9,327 research outputs found
Computer program simulates design, test, and analysis phases of sensitivity experiments
Modular program with a small main program and several specialized subroutines provides a general purpose computer program to simulate the design, test and analysis phases of sensitivity experiments. This program allows a wide range of design-response function combinations and the addition, deletion, or modification of subroutines
Two-dimensional hydrodynamic lattice-gas simulations of binary immiscible and ternary amphiphilic fluid flow through porous media
The behaviour of two dimensional binary and ternary amphiphilic fluids under
flow conditions is investigated using a hydrodynamic lattice gas model. After
the validation of the model in simple cases (Poiseuille flow, Darcy's law for
single component fluids), attention is focussed on the properties of binary
immiscible fluids in porous media. An extension of Darcy's law which explicitly
admits a viscous coupling between the fluids is verified, and evidence of
capillary effects are described. The influence of a third component, namely
surfactant, is studied in the same context. Invasion simulations have also been
performed. The effect of the applied force on the invasion process is reported.
As the forcing level increases, the invasion process becomes faster and the
residual oil saturation decreases. The introduction of surfactant in the
invading phase during imbibition produces new phenomena, including
emulsification and micellisation. At very low fluid forcing levels, this leads
to the production of a low-resistance gel, which then slows down the progress
of the invading fluid. At long times (beyond the water percolation threshold),
the concentration of remaining oil within the porous medium is lowered by the
action of surfactant, thus enhancing oil recovery. On the other hand, the
introduction of surfactant in the invading phase during drainage simulations
slows down the invasion process -- the invading fluid takes a more tortuous
path to invade the porous medium -- and reduces the oil recovery (the residual
oil saturation increases).Comment: 48 pages, 26 figures. Phys. Rev. E (in press
Medicare Reimbursement for Total Joint Arthroplasty: The Driving Forces.
BACKGROUND: Total joint arthroplasty is a large and growing part of the U.S. Medicare budget, drawing attention to how much providers are paid for their services. The purpose of this study was to examine the variables that affect total joint arthroplasty reimbursement. Along with standard economic variables, we include unique health-care variables. Given the focus on value in the Affordable Care Act, the model examines the relationship of the quality of care to total joint arthroplasty reimbursement. We hoped to find that reimbursement patterns reward quality and reflect standard economic principles.
METHODS: Multivariable regression was performed to identify variables that correlate with Medicare reimbursement for total joint arthroplasty. Inpatient charge or reimbursement data on Medicare reimbursements were available for 2,750 hospitals with at least 10 discharges for uncomplicated total joint arthroplasty from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) for fiscal year 2011. Reimbursement variability was examined by using the Dartmouth Atlas to group institutions into hospital referral regions and hospital service areas. Independent variables were taken from the Dartmouth Atlas, CMS, the WWAMI (Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, Montana, Idaho) Rural Health Research Center, and the United States Census.
RESULTS: There were 427,207 total joint arthroplasties identified, with a weighted mean reimbursement of 9,103 to $38,686). Nationally, the coefficient of variation for reimbursements was 0.19. The regression model accounted for 52.5% of reimbursement variation among providers. The total joint arthroplasty provider volume (p \u3c 0.001) and patient satisfaction (p \u3c 0.001) were negatively correlated with reimbursement. Government ownership of a hospital (p \u3c 0.001) and higher Medicare costs (p \u3c 0.001) correlated positively with reimbursement.
CONCLUSIONS: Medicare reimbursements for total joint arthroplasty are highly variable. Greater reimbursement was associated with lower patient volume, lower patient satisfaction, a healthier patient population, and government ownership of a hospital. As value-based reimbursement provisions of the Affordable Care Act are implemented, there will be dramatic changes in total joint arthroplasty reimbursements. To meet these changes, providers should expect qualities such as high patient volume, willingness to care for sicker patient populations, patient satisfaction, safe outcomes, and procedural demand to correlate with their reimbursement.
CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Practicing orthopaedic surgeons and hospital administrators should be aware of discrepancies in inpatient reimbursement for total joint arthroplasty from Medicare. Furthermore, these discrepancies are not associated with typical economic factors. These findings warrant further investigation and collaboration between policymakers and providers to develop value-based reimbursement
Simulating Three-Dimensional Hydrodynamics on a Cellular-Automata Machine
We demonstrate how three-dimensional fluid flow simulations can be carried
out on the Cellular Automata Machine 8 (CAM-8), a special-purpose computer for
cellular-automata computations. The principal algorithmic innovation is the use
of a lattice-gas model with a 16-bit collision operator that is specially
adapted to the machine architecture. It is shown how the collision rules can be
optimized to obtain a low viscosity of the fluid. Predictions of the viscosity
based on a Boltzmann approximation agree well with measurements of the
viscosity made on CAM-8. Several test simulations of flows in simple geometries
-- channels, pipes, and a cubic array of spheres -- are carried out.
Measurements of average flux in these geometries compare well with theoretical
predictions.Comment: 19 pages, REVTeX and epsf macros require
Referencing Sources of Molecular Spectroscopic Data in the Era of Data Science: Application to the HITRAN and AMBDAS Databases
The application described has been designed to create bibliographic entries
in large databases with diverse sources automatically, which reduces both the
frequency of mistakes and the workload for the administrators. This new system
uniquely identifies each reference from its digital object identifier (DOI) and
retrieves the corresponding bibliographic information from any of several
online services, including the SAO/NASA Astrophysics Data Systems (ADS) and
CrossRef APIs. Once parsed into a relational database, the software is able to
produce bibliographies in any of several formats, including HTML and BibTeX,
for use on websites or printed articles. The application is provided
free-of-charge for general use by any scientific database. The power of this
application is demonstrated when used to populate reference data for the HITRAN
and AMBDAS databases as test cases. HITRAN contains data that is provided by
researchers and collaborators throughout the spectroscopic community. These
contributors are accredited for their contributions through the bibliography
produced alongside the data returned by an online search in HITRAN. Prior to
the work presented here, HITRAN and AMBDAS created these bibliographies
manually, which is a tedious, time-consuming and error-prone process. The
complete code for the new referencing system can be found at
\url{https://github.com/hitranonline/refs}.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, already published online at
https://doi.org/10.3390/atoms802001
Instability of Extremal Relativistic Charged Spheres
With the question, ``Can relativistic charged spheres form extremal black
holes?" in mind, we investigate the properties of such spheres from a classical
point of view. The investigation is carried out numerically by integrating the
Oppenheimer-Volkov equation for relativistic charged fluid spheres and finding
interior Reissner-Nordstr\"om solutions for these objects. We consider both
constant density and adiabatic equations of state, as well as several possible
charge distributions, and examine stability by both a normal mode and an energy
analysis. In all cases, the stability limit for these spheres lies between the
extremal () limit and the black hole limit (). That is, we find
that charged spheres undergo gravitational collapse before they reach ,
suggesting that extremal Reissner-Nordtr\"om black holes produced by collapse
are ruled out. A general proof of this statement would support a strong form of
the cosmic censorship hypothesis, excluding not only stable naked
singularities, but stable extremal black holes. The numerical results also
indicate that although the interior mass-energy obeys the usual stability limit for the Schwarzschild interior solution, the gravitational
mass does not. Indeed, the stability limit approaches as .
In the Appendix we also argue that Hawking radiation will not lead to an
extremal Reissner-Nordstr\"om black hole. All our results are consistent with
the third law of black hole dynamics, as currently understood
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Coming of age in L3 initial stages transfer models: deriving developmental predictions and looking towards the future
Aims: Over the past decade in particular, formal linguistic work within L3 acquisition has concentrated on hypothesizing and empirically determining the source of transfer from previous languages—L1, L2 or both—in L3 grammatical representations. In view of the progressive concern with more advanced stages, we aim to show that focusing on L3 initial stages should be one continued priority of the field, even—or especially—if the field is ready to shift towards modeling L3 development and ultimate attainment.
Approach: We argue that L3 learnability is significantly impacted by initial stages transfer, as such forms the basis of the initial L3 interlanguage. To illustrate our point, the insights from studies using initial and intermediary stages L3 data are discussed in light of developmental predictions that derive from the initial stages models.
Conclusions: Despite a shared desire to understand the process of L3 acquisition in whole, inclusive of offering developmental L3 theories, we argue that the field does not yet have—although is ever closer to—the data basis needed to effectively do so.
Originality: This article seeks to convince the readership for the need of conservatism in L3 acquisition theory building, whereby offering a framework on how and why we can most effectively build on the accumulated knowledge of the L3 initial stages in order to make significant, steady progress.
Significance: The arguments exposed here are meant to provide an epistemological base for a tenable framework of formal approaches to L3 interlanguage development and, eventually, ultimate attainment
Interface Roughening in a Hydrodynamic Lattice-Gas Model with Surfactant
Using a hydrodynamic lattice-gas model, we study interface growth in a binary
fluid with various concentrations of surfactant. We find that the interface is
smoothed by small concentrations of surfactant, while microemulsion droplets
form for large surfactant concentrations. To assist in determining the
stability limits of the interface, we calculate the change in the roughness and
growth exponents and as a function of surfactant concentration
along the interface.Comment: 4 pages with 4 embedded ps figures. Requires psfig.tex. Will appear
in PRL 14 Oct 199
Effects of interdot dipole coupling in mesoscopic epitaxial Fe(100) dot arrays
The domain structure and the coercivity of epitaxial Fe(100) circular dot arrays of different diameters and separations have been studied using magnetic force microscopy (MFM) and focused magneto-optical Kerr effect (MOKE). The MFM images of the 1 µm diameter single domain dot arrays show direct evidence of strong interdot dipole coupling when the separation is reduced down to 0.1 µm. The coercivity of the dots is also found to be dependent on the separation, indicating the effect of the interdot dipole coupling on the magnetization reversal process
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