13,113 research outputs found
Singing and COPD: a pilot randomized controlled trial of wellbeing and respiratory outcomes
Aims/objectives
To test whether a ten-week regular weekly group singing programme, with guided home practice, leads to improvement in COPD-specific health status, as assessed by the COPD Assessment Test (CAT, primary outcome).
To test whether the programme results in changes to health-related quality of life, mental health, breathlessness, lung function, functional exercise performance and breathing patterns (secondary outcomes).
Rationale
A number of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) exist which suggest that there are potential benefits to health and wellbeing of regular singing for people with COPD (Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease). However, most rely on small samples, and findings across the different outcome measures are inconsistent, while interview studies tend to report consistent positive physical and psychological outcomes. Further research is therefore needed.
Approach
A single-blind, randomized controlled trial compared a structured, weekly group singing programme plus home practice between sessions over ten weeks, with a usual COPD treatment control. The sample was drawn from a local NHS population of people with COPD. Following baseline assessments, participants were allocated to a 10 week singing programme or a control.
Findings
Twenty-four individuals completed to follow-up. Measures at 12 weeks showed no significant differences between singing and control groups except for one item on the health status questionnaire (SF-36) which suggested the singers were less limited in their activities of daily living post-singing. Final follow-up, planned for 6 months post intervention, was aborted due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Discussion and conclusion
The study failed to recruit to target. There remains a recruitment problem in RCTs of singing for COPD, resulting in inconclusive findings, which conflict with the positive qualitative evidence. A wide variety of reseach methods, as well as RCTs, are suggested to enable a better understanding of the impact of singing on COPD.
Trial registration number: ISRCTN42943709
Suppression of the water ice and snow albedo feedback on planets orbiting red dwarf stars and the subsequent widening of the habitable zone
M-stars comprise 80% of main-sequence stars, and so their planetary systems
provide the best chance for finding habitable planets, i.e.: those with surface
liquid water. We have modelled the broadband albedo or reflectivity of water
ice and snow for simulated planetary surfaces orbiting two observed red dwarf
stars (or M-stars) using spectrally resolved data of the Earth's cryosphere.
The gradual reduction of the albedos of snow and ice at wavelengths greater
than 1 ?m, combined with M-stars emitting a significant fraction of their
radiation at these same longer wavelengths, mean that the albedos of ice and
snow on planets orbiting M-stars are much lower than their values on Earth. Our
results imply that the ice/snow albedo climate feedback is significantly weaker
for planets orbiting M-stars than for planets orbiting G-type stars such as the
Sun. In addition, planets with significant ice and snow cover will have
significantly higher surface temperatures for a given stellar flux if the
spectral variation of cryospheric albedo is considered, which in turn implies
that the outer edge of the habitable zone around M-stars may be 10-30% further
away from the parent star than previously thought.Comment: Final accepted by Astrobiology, 20 pages (double spaced), 3 figures
include
CBI limits on 31 GHz excess emission in southern HII regions
We have mapped four regions of the southern Galactic plane at 31 GHz with the
Cosmic Background Imager. From the maps, we have extracted the flux densities
for six of the brightest \hii regions in the southern sky and compared them
with multi-frequency data from the literature. The fitted spectral index for
each source was found to be close to the theoretical value expected for
optically thin free-free emission, thus confirming that the majority of flux at
31 GHz is due to free-free emission from ionised gas with an electron
temperature of K.
We also found that, for all six sources, the 31 GHz flux density was slightly
higher than the predicted value from data in the literature. This excess
emission could be due to spinning dust or another emission mechanism.
Comparisons with m data indicate an average dust emissivity of
K (MJy/sr), or a 95 per cent confidence limit of K (MJy/sr). This is lower than that found in diffuse clouds at high
Galactic latitudes by a factor of . The most significant detection
() was found in (RCW49) and may account for up to
per cent of the total flux density observed at 31 GHz. Here, the
dust emissivity of the excess emission is K (MJy/sr) and
is within the range observed at high Galactic latitudes.
Low level polarised emission was observed in all six sources with
polarisation fractions in the range per cent. This is likely to be
mainly due to instrumental leakage and is therefore upper an upper limit to the
free-free polarisation. It corresponds to an upper limit of per cent
for the polarisation of anomalous emission.Comment: Accepted in MNRAS. 12 pages, 10 figures, 5 table
The evolution of clustering and bias in the galaxy distribution
This paper reviews the measurements of galaxy correlations at high redshifts,
and discusses how these may be understood in models of hierarchical
gravitational collapse. The clustering of galaxies at redshift one is much
weaker than at present, and this is consistent with the rate of growth of
structure expected in an open universe. If , this observation would
imply that bias increases at high redshift, in conflict with observed
values for known high- clusters. At redshift 3, the population of
Lyman-limit galaxies displays clustering which is of similar amplitude to that
seen today. This is most naturally understood if the Lyman-limit population is
a set of rare recently-formed objects. Knowing both the clustering and the
abundance of these objects, it is possible to deduce empirically the
fluctuation spectrum required on scales which cannot be measured today owing to
gravitational nonlinearities. Of existing physical models for the fluctuation
spectrum, the results are most closely matched by a low-density spatially flat
universe. This conclusion is reinforced by an empirical analysis of CMB
anisotropies, in which the present-day fluctuation spectrum is forced to have
the observed form. Open models are strongly disfavoured, leaving CDM
as the most successful simple model for structure formation.Comment: Invited review at the Royal Society Meeting `Large-scale structure in
the universe', London, March 1998. 20 Pages LaTe
The Evolution of the Global Star Formation History as Measured from the Hubble Deep Field
The Hubble Deep Field (HDF) is the deepest set of multicolor optical
photometric observations ever undertaken, and offers a valuable data set with
which to study galaxy evolution. Combining the optical WFPC2 data with
ground-based near-infrared photometry, we derive photometrically estimated
redshifts for HDF galaxies with J<23.5. We demonstrate that incorporating the
near-infrared data reduces the uncertainty in the estimated redshifts by
approximately 40% and is required to remove systematic uncertainties within the
redshift range 1<z<2. Utilizing these photometric redshifts, we determine the
evolution of the comoving ultraviolet (2800 A) luminosity density (presumed to
be proportional to the global star formation rate) from a redshift of z=0.5 to
z=2. We find that the global star formation rate increases rapidly with
redshift, rising by a factor of 12 from a redshift of zero to a peak at z~1.5.
For redshifts beyond 1.5, it decreases monotonically. Our measures of the star
formation rate are consistent with those found by Lilly et al. (1996) from the
CFRS at z 2, and
bridge the redshift gap between those two samples. The overall star formation
or metal enrichment rate history is consistent with the predictions of Pei and
Fall (1995) based on the evolving HI content of Lyman-alpha QSO absorption line
systems.Comment: Latex format, 10 pages, 3 postscript figures. Accepted for
publication in Ap J Letter
The B-Band Luminosity Function of Red and Blue Galaxies up to z=3.5
We have explored the redshift evolution of the luminosity function of red and
blue galaxies up to . This was possible joining a deep I band composite
galaxy sample, which includes the spectroscopic K20 sample and the HDFs
samples, with the deep and samples derived from the
deep NIR images of the Hubble Deep Fields North and South, respectively. About
30% of the sample has spectroscopic redshifts and the remaining fraction
well-calibrated photometric redshifts. This allowed to select and measure
galaxies in the rest-frame blue magnitude up to and to derive the
redshift evolution of the B-band luminosity function of galaxies separated by
their rest-frame color or specific (i.e. per unit mass) star-formation
rate. The class separation was derived from passive evolutionary tracks or from
their observed bimodal distributions. Both distributions appear bimodal at
least up to and the locus of red/early galaxies is clearly identified
up to these high redshifts. Both luminosity and density evolutions are needed
to describe the cosmological behaviour of the red/early and blue/late
populations. The density evolution is greater for the early population with a
decrease by one order of magnitude at with respect to the value at
. The luminosity densities of the early and late type galaxies with
. Indeed while star-forming
galaxies slightly increase or keep constant their luminosity density, "early"
galaxies decrease in their luminosity density by a factor from
to . A comparison with one of the latest versions of
the hierarchical CDM models shows a broad agreement with the observed number
and luminosity density evolutions of both populations.Comment: 41 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
The Internal Ultraviolet-to-Optical Color Dispersion: Quantifying the Morphological K-Correction
We present a quantitative measure of the internal color dispersion within
galaxies, which quantifies differences in morphology as a function of
wavelength. We apply this statistic to a local galaxy sample with archival
images at 1500 and 2500 Angstroms from the Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope, and
ground-based B-band observations to investigate how the color dispersion
relates to global galaxy properties. The intenal color dispersion generally
correlates with transformations in galaxy morphology as a function of
wavelength, i.e., it quantifies the morphological K-correction. Mid-type spiral
galaxies exhibit the highest dispersion in their internal colors, which stems
from differences in the bulge, disk, and spiral-arm components. Irregulars and
late-type spirals show moderate internal color dispersion, which implies that
young stars generally dominate the colors. Ellipticals, lenticulars, and
early-type spirals generally have low or negligible internal color dispersion,
which indicates that the stars contributing to the UV-to-optical emission have
a very homogeneous distribution. We discuss the application of the internal
color dispersion to high-redshift galaxies in deep, Hubble Space Telescope
images. By simulating local galaxies at cosmological distances, many of the
galaxies have luminosities that are sufficiently bright at rest--frame optical
wavelengths to be detected within the limits of the currently deepest
near-infrared surveys even with no evolution. Under assumptions that the
luminosity and color evolution of the local galaxies conform with the measured
values of high-redshift objects, we show that galaxies' intrinsic internal
color dispersion remains measurable out to z ~ 3.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. 41 pages, 13
figures (3 color). Full resolution version (~8 Mb) available at
http://mips.as.arizona.edu/~papovich/papovich_astroph.p
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