6,121 research outputs found
Precision searches in dijets at the HL-LHC and HE-LHC
This paper explores the physics reach of the High-Luminosity Large Hadron
Collider (HL-LHC) for searches of new particles decaying to two jets. We
discuss inclusive searches in dijets and b-jets, as well as searches in
semi-inclusive events by requiring an additional lepton that increases
sensitivity to different aspects of the underlying processes. We discuss the
expected exclusion limits for generic models predicting new massive particles
that result in resonant structures in the dijet mass. Prospects of the
Higher-Energy LHC (HE-LHC) collider are also discussed. The study is based on
the Pythia8 Monte Carlo generator using representative event statistics for the
HL-LHC and HE-LHC running conditions. The event samples were created using
supercomputers at NERSC.Comment: 27 pages, 19 figure
The hypertoric intersection cohomology ring
We present a functorial computation of the equivariant intersection
cohomology of a hypertoric variety, and endow it with a natural ring structure.
When the hyperplane arrangement associated with the hypertoric variety is
unimodular, we show that this ring structure is induced by a ring structure on
the equivariant intersection cohomology sheaf in the equivariant derived
category. The computation is given in terms of a localization functor which
takes equivariant sheaves on a sufficiently nice stratified space to sheaves on
a poset.Comment: Significant revisions in Section 5, with several corrected proof
Poisson-de Rham homology of hypertoric varieties and nilpotent cones
We prove a conjecture of Etingof and the second author for hypertoric
varieties, that the Poisson-de Rham homology of a unimodular hypertoric cone is
isomorphic to the de Rham cohomology of its hypertoric resolution. More
generally, we prove that this conjecture holds for an arbitrary conical variety
admitting a symplectic resolution if and only if it holds in degree zero for
all normal slices to symplectic leaves.
The Poisson-de Rham homology of a Poisson cone inherits a second grading. In
the hypertoric case, we compute the resulting 2-variable Poisson-de
Rham-Poincare polynomial, and prove that it is equal to a specialization of an
enrichment of the Tutte polynomial of a matroid that was introduced by Denham.
We also compute this polynomial for S3-varieties of type A in terms of Kostka
polynomials, modulo a previous conjecture of the first author, and we give a
conjectural answer for nilpotent cones in arbitrary type, which we prove in
rank less than or equal to 2.Comment: 25 page
The design and relevance of a computerised therapy program for indigenous Māori adolescents.
Background: Depression is a major health issue among Māori indigenous adolescents, yet there has been little investigation into the relevance or effectiveness of psychological treatments for them. Further, consumer views are critical for engagement and adherence to therapy. However, there is little research regarding indigenous communities’ opinions about psychological interventions for depression.
Objective: The objective of this study was to conduct semistructured interviews with Māori (indigenous New Zealand) young people (taitamariki) and their families to find out their opinions of a prototype computerized cognitive behavioral therapy (cCBT) program called Smart, Positive, Active, Realistic, X-factor thoughts (SPARX), a free online computer game intended to help young persons with mild to moderate depression, feeling down, stress or anxiety. The program will teach them how to resolve their issues on their own using Cognitive Behavioural Therapy as psychotherapeutic approach.
Methods: There were seven focus groups on the subject of the design and cultural relevance of SPARX that were held, with a total of 26 participants (19 taitamarki, 7 parents/caregivers, all Māori). There were five of the groups that were with whānau (family groups) (n=14), one group was with Māori teenage mothers (n=4), and one group was with taitamariki (n=8). The general inductive approach was used to analyze focus group data.
Results: SPARX computerized therapy has good face validity and is seen as potentially effective and appealing for Māori people. Cultural relevance was viewed as being important for the engagement of Māori young people with SPARX. Whānau are important for young peoples’ well-being. Participants generated ideas for improving SPARX for Māori and for the inclusion of whānau in its delivery.
Conclusions: SPARX computerized therapy had good face validity for indigenous young people and families. In general, Māori participants were positive about the SPARX prototype and considered it both appealing and applicable to them. The results of this study were used to refine SPARX prior to it being delivered to taitamariki and non-Māori young people
Genome-wide analysis of poly(A) site selection in schizosaccharomyces pombe,
Polyadenylation of pre-mRNAs, a critical step in eukaryotic gene expression, is mediated by cis elements collectively called the polyadenylation signal. Genome-wide analysis of such polyadenylation signals was missing in fission yeast, even though it is an important model organism. We demonstrate that the canonical AATAAA motif is the most frequent and functional polyadenylation signal in Schizosaccharomyces pombe. Using analysis of RNA-Seq data sets from cells grown under various physiological conditions, we identify 3′ UTRs for nearly 90% of the yeast genes. Heterogeneity of cleavage sites is common, as is alternative polyadenylation within and between conditions. We validated the computationally identified sequence elements likely to promote polyadenylation by functional assays, including qRT-PCR and 3′RACE analysis. The biological importance of the AATAAA motif is underlined by functional analysis of the genes containing it. Furthermore, it has been shown that convergent genes require trans elements, like cohesin for efficient transcription termination. Here we show that convergent genes lacking cohesin (on chromosome 2) are generally associated with longer overlapping mRNA transcripts. Our bioinformatic and experimental genome-wide results are summarized and can be accessed and customized in a user-friendly database Pomb(A)
A New Scintillator Tile/Fiber Preshower Detector for the CDF Central Calorimeter
A detector designed to measure early particle showers has been installed in
front of the central CDF calorimeter at the Tevatron. This new preshower
detector is based on scintillator tiles coupled to wavelength-shifting fibers
read out by multi-anode photomultipliers and has a total of 3,072 readout
channels. The replacement of the old gas detector was required due to an
expected increase in instantaneous luminosity of the Tevatron collider in the
next few years. Calorimeter coverage, jet energy resolution, and electron and
photon identification are among the expected improvements. The final detector
design, together with the R&D studies that led to the choice of scintillator
and fiber, mechanical assembly, and quality control are presented. The detector
was installed in the fall 2004 Tevatron shutdown and started collecting
colliding beam data by the end of the same year. First measurements indicate a
light yield of 12 photoelectrons/MIP, a more than two-fold increase over the
design goals.Comment: 5 pages, 10 figures (changes are minor; this is the final version
published in IEEE-Trans.Nucl.Sci.
Is mindfulness Buddhist? (and why it matters).
Modern exponents of mindfulness meditation promote the therapeutic effects of "bare attention"--a sort of non-judgmental, non-discursive attending to the moment-to-moment flow of consciousness. This approach to Buddhist meditation can be traced to Burmese Buddhist reform movements of the first half of the 20th century, and is arguably at odds with more traditional Theravāda Buddhist doctrine and meditative practices. But the cultivation of present-centered awareness is not without precedent in Buddhist history; similar innovations arose in medieval Chinese Zen (Chan) and Tibetan Dzogchen. These movements have several things in common. In each case the reforms were, in part, attempts to render Buddhist practice and insight accessible to laypersons unfamiliar with Buddhist philosophy and/or unwilling to adopt a renunciatory lifestyle. In addition, these movements all promised astonishingly quick results. And finally, the innovations in practice were met with suspicion and criticism from traditional Buddhist quarters. Those interested in the therapeutic effects of mindfulness and bare attention are often not aware of the existence, much less the content, of the controversies surrounding these practices in Asian Buddhist history
Will promoting general practitioners with special interests threaten access to primary care?
The document attached has been archived with permission from the editor of the Medical Journal of Australia. An external link to the publisher’s copy is included.Moyez Jiwa, Hooi C Ee and Justin J Beilb
Tevatron-for-LHC Report of the QCD Working Group
The experiments at Run 2 of the Tevatron have each accumulated over 1 inverse
femtobarn of high-transverse momentum data. Such a dataset allows for the first
precision (i.e. comparisons between theory and experiment at the few percent
level) tests of QCD at a hadron collider. While the Large Hadron Collider has
been designed as a discovery machine, basic QCD analyses will still need to be
performed to understand the working environment. The Tevatron-for-LHC workshop
was conceived as a communication link to pass on the expertise of the Tevatron
and to test new analysis ideas coming from the LHC community. The TeV4LHC QCD
Working Group focussed on important aspects of QCD at hadron colliders: jet
definitions, extraction and use of Parton Distribution Functions, the
underlying event, Monte Carlo tunes, and diffractive physics. This report
summarizes some of the results achieved during this workshop.Comment: 156 pages, Tevatron-for-LHC Conference Report of the QCD Working
Grou
- …