7,233 research outputs found
Hard-to-get-at data from difficult-to-access users
This paper reports on the design and development of a suite of tools to collect, analyze and visualize a diverse range of data from sufferers of mental ill-health. The aim is to allow researchers and ultimately sufferers and clinicians to better understand the âindividual signaturesâ of factors that indicate or identify episodes of ill-health. The tools have been applied as part of a study working with clients of a mental health service that demonstrates positive results con-cerning the applicability and acceptability of the approach in developing a bet-ter understanding of the factors surrounding self-harm behavior
Does a Vegan Diet Contribute to Prevention or Maintenance of Diseases?
This literature review deals with the topic of, does a vegan diet contribute to prevention or maintenance of diseases? Our main focus was to look at what a vegan diet entailed, the history of veganism, and why people decide to adhere to this diet type. Multiple research studies were looked over on the topics of how a vegan diet effects the disease processes of cancer, diabetes, gastral intestinal issues, weight loss, and heart disease. The overall arching theme that was found in the research is that a vegan diet is beneficial in helping to lessen the risk or aid in managing these different diseases
High-fructose corn-syrup-sweetened beverage intake increases 5-hour breast milk fructose concentrations in lactating women
This study determined the effects of consuming a high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS)-sweetened beverage on breast milk fructose, glucose, and lactose concentrations in lactating women. At six weeks postpartum, lactating mothers (n = 41) were randomized to a crossover study to consume a commercially available HFCS-sweetened beverage or artificially sweetened control beverage. At each session, mothers pumped a complete breast milk expression every hour for six consecutive hours. The baseline fasting concentrations of breast milk fructose, glucose, and lactose were 5.0 ± 1.3 µg/mL, 0.6 ± 0.3 mg/mL, and 6.8 ± 1.6 g/dL, respectively. The changes over time in breast milk sugars were significant only for fructose (treatment × time, p < 0.01). Post hoc comparisons showed the HFCS-sweetened beverage vs. control beverage increased breast milk fructose at 120 min (8.8 ± 2.1 vs. 5.3 ± 1.9 µg/mL), 180 min (9.4 ± 1.9 vs. 5.2 ± 2.2 µg/mL), 240 min (7.8 ± 1.7 vs. 5.1 ± 1.9 µg/mL), and 300 min (6.9 ± 1.4 vs. 4.9 ± 1.9 µg/mL) (all p < 0.05). The mean incremental area under the curve for breast milk fructose was also different between treatments (14.7 ± 1.2 vs. −2.60 ± 1.2 µg/mL × 360 min, p < 0.01). There was no treatment × time interaction for breast milk glucose or lactose. Our data suggest that the consumption of an HFCS-sweetened beverage increased breast milk fructose concentrations, which remained elevated up to five hours post-consumption
Bell's Theorem from Moore's Theorem
It is shown that the restrictions of what can be inferred from
classically-recorded observational outcomes that are imposed by the no-cloning
theorem, the Kochen-Specker theorem and Bell's theorem also follow from
restrictions on inferences from observations formulated within classical
automata theory. Similarities between the assumptions underlying classical
automata theory and those underlying universally-unitary quantum theory are
discussed.Comment: 12 pages; to appear in Int. J. General System
The Revival of Galactic Cosmic Ray Nucleosynthesis?
Because of the roughly linear correlation between Be/H and Fe/H in low
metallicity halo stars, it has been argued that a ``primary'' component in the
nucleosynthesis of Be must be present in addition to the ``secondary''
component from standard Galactic cosmic ray nucleosynthesis. In this paper we
critically re-evaluate the evidence for the primary versus secondary character
of Li, Be, and B evolution, analyzing both in the observations and in Galactic
chemical evolution models. While it appears that [Be/H] versus [Fe/H] has a
logarithmic slope near 1, it is rather the Be-O trend that directly arises from
the physics of spallation production. Using new abundances for oxygen in halo
stars based on UV OH lines, we find that the Be-O slope has a large uncertainty
due to systematic effects, rendering it difficult to distinguish from the data
between the secondary slope of 2 and the primary slope of 1. The possible
difference between the Be-Fe and Be-O slopes is a consequence of the variation
in O/Fe versus Fe: recent data suggests a negative slope rather than zero
(i.e., Fe O) as is often assumed. In addition to a phenomenological
analysis of Be and B evolution, we have also examined the predicted LiBeB, O,
and Fe trends in Galactic chemical evolution models which include outflow.
Based on our results, it is possible that a good fit to the LiBeB evolution
requires only traditional the Galactic cosmic ray spallation, and the (primary)
neutrino-process contribution to B11. We thus suggest that these two processes
might be sufficient to explain Li6, Be, and B evolution in the Galaxy, without
the need for an additional primary source of Be and B.Comment: 25 pages, latex, 8 ps figures, figure 1 correcte
A Re-evaluation of Evidence for Light Neutral Bosons in Nuclear Emulsions
Electron-positron pair-production data obtained by bombardment of emulsion
detectors with either cosmic rays or projectiles with mass between one and 207
and kinetic energies between 18 GeV and 32 TeV have been re-analysed using a
consistent and conservative model of the background from electromagnetic pair
conversion. The combined data yield a spectrum of putative neutral bosons
decaying to e+e- pairs, with masses between 3 and 20 MeV/c^2 and femtosecond
lifetimes. The statistical significance against background for these "X-bosons"
varies between 2 and 8 sigma. The cross-section for direct production of
X-bosons increases slowly with projectile energy, remaining over 1,000 times
smaller the the pion production cross-section.Comment: major revision with improved figures; accepted by Int J Mod Phys
Structurally specific thermal fluctuations identify functional sites for DNA transcription
We report results showing that thermally-induced openings of double stranded
DNA coincide with the location of functionally relevant sites for
transcription. Investigating both viral and bacterial DNA gene promoter
segments, we found that the most probable opening occurs at the transcription
start site. Minor openings appear to be related to other regulatory sites. Our
results suggest that coherent thermal fluctuations play an important role in
the initiation of transcription. Essential elements of the dynamics, in
addition to sequence specificity, are nonlinearity and entropy, provided by
local base-pair constraints
SensePath: understanding the sensemaking process through analytic provenance
Sensemaking is described as the process of comprehension, finding meaning and gaining insight from information, producing new knowledge and informing further action. Understanding the sensemaking process allows building effective visual analytics tools to make sense of large and complex datasets. Currently, it is often a manual and time-consuming undertaking to comprehend this: researchers collect observation data, transcribe screen capture videos and think-aloud recordings, identify recurring patterns, and eventually abstract the sensemaking process into a general model. In this paper, we propose a general approach to facilitate such a qualitative analysis process, and introduce a prototype, SensePath, to demonstrate the application of this approach with a focus on browser-based online sensemaking. The approach is based on a study of a number of qualitative research sessions including observations of users performing sensemaking tasks and post hoc analyses to uncover their sensemaking processes. Based on the study results and a follow-up participatory design session with HCI researchers, we decided to focus on the transcription and coding stages of thematic analysis. SensePath automatically captures userâs sensemaking actions, i.e., analytic provenance, and provides multi-linked views to support their further analysis. A number of other requirements elicited from the design session are also implemented in SensePath, such as easy integration with existing qualitative analysis workflow and non-intrusive for participants. The tool was used by an experienced HCI researcher to analyze two sensemaking sessions. The researcher found the tool intuitive and considerably reduced analysis time, allowing better understanding of the sensemaking process
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