233 research outputs found
Decays of Non-strange Negative Parity Baryons in the 1/Nc Expansion
The decays of non-strange negative parity baryons via the emission of single
and mesons are analyzed in the framework of the expansion.
A basis of spin-flavor operators for the partial wave amplitudes is established
to order and the unknown effective coefficients are determined by
fitting to the S- and D-wave partial widths as provided by the Particle Data
Group. A set of relations between widths that result at the leading order, i.e.
order , is given and tested with the available data. Up to a few
exceptions, a good description of the partial decays widths is already obtained
at that order. Because of the rather large errors in the empirical input data
the next to leading order fit fails to pin down with satisfactory accuracy the
subleading effective coefficients. The hierarchy expected from the
expansion is reflected in the results.Comment: 24 pages, 8 table
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A pilot project to evaluate intensive desensitisation, oral tolerance therapy and hunger provocation programme for children who have had prolonged tube feeds
Background: Some children with feeding difficulties may require nasogastric tube feeding or insertion of a percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) from a young age. A small cohort of these children can develop severe oral aversions that can delay the re-introduction of oral feeding. Multidisciplinary approaches that provide an intensive approach are deemed the most effective method of intervention to reduce nasogastric and PEG dependency.
Methods: Two children and their parents received an intensive approach to reduce PEG feeds (Child A and Child B), while one child and her parents elected to receive a traditional feeding clinic approach (Child C). The mean age of the participants was 4 years 4 months.
Results: Child A initially took 2090 kJ (44% daily nutritional requirement) via her PEG before the intensive program, and Child B took 100% daily nutritional requirement via his PEG. Three months post the intervention, Child A took 100% of her nutritional requirements orally and Child B had reduced PEG requirement significantly to 38% of daily nutritional requirement. Child C showed no changes in PEG versus oral intake.
Children who received the intervention were able to remain focused on mealtimes for longer, with fewer instances of leaving the table. Parents altered their language styles post coaching on the intensive intervention using fewer reprimands. No changes with these behaviours were noted with Child C.
Conclusions: Although this was a small pilot study, there are some strategies used within an intensive multidisciplinary context that can enable children to reduce their reliance on PEG feeds significantly
Masses of the 70- Baryons in Large Nc QCD
The masses of the negative parity 70-plet baryons are analyzed in large N_c
QCD to order 1/N_c and to first order in SU(3) symmetry breaking. The existing
experimental data are well reproduced and twenty new observables are predicted.
The leading order SU(6) spin-flavor symmetry breaking is small and, as it
occurs in the quark model, the subleading in 1/N_c hyperfine interaction is the
dominant source of the breaking. It is found that the Lambda(1405) and
Lambda(1520) are well described as three-quark states and spin-orbit partners.
New relations between splittings in different SU(3) multiplets are found.Comment: 11 pages; references were added and a couple of improvements to the
text were mad
Critique of a Pion Exchange Model for Interquark Forces
I describe four serious defects of a widely discussed pion exchange model for
interquark forces: it doesn't solve the "spin-orbit problem" as advertised, it
fails to describe the internal structure of baryon resonances, it leads to
disastrous conclusions when extended to mesons, and it is not reasonably
connected to the physics of heavy-light systems.Comment: 20 pages, 6 figures; some clarifications and references adde
Decays of Baryons --- Quark Model versus Large-
We study nonleptonic decays of the orbitally excited, \su6 \rep{70}-plet
baryons in order to test the hypothesis that the successes of the
nonrelativistic quark model have a natural explanation in the large- limit
of QCD. By working in a Hartree approximation, we isolate a specific set of
operators that contribute to the observed s- and d-wave decays in leading order
in . We fit our results to the current experimental decay data, and make
predictions for a number of allowed but unobserved modes. Our tentative
conclusion is that there is more to the nonrelativistic quark model of baryons
than large-.Comment: LaTeX 49pp. (38 pp. landscape), PicTex, PrePicTex, PostPicTex
required for 3 figures, Harvard Preprint HUTP-94/A008. (Two additional
operators are included, but conclusions are unchanged.
Low-lying spectrum of the Y-string three-quark potential using hyper-spherical coordinates
We calculate the energies of three-quark states with definite permutation
symmetry (i.e. of SU(6) multiplets) in the N=0,1,2 shells, confined by the
Y-string three-quark potential. The exact Y-string potential consists of one,
so-called three-string term, and three angle-dependent two-string terms. Due to
this technical complication we treat the problem at three increasingly accurate
levels of approximation: 1) the (approximate) three-string potential expanded
to first order in trigonometric functions of hyper-spherical angles; 2) the
(approximate) three-string potential to all orders in the power expansion in
hyper-spherical harmonics, but without taking into account the transition(s) to
two-string potentials; 3) the exact minimal-length string potential to all
orders in power expansion in hyper-spherical harmonics, and taking into account
the transition(s) to two-string potentials. We show the general trend of
improvement %convergence of these approximations: The exact non-perturbative
corrections to the total energy are of the order of one per cent, as compared
with approximation 2), yet the exact energy differences between the
-plets are shifted to 2:2:0.9,
from the Bowler and Tynemouth separation rule 2:2:1, which is obeyed by
approximation 2) at the one per cent level. The precise value of the energy
separation of the first radial excitation ("Roper") -plet
from the -plet depends on the approximation, but does not become
negative, i.e. the "Roper" remains heavier than the odd-parity
-plet in all of our approximations.Comment: 19 pages, 6 figure
Expansion for Excited Baryons
We derive consistency conditions which constrain the possible form of the
strong couplings of the excited baryons to the pions. The consistency
conditions follow from requiring the pion-excited baryon scattering amplitudes
to satisfy the large-N_c Witten counting rules and are analogous to consistency
conditions used by Dashen, Jenkins and Manohar and others for s-wave baryons.
The consistency conditions are explicitly solved, giving the most general
allowed form of the strong vertices for excited baryons in the large-N_c limit.
We show that the solutions to the large-N_c consistency conditions coincide
with the predictions of the nonrelativistic quark model for these states,
extending the results previously obtained for the s-wave baryons. The 1/N_c
corrections to these predictions are studied in the quark model with arbitrary
number of colors N_c.Comment: 56 pages, REVTeX; one new Appendix added containing a discussion of
the results in the language of quark operator
P-odd and CP-odd Four-Quark Contributions to Neutron EDM
In a class of beyond-standard-model theories, CP-odd observables, such as the
neutron electric dipole moment, receive significant contributions from
flavor-neutral P-odd and CP-odd four-quark operators. However, considerable
uncertainties exist in the hadronic matrix elements of these operators strongly
affecting the experimental constraints on CP-violating parameters in the
theories. Here we study their hadronic matrix elements in combined chiral
perturbation theory and nucleon models. We first classify the operators in
chiral representations and present the leading-order QCD evolutions. We then
match the four-quark operators to the corresponding ones in chiral hadronic
theory, finding symmetry relations among the matrix elements. Although this
makes lattice QCD calculations feasible, we choose to estimate the
non-perturbative matching coefficients in simple quark models. We finally
compare the results for the neutron electric dipole moment and P-odd and CP-odd
pion-nucleon couplings with the previous studies using naive factorization and
QCD sum rules. Our study shall provide valuable insights on the present
hadronic physics uncertainties in these observables.Comment: 40 pages, 7 figures. This is the final version. A discussion of the
uncertainty of the calculation is adde
Negative Parity 70-plet Baryon Masses in the 1/Nc Expansion
The masses of the negative parity SU(6) 70-plet baryons are analyzed in the
1/Nc expansion to order 1/Nc and to first order in SU(3) breaking. At this
level of precision there are twenty predictions. Among them there are the well
known Gell-Mann Okubo and equal spacing relations, and four new relations
involving SU(3) breaking splittings in different SU(3) multiplets. Although the
breaking of SU(6) symmetry occurs at zeroth order in 1/Nc, it turns out to be
small. The dominant source of the breaking is the hyperfine interaction which
is of order 1/Nc. The spin-orbit interaction, of zeroth order in 1/Nc, is
entirely fixed by the splitting between the singlet states Lambda(1405) and
Lambda(1520), and the spin-orbit puzzle is solved by the presence of other
zeroth order operators involving flavor exchange.Comment: 31 pages, 3 figure
Computerised cognitive assessment in patients with traumatic brain injury: an observational study of feasibility and sensitivity relative to established clinical scales
Background: Online technology could potentially revolutionise how patients are cognitively assessed and monitored. However, it remains unclear whether assessments conducted remotely can match established pen-and-paper neuropsychological tests in terms of sensitivity and specificity. Methods: This observational study aimed to optimise an online cognitive assessment for use in traumatic brain injury (TBI) clinics. The tertiary referral clinic in which this tool has been clinically implemented typically sees patients a minimum of 6 months post-injury in the chronic phase. Between March and August 2019, we conducted a cross-group, cross-device and factor analyses at the St. Mary's Hospital TBI clinic and major trauma wards at Imperial College NHS trust and St. George's Hospital in London (UK), to identify a battery of tasks that assess aspects of cognition affected by TBI. Between September 2019 and February 2020, we evaluated the online battery against standard face-to-face neuropsychological tests at the Imperial College London research centre. Canonical Correlation Analysis (CCA) determined the shared variance between the online battery and standard neuropsychological tests. Finally, between October 2020 and December 2021, the tests were integrated into a framework that automatically generates a results report where patientsâ performance is compared to a large normative dataset. We piloted this as a practical tool to be used under supervised and unsupervised conditions at the St. Mary's Hospital TBI clinic in London (UK). Findings: The online assessment discriminated processing-speed, visual-attention, working-memory, and executive-function deficits in TBI. CCA identified two significant modes indicating shared variance with standard neuropsychological tests (r = 0.86, p < 0.001 and r = 0.81, p = 0.02). Sensitivity to cognitive deficits after TBI was evident in the TBI clinic setting under supervised and unsupervised conditions (F (15,555) = 3.99; p < 0.001). Interpretation: Online cognitive assessment of TBI patients is feasible, sensitive, and efficient. When combined with normative sociodemographic models and autogenerated reports, it has the potential to transform cognitive assessment in the healthcare setting. Funding: This work was funded by a National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Invention for Innovation (i4i) grant awarded to DJS and AH ( II-LB-0715-20006)
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