351 research outputs found
Appendices to Kunitz on mortality calculations
Appendices to "What Yugoslavia means: progress, nationalism, and health" by Stephen Kunit
Piggyback Weather Experimentation: Superimposing Randomized Treatment Comparisons on Commercial Cloud Seeding Operation
Cover series statement: Technical Report 81/2ISWS Publications Catalog (1995, p. 22) lists as Contract Report no. 255, with series statement Technical Report 81/2 in the citation.published or submitted for publicationis peer reviewedOpe
Concurrent Geometric Multicasting
We present MCFR, a multicasting concurrent face routing algorithm that uses
geometric routing to deliver a message from source to multiple targets. We
describe the algorithm's operation, prove it correct, estimate its performance
bounds and evaluate its performance using simulation. Our estimate shows that
MCFR is the first geometric multicast routing algorithm whose message delivery
latency is independent of network size and only proportional to the distance
between the source and the targets. Our simulation indicates that MCFR has
significantly better reliability than existing algorithms
The Assessment of Statistical-physical Techniques for the Evaluation of Weather Modification Operations
published or submitted for publicationis peer reviewedOpe
Precipitation Augmentation for Crops Experiments: Pre-experimental Phase Studies
published or submitted for publicationis peer reviewedOpe
SPLUS J142445.34-254247.1: An R-Process Enhanced, Actinide-Boost, Extremely Metal-Poor star observed with GHOST
We report on the chemo-dynamical analysis of SPLUS J142445.34-254247.1, an
extremely metal-poor halo star enhanced in elements formed by the rapid
neutron-capture process. This star was first selected as a metal-poor candidate
from its narrow-band S-PLUS photometry and followed up spectroscopically in
medium-resolution with Gemini South/GMOS, which confirmed its low-metallicity
status. High-resolution spectroscopy was gathered with GHOST at Gemini South,
allowing for the determination of chemical abundances for 36 elements, from
carbon to thorium. At [Fe/H]=-3.39, SPLUS J1424-2542 is one of the lowest
metallicity stars with measured Th and has the highest logeps(Th/Eu) observed
to date, making it part of the "actinide-boost" category of r-process enhanced
stars. The analysis presented here suggests that the gas cloud from which SPLUS
J1424-2542 was formed must have been enriched by at least two progenitor
populations. The light-element (Z<=30) abundance pattern is consistent with the
yields from a supernova explosion of metal-free stars with 11.3-13.4 Msun, and
the heavy-element (Z>=38) abundance pattern can be reproduced by the yields
from a neutron star merger (1.66Msun and 1.27Msun) event. A kinematical
analysis also reveals that SPLUS J1424-2542 is a low-mass, old halo star with a
likely in-situ origin, not associated with any known early merger events in the
Milky Way.Comment: 26 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication on Ap
Efficient long-range conduction in cable bacteria through nickel protein wires
Filamentous cable bacteria display long-range electron transport, generating electrical currents over centimeter distances through a highly ordered network of fibers embedded in their cell envelope. The conductivity of these periplasmic wires is exceptionally high for a biological material, but their chemical structure and underlying electron transport mechanism remain unresolved. Here, we combine high-resolution microscopy, spectroscopy, and chemical imaging on individual cable bacterium filaments to demonstrate that the periplasmic wires consist of a conductive protein core surrounded by an insulating protein shell layer. The core proteins contain a sulfur-ligated nickel cofactor, and conductivity decreases when nickel is oxidized or selectively removed. The involvement of nickel as the active metal in biological conduction is remarkable, and suggests a hitherto unknown form of electron transport that enables efficient conduction in centimeter-long protein structures
Sequential approach to joint flow-seismic inversion for improved characterization of fractured media
Seismic interpretation of subsurface structures is traditionally performed without any account of flow behavior. Here we present a methodology for characterizing fractured geologic reservoirs by integrating flow and seismic data. The key element of the proposed approach is the identification—within the inversion—of the intimate relation between fracture compliance and fracture transmissivity, which determine the acoustic and flow responses of a fractured reservoir, respectively. Owing to the strong (but highly uncertain) dependence of fracture transmissivity on fracture compliance, the modeled flow response in a fractured reservoir is highly sensitive to the geophysical interpretation. By means of synthetic models, we show that by incorporating flow data (well pressures and tracer breakthrough curves) into the inversion workflow, we can simultaneously reduce the error in the seismic interpretation and improve predictions of the reservoir flow dynamics. While the inversion results are robust with respect to noise in the data for this synthetic example, the applicability of the methodology remains to be tested for more complex synthetic models and field cases.Eni-MIT Energy Initiative Founding Member ProgramKorea (South). Ministry of Land, Transportation and Maritime Affairs (15AWMP-B066761-03
Combined clinical and genomic signatures for the prognosis of early stage non-small cell lung cancer based on gene copy number alterations
BACKGROUND: The development of a more refined prognostic methodology for early non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is an unmet clinical need. An accurate prognostic tool might help to select patients at early stages for adjuvant therapies. RESULTS: A new integrated bioinformatics searching strategy, that combines gene copy number alterations and expression, together with clinical parameters was applied to derive two prognostic genomic signatures. The proposed methodology combines data from patients with and without clinical data with a priori information on the ability of a gene to be a prognostic marker. Two initial candidate sets of 513 and 150 genes for lung adenocarcinoma (ADC) and squamous cell carcinoma (SCC), respectively, were generated by identifying genes which have both: a) significant correlation between copy number and gene expression, and b) significant prognostic value at the gene expression level in external databases. From these candidates, two panels of 7 (ADC) and 5 (SCC) genes were further identified via semi-supervised learning. These panels, together with clinical data (stage, age and sex), were used to construct the ADC and SCC hazard scores combining clinical and genomic data. The signatures were validated in two independent datasets (n = 73 for ADC, n = 97 for SCC), confirming that the prognostic value of both clinical-genomic models is robust, statistically significant (P = 0.008 for ADC and P = 0.019 for SCC) and outperforms both the clinical models (P = 0.060 for ADC and P = 0.121 for SCC) and the genomic models applied separately (P = 0.350 for ADC and P = 0.269 for SCC). CONCLUSION: The present work provides a methodology to generate a robust signature using copy number data that can be potentially used to any cancer. Using it, we found new prognostic scores based on tumor DNA that, jointly with clinical information, are able to predict overall survival (OS) in patients with early-stage ADC and SCC
A many-analysts approach to the relation between religiosity and well-being
The relation between religiosity and well-being is one of the most researched topics in the psychology of religion, yet the directionality and robustness of the effect remains debated. Here, we adopted a many-analysts approach to assess the robustness of this relation based on a new cross-cultural dataset (N=10,535 participants from 24 countries). We recruited 120 analysis teams to investigate (1) whether religious people self-report higher well-being, and (2) whether the relation between religiosity and self-reported well-being depends on perceived cultural norms of religion (i.e., whether it is considered normal and desirable to be religious in a given country). In a two-stage procedure, the teams first created an analysis plan and then executed their planned analysis on the data. For the first research question, all but 3 teams reported positive effect sizes with credible/confidence intervals excluding zero (median reported β=0.120). For the second research question, this was the case for 65% of the teams (median reported β=0.039). While most teams applied (multilevel) linear regression models, there was considerable variability in the choice of items used to construct the independent variables, the dependent variable, and the included covariates
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