8,528 research outputs found
Dissecting the Workforce and Workplace for Clinical Endocrinology, and the Work of Endocrinologists Early in Their Careers
[Excerpt] No national mechanism is in place for an informed, penetrating, and systematic assessment of the physician workforce such as that achieved by the National Science Foundation (NSF) for the periodic evaluation of the nation’s scientists and engineers. Likewise, knowledge of the workforce for clinical research is enigmatic and fragmentary despite the serial recommendations of “blue-ribbon” panels to establish a protocol for the recurrent assessment of clinical investigators early in their careers. Failure to adopt a national system for producing timely, high-quality data on the professional activities of physicians limits the application of improvement tools for advancing clinical investigation and ultimately improving clinical practice.
The present study was designed as a pilot project to test the feasibility of using Web-based surveys to estimate the administrative, clinical, didactic, and research work of subspecialty physicians employed in academic, clinical, federal, and pharmaceutical workplaces. Physician members of The Endocrine Society (TES) were used as surrogate prototypes of a subspecialty workforce because of their manageable number and investigative tradition. The results establish that Web-based surveys provide a tool to assess the activities of a decentralized workforce employed in disparate workplaces and underscore the value of focusing on physician work within the context of particular workplaces within a subspecialty. Our report also provides a new and timely snapshot of the amount and types of research performed by clinically trained endocrinologists and offers an evidenced-based framework for improving the investigative workforce in this medical subspecialty
Reliable solid-state circuits Semiannual report no. 2, Jun. 1 - Nov. 30, 1965
Pulse width modulator and other microminiaturized electronic equipment for space age application
On the resistivity at low temperatures in electron-doped cuprate superconductors
We measured the magnetoresistance as a function of temperature down to 20mK
and magnetic field for a set of underdoped PrCeCuO (x=0.12) thin films with
controlled oxygen content. This allows us to access the edge of the
superconducting dome on the underdoped side. The sheet resistance increases
with increasing oxygen content whereas the superconducting transition
temperature is steadily decreasing down to zero. Upon applying various magnetic
fields to suppress superconductivity we found that the sheet resistance
increases when the temperature is lowered. It saturates at very low
temperatures. These results, along with the magnetoresistance, cannot be
described in the context of zero temperature two dimensional
superconductor-to-insulator transition nor as a simple Kondo effect due to
scattering off spins in the copper-oxide planes. We conjecture that due to the
proximity to an antiferromagnetic phase magnetic droplets are induced. This
results in negative magnetoresistance and in an upturn in the resistivity.Comment: Accepted in Phys. Rev.
Linking changes in pain severity to changes in other outcomes in patients with posttraumatic peripheral neuropathic pain treated with pregabalin [POSTER]
No abstract available
Charged Rotating Black Holes in Equilibrium
Axially symmetric, stationary solutions of the Einstein-Maxwell equations
with disconnected event horizon are studied by developing a method of explicit
integration of the corresponding boundary-value problem. This problem is
reduced to non-leaner system of algebraic equations which gives relations
between the masses, the angular momenta, the angular velocities, the charges,
the distance parameters, the values of the electromagnetic field potential at
the horizon and at the symmetry axis. A found solution of this system for the
case of two charged non-rotating black holes shows that in general the total
mass depends on the distance between black holes. Two-Killing reduction
procedure of the Einstein-Maxwell equations is also discussed.Comment: LaTeX 2.09, no figures, 15 pages, v2, references added, introduction
section slightly modified; v3, grammar errors correcte
Origin of the anomalous Hall Effect in overdoped n-type cuprates: current vertex corrections due to antiferromagnetic fluctuations
The anomalous magneto-transport properties in electron doped (n-type)
cuprates were investigated using Hall measurements at THz frequencies. The
complex Hall angle was measured in overdoped PrCeCuO samples (x=0.17 and 0.18) as a continuous function of
temperature above at excitation energies 5.24 and 10.5 meV. The results,
extrapolated to low temperatures, show that inelastic scattering introduces
electron-like contributions to the Hall response. First principle calculations
of the Hall angle that include current vertex corrections (CVC) induced by
electron interactions mediated by magnetic fluctuations in the Hall
conductivity reproduce the temperature, frequency, and doping dependence of the
experimental data. These results show that CVC effects are the source of the
anomalous Hall transport properties in overdoped ntype cuprates.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
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The Tabby cat locus maps to feline chromosome B1.
The Tabby markings of the domestic cat are unique coat patterns for which no causative candidate gene has been inferred from other mammals. In this study, a genome scan was performed on a large pedigree of cats that segregated for Tabby coat markings, specifically for the Abyssinian (Ta-) and blotched (tbtb) phenotypes. There was linkage between the Tabby locus and eight markers on cat chromosome B1. The most significant linkage was between marker FCA700 and Tabby (Z = 7.56, theta = 0.03). Two additional markers in the region supported linkage, although not with significant LOD scores. Pairwise analysis of the markers supported the published genetic map of the cat, although additional meioses are required to refine the region. The linked markers cover a 17-cM region and flank an evolutionary breakpoint, suggesting that the Tabby gene has a homologue on either human chromosome 4 or 8. Alternatively, Tabby could be a unique locus in cats
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A procedure for rapid determination of the silicon content in plant materials
An efficient, reliable and low-cost procedure to determine the silicon content in plant material is presented which allows to monitor the agricultural aspects like growth and yield. The presented procedure consists of a hydrochloric acid pre-treatment and a subsequent thermal oxidation. The method is compared to other processes like dissolution in hydrofluoric acid combined with ICP OES, energy-dispersive X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy (EDXRF) or aqua regia treatment
Electromagnetic modeling and optimization of packaged photodetector modules for 100 Gbit/s applications
In this paper, we propose an accurate full 3D EM behavioral model of PD chips for the first time. The model, which is meshed at 130 GHz, runs for about 17 minutes on an Intel Core2 Duo CPU@3 GHz PC with 3.5 GB of RAM. The impact of various parameters in wire- bonding transitions for transmission characteristic is summarized in the Table I. When numbers of bonding wires are placed separately all through strips of CBCPWs as well as keeping an optimized gap of transitions, more than 10 GHz bandwidth improvement can be achieved compared the worst case. We also notice that optimization on bonding wires does not significantly improve the fast decay beyond 60 GHz. Further investigation and optimization of the transition is required including a redesign of the CBCPW
'Return to equilibrium' for weakly coupled quantum systems: a simple polymer expansion
Recently, several authors studied small quantum systems weakly coupled to
free boson or fermion fields at positive temperature. All the approaches we are
aware of employ complex deformations of Liouvillians or Mourre theory (the
infinitesimal version of the former). We present an approach based on polymer
expansions of statistical mechanics. Despite the fact that our approach is
elementary, our results are slightly sharper than those contained in the
literature up to now. We show that, whenever the small quantum system is known
to admit a Markov approximation (Pauli master equation \emph{aka} Lindblad
equation) in the weak coupling limit, and the Markov approximation is
exponentially mixing, then the weakly coupled system approaches a unique
invariant state that is perturbatively close to its Markov approximation.Comment: 23 pages, v2-->v3: Revised version: The explanatory section 1.7 has
changed and Section 3.2 has been made more explici
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