7,575 research outputs found

    Explaining Political Violence Against Civilians in Northern Ireland: A Contention-Oriented Approach

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    In contrast to prevalent theories of terrorism, this study develops a contention-oriented approach where levels and forms of political violence against civilians depend upon: (1) the strategies of combatants; (2) the means of contention; (3) the locations of allies and opponents; (4) the collective identities of combatants; and (5) the dynamics of contention, including whether or not representatives of paramilitary organizations are included in formal peace processes. Quantitative analyses of a multi-source database of civilian deaths taking place in Northern Ireland between 1966 and 2006 offer preliminary support for this approach. The study underscores the insights provided by theories and methods used in the fields of social movements research and peace and conflict studies

    M.B. Grace to Sir (30 September 1962)

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    https://egrove.olemiss.edu/mercorr_anti/1012/thumbnail.jp

    Obesity Prevalence and Dietary Intake of Antioxidants in Native American Adolescents

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    Antioxidants are well known for possessing anti-inflammatory properties, which can reduce the risk of chronic disease and obesity. However, very little research has been done to examine antioxidant intake among adolescent minority populations such as Native American adolescents. Our study examined the significance of antioxidant intake among Native American adolescents at an urban residential high school in Southern California. Our study population consisted of 183 male and female Native American adolescents, 14-18 years of age, representing 43 tribes from across the United States. Students' primary source of meals was provided by the school food service. Based on the BMI calculations, the rate of obesity within our population was 38% for males and 40% for females, more than two-fold the national rate indicated by NHANESIII data. We used the Harvard School of Public Health Youth/Adolescent Questionnaire (HSPH YAQ), a semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire, to examine antioxidant nutrient intake and evaluate the differences in the intake between normal and obese weight students. Statistical analysis of the results showed that intakes of vitamins C, E, and lycopene were the antioxidant nutrients found to be significantly different between normal and obese weight students and intakes of these nutrients were found to be higher among normal weight students (p-values = 0.02451, 0.00847, and 0.04928, respectively). These results suggest that dietary intake of antioxidants could be increased among Native American adolescents. Further research is needed to confirm our findings and identify effective ways for school food service to incorporate antioxidant rich foods into school menus

    Electro-Deposition of Polymer Chains on an Adsorbing Wall: Density Profiles and Wall Coverage

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    Growth of polymer density in an electro-deposition model of polymer chains on an impenetrable wall is studied on a two dimensional discrete lattice using a Monte Carlo simulation. Polymer-polymer repulsion and polymer-wall attraction for the adsorbing wall (along with the neutral and repulsive interactions) are considered in an external field. Effects of the field strength (B), temperature (T), and chain length (L-c) on the density profile of the polymer chains and wall coverage are investigated. The spatial density profile shows onset of oscillation near the wall at a characteristic field (B-c) which depends on chain length and temperature, In low field, adsorption-co-desorption transition at the wall appear on increasing the temperature (unlike neutral and repulsive walls). In high field regime, on the other hand, a non-monotonic dependence of coverage on temperature is observed with a maximum at a temperature (T-m) which increases on increasing B. The equilibrium value of the polymer density (P-d) shows a power-law decay with the chain length, p(d) similar to L-c(-alpha), at the wall and in the bulk with corresponding values of the exponent alpha(w) and alpha(B); these exponents differ substantially and depend on B, T, and L-c. The coverage decays monotonically with the chain length at a constant temperature and field. (C) 1997 American Institute of Physics. [S0021-9606(97)51347-X]

    Nonuniversal Scaling and Conformational Crossover of Polymer Chains in an Electrophoretic Deposition

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    A computer simulation model of electrodeposition of polymer chains on an impenetrable wall is used to evaluate the power-law scaling exponents (νx(y)) for the longitudinal and transverse spread, Rgx(y)∼Lcνx(y); we find that the exponents νx(y) depend on the field strength, i.e., they are nonuniversal. A conformational crossover is observed for the transverse spread from the bulk with νy≃1/3-2/3 to the wall with νy≃2/3-1. A similar crossover also occurs for the longitudinal component of Rg but with an opposite trend, i.e., magnitude of νx is larger in bulk than at the wall

    Conformation of Interacting Polymer Chains: Effects of Temperature, Bias, Polymer Concentration, and Porosity

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    The conformations of interacting polymer chains driven by a biased field in heterogeneous media are studied using Monte Carlo simulations in three dimensions. In addition to excluded volume, a nearest-neighbor interaction is considered with polymer-polymer repulsion and polymer-solvent attraction. Two types of heterogeneous media are considered: (i) a homogeneous-annealed system consisting of mobile polymer chains and solvents and (ii) quenched porous media, generated by adding a random distribution of quenched barriers. Effects of polymer concentration (p), bias (B), temperature (T), and porosity (ps) on the magnitude of the radius of gyration (Rg) of the chains and its scaling with the chain length (Lc) are studied. In an annealed system, we observe a crossover in power-law variation of the radius of gyration with the chain length, Rg∼Lyc, from an extended conformation with γ≃0.7 at low bias (B=0.2), low p, and high T to a collapsed conformation with γ∼0.20-0.31 at high bias (B⩾0.5) and low T. In a quenched porous medium, we observe a somewhat lower value of the power-law exponent, γ∼0.60-0.70, from its annealed value at high T and low bias. At low temperatures, in contrast, the magnitude of γ∼0.39-0.47 is enhanced with respect to its annealed value. Various nonlinear responses of Rg to bias are observed in different ranges of B, Lc, ps and T. In particular, we find that the response is nonmonotonic at low temperatures (T≃0.1) in the annealed system and at high temperatures (T≃100.0) in a porous medium with a relatively high barrier concentration (pb⩾0.3

    Discrete-to-Continuum Simulation Approach to Polymer Chain Systems: Subdiffusion, Segregation, and Chain Folding

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    A discrete-to-continuum approach is introduced to study the static and dynamic properties of polymer chain systems with a bead-spring chain model in two dimensions. A finitely extensible nonlinear elastic potential is used for the bond between the consecutive beads with the Lennard-Jones (LJ) potential with smaller (Rc=21/6σ=0.95) and larger (Rc=2.5σ=2.1) values of the upper cutoff for the nonbonding interaction among the neighboring beads. We find that chains segregate at temperature T =1.0 with Rc=2.1 and remain desegregated with Rc=0.95. At low temperature (T=0.2), chains become folded, in a ribbonlike conformation, unlike random and self-avoiding walk conformations at T=1.0. The power-law dependence of the rms displacements of the center of mass (Rc.m.) of the chains and their center node (Rcn) with time are nonuniversal, with the range of exponents v1≃045−0.25 and v2≃0.30−0.10, respectively. Both radius of gyration (Rg) and average bond length (⧼I⧽) decrease on increasing the range of interaction (Rc), consistent with the extended state in good solvent to collapsed state in poor solvent description of the polymer chains. Analysis of the radial distribution function supports these observations

    Computer Simulation Study of the Permeability of Driven Polymers Through Porous Media

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    A computer simulation model is used to study the permeability of polymer chains driven by a biased flow field through a porous medium in two dimensions. The chains are modeled by constrained self-avoiding walks, which reptate through the heterogeneous medium with a biased probability imposed by the driven field. A linear response description is used to evaluate an effective permeability. The permeability σ shows an unusual decay behavior on reducing the porosity ps. We find that the permeability decreases on increasing the bias above a characteristic value Bc. This characteristic bias shows a logarithmic decay on reducing the porosity, Bc∼−γ(1−ps), with γ≃0.35. The permeability decays with the length (Lc) of the chains; at low polymer concentration it shows a power-law decay, σ∼L−αc, the exponent α is nonuniversal and depends on both the porosity as well as the biased field (α≃1.64–3.73). We find that the biased field B and porosity ps affect the conformation of the chains. The radius of gyration Rg of the chains increases with increasing biased field in high porosity, while it decreases on decreasing the porosity at high field bias. In high porosity and low polymer concentrations, the radius of gyration shows a power-law dependence on the chain length, Rg∼Lvc, with ν depending on the biased field (ν≃0.84–0.94). In order to explain the deviations from the Darcy Law for the polymer flow, a plausible nonlinear response theory via a power-law response formula is suggested; we point out the associated complexities involved in addressing the flow problems in driven polymers

    Characteristics of Driven Polymer Surfaces: Growth and Roughness

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    Using a Monte Carlo simulation, the growth and roughness characteristics of polymer surfaces are studied in 2 + 1 dimensions. Kink-jump and reptation dynamics are used to move polymer chains under a driving field where they deposit onto an impenetrable attractive wall. Effects of field (E) chain length (Lc) and the substrate size (L) on the growing surfaces are studied. In low field, the interface width (W) shows a crossover from one power-law growth in time (W∼tβ1) to another (W∼tβ2 before reaching its asymptotic value (Ws), with β1(∼0.5±0.1)\u3cβ2(∼0.6-1.0). For short chain lengths (Lc=4), the saturated width (Ws) is independent of the substrate length (L), while for long chain lengths, Ws decays with L before becoming independent at large L. Ws depends strongly on the magnitude of the field: for short chains, Ws∼E-δ with δ≃0.4, while for long chains, it varies nonmonotonically with E

    Geographic and Age-Based Variations in Medicare Reimbursement Among ASSH Members.

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    Background: The purpose of this study was to investigate how American Society for Surgery of the Hand (ASSH) members\u27 Medicare reimbursement depends on their geographical location and number of years in practice. Methods: Demographic data for surgeons who were active members of the ASSH in 2012 were obtained using information publicly available through the US Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). Hand-surgeons-per-capita and average reimbursement per surgeon were calculated for each state. Regression analysis was performed to determine a relationship between (1) each state\u27s average reimbursement versus the number of ASSH members in that state, (2) average reimbursement versus number of hand surgeons per capita, and (3) total reimbursement from Medicare versus number of years in practice. Analysis of variance (ANOVA) was used to detect a difference in reimbursement based on categorical range of years as an ASSH member. Results: A total of 1667 ASSH members satisfied inclusion in this study. Although there was significant variation among states\u27 average reimbursement, reimbursement was not significantly correlated with the state\u27s hand surgeons per capita or total number of hand surgeons in that given state. Correlation between years as an ASSH member and average reimbursement was significant but non-linear; the highest reimbursements were seen in surgeons who had been ASSH members from 8 to 20 years. Conclusions: Peak reimbursement from Medicare for ASSH members appears to be related to the time of surgeons\u27 peak operative volume, rather than any age-based bias for or against treating Medicare beneficiaries. In addition, though geographic variation in reimbursement does exist, this does not appear to correlate with density or availability of hand surgeons
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