1,752 research outputs found
The SPIRIT collection: an overview of a large web collection
A large scale collection of web pages has been essential for research in information retrieval and related areas. This paper provides an overview of a large web collection used in the SPIRIT project for the design and testing of spatially-aware retrieval systems. Several statistics are derived and presented to show the characteristics of the collection
The text that reads itself
The idea of a text that ‘performs its own reading’ may not be entirely new, but it presents itself in a vivid new form, now supercharged by technology. Animated text, Kinetic Typography, Motion Graphics are all facets of the same technological package that has radically changed reading and readerships. This chapter explores the divide that is opening up between conventional reading and a new and enhanced form of reading that could be described as ‘hypertextual’. This digitally encountered and experienced form of reading has generated all kinds of possibilities, directions and redirections for the contemporary reader, which, it will be argued, has not only changed reading, but may be changing the way we think
The Eurovision St Andrews collection of photographs
This report describes the Eurovision image collection compiled for the ImageCLEF (Cross Language Evaluation Forum) evaluation exercise. The image collection consists of around 30,000 photographs from the collection provided by the University of St Andrews Library. The construction and composition of this unique image collection are described, together with the necessary information to obtain and use the image collection
Carbohydrate gel ingestion significantly improves the intermittent endurance capacity, but not sprint performance, of adolescent team games players during a simulated team games protocol
The aim of this study was to investigate the influence of ingesting a carbohydrate (CHO) gel on the intermittent endurance capacity and sprint performance of adolescent team games players. Eleven participants [mean age 13.5 ± 0.7 years, height 1.72 ± 0.08 m, body mass (BM) 62.1 ± 9.4 kg] performed two trials separated by 3–7 days. In each trial, they completed four 15 min periods of part A of the Loughborough Intermittent Shuttle Test (LIST), followed by an intermittent run to exhaustion (part B). In the 5 min pre-exercise, participants consumed 0.818 mL kg−1 BM of a CHO or a non-CHO placebo gel, and a further 0.327 mL kg−1 BM every 15 min during part A of the LIST (38.0 ± 5.5 g CHO h−1 in the CHO trial). Intermittent endurance capacity was increased by 21.1% during part B when the CHO gel was ingested (4.6 ± 2.0 vs. 3.8 ± 2.4 min, P < 0.05, r = 0.67), with distance covered in part B significantly greater in the CHO trial (787 ± 319 vs. 669 ± 424 m, P < 0.05, r = 0.57). Gel ingestion did not significantly influence mean 15 m sprint time (P = 0.34), peak sprint time (P = 0.81), or heart rate (P = 0.66). Ingestion of a CHO gel significantly increases the intermittent endurance capacity of adolescent team games players during a simulated team games protocol
Analyzing the Persistence of Referenced Web Resources with Memento
In this paper we present the results of a study into the persistence and
availability of web resources referenced from papers in scholarly repositories.
Two repositories with different characteristics, arXiv and the UNT digital
library, are studied to determine if the nature of the repository, or of its
content, has a bearing on the availability of the web resources cited by that
content. Memento makes it possible to automate discovery of archived resources
and to consider the time between the publication of the research and the
archiving of the referenced URLs. This automation allows us to process more
than 160000 URLs, the largest known such study, and the repository metadata
allows consideration of the results by discipline. The results are startling:
45% (66096) of the URLs referenced from arXiv still exist, but are not
preserved for future generations, and 28% of resources referenced by UNT papers
have been lost. Moving forwards, we provide some initial recommendations,
including that repositories should publish URL lists extracted from papers that
could be used as seeds for web archiving systems.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures. Accepted to Open Repositories 2011 Conferenc
Reconnaissance study of ground-water levels and withdrawls in the vicinity of DeWitt and Piatt counties
"Prepared for the Mahomet Valley Water Authority.
Topological complexity of motion planning in projective product spaces
We study Farber's topological complexity (TC) of Davis' projective product
spaces (PPS's). We show that, in many non-trivial instances, the TC of PPS's
coming from at least two sphere factors is (much) lower than the dimension of
the manifold. This is in high contrast with the known situation for (usual)
real projective spaces for which, in fact, the Euclidean immersion dimension
and TC are two facets of the same problem. Low TC-values have been observed for
infinite families of non-simply connected spaces only for H-spaces, for finite
complexes whose fundamental group has cohomological dimension not exceeding 2,
and now in this work for infinite families of PPS's. We discuss general bounds
for the TC (and the Lusternik-Schnirelmann category) of PPS's, and compute
these invariants for specific families of such manifolds. Some of our methods
involve the use of an equivariant version of TC. We also give a
characterization of the Euclidean immersion dimension of PPS's through
generalized concepts of axial maps and, alternatively, non-singular maps. This
gives an explicit explanation of the known relationship between the generalized
vector field problem and the Euclidean immersion problem for PPS's.Comment: 16 page
Predicting 30-day mortality in patients with sepsis: an exploratory analysis of process of care and patient characteristics
Background
Sepsis represents a significant public health burden, costing the NHS £2.5 billion annually, with 35% mortality in 2006. The aim of this exploratory study was to investigate risk factors predictive of 30-day mortality amongst patients with sepsis in Nottingham.
Methods
Data were collected prospectively from adult patients with sepsis in Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust as part of an on-going quality improvement project between November 2011 and March 2014. Patients admitted to critical care with the diagnosis of sepsis were included in the study. In all, 97 separate variables were investigated for their association with 30-day mortality. Variables included patient demographics, symptoms of systemic inflammatory response syndrome, organ dysfunction or tissue hypoperfusion, locations of early care, source of sepsis and time to interventions.
Results
A total of 455 patients were included in the study. Increased age (adjOR = 1.05 95%CI = 1.03–1.07 p < 0.001), thrombocytopenia (adjOR = 3.10 95%CI = 1.23–7.82 p = 0.016), hospital-acquired sepsis (adjOR = 3.34 95%CI = 1.78–6.27 p < 0.001), increased lactate concentration (adjOR = 1.16 95%CI = 1.06–1.27 p = 0.001), remaining hypotensive after vasopressors (adjOR = 3.89 95%CI = 1.26–11.95 p = 0.02) and mottling (adjOR = 3.80 95%CI = 1.06–13.55 p = 0.04) increased 30-day mortality odds. Conversely, fever (adjOR = 0.46 95%CI = 0.28-0.75 p = 0.002), fluid refractory hypotension (adjOR = 0.29 95%CI = 0.10–0.87 p = 0.027) and being diagnosed in surgical wards (adjOR = 0.35 95%CI = 0.15–0.81 p = 0.015) were protective. Treatment timeliness were not significant factors.
Conclusion
Several important predictors of 30-day mortality were found by this research. Retrospective analysis of our sepsis data has revealed mortality predictors that appear to be more patient-related than intervention-specific. With this information, care can be improved for those identified most at risk of death
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