2,984 research outputs found

    Stability prediction of early orthopedic treatment in Class III malocclusion: morphologic discriminant analysis

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    Background To evaluate morphologic differences between class III malocclusion success and failure treatment subjects in order to identify which variables are more predictive for long-term stability in early orthopedic treatment. In this retrospective study, 31 patients were enrolled from the Department of Orthodontics (Rome Tor Vergata). Inclusion criteria were as follows: white ancestry, class III malocclusion, mixed dentition, cervical stage (CS) 1-2, no pseudo-class III. Pre-treatment radiographic and cast records were collected. Each patient underwent rapid maxillary expansion/facial mask/bite block (RME/FM/BB) orthopedic treatment until correction. At T1 (permanent dentition, CS4), records were recollected. According to treatment stability, relapse group (RG, 19) and success group (SG, 12) were identified. Sagittal and vertical cephalometric and digital cast measurements were performed. Student's t tests were used for statistically significant differences inter and intra groups. For discriminant analysis, relapse or success status was added to each patient's T0 data. Results At T0, RG showed larger upper anterior transversal width (p = 0.0266), while at T1 the upper anterior length was shorter than SG (p = 0.0028). Between T1 and T0, both groups showed larger upper anterior and posterior transversal widths. SG had greater upper anterior (p = 0.0066) and posterior (p = 0.449) sagittal length. RG presented larger lower anterior (p = 0.0012) and posterior (p = 0.0002) transversal widths, while there were no differences in SG lower arch. Discriminant analysis provided two predictive variables with an accuracy of 80.6%: upper anterior length and upper posterior length. Conclusion A shorter and wider maxilla could be a predisposing factor for relapse and failure of the early orthopedic treatment of class III malocclusion patients. The absence of mandibular changes could be predictable for treatment success

    Stability prediction of early orthopedic treatment in Class III malocclusion: morphologic discriminant analysis

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    Abstract Background To evaluate morphologic differences between class III malocclusion success and failure treatment subjects in order to identify which variables are more predictive for long-term stability in early orthopedic treatment. In this retrospective study, 31 patients were enrolled from the Department of Orthodontics (Rome Tor Vergata). Inclusion criteria were as follows: white ancestry, class III malocclusion, mixed dentition, cervical stage (CS) 1-2, no pseudo-class III. Pre-treatment radiographic and cast records were collected. Each patient underwent rapid maxillary expansion/facial mask/bite block (RME/FM/BB) orthopedic treatment until correction. At T1 (permanent dentition, CS4), records were recollected. According to treatment stability, relapse group (RG, 19) and success group (SG, 12) were identified. Sagittal and vertical cephalometric and digital cast measurements were performed. Student’s t tests were used for statistically significant differences inter and intra groups. For discriminant analysis, relapse or success status was added to each patient’s T0 data. Results At T0, RG showed larger upper anterior transversal width (p = 0.0266), while at T1 the upper anterior length was shorter than SG (p = 0.0028). Between T1 and T0, both groups showed larger upper anterior and posterior transversal widths. SG had greater upper anterior (p = 0.0066) and posterior (p = 0.449) sagittal length. RG presented larger lower anterior (p = 0.0012) and posterior (p = 0.0002) transversal widths, while there were no differences in SG lower arch. Discriminant analysis provided two predictive variables with an accuracy of 80.6%: upper anterior length and upper posterior length. Conclusion A shorter and wider maxilla could be a predisposing factor for relapse and failure of the early orthopedic treatment of class III malocclusion patients. The absence of mandibular changes could be predictable for treatment success

    Appraisals of instructional context, control beliefs and academic emotions. A case study with advanced university students

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    [EN] In this paper we set out to provide contributions that reveal more about students who attend to university classrooms, from knowing their perceptions of the instructional context, the possibilities of taking control of their learning processes and the emotions they experience accordingly. We worked with an accidental sample (N=39) composed by all the students which in 2010 attended a course on the final part of the curriculum of a career of education at the Universidad Nacional de Río Cuarto (Argentina). Data were collected through the Motivated Strategies for Learning Questionnaire, the Achievement Emotions Questionnaire and focal semistructured interviews. The results are organized into four sections: a) appraisals attributed by students to instructional context; b) aspects of their control belief of learning; c) academic emotions experienced within the context of learning considered; d) statistically significant correlations between variables motivational and emotional focalized in this study. The final considerations are grouped into three categories: a) relevance of considering appraisals and control beliefs as antecedents of academic emotions; b) addressing the importance of tasks that are appreciated as significant for professional education and c) need to investigate into personal aspects in real contexts of learning.[ES] En este trabajo nos propusimos brindar aportes que permitan conocer más acerca de los estudiantes que habitan las aulas universitarias, a partir de indagar sus percepciones sobre el contexto instructivo, las posibilidades de tomar control en sus procesos de aprendizaje y las emociones que experimentan en consecuencia. Se trabajó con una muestra accidental (N=39) compuesta por el total de alumnos que durante el año 2010 cursó una asignatura ubicada en el tramo final del plan de estudio de una Carrera de Educación de la Universidad Nacional de Río Cuarto (Argentina). Los datos fueron recabados a través del Motivated Strategies for Learning Questionnaire, el Achievement Emotions Questionnaire y entrevistas focales semiestructuradas. Los resultados se organizan en cuatro apartados: a) valoraciones atribuidas por los alumnos al contexto instructivo; b) aspectos relativos a sus creencias de control de los aprendizajes; c) emociones académicas experimentada en el marco del contexto de aprendizaje considerado; d) correlaciones estadísticamente significativas entre variables motivacionales y emocionales focalizadas en este estudio. Las consideraciones finales se agrupan en tres ejes: a) relevancia de considerar las valoraciones y las creencias de control como antecedentes próximos de las emociones; b) importancia de atender al diseño de tareas que sean valoradas como significativas para la formación profesional y c) necesidad de continuar investigando en relación a aspectos personales en contextos reales de aprendizaje.Vaja, AB.; Paoloni, PV. (2016). Valoración del contexto instructivo, creencias de control y emociones académicas. Un estudio con universitarios avanzados. REDU. Revista de Docencia Universitaria. 14(2):225-243. doi:10.4995/redu.2016.5950.SWORD22524314

    Maxillary arch development with Invisalign system: Analysis of expansion dental movements on digital dental casts

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    Objectives: To evaluate tooth movements during maxillary arch expansion with clear aligner treatment.Materials and Methods: The study group included 28 subjects (16 females, 12 males, mean age 31.9 +/- 5.4 years) collected prospectively from January 2018 to May 2019. Inclusion criteria were European ancestry, posterior transverse discrepancy of 3-6 mm, permanent dentition stage, presence of second permanent molars, mild or moderate crowding, and good compliance with aligners. Treatment protocol included nonextraction strategies, application of Invisalign clear aligner system, and no auxiliaries other than Invisalign attachments. Linear and angular measurements were performed before treatment (T1), at the end of treatment (T2), and on final virtual models (T2 ClinCheck). A paired t-test was used to compare T2-T1 and T2-T2 ClinCheck changes. The level of significance was set at 5%.Results: Statistically significant differences were found for all measurements, except for ones at the upper second molars. The greatest increase in maxillary width was detected at the upper first and second premolars: 13.5 mm for the first premolar and 13.8 mm for the second premolar at T2. Comparison of T2-T1 angular outcomes showed statistically significant changes in the inclinations of all teeth except for the second permanent molars. T2-T2 ClinCheck showed significant differences for both linear and angular measurements for maxillary canines, resulting in poor predictability.Conclusions: Maxillary arch development revealed a progressive reduction of the expansion rate and buccal tipping in the anterior, lateral, and posterior regions, with the greatest net increase at the first and second premolars. Clinical attention should be paid to maxillary canine movements, and overcorrection should be planned for them during dentoalveolar expansion

    Artificial photosynthesis: photoanodes based on polyquinoid dyes onto mesoporous tin oxide surface

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    Dye-sensitized photoelectrochemical cells represent an appealing solution for artificial photosynthesis, aimed at the conversion of solar light into fuels or commodity chemicals. Extensive efforts have been directed towards the development of photoelectrodes combining semiconductor materials and organic dyes; the use of molecular components allows to tune the absorption and redox properties of the material. Recently, we have reported the use of a class of pentacyclic quinoid organic dyes (KuQuinone) chemisorbed onto semiconducting tin oxide as photoanodes for water oxidation. In this work, we investigate the effect of the SnO2 semiconductor thickness and morphology and of the dye-anchoring group on the photoelectrochemical performance of the electrodes. The optimized materials are mesoporous SnO2 layers with 2.5 mu m film thickness combined with a KuQuinone dye with a 3-carboxylpropyl-anchoring chain: these electrodes achieve light-harvesting efficiency of 93% at the maximum absorption wavelength of 533 nm, and photocurrent density J up to 350 mu A/cm(2) in the photoelectrochemical oxidation of ascorbate, although with a limited incident photon-to-current efficiency of 0.075%. Calculations based on the density functional theory (DFT) support the role of the reduced species of the KuQuinone dye via a proton-coupled electron transfer as the competent species involved in the electron transfer to the tin oxide semiconductor. Finally, a preliminary investigation of the photoelectrodes towards benzyl alcohol oxidation is presented, achieving photocurrent density up to 90 mu A/cm(2) in acetonitrile in the presence of N-hydroxysuccinimide and pyridine as redox mediator and base, respectively. These results support the possibility of using molecular-based materials in synthetic photoelectrochemistry.[GRAPHICS]

    Study of the time and space distribution of beta+ emitters from 80 MeV/u carbon ion beam irradiation on PMMA

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    Proton and carbon ion therapy is an emerging technique used for the treatment of solid cancers. The monitoring of the dose delivered during such treatments and the on-line knowledge of the Bragg peak position is still a matter of research. A possible technique exploits the collinear 511\ \kilo\electronvolt photons produced by positrons annihilation from β+\beta^+ emitters created by the beam. This paper reports rate measurements of the 511\ \kilo\electronvolt photons emitted after the interactions of a 80\ \mega\electronvolt / u fully stripped carbon ion beam at the Laboratori Nazionali del Sud (LNS) of INFN, with a Poly-methyl methacrylate target. The time evolution of the β+\beta^+ rate was parametrized and the dominance of 11C^{11}C emitters over the other species (13N^{13}N, 15O^{15}O, 14O^{14}O) was observed, measuring the fraction of carbon ions activating β+\beta^+ emitters A0=(10.3±0.7)⋅10−3A_0=(10.3\pm0.7)\cdot10^{-3}. The average depth in the PMMA of the positron annihilation from β+\beta^+ emitters was also measured, D_{\beta^+}=5.3\pm1.1\ \milli\meter, to be compared to the expected Bragg peak depth D_{Bragg}=11.0\pm 0.5\ \milli\meter obtained from simulations

    Status of the Super-B factory Design

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    The SuperB international team continues to optimize the design of an electron-positron collider, which will allow the enhanced study of the origins of flavor physics. The project combines the best features of a linear collider (high single-collision luminosity) and a storage-ring collider (high repetition rate), bringing together all accelerator physics aspects to make a very high luminosity of 1036^{36} cm−2^{-2} sec−1^{-1}. This asymmetric-energy collider with a polarized electron beam will produce hundreds of millions of B-mesons at the Υ\Upsilon(4S) resonance. The present design is based on extremely low emittance beams colliding at a large Piwinski angle to allow very low βy⋆\beta_y^\star without the need for ultra short bunches. Use of crab-waist sextupoles will enhance the luminosity, suppressing dangerous resonances and allowing for a higher beam-beam parameter. The project has flexible beam parameters, improved dynamic aperture, and spin-rotators in the Low Energy Ring for longitudinal polarization of the electron beam at the Interaction Point. Optimized for best colliding-beam performance, the facility may also provide high-brightness photon beams for synchrotron radiation applications

    Prospect for Charge Current Neutrino Interactions Measurements at the CERN-PS

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    Tensions in several phenomenological models grew with experimental results on neutrino/antineutrino oscillations at Short-Baseline (SBL) and with the recent, carefully recomputed, antineutrino fluxes from nuclear reactors. At a refurbished SBL CERN-PS facility an experiment aimed to address the open issues has been proposed [1], based on the technology of imaging in ultra-pure cryogenic Liquid Argon (LAr). Motivated by this scenario a detailed study of the physics case was performed. We tackled specific physics models and we optimized the neutrino beam through a full simulation. Experimental aspects not fully covered by the LAr detection, i.e. the measurements of the lepton charge on event-by-event basis and their energy over a wide range, were also investigated. Indeed the muon leptons from Charged Current (CC) (anti-)neutrino interactions play an important role in disentangling different phenomenological scenarios provided their charge state is determined. Also, the study of muon appearance/disappearance can benefit of the large statistics of CC muon events from the primary neutrino beam. Results of our study are reported in detail in this proposal. We aim to design, construct and install two Spectrometers at "NEAR" and "FAR" sites of the SBL CERN-PS, compatible with the already proposed LAr detectors. Profiting of the large mass of the two Spectrometers their stand-alone performances have also been exploited.Comment: 70 pages, 38 figures. Proposal submitted to SPS-C, CER

    Performance of scintillating tiles with direct silicon-photomultiplier (SiPM) readout for application to large area detectors

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    The light yield, the time resolution and the efficiency of different types of scintillating tiles with direct Silicon Photomultiplier readout and instrumented with a customised front-end electronics have been measured at the Beam Test Facility of Laboratori Nazionali di Frascati and several test stands. The results obtained on minimum ionising particles with different detector configurations are presented. A time resolution of the order of 300 ps, a light yield of more than 230 photo-electrons, and an efficiency better than 99.8% are obtained with ∼ 225 cm2 large area tiles. This technology is suitable for a wide range of applications in high-energy physics, in particular for large area muon and timing detectors

    The detection of neutrino interactions in the emulsion/lead target of the OPERA experiment

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    The OPERA neutrino detector in the underground Gran Sasso Laboratory (LNGS) was designed to perform the first detection of neutrino oscillations in appearance mode through the study of νμ→ντ\nu_\mu\to\nu_\tau oscillations. The apparatus consists of an emulsion/lead target complemented by electronic detectors and it is placed in the high energy long-baseline CERN to LNGS beam (CNGS) 730 km away from the neutrino source. Runs with CNGS neutrinos were successfully carried out in 2007 and 2008 with the detector fully operational with its related facilities for the emulsion handling and analysis. After a brief description of the beam and of the experimental setup we report on the collection, reconstruction and analysis procedures of first samples of neutrino interaction events
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