9,241 research outputs found
The excess burden of cancer in men in the UK
In general men are at significantly greater risk than women from nearly all of the common cancers that occur in both sexes (with the exception of breast cancer) (White 2009, Wilkins 2006, DH 2007). This report will consider the current overall burden of cancer among men in the UK, estimated from the latest statistics, and outline the extent of the differences between the sexes. All figures and calculations reported here are based on data extracted from the Cancer Research UK CancerStats web pages extracted in June 2009 (Cancer Research UK, 2009)
Are there socioeconomic gradients in stage and grade of breast cancer at diagnosis? Cross sectional analysis of UK cancer registry data
Socioeconomic gradients in uptake of breast cancer screening in the United Kingdom should, intuitively, lead to socioeconomic gradients in disease progression at diagnosis. However, studies have found little evidence of such an effect. Although this could be interpreted as evidence that socioeconomic gradients in uptake of screening do not have clinically important consequences, all of the published studies have used data from before (pre-1988) or during the early stages (1988-95) of implementation of the national breast cancer screening programme. We investigated the relation between socioeconomic position and progression of breast cancer at diagnosis by using recent data from the Northern and Yorkshire Cancer Registry and Information Service (NYCRIS), which is estimated to achieve around 93% ascertainment
Flaw growth behavior in thick welded plates of 2219-T87 aluminum at room and cryogenic temperatures
Axial load fatigue and fracture tests were conducted on thick welded plates of 2219-T87 aluminum alloy to determine the tensile strength properties and the flaw growth behavior in electron beam, gas metal arc, and pulse current gas tungsten arc welds for plates 6.35 centimeters (2.5 in.) thick. The tests were conducted in room temperature air and in liquid nitrogen environments. Specimens were tested in both the as-welded and the aged after welding conditions. The experimental crack growth rate were correlated with theoretical crack growth rate predictions for semielliptical surface flaws
A simplified test of universality in Lattice QCD
A simplified test of universality in Lattice QCD is performed by analytically
evaluating the continuous Euclidean time limits of various lattice fermion
determinants, both with and without a Wilson term to lift the fermion doubling
on the Euclidean time axis, and comparing them with each other and with the
zeta-regularised fermion determinant in the continuous time--lattice space
setting. The determinant relations expected from universality considerations
are found to be violated by a certain gauge field-dependent factor, i.e. we
uncover a "universality anomaly". The physical significance, or lack thereof,
of this factor is a delicate question which remains to be settled.Comment: 6 pages. v2: Revised to include a further result on the
zeta-regularised fermion determinant in the continuous time--lattice space
setting which impacts on the conclusions; typos corrected; acknowledgement
and reference added; to appear in Phys.Rev.Let
Charge Pattern Matching as a "Fuzzy" Mode of Molecular Recognition for the Functional Phase Separations of Intrinsically Disordered Proteins
Biologically functional liquid-liquid phase separation of intrinsically
disordered proteins (IDPs) is driven by interactions encoded by their amino
acid sequences. Little is currently known about the molecular recognition
mechanisms for distributing different IDP sequences into various cellular
membraneless compartments. Pertinent physics was addressed recently by applying
random-phase-approximation (RPA) polymer theory to electrostatics, which is a
major energetic component governing IDP phase properties. RPA accounts for
charge patterns and thus has advantages over Flory-Huggins and Overbeek-Voorn
mean-field theories. To make progress toward deciphering the phase behaviors of
multiple IDP sequences, the RPA formulation for one IDP species plus solvent is
hereby extended to treat polyampholyte solutions containing two IDP species.
The new formulation generally allows for binary coexistence of two phases, each
containing a different set of volume fractions for the two
different IDP sequences. The asymmetry between the two predicted coexisting
phases with regard to their ratios for the two sequences
increases with increasing mismatch between their charge patterns. This finding
points to a multivalent, stochastic, "fuzzy" mode of molecular recognition that
helps populate various IDP sequences differentially into separate phase
compartments. An intuitive illustration of this trend is provided by
Flory-Huggins models, whereby a hypothetical case of ternary coexistence is
also explored. Augmentations of the present RPA theory with a relative
permittivity that depends on IDP volume fraction
lead to higher propensities to phase separate, in line
with the case with one IDP species we studied previously. ...Comment: Accepted for publication in New Journal of Physics (IOP) for the
"Focus On Phase Transitions in Cells" Special Issue; 37 pages, 11 figure
International photovoltaic program. Volume 2: Appendices
The results of analyses conducted in preparation of an international photovoltaic marketing plan are summarized. Included are compilations of relevant statutes and existing Federal programs; strategies designed to expand the use of photovoltaics abroad; information on the domestic photovoltaic plan and its impact on the proposed international plan; perspectives on foreign competition; industry views on the international photovoltaic market and ideas about the how US government actions could affect this market;international financing issues; and information on issues affecting foreign policy and developing countries
Joint disease mapping using six cancers in the Yorkshire region of England
OBJECTIVES:
The aims of this study were to model jointly the incidence rates of six smoking related cancers in the Yorkshire region of England, to explore the patterns of spatial correlation amongst them, and to estimate the relative weight of smoking and other shared risk factors for the relevant disease sites, both before and after adjustment for socioeconomic background (SEB).
METHODS:
Data on the incidence of oesophagus, stomach, pancreas, lung, kidney, and bladder cancers between 1983 and 2003 were extracted from the Northern & Yorkshire Cancer Registry database for the 532 electoral wards in the Yorkshire region. Using postcode of residence, each case was assigned an area-based measure of SEB using the Townsend index. Standardised incidence ratios (SIRs) were calculated for each cancer site and their correlations investigated. The joint analysis of the spatial variation in incidence used a Bayesian shared-component model. Three components were included to represent differences in smoking (for all six sites), bodyweight/obesity (for oesophagus, pancreas and kidney cancers) and diet/alcohol consumption (for oesophagus and stomach cancers).
RESULTS:
The incidence of cancers of the oesophagus, pancreas, kidney, and bladder was relatively evenly distributed across the region. The incidence of stomach and lung cancers was more clustered around the urban areas in the south of the region, and these two cancers were significantly associated with higher levels of area deprivation. The incidence of lung cancer was most impacted by adjustment for SEB, with the rural/urban split becoming less apparent. The component representing smoking had a larger effect on cancer incidence in the eastern part of the region. The effects of the other two components were small and disappeared after adjustment for SEB.
CONCLUSIONS:
This study demonstrates the feasibility of joint disease modelling using data from six cancer sites. Incidence estimates are more precise than those obtained without smoothing. This methodology may be an important tool to help authorities evaluate healthcare system performance and the impact of policies
Stripping of gas and dust from the elliptical galaxy M86
Past observations of the x ray morphology of M86 have revealed that the galaxy is experiencing ram-pressure stripping due to its large velocity (1500 km s(-1)) relative to the intracluster medium of Virgo (Forman et al. 1979, Fabian, Schwartz, and Forman 1980). Observations indicate that the x ray emitting gas in the plume of M86 is still being produced from the continual heating of gas and dust stripped from nearer the galaxy's center. Researchers obtained two-dimensional Infrared Astronomy Satellite (IRAS) images of M86 which have revealed that there are two spatially separated regions of emission, one at 60 microns and the other at 100 microns of the IRAS wavebands. The 100 microns emission, presumably from cool dust (at approximately 20 K), appears to be located near the center of the galaxy together with HI (detected by Bregman, Roberts and Giovanelli 1988), while the 60 microns emission appears to lie more than 3 arcminutes away from the optical center in a direction slightly south of the center of the plume. Optical images produced by scanning U.K. Schmidt plates, reveal asymmetric isophotal contours along the major axis of the galaxy (first reported by Nulsen and Carter in 1987, which they propose as excess emission due to star formation). This excess optical emission is co-incident with the direction of the 60 micron infra-red emission
The rich cluster of galaxies ABCG 85. III. Analyzing the ABCG 85/87/89 complex
We present a combined X-ray and optical analysis of the ABCG 85/87/89 complex
of clusters of galaxies, based on the ROSAT PSPC image, optical photometric
catalogues (Slezak et al. 1998), and an optical redshift catalogue (Durret et
al. 1998). From this combined data set, we find striking alignments at all
scales at PA160\deg. At small scales, the cD galaxy in ABCG 85 and the
brightest galaxies in the cluster are aligned along this PA. At a larger scale,
X-ray emission defines a comparable PA south-southeast of ABCG 85 towards ABCG
87, with a patchy X-ray structure very different from the regular shape of the
optical galaxy distribution in ABCG 87. The galaxy velocities in the ABCG 87
region show the existence of subgroups, which all have an X-ray counterpart,
and seem to be falling onto ABCG 85 along a filament almost perpendicular to
the plane of the sky. To the west of ABCG 85, ABCG 89 appears as a significant
galaxy density enhancement, but is barely detected at X-ray wavelengths. The
galaxy velocities reveal that in fact this is not a cluster but two groups with
very different velocities superimposed along the line of sight. These two
groups appear to be located in intersecting sheets on opposite sides of a large
bubble. These data and their interpretation reinforce the cosmological scenario
in which matter, including galaxies, groups and gas, falls onto the cluster
along a filament.Comment: accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic
Clear and Compress: Computing Persistent Homology in Chunks
We present a parallelizable algorithm for computing the persistent homology
of a filtered chain complex. Our approach differs from the commonly used
reduction algorithm by first computing persistence pairs within local chunks,
then simplifying the unpaired columns, and finally applying standard reduction
on the simplified matrix. The approach generalizes a technique by G\"unther et
al., which uses discrete Morse Theory to compute persistence; we derive the
same worst-case complexity bound in a more general context. The algorithm
employs several practical optimization techniques which are of independent
interest. Our sequential implementation of the algorithm is competitive with
state-of-the-art methods, and we improve the performance through parallelized
computation.Comment: This result was presented at TopoInVis 2013
(http://www.sci.utah.edu/topoinvis13.html
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