4,909 research outputs found

    Frequency Bin Entangled Photons

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    A monochromatic laser pumping a parametric down conversion crystal generates frequency entangled photon pairs. We study this experimentally by addressing such frequency entangled photons at telecommunication wavelengths (around 1550 nm) with fiber optics components such as electro-optic phase modulators and narrow band frequency filters. The theory underlying our approach is developed by introducing the notion of frequency bin entanglement. Our results show that the phase modulators address coherently up to eleven frequency bins, leading to an interference pattern which can violate a Bell inequality adapted to our setup by more than five standard deviations.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures (extended version

    Test‐retest reliability of amygdala response to emotional faces

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    In the current study, we evaluated the test‐retest reliability of amygdala response using an emotional face‐matching task that has been widely used to examine pathophysiology and treatment mechanisms in psychiatric populations. Activation within the fusiform face area ( FFA ) was also examined. Twenty‐seven healthy volunteers completed a variation of the face‐matching paradigm developed by Hariri et al. (2000) at two time points approximately 90 days apart. Estimates of test‐retest reliability of amygdala response to fearful faces were moderate, whereas angry and happy faces showed poor reliability. Test‐retest reliability of the FFA was moderate to strong, regardless of facial affect. Collectively, these findings indicate that the reliability of the BOLD MR signal in the amygdala varies substantially by facial affect. Efforts to improve measurement precision, enlarge sample sizes, or increase the number of assessment occasions seem warranted.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/100342/1/psyp12129.pd

    Those wonderful elastic waves

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    We consider in a simple and general way elastic waves in isotropic and anisotropic media, their polarization, speeds, reflection from interfaces with mode conversion, and surface waves. Reflection of quasi transverse waves in anisotropic media from a free surface is shown to be characterized by three critical angles.Comment: 11 Figures 26 page

    Blood cancer journal

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    BACKGROUND: Gait impairments increase with advancing age and can lead to falls and loss of independence. Brain atrophy also occurs in older age and may contribute to gait decline. We aimed to investigate global and regional relationships of cerebral gray and white matter volumes with gait speed, and its determinants step length and cadence, in older people. METHODS: In a population-based study, participants aged >60 years without Parkinson's disease or brain infarcts underwent magnetic resonance imaging and gait measurements using a computerized walkway. Linear regression was used to study associations of total gray and white matter volumes with gait, adjusting for each other, age, sex, height and white matter hyperintensity volume. Other covariates considered in analyses included weight and vascular disease history. Voxel-based morphometry was used to study regional relationships of gray and white matter with gait. RESULTS: There were 305 participants, mean age 71.4 (6.9) years, 54% male, mean gait speed 1.16 (0.22) m/s. Smaller total gray matter volume was independently associated with poorer gait speed (p = 0.001) and step length (p<0.001), but not cadence. Smaller volumes of cortical and subcortical gray matter in bilateral regions important for motor control, vision, perception and memory were independently associated with slower gait speed and shorter steps. No global or regional associations were observed between white matter volume and gait independent of gray matter volume, white matter hyperintensity volume and other covariates. CONCLUSION: Smaller gray matter volume in bilaterally distributed brain networks serving motor control was associated with slower gait speed and step length, but not cadence

    The Impact of Implementing Hypofractionation Prescription Regimens and Modernizing Delivery Technique on Treatment Resources in Breast Radiotherapy

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    Purpose/Objective(s): To determine the change in treatment resources due to the implementation of hypofractionated prescription regimen. Materials/Methods: All patients between January 1, 2012 and December 31, 2021 receiving curative intent breast radiotherapy at a tertiary cancer center were included. Plan and patient data were extracted from the patient database with the treatment planning system and direct database query. Treatment plan categorization was completed using data elements to include only curative intent. Treatment plans for seroma boost or supraclavicular irradiation were excluded to ensure this analysis did not double-count regional nodal irradiation contribution or confound boost with hypofractionation. Treatment delivery time is recorded in the database for each patient treatment delivered. Average patient treatment time per year was estimated by multiplying the average fractions each year by average time in the same year. The standard fractionation regimens (95% of patients) are 42.56 Gy in 16, 40 Gy in 16, 27 Gy in 5 (accelerated partial breast irradiation), and 26 Gy in 5 (FAST-Forward). In the analysis, implementation milestones are indicated for new prescription regimens and delivery technique changes including deep inspiration breath hold (DIBH) for left-sided patient treatments and daily verification imaging. Results: A total of 6505 patients were included. Table 1 details the total number of patients per year, the average number of fractions treated per patient, and the average treatment time of each patient plan. The average total fractions per treatment decreased from 17.5 in 2012 to 10.9 in 2021. The average treatment delivery time increased from 12.9 minutes to 21.4 minutes. Conclusion: In considering total treatment resources, the interplay between hypofractionation and modernization delivery techniques is complex. The impact of hypofractionation reduced the average number of fractions but total treatment resources are offset with the implementation of modern treatment delivery techniques. Hypofractionated prescription regimens reduce the time and travel commitment required of patients on an individual basis, contributing to person-centered care

    PREPARATION AND PHOTOLUMINESCENCE PROPERTIES OF RF-SPUTTERED ZnO FILMS

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    ZnO/Si films were prepared by radio frequency (RF) magnetron sputtering at room temperature. By optimizing the heat treatment conditions, we obtained a good quality film annealed at 700 ÂșC for longer 60 minutes. This process was monitored carefully by Raman scattering spectroscopy, and X-ray diffraction. The photoluminescence study on this film revealed that only ultraviolet emissions due to donor-acceptor pair (DAP), neutral acceptor-bound exciton (AÂșX) and donor-bound exciton (DÂșX) were observed. The intensity and peak position of these emissions depend on the measurement temperature and excitation power density

    Neural correlates of explicit and implicit emotion processing in relation to treatment response in pediatric anxiety

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    Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/136676/1/jcpp12658_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/136676/2/jcpp12658.pd

    NAST: a multiple sequence alignment server for comparative analysis of 16S rRNA genes

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    Microbiologists conducting surveys of bacterial and archaeal diversity often require comparative alignments of thousands of 16S rRNA genes collected from a sample. The computational resources and bioinformatics expertise required to construct such an alignment has inhibited high-throughput analysis. It was hypothesized that an online tool could be developed to efficiently align thousands of 16S rRNA genes via the NAST (Nearest Alignment Space Termination) algorithm for creating multiple sequence alignments (MSA). The tool was implemented with a web-interface at . Each user-submitted sequence is compared with Greengenes' ‘Core Set’, comprising ∌10 000 aligned non-chimeric sequences representative of the currently recognized diversity among bacteria and archaea. User sequences are oriented and paired with their closest match in the Core Set to serve as a template for inserting gap characters. Non-16S data (sequence from vector or surrounding genomic regions) are conveniently removed in the returned alignment. From the resulting MSA, distance matrices can be calculated for diversity estimates and organisms can be classified by taxonomy. The ability to align and categorize large sequence sets using a simple interface has enabled researchers with various experience levels to obtain bacterial and archaeal community profiles

    Experimental quantum tossing of a single coin

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    The cryptographic protocol of coin tossing consists of two parties, Alice and Bob, that do not trust each other, but want to generate a random bit. If the parties use a classical communication channel and have unlimited computational resources, one of them can always cheat perfectly. Here we analyze in detail how the performance of a quantum coin tossing experiment should be compared to classical protocols, taking into account the inevitable experimental imperfections. We then report an all-optical fiber experiment in which a single coin is tossed whose randomness is higher than achievable by any classical protocol and present some easily realisable cheating strategies by Alice and Bob.Comment: 13 page
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