603 research outputs found

    Traveling waves for nonlinear Schr\"odinger equations with nonzero conditions at infinity, II

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    We prove the existence of nontrivial finite energy traveling waves for a large class of nonlinear Schr\"odinger equations with nonzero conditions at infinity (includindg the Gross-Pitaevskii and the so-called "cubic-quintic" equations) in space dimension N≄2 N \geq 2. We show that minimization of the energy at fixed momentum can be used whenever the associated nonlinear potential is nonnegative and it gives a set of orbitally stable traveling waves, while minimization of the action at constant kinetic energy can be used in all cases. We also explore the relationship between the families of traveling waves obtained by different methods and we prove a sharp nonexistence result for traveling waves with small energy.Comment: Final version, accepted for publication in the {\it Archive for Rational Mechanics and Analysis.} The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00205-017-1131-

    Glucose enhancement of memory is modulated by trait anxiety in healthy adolescent males

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    Glucose administration is associated with memory enhancement in healthy young individuals under conditions of divided attention at encoding. While the specific neurocognitive mechanisms underlying this ‘glucose memory facilitation effect’ are currently uncertain, it is thought that individual differences in glucoregulatory efficiency may alter an individual’s sensitivity to the glucose memory facilitation effect. In the present study, we sought to investigate whether basal hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis function (itself a modulator of glucoregulatory efficiency), baseline self-reported stress and trait anxiety influence the glucose memory facilitation effect. Adolescent males (age range = 14–17 years) were administered glucose and placebo prior to completing a verbal episodic memory task on two separate testing days in a counter-balanced, within-subjects design. Glucose ingestion improved verbal episodic memory performance when memory recall was tested (i) within an hour of glucose ingestion and encoding, and (ii) one week subsequent to glucose ingestion and encoding. Basal hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis function did not appear to influence the glucose memory facilitation effect; however, glucose ingestion only improved memory in participants reporting relatively higher trait anxiety. These findings suggest that the glucose memory facilitation effect may be mediated by biological mechanisms associated with trait anxiety

    Successful private–public funding of paediatric medicines research: lessons from the EU programme to fund research into off-patent medicines

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    The European Paediatric Regulation mandated the European Commission to fund research on off-patent medicines with demonstrated therapeutic interest for children. Responding to this mandate, five FP7 project calls were launched and 20 projects were granted. This paper aims to detail the funded projects and their preliminary results. Publicly available sources have been consulted and a descriptive analysis has been performed. Twenty Research Consortia including 246 partners in 29 European and non-European countries were created (involving 129 universities or public funded research organisations, 51 private companies with 40 SMEs, 7 patient associations). The funded projects investigate 24 medicines, covering 10 therapeutic areas in all paediatric age groups. In response to the Paediatric Regulation and to apply for a Paediatric Use Marketing Authorisation, 15 Paediatric Investigation Plans have been granted by the EMAPaediatric Committee, including 71 studies of whom 29 paediatric clinical trials, leading to a total of 7,300 children to be recruited in more than 380 investigational centres. Conclusion: Notwithstanding the EU contribution for each study is lower than similar publicly funded projects, and also considering the complexity of paediatric research, these projects are performing high-quality research and are progressing towards the increase of new paediatric medicines on the market. Private–public partnerships have been effectively implemented, providing a good example for future collaborative actions. Since these projects cover a limited number of offpatent drugs and many unmet therapeutic needs in paediatrics remain, it is crucial foreseeing new similar initiatives in forthcoming European funding programmes

    Convergence of Ginzburg-Landau functionals in 3-d superconductivity

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    In this paper we consider the asymptotic behavior of the Ginzburg- Landau model for superconductivity in 3-d, in various energy regimes. We rigorously derive, through an analysis via {\Gamma}-convergence, a reduced model for the vortex density, and we deduce a curvature equation for the vortex lines. In a companion paper, we describe further applications to superconductivity and superfluidity, such as general expressions for the first critical magnetic field H_{c1}, and the critical angular velocity of rotating Bose-Einstein condensates.Comment: 45 page

    Groupwise Multimodal Image Registration using Joint Total Variation

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    In medical imaging it is common practice to acquire a wide range of modalities (MRI, CT, PET, etc.), to highlight different structures or pathologies. As patient movement between scans or scanning session is unavoidable, registration is often an essential step before any subsequent image analysis. In this paper, we introduce a cost function based on joint total variation for such multimodal image registration. This cost function has the advantage of enabling principled, groupwise alignment of multiple images, whilst being insensitive to strong intensity non-uniformities. We evaluate our algorithm on rigidly aligning both simulated and real 3D brain scans. This validation shows robustness to strong intensity non-uniformities and low registration errors for CT/PET to MRI alignment. Our implementation is publicly available at https://github.com/brudfors/coregistration-njtv

    Sensory characterization of the perceived quality of East African highland cooking bananas (matooke)

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    Open Access ArticleBACKGROUND It has recently become increasingly evident that banana projects in Uganda need to consider consumer preferences as part of the breeding process to increase the acceptability of new cultivars. A trained panel used quantitative descriptive analysis (QDA) as a tool to assess the sensory characteristics of 32 cooking bananas (matooke). The aim was to investigate which sensory characteristics best describe matooke. RESULTS Fourteen descriptors were generated. The preferred attributes of matooke were high-intensity yellow color, homogeneous distribution of yellow color, good matooke aroma, highly moldable by touch, moist and smooth in the mouth. Analysis of variance revealed significant differences in the yellowness, homogeneity of color, firmness, moistness, smoothness, matooke aroma, hardness, and moldability across the genotypes (P < 0.05). Principal component analysis (PCA) showed strong positive correlations between yellowness and homogeneity of the color (R = 0.92). Smoothness in the mouth and moldability by touch were strongly and positively correlated (R = 0.88). Firmness in the mouth was well predicted by hardness to touch (R2 = 0.85). The matooke samples were ranked into two sensory clusters by agglomerative hierarchical clustering (AHC). CONCLUSION The study showed attribute terms that could be used to describe matooke and also revealed that QDA may be used as a tool during the assessment and selection of new cooking banana hybrids to identify relevant sensory attributes because of its ability to discriminate among the banana hybrids

    Les TMS et le maintien en emploi des salariés de 50 ans et plus : un défi pour la santé au travail et la santé publique

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    Les troubles musculosquelettiques des membres (TMS) sont la premiĂšre cause de maladie professionnelle en France comme en Europe. Le rĂ©seau pilote de surveillance Ă©pidĂ©miologique des TMS mis en place par l’Institut de Veille Sanitaire en 2002 dans la rĂ©gion des Pays de la Loire apporte des renseignements inĂ©dits sur la prĂ©valence des TMS et de leurs facteurs de risque dans la population salariĂ©e, notamment vieillissante. Entre 2002 et 2004, un rĂ©seau sentinelle de 83 mĂ©decins du travail volontaires a permis d’inclure par tirage au sort 3 710 salariĂ©s ĂągĂ©s de 20 Ă  59 ans reprĂ©sentatifs des salariĂ©s de la rĂ©gion. Les six principaux TMS des membres supĂ©rieurs sont diagnostiquĂ©s cliniquement selon un protocole rigoureux. L’évaluation de l’exposition professionnelle s’effectue Ă  l’aide d’un auto-questionnaire portant sur les facteurs biomĂ©caniques et psychosociaux de risque de TMS. Au moins un des six principaux TMS a Ă©tĂ© diagnostiquĂ© au cours de l’examen clinique chez 15 % des femmes et 11 % des hommes. Parmi les salariĂ©s ĂągĂ©s de 50 Ă  59 ans, prĂšs de 19 % des hommes et 27 % des femmes souffrent d’au moins un des six TMS. Les catĂ©gories ouvriĂšres sont les plus touchĂ©es, quels que soient l’ñge et le sexe, devant les employĂ©s. L’exposition professionnelle aux facteurs de risque de TMS reste Ă©levĂ©e chez les 50‑59 ans, quel que soit le sexe : 77 % des ouvriers et 72 % des ouvriĂšres restent exposĂ©s Ă  au moins deux des facteurs de risque de TMS. Les implications pour la prĂ©vention des TMS et le maintien au travail des salariĂ©s sont discutĂ©es. La forte prĂ©valence des TMS parmi les 50‑59 ans conjuguĂ©e Ă  des contraintes biomĂ©caniques et psychosociales importantes souligne la nĂ©cessitĂ© d’une approche globale de la prĂ©vention des TMS dans les entreprises pour rĂ©duire l’exposition au risque et assurer le maintien et/ou le retour au travail des salariĂ©s souffrant de TMS
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