1,813 research outputs found

    Quasi-infra-red fixed points and renormalisation group invariant trajectories for non-holomorphic soft supersymmetry breaking

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    In the MSSM the quasi-infra-red fixed point for the top-quark Yukawa coupling gives rise to specific predictions for the soft-breaking parameters. We discuss the extent to which these predictions are modified by the introduction of additional ``non-holomorphic'' soft-breaking terms. We also show that in a specific class of theories there exists an RG-invariant trajectory for the ``non-holomorphic'' terms, which can be understood using a holomorphic spurion term.Comment: 24 pages, TeX, two figures. Uses Harvmac (big) and epsf. Minor errors corrected, and the RG trajectory explained in terms of a holomorphic spurion ter

    Investigating concurrent auditory icon recognition

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    Presented at the 12th International Conference on Auditory Display (ICAD), London, UK, June 20-23, 2006.This paper an investigation of the identification of concurrently presented auditory icons1. The motivation for this work was to get a better understanding of the identification of an everyday sound scene. We collected a set of descriptions for a set of everyday sounds as classified by the participants, using their free text responses. Two different experiments were conducted. The first experiment used no sub-categorisation or classification information when choosing the auditory icons. The second experiment used object and action descriptors in the selection of auditory icons. Our hypotheses was that by ensuring auditory icons did not have the same object or action descriptors, the identification of auditory icons would improve. Both experiments used an onset-to-onset gap of 300 ms between auditory icons. The results show that when there was no overlap between the object and the action descriptors of the concurrent auditory icons, the identification of the auditory icons was significantly improved

    Preliminary Evidence That Yoga Practice Progressively Improves Mood and Decreases Stress in a Sample of UK Prisoners

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    Objectives. In the first randomized controlled trial of yoga on UK prisoners, we previously showed that yoga practice was associated with improved mental wellbeing and cognition. Here, we aimed to assess how class attendance, self-practice, and demographic factors were related to outcome amongst prisoners enrolled in the 10-week yoga intervention. Methods. The data of 55 participants (52 male, 3 female) who completed a 10-week yoga course were analysed. Changes in pre- and postyoga measures of affect, perceived stress, and psychological symptoms were entered into linear regression analyses with bias-corrected and accelerated bootstrap confidence intervals. Class attendance, self-practice, demographic variables, and baseline psychometric variables were included as regressors. Results. Participants who attended more yoga classes and those who engaged in frequent (5 times or more) self-practice reported significantly greater decreases in perceived stress. Decreases in negative affect were also significantly related to high frequency self-practice and greater class attendance at a near-significant level. Age was positively correlated with yoga class attendance, and higher levels of education were associated with greater decreases in negative affect. Conclusions. Our results suggest that there may be progressive beneficial effects of yoga within prison populations and point to subpopulations who may benefit the most from this practice

    Locally minimal uniformly oriented shortest networks

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    AbstractThe Steiner problem in a λ-plane is the problem of constructing a minimum length network interconnecting a given set of nodes (called terminals), with the constraint that all line segments in the network have slopes chosen from λ uniform orientations in the plane. This network is referred to as a minimum λ-tree. The problem is a generalization of the classical Euclidean and rectilinear Steiner tree problems, with important applications to VLSI wiring design.A λ-tree is said to be locally minimal if its length cannot be reduced by small perturbations of its Steiner points. In this paper we prove that a λ-tree is locally minimal if and only if the length of each path in the tree cannot be reduced under a special parallel perturbation on paths known as a shift. This proves a conjecture on necessary and sufficient conditions for locally minimal λ-trees raised in [M. Brazil, D.A. Thomas, J.F. Weng, Forbidden subpaths for Steiner minimum networks in uniform orientation metrics, Networks 39 (2002) 186–222]. For any path P in a λ-tree T, we then find a simple condition, based on the sum of all angles on one side of P, to determine whether a shift on P reduces, preserves, or increases the length of T. This result improves on our previous forbidden paths results in [M. Brazil, D.A. Thomas, J.F. Weng, Forbidden subpaths for Steiner minimum networks in uniform orientation metrics, Networks 39 (2002) 186–222]

    Effect of Preventive Primary Care Outreach on Health Related Quality of Life Among Older Adults at Risk of Functional Decline: Randomised Controlled Trial

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    Objective: To evaluate the impact of a provider initiated primary care outreach intervention compared with usual care among older adults at risk of functional decline. Design: Randomised controlled trial. Setting: Patients enrolled with 35 family physicians in five primary care networks in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. Participants: Patients were eligible if they were 75 years of age or older and were not receiving home care services. Of 3166 potentially eligible patients, 2662 (84%) completed the validated postal questionnaire used to determine risk of functional decline. Of 1724 patients who met the risk criteria, 769 (45%) agreed to participate and 719 were randomised. Intervention: The 12 month intervention, provided by experienced home care nurses in 2004-6, consisted of a comprehensive initial assessment using the resident assessment instrument for home care; collaborative care planning with patients, their families, and family physicians; health promotion; and referral to community health and social support services. Main outcome measures: Quality adjusted life years (QALYs), use and costs of health and social services, functional status, self rated health, and mortality. Results: The mean difference in QALYs between intervention and control patients during the study period was not statistically significant (0.017, 95% confidence interval ?0.022 to 0.056; P=0.388). The mean difference in overall cost of prescription drugs and services between the intervention and control groups was not statistically significant, (-C165(£107;118;C165 (£107; 118; 162), 95% confidence interval -C16545toC16 545 to $16 214; P=0.984). Changes over 12 months in functional status and self rated health were not significantly different between the intervention and control groups. Ten patients died in each group. Conclusions: The results of this study do not support adoption of this preventive primary care intervention for this target population of high risk older adults

    The practice of physicians and nurses in the Brazilian Family Health Programme – evidences of change in the delivery health care model

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    The article analyzes the practice of physicians and nurses working on the Family Health Programme (Programa de Saúde da Família or PSF, in Portuguese). A questionnaire was used to assess the evidences of assimilation of the new values and care principles proposed by the programme. The results showed that a great number of professionals seem to have incorporated the practice of home visits, health education actions and planning of the teams' work agenda to their routine labour activities

    Plasticity in nanoscale friction: Static and dynamic

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