2,533 research outputs found
The Dawn of a New, New International Economic Order
OBJECTIVES: To determine whether being overweight or obese is associated with significant health outcomes in an 85-year-old population. less thanbrgreater than less thanbrgreater thanDESIGN: A cross-sectional population-based study. less thanbrgreater than less thanbrgreater thanSETTING: Linkoping, Sweden. less thanbrgreater than less thanbrgreater thanPARTICIPANTS: Three hundred thirty-eight people born in 1922 were identified using the local authoritys register. less thanbrgreater than less thanbrgreater thanMEASUREMENTS: Data related to sociodemographic characteristics, health-related quality of life (HRQoL), assistance use, and the presence of diseases were collected using a postal questionnaire. Anthropometry and functional status were assessed during home and geriatric clinic visits. Diseases were double-checked in the electronic medical records, and information about health service consumption was obtained from the local healthcare register. less thanbrgreater than less thanbrgreater thanRESULTS: Overweight (body mass index (BMI) 25.0-29.9 kg/m(2)) and obese (BMI andgt;= 30.0 kg/m(2)) participants perceived more difficulty performing instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs) and had more comorbidity than their normal-weight counterparts (BMI 18.5-24.9 kg/m(2)), but their overall HRQoL and health service costs did not differ from those of normal-weight participants. After controlling for sociodemographic factors, being overweight did not influence IADLs or any comorbidity, but obese participants were more likely to perceive greater difficulty in performing outdoor activities (odds ratio (OR) = 2.1, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.1-4) and cleaning (OR = 2.2, 95% CI = 1.2-4.2) than their normal-weight counterparts. Although obesity was also associated with multimorbidity (OR = 3, 95% CI = 1.2-8), the health service cost of each case of multimorbidity (n = 251) was highest in normalweight participants and nearly three times as much as in obese participants (ratio: 2.9, 95% CI = 1.1-8.1). less thanbrgreater than less thanbrgreater thanCONCLUSION: For 85-year-olds, being obese, as opposed to overweight, is associated with self-reported activity limitations and comorbidities. Overweight older adults living in their own homes in this population had well-being similar to that of those with normal weight.Funding Agencies|Health Research Council of the South-East of Sweden||County of Ostergotland||Janne Elgqvist Family Foundation||</p
Low-momentum interactions with Brown-Rho-Ericson scalings and the density dependence of the nuclear symmetry energy
We have calculated the nuclear symmetry energy up to
densities of with the effects from the Brown-Rho (BR) and
Ericson scalings for the in-medium mesons included. Using the
low-momentum interaction with and without such scalings, the equations of state
(EOS) of symmetric and asymmetric nuclear matter have been calculated using a
ring-diagarm formalism where the particle-particle-hole-hole ring diagrams are
included to all orders. The EOS for symmetric nuclear matter and neutron matter
obtained with linear BR scaling are both overly stiff compared with the
empirical constraints of Danielewicz {\it et al.} \cite{daniel02}. In contrast,
satisfactory results are obtained by either using the nonlinear Ericson scaling
or by adding a Skyrme-type three-nucleon force (TNF) to the unscaled
interaction.
Our results for obtained with the nonlinear Ericson scaling
are in good agreement with the empirical values of Tsang {\it et al.}
\cite{tsang09} and Li {\it et al.} \cite{li05}, while those with TNF are
slightly below these values. For densities below the nuclear saturation density
, the results of the above calculations are nearly equivalent to each
other and all in satisfactory agreement with the empirical values.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Generic Structure of Research Article Abstracts
As an academic genre, the research article (RA) abstracts play an important role in academic community. This paper aims to explore the differences between RA abstracts by native and non-native speakers of English in terms of the generic structure. Theoretically, the commonly accepted IMRD model (Introduction-Method-Results-Discussion) and Swale’s Move-Step model are adopted to analyse the macro- and micro-structure respectively. It is found that the Introduction Move is obligatory for English RA abstracts by non-native speakers as opposed to the Introduction and the Results move by native speakers. Key words: Research Article; ; GeGenre Analysisneric Structur
Half-Skyrmions and the Equation of State for Compact-Star Matter
The half-skyrmions that appear in dense baryonic matter when skyrmions are
put on crystals modify drastically hadron properties in dense medium and affect
strongly the nuclear tensor forces, thereby influencing the equation of state
(EoS) of dense nuclear and asymmetric nuclear matter. The matter comprised of
half skyrmions has vanishing quark condensate but non-vanishing pion decay
constant and could be interpreted as a hadronic dual of strong-coupled quark
matter. We infer from this observation combined with certain predictions of
hidden local symmetry in low-energy hadronic interactionsa a set of new scaling
laws -- called "new-BR" -- for the parameters in nuclear effective field theory
controlled by renormalization-group flow. They are subjected to the EoS of
symmetric and asymmetric nuclear matter, and are then applied to nuclear
symmetry energies and properties of compact stars. The changeover from the
skyrmion matter to a half-skyrmion matter that takes place after the cross-over
density provides a simple and natural field theoretic explanation for
the change of the EoS from soft to stiff at a density above that of nuclear
matter required for compact stars as massive as . Cross-over
density in the range 1.5n_0 \lsim n_{1/2} \lsim 2.0 n_0 has been employed,
and the possible skyrmion half-skyrmion coexistence {or cross-over} near
is discussed. The novel structure of {the tensor forces and} the EoS
obtained with the new-BR scaling is relevant for neutron-rich nuclei and
compact star matter and could be studied in RIB (rare isotope beam) machines.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, slightly revised for PRC, in pres
Is Robustness the Cost of Accuracy? -- A Comprehensive Study on the Robustness of 18 Deep Image Classification Models
The prediction accuracy has been the long-lasting and sole standard for
comparing the performance of different image classification models, including
the ImageNet competition. However, recent studies have highlighted the lack of
robustness in well-trained deep neural networks to adversarial examples.
Visually imperceptible perturbations to natural images can easily be crafted
and mislead the image classifiers towards misclassification. To demystify the
trade-offs between robustness and accuracy, in this paper we thoroughly
benchmark 18 ImageNet models using multiple robustness metrics, including the
distortion, success rate and transferability of adversarial examples between
306 pairs of models. Our extensive experimental results reveal several new
insights: (1) linear scaling law - the empirical and
distortion metrics scale linearly with the logarithm of classification error;
(2) model architecture is a more critical factor to robustness than model size,
and the disclosed accuracy-robustness Pareto frontier can be used as an
evaluation criterion for ImageNet model designers; (3) for a similar network
architecture, increasing network depth slightly improves robustness in
distortion; (4) there exist models (in VGG family) that exhibit
high adversarial transferability, while most adversarial examples crafted from
one model can only be transferred within the same family. Experiment code is
publicly available at \url{https://github.com/huanzhang12/Adversarial_Survey}.Comment: Accepted by the European Conference on Computer Vision (ECCV) 201
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