2,320 research outputs found
Multi-Pulse Laser Wakefield Acceleration: A New Route to Efficient, High-Repetition-Rate Plasma Accelerators and High Flux Radiation Sources
Laser-driven plasma accelerators can generate accelerating gradients three
orders of magnitude larger than radio-frequency accelerators and have achieved
beam energies above 1 GeV in centimetre long stages. However, the pulse
repetition rate and wall-plug efficiency of plasma accelerators is limited by
the driving laser to less than approximately 1 Hz and 0.1% respectively. Here
we investigate the prospects for exciting the plasma wave with trains of
low-energy laser pulses rather than a single high-energy pulse. Resonantly
exciting the wakefield in this way would enable the use of different
technologies, such as fibre or thin-disc lasers, which are able to operate at
multi-kilohertz pulse repetition rates and with wall-plug efficiencies two
orders of magnitude higher than current laser systems. We outline the
parameters of efficient, GeV-scale, 10-kHz plasma accelerators and show that
they could drive compact X-ray sources with average photon fluxes comparable to
those of third-generation light source but with significantly improved temporal
resolution. Likewise FEL operation could be driven with comparable peak power
but with significantly larger repetition rates than extant FELs
Experimental philosophy leading to a small scale digital data base of the conterminous United States for designing experiments with remotely sensed data
Research using satellite remotely sensed data, even within any single scientific discipline, often lacked a unifying principle or strategy with which to plan or integrate studies conducted over an area so large that exhaustive examination is infeasible, e.g., the U.S.A. However, such a series of studies would seem to be at the heart of what makes satellite remote sensing unique, that is the ability to select for study from among remotely sensed data sets distributed widely over the U.S., over time, where the resources do not exist to examine all of them. Using this philosophical underpinning and the concept of a unifying principle, an operational procedure for developing a sampling strategy and formal testable hypotheses was constructed. The procedure is applicable across disciplines, when the investigator restates the research question in symbolic form, i.e., quantifies it. The procedure is set within the statistical framework of general linear models. The dependent variable is any arbitrary function of remotely sensed data and the independent variables are values or levels of factors which represent regional climatic conditions and/or properties of the Earth's surface. These factors are operationally defined as maps from the U.S. National Atlas (U.S.G.S., 1970). Eighty-five maps from the National Atlas, representing climatic and surface attributes, were automated by point counting at an effective resolution of one observation every 17.6 km (11 miles) yielding 22,505 observations per map. The maps were registered to one another in a two step procedure producing a coarse, then fine scale registration. After registration, the maps were iteratively checked for errors using manual and automated procedures. The error free maps were annotated with identification and legend information and then stored as card images, one map to a file. A sampling design will be accomplished through a regionalization analysis of the National Atlas data base (presently being conducted). From this analysis a map of homogeneous regions of the U.S.A. will be created and samples (LANDSAT scenes) assigned by region
An innovative approach to strengthening health professionals’ infection control and limiting hospital-acquired infection: video-reflexive ethnography
Objective To strengthen clinicians’ infection control awareness and risk realisation by engaging them in scrutinising footage of their own infection control practices and enabling them to articulate challenges and design improvements. Design and participants Clinicians and patients from selected wards of 2 hospitals in western Sydney. Main outcome measures Evidence of risk realisation and new insights into infection control as articulated during video-reflexive feedback meetings. Results Frontline clinicians identified previously unrecognised infection risks in their own practices and in their team's practices. They also formulated safer ways of dealing with, for example, charts and patient transfers. Conclusions Video-reflexive ethnography enables frontline clinicians to identify infection risks and to design locally tailored solutions for existing risks and emerging ones
Effect of abdominal binding on respiratory mechanics during exercise in athletes with cervical spinal cord injury
West CR, Goosey-Tolfrey VL, Campbell IG, Romer LM. Effect of
abdominal binding on respiratory mechanics during exercise in athletes
with cervical spinal cord injury. J Appl Physiol 117: 36–45, 2014. First
published May 22, 2014; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00218.2014.—We
asked whether elastic binding of the abdomen influences respiratory
mechanics during wheelchair propulsion in athletes with cervical
spinal cord injury (SCI). Eight Paralympic wheelchair rugby players
with motor-complete SCI (C5-C7) performed submaximal and maximal
incremental exercise tests on a treadmill, both with and without
abdominal binding. Measurements included pulmonary function,
pressure-derived indices of respiratory mechanics, operating lung
volumes, tidal flow-volume data, gas exchange, blood lactate, and
symptoms. Residual volume and functional residual capacity were
reduced with binding (77 18 and 81 11% of unbound, P 0.05),
vital capacity was increased (114 9%, P 0.05), whereas total lung
capacity was relatively well preserved (99 5%). During exercise,
binding introduced a passive increase in transdiaphragmatic pressure,
due primarily to an increase in gastric pressure. Active pressures
during inspiration were similar across conditions. A sudden, sustained
rise in operating lung volumes was evident in the unbound condition,
and these volumes were shifted downward with binding.
Expiratory flow limitation did not occur in any subject and there
was substantial reserve to increase flow and volume in both
conditions. V ˙ O2 was elevated with binding during the final stages
of exercise (8 –12%, P 0.05), whereas blood lactate concentration
was reduced (16 –19%, P 0.05). V ˙ O2/heart rate slopes were
less steep with binding (62 35 vs. 47 24 ml/beat, P 0.05).
Ventilation, symptoms, and work rates were similar across conditions.
The results suggest that abdominal binding shifts tidal
breathing to lower lung volumes without influencing flow limitation,
symptoms, or exercise tolerance. Changes in respiratory
mechanics with binding may benefit O2 transport capacity by an
improvement in central circulatory function.This article has been made available through the Brunel Open Access Publishing Fund
Virtually Instantaneous, Room-Temperature [11C]-Cyanation Using Biaryl Phosphine Pd(0) Complexes
A new radiosynthetic protocol for the preparation of [[superscript 11]C]aryl nitriles has been developed. This process is based on the direct reaction of in situ prepared L·Pd(Ar)X complexes (L = biaryl phosphine) with [[superscript 11]C]HCN. The strategy is operationally simple, exhibits a remarkably wide substrate scope with short reaction times, and demonstrates superior reactivity compared to previously reported systems. With this procedure, a variety of [[superscript 11]C]nitrile-containing pharmaceuticals were prepared with high radiochemical efficiency.National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (NIH GM46059)National Science Foundation (U.S.) (NSF predoctoral fellowship (2010094243))Amgen Inc. (Educational donation)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (NIH-NIDA postdoctoral fellowship (2T32DA015036)
To follow a rule? On frontline clinicians’ understandings and embodiments of hospital-acquired infection prevention and control rules.
This article reports on a study of clinicians’ responses to footage of their enactments of infection prevention and control. The study’s approach was to elicit clinicians’ reflections on and clarifications about the connections among infection control activities and infection control rules, taking into account their awareness, interpretation, and in situ application of those rules. The findings of the study are that clinicians responded to footage of their own IPC practices by articulating previously unheeded tensions and constraints including: infection control rules that were incomplete, undergoing change, and conflicting; material obstructions limiting infection control efforts; and habituated and divergent rule enactments and rule interpretations that were problematic but disregarded. The reflexive process is shown to elicit clinicians’ learning about these complexities as they affect the accomplishment of effective infection control. The process is further shown to strengthen clinicians’ appreciation of infection control as necessitating deliberation to decide what are locally appropriate standards, interpretations, assumptions, habituations and enactments of infection control. The article concludes that clinicians’ ‘practical wisdom’ is unlikely to reach its full potential without video-assisted scrutiny of and deliberation about in situ clinical work. This enables clinicians to anchor their in situ enactments, reasonings and interpretations to local agreements about the intent, applicability, limits and practical enactment of rules. Key words: video-reflexivity, rules, infection control, patient safety, embodied practice, practical wisdom, abductio
Evaluating QBF Solvers: Quantifier Alternations Matter
We present an experimental study of the effects of quantifier alternations on
the evaluation of quantified Boolean formula (QBF) solvers. The number of
quantifier alternations in a QBF in prenex conjunctive normal form (PCNF) is
directly related to the theoretical hardness of the respective QBF
satisfiability problem in the polynomial hierarchy. We show empirically that
the performance of solvers based on different solving paradigms substantially
varies depending on the numbers of alternations in PCNFs. In related
theoretical work, quantifier alternations have become the focus of
understanding the strengths and weaknesses of various QBF proof systems
implemented in solvers. Our results motivate the development of methods to
evaluate orthogonal solving paradigms by taking quantifier alternations into
account. This is necessary to showcase the broad range of existing QBF solving
paradigms for practical QBF applications. Moreover, we highlight the potential
of combining different approaches and QBF proof systems in solvers.Comment: preprint of a paper to be published at CP 2018, LNCS, Springer,
including appendi
Physician associates and GPs in primary care: a comparison.
BACKGROUND: Physician associates [PAs] (also known as physician assistants) are new to the NHS and there is little evidence concerning their contribution in general practice. AIM: This study aimed to compare outcomes and costs of same-day requested consultations by PAs with those of GPs. DESIGN AND SETTING: An observational study of 2086 patient records presenting at same-day appointments in 12 general practices in England. METHOD: PA consultations were compared with those of GPs. Primary outcome was re-consultation within 14 days for the same or linked problem. Secondary outcomes were processes of care. RESULTS: There were no significant differences in the rates of re-consultation (rate ratio 1.24, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.86 to 1.79, P = 0.25). There were no differences in rates of diagnostic tests ordered (1.08, 95% CI = 0.89 to 1.30, P = 0.44), referrals (0.95, 95% CI = 0.63 to 1.43, P = 0.80), prescriptions issued (1.16, 95% CI = 0.87 to 1.53, P = 0.31), or patient satisfaction (1.00, 95% CI = 0.42 to 2.36, P = 0.99). Records of initial consultations of 79.2% (n = 145) of PAs and 48.3% (n = 99) of GPs were judged appropriate by independent GPs (P<0.001). The adjusted average PA consultation was 5.8 minutes longer than the GP consultation (95% CI = 2.46 to 7.1; P<0.001); cost per consultation was GBP £6.22, (US$ 10.15) lower (95% CI = -7.61 to -2.46, P<0.001). CONCLUSION: The processes and outcomes of PA and GP consultations for same-day appointment patients are similar at a lower consultation cost. PAs offer a potentially acceptable and efficient addition to the general practice workforce
Changes in persistent contaminant concentration and CYP1A1 protein expression in biopsy samples from northern bottlenose whales, Hyperoodon ampullatus, following the onset of nearby oil and gas development
Author Posting. © Elsevier B.V., 2007. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier B.V. for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Environmental Pollution 152 (2008): 205-216, doi:10.1016/j.envpol.2007.05.027.A small population of endangered northern bottlenose whales (Hyperoodon ampullatus) inhabits “The Gully” Marine Protected Area on the Scotian Shelf, eastern Canada. Amid concerns regarding nearby oil and gas development, we took 36 skin and blubber biopsy samples in 1996-97 (prior to major development) and 2002-03 (five years after development began), and 3 samples from a population in the Davis Strait, Labrador in 2003. These were analysed for cytochrome P4501A1 (CYP1A1) protein expression (n=36), and for persistent contaminants (n=23). CYP1A1 showed generally low expression in whales from The Gully, but higher levels during 2003, potentially co-incident with recorded oil spills, and higher levels in Davis Strait whales. A range of PCB congeners and organochlorine compounds were detected, with concentrations similar to other North Atlantic odontocetes. Concentrations were higher in whales from The Gully than from the Davis Strait, with significant increases in 4,4’-DDE and trans-nonachlor in 2002-03 relative to 1996-97.Research was funded by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) of Canada, World Wildlife Fund Canada Endangered Species Recovery Fund, Fisheries and Oceans Canada, the National Geographic Society, the Canadian Federation of Humane Societies and two U.K. Royal Society International Collaborative Awards. S.K.H. was supported by a Canadian Commonwealth Scholarship and Royal Society Dorothy Hodgkin Research Fellowship. C.D.M. was awarded a Discovery grant from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) of Canada. J.Y.W was supported by an NSERC PGS B fellowship and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
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