1,061 research outputs found

    Labour and Antisemitism: a crisis misunderstood

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    In this article, we argue that Labour’s antisemitism crisis has been misunderstood. We suggest that a more accurate and sophisticated understanding of antisemitism offers a way forward. There are three elements to this claim. First, by drawing on existing data on attitudes towards Jews, we criticise the widespread focus on individual ‘antisemites’, rather than on the broader problem of antisemitism. In turn, we conceive of antisemitism not as a virus or poison, as in so many formulations, but rather, as a reservoir of readily available images and ideas that subsist in our political culture. Second, following on from this understanding, we offer five ways forward. Finally, we set this analysis in the context of a historical parting of the ways between anti‐racism and opposition to antisemitism. An anti‐racism defined solely by conceptions of whiteness and power, we argue, has proven unable to fully acknowledge and account for anti‐Jewish racism

    Effects of Nicotine on Emotional Reactivity in PTSD and Non-PTSD Smokers: Results of a Pilot fMRI Study

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    There is evidence that individuals with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) may smoke in part to regulate negative affect. This pilot fMRI study examined the effects of nicotine on emotional information processing in smokers with and without PTSD. Across groups, nicotine increased brain activation in response to fearful/angry faces (compared to neutral faces) in ventral caudate. Patch x Group interactions were observed in brain regions involved in emotional and facial feature processing. These preliminary findings suggest that nicotine differentially modulates negative information processing in PTSD and non-PTSD smokers

    Galactic Point Sources of TeV Antineutrinos

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    High energy cosmic ray experiments have identified an excess from the region of the Galactic Plane in a limited energy range around 101810^{18} eV (EeV). This is very suggestive of neutrons as candidate primaries, because the directional signal requires relatively-stable neutral primaries, and time-dilated neutrons can reach Earth from typical Galactic distances when the neutron energy exceeds an EeV. We here point out that if the Galactic messengers are neutrons, then those with energies below an EeV will decay in flight, providing a flux of cosmic antineutrinos above a TeV which is {\it observable} at a kilometer-scale neutrino observatory. The expected event rate per year above 1 TeV in a detector such as IceCube, for example, is 20 antineutrino showers (all flavors) and a 1∘1^\circ directional signal of 4 ΜˉΌ\bar \nu_\mu events. A measurement of this flux can serve to identify the first extraterrestrial point source of TeV antineutrinos.Comment: matches published versio

    MPTbreeze: A fast renormalized perturbative scheme

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    We put forward and test a simple description of multi-point propagators (MP), which serve as building-blocks to calculate the nonlinear matter power spectrum. On large scales these propagators reduce to the well-known kernels in standard perturbation theory, while at smaller scales they are suppresed due to nonlinear couplings. Through extensive testing with numerical simulations we find that this decay is characterized by the same damping scale for both two and three-point propagators. In turn this transition can be well modeled with resummation results that exponentiate one-loop computations. For the first time, we measure the four components of the non-linear (two-point) propagator using dedicated simulations started from two independent random Gaussian fields for positions and velocities, verifying in detail the fundamentals of propagator resummation. We use these results to develop an implementation of the MP-expansion for the nonlinear power spectrum that only requires seconds to evaluate at BAO scales. To test it we construct six suites of large numerical simulations with different cosmologies. From these and LasDamas runs we show that the nonlinear power spectrum can be described at the ~ 2% level at BAO scales for redshifts in the range [0-2.5]. We make a public release of the MPTbreeze code with the hope that it can be useful to the community.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS (minor comments included to match accepted version). Public code available at http://maia.ice.cat/crocce/mptbreeze

    255 In vivo detection of non-occlusive thrombi in drug-eluting stents by scintigraphy and radio-labelled annexin V in a rabbit model

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    IntroductionThrombi in contact with non re-endothelialized stent struts associated with drug-eluting stent (DES) thrombosis. Hence, detection of thrombi in DES could help to evaluate the risk of DES thrombosis. Annexin V radio-labelled with 99mTechnetium (99mTc) is a radio-tracer with a high affinity for activated platelets.ObjectivesOur objectives were: 1) to develop an animal model of non-occlusive thrombosis of stents, 2) to evaluate the ability of annexin V 99mTc for the detection of in-stent thrombi using scintigraphy.MethodsRight carotid arteries of NZW rabbits (n=14) fed a high cholesterol diet were implanted with overlapping DES (n=7) or bare-metal stents (BMS; n=7). Four weeks after stent implantation, rabbits underwent a first scintigraphy 3 hours after injection of 200 MBq of radio-labelled annexin V 99mTc. At the end of the first scintigraphy, a suture was placed surgically proximal to the stented carotid arteries in order to induce a thrombus-prone flow limiting stenosis. Four days later, a second scintigraphy was performed. After the second scintigraphy, stents were excised, imaged ex vivo and then fixed for histological examination and scanning electron microscopy (SEM).ResultsActivities measured in vivo in the stented carotid arteries after injection of annexin V 99mTc were higher on the second scintigraphy after creation of a surgical stenosis as compared to the first scintigraphy (0.24 vs. 0.15 counts/pixel/MBq, respectively; p<0.05). On the second scintigraphy, activities were higher in DES vs. BMS (0.26 vs. 0.19 counts/pixel/MBq, respectively; p < 0.005). High activities measured in stents in vivo were associated with the detection of thrombi on corresponding histological sections and SEM.ConclusionsIn this work, we developed a rabbit model of non-occlusive thrombosis of stents in carotid arteries. In this model, in-stent thrombi could be detected using annexin V 99mTc scintigraphy
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