49,246 research outputs found
Objective structured clinical examinations (OSCEs), psychiatry and the clinical assessment of skills and competencies (CASC) : same evidence, different judgement
Background: The Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE), originally developed in the 1970’s, has been
hailed as the "gold standard" of clinical assessments for medical students and is used within medical schools
throughout the world. The Clinical assessment of Skills and Competencies (CASC) is an OSCE used as a clinical
examination gateway, granting access to becoming a senior Psychiatrist in the UK.
Discussion: Van der Vleuten’s utility model is used to examine the CASC from the viewpoint of a senior
psychiatrist. Reliability may be equivalent to more traditional examinations. Whilst the CASC is likely to have
content validity, other forms of validity are untested and authenticity is poor. Educational impact has the potential
to change facets of psychiatric professionalism and influence future patient care. There are doubts about
acceptability from candidates and more senior psychiatrists.
Summary: Whilst OSCEs may be the best choice for medical student examinations, their use in post graduate
psychiatric examination in the UK is subject to challenge on the grounds of validity, authenticity and educational
impact
An Analysis of Diffraction in Deep-Inelastic Scattering
We propose a simple parametrization for the deep-inelastic diffractive cross
section. It contains the contribution of production to both the
longitudinal and the transverse diffractive structure functions, and of the
production of final states from transverse photons. We start from
the hard region and perform a suitable extrapolation into the soft region. We
test our model on the 1994 ZEUS and H1 data, and confront it with the H1
conjecture of a singular gluon distribution.Comment: 24 pages, LaTeX, figures included using epsfi
Dynamical Formation of Horizons in Recoiling D Branes
A toy calculation of string/D-particle interactions within a world-sheet
approach indicates that quantum recoil effects - reflecting the gravitational
back-reaction on space-time foam due to the propagation of energetic particles
- induces the appearance of a microscopic event horizon, or `bubble', inside
which stable matter can exist. The scattering event causes this horizon to
expand, but we expect quantum effects to cause it to contract again, in a
`bounce' solution. Within such `bubbles', massless matter propagates with an
effective velocity that is less than the velocity of light in vacuo, which may
lead to observable violations of Lorentz symmetry that may be tested
experimentally. The conformal invariance conditions in the interior geometry of
the bubbles select preferentially three for the number of the spatial
dimensions, corresponding to a consistent formulation of the interaction of D3
branes with recoiling D particles, which are allowed to fluctuate independently
only on the D3-brane hypersurface.Comment: 25 pages LaTeX, 4 eps figures include
Do Three Dimensions tell us Anything about a Theory of Everything?
It has been conjectured that four-dimensional N=8 supergravity may provide a
suitable framework for a `Theory of Everything', if its composite SU(8) gauge
fields become dynamical. We point out that supersymmetric three-dimensional
coset field theories motivated by lattice models provide toy laboratories for
aspects of this conjecture. They feature dynamical composite supermultiplets
made of constituent holons and spinons. We show how these models may be
extended to include N=1 and N=2 supersymmetry, enabling dynamical conjectures
to be verified more rigorously. We point out some special features of these
three-dimensional models, and mention open questions about their relevance to
the dynamics of N=8 supergravity.Comment: 20 pages Latex, 2 eps figure
CP-Violating MSSM Higgs Bosons in the Light of LEP 2
In the MSSM, the CP parities of the neutral Higgs bosons may be mixed by
radiative effects induced by explicit CP violation in the third generation of
squarks. To allow for this possibility, we argue that the charged Higgs-boson
mass and tan(beta) should be used to parametrize the MSSM Higgs sector. We
introduce a new benchmark scenario of maximal CP violation appropriate for
direct searches of CP-violating MSSM Higgs bosons. We show that the bounds
established by LEP 2 on the MSSM Higgs sector may be substantially relaxed at
low and intermediate values of tan(beta) in the presence of CP violation, and
comment on possible Higgs boson signatures at LEP 2 within this framework.Comment: 16 pages, LaTeX, 4 encapsulated figure
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