1,038 research outputs found
Left-right symmetry at LHC and precise 1-loop low energy data
Despite many tests, even the Minimal Manifest Left-Right Symmetric Model
(MLRSM) has never been ultimately confirmed or falsified. LHC gives a new
possibility to test directly the most conservative version of left-right
symmetric models at so far not reachable energy scales. If we take into account
precise limits on the model which come from low energy processes, like the muon
decay, possible LHC signals are strongly limited through the correlations of
parameters among heavy neutrinos, heavy gauge bosons and heavy Higgs particles.
To illustrate the situation in the context of LHC, we consider the "golden"
process . For instance, in a case of degenerate heavy neutrinos
and heavy Higgs masses at 15 TeV (in agreement with FCNC bounds) we get
fb at TeV which is consistent with muon
decay data for a very limited masses in the range (3008 GeV, 3040 GeV).
Without restrictions coming from the muon data, masses would be in the
range (1.0 TeV, 3.5 TeV). Influence of heavy Higgs particles themselves on the
considered LHC process is negligible (the same is true for the light, SM
neutral Higgs scalar analog). In the paper decay modes of the right-handed
heavy gauge bosons and heavy neutrinos are also discussed. Both scenarios with
typical see-saw light-heavy neutrino mixings and the mixings which are
independent of heavy neutrino masses are considered. In the second case heavy
neutrino decays to the heavy charged gauge bosons not necessarily dominate over
decay modes which include only light, SM-like particles.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figs, KL-KS and new ATLAS limits taken into accoun
Variants in the fetal genome near pro-inflammatory cytokine genes on 2q13 associate with gestational duration
The duration of pregnancy is influenced by fetal and maternal genetic and non-genetic
factors. Here we report a fetal genome-wide association meta-analysis of gestational duration, and early preterm, preterm, and postterm birth in 84,689 infants. One locus on chromosome 2q13 is associated with gestational duration; the association is replicated in 9,291
additional infants (combined P = 3.96 × 10−14). Analysis of 15,588 mother-child pairs shows
that the association is driven by fetal rather than maternal genotype. Functional experiments
show that the lead SNP, rs7594852, alters the binding of the HIC1 transcriptional repressor.
Genes at the locus include several interleukin 1 family members with roles in proinflammatory pathways that are central to the process of parturition. Further understanding
of the underlying mechanisms will be of great public health importance, since giving birth
either before or after the window of term gestation is associated with increased morbidity
and mortalit
Transplantation of Kidneys from Donors with Acute Renal Failure Five-Year Results from Double Center Experience
Background:
Transplantation of kidneys from deceased donors with acute renal failure (ARF) has been described and represents an underutilized source of renal grafts. We reviewed retrospectively our double center experience with transplantation of ARF donor kidneys.
Methods:
Between January 2009 and June 2014, we performed a total of 397 kidney transplants at the two hospitals. Of which, 65 came from donors with ARF. The outcome was compared with 62 expanded criteria donor kidneys and 270 standard criteria donor kidneys. ARF was defined as donor terminal creatinine higher than 2. All kidneys from ARF donors had acceptable biopsies and were pumped. The immunosuppression was similar in all three groups (Thymoglobulin for induction and Prograf, Cellcept and steroids for maintenance). The outcome measurements included recipient serum creatinine, patient and graft survival at 6 months, 1 year and 3 years. We also reviewed the delayed graft function (DGF) rates and cold ischemic time in all groups.
Results:
Mean donor creatinine was 3.84±1.3. The 6 month, 1 and 3 year patient survival rates were 98.5%, 96.8% and 92.0% in ARF group, 98.1%, 97.0% and 93.4% SCD group and 98.4%, 93.2% and 77.7% in ECD group. The 6 month, 1 and 3 year death censored graft survival was 96.9%, 96.9%, 96.9% in ARF group, 97.7, 96.5, 91.8 in SCD group and 95.1%, 93.2%, 90.1% in ECD group. The mean 6mo, 1 year and 3 year recipient creatinine was 1.49, 1.46 and 1.51 in ARF group, 1.61, 1.72 and 1.77 in SCD group and 1.91, 1.92 and 2.15 in ECD group, respectively. ARF kidneys are noted to be associated with more DGF (58.5% in ARF group VS 41.5% in non ARF group), longer cold ischemic time (857.79 min in ARF group vs 589.32 min in non ARF group) and younger donor age (32.25 years in ARF group vs 40.65 years in non ARF group).
Conclusion:
Elevated terminal donor creatinine is not a risk factor for graft loss after deceased donor kidney transplantation. Although there is increased risk of DGF and longer cold ischemic time, transplantation of ARF kidneys provides comparable short and long term graft function and patient survival compared to kidneys from non ARF donors
A habituation account of change detection in same/different judgments
We investigated the basis of change detection in a short-term priming task. In two experiments, participants were asked to indicate whether or not a target word was the same as a previously presented cue. Data from an experiment measuring magnetoencephalography failed to find different patterns for “same” and “different” responses, consistent with the claim that both arise from a common neural source, with response magnitude defining the difference between immediate novelty versus familiarity. In a behavioral experiment, we tested and confirmed the predictions of a habituation account of these judgments by comparing conditions in which the target, the cue, or neither was primed by its presentation in the previous trial. As predicted, cue-primed trials had faster response times, and target-primed trials had slower response times relative to the neither-primed baseline. These results were obtained irrespective of response repetition and stimulus–response contingencies. The behavioral and brain activity data support the view that detection of change drives performance in these tasks and that the underlying mechanism is neuronal habituation
The Threat of Capital Drain: A Rationale for Public Banks?
This paper yields a rationale for why subsidized public banks may be desirable from a regional perspective in a financially integrated economy. We present a model with credit rationing and heterogeneous regions in which public banks prevent a capital drain from poorer to richer regions by subsidizing local depositors, for example, through a public guarantee. Under some conditions, cooperative banks can perform the same function without any subsidization; however, they may be crowded out by public banks. We also discuss the impact of the political structure on the emergence of public banks in a political-economy setting and the role of interregional mobility
A SM-like Higgs near 125 GeV in low energy SUSY: a comparative study for MSSM and NMSSM
Motivated by the recent LHC hints of a Higgs boson around 125 GeV, we assume
a SM-like Higgs with the mass 123-127 GeV and study its implication in low
energy SUSY by comparing the MSSM and NMSSM. We consider various experimental
constraints at 2-sigma level (including the muon g-2 and the dark matter relic
density) and perform a comprehensive scan over the parameter space of each
model. Then in the parameter space which is allowed by current experimental
constraints and also predicts a SM-like Higgs in 123-127 GeV, we examine the
properties of the sensitive parameters (like the top squark mass and the
trilinear coupling A_t) and calculate the rates of the di-photon signal and the
VV^* (V=W,Z) signals at the LHC. Our typical findings are: (i) In the MSSM the
top squark and A_t must be large and thus incur some fine-tuning, which can be
much ameliorated in the NMSSM; (ii) In the MSSM a light stau is needed to
enhance the di-photon rate of the SM-like Higgs to exceed its SM prediction,
while in the NMSSM the di-photon rate can be readily enhanced in several ways;
(iii) In the MSSM the signal rates of pp -> h -> VV^* at the LHC are never
enhanced compared with their SM predictions, while in the NMSSM they may get
enhanced significantly; (iv) A large part of the parameter space so far
survived will be soon covered by the expected XENON100(2012) sensitivity
(especially for the NMSSM).Comment: Version in JHEP (refs added
Safety and Efficacy of Dihydroartemisinin-Piperaquine in Falciparum Malaria: A Prospective Multi-Centre Individual Patient Data Analysis
BACKGROUND: The fixed dose antimalarial combination of dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine (DP) is a promising new artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT). We present an individual patient data analysis of efficacy and tolerability in acute uncomplicated falciparum malaria, from seven published randomized clinical trials conducted in Africa and South East Asia using a predefined in-vivo protocol. Comparator drugs were mefloquine-artesunate (MAS3) in Thailand, Myanmar, Laos and Cambodia; artemether-lumefantrine in Uganda; and amodiaquine+sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine and artesunate+amodiaquine in Rwanda. METHODS AND FINDINGS: In total 3,547 patients were enrolled: 1,814 patients (32% children under five years) received DP and 1,733 received a comparator antimalarial at 12 different sites and were followed for 28-63 days. There was no significant heterogeneity between trials. DP was well tolerated with 1.7% early vomiting. There were less adverse events with DP in children and adults compared to MAS3 except for diarrhea; ORs (95%CI) 2.74 (2.13 to 3.51) and 3.11 (2.31 to 4.18), respectively. DP treatment resulted in a rapid clearance of fever and parasitaemia. The PCR genotype corrected efficacy at Day 28 of DP assessed by survival analysis was 98.7% (95%CI 97.6-99.8). DP was superior to the comparator drugs in protecting against both P.falciparum recurrence and recrudescence (P = 0.001, weighted by site). There was no difference between DP and MAS3 in treating P. vivax co-infections and in suppressing the first relapse (median interval to P. vivax recurrence: 6 weeks). Children under 5 y were at higher risk of recurrence for both infections. The proportion of patients developing gametocytaemia (P = 0.002, weighted by site) and the subsequent gametocyte carriage rates were higher with DP (11/1000 person gametocyte week, PGW) than MAS3 (6/1000 PGW, P = 0.001, weighted by site). CONCLUSIONS: DP proved a safe, well tolerated, and highly effective treatment of P.falciparum malaria in Asia and Africa, but the effect on gametocyte carriage was inferior to that of MAS3
Z' signals in polarised top-antitop final states
We study the sensitivity of top-antitop samples produced at all energy stages
of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) to the nature of an underlying Z' boson, in
presence of full tree level standard model (SM) background effects and relative
interferences. We concentrate on differential mass spectra as well as both
spatial and spin asymmetries thereby demonstrating that exploiting combinations
of these observables will enable one to distinguish between sequential Z's and
those pertaining to Left-Right symmetric models as well as E6 inspired ones,
assuming realistic final state reconstruction efficiencies and error estimates.Comment: 21 pages, 6 colour figures, 10 table
Learning and Long-Term Retention of Large-Scale Artificial Languages
Recovering discrete words from continuous speech is one of the first challenges facing language learners. Infants and adults can make use of the statistical structure of utterances to learn the forms of words from unsegmented input, suggesting that this ability may be useful for bootstrapping language-specific cues to segmentation. It is unknown, however, whether performance shown in small-scale laboratory demonstrations of “statistical learning” can scale up to allow learning of the lexicons of natural languages, which are orders of magnitude larger. Artificial language experiments with adults can be used to test whether the mechanisms of statistical learning are in principle scalable to larger lexicons. We report data from a large-scale learning experiment that demonstrates that adults can learn words from unsegmented input in much larger languages than previously documented and that they retain the words they learn for years. These results suggest that statistical word segmentation could be scalable to the challenges of lexical acquisition in natural language learning.National Science Foundation (U.S.) (NSF DDRIG #0746251
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