336 research outputs found
The application of social cost benefit analysis to nuclear power in the United Kingdom
Imperial Users onl
An investigation into the effect of thickness of titanium dioxide and gold-silver nanoparticle titanium dioxide composite thin-films on photocatalytic activity and photo-induced oxygen production in a sacrificial system
Thin films of titanium dioxide and titanium dioxide with incorporated gold and silver nanoparticles were deposited onto glass microscope slides, steel and titanium foil coupons by two solâgel dip-coating methods. The film's photocatalytic activity and ability to evolve oxygen in a sacrificial solution were assessed. It was found that photocatalytic activity increased with film thickness (from 50 to 500 nm thick samples) for the photocatalytic degradation of methylene blue in solution and resazurin redox dye in an intelligent ink dye deposited on the surface. Contrastingly, an optimum film thickness of [similar]200 nm for both composite and pure films of titanium dioxide was found for water oxidation, using persulfate (S2O82â) as a sacrificial electron acceptor. The nanoparticle composite films showed significantly higher activity in oxygen evolution studies compared with plain TiO2 films
From firstâtrimester screening to risk stratification of evolving preâeclampsia in second and third trimesters of pregnancy: comprehensive approach
Preeclampsia and associated hypertensive disorders of pregnancy represent a leading cause of global maternal and neonatal morbidity and mortality. Identification of women at high risk for developing preterm-preeclampsia and prophylaxis with low-dose aspirin has the potential to significantly reduce the rate of preterm-preeclampsia. In addition, risk assessment and monitoring of women in the second and third trimester of pregnancy, to aid in early detection of evolving disease, timely referral to specialist care, and active monitoring of women with confirmed or suspected preeclampsia is essential for improving maternal and neonatal outcomes. The angiogenesis-related biomarkers sFlt-1 and PlGF have been shown to have clinical value to aid in the prediction, diagnosis, and risk stratification of preeclampsia when used either alone or in combination with other risk factors. However, currently there is no consensus on the optimum strategy to link first trimester screening for preterm-preeclampsia with appropriate second and third trimester risk assessment strategies. This opinion paper will outline the current evidence for first trimester preeclampsia screening and prevention, as well as the evidence for various risk stratification approaches for detection of evolving preeclampsia through the second and third trimesters of pregnancy, and proposes a potential model integrating these tools. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved
Concurrent and prospective associations between negative social-evaluative beliefs, safety behaviours, and symptoms during and following cognitive behavioural group therapy for social anxiety disorder
Background: Improving the delivery of cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT) for social anxiety disorder (SAD) requires an in-depth understanding of which cognitive and behavioural mechanisms drive change in social anxiety symptoms (i.e., social interaction anxiety) during and after treatment. The current study explores the dynamic temporal associations between theory-driven cognitive and behavioural mechanisms of symptom change both during and following group CBT. Methods: A randomized controlled trial of imagery-enhanced CBT (n = 51) versus traditional verbal CBT (n = 54) for social anxiety was completed in a community mental health clinic setting. This study included data collected from 12-weekly sessions and a 1-month follow-up session. Mixed models were used to assess magnitude of change over the course of treatment. Cross-lagged panel models were fit to the data to examine temporal relationships between mechanisms (social evaluative beliefs, safety behaviours) and social interaction anxiety symptoms. Results: Participants in both CBT groups experienced significant improvements across all cognitive, behavioural, and symptom measures, with no significant differences in the magnitude of changes between treatments. During treatment, greater social-evaluative beliefs (fear of negative evaluation, negative self-portrayals) at one time point (T) were predictive of more severe SAD symptoms and safety behaviours at T+1. Social-evaluative beliefs (fear of negative evaluation, probability and cost of social failure) and safety behaviours measured at post-treatment were positively associated with SAD symptoms at the 1-month follow-up. Conclusions: The current study identifies social-evaluative beliefs that may be important targets for symptom and avoidance reduction during and following CBT. Assessment of these social-evaluative beliefs throughout treatment may be useful for predicting future SAD symptoms and avoidance, and for adapting treatment to promote optimal change for patients
âI'm a Referee, Not a Female Refereeâ: The Experiences of Women Involved in Football as Coaches and Referees
The development of the Women's Super League (WSL) in English football, increased media coverage of the game, and an expansion of grassroots opportunities indicate a bright future for women and girls who want to play. Yet this vision must be tempered against compelling evidence of deep rooted and enduring gender inequalities within the game. This is the case for both players, and women who undertake non-playing roles, which is reflected in the relatively low numbers of women coaches and referees. Whilst The Football Association (The FA) has signalled addressing these inequalities as a key priority, critics argue that such efforts amount to superficial and limited efforts to support meaningful change. This paper departs from a concern with playing the game and responds to calls for more research to explore the experiences of women involved in football in non-playing roles. More specifically, it focuses on women coaches and referees, and addresses the following question: how do women in positions of power in football negotiate their place in what remains a distinctly male-dominated profession? In addressing this question, we take a theoretical position located at the nexus between radical and post-structural feminism, acknowledging the significance of structural power relations and individual agency in shaping daily lived social realities. Data were generated from interviews with 14 women coaches and 10 women referees. These interviews explored the structure and culture of the game and its impact on women's experiences of men's and women's competitive and grassroots football. Through a rigorous process of thematic analysis, three themes were identified: gendered entry into football careers; reinforcement of women's difference on the football field; and coping strategies for remaining in the game. Centralising the women's voices in this research highlights the insidious and persistent nature of gendered microaggressions, the sexism of football culture, and the ways in which these women negotiate this masculine terrain in their pursuit of being coaches and referees.
âAndy Gray and Richard Keys hauled off air for sexist commentsâ (The Guardian, 24 January, 2011)
âCrystal Palace Women goalkeeper accuses clubs of ignoring FA protocols after she was subjected to sexist abuseâ (The Telegraph, 16 January, 2020)
âFootball manager demands ban on women refereesâ (The Guardian, 12 November, 2006)
âRichard Scudamore sexism scandal intensifies as conspirator in sexist emails investigated by own law firmâ (The Telegraph, 16 May, 2014)
âSoccer chief's plan to boost women's game? Hotpantsâ (The Guardian, 16 January, 2004)
âWomen in Football survey a damning indictment of sexism in the workplaceâ (HRreview, 11 March, 2014)
âClattenburg criticised for claim female referees must pick career or childrenâ (The Telegraph, 1 October, 2021
Observation and enhancement through alkali metal doping of p-type conductivity in the layered oxyselenides Sr<sub>2</sub>ZnO<sub>2</sub>Cu<sub>2</sub>Se<sub>2</sub> and Ba<sub>2</sub>Zn<sub>1âx</sub>O<sub>2âx</sub>Cu<sub>2</sub>Se<sub>2</sub>
The optoelectronic properties of two layered copper oxyselenide compounds, with nominal composition Sr2ZnO2Cu2Se2 and Ba2ZnO2Cu2Se2, have been investigated to determine their suitability as p-type conductors. The structure, band gaps and electrical conductivity of pristine and alkali-metal-doped samples have been determined. We find that the strontium-containing compound, Sr2ZnO2Cu2Se2, adopts the expected tetragonal Sr2Mn3SbO2 structure with I4/mmm symmetry, and has a band gap of 2.16 eV, and a room temperature conductivity of 4.8 Ă 10â1 S cmâ1. The conductivity of the compound could be increased to 4.2 S cmâ1 when sodium doped to a nominal composition of Na0.1Sr1.9ZnO2Cu2Se2. In contrast, the barium containing material was found to have a small zinc oxide deficiency, with a sample dependent compositional range of Ba2Zn1âxO2âxCu2Se2 where 0.01 < x < 0.06, as determined by single crystal X-ray diffraction and powder neutron diffraction. The barium-containing structure could also be modelled using the tetragonal I4/mmm structure, but significant elongation of the oxygen displacement ellipsoid along the ZnâO bonds in the average structure was observed. This indicated that the oxide ion position was better modelled as a disordered split site with a displacement to change the local zinc coordination from square planar to linear. Electron diffraction data confirmed that the oxide site in Ba2Zn1âxO2âxCu2Se2 does not adopt a long range ordered arrangement, but also that the idealised I4/mmm structure with an unsplit oxide site was not consistent with the extra reflections observed in the electron diffractograms. The band gap and conductivity of Ba2Zn1âxO2âxCu2Se2 were determined to be 2.22 eV and 2.0 Ă 10â3 S cmâ1 respectively. The conductivity could be increased to 1.5 Ă 10â1 S cmâ1 with potassium doping in K0.1Ba1.9Zn1âxO2âxCu2Se2. Hall measurements confirmed that both materials were p-type conductors with holes as the dominant charge carriers
The trigger system of the NOMAD experiment
The NOMAD trigger system is described in the present paper. It is made up of a largearea plastic scintillator veto system, two trigger scintillator planes inside a 0.4~Tmagnetic field and their associated trigger electronics. Special features of the systemconsist of the use of proximity mesh photomultipliers which allow the trigger scintillators to operate in the magnetic field, and the use of custom-built VME moduleswhich perform the trigger logic decisions, the signal synchronisation and gate generation,event counting and livetime calculations. This paper also includes a description of each of the NOMAD triggers, with their calculated and measured rates, efficiencies and livetimes
Optical photothermal infrared spectroscopy can differentiate equine osteoarthritic plasma extracellular vesicles from healthy controls
Equine osteoarthritis is a chronic degenerative disease of the articular joint, characterised by cartilage degradation resulting in pain and reduced mobility and thus is a prominent equine welfare concern. Diagnosis is usually at a late stage through clinical examination and radiographic imaging, whilst treatment is symptomatic not curative. Extracellular vesicles are nanoparticles that are involved in intercellular communication. The objective of this study was to investigate the feasibility of Raman and Optical Photothermal Infrared Spectroscopies to detect osteoarthritis using plasma-derived extracellular vesicles, specifically differentiating extracellular vesicles in diseased and healthy controls within the parameters of the techniques used. Plasma samples were derived from thoroughbred racehorses. A total of 14 samples were selected (control; n = 6 and diseased; n = 8). Extracellular vesicles were isolated using differential ultracentrifugation and characterised using nanoparticle tracking analysis, transmission electron microscopy, and human tetraspanin chips. Samples were then analysed using combined Raman and Optical Photothermal Infrared Spectroscopies. Infrared spectra were collected between 950â1800 cmâ1. Raman spectra had bands between the wavelengths of 900â1800 cmâ1 analysed. Spectral data for both Raman and Optical Photothermal Infrared Spectroscopy were used to generate clustering via principal components analysis and classification models were generated using partial least squared discriminant analysis in order to characterize the techniques' ability to distinguish diseased samples. Optical Photothermal Infrared Spectroscopy could differentiate osteoarthritic extracellular vesicles from healthy with good classification (93.4% correct classification rate) whereas Raman displayed poor classification (correct classification rate = â64.3%). Inspection of the infrared spectra indicated that plasma-derived extracellular vesicles from osteoarthritic horses contained increased signal for proteins, lipids and nucleic acids. For the first time we demonstrated the ability to use optical photothermal infrared spectroscopy combined with Raman spectroscopy to interrogate extracellular vesicles and osteoarthritis-related samples. Optical Photothermal Infrared Spectroscopy was superior to Raman in this study, and could distinguish osteoarthritis samples, suggestive of its potential use diagnostically to identify osteoarthritis in equine patients. This study demonstrates the potential of Raman and Optical Photothermal Infrared Spectroscopy to be used as a future diagnostic tool in clinical practice, with the capacity to detect changes in extracellular vesicles from clinically derived samples
Search for the exotic resonance in the NOMAD experiment
A search for exotic Theta baryon via Theta -> proton +Ks decay mode in the
NOMAD muon neutrino DIS data is reported. The special background generation
procedure was developed. The proton identification criteria are tuned to
maximize the sensitivity to the Theta signal as a function of xF which allows
to study the Theta production mechanism. We do not observe any evidence for the
Theta state in the NOMAD data. We provide an upper limit on Theta production
rate at 90% CL as 2.13 per 1000 of neutrino interactions.Comment: Accepted to European Physics Journal
Production properties of K*(892) vector mesons and their spin alignment as measured in the NOMAD experiment
First measurements of K*(892) mesons production properties and their spin
alignment in nu_mu charged current (CC) and neutral current (NC) interactions
are presented. The analysis of the full data sample of the NOMAD experiment is
performed in different kinematic regions. For K*+ and K*- mesons produced in
nu_mu CC interactions and decaying into K0 pi+/- we have found the following
yields per event: (2.6 +/- 0.2 (stat.) +/- 0.2 (syst.))% and (1.6 +/- 0.1
(stat.) +/- 0.1 (syst.))% respectively, while for the K*+ and K*- mesons
produced in nu NC interactions the corresponding yields per event are: (2.5 +/-
0.3 (stat.) +/- 0.3 (syst.))% and (1.0 +/- 0.3 (stat.) +/- 0.2 (syst.))%. The
results obtained for the rho00 parameter, 0.40 +/- 0.06 (stat) +/- 0.03 (syst)
and 0.28 +/- 0.07 (stat) +/- 0.03 (syst) for K*+ and K*- produced in nu_mu CC
interactions, are compared to theoretical predictions tuned on LEP measurements
in e+e- annihilation at the Z0 pole. For K*+ mesons produced in nu NC
interactions the measured rho00 parameter is 0.66 +/- 0.10 (stat) +/- 0.05
(syst).Comment: 20 p
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