489 research outputs found
Statistics for Clinical Research
The purpose of this paper is to make understandable the use of statistics in the field of medicine, and to introduce to the clinician some new methods of statistics for drawing some reasonable conclusions based on the meager data usually available. There is, after all, only one valid use of statistics: to enable oneself to make a personal decision based on the information available
The Curse of Copying , 7 J. Marshall Rev. Intell. Prop. L. 296 (2008)
The concept of âcopyingâ has long been involved with various aspects of intellectual property law, particularly in regard to patents and trademarks. In the absence of legally determined exclusive rights, âcopyingâ is permitted, and is in fact, encouraged. However, because the term âcopyingâ carries an undercurrent of disapproval and unfavorable practices, it is a favorite of patentees looking to portray an accused infringer in the most negative light, especially before a jury. Hence, the curse of âcopying.â This article will review the current state of âcopyingâ by addressing the substantive precedent in areas where âcopyingâ has traditionally had a substantive effectâwillfulness of any accused infringing conduct and obviousness of the patented invention. With respect to âcopyingâ and willful infringement, this article outlines two important considerations that the precedent is weak uponâââcopyingâ what?â and ââcopyingâ when?â Lifting the curse requires care and some courage at trial, in view of a precedential framework that is less than favorable to the accused infringer and the pejorative impact the term âcopyingâ will likely have on the jury and the court. These issues will be discussed and suggestions are advanced throughout as to how one might lift the curse once it is pronounced
Ion and polymer dynamics in polymer electrolytes PPO-LiClO4: II. 2H and 7Li NMR stimulated-echo experiment
We use 2H NMR stimulated-echo spectroscopy to measure two-time correlation
functions characterizing the polymer segmental motion in polymer electrolytes
PPO-LiClO4 near the glass transition temperature Tg. To investigate effects of
the salt on the polymer dynamics, we compare results for different ether oxygen
to lithium ratios, namely, 6:1, 15:1, 30:1 and infinity. For all compositions,
we find nonexponential correlation functions, which can be described by a
Kohlrausch function. The mean correlation times show quantitatively that an
increase of the salt concentration results in a strong slowing down of the
segmental motion. Consistently, for the high 6:1 salt concentration, a high
apparent activation energy E_a=4.1eV characterizes the temperature dependence
of the mean correlation times at Tg < T< 1.1T_g, while smaller values E_a=2.5eV
are observed for moderate salt contents. The correlation functions are most
nonexponential for 15:1 PPO-LiClO4, whereas the stretching is reduced for
higher and lower salt concentrations. A similar dependence of the correlation
functions on the evolution time in the presence and in the absence of ions
indicates that addition of salt hardly affects the reorientational mechanism.
For all compositions, mean jump angles of about 15 degree characterize the
segmental reorientation. In addition, comparison of results from 2H and 7Li NMR
stimulated-echo experiments suggests a coupling of ion and polymer dynamics in
15:1 PPO-LiClO4.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figure
History Memorized and Recalled upon Glass Transition
The memory effect upon glassification is studied in the glass to rubber
transition of vulcanized rubber with the strain as a controlling parameter. A
phenomenological model is proposed taking the history of the temperature and
the strain into account, by which the experimental results are interpreted. The
data and the model demonstrate that the glassy state memorizes the time-course
of strain upon glassification, not as a single parameter but as the history
itself. The data also show that the effect of irreversible deformation in the
glassy state is beyond the scope of the present model.
Authors' remark: The title of the paper in the accepted version is above. The
title appeared in PRL is the one changed by a Senior Assistant Editor after
acceptance of the paper. The recovery of the title was rejected in the
correction process.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
B595: An Illustrated Review of Apple Virus Diseases
The writers have attempted to review the available literature on the subject and to organize it in an orderly fashion. The name, symptomatology, host range, and geographic distribution are given for each virus disease. Where it was possible illustrations of each disorder have also been included. This bulletin addresses the following apple virus diseases: apple mosaic, flat limb, rubbery wood, stem pitting, spy 227 apple reaction, dwarf fruit and decline, chat fruit, chlorotic leaf spot, leaf pucker, dapple apple, false sting and green crinkle, green mottle, ring spot, star cracking, scar skin, rough skin, apple proliferation, rosettehttps://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/aes_bulletin/1068/thumbnail.jp
Studies of the Electrical Parameters and Behavioral Effects of an EEG \u27\u27Seizure Discharge
Nemastrina monkeys with multiple electrodes implanted in the amygdaloid area of the brain were used to study the relationship of electrical seizures and overt behavior. The electrical seizures were produced by long duration electrical pulses administered through the implanted electrodes. There appears to be no relationship between this kind of electrical seizure and lever pressing performance. Relationships between depth EEG, depth impedance, DC potential and surface EEG are observed and as a consequence some ideas concerning the genesis of the electroencephalogram are put forth
Extracting spectral density function of a binary composite without a-priori assumption
The spectral representation separates the contributions of geometrical
arrangement (topology) and intrinsic constituent properties in a composite. The
aim of paper is to present a numerical algorithm based on the Monte Carlo
integration and contrainted-least-squares methods to resolve the spectral
density function for a given system. The numerical method is verified by
comparing the results with those of Maxwell-Garnett effective permittivity
expression. Later, it is applied to a well-studied rock-and-brine system to
instruct its utility. The presented method yields significant microstructural
information in improving our understanding how microstructure influences the
macroscopic behaviour of composites without any intricate mathematics.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures and 1 tabl
Zooming In on the Progenitors of Superluminous Supernovae With the HST
We present Hubble Space Telescope (HST) rest-frame ultraviolet imaging of the
host galaxies of 16 hydrogen-poor superluminous supernovae (SLSNe), including
11 events from the Pan-STARRS Medium Deep Survey. Taking advantage of the
superb angular resolution of HST, we characterize the galaxies' morphological
properties, sizes and star formation rate (SFR) densities. We determine the
supernova (SN) locations within the host galaxies through precise astrometric
matching, and measure physical and host-normalized offsets, as well as the SN
positions within the cumulative distribution of UV light pixel brightness. We
find that the host galaxies of H-poor SLSNe are irregular, compact dwarf
galaxies, with a median half-light radius of just 0.9 kpc. The UV-derived SFR
densities are high ( ~ 0.1 M_sun/yr/kpc^2), suggesting that SLSNe
form in overdense environments. Their locations trace the UV light of their
host galaxies, with a distribution intermediate between that of long-duration
gamma-ray bursts (LGRBs) (which are strongly clustered on the brightest regions
of their hosts) and a uniform distribution (characteristic of normal
core-collapse SNe), though cannot be statistically distinguished from either
with the current sample size. Taken together, this strengthens the picture that
SLSN progenitors require different conditions than those of ordinary
core-collapse SNe to form, and that they explode in broadly similar galaxies as
do LGRBs. If the tendency for SLSNe to be less clustered on the brightest
regions than are LGRBs is confirmed by a larger sample, this would indicate a
different, potentially lower-mass progenitor for SLSNe than LRGBs.Comment: ApJ in press; matches published version. Minor changes following
referee's comments; conclusions unchange
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