286 research outputs found
Erkennen in der Psychopathologie: Reflexionen zu Epistemologie und Überlegungen zum Gewinn von praxisrelevantem Wissen
The epistemic processes leading to a practically viable “knowledge” in psychopathology are traced back from the transcendental-philosophical premises and antecedents through various epistemic steps to the empirical recognition and systematisation into a scientific theory. Psychopathology should serve empirical procedures in diagnostics, epidemiology, etiological conditions. However, it should also produce viable advices for the interpersonal therapeutic transaction. This is illustrated by an example of a catatonic syndrome
The syndrome concept: history and statistical operationalizations
A historical analysis of the syndrome concept shows that this term has been used in many different ways, ranging from clinical experience to records of coinciding symptoms. However, there seems to be broad agreement on the use of the word ‘syndrome' in daily practice. If empirical-mathematical methods are applied in syndrome detection, however, a precise operation-alization of the syndrome concept is needed. Traditional procedures have often used models more dictated by methodological considerations than derived from the field of application, i.e. psychiatric syndromatology. An alternative approach, Boolean factor analysis, is presented in this paper. This relatively new method is illustrated by means of the analysis of a small artificial sample with a known structure. As a point of reference, traditional methods (factor analysis, cluster analysis, and multidimensional scaling) are also briefly discussed. It is demonstrated that they all share a deficiency of information about inter-group structure. In contrast, Boolean factor analysis uses a syndromic definition which builds on the basic notion of concurrent symptoms. Moreover, this approach can easily be understood by clinician
New combined PIC-MCC approach for fast simulation of a radio frequency discharge at low gas pressure
A new combined PIC-MCC approach is developed for accurate and fast simulation
of a radio frequency discharge at low gas pressure and high density of plasma.
Test calculations of transition between different modes of electron heating in
a ccrf discharge in helium and argon show a good agreement with experimental
data.
We demonstrate high efficiency of the combined PIC-MCC algorithm, especially
for the collisionless regime of electron heating.Comment: 6 paged, 8 figure
Equation formulation considerations for efficient numerical modeling of semiconductor phenomena
This paper highlights the importance of equation formulation and associated programming efficiency with respect to modeling of semiconductor phenomena via numerical methods.Two numerical modeling efforts are developed in this paper for one-space dimension device modeling. It is shown on a per iteration basis that the ratio of the computational effort between the two methods is a factor of sixteen. The reduction in the computational effort between the two methods was realized by reformulating the mathematical equations and by reconsidering the effect of programming efficiency. A by-product of the reformulation was a factor of two to three improvement in the convergence rate of the nonlinear iteration. With all considerations, the overall improvement in the solution times for one-space dimension device numerical modeling was determined to be a factor of 30-50.When considering equation formulation alone, the per iteration improvement is a factor of 1[middle dot]43. Coupled with the two to three convergence rate improvement the overall improvement due to equation formulation was approximately 3[middle dot]67.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/22001/1/0000414.pd
Uncertainty quantification for kinetic models in socio-economic and life sciences
Kinetic equations play a major rule in modeling large systems of interacting
particles. Recently the legacy of classical kinetic theory found novel
applications in socio-economic and life sciences, where processes characterized
by large groups of agents exhibit spontaneous emergence of social structures.
Well-known examples are the formation of clusters in opinion dynamics, the
appearance of inequalities in wealth distributions, flocking and milling
behaviors in swarming models, synchronization phenomena in biological systems
and lane formation in pedestrian traffic. The construction of kinetic models
describing the above processes, however, has to face the difficulty of the lack
of fundamental principles since physical forces are replaced by empirical
social forces. These empirical forces are typically constructed with the aim to
reproduce qualitatively the observed system behaviors, like the emergence of
social structures, and are at best known in terms of statistical information of
the modeling parameters. For this reason the presence of random inputs
characterizing the parameters uncertainty should be considered as an essential
feature in the modeling process. In this survey we introduce several examples
of such kinetic models, that are mathematically described by nonlinear Vlasov
and Fokker--Planck equations, and present different numerical approaches for
uncertainty quantification which preserve the main features of the kinetic
solution.Comment: To appear in "Uncertainty Quantification for Hyperbolic and Kinetic
Equations
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Non-invasive measurement of cholesterol in human blood by impedance technique: an investigation by 2D finite element field modelling
This paper concerns detection of solid particles suspended in conductive media by impedance technique. The technique is based on changes in impedance measured between two electrodes placed across a given volume of conducting medium. It presents a methodology for modelling and investigation of the feasibility of such a technique for particle detection by 2D finite element (FE) field modelling. This is based on modelling and computation of electric field distribution between the above electrodes. It establishes the modelling approach, the complexity involved and justifies the need for modelling in 3D to incorporate some of the effects that cannot be taken into account in 2D models. It reports on the modelling investigation for a specific case of detecting, by impedance technique cholesterol particles suspended in human blood and points to a possible instrument for non-invasive measurement of blood cholesterol level
Combined analysis of 635 patients confirms an age-related association of the serotonin 2A receptor gene with tardive dyskinesia and specificity for the non-orofacial subtype
Tardive dyskinesia (TD) is an important limiting factor in the use of typical antipsychotic drugs. Genetic variability in the serotonin 2A (5-HT2A) receptor may influence risk for TD but the results of prior studies are not confirmatory. The objective of this study was to determine association of T102C and His452Tyr polymorphisms in the 5-HT2A receptor gene (HTR2A) with TD in a large, multicentre patient sample. The design employed case-control analysis controlling for possible confounders using pooled, original data from published and available unpublished samples and employing logistic regression, analysis of variance and meta-analysis. The study sample consisted of 635 patients with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder (256 with TD and 379 without TD) drawn from five research centres, divided into six groups based on population origin. The main outcome measure was association of a categorical diagnosis of TD based on the Research Diagnostic Criteria for TD with HTR2A T102C and His452Tyr genotypes and haplotypes. The findings indicate significant association of TD with HTR2A T102C genotype (p = 0.002) over and above the effect of population group, also when controlling for age and gender (p = 0.0008), but not with His452Tyr genotype. The T102C genotype was significantly associated with TD in older (> median age 47 yr, p = 0.002) but not younger patients and in patients with non-orofacial (limb-truncal) (p=0.001) but not orofacial TD. By meta-analysis the Mantel-Haenszel (M-H) pooled odds ratio (OR) across all the available data was 1.64. A T102C-His452Tyr haplotype was significantly associated with TD (p = 0.0008). These findings confirm that genetic variability in HTR2A contributes a small but significant degree of risk for the expression of TD, particularly in older patients and specifically for the non-orofacial (limb-truncal) type. Together with other genetic variants associated with TD the findings could be used to assess risk in patients who are candidates for treatment with typical antipsychotic medications
LHC1: a semiconductor pixel detector readout chip with internal, tunable delay providing a binary pattern of selected events
The Omega3/LHCl pixel detector readout chip comprises a matrix of 128 X 16 readout cells of 50 mu m X 500 mu m and peripheral functions with 4 distinct modes of initialization and operation, together more than 800 000 transistors. Each cell contains a complete chain of amplifier, discriminator with adjustable threshold and fast-OR output, a globally adjustable delay with local fine-tuning, coincidence logic and memory. Every cell can be individually addressed for electrical test and masking, First results have been obtained from electrical tests of a chip without detector as well as from source measurements, The electronic noise without detector is similar to 100 e(-) rms. The lowest threshold setting is close to 2000 e(-) and non-uniformity has been measured to be better than 450 e(-) rms at 5000 e(-) threshold. A timewalk of < 10 ns and a precision of < 6 ns rms on a delay of 2 mu s have been measured. The results may be improved by further optimization
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