21,703 research outputs found
Contesting the cruel treatment of abortion-seeking women
NOTICE: this is the author’s version of a work that was accepted for publication in Reproductive Health Matters. Changes resulting from the publishing process, such as peer review, editing, corrections, structural formatting, and other quality control mechanisms may not be reflected in this document. Changes may have been made to this work since it was submitted for publication. A definitive version was subsequently published in REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH MATTERS, [VOL 22, ISSUE 44, (2014)] DOI: 10.1016/S0968-8080(14)44818-
An apparent statistical relationship between polar heat budget and zonal circulation
Apparent statistical correlation between Arctic heat budget and zonal circulatio
Impulsive Heating of Solar Flare Ribbons Above 10 MK
The chromospheric response to the input of flare energy is marked by extended
extreme ultraviolet (EUV) ribbons and hard X-ray (HXR) footpoints. These are
usually explained as the result of heating and bremsstrahlung emission from
accelerated electrons colliding in the dense chromospheric plasma. We present
evidence of impulsive heating of flare ribbons above 10 MK in a two-ribbon
flare. We analyse the impulsive phase of SOL2013-11-09T06:38, a C2.6 class
event using data from Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) on board of Solar
Dynamics Observatory (SDO) and the Reuven Ramaty High Energy Solar
Spectroscopic Imager (RHESSI) to derive the temperature, emission measure and
differential emission measure of the flaring regions and investigate the
evolution of the plasma in the flaring ribbons. The ribbons were visible at all
SDO/AIA EUV/UV wavelengths, in particular, at 94 and 131 \AA\ filters,
sensitive to temperatures of 8 MK and 12 MK. Time evolution of the emission
measure of the plasma above 10 MK at the ribbons has a peak near the HXR peak
time. The presence of hot plasma in the lower atmosphere is further confirmed
by RHESSI imaging spectroscopy analysis, which shows resolved sources at 11-13
MK associated with at least one ribbon. We found that collisional beam heating
can only marginally explain the necessary power to heat the 10 MK plasma at the
ribbons.Comment: 21 pages, 15 figure
Question design in nurse-led and GP-led telephone triage for same-day appointment requests: a comparative investigation
Objective: To compare doctors’ and nurses’ communication with patients in primary care telephone triage consultations. Design: Qualitative comparative study of content and form of questions in 51 telephone triage encounters between practitioners (general practitioners (GPs)=29; nurses=22) and patients requesting a same-day appointment in primary care. Audio-recordings of nurse-led calls were synchronised with video recordings of nurse's use of computer decision support software (CDSS) during triage. Setting: 2 GP practices in Devon and Warwickshire, UK. Participants: 4 GPs and 29 patients; and 4 nurses and 22 patients requesting a same-day face-to-face appointment with a GP. Main outcome measure: Form and content of practitioner-initiated questions and patient responses during clinical assessment. Results: A total of 484 question–response sequences were coded (160 GP; 324 N). Despite average call lengths being similar (GP=4 min, 37 s, (SD=1 min, 26 s); N=4 min, 39 s, (SD=2 min, 22 s)), GPs and nurses differed in the average number (GP=5.51, (SD=4.66); N=14.72, (SD=6.42)), content and form of questions asked. A higher frequency of questioning in nurse-led triage was found to be due to nurses’ use of CDSS to guide telephone triage. 89% of nurse questions were oriented to asking patients about their reported symptoms or to wider-information gathering, compared to 54% of GP questions. 43% of GP questions involved eliciting patient concerns or expectations, and obtaining details of medical history, compared to 11% of nurse questions. Nurses using CDSS frequently delivered questions designed as declarative statements requesting confirmation and which typically preferred a ‘no problem’ response. In contrast, GPs asked a higher proportion of interrogative questions designed to request information. Conclusions: Nurses and GPs emphasise different aspects of the clinical assessment process during telephone triage. These different styles of triage have implications for the type of information available following nurse-led or doctor-led triage, and for how patients experience triage
Geometric approach to Fletcher's ideal penalty function
Original article can be found at: www.springerlink.com Copyright Springer. [Originally produced as UH Technical Report 280, 1993]In this note, we derive a geometric formulation of an ideal penalty function for equality constrained problems. This differentiable penalty function requires no parameter estimation or adjustment, has numerical conditioning similar to that of the target function from which it is constructed, and also has the desirable property that the strict second-order constrained minima of the target function are precisely those strict second-order unconstrained minima of the penalty function which satisfy the constraints. Such a penalty function can be used to establish termination properties for algorithms which avoid ill-conditioned steps. Numerical values for the penalty function and its derivatives can be calculated efficiently using automatic differentiation techniques.Peer reviewe
Same traits, different variance : Item-Level Variation Within Personality Measures
© 2014 the Author(s). This article has been published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. Without requesting permission from the Author or SAGE, you may further copy, distribute, transmit, and adapt the article, with the condition that the Author and SAGE Open are in each case credited as the source of the article. The version of record, Jamie S. Churcyard, Karen J. Pine, Shivani Sharma, Ben (C) Fletcher, ' Same Traits, Difference Variance: Item-Level Variation Within Personality Measures', SAGE Open, 2014, is available online via doi: 10.1177/2158244014522634Personality trait questionnaires are regularly used in individual differences research to examine personality scores between participants, although trait researchers tend to place little value on intra-individual variation in item ratings within a measured trait. The few studies that examine variability indices have not considered how they are related to a selection of psychological outcomes, so we recruited 160 participants (age M = 24.16, SD = 9.54) who completed the IPIP-HEXACO personality questionnaire and several outcome measures. Heterogenous within-subject differences in item ratings were found for every trait/facet measured, with measurement error that remained stable across the questionnaire. Within-subject standard deviations, calculated as measures of individual variation in specific item ratings within a trait/facet, were related to outcomes including life satisfaction and depression. This suggests these indices represent valid constructs of variability, and that researchers administering behavior statement trait questionnaires with outcome measures should also apply item-level variability indices.Peer reviewedFinal Published versio
Bulk-fragment and tube-like structures of AuN (N=2-26)
Using the relativistic all-electron density-functional calculations on the
AuN (N=2-26) in the generalized gradient approximation, combined with the
guided simulated annealing, we have found that the two- to three-dimensional
structural transition for AuN occurs between N=13 and 15, and the AuN (16<= N
<=25) prefer also the pyramid-based bulk fragment structures in addition to the
Au20. More importantly, the tubelike structures are found to be the most stable
for Au24 and Au26, offering another powerful structure competitor with other
isomers, e.g., amorphous, bulk fragment, and gold fullerene. The mechanism to
cause these unusual AuN may be attributed to the stronger s-d hybridization and
the d-d interaction enhanced by the relativistic effects.Comment: 12 pages and 3 figure
TOTAL ECONOMIC VALUATION OF STREAM RESTORATION USING INTERNET AND MAIL SURVEYS
The economic value of restoring Deckers Creek in Monongalia and Preston Counties of West Virginia was determined from mail, internet and personal interview surveys. Multi-attribute, choice experiments were conducted and nested logit models were estimated to derive the economic values of full restoration for three attributes of this creek: aquatic life, swimming, and scenic quality. The relative economic values of attributes were: aquatic life > scenic quality ~ swimming. These economic values imply that respondents had the highest value for aquatic life when fully restoring Deckers Creek to a sustainable fishery rather than "put and take" fishery that can not sustain a fish population (defined as moderate restoration for aquatic life). The consumer surplus estimates for full restoration of all three attributes ranged between 16 per month per household. Potential stream users (anglers) had the largest consumer surplus gain from restoration while non-angler respondents had the lowest. When the consumer surplus estimates were aggregated up to the entire watershed population, the benefit from restoration of Deckers Creek was estimated to be about $1.9 million annually. This benefit does not account for any economic values from partial stream restoration. Based upon log likelihood tests of the nested logit models, two sub-samples of the survey population (the general population and stream users) were found to be from the same population. Thus, restoration choices by stream users may be representative of the watershed population, although the sample size of stream users was small in this study.Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,
Omega time transmissions and receiving requirements
A short history is given of the development of dual VLF time transmission techniques. The theory of time recovery from the relative phase of the dual frequency transmission is presented. The transmission and receiving requirements for cycle identification and cycle ambiguity resolution are described. Finally, an experiment to test the capability of time transmission of the OMEGA system is propose
Trajectories in the Context of the Quantum Newton's Law
In this paper, we apply the one dimensional quantum law of motion, that we
recently formulated in the context of the trajectory representation of quantum
mechanics, to the constant potential, the linear potential and the harmonic
oscillator. In the classically allowed regions, we show that to each classical
trajectory there is a family of quantum trajectories which all pass through
some points constituting nodes and belonging to the classical trajectory. We
also discuss the generalization to any potential and give a new definition for
de Broglie's wavelength in such a way as to link it with the length separating
adjacent nodes. In particular, we show how quantum trajectories have as a limit
when the classical ones. In the classically forbidden regions,
the nodal structure of the trajectories is lost and the particle velocity
rapidly diverges.Comment: 17 pages, LateX, 6 eps figures, minor modifications, Title changed,
to appear in Physica Script
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