15 research outputs found

    Organisations et territoires

    Get PDF
    Pourquoi et comment mettre en valeur tous les territoires du Québec? - Guy Massicotte Une stratégie de renforcement des petits centres ruraux - Clermont Dugas Soutenir les PME exportatrices en région - André Joyal et Cécile Grandbois Ce que les régions non métropolitaines ont à offrir - Paul Villeneuve, Rémy Barbonne et Nicolas Racine Pour sortir de l'approche contre - périphérie? - Juan-Luis Klein Territoires de l'identité, territoires de la culture - Andrée Fortin Entreprises innovantes et renouvellement des économies régionales - Serge Côté L'exode des jeunes des régions du Québec : l'urgence d'agir! - Yves Lacasse De la connectivité - Jean-Marc Fontan Innovations en région, développement en métropole? - Richard Shearmur Que faire? Là est la question... - Oleg Stanek Et si la croissance n'étais pas au rendez-vous? - Michel Boisvert Évolution ou changements radicaux? - Bernard Vermot-Desroches Sacré-Cœur : un exemple de dynamisme économique - David Tremblay, Jean Perron et Guy Germain La politique territoriale - Marc-Urbain Proul

    Additional file 1: Table S1. of Residential particulate matter and distance to roadways in relation to mammographic density: results from the Nurses’ Health Studies

    No full text
    Presenting adjusted estimates (95% CI) of the difference in square-root-transformed mammographic dense area and nondense area for a 10-Îźg/m3 increase in PM among premenopausal and postmenopausal women residing across the United States and within regions, and Table S2. presenting adjusted estimates (95% CI) of the difference in untransformed mammographic density measures for a 10-Îźg/m3 increase in PM using bootstrapped robust standard errors (DOCX 33 kb

    Additional file 1: of Ambient ultraviolet radiation exposure and hepatocellular carcinoma incidence in the United States

    No full text
    Modeling the association between ambient UV and HCC incidence and analyses using exposure lags of 5–20 years. (DOCX 21 kb

    Comparison between the use of surface and volume conductivity to compute potential distribution along an insulator in presence of a thin conductive layer

    Get PDF
    This paper describes a comparative study on the modeling of a thin conductive dielectric layer usually found on polluted or ice-covered insulators. Two different approaches such as those offered by most FEM commercial software were studied. The first one is a volume approach which takes into account the thickness of the thin layer. The second is the surface approach where the thin layer is treated as a specific boundary condition. Simulations were performed using the FEM commercial software Comsol Multiphysics® that allows both volume and surface approaches. Parameters such as conductivity and permittivity of the thin layer as well as the number of elements used are studied both in 2D axisymmetric and 3D modeling. The results obtained demonstrated that the surface approach is the best solution as it provides the same results as the volume approach but with 3 times less elements required for the mesh. The surface approach should then be considered for 3D complex problems where thin conductive dielectric layer is present

    Additional file 2: of Exposure to hazardous air pollutants and risk of incident breast cancer in the Nurses’ Health Study II

    No full text
    Multivariable adjusted associations of increasing quartiles of each mammary carcinogen HAP exposure on risk of incident invasive overall, estrogen-receptor positive (ER+) or estrogen-receptor negative (ER-) breast cancer 1989–2011 among 109,239 members of the Nurses’ Health Study II cohort (DOCX 51 kb

    Additional file 1: Table S1. of Mammographic texture and risk of breast cancer by tumor type and estrogen receptor status

    No full text
    Baseline characteristics of study population per study site. Table S2. Pearson correlation coefficient for top 15 significant features. Correlations calculated using case subjects. Gray and gray with line pattern highlight strength of positive and negative associations, respectively. (PDF 123 kb

    Pedagogical and psychological factors that influence player performance in youth football

    Get PDF
    Title: Psychological and pedagogical factors that influence player performance in youth football Objectives: The objective of the theoretical part is to analyze the psychological development of the player and the pedagogical aspects influencing the performance from the point of view of the educational activities of the coaches and parents. The selected theoretical starting points are then linked to the player's game play and its sporting development. The content of the research section is to examine the emotional reactions of the players of the preparatory and pupil categories in the clubs AC Sparta Praha and FK Dukla Praha. We analyzed the results of the emotional experience of the players and then we analyzed the differences of factors in the developmental stages of the sporting development and the results of the differences of emotional reactions of the players of both clubs. Methods: In this work we used a questioning method, namely a standardized DEMOR emotional reaction questionnaire examining emotional reactions of pupils. We have adapted it to the sport training environment and piloted. The research was conducted in seven teams of the AC Sparta Prague Football Club and seven teams of FK Dukla Prague in the U9-U15 category. Results: The results showed high values of positive emotional..

    Difference in square-root mammographic density measures in postmenopausal compared to premenopausal women and by time since menopause: Overall and in subgroups (pooled analyses).

    No full text
    <p>Difference in square-root mammographic density measures in postmenopausal compared to premenopausal women and by time since menopause: Overall and in subgroups (pooled analyses).</p

    Polynomial smoothed curves of the crude association of percent mammographic density with age, for each population group within broad ethnic groups.

    No full text
    <p>The broad ethnic groups are organised from largest (black women) to smallest (East Asian women) average breast area for BMI. Full names and details of studies/population groups presented in this figure are provided in <a href="http://www.plosmedicine.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002335#pmed.1002335.s011" target="_blank">S1 Text</a>). Adjustments: none. PD, percent mammographic density.</p
    corecore