209 research outputs found

    Optimal sampling design for spatial capture-recapture

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    Spatial capture-recapture (SCR) has emerged as the industry standard for estimating population density by leveraging information from spatial locations of repeat encounters of individuals. The precision of density estimates depends fundamentally on the number and spatial configuration of traps. Despite this knowledge, existing sampling design recommendations are heuristic and their performance remains untested for most practical applications. To address this issue, we propose a genetic algorithm that minimizes any sensible, criteria-based objective function to produce near-optimal sampling designs. To motivate the idea of optimality, we compare the performance of designs optimized using three model-based criteria related to the probability of capture. We use simulation to show that these designs out-perform those based on existing recommendations in terms of bias, precision, and accuracy in the estimation of population size. Our approach, available as a function in the R package oSCR, allows conservation practitioners and researchers to generate customized and improved sampling designs for wildlife monitoring.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe

    Prehospital randomised assessment of a mechanical compression device in cardiac arrest (PaRAMeDIC) trial protocol

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    Background Survival after out-of-hospital cardiac arrest is closely linked to the quality of CPR, but in real life, resuscitation during pre-hospital care and ambulance transport is often suboptimal. Mechanical chest compression devices deliver consistent chest compressions, are not prone to fatigue and could potentially overcome some of the limitations of manual chest compression. However, there is no high-quality evidence that they improve clinical outcomes, or that they are cost effective. The Pre-hospital Randomised Assessment of a Mechanical Compression Device In Cardiac Arrest (PARAMEDIC) trial is a pragmatic cluster randomised study of the LUCAS-2 device in adult patients with non-traumatic out-of-hospital cardiac arrest. Methods The primary objective of this trial is to evaluate the effect of chest compression using LUCAS-2 on mortality at 30 days post out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, compared with manual chest compression. Secondary objectives of the study are to evaluate the effects of LUCAS-2 on survival to 12 months, cognitive and quality of life outcomes and cost-effectiveness. Methods: Ambulance service vehicles will be randomised to either manual compression (control) or LUCAS arms. Adult patients in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, attended by a trial vehicle will be eligible for inclusion. Patients with traumatic cardiac arrest or who are pregnant will be excluded. The trial will recruit approximately 4000 patients from England, Wales and Scotland. A waiver of initial consent has been approved by the Research Ethics Committees. Consent will be sought from survivors for participation in the follow-up phase. Conclusion The trial will assess the clinical and cost effectiveness of the LUCAS-2 mechanical chest compression device. Trial Registration: The trial is registered on the International Standard Randomised Controlled Trial Number Registry (ISRCTN08233942)

    Power-efficiency enhanced thermally tunable Bragg grating for silica-on-silicon photonics

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    A thermally tunable Bragg grating device has been fabricated in a silica-on-silicon integrated optical chip, incorporating a suspended microbeam improving power efficiency. A waveguide and Bragg grating are defined through the middle of the microbeam via direct ultraviolet writing. A tuning range of 0.4 nm (50 GHz) is demonstrated at the telecommunication wavelength of 1550 nm. Power consumption during wavelength tuning is measured at 45 pm/mW, which is a factor of 90 better than reported values for similar bulk thermally tuned silica-on-silicon planar devices. The response time to a step change in heating is longer by a similar factor, as expected for a highly power-efficient device. The fabrication procedure involves a deep micromilling process, as well as wet etching and metal deposition. With this response, the device would be suitable for trimming applications and wherever low modulation frequencies are acceptable. A four-point-probe-based temperature measurement was also done to ascertain the temperature reached during tuning and found an average volume temperature of 48 °C, corresponding to 0.4 nm of tuning. The role of stress-induced buckling in device fabrication is included

    Conformal Points and Duality of Non-Abelian Thirring Models and Interacting WZNW Models

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    We show that the strong coupling phase of the non-Abelian Thirring model is dual to the weak-coupling phase of a system of two WZNW models coupled to each other through a current-current interaction. This latter system is integrable and is related to a perturbed conformal field theory which, in the large ∣k∣|k| limit, has a nontrivial zero of the perturbation-parameter beta-function. The non-Abelian Thirring model reduces to a free fermion theory plus a topological field theory at this critical point, which should therefore be identified with the isoscalar Dashen-Frishman conformal point. The relationship with the Gross-Neveu model is discussed.Comment: This is a version which will appear in Nucl. Phys.

    ShaneAO: wide science spectrum adaptive optics system for the Lick Observatory

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    A new high-order adaptive optics system is now being commissioned at the Lick Observatory Shane 3-meter telescope in California. This system uses a high return efficiency sodium beacon and a combination of low and high-order deformable mirrors to achieve diffraction-limited imaging over a wide spectrum of infrared science wavelengths covering 0.8 to 2.2 microns. We present the design performance goals and the first on-sky test results. We discuss several innovations that make this system a pathfinder for next generation AO systems. These include a unique woofer-tweeter control that provides full dynamic range correction from tip/tilt to 16 cycles, variable pupil sampling wavefront sensor, new enhanced silver coatings developed at UC Observatories that improve science and LGS throughput, and tight mechanical rigidity that enables a multi-hour diffraction- limited exposure in LGS mode for faint object spectroscopy science.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures. Presented at SPIE Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation conference, paper 9148-7

    Reprocessing with GANEX:Methodology for Ligand Radiation Tolerance Testing

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    Results demonstrating the methodology for testing the radiation tolerance of organic ligands are presented. A high activity sealed source was used to irradiate samples which were sequentially removed and analysed using a sensitive mass spectrometer. The degradation of a candidate ligand for a new reprocessing process “GANEX” was found to be around 50% after 567 kGy exposure to gamma from Cs-137.<br/

    Gold amides as anticancer drugs: synthesis and activity studies

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    Modular gold amide chemotherapeutics: Access to modern chemotherapeutics with robust and flexible synthetic routes that are amenable to extensive customisation is a key requirement in drug synthesis and discovery. A class of chiral gold amide complexes featuring amino acid derived ligands is reported herein. They all exhibit in vitro cytotoxicity against two slow growing breast cancer cell lines with limited toxicity towards normal epithelial cells
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