444 research outputs found
Absolute properties of the main-sequence eclipsing binary FM Leo
First spectroscopic and new photometric observations of the eclipsing binary
FM Leo are presented. The main aims were to determine orbital and stellar
parameters of two components and their evolutionary stage. First spectroscopic
observations of the system were obtained with DDO and PST spectrographs. The
results of the orbital solution from radial velocity curves are combined with
those derived from the light-curve analysis (ASAS-3 photometry and
supplementary observations of eclipses with 1 m and 0.35 m telescopes) to
derive orbital and stellar parameters. JKTEBOP, Wilson-Devinney binary
modelling codes and a two-dimensional cross-correlation (TODCOR) method were
applied for the analysis. We find the masses to be M_1 = 1.318 0.007 and
M_2 = 1.287 0.007 M_sun, the radii to be R_1 = 1.648 0.043 and R_2
= 1.511 0.049 R_sun for primary and secondary stars, respectively. The
evolutionary stage of the system is briefly discussed by comparing physical
parameters with current stellar evolution models. We find the components are
located at the main sequence, with an age of about 3 Gyr.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, to appear in MNRA
Differences in prostate tumor characteristics and survival among religious groups in Songkhla, Thailand
Abstract
Background
The incidence and mortality from prostate cancer is expected to increase in the next decade in Thailand. Despite the perceived lower risk in this population vs. developed, western countries, it is becoming an important public health issue. Prostate cancer incidence varies between the most predominant religious groups in Thailand, Buddhists and Muslims. However limited data is available describing the prostate cancer survival in these two populations. Here we examine differences in prostate tumor characteristics and survival between Buddhists and Muslims in the province of Songkhla, Thailand.
Methods
945 incident prostate cancer cases (1990–2014) from the population-based Songkhla Cancer Registry were used in this analysis. Age, grade, stage, and year at diagnosis were compared across religious groups, using Wilcoxon or Chi-square tests. Kaplan Meier methods were used to estimate the median survival time and 5-year survival probabilities. Cox proportional hazards models were used to estimate hazard ratios (HR) between religious groups and 95% confidence intervals (CI) for mortality in age-adjusted and fully-adjusted models.
Results
Prostate tumor characteristics, age, and year at diagnosis were similar across religious groups. The median survival time after diagnosis of prostate cancer was longer in Buddhists 3.8 years compared with Muslims 3.2 years (p = 0.08). The age-adjusted risk of death after prostate cancer diagnosis was higher in Muslims compared with Buddhists (HR: 1.31; 95%CI: 1.00, 1.72). After adjustment by stage and grade, results were slightly attenuated (HR: 1.27, 95%CI: 0.97, 1.67).
Conclusion
Muslims have shorter survival after prostate cancer diagnosis than do Buddhists in Thailand. The reasons underlying this difference require additional investigation in order to design targeted interventions for both populations.https://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/146539/1/12885_2018_Article_5102.pd
Learning to Ignore Distracters
This is the author's accepted manuscript. This article may not exactly replicate the final version published in the APA journal. It is not the copy of record. The original publication is available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/a0025578.Eye tracking has indicated that older and young adults process distracters similarly when reading single sentences. The present study extended this approach by presenting short paragraphs, sentence by sentence. Eye tracking measures included reading times per word, and the duration of the first fixation and total fixations to the distracters and target words. Comprehension was tested following each paragraph, and recognition of distracters and target words was assessed. The results indicated that young adults were able to learn to ignore the distracters as they read through the paragraphs, whereas older adults were less successful at learning to ignore the distracters
Understanding verbal fluency in healthy aging, Alzheimer’s disease, and Parkinson’s disease
This is the author's accepted manuscript. This article may not exactly replicate the final version published in the APA journal. It is not the copy of record.• Objective: Verbal fluency measures are frequently part of batteries designed to assess executive function, but are also used to assess semantic processing ability or word knowledge. The goal of the present study was to identify the cognitive components underlying fluency performance.
• Method: Healthy young and older adults, adults with Parkinson’s disease, and adults with Alzheimer’s disease performed letter, category, and action fluency tests. Performance was assessed in terms of number of items generated, clustering, and the time course of output. A series of neuropsychological assessments were also administered to index verbal ability, working memory, executive function, and processing speed as correlates of fluency performance.
• Results: Findings indicated that regardless of the particular performance measure, young adults performed the best and adults with Alzheimer’s disease performed most poorly, with healthy older adults and adults with Parkinson’s disease performing at intermediate levels. The exception was the action fluency task, where adults with Parkinson’s disease performed most poorly. The time course of fluency performance was characterized in terms of slope and intercept parameters and related to neuropsychological constructs. Speed of processing was found to be the best predictor of performance, rather than the efficiency of executive function or semantic knowledge.
• Conclusions: Together, these findings demonstrate that the pattern of fluency performance looks generally the same regardless of how performance is measured. In addition, the primary role of processing speed in performance suggests that the use of fluency tasks as measures of executive function or verbal ability warrants reexamination.This work was conducted with grant support from the Kansas City Life Sciences Institute. Additional support was provided by the Digital Electronics Core of the Center for Biobehavioral Neurosciences in Communication Disorders, grant number P30 DC-005803, for assistance with the development of the digital ink assessment
Perceptions of Licensure: A Survey of Michigan Genetic Counselors
This study by the Michigan Genetic Counselor Licensure Committee is the first known published documentation of genetic counselors’ beliefs and attitudes about licensure. The response rate from genetic counselors in Michigan was 66% (41/62). Ninety‐five percent of respondents were supportive of licensure. Respondents believed licensure would legitimize genetic counseling as a distinct allied healthcare profession (97.5%), increase the public’s protection (75%), and allow genetic counselors to practice independently (67%). While 45% felt licensure would increase counselor involvement in lawsuits, this did not impact licensure support (p = 0.744). Opinions were split regarding physician supervision and ordering tests. Even though 28% favored physician supervision, there was overwhelming support for genetic counselors performing some components of genetic testing (95%) and ordering some types of genetic tests (82%) independent of a physician. Use of this survey may be helpful in other states to assess genetic counselors’ interest in licensure and for drafting legislation.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/147114/1/jgc40357.pd
Hadronic interaction of eta and eta-prime mesons with nucleons
Due to their short life-time, flavour-neutral mesons cannot be utilized as
free secondary beams or targets, and therefore a study of their interaction
with nucleons is not possible via direct scattering experiments.
This interaction is, however, accessible via its influence on the energy
dependence - and on the phase space distributions of the cross sections for
reactions in which these mesons are produced.
In case of the p p --> p p eta reaction the experimentally determined
distributions of the differential cross sections close to the production
threshold cannot be described by taking into account the S-wave proton-proton
and proton-eta interaction only. Here we show that the angular distributions
determined at the COSY-11 facility reveal some evidence for P-wave admixture in
the proton-proton subsystem already at an excess energy as low as Q = 15.5 MeV.
We also present that one can estimate the relative strength of the
eta-nucleon and eta-prime-nucleon interactions by comparison of the eta and
eta-prime production yield.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, Talk given at 16th International Conference on
Particles and Nuclei (PANIC 02), Osaka, Japan, 30 Sep - 4 Oct 200
COSY-11: an experimental facility for studying meson production in free and quasi-free nucleon-nucleon collisions
The COSY-11 experimental setup is an internal facility installed at the
COoler SYnchrotron COSY in Juelich. It allows to investigate meson production
in free and quasi-free nucleon-nucleon collisions, eg. pp --> pp meson and pd
--> p_sp np meson reactions. Drift chambers and scintillators permit to measure
outgoing protons, separated in magnetic field of COSY-11 dipole. Neutrons are
registered in the neutron modular detector installed downstream the beam.
Recently, the experimental setup has been extended with spectator detector,
deuteron drift chamber and polarization monitoring system, and since then meson
production can be investigated also as a function of spin and isospin of
colliding nucleons.Comment: Presented at LEAP05: International conference on Low Energy
Antiproton Physics, Bonn - Juelich, Germany, May 16-22, 200
General thoughts to the Kaon pair production in the threshold region
Simple--minded thoughts about the cross sections for the reactions
pp-->ppK+K- and pp-->ppK0K0 are presented, which certainly do not account for
the complex coupled channel problem but rather provide some ideas into the
mutual reaction dynamics.Comment: Talk given at 9th International Workshop on Meson Production,
Properties and Interaction, Cracow, Poland, 9-13 June 2006. 3 pages, 2
figure
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