1,677 research outputs found
Exposure of medical students to sexism and sexual harassment and their association with mental health: a cross-sectional study at a Swiss medical school.
To assess the self-reported prevalence of sexism and sexual harassment at a Swiss medical school, and to investigate their association with mental health. Research hypotheses were an association between sexism/sexual harassment and poor mental health and a higher prevalence of sexism/sexual harassment in clinical rotations.
Cross-sectional study as a part of ETMED-L project, an ongoing cohort study of interpersonal competences and mental health of medical students.
Single-centre Swiss study using an online survey submitted to medical students.
From 2096 registered students, 1059 were respondents (50.52%). We excluded 26 participants (25 due to wrong answers to attention questions, and 1 who did not answer the sexism exposure question). The final sample (N=1033) included 720 women, 300 men and 13 non-binary people.
Prevalence of self-reported exposure to sexism/sexual harassment. Multivariate regression analyses of association between being targeted by sexism or sexual harassment and mental health (depression, suicidal ideation, anxiety, stress, burnout, substance use and recent mental health consultation). Regression models adjusted for gender, academic year, native language, parental education level, partnership and an extracurricular paid job.
Being targeted by sexism or sexual harassment was reported by 16% of participants with a majority of women (96%). The prevalence increased with clinical work. After adjusting for covariates, we found association between being targeted by sexism/harassment and risk of depression (OR 2.29, 95% CI 1.54 to 3.41, p<0.001), suicidal ideation (B coefficient (B) 0.37, p<0.001) and anxiety (B 3.69, p<0.001), as well as cynicism (B 1.46, p=0.001) and emotional exhaustion (B 0.94, p=0.044) components of burnout, substance use (B 6.51, p<0.001) and a recent mental health consultation (OR 1.78, 95% CI 1.10 to 2.66, p=0.005).
Sexism and sexual harassment, although less common than usually reported, are behaviours of concern in this medical school and are significantly associated with mental health
Gauge-fixing, semiclassical approximation and potentials for graded Chern-Simons theories
We perform the Batalin-Vilkovisky analysis of gauge-fixing for graded
Chern-Simons theories. Upon constructing an appropriate gauge-fixing fermion,
we implement a Landau-type constraint, finding a simple form of the gauge-fixed
action. This allows us to extract the associated Feynman rules taking into
account the role of ghosts and antighosts. Our gauge-fixing procedure allows
for zero-modes, hence is not limited to the acyclic case. We also discuss the
semiclassical approximation and the effective potential for massless modes,
thereby justifying some of our previous constructions in the Batalin-Vilkovisky
approach.Comment: 46 pages, 4 figure
Genome-wide analyses of Liberibacter species provides insights into evolution, phylogenetic relationships, and virulence factors.
'Candidatus Liberibacter' species are insect-transmitted, phloem-limited α-Proteobacteria in the order of Rhizobiales. The citrus industry is facing significant challenges due to huanglongbing, associated with infection from 'Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus' (Las). In order to gain greater insight into 'Ca. Liberibacter' biology and genetic diversity, we have performed genome sequencing and comparative analyses of diverse 'Ca. Liberibacter' species, including those that can infect citrus. Our phylogenetic analysis differentiates 'Ca. Liberibacter' species and Rhizobiales in separate clades and suggests stepwise evolution from a common ancestor splitting first into nonpathogenic Liberibacter crescens followed by diversification of pathogenic 'Ca. Liberibacter' species. Further analysis of Las genomes from different geographical locations revealed diversity among isolates from the United States. Our phylogenetic study also indicates multiple Las introduction events in California and spread of the pathogen from Florida to Texas. Texan Las isolates were closely related, while Florida and Asian isolates exhibited the most genetic variation. We have identified conserved Sec translocon (SEC)-dependent effectors likely involved in bacterial survival and virulence of Las and analysed their expression in their plant host (citrus) and insect vector (Diaphorina citri). Individual SEC-dependent effectors exhibited differential expression patterns between host and vector, indicating that Las uses its effector repertoire to differentially modulate diverse organisms. Collectively, this work provides insights into the evolution of 'Ca. Liberibacter' species, the introduction of Las in the United States and identifies promising Las targets for disease management
Singularities in ternary mixtures of k-core percolation
Heterogeneous k-core percolation is an extension of a percolation model which
has interesting applications to the resilience of networks under random damage.
In this model, the notion of node robustness is local, instead of global as in
uniform k-core percolation. One of the advantages of k-core percolation models
is the validity of an analytical mathematical framework for a large class of
network topologies. We study ternary mixtures of node types in random networks
and show the presence of a new type of critical phenomenon. This scenario may
have useful applications in the stability of large scale infrastructures and
the description of glass-forming systems.Comment: To appear in Complex Networks, Studies in Computational Intelligence,
Proceedings of CompleNet 201
Dyonic Membranes
We present dyonic multi-membrane solutions of the N=2 D=8 supergravity theory
that serves as the effective field theory of the -compactified type II
superstring theory. The `electric' charge is fractional for generic asymptotic
values of an axion field, as for D=4 dyons. These membrane solutions are
supersymmetric, saturate a Bogomolnyi bound, fill out orbits of an
subgroup of the type II D=8 T-duality group, and are non-singular when
considered as solutions of -compactified D=11 supergravity. On
compactification to D=4, the conjectured type II/heterotic equivalence allows
the group to be reinterpreted as the S-duality group of the
toroidally compactified heterotic string and the dyonic membranes wrapped
around homology two-cycles of as S-duals of perturbative heterotic string
states.Comment: Phyzzx. 27 pp. Additional para. added to introductio
Research in development: learning from the CGIAR Research Program on Aquatic Agricultural Systems
This working paper aims to synthesize and share learning from the experience of adapting and operationalizing the Research in Development (RinD) approach to agricultural research in the five hubs under the The CGIAR Research Program on Aquatic Agricultural Systems. It seeks to share learning about how the approach is working in context and to explore the outcomes it is achieving through initial implementation over 3 ½ years. This learning can inform continuation of agricultural research in the second phase of the CGIAR research programs and will be useful to others aiming to implement research programs that seek to equitably build capacity to innovate in complex social-ecological systems. Each of the chapters in this working paper have shown that RinD has produced a range of outcomes that were often unexpected and broader in scope than might result from other approaches to agricultural research. RinD also produces innovations, and there is evidence that it builds capacity to innovate. - See more at: http://www.aas.cgiar.org/publications/research-development-learning-cgiar-research-program-aquatic-agricultural-systems#sthash.xfjhbHpl.dpu
Notes on Superconformal Chern-Simons-Matter Theories
The three dimensional N=2 supersymmetric Chern-Simons theory coupled to
matter fields, possibly deformed by a superpotential, give rise to a large
class of exactly conformal theories with Lagrangian descriptions. These
theories can be arbitrarily weakly coupled, and hence can be studied
perturbatively. We study the theories in the large N limit, and compute the
two-loop anomalous dimension of certain long operators. Our result suggests
that various N=2 U(N) Chern-Simons theories coupled to suitable matter fields
are dual to open or closed string theories in AdS4, which are not yet
constructed.Comment: 47 pages, 20 figure
Depinning with dynamic stress overshoots: A hybrid of critical and pseudohysteretic behavior
A model of an elastic manifold driven through a random medium by an applied
force F is studied focussing on the effects of inertia and elastic waves, in
particular {\it stress overshoots} in which motion of one segment of the
manifold causes a temporary stress on its neighboring segments in addition to
the static stress. Such stress overshoots decrease the critical force for
depinning and make the depinning transition hysteretic. We find that the steady
state velocity of the moving phase is nevertheless history independent and the
critical behavior as the force is decreased is in the same universality class
as in the absence of stress overshoots: the dissipative limit which has been
studied analytically. To reach this conclusion, finite-size scaling analyses of
a variety of quantities have been supplemented by heuristic arguments.
If the force is increased slowly from zero, the spectrum of avalanche sizes
that occurs appears to be quite different from the dissipative limit. After
stopping from the moving phase, the restarting involves both fractal and
bubble-like nucleation. Hysteresis loops can be understood in terms of a
depletion layer caused by the stress overshoots, but surprisingly, in the limit
of very large samples the hysteresis loops vanish. We argue that, although
there can be striking differences over a wide range of length scales, the
universality class governing this pseudohysteresis is again that of the
dissipative limit. Consequences of this picture for the statistics and dynamics
of earthquakes on geological faults are briefly discussed.Comment: 43 pages, 57 figures (yes, that's a five followed by a seven), revte
The Octonionic Membrane
We generalize the supermembrane solution of D=11 supergravity by permitting
the 4-form to be either self-dual or anti-self-dual in the eight dimensions
transverse to the membrane. After analyzing the supergravity field equations
directly, and also discussing necessary conditions for unbroken supersymmetry,
we focus on two specific, related solutions. The self-dual solution is not
asymptotically flat. The anti-self-dual solution is asymptotically flat, has
finite mass per unit area and saturates the same mass=charge Bogomolnyi bound
as the usual supermembrane. Nevertheless, neither solution preserves any
supersymmetry. Both solutions involve the octonionic structure constants but,
perhaps surprisingly, they are unrelated to the octonionic instanton 2-form
, for which is neither self-dual nor anti-self-dual.Comment: 17 pages, Latex; enhanced discussion on supersymmetry, some
references adde
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