4,949 research outputs found

    Earnings and unemployment in Britain 1974-1988: Evidence from a times series of general household surveys.

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    This thesis constructs a consistent data set of labour market variables from the annual British General Household Survey for the years 1974 to 1988. It uses this data to investigate the nature and causes of key developments in the distribution of earnings and incidence of unemployment for working age males. The principal findings of the thesis are: (1) Financial returns to education and experience increased substantially during the 1980s, probably due to a large increase in demand for skilled labour. Despite relative losses, real earnings for workers without educational qualifications increased by about 15 percent between 1974 and 1988. (2) After declining slightly during the 1970s, overall earnings inequality increased sharply in the 1980s. The increase in education and experience differentials accounted for only one-third to one-half of the increase in overall inequality. The rest of the rise occurred within education and experience groups. A shift in relative labour demand in favour of workers with high levels of labour market skills again appears to be the most likely explanation. (3) Education and experience levels have an important impact on an individuals probability of becoming and remaining unemployed. Adjusting conventional estimates of the returns to education and experience significantly increases the measured returns to these skills. (4) Once unemployed, changes in the level of unemployment benefits over the range prevailing in Britain during 1979-82 have no measurable effect on the search effort of unemployed benefit claimants

    Design of a Novel Low Cost Point of Care Tampon (POCkeT) Colposcope for Use in Resource Limited Settings

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    Introduction: Current guidelines by WHO for cervical cancer screening in low- and middle-income countries involves visual inspection with acetic acid (VIA) of the cervix, followed by treatment during the same visit or a subsequent visit with cryotherapy if a suspicious lesion is found. Implementation of these guidelines is hampered by a lack of: trained health workers, reliable technology, and access to screening facilities. A low cost ultra-portable Point of Care Tampon based digital colposcope (POCkeT Colposcope) for use at the community level setting, which has the unique form factor of a tampon, can be inserted into the vagina to capture images of the cervix, which are on par with that of a state of the art colposcope, at a fraction of the cost. A repository of images to be compiled that can be used to empower front line workers to become more effective through virtual dynamic training. By task shifting to the community setting, this technology could potentially provide significantly greater cervical screening access to where the most vulnerable women live. The POCkeT Colposcope’s concentric LED ring provides comparable white and green field illumination at a fraction of the electrical power required in commercial colposcopes. Evaluation with standard optical imaging targets to assess the POCkeT Colposcope against the state of the art digital colposcope and other VIAM technologies. Results: Our POCkeT Colposcope has comparable resolving power, color reproduction accuracy, minimal lens distortion, and illumination when compared to commercially available colposcopes. In vitro and pilot in vivo imaging results are promising with our POCkeT Colposcope capturing comparable quality images to commercial systems. Methods: Rapid 3D printing, consumer grade light sources, and cameras were used to construct the TVDC. The TVDC’s concentric LED ring provides comparable white and green field illumination at a fraction of the electrical power required in commercial colposcopes, and crossed polarizers provide a reduction in glare. Evaluation was performed using standard optical imaging targets to assess the TVDC against the state of the art digital colposcope and other VIA technologies. Results: Our TVDC has comparable resolving power, color reproduction accuracy, minimal lens distortion, and illumination when compared to commercially available colposcopes. In vitro and pilot in vivo imaging results are promising with our TVDC capturing images of comparable quality to commercial systems. Conclusion: The TVDC is capable of capturing images suitable for cervical lesion analysis. Our portable low cost system will be useful for increasing access to cervical cancer screening and diagnostics in resource-limited settings by providing a more readily portable and easy to use device for medical personnel.The image data and support information that is published in the article "Design of a Novel Low Cost Trans-Vaginal Digital Colposcope for use in Resource Limited Settings" are available at: http://dukespace.lib.duke.edu/dspace/handle/10161/8357.National Institutes of Health (US) 5R21CA162747-0

    Planet Hunters X: Searching for Nearby Neighbors of 75 Planet and Eclipsing Binary Candidates from the K2 Kepler Extended Mission

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    We present high-resolution observations of a sample of 75 K2 targets from Campaigns 1-3 using speckle interferometry on the Southern Astrophysical Research (SOAR) telescope and adaptive optics (AO) imaging at the Keck II telescope. The median SOAR II-band and Keck KsK_s-band detection limits at 1" were ΔmI=4.4\Delta m_{I}=4.4~mag and ΔmKs=6.1\Delta m_{K_s}=6.1~mag, respectively. This sample includes 37 stars likely to host planets, 32 targets likely to be eclipsing binaries (EBs), and 6 other targets previously labeled as likely planetary false positives. We find nine likely physically bound companion stars within 3" of three candidate transiting exoplanet host stars and six likely EBs. Six of the nine detected companions are new discoveries; one of the six, EPIC 206061524, is associated with a planet candidate. Among the EB candidates, companions were only found near the shortest period ones (P<3P<3 days), which is in line with previous results showing high multiplicity near short-period binary stars. This high-resolution data, including both the detected companions and the limits on potential unseen companions, will be useful in future planet vetting and stellar multiplicity rate studies for planets and binaries.Comment: Accepted in A

    Dopaminergic Modulation of Medial Prefrontal Cortex Deactivation in Parkinson Depression

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    Parkinson\u27s disease (PD) is associated with emotional abnormalities. Dopaminergic medications ameliorate Parkinsonian motor symptoms, but less is known regarding the impact of dopaminergic agents on affective processing, particularly in depressed PD (dPD) patients. The aim of this study was to examine the effects of dopaminergic pharmacotherapy on brain activation to emotional stimuli in depressed versus nondepressed Parkinson disease (ndPD) patients. Participants included 18 ndPD patients (11 men, 7 women) and 10 dPD patients (7 men, 3 women). Patients viewed photographs of emotional faces during functional MRI. Scans were performed while the patient was taking anti-Parkinson medication and the day after medication had been temporarily discontinued. Results indicate that dopaminergic medications have opposite effects in the prefrontal cortex depending upon depression status. DPD patients show greater deactivation in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (VMPFC) on dopaminergic medications than off, while ndPD patients show greater deactivation in this region off drugs. The VMPFC is in the default-mode network (DMN). DMN activity is negatively correlated with activity in brain systems used for external visual attention. Thus dopaminergic medications may promote increased attention to external visual stimuli among dPD patients but impede normal suppression of DMN activity during external stimulation among ndPD patients

    Martin Gardner's minimum no-3-in-a-line problem

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    In Martin Gardner's October, 1976 Mathematical Games column in Scientific American, he posed the following problem: "What is the smallest number of [queens] you can put on a board of side n such that no [queen] can be added without creating three in a row, a column, or a diagonal?" We use the Combinatorial Nullstellensatz to prove that this number is at least n, except in the case when n is congruent to 3 modulo 4, in which case one less may suffice. A second, more elementary proof is also offered in the case that n is even.Comment: 11 pages; lower bound in main theorem corrected to n-1 (from n) in the case of n congruent to 3 mod 4, minor edits, added journal referenc

    Dopaminergic Modulation of Memory and Affective Processing in Parkinson Depression

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    Depression is common in Parkinson\u27s disease and is associated with cognitive impairment. Dopaminergic medications are effective in treating the motor symptoms of Parkinson\u27s disease; however, little is known regarding the effects of dopaminergic pharmacotherapy on cognitive function in depressed Parkinson patients. This study examines the neuropsychological effects of dopaminergic pharmacotherapy in Parkinsonian depression. We compared cognitive function in depressed and non-depressed Parkinson patients at two time-points: following overnight withdrawal and after the usual morning regimen of dopaminergic medications. A total of 28 non-demented, right-handed patients with mild to moderate idiopathic Parkinson\u27s disease participated. Ten of these patients were depressed according to DSM IV criteria. Results revealed a statistically significant interaction between depression and medication status on three measures of verbal memory and a facial affect naming task. In all cases, depressed Parkinson\u27s patients performed significantly more poorly while on dopaminergic medication than while off. The opposite pattern emerged for the non-depressed Parkinson\u27s group. The administration of dopaminergic medication to depressed Parkinson patients may carry unintended risks

    Noise auto-correlation spectroscopy with coherent Raman scattering

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    Ultrafast lasers have become one of the most powerful tools in coherent nonlinear optical spectroscopy. Short pulses enable direct observation of fast molecular dynamics, whereas broad spectral bandwidth offers ways of controlling nonlinear optical processes by means of quantum interferences. Special care is usually taken to preserve the coherence of laser pulses as it determines the accuracy of a spectroscopic measurement. Here we present a new approach to coherent Raman spectroscopy based on deliberately introduced noise, which increases the spectral resolution, robustness and efficiency. We probe laser induced molecular vibrations using a broadband laser pulse with intentionally randomized amplitude and phase. The vibrational resonances result in and are identified through the appearance of intensity correlations in the noisy spectrum of coherently scattered photons. Spectral resolution is neither limited by the pulse bandwidth, nor sensitive to the quality of the temporal and spectral profile of the pulses. This is particularly attractive for the applications in microscopy, biological imaging and remote sensing, where dispersion and scattering properties of the medium often undermine the applicability of ultrafast lasers. The proposed method combines the efficiency and resolution of a coherent process with the robustness of incoherent light. As we demonstrate here, it can be implemented by simply destroying the coherence of a laser pulse, and without any elaborate temporal scanning or spectral shaping commonly required by the frequency-resolved spectroscopic methods with ultrashort pulses.Comment: To appear in Nature Physic

    The Atacama Cosmology Telescope: The LABOCA/ACT Survey of Clusters at All Redshifts

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    We present a multi-wavelength analysis of eleven Sunyaev Zel'dovich effect (SZE)-selected galaxy clusters (ten with new data) from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT) southern survey. We have obtained new imaging from the Large APEX Bolometer Camera (345GHz; LABOCA) on the Atacama Pathfinder EXperiment (APEX) telescope, the Australia Telescope Compact Array (2.1GHz; ATCA), and the Spectral and Photometric Imaging Receiver (250, 350, and 500 μm500\,\rm\mu m; SPIRE) on the Herschel Space Observatory. Spatially-resolved 345GHz SZE increments with integrated S/N > 5 are found in six clusters. We compute 2.1GHz number counts as a function of cluster-centric radius and find significant enhancements in the counts of bright sources at projected radii θ<θ2500\theta < \theta_{2500}. By extrapolating in frequency, we predict that the combined signals from 2.1GHz-selected radio sources and 345GHz-selected SMGs contaminate the 148GHz SZE decrement signal by ~5% and the 345GHz SZE increment by ~18%. After removing radio source and SMG emission from the SZE signals, we use ACT, LABOCA, and (in some cases) new Herschel SPIRE imaging to place constraints on the clusters' peculiar velocities. The sample's average peculiar velocity relative to the cosmic microwave background is 153±383 km s−1153\pm 383\,\rm km\,s^{-1}.Comment: 19 pages, 11 figures, Accepted for Publication in The Astrophysical Journa
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