258 research outputs found
A quantum mechanical model of the upper bounds of the cascading contribution to the second hyperpolarizability
Microscopic cascading of second-order nonlinearities between two molecules
has been proposed to yield an enhanced third-order molecular nonlinear-optical
response. In this contribution, we investigate the two-molecule cascaded second
hyperpolarizability and show that it will never exceed the fundamental limit of
a single molecule with the same number of electrons as the two-molecule system.
We show the apparent divergence behavior of the cascading contribution to the
second hyperpolarizability vanishes when properly taking into account the
intermolecular interactions. Although cascading can never lead to a larger
nonlinear-optical response than a single molecule, it provides alternative
molecular design configurations for creating materials with large third-order
susceptibilities that may be difficult to design into a single molecule.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, 1 tabl
A Qualitative Exploration of Collective Collapse in a Norwegian Qualifying Premier League Soccer MatchâThe Successful Team's Perspective
The current case study focused on a crucial match in the qualification for the Norwegian Premier League (Eliteserien). In the match, the participants of the study experienced a radical change in performance toward the end of the second half, from being behind by several goals to scoring 3 goals in 6 min and winning the qualifying game. The purpose of this study was therefore to examine the perceptions and reflections of players and coaches (sporting director) on what occurred within their own team and within the opposing team. The momentum shift in the opposition team can be described as a collective collapse. In the study, the theoretical collective collapse process model was used as a guide for the design of the interview questions where five semi-structured interviews were conducted with participants involved in the match (players, coach, and sporting director). The participants watched excerpt clips from the match to recall the main events, which they subsequently reflected on. The results highlighted the importance of the âbefore-gameâ aspects (i.e., pressure, first game result), the âduring-the-gameâ behavior (i.e., goals scored, playing with a low degree of risk) and the cognitive (i.e., feelings of pressure, despair) and emotional reactions (i.e., frustration, joy) to the match unfolding. In addition, social contagion processes were evident in both teams relating to emotion and behavior. Overall, the data from this study investigated the general structure of the process model of collective sport team collapse and found support for the notion of a temporal cascade of causes for a team collapse. Future research is encouraged to examine this model, to provide guidance to teams, coaches, and sport psychologists in order to make recommendations for dealing with collective collapse in sport teams
Agency and intentionality-dependent experiences of moral emotions
Moral emotions are thought to influence moral behaviour by providing a driving force to do good and to avoid doing bad. In this study we examined moral emotions; specifically, guilt, shame, annoyance and feeling âbadâ from two different perspectives in a moral scenario; the agent and the victim whilst manipulating the intentionality of the harm; intentional and unintentional. Two hundred participants completed a moral emotions task, which utilised cartoons to depict everyday moral scenarios. As expected, we found that self-blaming emotions such as shame and guilt were much more frequent when taking on the perspective of the agent whilst annoyance was more frequent from the victim perspective. Feeling bad, however, was not agency-specific. Notably, when the harm was intentional, we observed significantly greater shame ratings from the perspective of the agent compared to when the harm was unintentional. In addition, we also found clear gender differences and further observed correlations between moral emotions and personality variables such as psychoticism and neuroticism
High-Precision Inversion of Dynamic Radiography Using Hydrodynamic Features
Radiography is often used to probe complex, evolving density fields in
dynamic systems and in so doing gain insight into the underlying physics. This
technique has been used in numerous fields including materials science, shock
physics, inertial confinement fusion, and other national security applications.
In many of these applications, however, complications resulting from noise,
scatter, complex beam dynamics, etc. prevent the reconstruction of density from
being accurate enough to identify the underlying physics with sufficient
confidence. As such, density reconstruction from static/dynamic radiography has
typically been limited to identifying discontinuous features such as cracks and
voids in a number of these applications.
In this work, we propose a fundamentally new approach to reconstructing
density from a temporal sequence of radiographic images. Using only the robust
features identifiable in radiographs, we combine them with the underlying
hydrodynamic equations of motion using a machine learning approach, namely,
conditional generative adversarial networks (cGAN), to determine the density
fields from a dynamic sequence of radiographs. Next, we seek to further enhance
the hydrodynamic consistency of the ML-based density reconstruction through a
process of parameter estimation and projection onto a hydrodynamic manifold. In
this context, we note that the distance from the hydrodynamic manifold given by
the training data to the test data in the parameter space considered both
serves as a diagnostic of the robustness of the predictions and serves to
augment the training database, with the expectation that the latter will
further reduce future density reconstruction errors. Finally, we demonstrate
the ability of this method to outperform a traditional radiographic
reconstruction in capturing allowable hydrodynamic paths even when relatively
small amounts of scatter are present.Comment: Submitted to Optics Expres
When counting cattle is not enough: multiple perspectives in agricultural and veterinary research
A traditional approach in agricultural and veterinary research is focussing on the biological perspective where large cattle-databases are used to analyse the dairy herd. This approach has yielded valuable insights. However, recent research indicates that this knowledge-base can be further increased by examining agricultural and veterinary challenges from other perspectives. In this paper we suggest three perspectives that may supplement the biological perspective in agricultural and veterinary research; the economic-, the managerial-, and the social perspective. We review recent studies applying or combining these perspectives and discuss how multiple perspectives may improve our understanding and ability to handle cattle-health challenges
Analysis of role-play in medical communication training using a theatrical device the fourth wall
BACKGROUND: Communication training is a central part of medical education. The aim of this article is to explore the positions and didactic functions of the fourth wall in medical communication training, using a role-play model basically similar to a theatrical performance. METHOD: The empirical data stem from a communication training model demonstrated at an international workshop for medical teachers and course organizers. The model involves an actress playing a patient, students alternating in the role of the doctor, and a teacher who moderates. The workshop was videotaped and analyzed qualitatively. RESULTS: The analysis of the empirical material revealed three main locations of the fourth wall as it moved and changed qualities during the learning session: 1) A traditional theatre location, where the wall was transparent for the audience, but opaque for the participants in the fiction. 2) A "timeout/reflection" location, where the wall was doubly opaque, for the patient on the one side and the moderator, the doctor and the audience on the other side and 3) an "interviewing the character" location where the wall enclosed everybody in the room. All three locations may contribute to the learning process. CONCLUSION: The theatrical concept 'the fourth wall' may present an additional tool for new understanding of fiction based communication training. Increased understanding of such an activity may help medical teachers/course organizers in planning and evaluating communication training courses
Estimação da função de sensibilidade baseada em experimento com relé em malha fechada
Nonsurgical and surgical periodontal therapy in single-rooted teeth
The purpose of this study was to compare the effect of tooth related and patient related factors on the success of non-surgical and surgical periodontal therapy. In 41 patients (22 female) with untreated and/or recurrent periodontitis, no therapy, scaling and root planing (SRP), or access flap (AF) were assigned according to probing pocket depth (PPD). PPD and vertical relative attachment level (RAL-V) were obtained initially, 3 and 6Â months after therapy. Baseline data were compared according to therapy, jaw, tooth type, and site. Factors influencing clinical parameters were identified using multilevel analyses. Baseline PPDs were deeper interproximally, in the maxilla and at premolars compared to buccal/oral sites, mandibular, and anterior teeth. At 6Â months, PPD reduction and RAL-V gain were significantly greater at sites receiving SRP and AF as compared to untreated sites (pâ<â0.001). PPD reduction and RAL-V gain were significantly less (pâ<â0.005) in smokers as compared to nosmokers and at interproximal sites (pâ<â0.0001) as compared to buccal/oral sites. RAL-V gain was less in aggressive periodontitis, and PPD reduction was less in the maxilla (pâ<â0.001). In sites with greater bone loss and infrabony defects, a poorer response was observed regarding RAL-V gain or PPD reduction, respectively. The conclusions of the study are the following: (1) Nonsurgical and surgical periodontal therapies are effective in single-rooted teeth; (2) severe interproximal bone loss and infrabony defects deteriorate clinical results; and (3) there seem to be more defect-associated (tooth, site) factors influencing treatment outcome than patient-associated factors
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