731 research outputs found
Comparing three short questionnaires to detect psychosocial dysfunction among primary school children: a randomized method
BACKGROUND: Good questionnaires are essential to support the early identification of children with psychosocial dysfunction in community based settings. Our aim was to assess which of three short questionnaires was most suitable for this identification among school-aged children METHODS: A community-based sample of 2,066 parents of children aged 7-12 years (85% of those eligible) filled out the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) and - randomly determined - one of three questionnaires to be compared: the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire with Impact Supplement (SDQ), the Pediatric Symptom Checklist (PSC) and the PSYBOBA, a Dutch-origin questionnaire. Preventive Child Healthcare professionals assessed children's psychosocial functioning during routine health examinations. We assessed the scale structure (by means of Structural Equation Modelling), validity (correlation coefficients, sensitivity and specificity) and usability (ratings by parents and professionals) of each questionnaire and the degree to which they could improve the identification based only on clinical assessment (logistic regression). RESULTS: For the three questionnaires, Cronbach's alphas varied between 0.80 and 0.89. Sensitivities for a clinical CBCL at a cut off point with specificity = 0.90 varied between 0.78 and 0.86 for the three questionnaires. Areas under the Receiver Operating Curve, using the CBCL as criterion, varied between 0.93 and 0.96. No differences were statistically significant. All three questionnaires added information to the clinical assessment. Odds ratios (95% confidence intervals) for added information were PSC: 29.3 (14.4-59.8), SDQ: 55.0 (23.1-131.2) and PSYBOBA: 68.5 (28.3-165.6). Parents preferred the SDQ and PSYBOBA. Preventive Child Health Care professionals preferred the SDQ. CONCLUSIONS: This randomized comparison of three questionnaires shows that each of the three questionnaires can improve the detection of psychosocial dysfunction among children substantially
Structure and stability of finite gold nanowires
Finite gold nanowires containing less than 1000 atoms are studied using the
molecular dynamics simulation method and embedded atom potential. Nanowires
with the face-centered cubic structure and the (111) oriented cross-section are
prepared at T=0 K. After annealing and quenching the structure and vibrational
properties of nanowires are studied at room temperature. Several of these
nanowires form multi-walled structures of lasting stability. They consist of
concentrical cylindrical sheets and resemble multi-walled carbon nanotubes.
Vibrations are investigated by diagonalization of the dynamical matrix. It was
found that several percents of vibrational modes are unstable because of
uncompleted restructuring of initial fcc nanowires.Comment: 4 figures in gif forma
Does the Boltzmann principle need a dynamical correction?
In an attempt to derive thermodynamics from classical mechanics, an
approximate expression for the equilibrium temperature of a finite system has
been derived [M. Bianucci, R. Mannella, B. J. West, and P. Grigolini, Phys.
Rev. E 51, 3002 (1995)] which differs from the one that follows from the
Boltzmann principle S = k log (Omega(E)) via the thermodynamic relation 1/T=
dS/dE by additional terms of "dynamical" character, which are argued to correct
and generalize the Boltzmann principle for small systems (here Omega(E) is the
area of the constant-energy surface). In the present work, the underlying
definition of temperature in the Fokker-Planck formalism of Bianucci et al. is
investigated and shown to coincide with an approximate form of the
equipartition temperature. Its exact form, however, is strictly related to the
"volume" entropy S = k log (Phi(E)) via the thermodynamic relation above for
systems of any number of degrees of freedom (Phi(E) is the phase space volume
enclosed by the constant-energy surface). This observation explains and
clarifies the numerical results of Bianucci et al. and shows that a dynamical
correction for either the temperature or the entropy is unnecessary, at least
within the class of systems considered by those authors. Explicit analytical
and numerical results for a particle coupled to a small chain (N~10) of quartic
oscillators are also provided to further illustrate these facts.Comment: REVTeX 4, 10 pages, 2 figures. Accepted to J. Stat. Phy
Use of the Pediatric Symptom Checklist for the detection of psychosocial problems in preventive child healthcare
BACKGROUND: Early detection and treatment of psychosocial problems by preventive child healthcare may lead to considerable health benefits, and a short questionnaire could support this aim. The aim of this study was to assess whether the Dutch version of the US Pediatric Symptom checklist (PSC) is valid and suitable for the early detection of psychosocial problems among children. METHODS: We included 687 children (response 84.3%) aged 7–12 undergoing routine health assessments in nine Preventive Child Health Services across the Netherlands. Child health professionals interviewed and examined children and parents. Before the interview, parents completed an authorised Dutch translation of the PSC and the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL). The CBCL and data on the child's current treatment status were used as criteria for the validity of the PSC. RESULTS: The consistency of the Dutch PSC was good (Cronbach alpha 0.89). The area under the ROC curve using the CBCL as a criterion was 0.94 (95% confidence interval 0.92 to 0.96). At the US cut-off (28 and above), the prevalence rate of an increased score and sensitivity were lower than in the USA. At a lower cut-off (22 and above), sensitivity and specificity were similar to that of the US version (71.7% and 93.0% respectively). Information on the PSC also helped in the identification of children with elevated CBCL Total Problems Scores, above solely clinical judgment. CONCLUSION: The PSC is also useful for the early detection of psychosocial problems in preventive child healthcare outside the USA, especially with an adjusted cut-off
MATERIAL ARQUEOLÓGICO [Material gráfico]
Copia digital. Madrid : Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte, 201
Excitation and relaxation in atom-cluster collisions
Electronic and vibrational degrees of freedom in atom-cluster collisions are
treated simultaneously and self-consistently by combining time-dependent
density functional theory with classical molecular dynamics. The gradual change
of the excitation mechanisms (electronic and vibrational) as well as the
related relaxation phenomena (phase transitions and fragmentation) are studied
in a common framework as a function of the impact energy (eV...MeV). Cluster
"transparency" characterized by practically undisturbed atom-cluster
penetration is predicted to be an important reaction mechanism within a
particular window of impact energies.Comment: RevTeX (4 pages, 4 figures included with epsf
Melting behavior of ultrathin titanium nanowires
The thermal stability and melting behavior of ultrathin titanium nanowires
with multi-shell cylindrical structures are studied using molecular dynamic
simulation. The melting temperatures of titanium nanowires show remarkable
dependence on wire sizes and structures. For the nanowire thinner than 1.2 nm,
there is no clear characteristic of first-order phase transition during the
melting, implying a coexistence of solid and liquid phases due to finite size
effect. An interesting structural transformation from helical multi-shell
cylindrical to bulk-like rectangular is observed in the melting process of a
thicker hexagonal nanowire with 1.7 nm diameter.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Thermal Degradation of Adsorbed Bottle-Brush Macromolecules: Molecular Dynamics Simulation
The scission kinetics of bottle-brush molecules in solution and on an
adhesive substrate is modeled by means of Molecular Dynamics simulation with
Langevin thermostat. Our macromolecules comprise a long flexible polymer
backbone with segments, consisting of breakable bonds, along with two side
chains of length , tethered to each segment of the backbone. In agreement
with recent experiments and theoretical predictions, we find that bond cleavage
is significantly enhanced on a strongly attractive substrate even though the
chemical nature of the bonds remains thereby unchanged.
We find that the mean bond life time decreases upon adsorption by
more than an order of magnitude even for brush molecules with comparatively
short side chains $N=1 \div 4$. The distribution of scission probability along
the bonds of the backbone is found to be rather sensitive regarding the
interplay between length and grafting density of side chains. The life time
declines with growing contour length as ,
and with side chain length as . The probability
distribution of fragment lengths at different times agrees well with
experimental observations. The variation of the mean length of the
fragments with elapsed time confirms the notion of the thermal degradation
process as a first order reaction.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figure
Thermal expansion in small metal clusters and its impact on the electric polarizability
The thermal expansion coefficients of clusters with and , and
are obtained from {\it ab initio} Born-Oppenheimer LDA molecular dynamics.
Thermal expansion of small metal clusters is considerably larger than that in
the bulk and size-dependent. We demonstrate that the average static electric
dipole polarizability of Na clusters depends linearly on the mean interatomic
distance and only to a minor extent on the detailed ionic configuration when
the overall shape of the electron density is enforced by electronic shell
effects. The polarizability is thus a sensitive indicator for thermal
expansion. We show that taking this effect into account brings theoretical and
experimental polarizabilities into quantitative agreement.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, one table. Accepted for publication in Physical
Review Letters. References 10 and 23 update
- …