approach. We also compare electron-neutrino cross
sections with the corresponding muon-neutrino ones in order to investigate the
impact of the different charged-lepton masses. Finally, restricting to the
RPA-based approach we compare the sum of quasielastic, multinucleon emission,
coherent and incoherent one-pion production cross sections (folded with the
electron-neutrino T2K flux) with the charged-current inclusive
electron-neutrino differential cross sections on Carbon measured by T2K. We
find a good agreement with the data. The multinucleon component is needed in
order to reproduce the T2K electron-neutrino inclusive cross sections
What do implicit measures measure?
We identify several ongoing debates related to implicit measures, surveying prominent views and considerations in each debate. First, we summarize the debate regarding whether performance on implicit measures is explained by conscious or unconscious representations. Second, we discuss the cognitive structure of the operative constructs: are they associatively or propositionally structured? Third, we review debates whether performance on implicit measures reflects traits or states. Fourth, we discuss the question of whether a person’s performance on an implicit measure reflects characteristics of the person who is taking the test or characteristics of the situation in which the person is taking the test. Finally, we survey the debate about the relationship between implicit measures and (other kinds of) behavior
Impact of low-energy nuclear excitations on neutrino-nucleus scattering at MiniBooNE and T2K kinematics
[Background] Meticulous modeling of neutrino-nucleus interactions is
essential to achieve the unprecedented precision goals of present and future
accelerator-based neutrino-oscillation experiments. [Purpose] Confront our
calculations of charged-current quasielastic cross section with the
measurements of MiniBooNE and T2K, and to quantitatively investigate the role
of nuclear-structure effects, in particular, low-energy nuclear excitations in
forward muon scattering. [Method] The model takes the mean-field (MF) approach
as the starting point, and solves Hartree-Fock (HF) equations using a Skyrme
(SkE2) nucleon-nucleon interaction. Long-range nuclear correlations are taken
into account by means of the continuum random-phase approximation (CRPA)
framework. [Results] We present our calculations on flux-folded double
differential, and flux-unfolded total cross sections off C and compare
them with MiniBooNE and (off-axis) T2K measurements. We discuss the importance
of low-energy nuclear excitations for the forward bins. [Conclusions] The CRPA
predictions describe the gross features of the measured cross sections. They
underpredict the data (more in the neutrino than in the antineutrino case)
because of the absence of processes beyond pure quasielastic scattering in our
model. At very forward muon scattering, low-energy nuclear excitations ( 50 MeV) account for nearly 50% of the flux-folded cross section.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures. Version published in Physical Review
Can verbal suggestions strengthen the effects of a relaxation intervention?
Short stress management interventions such as relaxation therapy have demonstrated preliminary effectiveness in reducing stress-related problems. A promising tool to strengthen the effectiveness of relaxation-based interventions is the use of verbal suggestions, as previous research provided evidence that verbal suggestions can induce positive outcome expectancies, facilitate adaptive responses to stress and improve health outcomes. The present experimental proof-of-concept study aimed to investigate the effects of a brief relaxation intervention and specifically the role of verbal suggestions on stress-related outcomes assessed by self-report questionnaires and psychophysiological data. 120 participants (mean age = 22.1 years) were randomized to one of four intervention conditions: a brief relaxation intervention plus verbal suggestions condition, a brief relaxation intervention only condition, a verbal suggestions only condition, and a control condition. Afterwards, participants were subjected to a psychosocial stress challenge to assess reactivity to a stressful event. Immediately after both relaxation interventions (with and without verbal suggestions), lower self-reported state anxiety was found compared to the control condition, but no differences were observed in response to the stressor. The verbal suggestions only condition did not impact state anxiety. No significant effects were found for verbal suggestion interventions on cortisol, alpha amylase, heart rate and skin conductance. This is the first study investigating the role of verbal suggestions in the effectiveness of a brief relaxation intervention. Although this experimental proof-of-concept study provides support for the effectiveness of a brief relaxation intervention in lowering state anxiety directly after the intervention, the effects did not impact the response to a subsequent stressor and we did not observe any evidence for the add-on effectiveness of verbal suggestions. The effectiveness of brief relaxation interventions on stress responses should be investigated further in future research by incorporating interventions that are tailored to the specific stress challenge and various types of verbal suggestions
Illusory-correlation effects on implicit and explicit evaluation
Research suggests that people sometimes perceive a relationship between stimuli when no such relationship exists (i.e., illusory correlation). Illusory-correlation effects are thought to play a central role in the formation of stereotypes and evaluations of minority versus majority groups, often leading to less favorable impressions of minorities. Extant theories differ in terms of whether they attribute illusory-correlation effects to processes operating during learning (belief formation) or measurement (belief expression), and whether different evaluation measures should be differentially sensitive to illusory-correlation effects. Past research found mixed evidence for dissociative effects of illusory-correlation manipulations on measures of implicit (i.e., automatic) and explicit (i.e., controlled) evaluation. Four high-powered studies obtained illusory-correlation effects on explicit evaluations, but not implicit evaluations probed with an Implicit Association Test, Evaluative Priming Task, and Affect Misattribution Procedure. The results are consistent with theories that attribute illusory-correlation effects to processes during belief expression
Acute infectieuze (niet Clostridium difficile geassocieerde) diarree bij ouderen
Acute –niet antibiotica geassocieerde- diarree is een frequente aandoening die bij ouderen ernstig kan verlopen omwille van de grotere fragiliteit van deze bevolkingsgroep. Acute diarree is meestal van infectieuze oorsprong, en meest frequent te wijten aan een virale infectie. De belangrijkste therapeutische maatregel is het voorzien van voldoende rehydratie. Bij ernstige diarree van bacterie¨ le oorsprong is een antibiotische behandeling aangewezen
PPP1R8 (protein phosphatase 1, regulatory (inhibitor) subunit 8)
Review on PPP1R8 (protein phosphatase 1, regulatory (inhibitor) subunit 8), with data on DNA, on the protein encoded, and where the gene is implicated
Early ComeOn+ Adaptive Optics Observation of GQ Lup and its Substellar Companion
An analysis of adaptive optics K-band imaging data of GQ Lup acquired in 1994
by the first generation adaptive optics system ComeOn+ at the ESO 3.6m optical
telescope in La Silla is presented. The data reveal a likely candidate for the
low-mass companion recently reported in the literature. An a posteriori
detection in the 11 year old data would provide a useful astrometric data point
for the very long period (~1000 yr) orbit of the GQ Lup system. However, the
data is severely contaminated by speckle noise at the given projected
separation, which decreases the confidence of the detection. Still, from the
data we can conclude that GQ Lup B is not an unrelated background source, but
instead a physical companion to GQ Lup A. We present here the reduction and
analysis of the ComeOn+ images, as well as the results. We also discuss the
nature of the companion based on data and models available in the scientific
literature and examine claims made regarding the classification of the object
as a planet.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in A&
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