143 research outputs found

    The Influence of Corporate Governance to the Firm Performance in Logistics Industry

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    The aim of this study is to break down the execution of logistics industries in United Kingdom (UK) throughout five years. The analysis is employ on the sample of six organization in UK over the period in the vicinity of 2013 and 2017. The information is derived from annual report of Kerry Logistic, Wincanton, DFDS Seaways, Easy Jet and Stobart Group. This study utilizing a clear descriptive analysis, for example profitability, liquidity risk, credit risk, operational risk and also economic environment as to look at the performance of the organization include in logistics industries. The information ascertained is on average. The result show that the company performance can be influenced by the risk and economic environment. The study found the profitability ratio in term of current, quick ratio and debt to income are significant to independent variable which are to the return on asset. While, return on asset are significant to average collection period, liquidity ratio, unemployment rate, interest rate and operational ratio

    The Influence of Corporate Governance to the Firm Performance in Logistics Industry

    Get PDF
    The aim of this study is to break down the execution of logistics industries in United Kingdom (UK) throughout five years. The analysis is employ on the sample of six organization in UK over the period in the vicinity of 2013 and 2017. The information is derived from annual report of Kerry Logistic, Wincanton, DFDS Seaways, Easy Jet and Stobart Group. This study utilizing a clear descriptive analysis, for example profitability, liquidity risk, credit risk, operational risk and also economic environment as to look at the performance of the organization include in logistics industries. The information ascertained is on average. The result show that the company performance can be influenced by the risk and economic environment. The study found the profitability ratio in term of current, quick ratio and debt to income are significant to independent variable which are to the return on asset. While, return on asset are significant to average collection period, liquidity ratio, unemployment rate, interest rate and operational ratio

    A Study of Success Rate of Miniscrew Implants as Temporary Anchorage Devices in Singapore

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    Objective. To find out the success rate of miniscrew implants in the National Dental Centre of Singapore (NDCS) and the impact of patient-related, location-related, and miniscrew implant-related factors. Materials and Methods. Two hundred and eighty-five orthodontic miniscrew implants were examined from NDCS patient records. Eleven variables were analysed to see if there is any association with success. Outcome was measured twice, immediately after surgery prior to orthodontic loading (T1) and 12 months after surgery (T2). The outcome at T2 was assessed 12 months after the miniscrew’s insertion date or after its use as a temporary anchorage device has ceased. Results. Overall success rate was 94.7% at T1 and 83.3% at T2. Multivariate analysis revealed only the length of miniscrew implant to be significantly associated with success at both T1 (P=0.002) and T2 (P=0.030). Miniscrew implants with lengths of 10–12 mm had the highest success rate (98.0%) compared to other lengths, and this is statistically significant (P=0.035). At T2, lengths of 10–12 mm had significantly (P=0.013) higher success rates (93.5%) compared to 6-7 mm (76.7%) and 8 mm (82.1%) miniscrew implants. Conclusion. Multivariate statistical analyses of 11 variables demonstrate that length of miniscrew implant is significant in determining success

    A Study of Success Rate of Miniscrew Implants as Temporary Anchorage Devices in Singapore

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    Objective. To find out the success rate of miniscrew implants in the National Dental Centre of Singapore (NDCS) and the impact of patient-related, location-related, and miniscrew implant-related factors. Materials and Methods. Two hundred and eighty-five orthodontic miniscrew implants were examined from NDCS patient records. Eleven variables were analysed to see if there is any association with success. Outcome was measured twice, immediately after surgery prior to orthodontic loading (T1) and 12 months after surgery (T2). The outcome at T2 was assessed 12 months after the miniscrew's insertion date or after its use as a temporary anchorage device has ceased. Results. Overall success rate was 94.7% at T1 and 83.3% at T2. Multivariate analysis revealed only the length of miniscrew implant to be significantly associated with success at both T1 ( = 0.002) and T2 ( = 0.030). Miniscrew implants with lengths of 10-12 mm had the highest success rate (98.0%) compared to other lengths, and this is statistically significant ( = 0.035). At T2, lengths of 10-12 mm had significantly ( = 0.013) higher success rates (93.5%) compared to 6-7 mm (76.7%) and 8 mm (82.1%) miniscrew implants. Conclusion. Multivariate statistical analyses of 11 variables demonstrate that length of miniscrew implant is significant in determining success

    Case Report: A papillary thyroid microcarcinoma patient with skip lymph node metastasis and multiple distant metastasis

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    Papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) is the most common type of thyroid cancer. Papillary thyroid microcarcinoma (PTMC) is defined as PTC with a diameter less than 1 centimeter. Most lymph nodes of PTC patients have metastasized to the central neck, and a few lymph nodes have metastasized to the lateral neck. Skip lymph node metastasis, that is, lateral cervical lymph node metastasis without central lymph node metastasis, is even less common. Additionally, distant metastasis of PTMC is also rare, mainly occurring in the lung and bone. Here, we reported a case of PTMC patient with skip lymph node metastasis and multiple distant metastasis. The patient presented with a huge shoulder mass and the primary tumor was found to originate from the thyroid. However, the patient only suffered with PTMC via postoperative pathological results, and interestingly, the patient only had skip lymph node metastasis. Thus, we should focus on PTMC patients with lateral cervical lymph nodes metastasis, especially those with skip metastasis. In addition, this case provides a new perspective for us to understand of skip lymph metastasis and distant metastasis of PTMC

    Ferromagnetism and MR Imaging: Safety of Carotid Vascular Clamps

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    Metallic extracranial carotid vascular clamps of the Selverstone, Crutchfield, PoppenBlaylock, Salibi, Kindt, and tantalum varieties have been placed for treatment of large, giant, or inoperable intracranial aneurysms. To ascertain what adverse effect, if any, MR imaging would have on these clamps, magnetic deflection at 1.5 Twas measured for various carotid clamps. Marked magnetic deflection (and torque) was displayed by stainless steel Poppen-Blaylock clamps. Relatively mild magnetic deflection was displayed by the stainless steel Selverstone, Salibi, Crutchfield, and Kindt clamps. Three patients with previously placed carotid clamps (two Selverstone, one Salibi) and one patient with a nonferromagnetic tantalum carotid clip had cranial or cervical MR studies at field strengths ranging from 0.35 to 0.60 T. No patient experienced any discomfort or neurologic sequelae as a result of MR imaging. Although the ferromagnetic clamps created severe "black-hole" artifacts and image distortion within the cervical and facial regions, no significant image degradation was apparent during spin-echo imaging of the brain. The tantalum clip created a far smaller MR artifact than did ferromagnetic clamps and allowed effective spin-echo and gradient-echo imaging in the cervical region. Our findings indicate that most patients with carotid vascular clamps (and nonferromagnetic clips) can probably be imaged safely with MR. AJNR 11:267-272, March/April1990 Cervical carotid artery ligation has been used since 1798 for a variety of indications, including internal carotid artery aneurysms and large or giant inoperable intracranial aneurysms Other occlusion devices used on the carotid artery include tantalum or aluminum bands or clips [1 0-12) and an intraluminal balloon catheter The use of carotid vascular clamps has significantly decreased owing to the emergence of transluminal balloon embolization of large, giant, or inaccessible intracranial aneurysm

    Correlates of hallucinatory experiences in the general population: an international multi-site replication study

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    Hallucinatory experiences can occur in both clinical and nonclinical groups. However, in previous studies of the general population, investigations of the cognitive mechanisms underlying hallucinatory experiences have yielded inconsistent results. We ran a large-scale preregistered multisite study, in which general-population participants (N = 1,394 across 11 data-collection sites and online) completed assessments of hallucinatory experiences, a measure of adverse childhood experiences, and four tasks: source memory, dichotic listening, backward digit span, and auditory signal detection. We found that hallucinatory experiences were associated with a higher false-alarm rate on the signal detection task and a greater number of reported adverse childhood experiences but not with any of the other cognitive measures employed. These findings are an important step in improving reproducibility in hallucinations research and suggest that the replicability of some findings regarding cognition in clinical samples needs to be investigated

    Item-specific overlap between hallucinatory experiences and cognition in the general population: A three-step multivariate analysis of international multi-site data

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    Hallucinatory experiences (HEs) can be pronounced in psychosis, but similar experiences also occur in nonclinical populations. Cognitive mechanisms hypothesized to underpin HEs include dysfunctional source monitoring, heightened signal detection, and impaired attentional processes. Using data from an international multisite study on non-clinical participants (N = 419), we described the overlap between two sets of variables - one measuring cognition and the other HEs - at the level of individual items. We used a three-step method to extract and examine item-specific signal, which is typically obscured when summary scores are analyzed using traditional methodologies. The three-step method involved: (1) constraining variance in cognition variables to that which is predictable from HE variables, followed by dimension reduction, (2) determining reliable HE items using split-halves and permutation tests, and (3) selecting cognition items for interpretation using a leave-one-out procedure followed by repetition of Steps 1 and 2. The results showed that the overlap between HEs and cognition variables can be conceptualized as bi-dimensional, with two distinct mechanisms emerging as candidates for separate pathways to the development of HEs: HEs involving perceptual distortions on one hand (including voices), underpinned by a low threshold for signal detection in cognition, and HEs involving sensory overload on the other hand, underpinned by reduced laterality in cognition. We propose that these two dimensions of HEs involving distortions/liberal signal detection, and sensation overload/reduced laterality may map onto psychosis-spectrum and dissociation-spectrum anomalous experiences, respectively

    Progressive GAA·TTC Repeat Expansion in Human Cell Lines

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    Trinucleotide repeat expansion is the genetic basis for a sizeable group of inherited neurological and neuromuscular disorders. Friedreich ataxia (FRDA) is a relentlessly progressive neurodegenerative disorder caused by GAA·TTC repeat expansion in the first intron of the FXN gene. The expanded repeat reduces FXN mRNA expression and the length of the repeat tract is proportional to disease severity. Somatic expansion of the GAA·TTC repeat sequence in disease-relevant tissues is thought to contribute to the progression of disease severity during patient aging. Previous models of GAA·TTC instability have not been able to produce substantial levels of expansion within an experimentally useful time frame, which has limited our understanding of the molecular basis for this expansion. Here, we present a novel model for studying GAA·TTC expansion in human cells. In our model system, uninterrupted GAA·TTC repeat sequences display high levels of genomic instability, with an overall tendency towards progressive expansion. Using this model, we characterize the relationship between repeat length and expansion. We identify the interval between 88 and 176 repeats as being an important length threshold where expansion rates dramatically increase. We show that expansion levels are affected by both the purity and orientation of the repeat tract within the genomic context. We further demonstrate that GAA·TTC expansion in our model is independent of cell division. Using unique reporter constructs, we identify transcription through the repeat tract as a major contributor to GAA·TTC expansion. Our findings provide novel insight into the mechanisms responsible for GAA·TTC expansion in human cells
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