1,669 research outputs found
New Role, New Country: introducing US physician assistants to Scotland
This paper draws from research commissioned by the Scottish Executive Health Department (SEHD). It provides a case study in the introduction of a new health care worker role into an already well established and "mature" workforce configuration It assesses the role of US style physician assistants (PAs), as a precursor to planned "piloting" of the PA role within the National Health Service (NHS) in Scotland
Parton distributions with small-x resummation:evidence for BFKL dynamics in HERA data
We present a determination of the parton distribution functions of the proton
in which NLO and NNLO fixed-order calculations are supplemented by NLLx small-x
resummation. Deep inelastic structure functions are computed consistently at
NLO+NLLx or NNLO+NLLx, while for hadronic processes small-x resummation is
included only in the PDF evolution, with kinematic cuts introduced to ensure
the fitted data lie in a region where the fixed-order calculation of the hard
cross-sections is reliable. In all other respects, the fits use the same
methodology and are based on the same global dataset as the recent NNPDF3.1
analysis. We demonstrate that the inclusion of small-x resummation leads to a
quantitative improvement in the perturbative description of the HERA inclusive
and charm-production reduced cross-sections in the small x region. The impact
of the resummation in our fits is greater at NNLO than at NLO, because
fixed-order calculations have a perturbative instability at small x due to
large logarithms that can be cured by resummation. We explore the
phenomenological implications of PDF sets with small-x resummation for the
longitudinal structure function at HERA, for parton luminosities and LHC
benchmark cross-sections, for ultra-high energy neutrino-nucleus
cross-sections, and for future high-energy lepton-proton colliders such as the
LHeC.Comment: 70 pages, many figures. Discussion on uncertainties due to subleading
logarithmic contributions. Discussion on fits with pseudodata from future
high-energy lepton-proton colliders. Updated references. Version to be
published in EPJ
Evaluation of an ethidium monoazide-enhanced 16S rDNA real-time polymerase chain reaction assay for bacterial screening of platelet concentrates and comparison with automated culture
Background Culture‐based systems are currently the preferred means for bacterial screening of platelet (PLT) concentrates. Alternative bacterial detection techniques based on nucleic acid amplification have also been developed but these have yet to be fully evaluated. In this study we evaluate a novel 16S rDNA polymerase chain reaction (PCR ) assay and compare its performance with automated culture. Study Design and Methods A total of 2050 time‐expired, 176 fresh, and 400 initial‐reactive PLT packs were tested by real‐time PCR using broadly reactive 16S primers and a “universal” probe (TaqMan , Invitrogen). PLTs were also tested using a microbial detection system (BacT /ALERT , bioMérieux) under aerobic and anaerobic conditions. Results Seven of 2050 (0.34%) time‐expired PLTs were found repeat reactive by PCR on the initial nucleic acid extract but none of these was confirmed positive on testing frozen second aliquots. BacT /ALERT testing also failed to confirm any time‐expired PLTs positive on repeat testing, although 0.24% were reactive on the first test. Three of the 400 “initial‐reactive” PLT packs were found by both PCR and BacT /ALERT to be contaminated (Escherichia coli , Listeria monocytogenes , and Streptococcus vestibularis identified) and 14 additional packs were confirmed positive by BacT /ALERT only. In 13 of these cases the contaminating organisms were identified as anaerobic skin or oral commensals and the remaining pack was contaminated with Streptococcus pneumoniae . Conclusion These results demonstrate that the 16S PCR assay is less sensitive than BacT /ALERT and inappropriate for early testing of concentrates. However, rapid PCR assays such as this may be suitable for a strategy of late or prerelease testing
Age-related decline of peripheral visual processing: the role of eye movements
Earlier work suggests that the area of space from which useful visual information can be extracted (useful field of view, UFoV) shrinks in old age. We investigated whether this shrinkage, documented previously with a visual search task, extends to a bimanual tracking task. Young and elderly subjects executed two concurrent tracking tasks with their right and left arms. The separation between tracking displays varied from 3 to 35 cm. Subjects were asked to fixate straight ahead (condition FIX) or were free to move their eyes (condition FREE). Eye position was registered. In FREE, young subjects tracked equally well at all display separations. Elderly subjects produced higher tracking errors, and the difference between age groups increased with display separation. Eye movements were comparable across age groups. In FIX, elderly and young subjects tracked less well at large display separations. Seniors again produced higher tracking errors in FIX, but the difference between age groups did not increase reliably with display separation. However, older subjects produced a substantial number of illicit saccades, and when the effect of those saccades was factored out, the difference between young and older subjects’ tracking did increase significantly with display separation in FIX. We conclude that the age-related shrinkage of UFoV, previously documented with a visual search task, is observable with a manual tracking task as well. Older subjects seem to partly compensate their deficit by illicit saccades. Since the deficit is similar in both conditions, it may be located downstream from the convergence of retinal and oculomotor signals
BPI-fold (BPIF) containing/plunc protein expression in human fetal major and minor salivary glands.
The aim of this study was to determine expression, not previously described, of PLUNC (palate, lung, and nasal epithelium clone) (BPI-fold containing) proteins in major and minor salivary glands from very early fetal tissue to the end of the second trimester and thus gain further insight into the function of these proteins. Early fetal heads, and major and minor salivary glands were collected retrospectively and glands were classified according to morphodifferentiation stage. Expression of BPI-fold containing proteins was localized through immunohistochemistry. BPIFA2, the major BPI-fold containing protein in adult salivary glands, was detected only in the laryngeal pharynx; the lack of staining in salivary glands suggested salivary expression is either very late in development or is only in adult tissues. Early expression of BPIFA1 was seen in the trachea and nasal cavity with salivary gland expression only seen in late morphodifferentiation stages. BPIFB1 was seen in early neural tissue and at later stages in submandibular and sublingual glands. BPIFA1 is significantly expressed in early fetal oral tissue but BPIFB1 has extremely limited expression and the major salivary BPIF protein (BPIFA2) is not produced in fetal development. Further studies, with more sensitive techniques, will confirm the expression pattern and enable a better understanding of embryonic BPIF protein function
Parton distributions for the LHC run II
We present NNPDF3.0, the first set of parton distribution functions (PDFs)
determined with a methodology validated by a closure test. NNPDF3.0 uses a
global dataset including HERA-II deep-inelastic inclusive cross-sections, the
combined HERA charm data, jet production from ATLAS and CMS, vector boson
rapidity and transverse momentum distributions from ATLAS, CMS and LHCb, W+c
data from CMS and top quark pair production total cross sections from ATLAS and
CMS. Results are based on LO, NLO and NNLO QCD theory and also include
electroweak corrections. To validate our methodology, we show that PDFs
determined from pseudo-data generated from a known underlying law correctly
reproduce the statistical distributions expected on the basis of the assumed
experimental uncertainties. This closure test ensures that our methodological
uncertainties are negligible in comparison to the generic theoretical and
experimental uncertainties of PDF determination. This enables us to determine
with confidence PDFs at different perturbative orders and using a variety of
experimental datasets ranging from HERA-only up to a global set including the
latest LHC results, all using precisely the same validated methodology. We
explore some of the phenomenological implications of our results for the
upcoming 13 TeV Run of the LHC, in particular for Higgs production
cross-sections.Comment: 151 pages, 69 figures. More typos corrected: published versio
Observation of an Exotic Baryon in Exclusive Photoproduction from the Deuteron
In an exclusive measurement of the reaction , a
narrow peak that can be attributed to an exotic baryon with strangeness
is seen in the invariant mass spectrum. The peak is at
GeV/c with a measured width of 0.021 GeV/c FWHM, which is largely
determined by experimental mass resolution. The statistical significance of the
peak is . The mass and width of the observed peak are
consistent with recent reports of a narrow baryon by other experimental
groups.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Measurement of Beam-Spin Asymmetries for Deep Inelastic Electroproduction
We report the first evidence for a non-zero beam-spin azimuthal asymmetry in
the electroproduction of positive pions in the deep-inelastic region. Data have
been obtained using a polarized electron beam of 4.3 GeV with the CLAS detector
at the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility (JLab). The amplitude of
the modulation increases with the momentum of the pion relative to
the virtual photon, , with an average amplitude of for range.Comment: 5 pages, RevTEX4, 3 figures, 2 table
Measurement of the Polarized Structure Function for in the Resonance Region
The polarized longitudinal-transverse structure function
has been measured in the resonance region at and 0.65
GeV. Data for the reaction were taken at Jefferson Lab
with the CEBAF Large Acceptance Spectrometer (CLAS) using longitudinally
polarized electrons at an energy of 1.515 GeV. For the first time a complete
angular distribution was measured, permitting the separation of different
non-resonant amplitudes using a partial wave analysis. Comparison with previous
beam asymmetry measurements at MAMI indicate a deviation from the predicted
dependence of using recent phenomenological
models.Comment: 5 pages, LaTex, 4 eps figures: to be published in PRC/Rapid
Communications. Version 2 has revised Q^2 analysi
Onset of asymptotic scaling in deuteron photodisintegration
We investigate the transition from the nucleon-meson to quark-gluon
description of the strong interaction using the photon energy dependence of the
differential cross section for photon energies above 0.5 GeV and
center-of-mass proton angles between and . A possible
signature for this transition is the onset of cross section scaling
with the total energy squared, , at some proton transverse momentum, .
The results show that the scaling has been reached for proton transverse
momentum above about 1.1 GeV/c. This may indicate that the quark-gluon regime
is reached above this momentum.Comment: Accepted by PRL; 5 pages, 2 figure
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