5,304 research outputs found
The effect of placebo and neurophysiological involvements
Placebo and placebo effect are important issues related to the drug therapy for clinical and scientific meanings. The rates of placebo
may get as many as 50% for analgesic drugs in headache. The high answer to placebo brings questions on pathophysiology of headache. Answers may offer a new strategy in the implementation of trials and new insight in neurophysiology of headache. Current knowledge on
placebo and placebo effect will be analysed and dicussed looking for new direction in headache field
Hypertemporal Imaging of NYC Grid Dynamics
Hypertemporal visible imaging of an urban lightscape can reveal the phase of
the electrical grid granular to individual housing units. In contrast to
in-situ monitoring or metering, this method offers broad, persistent,
real-time, and non-permissive coverage through a single camera sited at an
urban vantage point. Rapid changes in the phase of individual housing units
signal changes in load (e.g., appliances turning on and off), while slower
building- or neighborhood-level changes can indicate the health of distribution
transformers. We demonstrate the concept by observing the 120 Hz flicker of
lights across a NYC skyline. A liquid crystal shutter driven at 119.75 Hz
down-converts the flicker to 0.25 Hz, which is imaged at a 4 Hz cadence by an
inexpensive CCD camera; the grid phase of each source is determined by analysis
of its sinusoidal light curve over an imaging "burst" of some 25 seconds.
Analysis of bursts taken at ~15 minute cadence over several hours demonstrates
both the stability and variation of phases of halogen, incandescent, and some
fluorescent lights. Correlation of such results with ground-truth data will
validate a method that could be applied to better monitor electricity
consumption and distribution in both developed and developing cities.Comment: This paper uses astronomical techniques applied to the study of urban
lights. This research is reproducible but the data access is restricted. A
Github repository contains all code supporting this research as well as
additional material: https://github.com/fedhere/detect12
Fluid inclusion study of the Boccassuolo VMS-related stockwork deposit (Northern-Apennine ophiolites, Italy)
Several Cyprus-type volcanogenic massive sulphide (VMS) deposits are found in the Jurassic ophiolitic series of the Northern Apennines. Stratabound, stratiform and stockwork deposits were formed in the western limb of the Neotethys (Ligurian Ocean) and are found today in basalt, gabbro and serpentinised peridotite host rocks. The studied stockwork deposit at Boccassuolo is found in basalt and basalt breccia. Detailed petrography, fluid inclusion study, Raman spectroscopy analyses and chlorite thermometry calculations were used to determine the P, T, X conditions of the fluid circulation system. The veins contain three quartz generations, calcite, chlorite, epidote and sericite as gangue minerals and pyrite, chalcopyrite, sphalerite, pyrrhotite and galena as ore minerals. Based on the fluid inclusion study, the earlier defined three vein types (1., 2. and 3.) precipitated from the same type of evolving fluid, though at slightly different stratigraphical positions. The determined ranges of temperature (370 60°C), salinity (6.2 11.4 NaCl equiv. wt%), pressure (30-44 MPa) ranges and methane content (average 0.28 mol/kg) suggest an evolved seawater origin for the hydrothermal fluid, modified by fluid-rock interaction and possibly by mixing of magmatic volatile. The fluid characteristics and the mineralogical observations have proven a slightly distal position in relation to the centre of the fluid flow for all studied locations, but less and more distal blocks were also recognised. The temporal evolution of the system developed into a low temperature event, occurring after the main mineral stage, but still participating to the same process as a whole.</p
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