364 research outputs found
Estimating economic impact using ex post econometric analysis: Cautionary tales
This paper provides an overview of techniques that can be used to estimate the economic impact of stadiums, events, championships, and franchises on local economies. Utilizing data from National Collegiate Athletic Association championships, this paper highlights the potential problems that can be made if city and time effects are not handled and unit-roots are not accounted for. In addition, the paper describes the technique for estimating dynamic panel data and the advantages that come with these modeling techniques.College sports, impact analysis, econometrics
Alien Registration- Matheson, Gordon W. (Saint Francis, Aroostook County)
https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/23429/thumbnail.jp
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Adult male students in higher education : perceived need for and sources of support.
Rival bishops, rival cathedrals : the election of Cormac, archdeacon of Sodor, as bishop in 1331
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Patterns and impact of hypoglycemia, hyperglycemia, and glucose variability on inpatients with insulin-treated cystic fibrosis-related diabetes
Introduction:
Mortality in patients with cystic fibrosis-related diabetes (CFRD) is higher than that in patients with cystic fibrosis without diabetes. Hypoglycemia, hyperglycemia, and glucose variability confer excess mortality and morbidity in the general inpatient population with diabetes.
Methods:
We investigated patterns of hypoglycemia and the association of hypoglycemia, hyperglycemia, and glucose variability with mortality and readmission rate in inpatients with CFRD. All capillary blood glucose (CBG) readings (measured using the Abbott Precision web system) of patients with insulin-treated CFRD measured within our health board between January 2009 and January 2015 were. Frequency and timing of hypoglycemia (<4 mmol/L) and was recorded. The effect of dysglycemia on readmission and mortality was investigated with survival analysis.
Results:
Sixty-six patients were included. A total of 22,711 CBG results were included in the initial analysis. Hypoglycemia was common with 1433 episodes (6.3%). Hypoglycemia ascertainment was highest between 2400 and 0600 h. Hypoglycemia was associated with a significantly higher rate of readmission or death over the 3.5-year follow-up period (P = 0.03). There was no significant association between hyperglycemia or glucose variability and the rate of readmission and mortality.
Conclusion:
Among inpatients with CFRD hypoglycemia is common and is associated with an increased composite endpoint of readmission and death. As with previously reported trends in general inpatient population this group shows a peak incidence of hypoglycemic during the night
Barrierless slow dissociation of photogenerated charge pairs in high-performance polymer-fullerene solar cells
The work in St Andrews was supported by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (grants EP/L017008/1, EP/J009016/1 and EP/G03673X/1) and the European Research Council (grant 321305). The work in Vilnius was supported by the Research Council of Lithuania (project MIP-85/2015). I.D.W.S. acknowledges support from a Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award. D.A.V. is grateful to Supergen SuperSolar Hub for the travel grant. The research data supporting this publication can be accessed at http://dx.doi.org/10.17630/7ec84b4b-d2ab-493c-aaf6-5503a44c0eb5Broadband transient absorption spectroscopy is combined with ultrafast carrier drift measurements to study dissociation of photogenerated charge pairs in efficient photovoltaic blends of the electron donating polymer PTB7 with the acceptor PC71BM. A high ensemble-average mobility sum of electrons and holes is observed which is independent of applied electric field above 12 V/ÎŒm and indicates nearly barrier-less pair dissociation at room temperature on a picosecond time scale. High efficiency of pair dissociation in this material is achieved by a combination of high electron mobility in fullerene clusters and hole delocalization along the polymer chain which increases by 30% during dissociation. Our results suggest a predominantly diffusive charge pair dissociation mechanism which requires persistent mobility of both carriers and preferably some delocalization of at least one of them.PostprintPostprintPeer reviewe
Evaluation of Parallel Authentic Research-Based Courses in Human Biology on Student Experiences at Stanford University and the University of Gothenburg
Abstract: Under a previous grant (2005-08), researchers and teachers at Stanford University (SU) and the University of Gothenburg (GU) co-designed a ten-week interdisciplinary, research-based laboratory course in human biology to be taught online to undergraduate students. Essentials in the subject were taught during the first four weeks of this course. Subsequently, student groups at SU and GU developed their own research questions, conducted live-streamed experiments remotely, processed their unique data with support from multiple interactive resources, cross-cultural collaboration and an interdisciplinary network of expert consultants, and presented original scientific results remotely. Student course-perceptions were evaluated using online questionnaires, scientific logbooks, and observations. In student teams from both universities, the course concept clearly improved student abilities to conduct research using laboratory experiments while learning theoretical basics. A comparison of pre and post course scores from student surveys showed that post course student comfort levels with several research-related tasks increased radically at both universities. All participating staff generally agreed that the methods and tools were valuable in this type of course and should be evaluated at other levels and areas of higher education, and shared in an expanded network of universities.
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GENE SILENCING. Epigenetic silencing by the HUSH complex mediates position-effect variegation in human cells.
Forward genetic screens in Drosophila melanogaster for modifiers of position-effect variegation have revealed the basis of much of our understanding of heterochromatin. We took an analogous approach to identify genes required for epigenetic repression in human cells. A nonlethal forward genetic screen in near-haploid KBM7 cells identified the HUSH (human silencing hub) complex, comprising three poorly characterized proteins, TASOR, MPP8, and periphilin; this complex is absent from Drosophila but is conserved from fish to humans. Loss of HUSH components resulted in decreased H3K9me3 both at endogenous genomic loci and at retroviruses integrated into heterochromatin. Our results suggest that the HUSH complex is recruited to genomic loci rich in H3K9me3, where subsequent recruitment of the methyltransferase SETDB1 is required for further H3K9me3 deposition to maintain transcriptional silencing.This work was supported by a Wellcome Trust Principal Research Fellowship to P.J.L. (084957/Z/08/Z) and studentship to I.A.T., an MRC Centenary Award to R.T.T., and the Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre (UK). The CIMR is in receipt of a Wellcome Trust Strategic Award.This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from AAAS via http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.aaa722
Self-trapping and excited state absorption in fluorene homo-polymer and copolymers with benzothiadiazole and tri-phenylamine
We thank the EPSRC [EP/J009318/1 and EP/J009016/1] for funding. MJP thanks the European Research Council (ERC) for funding under the European Unionâs Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013)/ERC Grant No. 258990.Excited state absorption (ESA) is studied using time-dependent density functional theory and compared with experiments performed in dilute solutions. The molecules investigated are a fluorene pentamer, polyfluorene F8, the alternating F8 copolymer with benzothiadiazole F8BT, and two blue-emitting random copolymers F8PFB and F8TFB. Calculated and measured spectra show qualitatively comparable results. The ESA cross-section of co-polymers at its maximum is about three times lower than that of F8. The ESA spectra are found to change little upon structural relaxation of the excited state, or change in the order of sub-units in a co-polymer, for all studied molecules. In all these molecules, the strongest ESA transition is found to arise from the same electronic process, exhibiting a reversal of the charge parity. In addition, F8PFB and F8TFB are found to possess almost identical electronic behaviour.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
SN 2002cx: The Most Peculiar Known Type Ia Supernova
We present photometric and spectroscopic observations of supernova (SN)
2002cx, which reveal it to be unique among all observed type Ia supernovae (SNe
Ia). SN 2002cx exhibits a SN 1991T-like premaximum spectrum, a SN 1991bg-like
luminosity, and expansion velocities roughly half those of normal SNe Ia.
Photometrically, SN 2002cx has a broad peak in the band and a plateau phase
in the band, and slow late-time decline. The color evolution is
nearly normal, but the and colors are very red. Early-time
spectra of SN 2002cx evolve very quickly and are dominated by lines from
Fe-group elements; features from intermediate-mass elements (Ca, S, Si) are
weak or absent. Mysterious emission lines are observed around 7000 \AA\ at
about 3 weeks after maximum brightness. The nebular spectrum of SN 2002cx is
also unique, consisting of narrow iron and cobalt lines. The observations of SN
2002cx are inconsistent with the observed spectral/photometric sequence, and
provide a major challenge to our understanding of SNe Ia. No existing
theoretical model can successfully explain all observed aspects of SN 2002cx.Comment: 60 pages, 12 figures. A high resolution PostScript version is
available at http://astro.berkeley.edu/~weidong/sn2002cx.p
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