2,426 research outputs found

    Bis[4-(dimethyl­amino)phen­yl]diazene oxide

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    The asymmetric unit of the title compound, C16H20N4O, contains six independent approximately planar mol­ecules and is best described as a commensurate modulation of a P21/c parent. Two sets of disordered mol­ecules share almost the same locations (related by an in-plane translation), ensuring that the c-glide plane condition is not attained. C—H⋯O inter­actions provide structural cohesion. The site occupancy factors of the disordered molecules are ca 0.72/0.28 and 0.67/0.33

    Dielectric constants of bulk ferroelectric PZTmeasured by terahertz time-domain spectroscopy

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    The complex permittivity of bulk ceramic ferroelectric of nominal composition PbZr0.4Ti0.6O3 was measured in the range 0.2–2 THz using transmission time-domain spectroscopy. The results indicate strong absorption and dispersion in this frequency range as often seen in highly disordered and polar materials. The results are compared to equivalent thin film data in the literature, and significant differences in the real and imaginary permittivity suggest that substrate clamping and degree of polarisation of the ferroelectric thin film materials affect dielectric properties even at these high frequencies

    Validating self-report of diabetes use by participants in the 45 and up study: A record linkage study

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    Background: Prevalence studies usually depend on self-report of disease status in survey data or administrative data collections and may over- or under-estimate disease prevalence. The establishment of a linked data collection provided an opportunity to explore the accuracy and completeness of capture of information about diabetes in survey and administrative data collections. Methods. Baseline questionnaire data at recruitment to the 45 and Up Study was obtained for 266,848 adults aged 45 years and over sampled from New South Wales, Australia in 2006-2009, and linked to administrative data about hospitalisation from the Admitted Patient Data Collection (APDC) for 2000-2009, claims for medical services (MBS) and pharmaceuticals (PBS) from Medicare Australia data for 2004-2009. Diabetes status was determined from response to a question 'Has a doctor EVER told you that you have diabetes' (n = 23,981) and augmented by examination of free text fields about diagnosis (n = 119) or use of insulin (n = 58). These data were used to identify the sub-group with type 1 diabetes. We explored the agreement between self-report of diabetes, identification of diabetes diagnostic codes in APDC data, claims for glycosylated haemoglobin (HbA1c) in MBS data, and claims for dispensed medication (oral hyperglycaemic agents and insulin) in PBS data. Results: Most participants with diabetes were identified in APDC data if admitted to hospital (79.3%), in MBS data with at least one claim for HbA1c testing (84.7%; 73.4% if 2 tests claimed) or in PBS data through claim for diabetes medication (71.4%). Using these alternate data collections as an imperfect 'gold standard' we calculated sensitivities of 83.7% for APDC, 63.9% (80.5% for two tests) for MBS, and 96.6% for PBS data and specificities of 97.7%, 98.4% and 97.1% respectively. The lower sensitivity for HbA1c may reflect the use of this test to screen for diabetes suggesting that it is less useful in identifying people with diabetes without additional information. Kappa values were 0.80, 0.70 and 0.80 for APDC, MBS and PBS respectively reflecting the large population sample under consideration. Compared to APDC, there was poor agreement about identifying type 1 diabetes status. Conclusions: Self-report of diagnosis augmented with free text data indicating diabetes as a chronic condition and/or use of insulin among medications used was able to identify participants with diabetes with high sensitivity and specificity compared to available administrative data collections. © 2013 Comino et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd

    Impact of diabetes on hospital admission and length of stay among a general population aged 45 year or more: A record linkage study

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    © 2015 Comino et al. Background: The increased prevalence of diabetes and its significant impact on use of health care services, particularly hospitals, is a concern for health planners. This paper explores the risk factors for all-cause hospitalisation and the excess risk due to diabetes in a large sample of older Australians. Methods: The study population was 263,482 participants in the 45 and Up Study. The data assessed were linked records of hospital admissions in the 12 months following completion of a baseline questionnaire. All cause and ambulatory care sensitive admission rates and length of stay were examined. The associations between demographic characteristics, socioeconomic status, lifestyle factors, and health and wellbeing and risk of hospitalisation were explored using zero inflated Poisson (ZIP) regression models adjusting for age and gender. The ratios of adjusted relative rates and 95% confidence intervals were calculated to determine the excess risk due to diabetes. Results: Prevalence of diabetes was 9.0% (n = 23,779). Age adjusted admission rates for all-cause hospitalisation were 631.3 and 454.8 per 1,000 participant years and the mean length of stay was 8.2 and 7.1 days respectively for participants with and without diabetes. In people with and without diabetes, the risk of hospitalisation was associated with age, gender, household income, smoking, BMI, physical activity, and health and wellbeing. However, the increased risk of hospitalisation was attenuated for participants with diabetes who were older, obese, or had hypertension or hyperlipidaemia and enhanced for those participants with diabetes who were male, on low income, current smokers or who had anxiety or depression. Conclusions: This study is one of the few studies published to explore the impact of diabetes on hospitalisation in a large non-clinical population, the 45 and Up Study. The attenuation of risk associated with some factors is likely to be due to correlation between diabetes and factors such as age and obesity. The increased risk in association with other factors such as gender and low income in participants with diabetes is likely to be due to their synergistic influence on health status and the way services are accessed

    Bis(furan-2-ylcarbon­yl) diselenide

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    The title mol­ecule, C10H6O4Se2, lies on a twofold rotation axis. The Se—Se bond length of 2.305 (3) Å is similar to that in diphenyl diselenide [2.3066 (7) and 2.3073 (10) Å for the P and M isomers, respectively] and longer than that in 1,8-diseleno­naph­thalene [2.0879 (8) Å]. The mol­ecule adopts a gauche conformation with respect to the C=O groups

    Inductive Game Theory and the Dynamics of Animal Conflict

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    Conflict destabilizes social interactions and impedes cooperation at multiple scales of biological organization. Of fundamental interest are the causes of turbulent periods of conflict. We analyze conflict dynamics in an monkey society model system. We develop a technique, Inductive Game Theory, to extract directly from time-series data the decision-making strategies used by individuals and groups. This technique uses Monte Carlo simulation to test alternative causal models of conflict dynamics. We find individuals base their decision to fight on memory of social factors, not on short timescale ecological resource competition. Furthermore, the social assessments on which these decisions are based are triadic (self in relation to another pair of individuals), not pairwise. We show that this triadic decision making causes long conflict cascades and that there is a high population cost of the large fights associated with these cascades. These results suggest that individual agency has been over-emphasized in the social evolution of complex aggregates, and that pair-wise formalisms are inadequate. An appreciation of the empirical foundations of the collective dynamics of conflict is a crucial step towards its effective management

    Translation and manipulation of silicon nanomembranes using holographic optical tweezers

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    We demonstrate the use of holographic optical tweezers for trapping and manipulating silicon nanomembranes. These macroscopic free-standing sheets of single-crystalline silicon are attractive for use in next-generation flexible electronics. We achieve three-dimensional control by attaching a functionalized silica bead to the silicon surface, enabling non-contact trapping and manipulation of planar structures with high aspect ratios (high lateral size to thickness). Using as few as one trap and trapping powers as low as several hundred milliwatts, silicon nanomembranes can be rotated and translated in a solution over large distances

    Growth and characterization of heteroepitaxial La-substituted BaSnO3_3 films on SrTiO3_3 (001) and SmScO3_3 (110) substrates

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    Heteroepitaxial growth of BaSnO3_3 (BSO) and Ba1x_{1-x}Lax_xSnO3_3 (x = 7 %) (LBSO) thin films on different perovskite single crystal (SrTiO3_3 (001) and SmScO3_3 (110)) substrates has been achieved by Pulsed Laser Deposition (PLD) under optimized deposition conditions. X-ray diffraction measurements indicate that the films on either of these substrates are relaxed due to the large mismatch and present a high degree of crystallinity with narrow rocking curves and smooth surface morphology while analytical quantification by proton induced x-ray emission (PIXE) confirms the stoichiometric La transfer from a polyphasic target, producing films with La contents above the bulk solubility limit. The films show degenerate semiconducting behavior on both substrates, with the observed room temperature resistivities, Hall mobilities and carrier concentrations of 4.4 mΩcmm \Omega cm, 10.11 cm2V1s1cm^2 V^{-1} s^{-1}, and 1.38 1020cm3\cdot 10^{20} cm^{-3} on SmScO3_3 and 7.8 mΩcmm \Omega cm, 5.8 cm2V1s1cm^2 V^{-1} s^{-1}, and 1.36 1020cm3\cdot 10^{20} cm^{-3} on SrTiO3_3 ruling out any extrinsic contribution from the substrate. The superior electrical properties observed on the SmScO3 substrate are attributed to reduction in dislocation density from the lower lattice mismatch.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, supplementary informations 2 figure

    (3S,4R)-4-(4-Fluoro­phen­yl)-3-(hydroxy­meth­yl)piperidinium chloride1

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    The title compound, C12H17FNO+·Cl−, is a degradation impurity of paroxetine hydro­chloride hemihydrate (PAXIL), an anti­depressant belonging to the group of drugs called selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs). Similar to the paroxetine hydro­chloride salt with protonation having taken place on the basic piperidine ring, the degradation impurity also exists as the hydro­chloride salt. The cyclic six-membered piperidinium ring adopts a chair conformation with the hydroxy­methyl and 4-fluoro­phenyl groups in the equatorial positions. The ions form a tape along the b axis through charge-assisted N+—H⋯Cl− hydrogen bonds; these tapes are connected by O—H⋯Cl− hydrogen bonds along the a axis
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