723 research outputs found
Prospectus, March 13, 1973
MEDICAL AID MONTH; Number, please?; Action in the pens; W.E.B. DuBois commemoration; Don\u27t shop at A & P; Cruisin\u27 \u2773; True happenings; Letters To The Editor; Federico Fellini\u27s \u27Roma\u27: The Rise & Fall of the Roman Empire, 1932-1972; Baseball Schedule - 1973; Candidate for Board of Trustees; Knickerbockers defeat Hotshots; PC Board summary; Public Education - Equality of opportunityhttps://spark.parkland.edu/prospectus_1973/1010/thumbnail.jp
Precautionary advice about mobile phones: Public understandings and intended responses
The official published version can be obtained from the link below - Copyright @ Taylor & FrancisThere is a widespread academic and policy debate about public responses to precaution in public health campaigns. This paper explores these issues in relation to the precautionary stance adopted in the UK around the regulation of mobile telecommunications. The aim of the paper is to examine the nature of attitudes to precaution, and the way in which these, along with other relevant variables, relate to the intention to adopt relevant behaviours. The results from an experimental study (n = 173) indicate that people distinguish between two dimensions of precaution: firstly in relation to its value or necessity per se and secondly as anchored to notions of governance. The two variables differentially relate to other variables including trust and uncertainty, and are predictive of intended behaviour change indirectly, through worry about mobile phone risks. Precautionary advice was generally interpreted as causing concern rather than providing reassurance. The results suggest that precaution may be considered a valuable stance but this does not mean that it is seen as good governance or that it will reduce concern. Whilst the discourse of precaution is aimed at reducing concern, it appears that the uptake of relevant behaviours is largely triggered by worry
Quantum Electronics
Contains research objectives and summary of research for eight research projects split into three sections and a report on one research project.U. S. Air Force - Office of Scientific Research (Contract F44620-71-C-0051)Joint Services Electronics Program (Contract DAAB07-75-C-1346
Development of Dual-Gain SiPM Boards for Extending the Energy Dynamic Range
Astronomical observations with gamma rays in the range of several hundred keV
to hundreds of MeV currently represent the least explored energy range. To
address this so-called MeV gap, we designed and built a prototype CsI:Tl
calorimeter instrument using a commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) SiPMs and
front-ends which may serve as a subsystem for a larger gamma-ray mission
concept. During development, we observed significant non-linearity in the
energy response. Additionally, using the COTS readout, the calorimeter could
not cover the four orders of magnitude in energy range required for the
telescope. We, therefore, developed dual-gain silicon photomultiplier (SiPM)
boards that make use of two SiPM species that are read out separately to
increase the dynamic energy range of the readout. In this work, we investigate
the SiPM's response with regards to active area ( and
) and various microcell sizes (, , and ). We read out CsI:Tl chunks
using dual-gain SiPMs that utilize microcells for both
SiPM species and demonstrate the concept when tested with high-energy gamma-ray
and proton beams. We also studied the response of $17 \times 17 \times 100 \
\mathrm{mm}^30.25-400 \ \mathrm{MeV}2.5-30 \ \mathrm{MeV}$. This development aims to demonstrate
the concept for future scintillator-based high-energy calorimeters with
applications in gamma-ray astrophysics
Quantum Electronics
Contains research objectives and summary of research on eight research projects split into four sections.Joint Services Electronics Program (Contract DAAB07-76-C-1400)U. S. Air Force - Office of Scientific Research (Grant AFOSR-76-3042)U. S. Air Force - Office of Scientific Research (Contract F44620-76-C-0079
Development of a CsI Calorimeter for the Compton-Pair (ComPair) Balloon-Borne Gamma-Ray Telescope
There is a growing interest in astrophysics to fill in the observational
gamma-ray MeV gap. We, therefore, developed a CsI:Tl calorimeter prototype as a
subsystem to a balloon-based Compton and Pair-production telescope known as
ComPair. ComPair is a technology demonstrator for a gamma-ray telescope in the
MeV range that is comprised of 4 subsystems: the double-sided silicon detector,
virtual Frisch grid CdZnTe, CsI calorimeter, and a plastic-based
anti-coincidence detector. The prototype CsI calorimeter is composed of thirty
CsI logs, each with a geometry of .
The logs are arranged in a hodoscopic fashion with 6 in a row that alternate
directions in each layer. Each log has a resolution of around
full-width-at-half-maximum (FWHM) at with a dynamic energy
range of around . A array of
SensL J-series SiPMs read out each end of the log to estimate the depth of
interaction and energy deposition with signals read out with an IDEAS ROSSPAD.
We also utilize an Arduino to synchronize with the other ComPair subsystems
that comprise the full telescope. This work presents the development and
performance of the calorimeter, its testing in thermal and vacuum conditions,
and results from irradiation by monoenergetic gamma-ray
beams. The CsI calorimeter will fly onboard ComPair as a balloon experiment in
the summer of 2023
Fertility preservation for girls and young women with cancer: population-based validation of criteria for ovarian tissue cryopreservation
This study was partly funded by the UK Medical Research Council grant G1100357 (to RAA). Open Access funded by Department of Health UK.Background: Ovarian tissue cryopreservation with later reimplantation has been shown to preserve fertility in adult women, but this approach remains unproven and experimental in children and adolescents. We aimed to assess the use of the Edinburgh selection criteria for ovarian tissue cryopreservation in girls and young women with cancer to determine whether we are offering this invasive procedure to the patients who are most at risk of premature ovarian insufficiency. Methods: Cryopreservation of ovarian tissue has been selectively offered to girls and young women with cancer who met the Edinburgh selection criteria since 1996. Between Jan 1, 1996, and June 30, 2012, 410 female patients younger than 18 years at diagnosis were treated for cancer (including leukaemia and brain tumours) at the Edinburgh Children's Cancer Centre, which serves the whole South East of Scotland region. We determined the ovarian status of these patients from review of clinical records and classified them as having premature ovarian insufficiency or not, or as unable to be determined. Patients younger than 12 years at time of data cutoff (Jan 31, 2013) were excluded from the analysis. Findings: 34 (8%) of the 410 patients met the Edinburgh selection criteria and were offered ovarian tissue cryopreservation before starting cancer treatment. 13 patients declined the procedure and 21 consented, and the procedure was completed successfully in 20 patients. Of the 20 patients who had ovarian tissue successfully cryopreserved, 14 were available for assessment of ovarian function. Of the 13 patients who had declined the procedure, six were available for assessment of ovarian function. Median age at the time of follow-up for the 20 assessable patients was 16·9 years (IQR 15·5-21·8). Of the 14 assessable patients who had successfully undergone ovarian cryopreservation, six had developed premature ovarian insufficiency at a median age of 13·4 years (IQR 12·5-14·6), one of whom also had a natural pregnancy. Of the six assessable patients who had declined the procedure, one had developed premature ovarian insufficiency. Assessment of ovarian function was possible for 141 of the 376 patients who were not offered cryopreservation; one of these patients had developed premature ovarian insufficiency. The cumulative probability of developing premature ovarian insufficiency after treatment was completed was significantly higher for patients who met the criteria for ovarian tissue cryopreservation than for those who did not (15-year probability 35% [95% CI 10-53] vs 1% [0-2]; pPublisher PDFPeer reviewe
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