41 research outputs found
Group Incentives and Rational Voting
Our model describes competition between groups driven by the choices of
self-interested voters within groups. Within a Poisson voting environment,
parties observe aggregate support from groups and can allocate prizes or
punishments to them. In a tournament style analysis, the model characterizes
how contingent allocation of prizes based on relative levels of support affects
equilibrium voting behavior. In addition to standard notions of pivotality,
voters influence the distribution of prizes across groups. Such prize
pivotality supports positive voter turnout even in non-competitive electoral
settings. The analysis shows that competition for a prize awarded to the most
supportive group is only stable when two groups actively support a party.
However, competition among groups to avoid punishment is stable in environments
with any number of groups. We conclude by examining implications for endogenous
group formation and how politicians structure the allocation of rewards and
punishments.Comment: 34 pages, 1 figur
Utility of echocardiography in predicting mortality in infants with severe bronchopulmonary dysplasia
This article is made available for unrestricted research re-use and secondary analysis in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for the duration of the World Health Organization (WHO) declaration of COVID-19 as a global pandemic.Objective: To determine the relationship between interventricular septal position (SP) and right ventricular systolic pressure (RVSP) and mortality in infants with severe BPD (sBPD).
Study design: Infants with sBPD in the Children's Hospitals Neonatal Database who had echocardiograms 34-44 weeks' postmenstrual age (PMA) were included. SP and RVSP were categorized normal, abnormal (flattened/bowed SP or RVSP > 40 mmHg) or missing.
Results: Of 1157 infants, 115 infants (10%) died. Abnormal SP or RVSP increased mortality (SP 19% vs. 8% normal/missing, RVSP 20% vs. 9% normal/missing, both p < 0.01) in unadjusted and multivariable models, adjusted for significant covariates (SP OR 1.9, 95% CI 1.2-3.0; RVSP OR 2.2, 95% CI 1.1-4.7). Abnormal parameters had high specificity (SP 82%; RVSP 94%), and negative predictive value (SP 94%, NPV 91%) for mortality.
Conclusions: Abnormal SP or RVSP is independently associated with mortality in sBPD infants. Negative predictive values distinguish infants most likely to survive
Top Quark Physics
We review the prospects for studies of the top quark at the LHC.We review the prospects for studies of the top quark at the LHC. Members of the working group who have contributed to this document are: A.Ahmadov, G.Azuelos, U.Baur, A.Belyaev, E.L.Berger, W.Bernreuther, E.E.Boos, M.Bosman, A.Brandenburg, R.Brock, M.Buice, N.Cartiglia, F.Cerutti, A.Cheplakov, L.Chikovani, M.Cobal-Grassmann, G.Corcella, F.del Aguila, T.Djobava, J.Dodd, V.Drollinger, A.Dubak, S.Frixione, D.Froidevaux, B.Gonzalez Pineiro, Y.P.Gouz, D.Green, P.Grenier, S.Heinemeyer, W.Hollik, V.Ilyin, C.Kao, A.Kharchilava, R. Kinnunen, V.V.Kukhtin, S.Kunori, L.La Rotonda, A.Lagatta, M.Lefebvre, K.Maeshima, G.Mahlon, S.Mc Grath, G.Medin, R.Mehdiyev, B.Mele, Z.Metreveli, D.O'Neil, L.H.Orr, D.Pallin, S.Parke, J.Parsons, D.Popovic, L.Reina, E.Richter-Was, T.G.Rizzo, D.Salihagic, M.Sapinski, M.H.Seymour, V.Simak, L.Simic, G.Skoro, S.R.Slabospitsky, J.Smolik, L.Sonnenschein, T.Stelzer, N.Stepanov, Z.Sullivan, T.Tait, I.Vichou, R.Vidal, D.Wackeroth, G.Weiglein, S.Willenbrock, W.W
Crustal recycling by subduction erosion in the central Mexican Volcanic Belt
Recycling of upper plate crust in subduction zones, or âsubduction erosionâ, is a major mechanism of crustal destruction at convergent margins. However, assessing the impact of eroded crust on arc magmas is difficult owing to the compositional similarity between the eroded crust, trench sediment and arc crustal basement that may all contribute to arc magma formation. Here we compare SrâNdâPbâHf and trace element data of crustal input material to SrâNdâPbâHfâHeâO isotope chemistry of a well-characterized series of olivine-phyric, high-Mg# basalts to dacites in the central Mexican Volcanic Belt (MVB). Basaltic to andesitic magmas crystallize high-Ni olivines that have high mantle-like 3He/4He = 7â8 Ra and high crustal ÎŽ18Omelt = +6.3â8.5â° implying their host magmas to be near-primary melts from a mantle infiltrated by slab-derived crustal components. Remarkably, their HfâNd isotope and Nd/Hf trace element systematics rule out the trench sediment as the recycled crust end member, and imply that the coastal and offshore granodiorites are the dominant recycled crust component. SrâNdâPbâHf isotope modeling shows that the granodiorites control the highly to moderately incompatible elements in the calc-alkaline arc magmas, together with lesser additions of Pb- and Sr-rich fluids from subducted mid-oceanic ridge basalt (MORB)-type altered oceanic crust (AOC). NdâHf mass balance suggests that the granodiorite exceeds the flux of the trench sediment by at least 9â10 times, corresponding to a flux of â©Ÿ79â88 km3/km/Myr into the subduction zone. At an estimated thickness of 1500â1700 m, the granodiorite may buoyantly rise as bulk âslab diapirsâ into the mantle melt region and impose its trace element signature (e.g., Th/La, Nb/Ta) on the prevalent calc-alkaline arc magmas. Deep slab melting and local recycling of other slab components such as oceanic seamounts further diversify the MVB magmas by producing rare, strongly fractionated high-La magmas and a minor population of high-Nb magmas, respectively. Overall, the central MVB magmas inherit their striking geochemical diversity principally from the slab, thus emphasizing the importance of continental crust recycling in modern solid Earth relative to its new formation in modern subduction zones
Top anti-top quark spin correlations and the potential of observation of CP volation in the production vertex
Heavy quarks have special properties. The decay and production mechanism is mentioned. Large statistics of t-quarks can significantly contribute to understand the mass and properties of quarks. Also a possible new interactions in the strong vertex, involving supersymetric particles, several Higgs fields, may contribute to observable quantities. Such dynamics may be detected via asymmetry, which may reflect CP-violation in the strong production vertex. Some possibilities to study of this effects at the LHC energies in ATLAS experiment is subject of this note
EVALUATION OF PHYSICO-CHEMICAL STABILITY OF SUN FILTERS IN GEL MANIPULATED IN THE CITY OF PONTA GROSSA-PR
Os filtro solares sĂŁo formulaçÔes que ajudam a proteger a pele contra os raios ultravioleta UVA/UVB do sol, tĂȘm a capacidade de absorver e/ou dispersar os raios solares. Os testes realizados visam verificar a estabilidade fĂsico-quĂmica de filtros solares em gel realizando os ensaios de pH, viscosidade, densidade, caracterĂsticas organolĂ©pticas e espalhabilidade. Assim, o objetivo do trabalho Ă© avaliar a estabilidadefĂsico-quĂmica de duas formulaçÔes de protetores solares faciais em gel manipulados em duas diferentes farmĂĄcias de manipulação na cidade de Ponta Grossa - PR. A avaliação da estabilidade do filtro solar em gel Ă© de suma importĂąncia, pois assim assegura a qualidade e segurança ao produto. Para isso foram coletados dados em 0, 30 e 60 dias. As amostras ficaram em estufa a 40ÂșC. Valores mĂ©dios encontrados para densidade diminuĂram ao longo do tempo, provavelmente devido a perda de ĂĄgua e compostos volĂĄteis.Para resultados de pH observamos uma pequena alteração ao longo do tempo porem os valores ainda ficam dentro da faixa de pH da pele. A viscosidade alterou bastante ao longo do ensaio e isto denota grande instabilidade fĂsico-quĂmica a 40 ÂșC. Os caracteres organolĂ©pticos e espalhabilidade tambĂ©m sofreram pequenas alteraçÔes e a estabilidade mostrou-se ineficiente ao longo de 60 dias. Assim, o trabalho demonstrou a instabilidade fĂsico-quĂmica dos produtos nas condiçÔes testadas ao longo de 60 dias de ensaios
Independent component analysis: fetal signal reconstruction from magnetocardiographic recording
Independent component analysis (ICA) was used for the processing of cardiological signals obtained by means of fetal magnetocardiography (fMCG), a technique allowing the non-invasive recording of the weak magnetic field variations associated to the electrical activity of the fetal heart. Purpose of the present work was to verify whether a computational-light ICA algorithm (FastICA), tailored to the characteristics of fMCG, could reconstruct reliable signals of the fetal cardiac activity during the last gestational trimester, when good electrophysiological traces are difficult to obtain although being extremely important for clinical diagnosis of severe fetal dysrhythmias. Several combinations of input recordings and output components were examined in order to assess the best configuration to successfully use FastICA. The reconstructed traces were compared with those obtained with deterministic techniques already used for this purpose, and they showed to be stable and reliable, unaffected by overlapped maternal and fetal beats and suitable for clinical applications