2,287 research outputs found
Linear Redshift Distortions and Power in the PSCz Survey
We present a state-of-the-art linear redshift distortion analysis of the
recently published IRAS Point Source Catalog Redshift Survey (PSCz). The
procedure involves linear compression into 4096 Karhunen-Loeve modes culled
from a potential pool of about 3 x 10^5 modes, followed by quadratic
compression into three separate power spectra, the galaxy-galaxy,
galaxy-velocity, and velocity-velocity power spectra. Least squares fitting to
the decorrelated power spectra yields a linear redshift distortion parameter
beta = Omega_m^0.6/b = 0.41(+0.13,-0.12).Comment: Minor changes to agree with accepted version. Slight changes to power
spectrum, including one more point added at large scales, from binning points
formerly discarded as too noisy. 5 pages, including 4 embedded PostScript
figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS Letters (pink pages). Power
spectrum data available at http://casa.colorado.edu/~ajsh/pscz
Staying in place during times of change in Arctic Alaska: The implications of attachment,alternatives, and buffering
The relationship between stability and change in social-ecological systems has received considerable attention in recent years, including the expectation that significant environmental changes will drive observable consequences for individuals, communities, and populations. Migration, as one example of response to adverse economic or environmental changes, has been observed in many places, including parts of the Far North. In Arctic Alaska, a relative lack of demographic or migratory response to rapid environmental and other changes has been observed. To understand why Arctic Alaska appears different, we draw on the literature on environmentally driven migration, focusing on three mechanisms that could account for the lack of response: attachment, the desire to remain in place, or the inability to relocate successfully; alternatives, ways to achieve similar outcomes through different means; and buffering, the reliance on subsidies or use of reserves to delay impacts. Each explanation has different implications for research and policy, indicating a need to further explore the relative contribution that each makes to a given situation in order to develop more effective responses locally and regionally. Given that the Arctic is on the front lines of climate change, these explanations are likely relevant to the ways changes play out in other parts of the world. Our review also underscores the importance of further attention to the details of social dynamics in climate change impacts and responses
Views of the Highway: Infrastructure Reality, Perceptions, and Politics
Transportation infrastructure such as highways and bridges requires upgrades and maintenance. In many U.S. regions, these requirements have surpassed current funding, so new solutions are needed. One obvious though imperfect source is gasoline taxes, but raising these is politically risky, regardless of need. To illuminate this conflict, we analyze data from four random-sample telephone surveys (2016â2018, n = 2,035) that asked residents in the U.S. state of New Hampshire about their perceptions of highway and bridge conditions, and support for gas tax increases. About one third of the respondents counterfactually reported that highway and bridge conditions had improved compared with 10 or 20 years ago. At the county level, subjective perceptions correlate well with actual pavement and bridge conditions. Majorities of respondents also said they would support tax increases of 5 of 10 cents, although support falls off at higher amounts. Support for a tax increase varies not only with the proposed amount, but also with individual characteristicsâespecially political identity. In a structural equation model, infrastructure perceptions serve as an intervening variable between ideology and tax support: if infrastructure is falsely seen as improving, that supports an ideologically favored rejection of taxes. Partisan differences in perceptions of physical conditions, noted previously in other domains such as climate change, pose an unexpected challenge in building public support for transportation infrastructure
The prevalence of axial spondyloarthritis in the UK: a cross-sectional cohort study
Background: Accurate prevalence data are important when interpreting diagnostic tests and planning for the health needs of a population, yet no such data exist for axial spondyloarthritis (axSpA) in the UK. In this cross-sectional cohort study we aimed to estimate the prevalence of axSpA in a UK primary care population. Methods: A validated self-completed questionnaire was used to screen primary care patients with low back pain for inflammatory back pain (IBP). Patients with a verifiable pre-existing diagnosis of axSpA were included as positive cases. All other patients meeting the Assessment of SpondyloArthritis international Society (ASAS) IBP criteria were invited to undergo further assessment including MRI scanning, allowing classification according to the European Spondyloarthropathy Study Group (ESSG) and ASAS axSpA criteria, and the modified New York (mNY) criteria for ankylosing spondylitis (AS). Results: Of 978 questionnaires sent to potential participants 505 were returned (response rate 51.6 %). Six subjects had a prior diagnosis of axSpA, 4 of whom met mNY criteria. Thirty eight of 75 subjects meeting ASAS IBP criteria attended review (mean age 53.5 years, 37 % male). The number of subjects satisfying classification criteria was 23 for ESSG, 3 for ASAS (2 clinical, 1 radiological) and 1 for mNY criteria. This equates to a prevalence of 5.3 % (95 % CI 4.0, 6.8) using ESSG, 1.3 % (95 % CI 0.8, 2.3) using ASAS, 0.66 % (95 % CI 0.28, 1.3) using mNY criteria in chronic back pain patients, and 1.2 % (95 % CI 0.9, 1.4) using ESSG, 0.3 % (95 % CI 0.13, 0.48) using ASAS, 0.15 % (95 % CI 0.02, 0.27) using mNY criteria in the general adult primary care population. Conclusions: These are the first prevalence estimates for axSpA in the UK, and will be of importance in planning for the future healthcare needs of this population. Trial registration: Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN7687321
When do children learn how to select a portion size?
The reduction of portion sizes supports weight-loss. This study looks at whether children have a conceptual understanding of portion size, by studying their ability to manually serve a portion size that corresponds to what they eat. In a clinical setting, discussion around portion size is subjective thus a computerised portion size tool is also trialled, with the portion sizes chosen on the screen being compared to amounts served manually. Children (n=76) age 5-6, 7-8 and 10-11 were asked to rate their hunger (VAS scale), liking (VAS scale) and âideal portion size for lunchâ of eight interactive meal images using a computerised portion size tool. Children then manually self-served and consumed a portion of pasta. Plates were weighed to allow for the calculation of calories served and eaten. A positive correlation was found between manually served food portions and the amount eaten (r =.53, 95%CI [.34, .82, P<.001), indicating that many children were able to anticipate their likely food intake prior to meal onset. A regression model demonstrates that age contributes to 9.4% of the variance in portion size accuracy (t(68)= -2.3, p=.02). There was no relationship between portion size and either hunger or liking. The portion sizes chosen on the computer at lunchtime correlated to the amount manually served overall (r=.34, 95%CI [.07, .55], p<.01), but not in 5-6-year-old children. Manual portion-size selection can be observed in five-year olds and from age seven, childrenâs âvirtualâ responses correlate with their manual portion selections. The application of the computerised portion-size tool requires further development but offers considerable potential
Rethinking Semi-Supervised Medical Image Segmentation: A Variance-Reduction Perspective
For medical image segmentation, contrastive learning is the dominant practice
to improve the quality of visual representations by contrasting semantically
similar and dissimilar pairs of samples. This is enabled by the observation
that without accessing ground truth label, negative examples with truly
dissimilar anatomical features, if sampled, can significantly improve the
performance. In reality, however, these samples may come from similar
anatomical features and the models may struggle to distinguish the minority
tail-class samples, making the tail classes more prone to misclassification,
both of which typically lead to model collapse. In this paper, we propose ARCO,
a semi-supervised contrastive learning (CL) framework with stratified group
sampling theory in medical image segmentation. In particular, we first propose
building ARCO through the concept of variance-reduced estimation, and show that
certain variance-reduction techniques are particularly beneficial in medical
image segmentation tasks with extremely limited labels. Furthermore, we
theoretically prove these sampling techniques are universal in variance
reduction. Finally, we experimentally validate our approaches on three
benchmark datasets with different label settings, and our methods consistently
outperform state-of-the-art semi-supervised methods. Additionally, we augment
the CL frameworks with these sampling techniques and demonstrate significant
gains over previous methods. We believe our work is an important step towards
semi-supervised medical image segmentation by quantifying the limitation of
current self-supervision objectives for accomplishing medical image analysis
tasks
Arctic system on trajectory to new state
The Arctic system is moving toward a new state that falls outside the envelope of glacial-interglacial fluctuations that prevailed during recent Earth history. This future Arctic is likely to have dramatically less permanent ice than exists at present. At the present rate of change, a summer ice-free Arctic Ocean within a century is a real possibility, a state not witnessed for at least a million years. The change appears to be driven largely by feedback-enhanced global climate warming, and there seem to be few, if any processes or feedbacks within the Arctic system that are capable of altering the trajectory toward this âsuper interglacialâ state
Decisionâsupport networks of women newly diagnosed with breast cancer
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/138904/1/cncr30848_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/138904/2/cncr30848.pd
On the evolution of clustering of 24um-selected galaxies
This paper investigates the clustering properties of a complete sample of
1041 24um-selected sources brighter than F[24um]=400 uJy in the overlapping
region between the SWIRE and UKIDSS UDS surveys. We have concentrated on the
two (photometric) interval ranges z=[0.6-1.2] (low-z sample) and z>1.6 (high-z
sample) as it is in these regions were we expect the mid-IR population to be
dominated by intense dust-enshrouded activity such as star formation and black
hole accretion. Investigations of the angular correlation function produce a
correlation length are r0~15.9 Mpc for the high-z sample and r0~8.5 Mpc for the
low-z one. Comparisons with physical models reveal that the high-z sources are
exclusively associated with very massive (M>~10^{13} M_sun)haloes, comparable
to those which locally host groups-to-clusters of galaxies, and are very common
within such (rare) structures. Conversely, lower-z galaxies are found to reside
in smaller halos (M_min~10^{12} M_sun) and to be very rare in such systems.
While recent studies have determined a strong evolution of the 24um luminosity
function between z~2 and z~0, they cannot provide information on the physical
nature of such an evolution. Our clustering results instead indicate that this
is due to the presence of different populations of objects inhabiting different
structures, as active systems at z<~1.5 are found to be exclusively associated
with low-mass galaxies, while very massive sources appear to have concluded
their active phase before this epoch. Finally, we note that the small-scale
clustering data seem to require steep profiles for the distribution of galaxies
within their halos. This is suggestive of close encounters and/or mergers which
could strongly favour both AGN and star-formation activity.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures, to appear in MNRA
Holographic and Wilsonian Renormalization Groups
We develop parallels between the holographic renormalization group in the
bulk and the Wilsonian renormalization group in the dual field theory. Our
philosophy differs from most previous work on the holographic RG; the most
notable feature is the key role of multi-trace operators. We work out the forms
of various single- and double-trace flows. The key question, `what cutoff on
the field theory corresponds to a radial cutoff in the bulk?' is left
unanswered, but by sharpening the analogy between the two sides we identify
possible directions.Comment: 31 pages, 3 figures. v2: Minor clarifications. Added reference
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