4,892 research outputs found
Absolute continuity and spectral concentration for slowly decaying potentials
We consider the spectral function for the
Sturm-Liouville equation on with the
boundary condition and where has slow decay
as . We develop our previous methods of locating spectral
concentration for with rapid exponential decay (JCAM 81 (1997) 333-348) to
deal with the new theoretical and computational complexities which arise for
slow decay
Extensions of a New Algorithm for the Numerical Solution of Linear Differential Systems on an Infinite Interval
This paper is part of a series of papers in which the asymptotic theory and
appropriate symbolic computer code are developed to compute the asymptotic
expansion of the solution of an n-th order ordinary differential equation. The
paper examines the situation when the matrix that appears in the Levinson
expansion has a double eigenvalue. Application is made to a fourth-order ODE
with known special function solution
Alcohol and healthy ageing: a challenge for alcohol policy
Objectives:
This paper presents findings of a qualitative study of older people's use of alcohol during retirement and identifies ways that an improved understanding of older people's drinking can inform policy approaches to alcohol and active and healthy ageing.
Study design:
Qualitative semi-structured interviews conducted with a self-selecting sample of retired people.
Methods:
Participants were recruited from three geographical locations in the West of Scotland. A quota sampling design was used to ensure a broad spread of participants in terms of socio-economic position, age and gender. In total 40 participants were interviewed and the data analysed thematically using Braun and Clarke's (2006) approach.
Results:
Amongst those who used alcohol, it was most often framed in terms of pleasure, relaxation, socialising and as a way to mark the passage of time. Alcohol was often associated with social occasions and interactions both in private and in public spaces. There were also many examples of the use of imposed routines to limit alcohol use and of a decreasing volume of alcohol being consumed as participants aged. This suggests that older people are often active in constructing what they regard as ‘healthier’ routines around alcohol use. However, processes and circumstances associated with ageing can lead to risk of social isolation and/or increased alcohol consumption. Such processes include retirement from paid work and other ‘biographical disruptions’ such as caring for a partner, bereavement and/or loss of social networks.
Conclusions:
These findings highlight processes that can result in changes in drinking habits and routines. Whilst these processes can be associated with a reduction or cessation of alcohol use as people age, they can also be associated with increased risk of harmful alcohol consumption. Fractured or disrupted routines, particularly those associated with bereavement or the burden of caring responsibilities, through increasing the risk of loneliness and isolation, can construct increased risk of harmful alcohol consumption. These findings reframe the pathway of risk between ageing and alcohol-related harm by highlighting the vulnerability to harmful drinking practices brought by fracture or sudden change of routine. The findings point to a role for public health in supporting the reconstruction of routines that provide structure and meaning and can be used to actively manage the benefits and harms associated with drinking
Critical Current Peaks at in Superconductors with Columnar Defects: Recrystalizing the Interstitial Glass
The role of commensurability and the interplay of correlated disorder and
interactions on vortex dynamics in the presence of columnar pins is studied via
molecular dynamics simulations. Simulations of dynamics reveal substantial
caging effects and a non-monotonic dependence of the critical current with
enhancements near integer values of the matching field and
in agreement with experiments on the cuprates. We find qualitative
differences in the phase diagram for small and large values of the matching
field.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures (3 color
Cholinergic suppression: A postsynaptic mechanism of long-term associative learning
Food avoidance learning in the mollusc Pleurobranchaea entails reduction in the responsiveness of key brain interneurons in the feeding neural circuitry, the paracerebral feeding command interneurons (PCNs), to the neurotransmitter acetylcholine (AcCho). Food stimuli applied to the oral veil of an untrained animal depolarize the PCNs and induce the feeding motor program (FMP). Atropine (a muscarinic cholinergic antagonist) reversibly blocks the food-induced depolarization of the PCNs, implicating AcCho as the neurotransmitter mediating food detection. AcCho applied directly to PCN somata depolarizes them, indicating that the PCN soma membrane contains AcCho receptors and induces the FMP in the isolated central nervous system preparation. The AcCho response of the PCNs is mediated by muscariniclike receptors, since comparable depolarization is induced by muscarinic agonists (acetyl-ß -methylcholine, oxotremorine, pilocarpine), but not nicotine, and blocked by muscarinic antagonists (atropine, trifluoperazine). The nicotinic antagonist hexamethonium, however, blocked the AcCho response in four of six cases. When specimens are trained to suppress feeding behavior using a conventional food-avoidance learning paradigm (conditionally paired food and shock), AcCho applied to PCNs in the same concentration as in untrained animals causes little or no depolarization and does not initiate the FMP. Increasing the concentration of AcCho 10-100 times, however, induces weak PCN depolarization in trained specimens, indicating that learning diminishes but does not fully abolish AcCho responsiveness of the PCNs. This study proposes a cellular mechanism of long-term associative learning -- namely, postsynaptic modulation of neurotransmitter responsiveness in central neurons that could apply also to mammalian species
CHEM2D-OPP: A new linearized gas-phase ozone photochemistry parameterization for high-altitude NWP and climate models
The new CHEM2D-Ozone Photochemistry Parameterization (CHEM2D-OPP) for high-altitude numerical weather prediction (NWP) systems and climate models specifies the net ozone photochemical tendency and its sensitivity to changes in ozone mixing ratio, temperature and overhead ozone column based on calculations from the CHEM2D interactive middle atmospheric photochemical transport model. We evaluate CHEM2D-OPP performance using both short-term (6-day) and long-term (1-year) stratospheric ozone simulations with the prototype high-altitude NOGAPS-ALPHA forecast model. An inter-comparison of NOGAPS-ALPHA 6-day ozone hindcasts for 7 February 2005 with ozone photochemistry parameterizations currently used in operational NWP systems shows that CHEM2D-OPP yields the best overall agreement with both individual Aura Microwave Limb Sounder ozone profile measurements and independent hemispheric (10°–90° N) ozone analysis fields. A 1-year free-running NOGAPS-ALPHA simulation using CHEM2D-OPP produces a realistic seasonal cycle in zonal mean ozone throughout the stratosphere. We find that the combination of a model cold temperature bias at high latitudes in winter and a warm bias in the CHEM2D-OPP temperature climatology can degrade the performance of the linearized ozone photochemistry parameterization over seasonal time scales despite the fact that the parameterized temperature dependence is weak in these regions
Loss of secretory pathway FK506-binding proteins results in cold-sensitive lethality in caenorhabditis elegans
The FK506-binding proteins (FKBs) represent ubiquitous enzymes that catalyse the rate-limiting peptidyl prolyl cis-trans isomerization step in protein folding. The nematode <i>Caenorhabditis elegans</i> has eight FKBs, three of which (FKB-3, -4 and -5) have dual peptidyl prolyl <i>cis-trans</i> isomerase (PPIase) domains, signal peptides and ER-retention signals. PPIase activity has been detected for
recombinant FKB-3. Both FKB-3 and -5 are expressed in the exoskeleton-synthesising hypodermis with transcript peaks that correspond to the molting and collagen synthesis cycles. FKB-4 is expressed at a low level throughout development. No phenotypes were observed in deletion mutants
in each of the secretory pathway FKBs. Combined triple and <i>fkb-4/-5</i> double deletion mutants were found to arrest at 12°C, but developed normally at 15-25°C. This cold-sensitive larval lethal effect was not maternally-derived, occurred during embryogenesis and could be rescued following the transgenic introduction of a wild type copy of either <i>fkb-4 or fkb-5</i>. The temperature-sensitive defects
also affected molting, cuticle collagen expression, hypodermal seam cell morphology and the structural integrity of the cuticular extracellular matrix. This study establishes that the secretory pathway FK506-binding PPIase enzymes are essential for normal nematode development, collagen biogenesis and the formation of an intact exoskeleton under adverse physiological conditions
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