26,523 research outputs found
A critical analysis of the hydrino model
Recently, spectroscopic and calorimetric observations of hydrogen plasmas and
chemical reactions with them have been interpreted as evidence for the
existence of electronic states of the hydrogen atom with a binding energy of
more than 13.6 eV. The theoretical basis for such states, that have been dubbed
hydrinos, is investigated. We discuss both, the novel deterministic model of
the hydrogen atom, in which the existence of hydrinos was predicted, and
standard quantum mechanics. Severe inconsistencies in the deterministic model
are pointed out and the incompatibility of hydrino states with quantum
mechanics is reviewed.Comment: 9 page
Modelling of Electroluminescence in Polymers Using a Bipolar Charge Transport Model
Electroluminescence (EL) in polymeric materials is thought to occur due to the energy dissipation process from the recombination of opposite polarity charge carriers. It is considered as an indication of storage and transport of charge carriers in cable insulation subject to electrical stresses and may indicate the change in charge movement due to aging or degradation processes. Under ac electric fields, the interaction of opposite polarity charge carriers at the interface of polymer/conductor is enhanced compared with dc conditions, and seems to contribute a lot to the electroluminescence rather than the charge behaviours in the bulk of polymers. The dynamics of charge carriers both at the interface of polymer/conductor and in the bulk of polymers is investigated through a simulation work using a bipolar charge transport model. Figure 1 compares experimental electroluminescence results with simulated data from the recombination of injected charge carriers. The paper will give more details on EL model and comparison under various waveforms and frequencies
Deep learning with convolutional neural networks for decoding and visualization of EEG pathology
We apply convolutional neural networks (ConvNets) to the task of
distinguishing pathological from normal EEG recordings in the Temple University
Hospital EEG Abnormal Corpus. We use two basic, shallow and deep ConvNet
architectures recently shown to decode task-related information from EEG at
least as well as established algorithms designed for this purpose. In decoding
EEG pathology, both ConvNets reached substantially better accuracies (about 6%
better, ~85% vs. ~79%) than the only published result for this dataset, and
were still better when using only 1 minute of each recording for training and
only six seconds of each recording for testing. We used automated methods to
optimize architectural hyperparameters and found intriguingly different ConvNet
architectures, e.g., with max pooling as the only nonlinearity. Visualizations
of the ConvNet decoding behavior showed that they used spectral power changes
in the delta (0-4 Hz) and theta (4-8 Hz) frequency range, possibly alongside
other features, consistent with expectations derived from spectral analysis of
the EEG data and from the textual medical reports. Analysis of the textual
medical reports also highlighted the potential for accuracy increases by
integrating contextual information, such as the age of subjects. In summary,
the ConvNets and visualization techniques used in this study constitute a next
step towards clinically useful automated EEG diagnosis and establish a new
baseline for future work on this topic.Comment: Published at IEEE SPMB 2017 https://www.ieeespmb.org/2017
Public attitudes toward people with intellectual disabilities after viewing Olympic or Paralympic performance
Despite some changes to the way that people with intellectual disabilities (ID) are viewed in society, negative attitudes prevail. One of the aspirations of the 2012 Paralympic games was to influence the public’s attitudes toward people with disabilities. The aim of this study was to investigate whether stimuli depicting people with ID performing at Paralympic level of competition change attitudes toward ID. A mixed randomized comparison design was employed comparing 2 groups: those who viewed Paralympic-level ID sport footage and information and those who viewed Olympic footage and information. One hundred fourteen students, mean age 25 yr, were administered measures of implicit (subconscious) attitudes toward disability and explicit (belief-based) attitudes toward ID. Implicit attitudes significantly changed in a positive direction for both groups. The findings provide evidence that both Paralympic (ID) and Olympic media coverage may have at least a short-term effect on attitudes toward people with disabilities
Ferromagnetic relaxation by magnon-induced currents
A theory for calculating spin wave relaxation times based on the
magnon-electron interaction is developed. The theory incorporates a thin film
geometry and is valid for a large range of magnon frequencies and wave vectors.
For high conductivity metals such as permalloy, the wave vector dependent
damping constant approaches values as high as 0.2, showing the large magnitude
of the effect, and can dominate experimentally observed relaxation.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
How has the Louisiana Scholarship Program Affected Students? A Comprehensive Summary of Effects after Four Years
School choice has long been a subject of robust debate. Private school vouchers—programs providing public funds for students to attend K-12 private schools—tend to be the most contentious form of school choice. Over the past three years, our research team has released a series of reports examining how the LSP has affected key student and community conditions
Elevated interferon-stimulated gene transcription in peripheral blood mononuclear cells occurs in patients infected with genotype 1 but not genotype 3 hepatitis C virus
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) can be classified into seven distinct genotypes that are associated with differing pathologies and respond differently to antiviral therapy. In the UK, genotype 1 and 3 are present in approximately equal proportions. Chronic infection with HCV genotype 3 is associated with increased liver steatosis and reduced peripheral total cholesterol levels, which potentially influences peripheral immune responses. To understand these differences, we investigated host gene transcription in peripheral blood mononuclear cells by microarray and quantitative PCR in patients with genotype 1 (n = 22) or genotype 3 infection (n = 22) and matched healthy controls (n = 15). Enrichment of genes involved in immune response and inflammatory pathways were present in patients infected with HCV genotype 1; however, no differences in genes involved in lipid or cholesterol metabolism were detected. This genotype-specific induction of genes is unrelated to IL28B genotype or previous treatment failure. Our data support the hypothesis that genotype 1 infection drives a skewed Type I interferon response and provides a foundation for future investigations into the host–pathogen interactions that underlie the genotype-specific clinical outcomes of chronic HCV infection
- …