8,841 research outputs found
Quasiparticle Interference on the Surface of the Topological Insulator BiTe
The quasiparticle interference of the spectroscopic imaging scanning
tunneling microscopy has been investigated for the surface states of the large
gap topological insulator BiTe through the T-matrix formalism. Both the
scalar potential scattering and the spin-orbit scattering on the warped
hexagonal isoenergy contour are considered. While backscatterings are forbidden
by time-reversal symmetry, other scatterings are allowed and exhibit strong
dependence on the spin configurations of the eigenfunctions at k points over
the isoenergy contour. The characteristic scattering wavevectors found in our
analysis agree well with recent experiment results.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, Some typos are correcte
A New Experiment to Study Hyperon CP Violation and the Charmonium System
Fermilab operates the world's most intense antiproton source, now exclusively
dedicated to serving the needs of the Tevatron Collider. The anticipated 2009
shutdown of the Tevatron presents the opportunity for a world-leading low- and
medium-energy antiproton program. We summarize the status of the Fermilab
antiproton facility and review physics topics for which a future experiment
could make the world's best measurements.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures, to appear in Proceedings of CTP symposium on
Supersymmetry at LHC: Theoretical and Experimental Perspectives, The British
University in Egypt, Cairo, Egypt, 11-14 March 200
Utility and lower limits of frequency detection in surface electrode stimulation for somatosensory brain-computer interface in humans
Objective: Stimulation of the primary somatosensory cortex (S1) has been successful in evoking artificial somatosensation in both humans and animals, but much is unknown about the optimal stimulation parameters needed to generate robust percepts of somatosensation. In this study, the authors investigated frequency as an adjustable stimulation parameter for artificial somatosensation in a closed-loop brain-computer interface (BCI) system.
Methods: Three epilepsy patients with subdural mini-electrocorticography grids over the hand area of S1 were asked to compare the percepts elicited with different stimulation frequencies. Amplitude, pulse width, and duration were held constant across all trials. In each trial, subjects experienced 2 stimuli and reported which they thought was given at a higher stimulation frequency. Two paradigms were used: first, 50 versus 100 Hz to establish the utility of comparing frequencies, and then 2, 5, 10, 20, 50, or 100 Hz were pseudorandomly compared.
Results: As the magnitude of the stimulation frequency was increased, subjects described percepts that were âmore intenseâ or âfaster.â Cumulatively, the participants achieved 98.0% accuracy when comparing stimulation at 50 and 100 Hz. In the second paradigm, the corresponding overall accuracy was 73.3%. If both tested frequencies were less than or equal to 10 Hz, accuracy was 41.7% and increased to 79.4% when one frequency was greater than 10 Hz (p = 0.01). When both stimulation frequencies were 20 Hz or less, accuracy was 40.7% compared with 91.7% when one frequency was greater than 20 Hz (p < 0.001). Accuracy was 85% in trials in which 50 Hz was the higher stimulation frequency. Therefore, the lower limit of detection occurred at 20 Hz, and accuracy decreased significantly when lower frequencies were tested. In trials testing 10 Hz versus 20 Hz, accuracy was 16.7% compared with 85.7% in trials testing 20 Hz versus 50 Hz (p < 0.05). Accuracy was greater than chance at frequency differences greater than or equal to 30 Hz.
Conclusions: Frequencies greater than 20 Hz may be used as an adjustable parameter to elicit distinguishable percepts. These findings may be useful in informing the settings and the degrees of freedom achievable in future BCI systems
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EUS-guided portal pressure gradient measurement with a simple novel device: a human pilot study.
Background and aimsPortal hypertension is a serious adverse event of liver cirrhosis. Recently, we developed a simple novel technique for EUS-guided portal pressure gradient (PPG) measurement (PPGM). Our animal studies showed excellent correlation between EUS-PPGM and interventional radiology-acquired PPGM. In this video we demonstrate the results of the first human pilot study of EUS-PPGM in patients with liver disease.MethodsEUS-PPGM was performed by experienced endosonographers using a linear echoendoscope, a 25-gauge FNA needle, and a novel compact manometer. The portal vein and hepatic vein (or inferior vena cava) were targeted by use of a transgastric or transduodenal approach. Feasibility was defined as successful PPGM in each patient. Safety was based on adverse events captured in a postprocedural interview.ResultsTwenty-eight patients underwent EUS-PPGM with 100% technical success and no adverse events. PPG ranged from 1.5 to 19 mm Hg and had excellent correlation with clinical parameters of portal hypertension, including the presence of varices (P = .0002), PH gastropathy (P = .007), and thrombocytopenia (P = .036).ConclusionThis novel technique of EUS-PPGM using a 25-gauge needle and compact manometer is feasible and appears safe. Given the availability of EUS and the simplicity of the manometry setup, EUS-guided PPG may represent a promising breakthrough for procuring indispensable information in the management of patients with liver disease
Development of the TwoâStage Rapid Estimate of Adult Literacy in Dentistry
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/86828/1/j.1600-0528.2011.00619.x.pd
Prenatal Diagnosis of Fetal Cystic Hygromas Associated with Generalized Lymphangiectasis
Ultrasonography has made possible the prenatal diagnosis of many congenital fetal abnormalities. This report describes two cases of bilateral cystic hygromas of the neck associated with generalized lymphangiectasis that were diagnosed by ultrasound. Ultrasonic scans revealed moderate polyhydramnios: thick, edematous placenta and edematous fetus with large cystic mass occupying both sides of the neck and extending to the upper chest wall, ascites, and pleural effusion at gestational ages of 21.5 and 24 weeks, respectively. In one case, chromosomal study from amniotic fluid cell culture revealed X chromosome monosomy, often associated with lymphatic anomalies. The prenatal diagnosis was confirmed at birth: both infants delivered prematurely, were stillborn, and showed gross evidence of cystic hygromas of the neck. In this lymphatic defect, chromosomal analysis may be used for the diagnosis and in genetic counseling for subsequent pregnancies
Deformable registration of X-ray and MRI for post-implant dosimetry in low-dose-rate prostate brachytherapy
Purpose
Dosimetric assessment following permanent prostate brachytherapy (PPB) commonly involves seed localization using CT and prostate delineation using coregistered MRI. However, pelvic CT leads to additional imaging dose and requires significant resources to acquire and process both CT and MRI. In this study, we propose an automatic postimplant dosimetry approach that retains MRI for softâtissue contouring, but eliminates the need for CT and reduces imaging dose while overcoming the inconsistent appearance of seeds on MRI with three projection x rays acquired using a mobile Câarm.
Methods
Implanted seeds are reconstructed using x rays by solving a combinatorial optimization problem and deformably registered to MRI. Candidate seeds are located in MR images using local hypointensity identification. X rayâbased seeds are registered to these candidate seeds in three steps: (a) rigid registration using a stochastic evolutionary optimizer, (b) affine registration using an iterative closest point optimizer, and (c) deformable registration using a local feature point search and nonrigid coherent point drift. The algorithm was evaluated using 20 PPB patients with x rays acquired immediately postimplant and T2âweighted MR images acquired the next day at 1.5 T with mean 0.8 Ă 0.8 Ă 3.0 mmurn:x-wiley:00942405:media:mp13667:mp13667-math-0001 voxel dimensions. Target registration error (TRE) was computed based on the distance from algorithm results to manually identified seed locations using coregistered CT acquired the same day as the MRI. Dosimetric accuracy was determined by comparing prostate D90 determined using the algorithm and the ground truth CTâbased seed locations.
Results
The mean ± standard deviation TREs across 20 patients including 1774 seeds were 2.23 ± 0.52 mm (rigid), 1.99 ± 0.49 mm (rigid + affine), and 1.76 ± 0.43 mm (rigid + affine + deformable). The corresponding mean ± standard deviation D90 errors were 5.8 ± 4.8%, 3.4 ± 3.4%, and 2.3 ± 1.9%, respectively. The mean computation time of the registration algorithm was 6.1 s.
Conclusion
The registration algorithm accuracy and computation time are sufficient for clinical PPB postimplant dosimetry
Limits on Radio Continuum Emission from a Sample of Candidate Contracting Starless Cores
We used the NRAO Very Large Array to search for 3.6 cm continuum emission
from embedded protostars in a sample of 8 nearby ``starless'' cores that show
spectroscopic evidence for infalling motions in molecular emission lines. We
detect a total of 13 compact sources in the eight observed fields to 5 sigma
limiting flux levels of typically 0.09 mJy. None of these sources lie within 1'
of the central positions of the cores, and they are all likely background
objects. Based on an extrapolation of the empirical correlation between the
bolometric luminosity and 3.6 cm luminosity for the youngest protostars, these
null-detections place upper limits of ~0.1 L_sun (d/140pc)^2 on the
luminosities of protostellar sources embedded within these cores. These limits,
together with the extended nature of the inward motions inferred from molecular
line mapping (Lee et al. 2001), are inconsistent with the inside-out collapse
model of singular isothermal spheres and suggest a less centrally condensed
phase of core evolution during the earliest stages of star formation.Comment: Accepted to the Astronomical Journal; 12 pages, 1 figur
Iron oxide doped boron nitride nanotubes: structural and magnetic properties
A first-principles formalism is employed to investigate the interaction of
iron oxide (FeO) with a boron nitride (BN) nanotube. The stable structure of
the FeO-nanotube has Fe atoms binding N atoms, with bond length of roughly
2.1 \AA, and binding between O and B atoms, with bond length of 1.55 \AA.
In case of small FeO concentrations, the total magnetic moment is
(4) times the number of Fe atoms in the unit cell and it is
energetically favorable to FeO units to aggregate rather than randomly bind to
the tube. As a larger FeO concentration case, we study a BN nanotube fully
covered by a single layer of FeO. We found that such a structure has square FeO
lattice with Fe-O bond length of 2.11 \AA, similar to that of FeO bulk, and
total magnetic moment of 3.94 per Fe atom. Consistently with
experimental results, the FeO covered nanotube is a semi-half-metal which can
become a half-metal if a small change in the Fermi level is induced. Such a
structure may be important in the spintronics context.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
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