1,871 research outputs found
Spatial dependency of Buruli ulcer prevalence on arsenic-enriched domains in Amansie West District, Ghana: implications for arsenic mediation in Mycobacterium ulcerans infection
BACKGROUND: In 1998, the World Health Organization recognized Buruli ulcer (BU), a human skin disease caused by Mycobacterium ulcerans (MU), as the third most prevalent mycobacterial disease. In Ghana, there have been more than 2000 reported cases in the last ten years; outbreaks have occurred in at least 90 of its 110 administrative districts. In one of the worst affected districts, Amansie West, there are arsenic-enriched surface environments resulting from the oxidation of arsenic-bearing minerals, occurring naturally in mineral deposits. RESULTS: Proximity analysis, carried out to determine spatial relationships between BU-affected areas and arsenic-enriched farmlands and arsenic-enriched drainage channels in the Amansie West District, showed that mean BU prevalence in settlements along arsenic-enriched drainages and within arsenic-enriched farmlands is greater than elsewhere. Furthermore, mean BU prevalence is greater along arsenic-enriched drainages than within arsenic-enriched farmlands. CONCLUSION: The results suggest that arsenic in the environment may play a contributory role in MU infection
Spectral analysis of the biharmonic operator subject to Neumann boundary conditions on dumbbell domains
We consider the biharmonic operator subject to homogeneous boundary
conditions of Neumann type on a planar dumbbell domain which consists of two
disjoint domains connected by a thin channel. We analyse the spectral behaviour
of the operator, characterizing the limit of the eigenvalues and of the
eigenprojections as the thickness of the channel goes to zero. In applications
to linear elasticity, the fourth order operator under consideration is related
to the deformation of a free elastic plate, a part of which shrinks to a
segment. In contrast to what happens with the classical second order case, it
turns out that the limiting equation is here distorted by a strange factor
depending on a parameter which plays the role of the Poisson coefficient of the
represented plate.Comment: To appear in "Integral Equations and Operator Theory
Explicit approximate controllability of the Schr\"odinger equation with a polarizability term
We consider a controlled Schr\"odinger equation with a dipolar and a
polarizability term, used when the dipolar approximation is not valid. The
control is the amplitude of the external electric field, it acts non linearly
on the state. We extend in this infinite dimensional framework previous
techniques used by Coron, Grigoriu, Lefter and Turinici for stabilization in
finite dimension. We consider a highly oscillating control and prove the
semi-global weak stabilization of the averaged system using a Lyapunov
function introduced by Nersesyan. Then it is proved that the solutions of the
Schr\"odinger equation and of the averaged equation stay close on every finite
time horizon provided that the control is oscillating enough. Combining these
two results, we get approximate controllability to the ground state for the
polarizability system
Ultrasonic Characterization of Porosity in Composites
The determination of levels of porosity is important in the engineering uses of graphite fiber/polymer matrix composites, since the interlaminar shear strength can be greatly reduced by excessive porosity [1]. Research in making nondestructive evaluations using ultrasonics as the probing energy has taken many directions. Hsu [2] has successfully modeled the frequency dependent attenuation to predict porosity levels in composites. Kline [3] has extended the work of Hashsin and Rosen [4] to determine the porosity and fiber volume fraction of composites by solving for the elastic coefficients of the composite structure. The propagation of leaky Lamb waves [5] has also been used to model porosity levels
Does the level of expressed emotion (LEE) questionnaire have the same factor structure for adolescents as it has for adults?
Background The level of expressed emotion (LEE) is a four-factor questionnaire that measures expressed emotion (EE) as perceived by the recipient. These factors are: perceived lack of emotional support, perceived intrusiveness, perceived irritation, and perceive criticism. The four factors of the LEE has previously been found to be related to psychological disorders and has good psychometric properties for adults. However, it has not previously been studied in adolescent populations. Methods A total of 311 adolescents participated in this study. Using structural equation modeling, confirmatory factor analyses were conducted to examine if the LEE also had the same four-factor structure for adolescents as it does for adults. Results The confirmatory factor analyses demonstrated that the LEE's four-factor structure also applied to adolescents. The internal consistency of the scales were good and all the inter-correlations between the scales were significant. Additionally, the factors were significantly correlated to adolescent depressive and anxiety symptom score dimensions. Conclusion These findings seem to indicate that the LEE may be a good instrument in the measurement of adolescents perceived EE
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Climate warming leads to divergent succession of grassland microbial communities
Accurate climate projections require an understanding of the effects of warming on ecological communities and the underlying mechanisms that drive them . However, little is known about the effects of climate warming on the succession of microbial communities . Here we examined the temporal succession of soil microbes in a long-term climate change experiment at a tall-grass prairie ecosystem. Experimental warming was found to significantly alter the community structure of bacteria and fungi. By determining the time-decay relationships and the paired differences of microbial communities under warming and ambient conditions, experimental warming was shown to lead to increasingly divergent succession of the soil microbial communities, with possibly higher impacts on fungi than bacteria. Variation partition- and null model-based analyses indicate that stochastic processes played larger roles than deterministic ones in explaining microbial community taxonomic and phylogenetic compositions. However, in warmed soils, the relative importance of stochastic processes decreased over time, indicating a potential deterministic environmental filtering elicited by warming. Although successional trajectories of microbial communities are difficult to predict under future climate change scenarios, their composition and structure are projected to be less variable due to warming-driven selection. 1–3 4,
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