15,873 research outputs found
Feshbach Resonance Cooling of Trapped Atom Pairs
Spectroscopic studies of few-body systems at ultracold temperatures provide
valuable information that often cannot be extracted in a hot environment.
Considering a pair of atoms, we propose a cooling mechanism that makes use of a
scattering Feshbach resonance. Application of a series of time-dependent
magnetic field ramps results in the situation in which either zero, one, or two
atoms remain trapped. If two atoms remain in the trap after the field ramps are
completed, then they have been cooled. Application of the proposed cooling
mechanism to optical traps or lattices is considered.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures; v.2: major conceptual change
Understanding jumping to conclusions in patients with persecutory delusions: working memory and intolerance of uncertainty
Background. Persecutory delusions are a key psychotic experience. A reasoning style known as ‘jumping to conclusions’ (JTC) – limited information gathering before reaching certainty in decision making – has been identified as a contributory factor in the occurrence of delusions. The cognitive processes that underpin JTC need to be determined in order to develop effective interventions for delusions. In the current study two alternative perspectives were tested: that JTC partially results from impairment in information-processing capabilities and that JTC is a motivated strategy to avoid uncertainty.Method. A group of 123 patients with persistent persecutory delusions completed assessments of JTC (the 60:40 beads task), IQ, working memory, intolerance of uncertainty, and psychiatric symptoms. Patients showing JTC were compared with patients not showing JTC.Results. A total of 30 (24%) patients with delusions showed JTC. There were no differences between patients who did and did not jump to conclusions in overall psychopathology. Patients who jumped to conclusions had poorer working memory performance, lower IQ, lower intolerance of uncertainty and lower levels of worry.Working memory and worry independently predicted the presence of JTC.Conclusions. Hasty decision making in patients with delusions may partly arise from difficulties in keeping information in mind. Interventions for JTC are likely to benefit from addressing working memory performance, while in vivo techniques for patients with delusions will benefit from limiting the demands on working memory. The study provides little evidence for a contribution to JTC from top down motivational beliefs about uncertainty
Investigating Heating and Cooling in the BCS & B55 Cluster Samples
We study clusters in the BCS cluster sample which are observed by Chandra and
are more distant than redshift, z>0.1. We select from this subsample the
clusters which have both a short central cooling time and a central temperature
drop, and also those with a central radio source. Six of the clusters have
clear bubbles near the centre. We calculate the heating by these bubbles and
express it as the ratio r_heat/r_cool=1.34+/-0.20. This result is used to
calculate the average size of bubbles expected in all clusters with central
radio sources. In three cases the predicted bubble sizes approximately match
the observed radio lobe dimensions.
We combine this cluster sample with the B55 sample studied in earlier work to
increase the total sample size and redshift range. This extended sample
contains 71 clusters in the redshift range 0<z<0.4. The average distance out to
which the bubbles offset the X-ray cooling in the combined sample is at least
r_heat/r_cool=0.92+/-0.11. The distribution of central cooling times for the
combined sample shows no clusters with clear bubbles and t_cool>1.2Gyr. An
investigation of the evolution of cluster parameters within the redshift range
of the combined samples does not show any clear variation with redshift.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Intrabodies Binding the Proline-Rich Domains of Mutant Huntingtin Increase Its Turnover and Reduce Neurotoxicity
Although expanded polyglutamine (polyQ) repeats are inherently toxic, causing at least nine neurodegenerative diseases, the protein context determines which neurons are affected. The polyQ expansion that causes Huntington's disease (HD) is in the first exon (HDx-1) of huntingtin (Htt). However, other parts of the protein, including the 17 N-terminal amino acids and two proline (polyP) repeat domains, regulate the toxicity of mutant Htt. The role of the P-rich domain that is flanked by the polyP domains has not been explored. Using highly specific intracellular antibodies (intrabodies), we tested various epitopes for their roles in HDx-1 toxicity, aggregation, localization, and turnover. Three domains in the P-rich region (PRR) of HDx-1 are defined by intrabodies: MW7 binds the two polyP domains, and Happ1 and Happ3, two new intrabodies, bind the unique, P-rich epitope located between the two polyP epitopes. We find that the PRR-binding intrabodies, as well as VL12.3, which binds the N-terminal 17 aa, decrease the toxicity and aggregation of HDx-1, but they do so by different mechanisms. The PRR-binding intrabodies have no effect on Htt localization, but they cause a significant increase in the turnover rate of mutant Htt, which VL12.3 does not change. In contrast, expression of VL12.3 increases nuclear Htt. We propose that the PRR of mutant Htt regulates its stability, and that compromising this pathogenic epitope by intrabody binding represents a novel therapeutic strategy for treating HD. We also note that intrabody binding represents a powerful tool for determining the function of protein epitopes in living cells
Routine Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for anxiety and depression is more effective at repairing symptoms of psychopathology than enhancing wellbeing
This is the final version. Available on open access from Springer via the DOI in this recordThe primary focus of classic cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) for depression and anxiety
is on decreasing symptoms of psychopathology. However, there is increasing recognition that
it is also important to enhance wellbeing during therapy. This study investigates the extent to
which classic CBT for anxiety and depression leads to symptom relief versus wellbeing
enhancement, analysing routine outcomes in patients receiving CBT in high intensity
Improving Access to Psychological Therapy (IAPT) Services in the UK. At intake, there
were marked symptoms of anxiety and depression (a majority of participants scoring in the
severe range) and deficits in wellbeing (a majority of participants classified as languishing,
relative to general population normative data). CBT was more effective at reducing
symptoms of anxiety and depression than repairing wellbeing. As a result, at the end of
treatment, a greater proportion of participants met recovery criteria for anxiety and
depression than had moved from languishing into average or flourishing levels of wellbeing.
Given the importance of wellbeing to client definitions of recovery, the present results
suggest a greater emphasis should be placed on enhancing wellbeing in classic CBT
HadISD: a quality-controlled global synoptic report database for selected variables at long-term stations from 1973--2011
[Abridged] This paper describes the creation of HadISD: an automatically
quality-controlled synoptic resolution dataset of temperature, dewpoint
temperature, sea-level pressure, wind speed, wind direction and cloud cover
from global weather stations for 1973--2011. The full dataset consists of over
6000 stations, with 3427 long-term stations deemed to have sufficient sampling
and quality for climate applications requiring sub-daily resolution. As with
other surface datasets, coverage is heavily skewed towards Northern Hemisphere
mid-latitudes.
The dataset is constructed from a large pre-existing ASCII flatfile data bank
that represents over a decade of substantial effort at data retrieval,
reformatting and provision. These raw data have had varying levels of quality
control applied to them by individual data providers. The work proceeded in
several steps: merging stations with multiple reporting identifiers;
reformatting to netCDF; quality control; and then filtering to form a final
dataset. Particular attention has been paid to maintaining true extreme values
where possible within an automated, objective process. Detailed validation has
been performed on a subset of global stations and also on UK data using known
extreme events to help finalise the QC tests. Further validation was performed
on a selection of extreme events world-wide (Hurricane Katrina in 2005, the
cold snap in Alaska in 1989 and heat waves in SE Australia in 2009). Although
the filtering has removed the poorest station records, no attempt has been made
to homogenise the data thus far. Hence non-climatic, time-varying errors may
still exist in many of the individual station records and care is needed in
inferring long-term trends from these data.
A version-control system has been constructed for this dataset to allow for
the clear documentation of any updates and corrections in the future.Comment: Published in Climate of the Past, www.clim-past.net/8/1649/2012/. 31
pages, 23 figures, 9 pages. For data see
http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/hadobs/hadis
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