225 research outputs found
Bargaining behavior, demographics and nationality: a reconsideration of the experimental evidence
Bargaining behavior appears to vary across nations. What drives these apparent differences? We reconsider the evidence provided by previous experiments, and undertake some new experiments that expand the controls for demographics. We show that inferences about country effects are sensitive to the way in which the data are analyzed and the controls that are incorporated. Separating out differences in initial behavior versus trend shows significant differences in both. Adding interaction effects between countries, gender, and ethnic background shows that cultural differences are more complex than the factors captured by either nationality or gender alone. Some subgroups behave in ways which are clearly closer to the subgame perfect equilibrium prediction than others.
Heart Failure with Transient Left Bundle Branch Block in the Setting of Left Coronary Fistula
Coronary arterial fistulas are rare communications between vessels or chambers of the heart. Although cardiac symptoms associated with fistulas are well described, fistulas are seldom considered in the differential diagnosis of acute myocardial ischemia. We describe the case of a 64-year-old man who presented with left shoulder pain, signs of heart failure, and a new left bundle branch block (LBBB). Cardiac catheterization revealed a small left anterior descending (LAD)-to-pulmonary artery (PA) fistula. Diuresis led to subjective improvement of the patient's symptoms and within several days the LBBB resolved. We hypothesize that the coronary fistula in this patient contributed to transient ischemia of the LAD territory through a coronary steal mechanism. We elected to observe rather than repair the fistula, as his symptoms and ECG changes resolved with treatment of his heart failure
Intramyocardial Hematoma From Blunt Trauma Mimicking Apical Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
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Gadolinium Enhanced MR Coronary Vessel Wall Imaging at 3.0 Tesla
Purpose. We evaluated the influence of the time between low-dose gadolinium (Gd) contrast administration and coronary vessel wall enhancement (LGE) detected by 3T magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in healthy subjects and patients with coronary artery disease (CAD). Materials and Methods. Four healthy subjects (4 men, mean age 29 ± 3 years and eleven CAD patients (6 women, mean age 61 ± 10 years) were studied on a commercial 3.0 Tesla (T) whole-body MR imaging system (Achieva 3.0 T; Philips, Best, The Netherlands). T1-weighted inversion-recovery coronary magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was repeated up to 75 minutes after administration of low-dose Gadolinium (Gd) (0.1 mmol/kg Gd-DTPA). Results. LGE was seen in none of the healthy subjects, however in all of the CAD patients. In CAD patients, fifty-six of 62 (90.3%) segments showed LGE of the coronary artery vessel wall at time-interval 1 after contrast. At time-interval 2, 34 of 42 (81.0%) and at time-interval 3, 29 of 39 evaluable segments (74.4%) were enhanced. Conclusion. In this work, we demonstrate LGE of the coronary artery vessel wall using 3.0 T MRI after a single, low-dose Gd contrast injection in CAD patients but not in healthy subjects. In the majority of the evaluated coronary segments in CAD patients, LGE of the coronary vessel wall was already detectable 30–45 minutes after administration of the contrast agent
Optimization of Drug Prescription and Medication Management in Older Adults with Cardiovascular Disease
Cardiovascular disease increases incrementally with age and elderly patients concomitantly sustain multimorbidities, with resultant prescription of multiple medications. Despite conforming with disease-specific cardiovascular clinical practice guidelines, this polypharmacy predisposes many elderly individuals with cardiovascular disease to adverse drug events and non-adherence. Patient-centered care requires that the clinician explore with each patient his or her goals of care and that this shared decision-making constitutes the basis for optimization of medication management. This approach to aligning therapies with patient preferences is likely to promote patient satisfaction, to limit morbidity, and to favorably affect healthcare costs
An oligofluorene truxene based distributed feedback laser for biosensing applications
The first example of an all-organic oligofluorene truxene based distributed feedback laser for the detection of a specific protein–small molecule interaction is reported. The protein avidin was detected down to View the MathML source1μgmL−1 using our biotin-labelled biosensor platform. This interaction was both selective and reversible when biotin was replaced with desthiobiotin. Avidin detection was not perturbed by Bovine Serum Albumin up to View the MathML source50,000μgmL−1. Our biosensor offers a new detection platform that is both highly sensitive, modular and potentially re-usable
B -> Xs l_i^+ l_j^+ Decays with R-parity Violation
We derive the upper bounds on certain products of R-parity- and
lepton-flavor-violating couplings from B \ra X_s {l_i}^+ {l_j}^- decays.
These modes of B-meson decays can constrain the product combinations of the
couplings with one or more heavy generation indices which are comparable with
or stronger than the present bounds. From the studies of the invariant dilepton
mass spectrum and the forward backward asymmetry of the emitted leptons we note
the possibility of detecting R-parity-violating signals even when the total
decay rate due to R-parity violating couplings is comparable with that in the
standard model and discriminating two types of R-parity-violating signals. The
general expectation of the enhancement of the forward backward asymmetry of the
emitted leptons in the minimal supersymmetric standard model with R-parity may
be corrupted by R-parity violation.Comment: 10 pages, Revtex, 1 table and 2 figure
Please mind the gap: students’ perspectives of the transition in academic skills between A-level and degree level geography
This paper explores first-year undergraduates’ perceptions of the transition from studying geography at pre-university level to studying for a degree. This move is the largest step students make in their education, and the debate about it in the UK has been reignited due to the government’s planned changes to A-level geography. However, missing from most of this debate is an appreciation of the way in which geography students themselves perceive their transition to university. This paper begins to rectify this absence. Using student insights, we show that their main concern is acquiring the higher level skills required for university learning
decays in SUSY models without R-parity
Being strictly forbidden in the standard model, experimental detection of the
lepton flavor violating decays and would constitute an unmistakable indication of new physics. We
study these decays in supersymmetric models without R-parity and without lepton
number. In order to derive order of magnitude predictions for the branching
ratios, we assume a horizontal U(1) symmetry with horizontal charges chosen to
explain the magnitude of fermion masses and quark mixing angles. We find that
the branching ratios for decays with a pair in the final state are
not particularly suppressed with respect to the lepton flavor conserving
channels. In general in these models {\rm B}[b\to\mu^+\mu^-(X)]\lsim {\rm
B}[b(\bar b)\to\tau^+\mu^-(X)] \lsim {\rm B}[b\to\tau^+\tau^-(X)]. While in
some cases the rates for final states can be up to one order of
magnitude larger than the lepton flavor violating channel, due to better
efficiencies for muon detection and to the absence of standard model
contributions, decays into final states appear to be better suited to
reveal this kind of new physics.Comment: 15 pages, LaTeX, 3 ps-figures (uses epsfig.sty) Minor typos
corrected, one normalization factor added to Eq. (3.11). To be published on
Phys. Rev.
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