1,118 research outputs found
Study of annoyance due to urban automobile traffic
Continuous traffic noise measurements were carried out over 48 hour periods in front of a hundred buildings in different types of streets in Paris and its suburbs. Physical interpretation of the results provides a noise prediction formula for a traditional type of street. The noise at each point was characterized by a limited number of parameters by means of factor analysis, and their effect on the degree of disturbance by 700 individuals questioned near the measurement stations was studied. It was found that many additional factors affect disturbance besides noise, and that the dispersion of replies for any given noise situation is very wide. A disturbance index is proposed which takes into account the daylight level L(50), the position of rooms in the dwelling exposed to noise, and the individual degrees of satisfaction with the area
Study of annoyance due to urban automobile traffic. Annex 5: Sociological study
The aim, method, description, and results of the study of the influence of traffic noise on the annoyance of persons living near points of measurement are discussed. A facsimile of the questionnaire used in the study is included. The essential themes were: the different dimensions of annoyance; the means of defense against noise; the criteria subjects use to describe the noise; attitudes regarding noise; and the functions of noises
Study of annoyance due to urban automobile traffic. Annex 4: A catalog of the characteristics of noise at different measuring points
The characteristics of urban traffic were studied. Data synthesis of and data specifically for the city of Paris concerning noise due to automobile traffic were examined. Information on noise characteristics at different measuring locations is presented
Impact of a telenursing service on satisfaction and health outcomes of children with inflammatory rheumatic diseases and their families: a crossover randomized trial study protocol.
BACKGROUND: Pediatric rheumatic diseases have a significant impact on children's quality of life and family functioning. Disease control and management of the symptoms are important to minimize disability and pain. Specialist clinical nurses play a key role in supporting medical teams, recognizing poor disease control and the need for treatment changes, providing a resource to patients on treatment options and access to additional support and advice, and identifying best practices to achieve optimal outcomes for patients and their families. This highlights the importance of investigating follow-up telenursing (TN) consultations with experienced, specialist clinical nurses in rheumatology to provide this support to children and their families.
METHODS/DESIGN: This randomized crossover, experimental longitudinal study will compare the effects of standard care against a novel telenursing consultation on children's and family outcomes. It will examine children below 16 years old, recently diagnosed with inflammatory rheumatic diseases, who attend the pediatric rheumatology outpatient clinic of a tertiary referral hospital in western Switzerland, and one of their parents. The telenursing consultation, at least once a month, by a qualified, experienced, specialist nurse in pediatric rheumatology will consist of providing affective support, health information, and aid to decision-making. Cox's Interaction Model of Client Health Behavior serves as the theoretical framework for this study. The primary outcome measure is satisfaction and this will be assessed using mixed methods (quantitative and qualitative data). Secondary outcome measures include disease activity, quality of life, adherence to treatment, use of the telenursing service, and cost. We plan to enroll 56 children.
DISCUSSION: The telenursing consultation is designed to support parents and children/adolescents during the course of the disease with regular follow-up. This project is novel because it is based on a theoretical standardized intervention, yet it allows for individualized care. We expect this trial to confirm the importance of support by a clinical specialist nurse in improving outcomes for children and adolescents with inflammatory rheumatisms.
TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrial.gov identifier: NCT01511341 (December 1st, 2012)
Elimination of the BKCa Channel's High-Affinity Ca2+ Sensitivity
We report here a combination of site-directed mutations that eliminate the high-affinity Ca2+ response of the large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channel (BKCa), leaving only a low-affinity response blocked by high concentrations of Mg2+. Mutations at two sites are required, the “Ca2+ bowl,” which has been implicated previously in Ca2+ binding, and M513, at the end of the channel's seventh hydrophobic segment. Energetic analyses of mutations at these positions, alone and in combination, argue that the BKCa channel contains three types of Ca2+ binding sites, one of low affinity that is Mg2+ sensitive (as has been suggested previously) and two of higher affinity that have similar binding characteristics and contribute approximately equally to the power of Ca2+ to influence channel opening. Estimates of the binding characteristics of the BKCa channel's high-affinity Ca2+-binding sites are provided
A method to localize gamma-ray bursts using POLAR
The hard X-ray polarimeter POLAR aims to measure the linear polarization of
the 50-500 keV photons arriving from the prompt emission of gamma-ray bursts
(GRBs). The position in the sky of the detected GRBs is needed to determine
their level of polarization. We present here a method by which, despite of the
polarimeter incapability of taking images, GRBs can be roughly localized using
POLAR alone. For this purpose scalers are attached to the output of the 25
multi-anode photomultipliers (MAPMs) that collect the light from the POLAR
scintillator target. Each scaler measures how many GRB photons produce at least
one energy deposition above 50 keV in the corresponding MAPM. Simulations show
that the relative outputs of the 25 scalers depend on the GRB position. A
database of very strong GRBs simulated at 10201 positions has been produced.
When a GRB is detected, its location is calculated searching the minimum of the
chi2 obtained in the comparison between the measured scaler pattern and the
database. This GRB localization technique brings enough accuracy so that the
error transmitted to the 100% modulation factor is kept below 10% for GRBs with
fluence Ftot \geq 10^(-5) erg cm^(-2) . The POLAR localization capability will
be useful for those cases where no other instruments are simultaneously
observing the same field of view.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figure
Impact of a nurse led telephone intervention on satisfaction and health outcomes of children with inflammatory rheumatic diseases and their families: a crossover randomized clinical trial.
Children suffering from rheumatic disease are faced with multidimensional challenges that affect their quality of life and family dynamics. Symptom management and monitoring of the course of the disease over time are important to minimize disability and pain. Poor disease control and anticipation of the need for treatment changes may be prompted by specialist medical follow-up and regular nurse-led consultations with the patient and families, in which information and support is provided. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of a nurse-led telephone intervention or Telenursing (TN) compared to standard care (SC) on satisfaction and health outcomes of children with inflammatory rheumatic diseases and their parents.
A multicentered, randomized, longitudinal, crossover trial was conducted with pediatrics outpatients newly diagnosed with inflammatory rheumatic diseases. Participants were randomly assigned to two groups TN and SC for 12 months and crossed-over for the following 12 months. TN consisted of providing individualized affective support, health information and aid to decision making. Satisfaction (primary outcome) and health outcomes were assessed with the Client Satisfaction Questionnaire-8 and the Juvenile Arthritis Multidimensional Assessment Report, respectively. A mixed effect model, including a group x time interaction, was performed for each outcome.
Satisfaction was significantly higher when receiving TN (OR = 7.7, 95% CI: 1.8-33.6). Morning stiffness (OR = 3.2, 95% CI: 0.97-7.15) and pain (OR = 2.64, 95% CI: 0.97-7.15) were lower in the TN group. For both outcomes a carry-over effect was observed with a higher impact of TN during the 12 first months of the study. The other outcomes did not show any significant improvements between groups.
TN had a positive impact on satisfaction and on morning stiffness and pain of children with inflammatory rheumatic diseases and their families. This highlights the importance of support by specialist nurses in improving satisfaction and symptom management for children with inflammatory rheumatisms and their families.
ClinicalTrial.gov identifier: NCT01511341 (December 1st, 2012)
Fully Parallel Hyperparameter Search: Reshaped Space-Filling
Space-filling designs such as scrambled-Hammersley, Latin Hypercube Sampling
and Jittered Sampling have been proposed for fully parallel hyperparameter
search, and were shown to be more effective than random or grid search. In this
paper, we show that these designs only improve over random search by a constant
factor. In contrast, we introduce a new approach based on reshaping the search
distribution, which leads to substantial gains over random search, both
theoretically and empirically. We propose two flavors of reshaping. First, when
the distribution of the optimum is some known , we propose Recentering,
which uses as search distribution a modified version of tightened closer
to the center of the domain, in a dimension-dependent and budget-dependent
manner. Second, we show that in a wide range of experiments with unknown,
using a proposed Cauchy transformation, which simultaneously has a heavier tail
(for unbounded hyperparameters) and is closer to the boundaries (for bounded
hyperparameters), leads to improved performances. Besides artificial
experiments and simple real world tests on clustering or Salmon mappings, we
check our proposed methods on expensive artificial intelligence tasks such as
attend/infer/repeat, video next frame segmentation forecasting and progressive
generative adversarial networks
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Work Plan for Howard A. Hanson Dam Forecast Informed Reservoir Operations
This Work Plan lays out an approach and scope for assessing the viability of Forecast Informed Reservoir Operations (FIRO) at Howard A. Hanson Dam. Tacoma Water and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Seattle District are collaborating with Center for Western Weather and Water Extremes at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Research and Development Center, the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration National Weather Service, the National Marine Fisheries Service, King County River and Floodplain Management, and the Muckleshoot Indian Tribe to assess the benefits of reservoir management scenarios using forecasts. The Howard A. Hanson Dam FIRO project will investigate this key question: How can improved forecasts of landfalling atmospheric rivers and associated precipitation and runoff be used to improve the reliability of spring refill to meet instream flows for fish and water supply storage objectives, improve the effectiveness of summer water management in advance of the fall flood transition period, maintain or improve operations for downstream flood risk management, and ensure forecasts and operations are flexible enough to respond to a changing climate without impacting flood risk, water storage reliability, and flows for fish
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