393 research outputs found

    The Nature of the Problem: Sudden Infant Death Syndrome

    Get PDF
    The following is an overview of the Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) and emphasizes salient features of its epidemiology, pathology, pathophysiology and management. Controversial points are not discussed

    Use Cases for Abnormal Behaviour Detection in Smart Homes

    Get PDF
    While people have many ideas about how a smart home should react to particular behaviours from their inhabitant, there seems to have been relatively little attempt to organise this systematically. In this paper, we attempt to rectify this in consideration of context awareness and novelty detection for a smart home that monitors its inhabitant for illness and unexpected behaviour. We do this through the concept of the Use Case, which is used in software engineering to specify the behaviour of a system. We describe a set of scenarios and the possible outputs that the smart home could give and introduce the SHMUC Repository of Smart Home Use Cases. Based on this, we can consider how probabilistic and logic-based reasoning systems would produce different capabilities

    Exploring The Responsibilities Of Single-Inhabitant Smart Homes With Use Cases

    Get PDF
    DOI: 10.3233/AIS-2010-0076This paper makes a number of contributions to the field of requirements analysis for Smart Homes. It introduces Use Cases as a tool for exploring the responsibilities of Smart Homes and it proposes a modification of the conventional Use Case structure to suit the particular requirements of Smart Homes. It presents a taxonomy of Smart-Home-related Use Cases with seven categories. It draws on those Use Cases as raw material for developing questions and conclusions about the design of Smart Homes for single elderly inhabitants, and it introduces the SHMUC repository, a web-based repository of Use Cases related to Smart Homes that anyone can exploit and to which anyone may contribute

    Plasma arginine vasopressin concentrations in epileptics under monotherapy

    Get PDF
    Plasma arginine vasopressin concentrations were determined by radio-immunoassay in 112 adult epileptics who were taking carbamazepine, phenytoin, primidone, or sodium valproate in long-term monotherapy, and in 19 controls. No significant difference was found between the groups, but some epileptics taking carbamazepine and primidone showed low values. Serum concentrations of carbamazepine did not correlate with the concentrations of plasma arginine vasopressin. In conclusion, there was no evidence of a stimulating effect of chronic carbamazepine medication or a special inhibiting effect of phenytoin on the release of vasopressin arginine from the posterior pituitary

    Conducting surveys on forestry attitudes and practices in Leyte Communities, Philippines: Experiences and lessons learnt

    Get PDF
    A survey of forestry practices and attitudes was undertaken in four communities in Leyte, the Philippines, to improve understanding of the social and economic factors affecting small-scale forestry development. The survey had three main data collection activities — initial focus group discussions (FGDs), household interviews, and reporting and validation FGDs. A team of enumerators was selected for household interviews which consisted of both males and females, to avoid potential problems of unwillingness of people to talk with those of the opposite gender. The interviewers were also required to be able to speak local dialects (Cebuano and Waray Waray), the survey questionnaires being administered in these dialects. Various methods were used to gain the support and assistance of local government units and barangay captains. Some difficulty was experienced by the survey team in the first community due to barangay elections at the time of the survey, and the requirement by the University of Queensland Ethics Committee that respondents sign a consent form. This requirement was found to be not culturally appropriate for the Leyte smallholder communities. Offering goods at the end of the interview was found to be of limited value for encouraging participation in the survey. Provision of food and drinks were found to encourage FGD participants to express their views, but too much alcohol had a negative effect. The importance of providing comprehensive feedback to respondents and involving them and other stakeholders in development of policy recommendations was apparent. These survey experiences provide valuable insights which are not generally available in textbooks on sample surveys, and provide lessons for planning and conducting smallholder community survey into natural resource management issues

    Constructing reparametrization invariant metrics on spaces of plane curves

    Get PDF
    Metrics on shape space are used to describe deformations that take one shape to another, and to determine a distance between them. We study a family of metrics on the space of curves, that includes several recently proposed metrics, for which the metrics are characterised by mappings into vector spaces where geodesics can be easily computed. This family consists of Sobolev-type Riemannian metrics of order one on the space Imm(S1,R2)\text{Imm}(S^1,\mathbb R^2) of parametrized plane curves and the quotient space Imm(S1,R2)/Diff(S1)\text{Imm}(S^1,\mathbb R^2)/\text{Diff}(S^1) of unparametrized curves. For the space of open parametrized curves we find an explicit formula for the geodesic distance and show that the sectional curvatures vanish on the space of parametrized and are non-negative on the space of unparametrized open curves. For the metric, which is induced by the "R-transform", we provide a numerical algorithm that computes geodesics between unparameterised, closed curves, making use of a constrained formulation that is implemented numerically using the RATTLE algorithm. We illustrate the algorithm with some numerical tests that demonstrate it's efficiency and robustness.Comment: 27 pages, 4 figures. Extended versio

    The Intestinal Microbiota Contributes to the Ability of Helminths to Modulate Allergic Inflammation

    Get PDF
    We thank Manuel Kulagin for technical help, Pierre Bonnaventure for portal vein blood sampling, Francisco Sepulveda for technical assistance in GS-MS acquisition, and Dorothee Hahne (Metabolomics Australia, University of Western Australia) for human samples SCFA isolation, acquisition, and analysis. We also thank Cristina Cartoni (Phenotyping Unit, EPFL) for Milliplex analysis, Jessica Dessimoz and her team from the Histology Core Facility (EPFL), Miguel Garcia and his team from the Flow Cytometry Core Facility (EPFL), and staff from the EPFL CPG animal house for excellent animal care. The computations were partially performed at the Vital-IT Center for high-performance computing of the SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics (http://www.vital-it.ch). The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Research Council under the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme (FP/2007-2013) / ERC Grant Agreement n. 310948. Funding for A.W.W. and a subset of the 16S rRNA gene sequencing was provided by the Wellcome Trust (grant number WT 098051). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.Peer reviewedPublisher PD

    Trait positive and negative emotionality differentially associate withdiurnal cortisol activity

    Get PDF
    Inter-individual variability in metrics of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical (HPA) activity, such asthe slope of the diurnal decline in cortisol, cortisol awakening response (CAR), and total cortisol out-put, have been found to associate inversely with trait ratings of extraversion and positive affect (E/PA)and positively with neuroticism and negative affect (N/NA) in some, but not all, investigations. Theseinconsistencies may partly reflect varied intensity of cortisol sampling among studies and reliance onself-rated traits, which are subject to reporting biases and limitations of introspection. Here, we furtherexamined dispositional correlates of HPA activity in 490 healthy, employed midlife volunteers (M age = 43years; 54% Female; 86% white). Trait ratings were requested from participants and 2 participant-electedinformants using the Positive and Negative Affect Schedule (PANAS) and Extraversion and Neuroticismdimensions of NEO personality inventories. CAR was assessed as percent increase in cortisol levels fromawakening to 30 min after awakening; and the diurnal slope and total output of cortisol [Area Underthe Curve (AUC)] were determined from cortisol measurements taken at awakening, +4 and +9 h later,and bedtime, across 3 workdays. Structural equation modeling was used to estimate multi-informantE/PA and N/NA factors. We used 3 days of measurement as indicators to model each of the three latentcortisol factors (slope, CAR, and AUC). With the two latent emotionality and three latent cortisol indicesincluded there was good fit to the data ( 2(200)= 278.38, p = 0.0002; RMSEA = 0.028, 90% CI = 0.02–0.04;CFI/TLI = 0.97/0.96; SRMR = 0.04). After controlling for covariates (age, sex, race), results showed higherlatent E/PA associated with a steeper diurnal slope (Standardized ˇ = −0.19, p = 0.02) and smaller CAR(Standardized ˇ = −0.26, p = 0.004), whereas N/NA did not associate with any cortisol metric (Standard-ized ˇ’s = −0.12 to 0.13, p’s = 0.10 to 0.53). These findings suggest that positive emotionality may be moreclosely associated with indices of diurnal cortisol release than negative emotionality

    Trait positive and negative emotionality differentially associate withdiurnal cortisol activity

    Get PDF
    Inter-individual variability in metrics of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical (HPA) activity, such asthe slope of the diurnal decline in cortisol, cortisol awakening response (CAR), and total cortisol out-put, have been found to associate inversely with trait ratings of extraversion and positive affect (E/PA)and positively with neuroticism and negative affect (N/NA) in some, but not all, investigations. Theseinconsistencies may partly reflect varied intensity of cortisol sampling among studies and reliance onself-rated traits, which are subject to reporting biases and limitations of introspection. Here, we furtherexamined dispositional correlates of HPA activity in 490 healthy, employed midlife volunteers (M age = 43years; 54% Female; 86% white). Trait ratings were requested from participants and 2 participant-electedinformants using the Positive and Negative Affect Schedule (PANAS) and Extraversion and Neuroticismdimensions of NEO personality inventories. CAR was assessed as percent increase in cortisol levels fromawakening to 30 min after awakening; and the diurnal slope and total output of cortisol [Area Underthe Curve (AUC)] were determined from cortisol measurements taken at awakening, +4 and +9 h later,and bedtime, across 3 workdays. Structural equation modeling was used to estimate multi-informantE/PA and N/NA factors. We used 3 days of measurement as indicators to model each of the three latentcortisol factors (slope, CAR, and AUC). With the two latent emotionality and three latent cortisol indicesincluded there was good fit to the data ( 2(200)= 278.38, p = 0.0002; RMSEA = 0.028, 90% CI = 0.02–0.04;CFI/TLI = 0.97/0.96; SRMR = 0.04). After controlling for covariates (age, sex, race), results showed higherlatent E/PA associated with a steeper diurnal slope (Standardized ˇ = −0.19, p = 0.02) and smaller CAR(Standardized ˇ = −0.26, p = 0.004), whereas N/NA did not associate with any cortisol metric (Standard-ized ˇ’s = −0.12 to 0.13, p’s = 0.10 to 0.53). These findings suggest that positive emotionality may be moreclosely associated with indices of diurnal cortisol release than negative emotionality
    • 

    corecore