1,875 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
Blue-light filtering spectacle lenses for visual performance, sleep, and macular health in adults
This is a protocol for a Cochrane Review (Intervention). The objectives are as follows:
To assess whether blue-light filtering spectacle lenses impart effects on visual function, provide protection to the macula, or both. We will also examine potential effects on the sleep-wake cycle
Recommended from our members
Creative professional users musical relevance criteria
Although known item searching for music can be dealt with by searching metadata using existing text search techniques, human subjectivity and variability within the music itself make it very difficult to search for unknown items. This paper examines these problems within the context of text retrieval and music information retrieval. The focus is on ascertaining a relationship between music relevance criteria and those relating to relevance judgements in text retrieval. A data-rich collection of relevance judgements by creative professionals searching for unknown musical items to accompany moving images using real world queries is analysed. The participants in our observations are found to take a socio-cognitive approach and use a range of content and context based criteria. These criteria correlate strongly with those arising from previous text retrieval studies despite the many differences between music and text in their actual content
Nutrition and Eye Health
Diet is a key lifestyle factor that can have long-term effects on ocular health [...]
Natural history contributions of the University of Glasgow Exploration Society to Scotland and the World
Expeditions with a natural history focus have been
organised by University of Glasgow staff and
students since the 1930s. The educational benefits of
such expeditions to students have been reported by
Harper
et
al.
(
Journal
of
Biological
Education
51, 3-
16; 2017). Here, we present a short history of these
expeditions, concentrating on their scientific
achievements. In addition to expedition reports, a
large number of PhD theses, masters and honours
project reports and scientific papers have been
based on expedition work. Many biological
specimens have been deposited in museums,
including some new species. We provide case
histories of four expedition locations, to demonstrate
the variety of work done, and the value of returning
many times to the same place: Scotland, Trinidad and
Tobago, North Cyprus and Ecuador. A major problem
for expeditions is funding. For many years, the
Carnegie Trust for the Universities of Scotland ran a
funding stream that was crucial to the viability of
Scottish university expeditions, but this has sadly
now closed. For Glasgow University expeditions, the
Blodwen Lloyd Binns Bequest has provided a reliable
source since 1994, and we hope that it will continue
to do so
A Critical Appraisal of National and International Clinical Practice Guidelines Reporting Nutritional Recommendations for Age-Related Macular Degeneration: Are Recommendations Evidence-Based?
Eye care professionals should have access to high quality clinical practice guidelines that ideally are underpinned by evidence from robust systematic reviews of relevant research. The aim of this study was to identify clinical guidelines with recommendations pertaining to dietary modification and/or nutritional supplementation for age-related macular degeneration (AMD), and to evaluate the overall quality of the guidelines using the Appraisal of Guidelines for Research and Evaluation II (AGREE II) instrument. We also mapped recommendations to existing systematic review evidence. A comprehensive search was undertaken using bibliographic databases and other electronic resources for eligible guidelines. Quality appraisal was undertaken to generate scores for each of the six AGREE II domains, and mapping of extracted nutritional recommendations was performed for systematic reviews published up to March 2017. We identified 13 national and international guidelines, developed or updated between 2004 and 2019. These varied substantially in quality. The lowest scoring AGREE II domains were for 'Rigour of Development', 'Applicability' (which measures implementation strategies to improve uptake of recommendations), and 'Editorial Independence'. Only four guidelines used evidence from systematic reviews to support their nutritional recommendations. In conclusion, there is significant scope for improving current Clinical Practice Guidelines for AMD, and guideline developers should use evidence from existing high quality systematic reviews to inform clinical recommendations
High-resolution computed tomography reconstructions of invertebrate burrow systems
The architecture of biogenic structures can be highly influential in determining species contributions to major soil and sediment processes, but detailed 3-D characterisations are rare and descriptors of form and complexity are lacking. Here we provide replicate high-resolution micro-focus computed tomography (μ-CT) data for the complete burrow systems of three co-occurring, but functionally contrasting, sediment-dwelling inter-tidal invertebrates assembled alone, and in combination, in representative model aquaria. These data (≤2,000 raw image slices aquarium−1, isotropic voxel resolution, 81 μm) provide reference models that can be used for the development of novel structural analysis routines that will be of value within the fields of ecology, pedology, geomorphology, palaeobiology, ichnology and mechanical engineering. We also envisage opportunity for those investigating transport networks, vascular systems, plant rooting systems, neuron connectivity patterns, or those developing image analysis or statistics related to pattern or shape recognition. The dataset will allow investigators to develop or test novel methodology and ideas without the need to generate a complete three-dimensional computation of exemplar architecture
Technical Design Report for PANDA Electromagnetic Calorimeter (EMC)
This document presents the technical layout and the envisaged performance of the Electromagnetic Calorimeter (EMC) for the
PANDA target spectrometer. The EMC has been designed to meet the physics goals of the PANDA experiment. The performance figures are based on extensive prototype tests and radiation hardness studies. The document shows that the EMC is ready for construction up to the front-end electronics interface
Quasifree photoproduction of mesons off protons and neutrons
Differential and total cross sections for the quasifree reactions and have been determined at the
MAMI-C electron accelerator using a liquid deuterium target. Photons were
produced via bremsstrahlung from the 1.5 GeV incident electron beam and
energy-tagged with the Glasgow photon tagger. Decay photons of the neutral
decay modes and and coincident recoil nucleons were detected in a combined setup of
the Crystal Ball and the TAPS calorimeters. The -production cross
sections were measured in coincidence with recoil protons, recoil neutrons, and
in an inclusive mode without a condition on recoil nucleons, which allowed a
check of the internal consistency of the data. The effects from nuclear Fermi
motion were removed by a kinematic reconstruction of the final-state invariant
mass and possible nuclear effects on the quasifree cross section were
investigated by a comparison of free and quasifree proton data. The results,
which represent a significant improvement in statistical quality compared to
previous measurements, agree with the known neutron-to-proton cross-section
ratio in the peak of the resonance and confirm a peak in the
neutron cross section, which is absent for the proton, at a center-of-mass
energy MeV with an intrinsic width of MeV
Photoproduction of π0-pairs off protons and off neutrons
Total cross sections, angular distributions, and invariant-mass distributions have been measured for the photoproduction of π0π0 pairs off free protons and off nucleons bound in the deuteron. The experiments were performed at the MAMI accelerator facility in Mainz using the Glasgow photon tagging spectrometer and the Crystal Ball/TAPS detector. The accelerator delivered electron beams of 1508 and 1557MeV, which produced bremsstrahlung in thin radiator foils. The tagged photon beam covered energies up to 1400MeV. The data from the free proton target are in good agreement with previous measurements and were only used to test the analysis procedures. The results for differential cross sections (angular distributions and invariant-mass distributions) for free and quasi-free protons are almost identical in shape, but differ in absolute magnitude up to 15%. Thus, moderate final-state interaction effects are present. The data for quasi-free neutrons are similar to the proton data in the second resonance region (final-state invariant masses up to ≈1550 MeV), where both reactions are dominated by the N(1520)3/2−→Δ(1232)3/2+π decay. At higher energies, angular and invariant-mass distributions are different. A simple analysis of the shapes of the invariant-mass distributions in the third resonance region is consistent with strong contributions of an N⋆→Nσ decay for the proton, while the reaction is dominated by a sequential decay via a Δπ intermediate state for the neutron. The data are compared to predictions from the Two-Pion-MAID model and the Bonn-Gatchina coupled-channel analysis
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