5,477 research outputs found
Pigment analysis by Raman microscopy and portable X-ray fluorescence (pXRF) of thirteenth to fourteenth century illuminations and cuttings from Bologna
Non-destructive pigment analysis by Raman microscopy (RM) and portable X-ray fluorescence (pXRF) has been carried out on some Bolognese illuminations and cuttings chosen to represent the beginnings, evolution and height of Bolognese illuminated manuscript production. Dating to the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries and held in a private collection, the study provides evidence for the pigments generally used in this period. The results, which are compared with those obtained for other north Italian artwork, show the developments in usage of artistic materials and technique. Also addressed in this study is an examination of the respective roles of RM and pXRF analysis in this area of technical art history
POTENTIAL HEALTHCARE SAVINGS FROM PLANT STEROL ENRICHED FOODS IN CANADA
Increased consumption of foods containing plant sterols has the potential to reduce the incidence of coronary heart disease (CHD) and thus reduce costs associated with treating that disease in a significant way. This paper reports the results of an investigation of the potential monetary benefits of allowing foods enriched with plant sterols to be marketed in Canada. The objective of this research was to estimate the annual savings that would accrue to Canada’s single-payer publicly funded health care system if plant sterols were approved for use. If foods containing plant sterols are consumed at a sufficient rate, a reduction in CHD should follow. This research employs a variation of traditional cost-of-illness analysis entailing four steps: (i) estimation of a “success rate” (proportion of persons who would consume plant sterols at the necessary rate); (ii) presumption of blood cholesterol reduction due to plant sterol consumption; (iii) assumption of reduction in CHD that follows from blood cholesterol reduction; (iv) calculation of cost savings associated with reduced incidence of CHD. Calculations were carried out for four scenarios: ideal, optimistic, pessimistic, and very pessimistic. It was estimated that between 2.45 billion (ideal scenario) could be saved annually by Canada’s health care system with plant sterol enriched food products being made available for sale.coronary heart disease, cost of illness analysis, health care costs, success rate, Agricultural and Food Policy, Consumer/Household Economics, Demand and Price Analysis, Food Consumption/Nutrition/Food Safety, Food Security and Poverty, Health Economics and Policy, I18,
A potential new method for determining the temperature of cool stars
‘The definitive version is available at www.blackwell-synergy.com.’ Copyright Blackwell Publishing DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2008.13489.xPeer reviewe
A revolution for the at-risk
The case for investment in early intervention for neurodevelopmental disorders
Kernel density classification and boosting: an L2 sub analysis
Kernel density estimation is a commonly used approach to classification. However, most of the theoretical results for kernel methods apply to estimation per se and not necessarily to classification. In this paper we show that when estimating the difference between two densities, the optimal smoothing parameters are increasing functions of the sample size of the complementary group, and we provide a small simluation study which examines the relative performance of kernel density methods when the final goal is classification. A relative newcomer to the classification portfolio is “boosting”, and this paper proposes an algorithm for boosting kernel density classifiers. We note that boosting is closely linked to a previously proposed method of bias reduction in kernel density estimation and indicate how it will enjoy similar properties for classification. We show that boosting kernel classifiers reduces the bias whilst only slightly increasing the variance, with an overall reduction in error. Numerical examples and simulations are used to illustrate the findings, and we also suggest further areas of research
Toxicity of cancer therapy: what the cardiologist needs to know about angiogenesis inhibitors
Clinical outcomes for patients with a wide range of malignancies have improved substantially over the last two decades. Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) are potent signalling cascade inhibitors and have been responsible for significant advances in cancer therapy. By inhibiting vascular endothelial growth factor receptor (VEGFR)-mediated tumour blood vessel growth, VEGFR-TKIs have become a mainstay of treatment for a number of solid malignancies. However, the incidence of VEGFR-TKI-associated cardiovascular toxicity is substantial and previously under-recognised. Almost all patients have an acute rise in blood pressure, and the majority develop hypertension. They are associated with the development of left ventricular systolic dysfunction (LVSD), heart failure and myocardial ischaemia and can have effects on myocardial repolarisation. Attention should be given to rigorous baseline assessment of patients prior to commencing VEGFR-TKIs, with careful consideration of baseline cardiovascular risk factors. Baseline blood pressure measurement, ECG and cardiac imaging should be performed routinely. Hypertension management currently follows national guidelines, but there may be a future role forendothelin-1 antagonism in the prevention or treatment of VEGFR-TKI-associated hypertension. VEGFR-TKI-associated LVSD appears to be independent of dose and is reversible. Patients who develop LVSD and heart failure should be managed with conventional heart failure therapies, but the role of prophylactic therapy is yet to be defined. Serial monitoring of left ventricular function and QT interval require better standardisation and coordinated care. Management of these complex patients requires collaborative, cardio-oncology care to allow the true therapeutic potential from cancer treatment while minimising competing cardiovascular effects
Brain adaptation and alternative developmental trajectories
Resilience and adaptation in the face of early genetic or environmental risk has become a major interest in child psychiatry over recent years. However, we still remain far from an understanding of how developing human brains as a whole adapt to the diffuse and widespread atypical synaptic function that may be characteristic of some common developmental disorders. The first part of this paper discusses four types of whole-brain adaptation in the face of early risk: redundancy, reorganization, niche construction, and adjustment of developmental rate. The second part of the paper applies these adaptation processes specifically to autism. We speculate that key features of autism may be the end result of processes of early brain adaptation, rather than the direct consequences of ongoing neural pathology
P-Wave Charmonium Production in B-Meson Decays
We calculate the decay rates of mesons into P-wave charmonium states
using new factorization formulas that are valid to leading order in the
relative velocity of the charmed quark and antiquark and to all orders in the
running coupling constant of QCD. We express the production rates for all four
P states in terms of two nonperturbative parameters, the derivative of the
wavefunction at the origin and another parameter related to the probability for
a charmed-quark-antiquark pair in a color-octet S-wave state to radiate a soft
gluon and form a P-wave bound state. Using existing data on meson decays
into to estimate the color-octet parameter, we find that the
color-octet mechanism may account for a significant fraction of the
production rate and that mesons should decay into at a similar
rate.Comment: 14 page
Pathways from pilot to demonstration : how can research advance CO2 geological storage deployment?
An international workshop was hosted by the British Geological Survey (BGS), supported by the
United Kingdom’s Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO), from the 1st to the 3rd of March
2016 at the BGS offices in Keyworth, Nottingham, United Kingdom.
The workshop objectives were to:
Examine how pilot, field laboratory and laboratory projects can inform and advance large-scale
CO2 storage and low-carbon geo-energy resources.
Reinforce the importance of advancing CCS through practical experience at varied relevant scales:
pilots/field labs (testing concepts) and demonstrations (deploy technologies and identify new
technical questions for pilots to examine)
Strengthening international links between field lab, pilot, demonstration and large scale project
operators to make it easier to share lessons learned
Exchange research learning between CCS and other geo-energy disciplines
The workshop outcomes were intended to identify of opportunities for collaboration and
development of outline proposals to advance CCS and geo-energy research through practical
experience and demonstrations.
Workshop invitees included policy makers, demonstration project representatives, academics and
pilot project operators. A total of 75 delegates attended, who represented 46 organisations
including research institutions, industry (national, multinational and suppliers), global and
national CCS networks and trade associations (see attached delegate list – Appendix 1), and a
government representative from UK DECC. Delegates were from 13 countries worldwide
Annual research review: Infant development, autism, and ADHD – early pathways to emerging disorders
- Background: Autism spectrum disorders (ASD) and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) are two of the most common neurodevelopmental disorders, with a high degree of co-occurrence.
- Methods: Prospective longitudinal studies of infants who later meet criteria for ASD or ADHD offer the opportunity to determine whether the two disorders share developmental pathways.
- Results: Prospective studies of younger siblings of children with autism have revealed a range of infant behavioral and neural markers associated with later diagnosis of ASD. Research on infants with later ADHD is less developed, but emerging evidence reveals a number of relations between infant measures and later symptoms of inattention and hyperactivity.
- Conclusions: We review this literature, highlighting points of convergence and divergence in the early pathways to ASD and ADHD
- …