169 research outputs found
Engineering quantum dots for electrical control of the fine structure splitting
We have studied the variation in fine-structure splitting (FSS) under
application of vertical electric field in a range of quantum dots grown by
different methods. In each sample we confirm that this energy splitting changes
linearly over the field range we can access. We conclude that this linear
tuning is a general feature of self-assembled quantum dots, observed under
different growth conditions, emission wavelengths and in different material
systems. Statistical measurements of characteristic parameters such as emission
energy, Stark shift and FSS tuning are presented which may provide a guide for
future attempts to increase the yield of quantum dots that can be tuned to a
minimal value of FSS with vertical electric field
Association studies of polybrominated biphenyls in aquatic systems
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/47983/1/128_2005_Article_BF01606089.pd
The Influence of Screening, Misclassification, and Reporting Biases on Reported Chlamydia Case Rates Among Young Women in the United States, 2000 Through 2017
Background National chlamydia case rate trends are difficult to interpret because of biases from partial screening coverage, imperfect diagnostic tests, and underreporting. We examined the extent to which these time-varying biases could influence reported annual chlamydia case rates. Methods Annual reported case rates among women aged 15 through 24 years from 2000 through 2017 were obtained from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention AtlasPlus tool. Estimates of reporting completeness, diagnostic test sensitivity and specificity, and screening coverage were derived from literature review and expert opinion. We adjusted annual reported case rates for incomplete reporting, imperfect diagnostic tests, and partial screening coverage through a series of corrections, and calculated annual adjusted case rates of correctly diagnosed chlamydia. Results Adjusted chlamydia case rates among young women were higher than reported case rates throughout the study period. Reported case rates increased over the study period, but adjusted rates declined from 12,900 to 7900 cases per 100,000 person-years between 2000 and 2007. After 2007, adjusted case rates declined to 7500 cases per 100,000 person-years in 2017. Bias from partial screening coverage had a larger impact on case rate magnitude and trend shape than bias from imperfect diagnostic tests or underreporting. Conclusions Reported chlamydia case rates may be substantially lower than true chlamydia case rates because of incomplete reporting, imperfect diagnostic tests, and partial screening coverage. Because the magnitude of these biases has declined over time, the differences between reported and adjusted case rates have narrowed, revealing a sharp decline in adjusted case rates even as reported case rates have risen. The decline in adjusted case rates suggests that the rise in reported case rates should not be interpreted strictly as increasing chlamydia incidence, as the observed rise can be explained by improvements in screening coverage, diagnostic tests, and reporting
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