1,218 research outputs found
The Occupational Therapy Practitioner Experience and Practice Related to Upper Limb Loss or Difference and Prosthetics
Despite occupational therapy’s critical role on the rehabilitation team for individuals with upper limb loss or difference (ULL/D) and prosthetics, this population is not extensively covered in many occupational therapy (OT) program curricula. As such, many clinicians work with patients with ULL/D with little expertise or confidence for this complex population. The aim of this study was to evaluate the OT practitioner experience and practice related to ULL/D and prosthetics in their education and practice. Utilizing snowball sampling, 150 OT practitioners completed a 24-question survey, which assessed OT practitioners’ experience with ULL/D, the prosthetic education in their OT program, and their confidence in working with this population. Participants reported they had limited education on this population and would have liked to have more education in school, specifically in the form of active learning opportunities such as hands-on experience with prosthetic devices, observations with clinicians, and discussions with individuals with ULL/D. Recommendations for OT programs include additional active learning opportunities including patient educators and prosthetic simulators, observation opportunities for students interested in working with this population, and continuing education opportunities for OT practitioners after graduation
Non-uniform doping across the Fermi surface of NbS intercalates
Magnetic ordering of the first row transition metal intercalates of NbS
due to coupling between the conduction electrons and the intercalated ions has
been explained in terms of Fermi surface nesting. We use angle-resolved
photoelectron spectroscopy to investigate the Fermi surface topology and the
valence band structure of the quasi-two-dimensional layer compounds
MnNbS and NiNbS. Charge transfer from the intercalant
species to the host layer leads to non-uniform, pocket selective doping of the
Fermi surface. The implication of our results on the nesting properties are
discussed
First determination of the strange and light quark masses from full lattice QCD
We compute the strange quark mass and the average of the and
quark masses using full lattice QCD with three dynamical quarks
combined with experimental values for the pion and kaon masses. The simulations
have degenerate and quarks with masses as low as
, and two different values of the lattice spacing. The bare lattice
quark masses obtained are converted to the \msbar scheme using perturbation
theory at . Our results are: m_s^\msbar(2 GeV) = 76(0)(3)(7)(0)
MeV, \hat m^\msbar(2 GeV) = 2.8(0)(1)(3)(0) MeV and =
27.4(1)(4)(0)(1), where the errors are from statistics, simulation,
perturbation theory, and electromagnetic effects, respectively.Comment: 5 pages, revtex, 2 figures. v2: New ms/hat(m) discussion and
reference, v3: slight change in discussion of referenc
The nascent ecology of social enterprise
Funder: Edmond de Rothschild FoundationsFunder: Isaac Newton Trust; doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100004815Employing population ecology theory, we examine social enterprise population emergence in the United Kingdom after 2005 when a new organizational form for social enterprise was established. Our density dependence analysis of nearly seven thousand Community Interest Companies finds that survival is positively influenced by age and population densities of both other social enterprises and commercial organizations. Two specific patterns in population emergence are identified: social enterprise survival is more likely influenced by industry than age, a finding that we label the liability of specificity, and their survival benefits from the population density of commercial organizations but not nonprofit organizations, a finding that we label the hybrid-commercial benefit. Our research identifies the liability of specificity as a new concept in population ecology theory and the hybrid-commercial benefit as a contextual influence on social enterprise survival
High-Precision Lattice QCD Confronts Experiment
We argue that high-precision lattice QCD is now possible, for the first time,
because of a new improved staggered quark discretization. We compare a wide
variety of nonperturbative calculations in QCD with experiment, and find
agreement to within statistical and systematic errors of 3% or less. We also
present a new determination of alpha_msbar(Mz); we obtain 0.121(3). We discuss
the implications of this breakthrough for phenomenology and, in particular, for
heavy-quark physics.Comment: 2 figures, revte
Equation of state and QCD transition at finite temperature
We calculate the equation of state in 2+1 flavor QCD at finite temperature
with physical strange quark mass and almost physical light quark masses using
lattices with temporal extent Nt=8. Calculations have been performed with two
different improved staggered fermion actions, the asqtad and p4 actions.
Overall, we find good agreement between results obtained with these two O(a^2)
improved staggered fermion discretization schemes. A comparison with earlier
calculations on coarser lattices is performed to quantify systematic errors in
current studies of the equation of state. We also present results for
observables that are sensitive to deconfining and chiral aspects of the QCD
transition on Nt=6 and 8 lattices. We find that deconfinement and chiral
symmetry restoration happen in the same narrow temperature interval. In an
Appendix we present a simple parametrization of the equation of state that can
easily be used in hydrodynamic model calculations. In this parametrization we
also incorporated an estimate of current uncertainties in the lattice
calculations which arise from cutoff and quark mass effects. We estimate these
systematic effects to be about 10 MeVComment: 31 pages, 24 EPS-figure
Fluctuations and Correlations of net baryon number, electric charge, and strangeness: A comparison of lattice QCD results with the hadron resonance gas model
We calculate the quadratic fluctuations of net baryon number, electric charge
and strangeness as well as correlations among these conserved charges in
(2+1)-flavor lattice QCD at zero chemical potential. Results are obtained using
calculations with tree level improved gauge and the highly improved staggered
quark (HISQ) actions with almost physical light and strange quark masses at
three different values of the lattice cut-off. Our choice of parameters
corresponds to a value of 160 MeV for the lightest pseudo scalar Goldstone mass
and a physical value of the kaon mass. The three diagonal charge
susceptibilities and the correlations among conserved charges have been
extrapolated to the continuum limit in the temperature interval 150 MeV <T <
250 MeV. We compare our results with the hadron resonance gas (HRG) model
calculations and find agreement with HRG model results only for temperatures
T<= 150 MeV. We observe significant deviations in the temperature range 160 MeV
< T < 170 MeV and qualitative differences in the behavior of the three
conserved charge sectors. At T < 160 MeV quadratic net baryon number
fluctuations in QCD agree with HRG model calculations while, the net electric
charge fluctuations in QCD are about 10% smaller and net strangeness
fluctuations are about 20% larger. These findings are relevant to the
discussion of freeze-out conditions in relativistic heavy ion collisions.Comment: 17 pages, 18 EPS-files, 5 tables, revised version includes continuum
limit extrapolations of off-diagonal susceptibilities, to appear in Phys.
Rev.
The 'Forbidden' Abundance of Oxygen in the Sun
We reexamine closely the solar photospheric line at 6300 A, which is
attributed to a forbidden line of neutral oxygen, and is widely used in
analyses of other late-type stars.
We use a three-dimensional time-dependent hydrodynamical model solar
atmosphere which has been tested successfully against observed granulation
patterns and an array of absorption lines. We show that the solar line is a
blend with a Ni I line, as previously suggested but oftentimes neglected.
Thanks to accurate atomic data on the [O I] and Ni I lines we are able to
derive an accurate oxygen abundance for the Sun: log epsilon (O) = 8.69 +/-
0.05 dex, a value at the lower end of the distribution of previously published
abundances, but in good agreement with estimates for the local interstellar
medium and hot stars in the solar neighborhood. We conclude by discussing the
implication of the Ni I blend on oxygen abundances derived from the [O I] 6300
A line in disk and halo stars.Comment: 16 pages, 3 eps figures included; a more compact PostScript version
created using emulateapj.sty is available from
http://hebe.as.utexas.edu/recent_publi.html; to appear in ApJ
Micronutrients attenuate progression of prostate cancer by elevating the endogenous inhibitor of angiogenesis, Platelet Factor-4
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Longstanding evidence implicates an inadequate diet as a key factor in the onset and progression of prostate cancer. The purpose herein was to discover, validate and characterize functional biomarkers of dietary supplementation capable of suppressing the course of prostate cancer <it>in vivo</it>.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>The <it>Lady </it>transgenic mouse model that spontaneously develops prostate cancer received a diet supplemented with a micronutrient cocktail of vitamin E, selenium and lycopene ad libitum. A proteomic analysis was conducted to screen for serum biomarkers of this dietary supplementation. Candidate peptides were validated and identified by sequencing and analyzed for their presence within the prostates of all mice by immunohistochemistry.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Dietary supplementation with the combined micronutrients significantly induced the expression of the megakaryocyte-specific inhibitor of angiogenesis, platelet factor-4 (P = 0.0025). This observation was made predominantly in mice lacking tumors and any manifestations associated with progressive disease beyond 37 weeks of life, at which time no survivors remained in the control group (P < 0.0001). While prostates of mice receiving standard chow were enlarged and burdened with poorly differentiated carcinoma, those of mice on the supplemented diet appeared normal. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed marked amplifications of both platelet binding and platelet factor-4 within the blood vessels of prostates from mice receiving micronutrients only.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>We present unprecedented data whereby these combined micronutrients effectively promotes tumor dormancy in early prostate cancer, following initiation mutations that may drive the angiogenesis-dependent response of the tumor, by inducing platelet factor-4 expression and concentrating it at the tumor endothelium through enhanced platelet binding.</p
Scaling studies of QCD with the dynamical HISQ action
We study the lattice spacing dependence, or scaling, of physical quantities
using the highly improved staggered quark (HISQ) action introduced by the
HPQCD/UKQCD collaboration, comparing our results to similar simulations with
the asqtad fermion action. Results are based on calculations with lattice
spacings approximately 0.15, 0.12 and 0.09 fm, using four flavors of dynamical
HISQ quarks. The strange and charm quark masses are near their physical values,
and the light-quark mass is set to 0.2 times the strange-quark mass. We look at
the lattice spacing dependence of hadron masses, pseudoscalar meson decay
constants, and the topological susceptibility. In addition to the commonly used
determination of the lattice spacing through the static quark potential, we
examine a determination proposed by the HPQCD collaboration that uses the decay
constant of a fictitious "unmixed s bar s" pseudoscalar meson. We find that the
lattice artifacts in the HISQ simulations are much smaller than those in the
asqtad simulations at the same lattice spacings and quark masses.Comment: 36 pages, 11 figures, revised version to be published. Revisions
include discussion of autocorrelations and several clarification
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