9,215 research outputs found
Attention and regional gray matter development in very preterm children at age 12 years
Objectives: This study examines the selective, sustained, and executive attention abilities of very preterm (VPT) born children in relation to concurrent structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) measures of regional gray matter development at age 12 years. Methods: A regional cohort of 110 VPT (≤32 weeks gestation) and 113 full term (FT) born children were assessed at corrected age 12 years on the Test of Everyday Attention-Children. They also had a structural MRI scan that was subsequently analyzed using voxel-based morphometry to quantify regional between-group differences in cerebral gray matter development, which were then related to attention measures using multivariate methods. Results: VPT children obtained similar selective (p=.85), but poorer sustained (p=.02) and executive attention (p=.01) scores than FT children. VPT children were also characterized by reduced gray matter in the bilateral parietal, temporal, prefrontal and posterior cingulate cortices, bilateral thalami, and left hippocampus; and increased gray matter in the occipital and anterior cingulate cortices (family-wise error-corrected
The Many Faces of a Character
We prove an identity between three infinite families of polynomials which are
defined in terms of `bosonic', `fermionic', and `one-dimensional configuration'
sums. In the limit where the polynomials become infinite series, they give
different-looking expressions for the characters of the two integrable
representations of the affine algebra at level one. We conjecture yet
another fermionic sum representation for the polynomials which is constructed
directly from the Bethe-Ansatz solution of the Heisenberg spin chain.Comment: 14/9 pages in harvmac, Tel-Aviv preprint TAUP 2125-9
Self consistent theory of unipolar charge-carrier injection in metal/insulator/metal systems
A consistent device model to describe current-voltage characteristics of
metal/insulator/metal systems is developed. In this model the insulator and the
metal electrodes are described within the same theoretical framework by using
density of states distributions. This approach leads to differential equations
for the electric field which have to be solved in a self consistent manner by
considering the continuity of the electric displacement and the electrochemical
potential in the complete system. The model is capable of describing the
current-voltage characteristics of the metal/insulator/metal system in forward
and reverse bias for arbitrary values of the metal/ insulator injection
barriers. In the case of high injection barriers, approximations are provided
offering a tool for comparison with experiments. Numerical calculations are
performed exemplary using a simplified model of an organic semiconductor.Comment: 21 pages, 8 figure
Self-reported quality of care for older adults from 2004 to 2011: a cohort study
Background: little is known about changes in the quality of medical care for older adults over time. Objective: to assess changes in technical quality of care over 6 years, and associations with participants' characteristics. Design: a national cohort survey covering RAND Corporation-derived quality indicators (QIs) in face-to-face structured interviews in participants' households. Participants: a total of 5,114 people aged 50 or more in four waves of the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing. Methods: the percentage achievement of 24 QIs in 10 general medical and geriatric clinical conditions was calculated for each time point, and associations with participants' characteristics were estimated using logistic regression. Results: participants were eligible for 21,220 QIs. QI achievement for geriatric conditions (cataract, falls, osteoarthritis and osteoporosis) was 41% [95% confidence interval (CI): 38–44] in 2004–05 and 38% (36–39) in 2010–11. Achievement for general medical conditions (depression, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, ischaemic heart disease, pain and cerebrovascular disease) improved from 75% (73–77) in 2004–05 to 80% (79–82) in 2010–11. Achievement ranged from 89% for cerebrovascular disease to 34% for osteoarthritis. Overall achievement was lower for participants who were men, wealthier, infrequent alcohol drinkers, not obese and living alone. Conclusion: substantial system-level shortfalls in quality of care for geriatric conditions persisted over 6 years, with relatively small and inconsistent variations in quality by participants' characteristics. The relative lack of variation by participants' characteristics suggests that quality improvement interventions may be more effective when directed at healthcare delivery systems rather than individuals
Spectral Equivalence of Bosons and Fermions in One-Dimensional Harmonic Potentials
Recently, Schmidt and Schnack (cond-mat/9803151, cond-mat/9810036), following
earlier references, reiterate that the specific heat of N non-interacting
bosons in a one-dimensional harmonic well equals that of N fermions in the same
potential. We show that this peculiar relationship between specific heats
results from a more dramatic equivalence between bose and fermi systems.
Namely, we prove that the excitation spectrums of such bose and fermi systems
are spectrally equivalent. Two complementary proofs are provided, one based on
an analysis of the dynamical symmetry group of the N-body system, the other
using combinatoric analysis.Comment: Six Pages, No Figures, Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Fermionic solution of the Andrews-Baxter-Forrester model II: proof of Melzer's polynomial identities
We compute the one-dimensional configuration sums of the ABF model using the
fermionic technique introduced in part I of this paper. Combined with the
results of Andrews, Baxter and Forrester, we find proof of polynomial
identities for finitizations of the Virasoro characters
as conjectured by Melzer. In the thermodynamic limit
these identities reproduce Rogers--Ramanujan type identities for the unitary
minimal Virasoro characters, conjectured by the Stony Brook group. We also
present a list of additional Virasoro character identities which follow from
our proof of Melzer's identities and application of Bailey's lemma.Comment: 28 pages, Latex, 7 Postscript figure
Identification, Genotyping and Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing of Brucella spp. Isolated from Livestock in Egypt
Brucellosis is a highly contagious zoonosis worldwide with economic and public health impacts. The aim of the present study was to identify Brucella (B.) spp. isolated from animal populations located in different districts of Egypt and to determine their antimicrobial resistance. In total, 34-suspected Brucella isolates were recovered from lymph nodes, milk, and fetal abomasal contents of infected cattle, buffaloes, sheep, and goats from nine districts in Egypt. The isolates were identified by microbiological methods and matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS). Differentiation and genotyping were confirmed using multiplex PCR for B. abortus, Brucella melitensis, Brucella ovis, and Brucella suis (AMOS) and Bruce-ladder PCR. Antimicrobial susceptibility testing against clinically used antimicrobial agents (chloramphenicol, ciprofloxacin, erythromycin, gentamicin, imipenem, rifampicin, streptomycin, and tetracycline) was performed using E-Test. The antimicrobial resistance-associated genes and mutations in Brucella isolates were confirmed using molecular tools. In total, 29 Brucella isolates (eight B. abortus biovar 1 and 21 B. melitensis biovar 3) were identified and typed. The resistance of B. melitensis to ciprofloxacin, erythromycin, imipenem, rifampicin, and streptomycin were 76.2%, 19.0%, 76.2%, 66.7%, and 4.8%, respectively. Whereas, 25.0%, 87.5%, 25.0%, and 37.5% of B. abortus were resistant to ciprofloxacin, erythromycin, imipenem, and rifampicin, respectively. Mutations in the rpoB gene associated with rifampicin resistance were identified in all phenotypically resistant isolates. Mutations in gyrA and gyrB genes associated with ciprofloxacin resistance were identified in four phenotypically resistant isolates of B. melitensis. This is the first study highlighting the antimicrobial resistance in Brucella isolated from different animal species in Egypt. Mutations detected in genes associated with antimicrobial resistance unravel the molecular mechanisms of resistance in Brucella isolates from Egypt. The mutations in the rpoB gene in phenotypically resistant B. abortus isolates in this study were reported for the first time in Egypt
Exceptional structure of the dilute A model: E and E Rogers--Ramanujan identities
The dilute A lattice model in regime 2 is in the universality class of
the Ising model in a magnetic field. Here we establish directly the existence
of an E structure in the dilute A model in this regime by expressing
the 1-dimensional configuration sums in terms of fermionic sums which
explicitly involve the E root system. In the thermodynamic limit, these
polynomial identities yield a proof of the E Rogers--Ramanujan identity
recently conjectured by Kedem {\em et al}.
The polynomial identities also apply to regime 3, which is obtained by
transforming the modular parameter by . In this case we find an
A_1\times\mbox{E}_7 structure and prove a Rogers--Ramanujan identity of
A_1\times\mbox{E}_7 type. Finally, in the critical limit, we give
some intriguing expressions for the number of -step paths on the A
Dynkin diagram with tadpoles in terms of the E Cartan matrix. All our
findings confirm the E and E structure of the dilute A model found
recently by means of the thermodynamic Bethe Ansatz.Comment: 9 pages, 1 postscript figur
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