4,650 research outputs found
Precision laser range finder system design for Advanced Technology Laboratory applications
Preliminary system design of a pulsed precision ruby laser rangefinder system is presented which has a potential range resolution of 0.4 cm when atmospheric effects are negligible. The system being proposed for flight testing on the advanced technology laboratory (ATL) consists of a modelocked ruby laser transmitter, course and vernier rangefinder receivers, optical beacon retroreflector tracking system, and a network of ATL tracking retroreflectors. Performance calculations indicate that spacecraft to ground ranging accuracies of 1 to 2 cm are possible
A novel laser ranging system for measurement of ground-to-satellite distances
A technique was developed for improving the precision of laser ranging measurements of ground-to-satellite distances. The method employs a mode-locked laser transmitter and utilizes an image converter tube equipped with deflection plates in measuring the time of flight of the laser pulse to a distant retroreflector and back. Samples of the outgoing and returning light pulses are focussed on the photocathode of the image converter tube, whose deflection plates are driven by a high-voltage 120 MHz sine wave derived from a very stable oscillator. From the relative positions of the images produced at the output phosphor by the two light pulses, it is possible to make a precise determination of the fractional amount by which the time of flight exceeds some large integral multiple of the period of the deflection sinusoid
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Effective patient–clinician interaction to improve treatment outcomes for patients with psychosis: a mixed-methods design
BACKGROUND:At least 100,000 patients with schizophrenia receive care from community mental health teams (CMHTs) in England. These patients have regular meetings with clinicians, who assess them, engage them in treatment and co-ordinate care. As these routine meetings are not commonly guided by research evidence, a new intervention, DIALOG, was previously designed to structure consultations. Using a hand-held computer, clinicians asked patients to rate their satisfaction with eight life domains and three treatment aspects, and to indicate whether or not additional help was needed in each area, with responses being graphically displayed and compared with previous ratings. In a European multicentre trial, the intervention improved patients’ quality of life over a 1-year period. The current programme builds on this research by further developing DIALOG in the UK. RESEARCH QUESTIONS:(1) How can the practical procedure of the intervention be improved, including the software used and the design of the user interface? (2) How can elements of resource-oriented interventions be incorporated into a clinician manual and training programme for a new, more extensive ‘DIALOG+’ intervention? (3) How effective and cost-effective is the new DIALOG+ intervention in improving treatment outcomes for patients with schizophrenia or a related disorder? (4) What are the views of patients and clinicians regarding the new DIALOG+ intervention? METHODS:We produced new software on a tablet computer for CMHTs in the NHS, informed by analysis of videos of DIALOG sessions from the original trial and six focus groups with 18 patients with psychosis. We developed the new ‘DIALOG+’ intervention in consultation with experts, incorporating principles of solution-focused therapy when responding to patients’ ratings and specifying the procedure in a manual and training programme for clinicians. We conducted an exploratory cluster randomised controlled trial with 49 clinicians and 179 patients with psychosis in East London NHS Foundation Trust, comparing DIALOG+ with an active control. Clinicians working as care co-ordinators in CMHTs (along with their patients) were cluster randomised 1 : 1 to either DIALOG+ or treatment as usual plus an active control, to prevent contamination. Intervention and control were to be administered monthly for 6 months, with data collected at baseline and at 3, 6 and 12 months following randomisation. The primary outcome was subjective quality of life as measured on the Manchester Short Assessment of Quality of Life; secondary outcomes were also measured. We also established the cost-effectiveness of the DIALOG intervention using data from the Client Service Receipt Inventory, which records patients’ retrospective reports of using health- and social-care services, including hospital services, outpatient services and medication, in the 3 months prior to each time point. Data were supplemented by the clinical notes in patients’ medical records to improve accuracy. We conducted an exploratory thematic analysis of 16 video-recorded DIALOG+ sessions and measured adherence in these videos using a specially developed adherence scale. We conducted focus groups with patients (n = 19) and clinicians (n = 19) about their experiences of the intervention, and conducted thematic analyses. We disseminated the findings and made the application (app), manual and training freely available, as well as producing a protocol for a definitive trial. RESULTS:Patients receiving the new intervention showed more favourable quality of life in the DIALOG+ group after 3 months (effect size: Cohen’s d = 0.34), after 6 months (Cohen’s d = 0.29) and after 12 months (Cohen’s d = 0.34). An analysis of video-recorded DIALOG+ sessions showed inconsistent implementation, with adherence to the intervention being a little over half of the possible score. Patients and clinicians from the DIALOG+ arm of the trial reported many positive experiences with the intervention, including better self-expression and improved efficiency of meetings. Difficulties reported with the intervention were addressed by further refining the DIALOG+ manual and training. Cost-effectiveness analyses found a 72% likelihood that the intervention both improved outcomes and saved costs. LIMITATIONS:The research was conducted solely in urban east London, meaning that the results may not be broadly generalisable to other settings. CONCLUSIONS:(1) Although services might consider adopting DIALOG+ based on the existing evidence, a definitive trial appears warranted; (2) applying DIALOG+ to patient groups with other mental disorders may be considered, and to groups with physical health problems; (3) a more flexible use with variable intervals might help to make the intervention even more acceptable and effective; (4) more process evaluation is required to identify what mechanisms precisely are involved in the improvements seen in the intervention group in the trial; and (5) what appears to make DIALOG+ effective is that it is not a separate treatment and not a technology that is administered by a specialist; rather, it changes and utilises the existing therapeutic relationship between patients and clinicians in CMHTs to initiate positive change, helping the patients to improve their quality of life. FUTURE RESEARCH:Future studies should include a definitive trial on DIALOG+ and test the effectiveness of the intervention with other populations, such as people with depression. TRIAL REGISTRATION:Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN34757603. FUNDING:The National Institute for Health Research Programme Grants for Applied Research programme
Effects of age and group size on habitat selection and activity level in Xenopus laevis tadpoles
The Effect of Ethnicity on Neuropsychological Test Performance of Former NFL Athletes
Objective: To investigate the effect of ethnicity on neuropsychological test performance by specifically exploring differences between white and black former NFL athletes on subtests of the WAIS-IV. Participants and Methods: Data was derived from a de-identified database in Florida consisting of 63 former NFL athletes (Mage=50.38; SD=11.57); 28 white and 35 black. Participants completed the following subtests of the WAIS-IV: Block Design, Similarities, Digit Span, Matrix Reasoning, Arithmetic, Symbol Search, Visual Puzzles, Coding, and Cancellation. Results: One-Way ANOVA yielded a significant effect between ethnicity and performance on several subtests. Black athletes had significantly lower scaled scores than white athletes on Block Design F(1,61)=14.266, p\u3c.001, Similarities F(1,61)=5.904, p=.018, Digit Span F(1,61)=8.985, p=.004, Arithmetic F(1,61)=16.07, p\u3c.001 and Visual Puzzles F(1,61)=16.682, p\u3c .001. No effect of ethnicity was seen on performance of Matrix Reasoning F(1,61)=2.937, p=.092, Symbol Search F(1,61)=3.619, p=.062, Coding F(1,61)=3.032, p=.087 or Cancellation F(1,61)=2.289, p=.136. Conclusions: Results reveal significant differences between white and black athletes on all subtests of the WAIS-IV but those from the Processing Speed Scale and Matrix Reasoning. These findings align with previous literature that found white individuals to outperform African-Americans on verbal and non-verbal tasks after controlling for socioeconomic and demographic variables (Manly & Jacobs, 2002). These differences may also be a reflection of the WAIS-IV’s psychometric properties and it is significant to consider the normative sample used may not be appropriate for African-Americans. This study highlights the need for future research to identify how ethnicity specifically influences performance, sheds light on the importance of considering cultural factors when interpreting test results, and serves as a call to action to further understand how and why minorities may not be accurately represented in neuropsychological testing
Acid Vapor Weathering of Apatite and Implications for Mars
Phosphorus is an essential nutrient for terrestrial life, and therefore may be important in characterizing habitability on Mars. In addition, phosphate mobility on Mars has been postulated as an indicator of early aqueous activity [1]. Rock surfaces analyzed by the Spirit Mars Exploration Rover indicate elemental concentrations consistent with the loss of a phosphate-containing mineral [2], and the highly altered Paso Robles deposit contains ~5% P2O5, modeled as 8-10 % phosphate [3]. Depending on the pH of the solution, phosphate can exist as one of four charge states, which can affect its solubility, reactivity and mobility. Phosphate may therefore prove a useful and interesting tracer of alteration conditions on Mars. Acid vapor weathering has been previously studied as a potentially important process on Mars [4-6], and Paso Robles may have been formed by reaction of volcanic vapors with phosphate-bearing rock [3, 7]. Here we present preliminary results of acid vapor reactions in a Parr vessel [6] using fluorapatite, olivine and glass as single phases and in a mixture
Angle-resolved and core-level photoemission study of interfacing the topological insulator Bi1.5Sb0.5Te1.7Se1.3 with Ag, Nb and Fe
Interfaces between a bulk-insulating topological insulator (TI) and metallic
adatoms have been studied using high-resolution, angle-resolved and core-level
photoemission. Fe, Nb and Ag were evaporated onto Bi1.5Sb0.5Te1.7Se1.3 (BSTS)
surfaces both at room temperature and 38K. The coverage- and
temperature-dependence of the adsorption and interfacial formation process have
been investigated, highlighting the effects of the overlayer growth on the
occupied electronic structure of the TI. For all coverages at room temperature
and for those equivalent to less than 0.1 monolayer at low temperature all
three metals lead to a downward shift of the TI's bands with respect to the
Fermi level. At room temperature Ag appears to intercalate efficiently into the
van der Waals gap of BSTS, accompanied by low-level substitution of the Te/Se
atoms of the termination layer of the crystal. This Te/Se substitution with
silver increases significantly for low temperature adsorption, and can even
dominate the electrostatic environment of the Bi/Sb atoms in the BSTS
near-surface region. On the other hand, Fe and Nb evaporants remain close to
the termination layer of the crystal. On room temperature deposition, they
initially substitute isoelectronically for Bi as a function of coverage, before
substituting for Te/Se atoms. For low temperature deposition, Fe and Nb are too
immobile for substitution processes and show a behaviour consistent with
clustering on the surface. For both Ag and Fe/Nb, these differing adsorption
pathways leads to the qualitatively similar and remarkable behavior for low
temperature deposition that the chemical potential first moves upward (n-type
dopant behavior) and then downward (p-type behavior) on increasing coverage.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures. In our Phys. Rev. B manuscript an error was made
in formulating the last sentence of the abstract that, unfortunately, was
missed in the page proofs. Version 2 on arxiv has the correct formulation of
this sentenc
A general moment NRIXS approach to the determination of equilibrium Fe isotopic fractionation factors: application to goethite and jarosite
We measured the reduced partition function ratios for iron isotopes in
goethite FeO(OH), potassium-jarosite KFe3(SO4)2(OH)6, and hydronium-jarosite
(H3O)Fe3(SO4)2(OH)6, by Nuclear Resonant Inelastic X-Ray Scattering (NRIXS,
also known as Nuclear Resonance Vibrational Spectroscopy -NRVS- or Nuclear
Inelastic Scattering -NIS) at the Advanced Photon Source. These measurements
were made on synthetic minerals enriched in 57Fe. A new method (i.e., the
general moment approach) is presented to calculate {\beta}-factors from the
moments of the NRIXS spectrum S(E). The first term in the moment expansion
controls iron isotopic fractionation at high temperature and corresponds to the
mean force constant of the iron bonds, a quantity that is readily measured and
often reported in NRIXS studies.Comment: 38 pages, 2 tables, 8 figures. In press at Geochimica et Cosmochimica
Acta. Appendix C contains new derivations relating the moments of the iron
PDOS to the moments of the excitation probability function measured in
Nuclear Resonant Inelastic X-ray Scatterin
Simultaneous Absolute Timing of the Crab Pulsar at Radio and Optical Wavelengths
The Crab pulsar emits across a large part of the electromagnetic spectrum.
Determining the time delay between the emission at different wavelengths will
allow to better constrain the site and mechanism of the emission. We have
simultaneously observed the Crab Pulsar in the optical with S-Cam, an
instrument based on Superconducting Tunneling Junctions (STJs) with s time
resolution and at 2 GHz using the Nan\c{c}ay radio telescope with an instrument
doing coherent dedispersion and able to record giant pulses data. We have
studied the delay between the radio and optical pulse using simultaneously
obtained data therefore reducing possible uncertainties present in previous
observations. We determined the arrival times of the (mean) optical and radio
pulse and compared them using the tempo2 software package. We present the most
accurate value for the optical-radio lag of 255 21 s and suggest the
likelihood of a spectral dependence to the excess optical emission asociated
with giant radio pulses.Comment: 8 pages; accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysic
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