185 research outputs found
Análisis de variables relacionadas con el acceso y desempeño de las funciones directiva y docente en las nuevas universidades populares españolas. Un estudio a nivel nacional
Cada vez y con más frecuencia las instituciones
de educación no formal están cobrando una
mayor importancia en la formación continua de nuestros
ciudadanos. El presente trabajo recoge una investigación
realizada a nivel nacional sobre una de estas
instituciones que en la actualidad cuenta con más de
dos millones de alumnos. Estamos hablando de las Universidades
Populares españolas que en la actualidad se
encuentran expandidas por veintidós provincias de once
comunidades autónomas: Andalucía, Aragón, Castilla
La Mancha, Castilla León, Extremadura, Galicia, La
Rioja, Madrid, Murcia y Valencia. En esta investigación
se utilizaron tres tipos de cuestionarios dirigidos a cada uno de los estamentos ligados a este proyecto: los directivos,
los monitores y los alumnos. A su vez, se realizó
un estudio de caso en la Universidad Popular de
Loja (Granada), con el objetivo de dotar de significado
a los datos estadísticos obtenidos del estudio a nivel nacional.
De esta forma se han caracterizado y descrito
las principales tareas de las Universidades Populares españolas
y la visión que de ellas tienen los tres grupos
implicados en su vida diari
Impacto de la atención ambulatoria del primer nivel de atención en la hospitalización de población asegurada con diabetes mellitus tipo 2
ObjetivoDeterminar el impacto de atención ambulatoria del primer nivel de atención en la hospitalización del diabético tipo 2 en una población con condiciones iguales de aseguramiento.DiseñoEstudio de casos y controles. Los casos son pacientes diabéticos hospitalizados por enfermedad relacionada con el padecimiento, y los controles son pacientes diabéticos sin antecedente de hospitalización en el último año.EmplazamientoCentros de atención primaria urbanos.ParticipantesLos casos fueron seleccionados consecutivamente en 4 de 5 hospitales generales urbanos (n=123). Los controles fueron elegidos al azar en la unidad de atención primaria de donde provenía el caso (n=135). Se excluyó a las mujeres con diabetes gestacional y a todos los que no contaban con expediente localizable (aproximadamente un 15%).MedicionesSe construyó un índice de atención primaria según las recomendaciones de la Asociación de Médicos Norteamericanos, la Comisión Conjunta de Acreditación de Organizaciones de Salud, el Comité Nacional de Aseguramiento para la Calidad, la Asociación Norteamericana de Diabetes y la Norma Oficial Mexicana. Se consideró que un cumplimiento menor al 60% correspondía a una atención subóptima.ResultadosLos factores de riesgo para la hospitalización fueron los siguientes: menos de 2 vistas al médico de familia en el último año (OR ajustada, 16,2; IC del 95%, 1,5–174,2), valor de glucosa (OR ajustada, 1,006; IC del 95%, 1,002–1,010) y nivel de conocimientos sobre la enfermedad (OR ajustada, 0,98; IC del 95%, 0,96–0,99), además de la práctica de ejercicio y el tiempo de diagnóstico. La atención primaria subóptima se registró en el 65,3% de los casos y el 49,1% de los controles (p=0,03) e incrementó 2,5 veces el riesgo de hospitalización (IC del 95%, 1,2–5,0; seudo R2=0,279; p < 0,001).ConclusionesLa evidencia disponible indica que la atención primaria puede ser un factor potencial para reducir la tasa de hospitalización por diabetes mellitus tipo 2. Los programas de manejo efectivos contribuirían a evitar hospitalizaciones innecesarias.ObjectiveTo determine the impact of primary care on hospitalization of type 2 diabetics with equal conditions of health insurance.DesignA case-control study. Case=diabetic hospitalized by a disease related condition. Control=diabetic without hospitalization during the last 12 months.SettingUrban primary care centers.ParticipantsCases were consecutively selected from four out of five urban hospitals (n=123). Controls were chosen at random from primary care units matched by primary care source (n=135).Women with gestational diabetes were excluded as well as individuals with missing medical charts (approximately 15%).MeasurementsA primary care index was constructed with process and outcome indicators recommended by the American Medical Association, the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations, the National Committee for Quality Assurance, the American Diabetes Association and the Official Mexican Standards. Compliance to less than 60% of recommendations was considered unsatisfactory primary care.ResultsThe following were hospitalization risk factors: less than 2 visits to family physician during the last year (OR adjusted, 16,2; 95% CI, 1,5–174,2), glucose level (OR adjusted, 1,006; 95% CI, 1,002–1,010) and cognitive level (OR adjusted, 0,98; 95% CI, 0,96–0,99), in addition to exercising and year of diagnosis. Sixty-five percent of cases observed unsatisfactory primary care compared with 49,1% of controls (P=0,03). Unsatisfactory primary care increased 2,5 times the risk of hospitalization (95% CI, 1,2–5,0) (pseudo R2=0,279; P<0,001).ConclusionsPrimary care is a potential factor for reducing hospitalization of type 2 diabetics. Effective primary care programs would contribute to a better disease control and less unnecessary hospitalizations
On unquenched N=2 holographic flavor
The addition of fundamental degrees of freedom to a theory which is dual (at
low energies) to N=2 SYM in 1+3 dimensions is studied. The gauge theory lives
on a stack of Nc D5 branes wrapping an S^2 with the appropriate twist, while
the fundamental hypermultiplets are introduced by adding a different set of Nf
D5-branes. In a simple case, a system of first order equations taking into
account the backreaction of the flavor branes is derived (Nf/Nc is kept of
order 1). From it, the modification of the holomorphic coupling is computed
explicitly. Mesonic excitations are also discussed.Comment: 25 pages, 4 figure
Restructuring of the "Macaronesia" biogeografic unit: a marine multi-taxon biogeographical approach
The Azores, Madeira, Selvagens, Canary Islands and Cabo Verde are commonly united under the term
“Macaronesia”. This study investigates the coherency and validity of Macaronesia as a biogeographic
unit using six marine groups with very different dispersal abilities: coastal fishes, echinoderms,
gastropod molluscs, brachyuran decapod crustaceans, polychaete annelids, and macroalgae. We found
no support for the current concept of Macaronesia as a coherent marine biogeographic unit. All marine
groups studied suggest the exclusion of Cabo Verde from the remaining Macaronesian archipelagos and thus, Cabo Verde should be given the status of a biogeographic subprovince within the West African
Transition province. We propose to redefine the Lusitanian biogeographical province, in which we
include four ecoregions: the South European Atlantic Shelf, the Saharan Upwelling, the Azores, and a
new ecoregion herein named Webbnesia, which comprises the archipelagos of Madeira, Selvagens and
the Canary Islandsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Two-level system with a thermally fluctuating transfer matrix element: Application to the problem of DNA charge transfer
Charge transfer along the base-pair stack in DNA is modeled in terms of
thermally-assisted tunneling between adjacent base pairs. Central to our
approach is the notion that tunneling between fluctuating pairs is rate-limited
by the requirement of their optimal alignment. We focus on this aspect of the
process by modeling two adjacent base pairs in terms of a classical damped
oscillator subject to thermal fluctuations as described by a Fokker-Planck
equation. We find that the process is characterized by two time scales, a
result that is in accord with experimental findings.Comment: original file is revtex4, 10 pages, three eps figure
Phase diagram of the one-dimensional extended attractive Hubbard model for large nearest-neighbor repulsion
We consider the extended Hubbard model with attractive on-site interaction U
and nearest-neighbor repulsions V. We construct an effective Hamiltonian
H_{eff} for hopping t<<V and arbitrary U<0. Retaining the most important terms,
H_{eff} can be mapped onto two XXZ models, solved by the Bethe ansatz. The
quantum phase diagram shows two Luttinger liquid phases and a region of phase
separation between them. For density n<0.422 and U<-4, singlet superconducting
correlations dominate at large distances. For some parameters, the results are
in qualitative agreement with experiments in BaKBiO.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Electroactive biofilms: new means for electrochemistry
This work demonstrates that electrochemical reactions can be catalysed by the natural biofilms that form on
electrode surfaces dipping into drinking water or compost. In drinking water, oxygen reduction was monitored with
stainless steel ultra-microelectrodes under constant potential electrolysis at )0.30 V/SCE for 13 days. 16 independent experiments were conducted in drinking water, either pure or with the addition of acetate or dextrose. In
most cases, the current increased and reached 1.5–9.5 times the initial current. The current increase was attributed to
biofilm forming on the electrode in a similar way to that has been observed in seawater. Epifluorescence microscopy
showed that the bacteria size and the biofilm morphology depended on the nutrients added, but no quantitative
correlation between biofilm morphology and current was established. In compost, the oxidation process was
investigated using a titanium based electrode under constant polarisation in the range 0.10–0.70 V/SCE. It was
demonstrated that the indigenous micro-organisms were responsible for the current increase observed after a few
days, up to 60 mA m)2. Adding 10 mM acetate to the compost amplified the current density to 145 mA m)2 at 0.50 V/SCE. The study suggests that many natural environments, other than marine sediments, waste waters and
seawaters that have been predominantly investigated until now, may be able to produce electrochemically active
biofilm
Preliminary characterization of echinoderm assemblages in circalittoral and bathyal soft bottoms of the northern Alboran Sea
Echinoderms, with 7.272 species described so far (based on WORMS), provide an ecosystemic role which can be important depending on their habitat, and including tag species (Manjón-Cabeza et al., 2014; Palma-Sevilla 2015) or even dominant ones (Iken et al., 2010; Hughes et al., 2012). Despite the increasing knowledge on their taxonomy, studies on ecological and assemblage composition and structure of echinoderms are very scarce compared to those for other invertebrate groups, being this information essential for improving the knowledge on Mediterranean ecosystems (Coll et al., 2010).
The Alboran Sea, in the junction of the Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea and the European and African continental margins, represents a biodiversity hotspot due to the overlapping of species from those basins and continents, including some endemic components (Coll et al., 2010). Regarding echinoderms of the Alboran Sea, most previous studies focussed on infralittoral bottoms, with very few for circalittoral and bathyal ones (Manjón-Cabeza et al, 2014; Sibuet, 1974). Nevertheless, these studies generally included faunistic lists (Ocaña & Pérez-Ruzafa, 2004; Manjón-Cabeza et al., 2014), sometimes with identification keys, ecological and distributional data of some species and rarely on the assemblage composition and structure (Palma-Sevilla, 2015), which represent the main aim of this study on echinoderm assemblages of circalittoral and bathyal soft bottoms of the Alboran Sea.
During the MEDITS survey expeditions (April-May 2014-2015) on board the R/V Miguel Oliver (Fig. 1), 35 samples were collected using a beam trawl (horizontal and vertical openings of 1.3 and 1.2 m, respectively, and a mesh size of 10 mm in the codend) at depths from 40 to 774 m in the Alboran Sea (Fig. 1). Hauls were done at a speed of ca. 2 knots during 5-10 (shelf stations) and 15 minutes (slope stations). Echinoderms were separated, identified to the lowest possible taxonomic leveland specimens counted and weighed to the nearest 0.5 g. Abundance and biomass data were standardized to 1000 m2 according to the sampling area of each haul.
Echinoderm assemblages were characterized according to the dominance and frequency of occurrence of species in the samples and considering different ecological indexes. Multivariate methods (CLUSTER, nMDS, SIMPER, ANOSIM) were applied, based on the Bray & Curtis similarity index, for detecting and contrastingassemblages in relation to depth and 4 geographic areas of the Alboran Sea with different influence of Atlantic waters (Occidental-Esteponato Málaga, Central-Málaga to Motril, Oriental-Motril to Almería and Alboran Island).
Fig. 1. Location of beam-trawl samples (dots) collected during 2014 and 2015 MEDITS expeditions in the northern Alboran Sea.
At present 39 taxa have been detected, mostly belonging to Ophiuroidea and Asteroidea (28.2 and 25.6% of all species, respectively), followed by Holothuroidea (23.1%), Echinoidea (17.9%) and Crinoidea (5.1%). Regarding abundance, a total of 54689 individuals have been collected, being Ophiuroidea (98.6% of all individuals), Holothuroidea (0.6%) and Crinoidea (0.4%) the top-dominant classes. Regarding biomass, ophiuroids also dominated (52.8%), followed by asteroids (16.1%) and holothuroids (15.0%). Considering other faunistic groups, echinoderms were the most abundant phyllum in the samples (60.7%) and the fifth one in biomass (7.6%). The dominant (for both abundance and biomass) and frequent genera included Ophiocten (displaying dominances >90%) Hymenodiscus, Luidia and Astropecten for asteroids, Antedon and Leptometra for crinoids, Dendrochirotida and Molpadidae for holothuroids, and Brissopsis and Echinocyamus for echinoids (Fig. 2).
Fig. 2. Some echinodermscollected in circalittoral and bathyal soft bottoms of the Alboran Sea using beam-trawl during the MEDITS expeditions. A: Ophiocten; B: Dendrochirotida sp.; C: Brissopsis; D: Anseropoda; E: Luidia.
Multivariate analyses indicated groupings of samples and significantly different echinoderm assemblages in relation to depth (RANOSIM=0.22, p0.05). Shelf assemblages displayed lower intra-group similarities (<20% similarity in SIMPER) than the slope ones (ca. 40%). Species characterizing the shelf assemblages belonged to the genera Astropecten, Antedon, Ophiothrix among others, whereas those of the slope belonged to the genera Luidia (L. sarsi), Hymenodiscus, Ophiocten, Leptometra and Amphiura
Evidence for a mixed mass composition at the `ankle' in the cosmic-ray spectrum
We report a first measurement for ultra-high energy cosmic rays of the
correlation between the depth of shower maximum and the signal in the water
Cherenkov stations of air-showers registered simultaneously by the fluorescence
and the surface detectors of the Pierre Auger Observatory. Such a correlation
measurement is a unique feature of a hybrid air-shower observatory with
sensitivity to both the electromagnetic and muonic components. It allows an
accurate determination of the spread of primary masses in the cosmic-ray flux.
Up till now, constraints on the spread of primary masses have been dominated by
systematic uncertainties. The present correlation measurement is not affected
by systematics in the measurement of the depth of shower maximum or the signal
in the water Cherenkov stations. The analysis relies on general characteristics
of air showers and is thus robust also with respect to uncertainties in
hadronic event generators. The observed correlation in the energy range around
the `ankle' at differs significantly from
expectations for pure primary cosmic-ray compositions. A light composition made
up of proton and helium only is equally inconsistent with observations. The
data are explained well by a mixed composition including nuclei with mass . Scenarios such as the proton dip model, with almost pure compositions, are
thus disfavoured as the sole explanation of the ultrahigh-energy cosmic-ray
flux at Earth.Comment: Published version. Added journal reference and DOI. Added Report
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