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The implementation of affirmative action at a selected Massachusetts community college.
EducationDoctor of Education (Ed.D.
Charmonium mass splittings at the physical point
We present results from an ongoing study of mass splittings of the lowest
lying states in the charmonium system. We use clover valence charm quarks in
the Fermilab interpretation, an improved staggered (asqtad) action for sea
quarks, and the one-loop, tadpole-improved gauge action for gluons. This study
includes five lattice spacings, 0.15, 0.12, 0.09, 0.06, and 0.045 fm, with two
sets of degenerate up- and down-quark masses for most spacings. We use an
enlarged set of interpolation operators and a variational analysis that permits
study of various low-lying excited states. The masses of the sea quarks and
charm valence quark are adjusted to their physical values. This large set of
gauge configurations allows us to extrapolate results to the continuum physical
point and test the methodology.Comment: 7 pp, 6 figs, Lattice 201
Reanalysis of the FEROS observations of HIP 11952
Aims. We reanalyze FEROS observations of the star HIP 11952 to reassess the
existence of the proposed planetary system. Methods. The radial velocity of the
spectra were measured by cross-correlating the observed spectrum with a
synthetic template. We also analyzed a large dataset of FEROS and HARPS
archival data of the calibrator HD 10700 spanning over more than five years. We
compared the barycentric velocities computed by the FEROS and HARPS pipelines.
Results. The barycentric correction of the FEROS-DRS pipeline was found to be
inaccurate and to introduce an artificial one-year period with a semi-amplitude
of 62 m/s. Thus the reanalysis of the FEROS data does not support the existence
of planets around HIP 11952.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures, 1 tabl
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Frailty Syndrome, Cognition, and Dysphonia in the Elderly
Purpose. The purpose of the current study is to determine the relation of frailty syndrome to acoustic measures of voice quality and voice-related handicap. Methods. Seventy-three adults (52 community-dwelling participants and 21 assisted living residents) age 60 and older completed frailty screening, acoustic assessment, cognitive screening, and the Voice Handicap Index-10 (VHI-10). Factor analysis was used to consolidate acoustic measures. Statistical analysis included multiple regression, analysis of variance, and Tukey post-hoc tests with alfa of 0.05. Results. Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) and exhaustion explained 28% of the variance in VHI-10. MoCA and sex explained 27% of the variance in factor 1 (spectral ratio), age and MoCA explained 13% of the variance in factor 2 (cepstral peak prominence for speech), and slowness explained 10% of the variance in factor 3 (cepstral peak prominence for sustained /a/). There were statistically significant differences in two measures across frailty groups: VHI-10 and MoCA. Acoustic factor scores did not differ significantly among frailty groups (P > 0.05). Conclusions. Voice-related handicap and cognitive status differed among robust and frail older adults, yet vocal function measures did not. The components of frailty most related to VHI-10 were exhaustion and weight loss rather than slowness, weakness, or inactivity. Based on these findings, routine screening of physical frailty and cognition are recommended as part of a complete voice evaluation for older adults.12 month embargo; published online: 25 July 2018This item from the UA Faculty Publications collection is made available by the University of Arizona with support from the University of Arizona Libraries. If you have questions, please contact us at [email protected]
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