6,838 research outputs found
Prisbaserad grÀsrotsfinansiering : En guide
Finansiering av företag har alltid varit nÄgot som behövs. Företag kan inte vÀxa utan ka-pital. Tack vare grÀsrotsfinansiering sÄ har det blivit mycket lÀttare att samla in detta kapital. Finansiering har blivit transparent och sker pÄ internet, produkterna nÄr direkt en internationell publik. Detta arbete Àr fokuserat pÄ prisbaserad grÀsrotsfinansiering, och fungerar som en guide för företag som söker kapital genom en prisbaserad grÀsrotsfinan-sierings kampanj. Arbetet förklarar prisbaserad grÀsrots finansiering som en helhet, lag-stiftningen, webbportalerna och analyserar konkreta exempel pÄ kampanjer. Arbetet jÀmför Àven grÀsrotsfinansiering med andra former av finansiering. Arbetet förklarar det negativa och positiva med grÀsrotsfinansiering, och hur grÀsrotsfinansiering har haft en explosiv tillvÀxt i vÀrlden. Arbetet förklarar för vem och vilka produkter denna form av finansiering passar. Guiden ger tydliga instruktioner om hur man ska gÄ till vÀga dÄ man skapar en finansierings kampanj. Guiden Àr skriven i en kronologisk ordning för att vara sÄ lÀttlÀst och anvÀndningsbar som möjligt.Financing of ventures and products has always been needed. New companies cannot grow without capital. Thanks to crowdfunding it has never been easier to raise capital. Financing has become transparent and is happening over the internet, which means it is of a global scope. This thesis is based on a specific form of crowdfunding, reward based crowdfunding. In which you sell a product before you even produce it, thus financing the production and development of the product while getting a global reach and global mar-keting for the product. This thesis will explain reward based crowdfunding as a whole and then becomes a guide for companies who are seeking to use crowdfunding as a tool of financing. The thesis explains the laws of crowdfunding in Finland, different crowd-funding web portals and analyzes examples of failed and successful crowdfunding cam-paigns. The thesis also takes a closer look at how crowdfunding differs from traditional funding ways and looks at the pros and cons for crowdfunding compared to them. The thesis explains for who and what products crowdfunding is a good choice. The guide is written as a step-by-step guide in a chronological order to be as easy as possible to follow for companies
Intracardiac Calcification - An Interesting Chest X-ray Report.
We report a case of chest X-ray finding of mitral annular calcification. Mitral annular calcification is a degenerative process involving the fibrous annulus of the mitral valve. It is generally an incidental finding associated with aging and atherosclerosis. It may lead to significant mitral regurgitation and can rarely cause symptomatic mitral stenosis. In addition, mitral annulus calcification may be associated with atrial fibrillation and cardiac arrhythmia. Calcification of mitral annulus in the chest X-ray generally follows the C-shape of the mitral annulus. Confirmation is by echocardiography. Symptomatic cases require repair by surgery
Random Surfing Without Teleportation
In the standard Random Surfer Model, the teleportation matrix is necessary to
ensure that the final PageRank vector is well-defined. The introduction of this
matrix, however, results in serious problems and imposes fundamental
limitations to the quality of the ranking vectors. In this work, building on
the recently proposed NCDawareRank framework, we exploit the decomposition of
the underlying space into blocks, and we derive easy to check necessary and
sufficient conditions for random surfing without teleportation.Comment: 13 pages. Published in the Volume: "Algorithms, Probability, Networks
and Games, Springer-Verlag, 2015". (The updated version corrects small
typos/errors
Family history of prostate and colorectal cancer and risk of colorectal cancer in the Women's health initiative.
BackgroundEvidence suggests that risk of colorectal and prostate cancer is increased among those with a family history of the same disease, particularly among first-degree relatives. However, the aggregation of colorectal and prostate cancer within families has not been well investigated.MethodsAnalyses were conducted among participants of the Women's Health Initiative (WHI) observational cohort, free of cancer at the baseline examination. Subjects were followed for colorectal cancer through August 31st, 2009. A Cox-proportional hazards regression modeling approach was used to estimate risk of colorectal cancer associated with a family history of prostate cancer, colorectal cancer and both cancers among first-degree relatives of all participants and stratified by race (African American vs. White).ResultsOf 75,999 eligible participants, there were 1122 colorectal cancer cases diagnosed over the study period. A family history of prostate cancer alone was not associated with an increase in colorectal cancer risk after adjustment for confounders (aHR =0.94; 95% CI =0.76, 1.15). Separate analysis examining the joint impact, a family history of both colorectal and prostate cancer was associated with an almost 50% increase in colorectal cancer risk (aHRâ=â1.48; 95% CIâ=â1.04, 2.10), but similar to those with a family history of colorectal cancer only (95% CIâ=â1.31; 95% CIâ=â1.11, 1.54).ConclusionsOur findings suggest risk of colorectal cancer is increased similarly among women with colorectal cancer only and among those with both colorectal and prostate cancer diagnosed among first-degree family members. Future studies are needed to determine the relative contribution of genes and shared environment to the risk of both cancers
Order preserving pattern matching on trees and DAGs
The order preserving pattern matching (OPPM) problem is, given a pattern
string and a text string , find all substrings of which have the
same relative orders as . In this paper, we consider two variants of the
OPPM problem where a set of text strings is given as a tree or a DAG. We show
that the OPPM problem for a single pattern of length and a text tree
of size can be solved in time if the characters of are
drawn from an integer alphabet of polynomial size. The time complexity becomes
if the pattern is over a general ordered alphabet. We
then show that the OPPM problem for a single pattern and a text DAG is
NP-complete
Suprathreshold heat pain response predicts activity-related pain, but not rest-related pain, in an exercise-induced injury model
© 2014 Coronado et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Exercise-induced injury models are advantageous for studying pain since the onset of pain is controlled and both pre-injury and post-injury factors can be utilized as explanatory variables or predictors. In these studies, rest-related pain is often considered the primary dependent variable or outcome, as opposed to a measure of activity-related pain. Additionally, few studies include pain sensitivity measures as predictors. In this study, we examined the influence of pre-injury and post-injury factors, including pain sensitivity, for induced rest and activity-related pain following exercise induced muscle injury. The overall goal of this investigation was to determine if there were convergent or divergent predictors of rest and activityrelated pain. One hundred forty-three participants provided demographic, psychological, and pain sensitivity information and underwent a standard fatigue trial of resistance exercise to induce injury of the dominant shoulder. Pain at rest and during active and resisted shoulder motion were measured at 48- and 96-hours post-injury. Separate hierarchical models were generated for assessing the influence of pre-injury and post-injury factors on 48- and 96-hour rest-related and activityrelated pain. Overall, we did not find a universal predictor of pain across all models. However, pre-injury and post-injury suprathreshold heat pain response (SHPR), a pain sensitivity measure, was a consistent predictor of activity-related pain, even after controlling for known psychological factors. These results suggest there is differential prediction of pain. A measure of pain sensitivity such as SHPR appears more influential for activity-related pain, but not rest-related pain, and may reflect different underlying processes involved during pain appraisal
Ascaroside Expression in Caenorhabditis elegans Is Strongly Dependent on Diet and Developmental Stage
Background:
The ascarosides form a family of small molecules that have been isolated from cultures of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. They are often referred to as âdauer pheromonesâ because most of them induce formation of long-lived and highly stress resistant dauer larvae. More recent studies have shown that ascarosides serve additional functions as social signals and mating pheromones. Thus, ascarosides have multiple functions. Until now, it has been generally assumed that ascarosides are constitutively expressed during nematode development.
Methodology/Principal Findings:
Cultures of C. elegans were developmentally synchronized on controlled diets. Ascarosides released into the media, as well as stored internally, were quantified by LC/MS. We found that ascaroside biosynthesis and release were strongly dependent on developmental stage and diet. The male attracting pheromone was verified to be a blend of at least four ascarosides, and peak production of the two most potent mating pheromone components, ascr#3 and asc#8 immediately preceded or coincided with the temporal window for mating. The concentration of ascr#2 increased under starvation conditions and peaked during dauer formation, strongly supporting ascr#2 as the main population density signal (dauer pheromone). After dauer formation, ascaroside production largely ceased and dauer larvae did not release any ascarosides. These findings show that both total ascaroside production and the relative proportions of individual ascarosides strongly correlate with these compounds' stage-specific biological functions.
Conclusions/Significance:
Ascaroside expression changes with development and environmental conditions. This is consistent with multiple functions of these signaling molecules. Knowledge of such differential regulation will make it possible to associate ascaroside production to gene expression profiles (transcript, protein or enzyme activity) and help to determine genetic pathways that control ascaroside biosynthesis. In conjunction with findings from previous studies, our results show that the pheromone system of C. elegans mimics that of insects in many ways, suggesting that pheromone signaling in C. elegans may exhibit functional homology also at the sensory level. In addition, our results provide a strong foundation for future behavioral modeling studies
Cracking in asphalt materials
This chapter provides a comprehensive review of both laboratory characterization and modelling of bulk material fracture in asphalt mixtures. For the purpose of organization, this chapter is divided into a section on laboratory tests and a section on models. The laboratory characterization section is further subdivided on the basis of predominant loading conditions (monotonic vs. cyclic). The section on constitutive models is subdivided into two sections, the first one containing fracture mechanics based models for crack initiation and propagation that do not include material degradation due to cyclic loading conditions. The second section discusses phenomenological models that have been developed for crack growth through the use of dissipated energy and damage accumulation concepts. These latter models have the capability to simulate degradation of material capacity upon exceeding a threshold number of loading cycles.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
Microbial ligand costimulation drives neutrophilic steroid-refractory asthma
Funding: The authors thank the Wellcome Trust (102705) and the Universities of Aberdeen and Cape Town for funding. This research was also supported, in part, by National Institutes of Health GM53522 and GM083016 to DLW. KF and BNL are funded by the Fonds Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek, BNL is the recipient of an European Research Commission consolidator grant and participates in the European Union FP7 programs EUBIOPRED and MedALL. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
- âŠ