1,796 research outputs found
Causal Impact of the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program on Hospital Readmissions and Mortality
Estimating causal effects of the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program
(HRRP), part of the Affordable Care Act, has been very controversial.
Associational studies have demonstrated decreases in hospital readmissions,
consistent with the intent of the program, although analyses with different
data sources and methods have differed in estimating effects on patient
mortality. To address these issues, we define the estimands of interest in the
context of potential outcomes, we formalize a Bayesian structural time-series
model for causal inference, and discuss the necessary assumptions for
estimation of effects using observed data. The method is used to estimate the
effect of the passage of HRRP on both the 30-day readmissions and 30-day
mortality. We show that for acute myocardial infarction and congestive heart
failure, HRRP caused reduction in readmissions while it had no statistically
significant effect on mortality. However, for pneumonia, HRRP had no
statistically significant effect on readmissions but caused an increase in
mortality.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure, 2 table
Polynomial solutions of nonlinear integral equations
We analyze the polynomial solutions of a nonlinear integral equation,
generalizing the work of C. Bender and E. Ben-Naim. We show that, in some
cases, an orthogonal solution exists and we give its general form in terms of
kernel polynomials.Comment: 10 page
Bayesian Model Averaging for Clustered Data: Imputing Missing Daily Air Pollution Concentration
The presence of missing observations is a challenge in statistical analysis especially when data are clustered. In this paper, we develop a Bayesian model averaging (BMA) approach for imputing missing observations in clustered data. Our approach extends BMA by allowing the weights of competing regression models for missing data imputation to vary between clusters while borrowing information across clusters in estimating model parameters. Through simulation and cross-validation studies, we demonstrate that our approach outperforms the standard BMA imputation approach where model weights are assumed to be the same for all clusters. We then apply our proposed method to a national dataset of daily ambient coarse particulate matter (PM10-2.5) concentration between 2003 and 2005. We impute missing daily monitor-level PM10-2.5 measurements and estimate the posterior probability of PM10-2.5 nonattainment status for 95 US counties based on the Environmental Protection Agency\u27s proposed 24-hour standard
Speech-Evoked Brainstem Response
The auditory brainstem response (ABR) is a clinical tool to assess the neural functionality of the auditory brainstem. The use of verbal stimuli in ABR protocols has provided important information of how the speech stimuli are processed by the brainstem structure. The perception of speech sounds seems to begin in the brainstem, which has an important role in the reading process and the phonological acquisition speech ABR assessment allows the identification of fine-grained auditory processing deficits, which do not appear in click evoked ABR responses. The syllable /da/ is commonly used by speech ABR assessment due to it being considered a universal syllable and allows it to be applied in different countries with good clinical assertiveness. The speech ABR is a objective, fast procedure that can be applied to very young subjects. It be utilized in different languages and can provide differential diagnoses of diseases with similar symptoms, as an effective biomarker of auditory processing disorders present in various diseases, such as dyslexia, specific language impairment, hearing loss, auditory processing disorders, otitis media, and scholastic difficulties. Speech ABR protocols can assist in the detection, treatment, and monitoring of various types of hearing impairments
Moose models with vanishing parameter
In the linear moose framework, which naturally emerges in deconstruction
models, we show that there is a unique solution for the vanishing of the
parameter at the lowest order in the weak interactions. We consider an
effective gauge theory based on SU(2) gauge groups, chiral fields and
electroweak groups and at the ends of the chain of the
moose. vanishes when a link in the moose chain is cut. As a consequence one
has to introduce a dynamical non local field connecting the two ends of the
moose. Then the model acquires an additional custodial symmetry which protects
this result. We examine also the possibility of a strong suppression of
through an exponential behavior of the link couplings as suggested by Randall
Sundrum metric.Comment: LaTex file, 27 pages, 8 figure
Consequences of a covariant Description of Heavy Ion Reactions at intermediate Energies
Heavy ion collisions at intermediate energies are studied by using a new RQMD
code, which is a covariant generalization of the QMD approach. We show that
this new implementation is able to produce the same results in the
nonrelativistic limit (i.e. 50MeV/nucl.) as the non-covariant QMD. Such a
comparison is not available in the literature. At higher energies (i.e. 1.5
GeV/nucl. and 2 GeV/nucl.) RQMD and QMD give different results in respect to
the time evolution of the phase space, for example for the directed transverse
flow. These differences show that consequences of a covariant description of
heavy ion reactions within the framework of RQMD are existing even at
intermediate energies.Comment: LaTex-file, 28 pages, 8 figures (available upon request), accepted
for publication in Physical Review
Vortex and half-vortex dynamics in a spinor quantum fluid of interacting polaritons
Spinorial or multi-component Bose-Einstein condensates may sustain fractional
quanta of circulation, vorticant topological excitations with half integer
windings of phase and polarization. Matter-light quantum fluids, such as
microcavity polaritons, represent a unique test bed for realising strongly
interacting and out-of-equilibrium condensates. The direct access to the phase
of their wavefunction enables us to pursue the quest of whether half vortices
---rather than full integer vortices--- are the fundamental topological
excitations of a spinor polariton fluid. Here, we are able to directly generate
by resonant pulsed excitations, a polariton fluid carrying either the half or
full vortex states as initial condition, and to follow their coherent evolution
using ultrafast holography. Surprisingly we observe a rich phenomenology that
shows a stable evolution of a phase singularity in a single component as well
as in the full vortex state, spiraling, splitting and branching of the initial
cores under different regimes and the proliferation of many vortex anti-vortex
pairs in self generated circular ripples. This allows us to devise the
interplay of nonlinearity and sample disorder in shaping the fluid and driving
the phase singularities dynamicsComment: New version complete with revised modelization, discussion and added
material. 8 pages, 7 figures. Supplementary videos:
https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0B0QCllnLqdyBfmc2ai0yVF9fa2g2VnZodGUwemVkLThBb3BoOVRKRDJMS2dUdjlZdkRTQk
Top-BESS model and its phenomenology
We introduce the top-BESS model which is the effective description of the
strong electroweak symmetry breaking with a single new SU(2)_L+R triplet vector
resonance. The model is a modification of the BESS model in the fermion sector.
The triplet couples to the third generation of quarks only. This approach
reflects a possible extraordinary role of the top quark in the mechanism of
electroweak symmetry breaking. The low-energy limits on the model parameters
found provide hope for finding sizable signals in the LHC Drell-Yan processes
as well as in the s-channel production processes at the ILC. However, there are
regions of the model parameter space where the interplay of the direct and
indirect fermion couplings can hide the resonance peak in a scattering process
even though the resonance exists and couples directly to top and bottom quarks.Comment: published in Physical Review D, minor changes in text, 21 pages, 37
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