305 research outputs found
Gaia DR2 Distances and Peculiar Velocities for Galactic Black Hole Transients
We report on a first census of Galactic black hole X-ray binary (BHXRB)
properties with the second data release (DR2) of {\em Gaia}, focusing on
dynamically confirmed and strong candidate black hole transients. DR2 provides
five-parameter astrometric solutions including position, parallax and proper
motion for 11 of a sample of 24 systems. Distance estimates are tested with
parallax inversion as well as Bayesian inference. We derive an empirically
motivated characteristic scale length of =2.170.12 kpc for this BHXRB
population to infer distances based upon an exponentially decreasing space
density prior. Geometric DR2 parallaxes provide new, independent distance
estimates, but the faintness of this population in quiescence results in
relatively large fractional distance uncertainties. Despite this, DR2 estimates
generally agree with literature distances. The most discrepant case is BW Cir,
for which detailed studies of the donor star have suggested a distant location
at >~25 kpc. A large DR2 measured parallax and relatively high proper motion
instead prefer significantly smaller distances, suggesting that the source may
instead be amongst the nearest of XRBs. However, both distances create problems
for interpretation of the source, and follow-up data are required to resolve
its true nature. DR2 also provides a first distance estimate to one source,
MAXI J1820+070, and novel proper motion estimates for 7 sources. Peculiar
velocities relative to Galactic rotation exceed 50 km s for the
bulk of the sample, with a median system kinetic energy of peculiar motion of
5 10 erg. BW Cir could be a new high-velocity BHXRB if
its astrometry is confirmed. A putative anti-correlation between peculiar
velocity and black hole mass is found, as expected in mass-dependent BH kick
formation channels, but this trend remains weak in the DR2 data.Comment: MNRAS in pres
MASCC recommendations on the management of constipation in patients with advanced cancer
PURPOSE: The Palliative Care Study Group of the Multinational Association for Supportive Care in Cancer formed a subgroup to develop evidence-based recommendations on the management of constipation in patients with advanced cancer. METHODS: These recommendations were developed in accordance with the MASCC Guidelines Policy. A search strategy for Medline was developed, and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials were explored for relevant reviews/trials respectively. The recommendations were categorised by the level of evidence and a "category of guideline" based on the level of evidence (i.e. "recommendation", "suggestion", or "no guideline possible"). RESULTS: The group produced 15 recommendations, with varying levels of evidence and so varying categories of guideline. The recommendations relate to the assessment, the treatment, and the re-assessment of constipation. CONCLUSIONS: These recommendations provide a framework for the management of constipation in advanced cancer, although every patient needs individualised management
The effect of carbohydrate dose and timing on timed effort and time to exhaustion within a simulated cycle race in male professional cyclists
A key performance limitation affecting professional endurance cycling is carbohydrate storage and utilisation (Pöchmüller, Schwingshack, Colombani & Hoffmann, 2016, Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition, 13). Muscle glycogen stores alone are inefficient at maintaining optimal blood glucose levels beyond two hours of exercise; consequently, exogenous CHO is commonly used to counteract this (Jeukendrup, 2011, Journal of Sports Sciences, 21, 91-99). High concentrations of CHO can cause drops in blood glucose, excessive glycogen utilisation and gastrointestinal discomfort (GID) (Jeukendrup, 2011). Therefore, the aim of this study was to determine if frequent, smaller CHO feedings would be preferable to large, bolus CHO feedings on time trial cycling performance. With institutional ethics approval, 5 professional cyclists completed a 4h simulated cycle ride with 3 timed efforts in a randomised, cross-over, double blind design study. Each timed effort occurred in the last 10 min of each hour (TE1, TE2, TE3); participants were asked to cycle with maximum effort for this time. There was also a final effort at the end of the 4th hour to replicate a sprint finish. This was measured as time to exhaustion (TTE). Two interventions were used; a frequent feed (F) where participants drank 20g maltodextrin in 300ml flavoured water solution 3 times per hour and a bolus feed (B) where participants drank 60g maltodextrin solution once per hour. Heart rate, power output, GID, perceived exertion (RPE), blood lactate and blood glucose were recorded before and after TE1, TE2, TE3 and TTE. Wilcoxen signed rank test and Cohen’s D was performed to study differences between interventions and effect sizes.In the F intervention, average watts were significantly higher at TE2 (P<0.05 d=0.75) and TE3 (P<0.05 d=1.21) and the RPE was lower TE1 (P≥0.05 d=1.12), TE2 (P<0.05, d=1.12) and TTE (P≥0.05 d=1.12) compared to B. There was no significant difference between any other variables. The results suggest that despite power output being higher, RPE was lower in the F intervention. Gut absorption of CHO is limited to 1g/h (Jeukendrup, 2011), which may help explain these findings. This is one of the first studies to look at concentration and timing of CHO consumption in endurance cycling. Regular feeds of 20g CHO may be more beneficial on power output and RPE in endurance cycling compared to hourly 60g feeds
The application of linguistic processing to automatic abstract generation
One approach to the problem of generating abstracts by computer is to extract from a source text those sentences which give a strong indication of the central subject matter and findings of the paper. Not surprisingly, concatenations of extracted sentences show a lack of cohesion, due partly to the frequent occurrence of anaphoric references. This paper describes the text processing which was necessary to identify these anaphors so that they may be utilised in the enhancement of the sentence selection criteria. It is assumed that sentences which contain non-anaphoric nounphrases and introduce key concepts into the text are worthy of inclusion in an abstract. The results suggest that the key
concepts are indeed identified but the abstracts are too long. Further recommendations are made to continue this work in abstracting which makes use of text structure
The application of linguistic processing to automatic abstract generation
One approach to the problem of generating abstracts by computer is to extract from a source text those sentences which give a strong indication of the central subject matter and findings of the paper. Not surprisingly, concatenations of extracted sentences show a lack of cohesion, due partly to the frequent occurrence of anaphoric references. This paper describes the text processing which was necessary to identity these anaphors so that they may be utilised in the enhancement of the sentence selection criteria. It is assumed that sentences which contain non-anaphoric nounphrases and introduce key concepts into the text are worthy of inclusion in an abstract. The results suggest that the key concepts are indeed identified but the abstracts are too long. Further recommendations are made to continue this work in abstracting which makes use of text structure
Cascading training the trainers in ophthalmology across Eastern, Central and Southern Africa
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