260 research outputs found

    Mass-Radius Relationships for Solid Exoplanets

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    We use new interior models of cold planets to investigate the mass-radius relationships of solid exoplanets, considering planets made primarily of iron, silicates, water, and carbon compounds. We find that the mass-radius relationships for cold terrestrial-mass planets of all compositions we considered follow a generic functional form that is not a simple power law: log10Rs=k1+1/3log10(Ms)k2Msk3\log_{10} R_s = k_1 + 1/3 \log_{10}(M_s) - k_2 M_s^{k_3} for up to Mp20MM_p \approx 20 M_{\oplus}, where MsM_s and RsR_s are scaled mass and radius values. This functional form arises because the common building blocks of solid planets all have equations of state that are well approximated by a modified polytrope of the form ρ=ρ0+cPn\rho = \rho_0 + c P^n. We find that highly detailed planet interior models, including temperature structure and phase changes, are not necessary to derive solid exoplanet bulk composition from mass and radius measurements. For solid exoplanets with no substantial atmosphere we have also found that: with 5% fractional uncertainty in planet mass and radius it is possible to distinguish among planets composed predominantly of iron or silicates or water ice but not more detailed compositions; with \sim~5% uncertainty water ice planets with 25\gtrsim 25% water by mass may be identified; the minimum plausible planet size for a given mass is that of a pure iron planet; and carbon planet mass-radius relationships overlap with those of silicate and water planets due to similar zero-pressure densities and equations of state. We propose a definition of "super Earths'' based on the clear distinction in radii between planets with significant gas envelopes and those without.Comment: ApJ, in press, 33 pages including 16 figure

    Fluency Training in Phoneme Blending: A Preliminary Study of Generalized Effects

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    We examined the generalized effects of training children to fluently blend phonemes of words containing target vowel teams on their reading of trained and untrained words in lists and passages. Three second-grade students participated. A subset of words containing each of 3 target vowel teams (aw, oi, and au) was trained in lists, and generalization was assessed to untrained words in lists, trained and untrained words in target passages, and novel words in generalization passages. A multiple probe design across vowel teams revealed generalized increases in oral reading accuracy for target words presented in both lists and passages for all 3 students on 2 vowel teams and for 1 student on all 3 vowel teams. Generalized increases in oral reading fluency in both lists and passages were found for all 3 students on the vowel team that was trained to a fluency criterion, with two students showing increases prior to training on the other two vowel teams. Implications of these results for building fluency in prerequisite phonemic awareness skills as an intervention for promoting generalized oral reading fluency are discussed

    Dementia in Stroke Survivors in the Stroke Data Bank Cohort: Prevalence, Incidence, Risk Factors, and Computed Tomographic Findings

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    We Determined the Prevalence of Dementia in 927 Patients with Acute Ischemic Stroke Aged ≥60 Years in the Stroke Data Bank Cohort based on the Examining Neurologist\u27s Best Judgment Diagnostic Agreement among Examiners Was 68% (K=0.34). of 726 Testable Patients, 116 (16%) Were Demented. Prevalence of Dementia Was Related to Age But Not to Sex, Race, Handedness, Educational Level, or Employment Status Before the Stroke. Previous Stroke and Previous Myocardial Infarction Were Related to Prevalence of Dementia Although Hypertension, Diabetes Mellitus, Atrial Fibrillation, and Previous Use of Antithrombotic Drugs Were Not Prevalence of Dementia Was Most Frequent in Patients with Infarcts Due to Large-Artery Atherosclerosis and in Those with Infarcts of Unknown Cause. Computed Tomographic Findings Related to Prevalence of Dementia Included Infarct Number, Infarct Site, and Cortical Atrophy. among 610 Patients Who Were Not Demented at Stroke Onset, We Used Methods of Survival Analysis to Determine the Incidence of Dementia Occurring during the 2-Year Follow-Up. Incidence of Dementia Was Related to Age But Not Sex. based on Logistic Regression Analysis, the Probability of New-Onset Dementia at 1 Year Was 5.4% for a Patient Aged 60 Years and 10.4% for a Patient Aged 90 Years. with a Multivariate Proportional Hazards Model, the Most Important Predictors of Incidence of Dementia Were a Previous Stroke and the Presence of Cortical Atrophy at Stroke Onset. © 1990 American Heart Association, Inc

    Thalamic Stroke: Presentation and Prognosis of Infarcts and Hemorrhages

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    Thalamic Strokes in 62 Patients Selected from the Stroke Data Bank Were Studied to Determine Differences among 18 Infarctions (INF), 23 Localized Hemorrhages (ICH), and 21 Hematomas with Ventricular Extension (IVH). Stupor or Coma at Onset Occurred More Frequently in the IVH (62%) Than in the INF (6%) or ICH (13%) Groups and Was Reflected in Significantly Lower Median Glasgow Coma Scores in the IVH Group (7) Than in the INF (15) and ICH (14) Groups. Although Ocular Movements Were More Frequently Abnormal in the IVH Group Compared with the ICH and INF Groups, No Significant Differences Were Found in the Frequency of Motor or Sensory Deficits. among the 62 Strokes, 32 Had Restricted Lesions of the Posterolateral (N=9), Anterior (N=3), Paramedian (N=7), and Dorsal (N=13) Portions of the Thalamus. Differences in Consciousness and in Motor, Sensory, and Oculomotor Deficits Were Found among the Topographic Subgroups. Stroke-Related Deaths Occurred in 52% of IVH Cases, 13% of ICH Cases, and No Cases of INF. Median Lesion Volume as Detected with Computed Tomography Was Greater in Hemorrhages (INF, 2 Cm3; ICH, 10 Cm3; IVH, 16 Cm3), with Mortality Related to Increasing Hematoma Size. Coma, Glasgow Coma Score Lower Than 9, Weakness Score Greater Than 15 of a Possible 30, Abnormal Ocular Movements, and Fixed Pupils Were Also Associated with Stroke-Related Mortality. We Conclude that the Initial Neurologic Syndrome Does Not Discriminate Infarcts from Intrathalamic Hemorrhages. Ventricular Extension, However, Causes Significantly More Severe Deficits and Higher Mortality. © 1992 Arch Neurol All Rights Reserved

    Early Clinical Differentiation of Cerebral Infarction from Severe Atherosclerotic Stenosis and Cardioembolism

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    Background and Purpose: Hyperacute Cerebral Infarction Trials Require Early Differentiation of Infarction Subtype. Our Aim Was to Determine Clinical Factors Predictive of Infarction Subtype from Data Collected in the Early Hours of Admission. Methods: using the 1,273 Patients Enrolled in the Stroke Data Bank, Stroke Risk Factors and Demographic, Clinical, and Radiological Features Were Compared between the 246 Cardioembolic and 113 Large-Vessel Atherosclerotic Cerebral Infarcts. Results: Stroke Data Bank Definitions Ensured More Transient Ischemic Attacks in Atherosclerotic Infarcts and More Cardiac Disease in Cardioembolic Infarcts, But the Diagnosis Was Distinguished Further using a Logistic Regression Model. Fractional Arm Weakness (Shoulder Different from Hand) (Odds Ratio 3.1, 95% Confidence Interval [CI] 1.6-5.8), Hypertension (Odds Ratio 2.8, CI 1.4-5.3), Diabetes (Odds Ratio 2.5, CI 1.2-5.1) and Male Gender (Odds Ratio=2.2, CI 1.2-4.1) Occurred More Frequently in Patients with Atherosclerotic Than Cardioembolic Infarcts. Reduced Consciousness (Odds Ratio=3.2, CI 1.4-7.3) Was More Frequent in Cardio embolism. for a Male Patient with Hypertension, Diabetes, and Fractional Arm Weakness, the Estimated Odds of an Atherosclerotic Infarction Were 47-Fold that of a Cardioembolic Infarction. Patients with Atherosclerotic Infarcts Were More Likely to Have a Fractional Arm Weakness Regardless of Infarct Size, Whereas, for Those with Cardioembolic Infarctions, Fractional Weakness Was More Frequent in Infarcts Less Than 20 Cc in Volume. Conclusions: Clinical Features that Are Observed at Stroke Onset Can Help Distinguish Cerebral Infarction Subtypes and May Allow for Early Stratification in Therapeutic Trials. © 1992 American Heart Association, Inc

    A "superstorm": When moral panic and new risk discourses converge in the media

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    This is an Author's Accepted Manuscript of an article published in Health, Risk and Society, 15(6), 681-698, 2013, copyright Taylor & Francis, available online at: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/13698575.2013.851180.There has been a proliferation of risk discourses in recent decades but studies of these have been polarised, drawing either on moral panic or new risk frameworks to analyse journalistic discourses. This article opens the theoretical possibility that the two may co-exist and converge in the same scare. I do this by bringing together more recent developments in moral panic thesis, with new risk theory and the concept of media logic. I then apply this theoretical approach to an empirical analysis of how and with what consequences moral panic and new risk type discourses converged in the editorials of four newspaper campaigns against GM food policy in Britain in the late 1990s. The article analyses 112 editorials published between January 1998 and December 2000, supplemented with news stories where these were needed for contextual clarity. This analysis shows that not only did this novel food generate intense media and public reactions; these developed in the absence of the type of concrete details journalists usually look for in risk stories. Media logic is important in understanding how journalists were able to engage and hence how a major scare could be constructed around convergent moral panic and new risk type discourses. The result was a media ‘superstorm’ of sustained coverage in which both types of discourse converged in highly emotive mutually reinforcing ways that resonated in a highly sensitised context. The consequence was acute anxiety, social volatility and the potential for the disruption of policy and social change

    Rapid Responders to Frovatriptan in Acute Migraine Treatment: Results from a Long-Term, Open-Label Study

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    Background. the Chronic Nature of Migraine and the Reliance on Acute Treatment Constitute the Basis of the Present Long-Term, Open-Label Study. Objectives. First, Assessment of the Tolerability and Safety of Frovatriptan, 2.5-7.5 Mg Taken Orally over 24 Hours, for the Acute Treatment of Migraine, Repeatedly over a 12-Month Period. Second, Assessment of the Efficacy and Tolerability of a Second, Double-Blind Dose of 2.5-Mg Frovatriptan, Compared with Placebo, for Nonresponse at 2 Hours after Treatment of Moderate or Severe Headache with 2.5-Mg Frovatriptan. Results. with Regard to the First Attack Treated, 173 (36%) of the 486 Subjects in the Study Did Not Take a Second Dose at 2 Hours for Nonresponse. at 2 Hours and 4 Hours, These Rapid Responders Experienced a Decrease in Headache Intensity from Moderate or Severe to Mild or No Pain in 84% and 98%, Respectively ( Headache Response ). Six Percent of Them Experienced Recurrence of Moderate or Severe Headache within 24 Hours Following a Response at 4 Hours and 12% Took Rescue Medication. the Response, Measured in Terms of Median Time to Complete Migraine Relief, Was Maintained over 30 Subsequent Migraine Attacks, Treated from Attack 2 Onwards over the Course of 12 Months. Conclusion. Frovatriptan Provides a Remarkably Fast and High Headache Response in a Subgroup of More Than One-Third of Migraineurs, with a Very Low 24-Hour Headache Recurrence and Low Rescue Medication Intake. © 2009 American Academy of Pain Medicine

    Analyzing and Mapping Sweat Metabolomics by High-Resolution NMR Spectroscopy

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    The content of human sweat is studied by high-resolution NMR, and the majority of organic components most often found in sweat of conditionally healthy people are identified. Original and simple tools are designed for sweat sampling from different areas of human body. The minimal surface area needed for sampling is in the range of 50–100 cm2. On all the surface parts of the human body examined in this work, the main constituents forming a sweat metabolic profile are lactate, glycerol, pyruvate, and serine. The only exception is the sole of the foot (planta pedis), where trace amounts of glycerol are found. An attempt is made to explain the presence of specified metabolites and their possible origin

    Researching Neoliberal and Neocolonial Assemblages in Early Childhood Education

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    The article provides a discussion of ‘‘researching’’ neoliberalisms and neocolonialisms in white settler colonial societies such as Canada. It addresses the research implications after conceptualizing neoliberalisms as assemblages that are always already implicated in colonial histories. Specifically, the article discusses the need to rethink methodologies when neoliberalisms do not follow coherent directions, the kinds of methodological and research approaches necessary for the fluid and nonlinear movements of neoliberalisms and neocolonialisms, and how neoliberalisms and neocolonialisms as connected assemblages open up early childhood research practices that attend to colonial pastpresents

    The affective atmospheres of surveillance

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    The spaces that surveillance produces can be thought of as ambiguous, entailing elements that are ethereal yet material, geographical yet trans-geographical. Contemporary surveillance systems form numerous connections that involve multiple times, spaces, and bodies. Owing to their ubiquity, normalization, and yet clandestine characteristics, they seem to produce an almost unnoticed aspect of everyday life. The impacts, then, of contemporary surveillance systems appear to be particularly experienced on the margins of consciousness. Thus we find that an empirical analysis of this realm of experience is possible but requires one to look for such things as disruption, disfluency, and hesitation in the text of speech acts rather than clear representation. Through empirical analysis of narratives concerning everyday experiences of living with contemporary surveillance systems, this paper focuses on their possible affective impacts. In turn, we find it more fitting to think about the so-called “surveillance society” in terms of producing “atmospheres” rather than “cultures or assemblages,” and “affects” rather than “emotions.” © 2013, SAGE Publications. All rights reserved
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