3,140 research outputs found
Expanding Space: the Root of all Evil?
While it remains the staple of virtually all cosmological teaching, the
concept of expanding space in explaining the increasing separation of galaxies
has recently come under fire as a dangerous idea whose application leads to the
development of confusion and the establishment of misconceptions. In this
paper, we develop a notion of expanding space that is completely valid as a
framework for the description of the evolution of the universe and whose
application allows an intuitive understanding of the influence of universal
expansion. We also demonstrate how arguments against the concept in general
have failed thus far, as they imbue expanding space with physical properties
not consistent with the expectations of general relativity.Comment: 8 pages, accepted for publication in PAS
The Evolving Educational Challenge: Balancing Patient Numbers, Conference Attendance, Sleep, and Resident Wellness
The Accreditation Council on Graduate Medical Education (ACMGE) 2011 guidelines for resident physicians specifically limited interns to 16-hour shifts and forced a paradigm switch from traditional overnight call.1 In âShift Schedules and Intern Work Hours, Patient Numbers, Conference Attendance, and Sleep at a Single Pediatric Residency Program,â2 we prospectively compared intern work hours, patient numbers, conference attendance, sleep duration, pattern, and quality in 2003 and 2011 ACGME duty hour compliant call schedules at a single pediatric residency program. We concluded that a shift schedule reduced intern work hours and improved sleep duration and pattern. Although intern didactic conference attendance declined significantly during high census months, opportunities for experiential learning in a shift schedule remained robust with unchanged or increased intern patient numbers. Since the publication of our study, the ACGME has removed the 16-hour intern work hour limit, but still requires a maximum 80-hour work week and limits consecutive time on-task to 24 hours, plus 4 hours to transition care.1 Educators aim to provide the best clinical education for residents, while meeting requirements. In this progress report, we consider our study's findings in light of what has been published since October 2016 and discuss innovative scheduling, didactic and experiential resident education, resident sleep, and wellness and areas for future work
Toxicological Studies on Aquatic Contaminants Originating from Coal Production and Utilization: The Induction of Tolerance to Silver in Laboratory Populations of Fish and the Chronic Toxicity of Nickel to Fish Early Life Stages
Aquatic toxicity studies were performed on two important coal-derived contaminants, silver and nickel. Silver was investigated with regard to metal-induced tolerance in laboratory populations of the fathead minnow (Pimephales promelas). Fish were exposed to acute silver concentrations following acclimation to sublethal exposures of this metal. Based on median lethal times (LT50), animals which had received 14 days prior exposure to 1.5 and 15 ÎŒg Ag/L were three to four times more resistant to silver than were previously unexposed organisms. This metal-induced resistance was not a sustained response. After organisms which had been acclimated to 15 ÎŒg/L had been transferred to clean water for two weeks, LT50 values determined with these animals were statistically indistinguishable from those calculated with non-acclimated control fish. With respect to nickel, a 32-day continuous-flow test was performed with the fathead minnow. Nickel was administered in duplicate at six exposure concentrations ranging from 0.038 to 0.733 mg/Lin medium-hard water (100 mg CaC03/L). Animal test responses included mortality, teratogenesis, and growth. Based on frequencies of mortality after 32 days of continuous exposure, significant effects were recorded at a nickel concentration of 0.120 mg/L, and the no observed effect concentration (NOEC) was determined to be 0.057 mg Ni/L
Challenges of Profile Likelihood Evaluation in Multi-Dimensional SUSY Scans
Statistical inference of the fundamental parameters of supersymmetric
theories is a challenging and active endeavor. Several sophisticated algorithms
have been employed to this end. While Markov-Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) and
nested sampling techniques are geared towards Bayesian inference, they have
also been used to estimate frequentist confidence intervals based on the
profile likelihood ratio. We investigate the performance and appropriate
configuration of MultiNest, a nested sampling based algorithm, when used for
profile likelihood-based analyses both on toy models and on the parameter space
of the Constrained MSSM. We find that while the standard configuration is
appropriate for an accurate reconstruction of the Bayesian posterior, the
profile likelihood is poorly approximated. We identify a more appropriate
MultiNest configuration for profile likelihood analyses, which gives an
excellent exploration of the profile likelihood (albeit at a larger
computational cost), including the identification of the global maximum
likelihood value. We conclude that with the appropriate configuration MultiNest
is a suitable tool for profile likelihood studies, indicating previous claims
to the contrary are not well founded.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figures, 1 table; minor changes following referee report.
Matches version accepted by JHE
Delayed self-recognition in children with autism spectrum disorder.
This study aimed to investigate temporally extended self-awareness (awareness of oneâs place in and continued existence through time) in autism spectrum disorder (ASD), using the delayed self-recognition (DSR) paradigm (Povinelli et al., Child Development 67:1540â1554, 1996). Relative to age and verbal ability matched comparison children, children with ASD showed unattenuated performance on the DSR task, despite showing significant impairments in theory-of-mind task performance, and a reduced propensity to use personal pronouns to refer to themselves. The results may indicate intact temporally extended self-awareness in ASD. However, it may be that the DSR task is not an unambiguous measure of temporally extended self-awareness and it can be passed through strategies which do not require the possession of a temporally extended self-concept
Autonomous tracking and sampling of the deep chlorophyll maximum layer in an open-ocean eddy by a long-range autonomous underwater vehicle
© The Author(s), 2020. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Zhang, Y., Kieft, B., Hobson, B. W., Ryan, J. P., Barone, B., Preston, C. M., Roman, B., Raanan, B., Marin,Roman,,III, O'Reilly, T. C., Rueda, C. A., Pargett, D., Yamahara, K. M., Poulos, S., Romano, A., Foreman, G., Ramm, H., Wilson, S. T., DeLong, E. F., Karl, D. M., Birch, J. M., Bellingham, J. G., & Scholin, C. A. Autonomous tracking and sampling of the deep chlorophyll maximum layer in an open-ocean eddy by a long-range autonomous underwater vehicle. IEEE Journal of Oceanic Engineering, 45(4), (2020): 1308-1321, doi:10.1109/JOE.2019.2920217.Phytoplankton communities residing in the open ocean, the largest habitat on Earth, play a key role in global primary production. Through their influence on nutrient supply to the euphotic zone, open-ocean eddies impact the magnitude of primary production and its spatial and temporal distributions. It is important to gain a deeper understanding of the microbial ecology of marine ecosystems under the influence of eddy physics with the aid of advanced technologies. In March and April 2018, we deployed autonomous underwater and surface vehicles in a cyclonic eddy in the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre to investigate the variability of the microbial community in the deep chlorophyll maximum (DCM) layer. One long-range autonomous underwater vehicle (LRAUV) carrying a third-generation Environmental Sample Processor (3G-ESP) autonomously tracked and sampled the DCM layer for four days without surfacing. The sampling LRAUV's vertical position in the DCM layer was maintained by locking onto the isotherm corresponding to the chlorophyll peak. The vehicle ran on tight circles while drifting with the eddy current. This mode of operation enabled a quasi-Lagrangian time series focused on sampling the temporal variation of the DCM population. A companion LRAUV surveyed a cylindrical volume around the sampling LRAUV to monitor spatial and temporal variation in contextual water column properties. The simultaneous sampling and mapping enabled observation of DCM microbial community in its natural frame of reference.10.13039/501100008982 - National Science Foundation
10.13039/100000936 - Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation
10.13039/100000008 - David and Lucile Packard Foundation
10.13039/100016377 - Schmidt Ocean Institute
10.13039/100000893 - Simons Foundatio
The inflationary trispectrum
We calculate the trispectrum of the primordial curvature perturbation
generated by an epoch of slow-roll inflation in the early universe, and
demonstrate that the non-gaussian signature imprinted at horizon crossing is
unobservably small, of order tau_NL < r/50, where r < 1 is the tensor-to-scalar
ratio. Therefore any primordial non-gaussianity observed in future microwave
background experiments is likely to have been synthesized by gravitational
effects on superhorizon scales. We discuss the application of Maldacena's
consistency condition to the trispectrum.Comment: 23 pages, 2 diagrams drawn with feynmp.sty, uses iopart.cls. v2,
replaced with version accepted by JCAP. Estimate of maximal tau_NL refined in
Section 5, resulting in smaller numerical value. Sign errors in Eq. (44) and
Eq. (48) corrected. Some minor notational change
The medical student
The Medical Student was published from 1888-1921 by the students of Boston University School of Medicine
- âŠ