355 research outputs found

    Quick Design Analysis for Improving Building Energy Performance

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    AbstractA building's overall energy performance may be understood as the variation of its energy balance and the extent to which additional heating or cooling energy is needed to maintain comfort. Different characteristics of a building impact the energy performance in ways that vary over time. Transmitted solar gain, for instance, might be an asset at one moment and a liability at another. Architects, designers, and builders often want to know how well a building can be expected to perform in this regard, and they are interested to know what improvements might be the most effective to reduce overall energy use. Many projects lack the budget required for an extensive energy analysis, which is a common approach for answering such questions, while often energy-efficiency guidelines do not address project specific performance issues related to the interactions of site, program and design.Quick analysis tools currently available tend to be inflexible and generic, and thus of limited use in giving design teams feedback about a specific design proposal. This paper presents a cost-effective analysis technique that assesses envelope and internal load characteristics (eg, transmitted solar gain, heat gain/loss of thermal mass, heat gain from equipment, etc) of a building design in terms of their relative benefit or liability to overall conditioning loads. Using data from the energy simulation of one design alternative, the tool presents overall performance of each building characteristic as well as a detailed visualization of performance over all 8760hours of a typical year. The cumulative ranking provides a prioritized list for overall building performance improvements, and the detailed data visualization suggests specific time periods on which the design team should focus

    Factors Driving The Tourists Choice of Alcohol and Drinkscapes: An Exploratory Study

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    This study analyses the crucial dimension of variables influencing visitors\u27 choice of drinkscapes and alcohol among those who visited Goa. This research also aims to examine the influence of tourists\u27 knowledge and past experiences regarding alcohol consumption on the choice of alcoholic beverages and the choice of drinkscapes at tourist destinations. Respondents were asked to rate provided attributes on a 5-point Likert scale according to their preferences in selecting alcohol or drinkscapes. Four hundred and eighty-one questionnaires collected from a web-based survey at popular drinkscapes in Goa were analyzed. The research ranks attribute based on the mean values used by consumers when selecting a drinkscape or ordering alcohol. Based on the results of factor analysis, the study found that the most important factors influencing the choice of alcohol were taste, quality, quantity to be consumed, the brand of the alcoholic beverage and the level of intoxication desired. Whereas ambience, entertainment, safe environment, comfortable seating and clean surroundings were the critical factors indicating the choice of drinkscapes for the respondents. Regression analysis also suggested a significant impact of tourists\u27 knowledge and past experiences regarding alcohol consumption on the choice of alcoholic beverages and the choice of drinkscapes. Regarding the implications for drinkscape management, this study suggests placing a stronger emphasis on providing drinkscapes having a beverage list that stands out with good brands and a variety of quality alcoholic beverages, a good ambience that emphasized a safe and clean environment and good entertainment to attract customers to stand out in this competitive industry. This study also contributes to the field by providing practical information that will enable bar managers to facilitate memorable drinking experiences better

    Density Functional Study of Cubic to Rhombohedral Transition in α\alpha-AlF3_3

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    Under heating, α\alpha-AlF3_3 undergoes a structural phase transition from rhombohedral to cubic at temperature TT around 730 K. The density functional method is used to examine the TT=0 energy surface in the structural parameter space, and finds the minimum in good agreement with the observed rhombohedral structure. The energy surface and electronic wave-functions at the minimum are then used to calculate properties including density of states, Γ\Gamma-point phonon modes, and the dielectric function. The dipole formed at each fluorine ion in the low temperature phase is also calculated, and is used in a classical electrostatic picture to examine possible antiferroelectric aspects of this phase transition.Comment: A 6-page manuscript with 4 figures and 4 table

    Psychotic experiences are linked to cannabis use in adolescents in the community because of common underlying environmental risk factors

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    Cannabis users are more likely to have psychotic experiences (PEs). The degree to which these associations are driven by genetic or environmental influences in adolescence is unknown. This study estimated the genetic and environmental contributions to the relationship between cannabis use and PEs. Specific PEs were measured in a community-based twin sample (4830 16-year-old pairs) using self-reports and parent-reports. Adolescents reported on ever using cannabis. Multivariate liability threshold structural equation model-fitting was conducted. Cannabis use was significantly correlated with PEs. Modest heritability (37%), common environmental influences (55%) and unique environment (8%) were found for cannabis use. For PEs, modest heritability (27-54%), unique environmental influences (. E=12-50%) and little common environmental influences (11-20%), with the exception of parent-rated Negative Symptoms (42%), were reported. Environmental influences explained all of the covariation between cannabis use and paranoia, cognitive disorganization and parent-rated negative symptoms (bivariate common environment=69-100%, bivariate unique environment=28-31%), whilst the relationship between cannabis use and hallucinations indicated familial influences. Cannabis use explains 2-5% of variance in positive, cognitive, and negative PEs. Cannabis use and psychotic experience co-occur due to environmental factors. Focus on specific environments may reveal why adolescent cannabis use and psychotic experiences tend to 'travel together'

    Treatment of Chlordecone (Kepone) Toxicity with Cholestyramine — Results of a Controlled Clinical Trial

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    Abstract Industrial workers exposed to the organochlorine pesticide, chlordecone (Kepone), had signs of toxicity in several organs. The extent of toxicity was proportional to the levels of this chemical in the tissues. In 22 patients, chlordecone was eliminated slowly from blood (half time of 165±27 days — mean ± S.E.M.) and fat (half time of 125 days, with a range of 97 to 177), chiefly in the stool. Output of chlordecone in bile was 10 to 20 times greater than in stool, suggesting that chlordecone is reabsorbed in the intestine. Cholestyramine, an anion-exchange resin that binds chlordecone, increased its fecal excretion by seven times. In a five-month trial, cholestyramine significantly accelerated elimination of chlordecone from blood, with a half life of 80±4 days (S.E.M.) (

    A Rapid New Assay to Detect RNA Editing Reveals Antipsychotic-Induced Changes in Serotonin-2C Transcripts

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    ABSTRACT We report the development of a new assay as an alternative to direct DNA sequencing to measure RNA-edited variation in tissue. The new assay has been validated and is accurate, cheaper, more rapid, and less labor-intensive than DNA sequencing. We also outline the statistical modeling required for analyses of the hierarchical, clustered RNA-editing data generated in these studies. Using the new technique, we analyzed the effects of long-term antipsychotic medication on serotonin-2C receptor (5-HT 2C R) RNA editing in rat brain. Our hypothesis that a drug with high affinity for 5-HT 2C R, such as clozapine, would alter its RNA-editing profile was not confirmed. Whereas haloperidol, a typical antipsychotic drug that is primarily a dopamine receptor antagonist, reduced 5-HT 2C VNV isoform frequency and the level of RNA editing at the D site, risperidone and not the prototype atypical antipsychotic drug clozapine increased the frequency of 5-HT 2C VNV and D-site editing. Our data emphasize that caution is required in the interpretation of RNA-editing data in studies of psychiatric disorders, because these studies usually include subjects who received long-term exposure to medication. This newly established method will facilitate high-throughput investigations of RNA editing in disease pathology and in the pharmacological activity of drugs. The revelation that the human genome comprises between 30,000 and 40,000 protein-coding genes was unexpected, because such few genes are unlikely to explain the functional diversity between humans and less complex organisms. These interspecies differences could arise from post-transcriptional processes such as RNA editing and alternative splicing, which allow a single gene to generate several protein variants. The current study focuses on RNA editing. The recent detection of 1637 potential new substrates for RNA editing Because of their relatively recent discovery, substrates of RNA editing have not been extensively characterized. Adenine-to-inosine RNA editing in mammalian brain has been identified in ionotropic receptors (such as the GluR2 subunit of the ␣-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionate receptor) and in the serotonin (5-HT)-2C receptor (R), which is coupled to GTP-binding protein. Discrepancies between genomic DNA and cDNA sequences led to the discovery of nucleotide changes caused by the activity of ADAR enzymes. In the fully edited 5-HT 2C R, three amino acid codons in the pre-mRNA are changed so that the sequence coding for IRNPI becomes VRGP

    A double-blind placebo controlled trial into the impacts of HMB supplementation and exercise on free-living muscle protein synthesis, muscle mass and function, in older adults

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    Age-related sarcopenia and dynapenia are associated with frailty and metabolic diseases. Resistance exercise training (RET) adjuvant to evidence-based nutritional intervention(s) have been shown as mitigating strategies. Given that HMB supplementation during RET improves lean body mass in younger humans (Wilson et al., 2014), and that we have shown that HMB acutely stimulates muscle protein synthesis (MPS) and inhibits breakdown; we hypothesized that chronic supplementation of HMB adjuvant to RET would enhance MPS and muscle mass/function in older people.We recruited 16 healthy older men (PLA: 68.5±1.0y, HMB: 67.8±1.1y) for a randomised double-blind-placebo (PLA) controlled trial (HMB 3 x 1g/day vs. PLA) involving a 6-week unilateral progressive RET regime (6 x 8 repetitions, 75% 1-RM, 3.wk-1). D2O dosing was performed over the first two weeks (0-2w) and last two weeks (4-6w) with bilateral vastus lateralis (VL) biopsies at 0-2 and 4-6 weeks (each time 75±2 min after a single bout of RE) for quantification of early and later MPS responses and post-RE myogenic gene expression. Thigh lean mass was measured by DXA, VL thickness and architecture (fibre length and pennation angle) by ultrasound at 0/3/6 weeks, and strength by knee extensor 1-RM testing and MVC by isokinetic dynamometry (approx. every 10 days).RET induced strength increases (1-RM) in the exercised leg in both groups (398±22N to 499±30N HMB vs. 396±29N to 510±43N PLA (both
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