1,595 research outputs found
Personal, social and relational predictors of UK postgraduate researcher mental health problems
Background
Emerging evidence demonstrates that postgraduate researchers have high rates of mental health problems. These problems are distressing, affect PhD studies, and have longer-term potential effects beyond the duration of the PhD. Yet large-scale studies of multiple risk and protective factors are rare.
Aims
We aimed to test the predictive validity of a comprehensive set of potential determinants of mental health symptoms (depression, anxiety and suicidality) among postgraduate researchers in the UK, including personal, study-related, and supervision characteristics.
Method
We used regression models applied to data obtained from a national online survey of UK postgraduate researchers (Understanding DOCtoral researcher mental health; U-DOC, 2018–2019) to test predictors of mental health symptoms.
Results
These models show that postgraduate researchers' mental health symptoms are predicted by demographic, occupational, psychological, social and supervisory relationship factors. Greater perfectionism, more impostor thoughts and reduced supervisory communion most strongly and consistently predict mental health symptoms.
Conclusions
Institutions training postgraduate researchers should focus interventions intended to improve depression, anxiety, suicidality, on self-beliefs and social connectedness. Moreover, supervisors should be provided with training that improves the degree of agency, and especially communion, in the relationships they form with postgraduate researchers
Quantum pumping and dissipation: from closed to open systems
Current can be pumped through a closed system by changing parameters (or
fields) in time. The Kubo formula allows to distinguish between dissipative and
non-dissipative contributions to the current. We obtain a Green function
expression and an matrix formula for the associated terms in the
generalized conductance matrix: the "geometric magnetism" term that corresponds
to adiabatic transport; and the "Fermi golden rule" term which is responsible
to the irreversible absorption of energy. We explain the subtle limit of an
infinite system, and demonstrate the consistency with the formulas by Landauer
and Buttiker, Pretre and Thomas. We also discuss the generalization of the
fluctuation-dissipation relation, and the implications of the Onsager
reciprocity.Comment: 4 page paper, 1 figure (published version) + 2 page appendi
Classical and quantum pumping in closed systems
Pumping of charge (Q) in a closed ring geometry is not quantized even in the
strict adiabatic limit. The deviation form exact quantization can be related to
the Thouless conductance. We use Kubo formalism as a starting point for the
calculation of both the dissipative and the adiabatic contributions to Q. As an
application we bring examples for classical dissipative pumping, classical
adiabatic pumping, and in particular we make an explicit calculation for
quantum pumping in case of the simplest pumping device, which is a 3 site
lattice model.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. The long published version is cond-mat/0307619.
This is the short unpublished versio
On-farm net benefit of genotyping candidate female replacement cattle and sheep
peer-reviewedThe net benefit from investing in any technology is a function of the cost of implementation and the expected return in revenue. The objective of the present study was to quantify, using deterministic equations, the net monetary benefit from investing in genotyping of commercial females. Three case studies were presented reflecting dairy cows, beef cows and ewes based on Irish population parameters; sensitivity analyses were also performed. Parameters considered in the sensitivity analyses included the accuracy of genomic evaluations, replacement rate, proportion of female selection candidates retained as replacements, the cost of genotyping, the sire parentage error rate and the age of the female when it first gave birth. Results were presented as an annualised monetary net benefit over the lifetime of an individual, after discounting for the timing of expressions. In the base scenarios, the net benefit was greatest for dairy, followed by beef and then sheep. The net benefit improved as the reliability of the genomic evaluations improved and, in fact, a negative net benefit of genotyping was less frequent when the reliability of the genomic evaluations was high. The impact of a 10% point increase in genomic reliability was, however, greatest in sheep, followed by beef and then dairy. The net benefit of genotyping female selection candidates reduced as replacement rate increased. As genotyping costs increased, the net benefit reduced irrespective of the percentage of selection candidates kept, the replacement rate or even the population considered. Nonetheless, the association between the genotyping cost and the net benefit of genotyping differed by the percentage of selection candidates kept. Across all replacement rates evaluated, retaining 25% of the selection candidates resulted in the greatest net benefit when genotyping cost was low but the lowest net benefit when genotyping cost was high. Genotyping breakeven cost was non-linearly associated with the percentage of selection candidates retained, reaching a maximum when 50% of selection candidates were retained, irrespective of replacement rate, genomic reliability or the population. The genotyping breakeven cost was also non-linearly associated with replacement rate. The approaches outlined within provide the back-end framework for a decision support tool to quantify the net benefit of genotyping, once parameterised by the relevant population metrics
First Documented Pathologies in Tenontosaurus tilletti with Comments on Infection in Non-Avian Dinosaurs
In 2001, a nearly complete sub-adult Tenontosaurus tilletti was collected from the Antlers Formation (Aptian-Albian) of southeastern Oklahoma. Beyond its exceptional preservation, computed tomography (CT) and physical examination revealed this specimen has five pathological elements with four of the pathologies a result of trauma. Left pedal phalanx I-1 and left dorsal rib 10 are both fractured with extensive callus formation in the later stages of healing. Left dorsal rib 7 (L7) and right dorsal rib 10 (R10) exhibit impacted fractures compressed 26 mm and 24 mm, respectively. The fracture morphologies in L7 and R10 indicate this animal suffered a strong compressive force coincident with the long axis of the ribs. All three rib pathologies and the pathological left phalanx I-1 are consistent with injuries sustained in a fall. However, it is clear from the healing exhibited by these fractures that this individual survived the fall. In addition to traumatic fractures, left dorsal rib 10 and possibly left phalanx I-1 have a morphology consistent with post-traumatic infection in the form of osteomyelitis. The CT scans of left metacarpal IV revealed the presence of an abscess within the medullary cavity consistent with a subacute form of hematogenous osteomyelitis termed a Brodie abscess. This is only the second reported Brodie abscess in non-avian dinosaurs and the first documented occurrence in herbivorous dinosaurs. The presence of a Brodie abscess, known only in mammalian pathological literature, suggest mammalian descriptors for bone infection may be applicable to non-avian dinosaurs.We thank R. Cifelli, S. Westrop, and N. Czaplewski for reviewing early drafts of this manuscript. This research was funded by grants awarded to R. L. Cifelli by the American Chemical Society, Petroleum Research Fund (ACS-PRF#38572-AC8) and the National Science Foundation (DEB 9870173).
Open Access Fees paid for whole or in part by the University of Oklahoma Libraries Open Initiatives.Ye
Adiabatic theorems for generators of contracting evolutions
We develop an adiabatic theory for generators of contracting evolution on
Banach spaces. This provides a uniform framework for a host of adiabatic
theorems ranging from unitary quantum evolutions through quantum evolutions of
open systems generated by Lindbladians all the way to classically driven
stochastic systems. In all these cases the adiabatic evolution approximates, to
lowest order, the natural notion of parallel transport in the manifold of
instantaneous stationary states. The dynamics in the manifold of instantaneous
stationary states and transversal to it have distinct characteristics: The
former is irreversible and the latter is transient in a sense that we explain.
Both the gapped and gapless cases are considered. Some applications are
discussed.Comment: 31 pages, 4 figures, replaced by the version accepted for publication
in CM
Localization and Expression of Osteopontin in Mineralized and Nonmineralized Tissues of the Periodontium a
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/72134/1/j.1749-6632.1995.tb44628.x.pd
Adiabatic response for Lindblad dynamics
We study the adiabatic response of open systems governed by Lindblad
evolutions. In such systems, there is an ambiguity in the assignment of
observables to fluxes (rates) such as velocities and currents. For the
appropriate notion of flux, the formulas for the transport coefficients are
simple and explicit and are governed by the parallel transport on the manifold
of instantaneous stationary states. Among our results we show that the response
coefficients of open systems, whose stationary states are projections, is given
by the adiabatic curvature.Comment: 33 pages, 4 figures, accepted versio
General Adiabatic Evolution with a Gap Condition
We consider the adiabatic regime of two parameters evolution semigroups
generated by linear operators that are analytic in time and satisfy the
following gap condition for all times: the spectrum of the generator consists
in finitely many isolated eigenvalues of finite algebraic multiplicity, away
from the rest of the spectrum. The restriction of the generator to the spectral
subspace corresponding to the distinguished eigenvalues is not assumed to be
diagonalizable. The presence of eigenilpotents in the spectral decomposition of
the generator forbids the evolution to follow the instantaneous eigenprojectors
of the generator in the adiabatic limit. Making use of superadiabatic
renormalization, we construct a different set of time-dependent projectors,
close to the instantaneous eigeprojectors of the generator in the adiabatic
limit, and an approximation of the evolution semigroup which intertwines
exactly between the values of these projectors at the initial and final times.
Hence, the evolution semigroup follows the constructed set of projectors in the
adiabatic regime, modulo error terms we control
Effective dynamics for particles coupled to a quantized scalar field
We consider a system of N non-relativistic spinless quantum particles
(``electrons'') interacting with a quantized scalar Bose field (whose
excitations we call ``photons''). We examine the case when the velocity v of
the electrons is small with respect to the one of the photons, denoted by c
(v/c= epsilon << 1). We show that dressed particle states exist (particles
surrounded by ``virtual photons''), which, up to terms of order (v/c)^3, follow
Hamiltonian dynamics. The effective N-particle Hamiltonian contains the kinetic
energies of the particles and Coulomb-like pair potentials at order (v/c)^0 and
the velocity dependent Darwin interaction and a mass renormalization at order
(v/c)^{2}. Beyond that order the effective dynamics are expected to be
dissipative.
The main mathematical tool we use is adiabatic perturbation theory. However,
in the present case there is no eigenvalue which is separated by a gap from the
rest of the spectrum, but its role is taken by the bottom of the absolutely
continuous spectrum, which is not an eigenvalue.
Nevertheless we construct approximate dressed electrons subspaces, which are
adiabatically invariant for the dynamics up to order (v/c)\sqrt{\ln
(v/c)^{-1}}. We also give an explicit expression for the non adiabatic
transitions corresponding to emission of free photons. For the radiated energy
we obtain the quantum analogue of the Larmor formula of classical
electrodynamics.Comment: 67 pages, 2 figures, version accepted for publication in
Communications in Mathematical Physic
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