71 research outputs found
A Process for Stochastic Material Analysis based on Empirical Data
Material properties are often dominated by imperfections and geometrical variations in micro-scale. The manufacturing process of complex parts as stringers and their assembly creates specific microscopic imperfections whose influence to phenomena like delamination growth can not be understood with a deterministic homogenised material model. This paper describes a general approach to develop a stochastic model of anisotropic micro-structure on the basis of high-resolution image data. This approach uses a surrogate model for approximating material properties of meso-scale material blocks. The empirical material properties provided by the surrogate model are analysed for their marginal distribution and spatial covariance
Liability management: training requirements for tactical teams
Examines training hours as well as the quality of training needed to reduce agency liability
The XXZ model with anti-periodic twisted boundary conditions
We derive functional equations for the eigenvalues of the XXZ model subject
to anti-diagonal twisted boundary conditions by means of fusion of transfer
matrices and by Sklyanin's method of separation of variables. Our findings
coincide with those obtained using Baxter's method and are compared to the
recent solution of Galleas. As an application we study the finite size scaling
of the ground state energy of the model in the critical regime.Comment: 22 pages and 3 figure
Pain Management in the Neonatal Piglet During Routine Management Procedures. Part 1: A Systematic Review of Randomized and Non-Randomized Intervention Studies
Routine procedures carried out on piglets (i.e. castration, tail docking, teeth clipping, and ear notching) are considered painful. Unfortunately the efficacy of current pain mitigation modalities is poorly understood. The aim of this systematic review was to synthesize the existing primary scientific literature regarding the effectiveness of pain management interventions used for routine procedures on piglets. The review question was, \u27In piglets under twenty-eight days old, undergoing castration, tail docking, teeth clipping, and/or methods of identification that involve cutting of the ear tissue, what is the effect of pain mitigation compared with no pain mitigation on behavioral and non-behavioral outcomes that indicate procedural pain and post-procedural pain?\u27 A review protocol was designed a priori. Data sources used were Agricola (EBSCO), CAB Abstracts (Thomson Reuters), PubMed, Web of Science (Thomson Reuters), BIOSIS Previews (Thomson Reuters), and ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Full Text. No restrictions on year of publication or language were placed on the search. Eligible studies assessed an intervention designed to mitigate the pain of the procedures of interest and included a comparison group that did not receive an intervention. Eligible non-English studies were translated using a translation service. Two reviewers independently screened titles and abstracts for relevance using pre-defined questions. Data were extracted from relevant articles onto pre-defined forms. From the 2203 retrieved citations forty publications, containing 52 studies met the eligibility criteria. In 40 studies, piglets underwent castration only. In seven studies, piglets underwent tail docking only. In one study, piglets underwent teeth clipping only, and in one study piglets underwent ear notching only. Three studies used multiple procedures. Thirty-two trial arms assessed general anesthesia protocols, 30 trial arms assessed local anesthetic protocols, and 28 trial arms assessed non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) protocols. Forty-one trial arms were controls where piglets received either placebo or no treatment. Forty-five outcomes were extracted from the studies, however only the results from studies that assessed cortisol (six studies), β-endorphins (one study), vocalisations (nine studies), and pain-related behaviors (nine studies) are reported. Other outcomes were reported in only one or two studies. Confident decision making will likely be difficult based on this body of work because lack of comprehensive reporting precludes calculation of the magnitude of pain mitigation for most outcomes
Analysing multiparticle quantum states
The analysis of multiparticle quantum states is a central problem in quantum
information processing. This task poses several challenges for experimenters
and theoreticians. We give an overview over current problems and possible
solutions concerning systematic errors of quantum devices, the reconstruction
of quantum states, and the analysis of correlations and complexity in
multiparticle density matrices.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figures, prepared for proceedings of the "Quantum
[Un]speakables II" conference (Vienna, 2014
Non-diagonal open spin-1/2 XXZ quantum chains by separation of variables: Complete spectrum and matrix elements of some quasi-local operators
The integrable quantum models, associated to the transfer matrices of the
6-vertex reflection algebra for spin 1/2 representations, are studied in this
paper. In the framework of Sklyanin's quantum separation of variables (SOV), we
provide the complete characterization of the eigenvalues and eigenstates of the
transfer matrix and the proof of the simplicity of the transfer matrix
spectrum. Moreover, we use these integrable quantum models as further key
examples for which to develop a method in the SOV framework to compute matrix
elements of local operators. This method has been introduced first in [1] and
then used also in [2], it is based on the resolution of the quantum inverse
problem (i.e. the reconstruction of all local operators in terms of the quantum
separate variables) plus the computation of the action of separate covectors on
separate vectors. In particular, for these integrable quantum models, which in
the homogeneous limit reproduce the open spin-1/2 XXZ quantum chains with
non-diagonal boundary conditions, we have obtained the SOV-reconstructions for
a class of quasi-local operators and determinant formulae for the
covector-vector actions. As consequence of these findings we provide one
determinant formulae for the matrix elements of this class of reconstructed
quasi-local operators on transfer matrix eigenstates.Comment: 40 pages. Minor modifications in the text and some notations and some
more reference adde
Mpox vaccination willingness, determinants, and communication needs in gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men, in the context of limited vaccine availability in the Netherlands (Dutch Mpox-survey)
IntroductionIn the 2022 multicountry mpox (formerly named monkeypox) outbreak, several countries offered primary preventive vaccination (PPV) to people at higher risk for infection. We study vaccine acceptance and its determinants, to target and tailor public health (communication-) strategies in the context of limited vaccine supply in the Netherlands. MethodsOnline survey in a convenience sample of gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men, including transgender persons (22/07-05/09/2022, the Netherlands). We assessed determinants for being (un)willing to accept vaccination. We used multivariable multinominal regression and logistic regression analyses, calculating adjusted odds ratios (aOR) and 95 percent confidence-intervals. An open question asked for campaigning and procedural recommendations. ResultsOf respondents, 81.5% (n = 1,512/1,856) were willing to accept vaccination; this was 85.2% (799/938) in vaccination-eligible people and 77.7% (713/918) in those non-eligible. Determinants for non-acceptance included: urbanization (rural: aOR:2.2;1.2-3.7; low-urban: aOR:2.4;1.4-3.9; vs. high-urban), not knowing mpox-vaccinated persons (aOR:2.4;1.6-3.4), and lack of connection to gay/queer-community (aOR:2.0;1.5-2.7). Beliefs associated with acceptance were: perception of higher risk/severity of mpox, higher protection motivation, positive outcome expectations post vaccination, and perceived positive social norms regarding vaccination. Respondents recommended better accessible communication, delivered regularly and stigma-free, with facts on mpox, vaccination and procedures, and other preventive options. Also, they recommended, "vaccine provision also at non-clinic settings, discrete/anonymous options, self-registration" to be vaccinated and other inclusive vaccine-offers (e.g., also accessible to people not in existing patient-registries). ConclusionIn the public health response to the mpox outbreak, key is a broad and equitable access to information, and to low-threshold vaccination options for those at highest risk. Communication should be uniform and transparent and tailored to beliefs, and include other preventive options. Mpox vaccine willingness was high. Public health efforts may be strengthened in less urbanized areas and reach out to those who lack relevant (community) social network influences
Antiperiodic dynamical 6-vertex model I: Complete spectrum by SOV, matrix elements of the identity on separate states and connections to the periodic 8-vertex model
The spin-1/2 highest weight representations of the dynamical 6-vertex and the
standard 8-vertex Yang-Baxter algebra on a finite chain are considered in this
paper. For the antiperiodic dynamical 6-vertex transfer matrix defined on
chains with an odd number of sites, we adapt the Sklyanin's quantum separation
of variable (SOV) method and explicitly construct SOV representations from the
original space of representations. We provide the complete characterization of
eigenvalues and eigenstates proving also the simplicity of its spectrum.
Moreover, we characterize the matrix elements of the identity on separated
states by determinant formulae. The matrices entering in these determinants
have elements given by sums over the SOV spectrum of the product of the
coefficients of separate states. This SOV analysis is not reduced to the case
of the elliptic roots of unit and the results here derived define the required
setup to extend to the dynamical 6-vertex model the approach recently developed
in [1]-[5] to compute the form factors of the local operators in the SOV
framework, these results will be presented in a future publication. For the
periodic 8-vertex transfer matrix, we prove that its eigenvalues have to
satisfy a fixed system of equations. In the case of a chain with an odd number
of sites, this system of equations is the same entering in the SOV
characterization of the antiperiodic dynamical 6-vertex transfer matrix
spectrum. This implies that the set of the periodic 8-vertex eigenvalues is
contained in the set of the antiperiodic dynamical 6-vertex eigenvalues. A
criterion is introduced to find simultaneous eigenvalues of these two transfer
matrices and associate to any of such eigenvalues one nonzero eigenstate of the
periodic 8-vertex transfer matrix by using the SOV results. Moreover, a
preliminary discussion on the degeneracy of the periodic 8-vertex spectrum is
also presented.Comment: 36 pages, main modifications in section 3 and one appendix added, no
result modified for the dynamical 6-vertex transfer matrix spectrum and the
matrix elements of identity on separate states for chains with an odd number
of site
Pain management in the neonatal piglet during routine management procedures. Part 2:Grading the quality of evidence and the strength of recommendations
Piglets reared in swine production in the USA undergo painful procedures that include castration, tail docking, teeth clipping, and identification with ear notching or tagging. These procedures are usually performed without pain mitigation. The objective of this project was to develop recommendations for pain mitigation in 1- to 28-day-old piglets undergoing these procedures. The National Pork Board funded project to develop recommendations for pain mitigation in piglets. Recommendation development followed a defined multi-step process that included an evidence summary and estimates of the efficacies of interventions. The results of a systematic review of the interventions were reported in a companion paper. This manuscript describes the recommendation development process and the final recommendations. Recommendations were developed for three interventions (CO2/O2 general anesthesia, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), and lidocaine) for use during castration. The ability to make strong recommendations was limited by low-quality evidence and strong certainty about variation in stakeholder values and preferences. The panel strongly recommended against the use of a CO2/O2 general anesthesia mixture, weakly recommended for the use of NSAIDs and weakly recommended against the use of lidocaine for pain mitigation during castration of 1- to 28-day-old piglets
Review: Transport Losses in Market Weight Pigs: I. A Review of Definitions, Incidence, and Economic Impact
Transport losses (dead and nonambulatory pigs) present animal welfare, legal, and economic challenges to the US swine industry. The objectives of this review are to explore 1) the historical perspective of transport losses; 2) the incidence and economic implications of transport losses; and 3) the symptoms and metabolic characteristics of fatigued pigs. In 1933 and 1934, the incidence of dead and nonambulatory pigs was reported to be 0.08 and 0.16%, respectively. More recently, 23 commercial field trials (n = 6,660,569 pigs) were summarized and the frequency of dead pigs, nonambulatory pigs, and total transport losses at the processing plant were 0.25, 0.44, and 0.69% respectively. In 2006, total economic losses associated with these transport losses were estimated to cost the US pork industry approximately $46 million. Furthermore, 0.37 and 0.05% of the nonambulatory pigs were classified as either fatigued (nonambulatory, noninjured) or injured, respectively, in 18 of these trials (n = 4,966,419 pigs). Fatigued pigs display signs of acute stress (open-mouth breathing, skin discoloration, muscle tremors) and are in a metabolic state of acidosis, characterized by low blood pH and high blood lactate concentrations; however, the majority of fatigued pigs will recover with rest. Transport losses are a multifactorial problem consisting of people, pig, facility design, management, transportation, processing plant, and environmental factors, and, because of these multiple factors, continued research efforts are needed to understand how each of the factors and the relationships among factors affect the well-being of the pig during the marketing process
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