2,088 research outputs found

    Characterization of damage in shielding structures of space vehicles under hypervelocity impact

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    6th Asia Pacific Workshop on Structural Health Monitoring, APWSHM, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia, 7-9 December 2016Version of RecordPublishe

    Spatial Division Multiplexed Microwave Signal processing by selective grating inscription in homogeneous multicore fibers

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    [EN] The use of Spatial Division Multiplexing for Microwave Photonics signal processing is proposed and experimentally demonstrated, for the first time to our knowledge, based on the selective inscription of Bragg gratings in homogeneous multicore fibers. The fabricated devices behave as sampled true time delay elements for radiofrequency signals offering a wide range of operation possibilities within the same optical fiber. The key to processing flexibility comes from the implementation of novel multicavity configurations by inscribing a variety of different fiber Bragg gratings along the different cores of a 7-core fiber. This entails the development of the first fabrication method to inscribe high-quality gratings characterized by arbitrary frequency spectra and located in arbitrary longitudinal positions along the individual cores of a multicore fiber. Our work opens the way towards the development of unique compact fiber-based solutions that enable the implementation of a wide variety of 2D (spatial and wavelength diversity) signal processing functionalities that will be key in future fiber-wireless communications scenarios. We envisage that Microwave Photonics systems and networks will benefit from this technology in terms of compactness, operation versatility and performance stability.We thank Prof. Jose Capmany for the thoughtful discussions and recommendations that greatly contribute to this work. This research was supported by the Spanish MINECO Projects TEC2014-60378-C2-1-R and TEC2015-62520-ERC, the Valencian Research Excellency Award Program GVA PROMETEO 2013/012, the Spanish MECD FPU Scholarship (FPU13/04675) for J. Hervas, and the Spanish MINECO Ramon y Cajal Program (RYC-2014-16247) for I. Gasulla.Gasulla Mestre, I.; Barrera Vilar, D.; Hervás-Peralta, J.; Sales Maicas, S. (2017). Spatial Division Multiplexed Microwave Signal processing by selective grating inscription in homogeneous multicore fibers. Scientific Reports. 7(41727):1-10. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep41727S110741727Samsung Electronics Co, “5G Vision”, available at http://www.samsung.com/global/business-images/insights/2015/Samsung-5G-Vision-0.pdf (2015).Technology Focus on Microwave Photonics. Nat. Photonics 5, 723 (2011).J. Capmany, J. Mora, I. Gasulla, J. Sancho, J. Lloret & S. Sales . Microwave photonic signal processing. IEEE J. Lightw. Technol. 31, 571–586 (2013).Y. Long & J. Wang . Ultra-high peak rejection notch microwave photonic filter using a single silicon microring resonator. Opt. Express 23, 17739–17750 (2015).Y. Long & J. Wang . All-optical tuning of a nonlinear silicon microring assisted microwave photonic filter: theory and experiment. Opt. Express 23, 17758–17771 (2015).Y. Long, L. Zhou & J. Wang . Photonic-assisted microwave signal multiplication and modulation using a silicon Mach–Zehnder modulator. Sci. Reports 6, 20215 (2016).J. Sancho, J. Bourderionnet, J. Lloret, S. Combrié, I. Gasulla, S. Xavier, S. Sales, P. Colman, G. Lehoucq, D. Dolfi, J. Capmany & A. De Rossi . Integrable microwave filter based on a photonic crystal delay line. Nat. Commun. 3, 1075 (2012).F. Ohman, K. Yvind & J. Mørk . Slow Light in a Semiconductor Waveguide for True-Time Delay Applications in Microwave Photonics. IEEE Photon. Technol. Lett. 19, 1145–1157 (2007).P. A. Morton & J. B. Khurgin. Microwave photonic delay line with separate tuning of the optical carrier. IEEE Photon. Technol. Lett. 21, 1686–1688 (2009).D. Marpaung, C. Roeloffzen, R. Heideman, A. Leinse, S. Sales & J. Capmany . Integrated microwave photonics. Lasers Photon. Rev. 7, 506–538 (2013).I. Gasulla & J. Capmany . Microwave photonics applications of multicore fibers. Photonics J. 4, 877–888 (2012).S. Garcia & I. Gasulla . Design of Heterogeneous Multicore fibers as sampled True Time Delay Lines. Opt. Lett. 40, 621–624 (2015).F. Zeng & J. Yao . All-optical microwave filters using uniform fiber Bragg gratings with identical reflectivities. IEEE J. Lightw. Technol. 23, 1410 (2005).C. Wang & J. Yao . Fiber Bragg gratings for microwave photonics subsystems. Opt. Express 21, 22868–22884 (2013).I. Gasulla, D. Barrera & S. Sales . Microwave photonic devices based on multicore fibers. 16th International Conference on Transparent Optical Networks (ICTON), Graz, Austria, 2014.I. Gasulla, D. Barrera, J. Hervás, S. García & S. Sales . Multi-cavity Microwave Photonics devices built upon multicore fibres. 18th International Conference on Transparent Optical Networks (ICTON), Trento (Italy), pp. 1–4, 2016.K. O. Hill & G. Meltz . Fiber Bragg grating technology fundamentals and overview. IEEE J. Lightw. Technol. 15, 1263–1276 (1997).T. Erdogan . Fiber grating spectra. IEEE J. Lightw. Technol. 15, 1277–1294 (1997).D. Barrera, I. Gasulla & S. Sales . Multipoint two-dimensional curvature optical fiber sensor based on a non-twisted homogeneous four-core fiber. IEEE J. Lightw. Technol. 33, 2445–2450 (2015).T. Birks, B. Mangan, A. Diez, J. Cruz, S. Leon-Saval, J. Bland-Hawthorn & D. Murphy . Multicore optical fibres for astrophotonics. In CLEO/Europe and EQEC 2011 Conference Digest, OSA Technical Digest (CD)d (Optical Society of America, 2011), paper JSIII2_1.C. Wang, Z. Yan, Q. Sun, Z. Sun, C. Mou, J. Zhang, A. Badmos & L. Zhang . Fibre Bragg gratings fabrication in four core fibres. Proc. SPIE 9886, Micro-Structured and Specialty Optical Fibres IV, 98860H (2016).M. J. Cole, W. H. Loh, R. I. Laming, M. N. Zervas & S. Barcelos . Moving fibre/phase mask-scanning beam technique for enhanced flexibility in producing fibre gratings with uniform phase mask. Electron. Lett. 31, 1488–1490 (1995).M. Gallagher & U. Österberg . Time resolved 3.10 eV luminescence in germanium-doped silica glass. Appl. Phys. Lett. 63, 2987–2988 (1993).T. Komukai & M. Nakazawa . Fabrication of high-quality long fiber Bragg grating by monitoring 3.1 eV radiation (400 nm) from GeO defects. IEEE Photon. Tech. Lett. 8, 1495–1497 (1996).R. R. Thomson, H. T. Bookey, N. D. Psaila, A. Fender, S. Campbell, W. N. MacPherson, J. S. Barton, D. T. Reid & A. K. Kar . Ultrafast-laser inscription of a three dimensional fan-out device for multicore fiber coupling applications. Opt. Express 15, 11691–11697 (2007)

    “It’s hard to tell”. The challenges of scoring patients on standardised outcome measures by multidisciplinary teams: a case study of Neurorehabilitation

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    Background Interest is increasing in the application of standardised outcome measures in clinical practice. Measures designed for use in research may not be sufficiently precise to be used in monitoring individual patients. However, little is known about how clinicians and in particular, multidisciplinary teams, score patients using these measures. This paper explores the challenges faced by multidisciplinary teams in allocating scores on standardised outcome measures in clinical practice. Methods Qualitative case study of an inpatient neurorehabilitation team who routinely collected standardised outcome measures on their patients. Data were collected using non participant observation, fieldnotes and tape recordings of 16 multidisciplinary team meetings during which the measures were recited and scored. Eleven clinicians from a range of different professions were also interviewed. Data were analysed used grounded theory techniques. Results We identified a number of instances where scoring the patient was 'problematic'. In 'problematic' scoring, the scores were uncertain and subject to revision and adjustment. They sometimes required negotiation to agree on a shared understanding of concepts to be measured and the guidelines for scoring. Several factors gave rise to this problematic scoring. Team members' knowledge about patients' problems changed over time so that initial scores had to be revised or dismissed, creating an impression of deterioration when none had occurred. Patients had complex problems which could not easily be distinguished from each other and patients themselves varied in their ability to perform tasks over time and across different settings. Team members from different professions worked with patients in different ways and had different perspectives on patients' problems. This was particularly an issue in the scoring of concepts such as anxiety, depression, orientation, social integration and cognitive problems. Conclusion From a psychometric perspective these problems would raise questions about the validity, reliability and responsiveness of the scores. However, from a clinical perspective, such characteristics are an inherent part of clinical judgement and reasoning. It is important to highlight the challenges faced by multidisciplinary teams in scoring patients on standardised outcome measures but it would be unwarranted to conclude that such challenges imply that these measures should not be used in clinical practice for decision making about individual patients. However, our findings do raise some concerns about the use of such measures for performance management

    How large should whales be?

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    The evolution and distribution of species body sizes for terrestrial mammals is well-explained by a macroevolutionary tradeoff between short-term selective advantages and long-term extinction risks from increased species body size, unfolding above the 2g minimum size induced by thermoregulation in air. Here, we consider whether this same tradeoff, formalized as a constrained convection-reaction-diffusion system, can also explain the sizes of fully aquatic mammals, which have not previously been considered. By replacing the terrestrial minimum with a pelagic one, at roughly 7000g, the terrestrial mammal tradeoff model accurately predicts, with no tunable parameters, the observed body masses of all extant cetacean species, including the 175,000,000g Blue Whale. This strong agreement between theory and data suggests that a universal macroevolutionary tradeoff governs body size evolution for all mammals, regardless of their habitat. The dramatic sizes of cetaceans can thus be attributed mainly to the increased convective heat loss is water, which shifts the species size distribution upward and pushes its right tail into ranges inaccessible to terrestrial mammals. Under this macroevolutionary tradeoff, the largest expected species occurs where the rate at which smaller-bodied species move up into large-bodied niches approximately equals the rate at which extinction removes them.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, 2 data table

    Comparative 3D analyses and palaeoecology of giant early amphibians (Temnospondyli: Stereospondyli)

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    Macroevolutionary, palaeoecological and biomechanical analyses in deep time offer the possibility to decipher the structural constraints, ecomorphological patterns and evolutionary history of extinct groups. Here, 3D comparative biomechanical analyses of the extinct giant early amphibian group of stereospondyls together with living lissamphibians and crocodiles, shows that: i) stereospondyls had peculiar palaeoecological niches with proper bites and stress patterns very different than those of giant salamanders and crocodiles; ii) their extinction may be correlated with the appearance of neosuchians, which display morphofunctional innovations. Stereospondyls weathered the end-Permian mass extinction, re-radiated, acquired gigantic sizes and dominated (semi) aquatic ecosystems during the Triassic. Because these ecosystems are today occupied by crocodilians, and stereospondyls are extinct amphibians, their palaeobiology is a matter of an intensive debate: stereospondyls were a priori compared with putative living analogous such as giant salamanders and/or crocodilians and our new results try to close this debate.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version

    Empirical vs Bayesian approach for estimating haplotypes from genotypes of unrelated individuals

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    BACKGROUND: The completion of the HapMap project has stimulated further development of haplotype-based methodologies for disease associations. A key aspect of such development is the statistical inference of individual diplotypes from unphased genotypes. Several methodologies for inferring haplotypes have been developed, but they have not been evaluated extensively to determine which method not only performs well, but also can be easily incorporated in downstream haplotype-based association analyses. In this paper, we attempt to do so. Our evaluation was carried out by comparing the two leading Bayesian methods, implemented in PHASE and HAPLOTYPER, and the two leading empirical methods, implemented in PL-EM and HPlus. We used these methods to analyze real data, namely the dense genotypes on X-chromosome of 30 European and 30 African trios provided by the International HapMap Project, and simulated genotype data. Our conclusions are based on these analyses. RESULTS: All programs performed very well on X-chromosome data, with an average similarity index of 0.99 and an average prediction rate of 0.99 for both European and African trios. On simulated data with approximation of coalescence, PHASE implementing the Bayesian method based on the coalescence approximation outperformed other programs on small sample sizes. When the sample size increased, other programs performed as well as PHASE. PL-EM and HPlus implementing empirical methods required much less running time than the programs implementing the Bayesian methods. They required only one hundredth or thousandth of the running time required by PHASE, particularly when analyzing large sample sizes and large umber of SNPs. CONCLUSION: For large sample sizes (hundreds or more), which most association studies require, the two empirical methods might be used since they infer the haplotypes as accurately as any Bayesian methods and can be incorporated easily into downstream haplotype-based analyses such as haplotype-association analyses

    Length of stay and associated costs of obesity related hospital admissions in Ireland

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    BACKGROUND: Obesity is the cause of other chronic diseases, psychological problems, obesity shortens the lifespan and puts strain on health systems. The risk associated with childhood obesity in particular, which will accelerate the development of adult morbidity and mortality, has been identified as an emerging public health problem. METHODS: To estimate the length of stay and associated hospital costs for obesity related illnesses a cost of illness study was set up. All discharges from all acute hospitals in the Republic of Ireland from 1997 to 2004 with a principal or secondary diagnostic code for obesity for all children from 6 to 18 years of age and for adults were collected.A discharge frequency was calculated by dividing obesity related discharges by the total number of diagnoses (principal and secondary) for each year. The hospital costs related to obesity was calculated based on the total number of days care. RESULTS: The discharge frequency of obesity related conditions increased from 1.14 in 1997 to 1.49 in 2004 for adults and from 0.81 to 1.37 for children. The relative length of stay (number of days in care for obesity related conditions per 1000 days of hospital care given) increased from 1.47 in 1997 to 4.16 in 2004 for children and from 3.68 in 1997 to 6.74 in 2004 for adults.Based on the 2001 figures for cost per inpatient bed day, the annual hospital cost was calculated to be 4.4 Euromillion in 1997, increasing to 13.3 Euromillion in 2004. At a 20% variable hospital cost the cost ranges from 0.9 Euromillion in 1997 to 2.7 Euromillion in 2004; a 200% increase. CONCLUSION: The annual increase in the proportion of hospital discharges related to obesity is alarming. This increase is related to a significant increase in economic costs. This paper emphasises the need for action at an early stage of life. Health promotion and primary prevention of obesity should be high on the political agenda
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