3,270 research outputs found

    Global properties of an exact string theory solution in two and four dimensions

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    This paper discusses global properties of exact (in alpha prime) string theory solutions: A deformed black hole solution in two dimensions and a Taub-NUT type solution in four dimensions. These models are exact by virtue of having CFT descriptions in terms of heterotic coset models. The analysis includes analytic continuations of the metric, motion of test particles, and the T-duality which acts as a map between different regions of the extended solutions, rendering the physical spacetimes non-singular.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures; v2: minor corrections, as printed in journa

    Factors influencing infection risk in endurance athletes

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    High training loads or prolonged bouts of acute exercise can increase susceptibility to opportunistic infections. Such infections, although generally medically innocuous, can have profound negative implications for athletic performance. This thesis presents a series of studies investigating which factors influence infection risk in athletes, as well as exploring potential strategies to maintain immunocompetence during heavy training. In Chapters 2 and 3, a large cohort of elite winter endurance athletes were followed over a number of years to determine patterns and frequency of illness in this population, and to identify training- and competition-related predictors of infection. Incidence rates and seasonal patterns of illness were found to be broadly similar to elite athletes from summer sports, and to the general population. Competition, air travel, greater day-to-day fluctuations in training load and lower performance level were significant predictors of illness. When high training loads are combined with insufficient recovery, athletes may become overreached or overtrained. Previous studies suggest that increasing carbohydrate intake can be an effective means of preventing overreaching during periods of intense training. In Chapter 4 we therefore investigated the efficacy of carbohydrate supplementation in reducing immune disturbances and symptoms of overreaching. The lower carbohydrate does (20 g/h during exercise) was found to be equally effective in preserving immunity and power output as the higher dose (60 g/h), with modest immune and performance changes observed in both groups following eight days of intensified training. Many athletes fail to ingest sufficient fluid to maintain euhydration during exercise. However, Chapter 5 found that moderate hypohydration, elicited by a 24 h period of fluid restriction, had little effect on immune responses to prolonged exercise. Altitude training is an important component of the training process of most of today s elite endurance athletes. Chapters 6 and 7 explored the effects of acute and prolonged hypoxic training on immunity. Despite a somewhat augmented stress hormone response to exercise in hypoxia, altitude training was found to have little negative effect on host defence, providing relative exercise intensity at altitude and sea-level was matched

    MillionTreesNYC, Green Infrastructure and Urban Ecology Symposium March 5-6, 2010

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    The MillionTreesNYC Subcommittee on Research and Evaluation was formed shortly following the 2007 launch of MillionTreesNYC, a citywide, public-private initiative with an ambitious goal: to plant and care for one million new trees across New York City’s five boroughs by 2017. Members of this committee are comprised of academics, government researchers and local practitioners with experience in the fields of natural resource management and community development. On March 5-6, 2010, over two hundred researchers and practitioners came together at The New School to showcase scientific innovation in the field of urban forestry and greening. The MillionTreesNYC, Green Infrastructure and Urban Ecology Research Symposium engaged professionals from a broad range of disciplines including sociology, planning, epidemiology, earth sciences, hydrology, forestry, ecology, and design who were uniquely positioned to discuss new ideas

    Influence of Prolonged Exercise and Hydration Status on Antigen-Stimulated Cytokine Production by Whole Blood Culture

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    Prolonged, strenuous exercise has been associated with a temporal depression of host defence, increasing susceptibility to upper respiratory tract illness (URTI). An elevated anti-inflammatory cytokine response to antigen challenge at rest has been reported as a risk factor for URTI. Chronic, strenuous exercise training appears to augment this anti-inflammatory response, with IL-10 release predicting URTI susceptibility in athletes. The purpose of this study was to determine the acute effects of a bout of prolonged exercise and hydration status on antigen-stimulated cytokine production. Twelve healthy males cycled for 120 minutes at 60% of maximal oxygen uptake on two occasions, once in a euhydrated state and once moderately hypohydrated. For the euhydrated trial, participants drank ad libitum during the 24 hours prior to the trial, and were provided with 250 mL water every 30 minutes during exercise. For the hypohydrated trial, fluid intake was restricted to 500 mL water during the 24 hours leading up to the trial, and no fluid was ingested during exercise. Blood samples were collected immediately before and after exercise, and following 2 hours of passive recovery. A full blood count was obtained, and plasma analysed for cortisol. In vitro antigen-stimulated cytokine production was determined from whole blood culture, using a multi-antigen vaccine as stimulant. Fluid restriction resulted in body mass loss of 1.3 ± 0.7 % and 3.9 ± 1.0 % before and after exercise, respectively. Exercise elicited a significant leukocytosis and elevated plasma cortisol, with no differences between trials. Post-exercise IL-10 production following stimulation was significantly higher than pre-exercise (p\u3c0.01). Both IL-4 (p\u3c0.05) and IL-10 (p\u3c0.01) release per lymphocyte were significantly increased 2 hours post-exercise compared with pre-exercise. Antigen-stimulated IL-6 production was significantly reduced 2 hours post-exercise (p\u3c0.05), an effect that remained significant when expressed per monocyte (p\u3c0.01). Although not quite reaching statistical significance, antigen-stimulated IFN-γ and IL-8 release tended to decrease following exercise, as did monocyte production of TNF-α. IL-1β and IL-2 production were not significantly altered by exercise. No significant effect of hydration status was observed for any of the measured variables. Prolonged exercise appears to result in augmented anti-inflammatory cytokine release in response to antigen challenge, possibly coupled with an acute suppression of pro-inflammatory cytokine production. These findings correspond with previous studies using mitogen or endotoxin as stimulant. Neither cytokine production nor plasma cortisol was affected by moderate hypohydration induced by fluid restriction for 24 hours prior to and during exercise

    Beyond the local approximation to exchange and correlation: the role of the Laplacian of the density in the energy density of Si

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    We model the exchange-correlation (XC) energy density of the Si crystal and atom as calculated by variational Monte Carlo (VMC) methods with a gradient analysis beyond the local density approximation (LDA). We find the Laplacian of the density to be an excellent predictor of the discrepancy between VMC and LDA energy densities in each system. A simple Laplacian-based correction to the LDA energy density is developed by means of a least square fit to the VMC XC energy density for the crystal, which fits the homogeneous electron gas and Si atom without further effort.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let

    Meta-analysis of insulin aspart versus regular human insulin used in a basal-bolus regimen for the treatment of diabetes mellitus

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    Background: The objective of the current study was to compare the efficacy of two different insulin formulations, insulin aspart (IAsp) and regular human insulin (RHI), for prandial insulin coverage with neutral protamine Hagedorn (NPH) insulin as basal insulin using a meta-analysis approach. The primary endpoint was change in A1c over time. Secondary endpoints included incidence of hypoglycemia and postprandial glycemic control. Methods: Clinical trials (Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes) complying with Good Clinical Practice, and with individual patient data, were included in the meta-analysis. Trials were randomized, consisting of (at least) two treatment arms and had a minimum duration of 12 weeks. Estimates were calculated using fixed-effects and random-effects models. Heterogeneity was assessed for each analysis. The effect of baseline parameters on A1c was analyzed in extended simultaneous models. Results: The mean difference in A1c was 0.1% (95% confidence interval [CI] [−0.15; −0.04], P < 0.001) in favor of IAsp. Higher accumulated dose of IAsp, higher age and increased rates of hypoglycemia were associated with improved A1c outcome. Fasting plasma glucose was not significantly different between regimens. Postprandial glucose was significantly lower after treatment with IAsp compared with RHI, but the analysis did present a significant level of heterogeneity (P < 0.001). The overall rate of hypoglycemia was the same with both regimens, but nocturnal hypoglycemia was significantly lower with IAsp. Conclusions: A basal–bolus regimen with IAsp as bolus insulin provided minimal, but statistically significant, improvement in overall glycemic control with a lower rate of nocturnal hypoglycemic episodes, compared with a corresponding regimen with bolus RHI

    Computational modeling of gradient hardening in polycrystals

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    A gradient hardening crystal plasticity model for polycrystals is introduced in Ekh et al. (2007). It is formulated in a thermodynamically consistent fashion and is capable of modeling a grain-size-dependent stress-strain response. In this contribution we extend that model to also include cross-hardening. A free energy is stated which includes contributions from the gradient of hardening along each slip direction. This leads to hardening stresses depending on the second derivative of the plastic slip. The governing equations for a nonlinear coupled system of equations is solved numerically with the help of a dual-mixed finite element method. The numerical results show that the macroscopic strength increases with decreasing grain size as a result of gradient hardening: Moreover, cross-hardening further enhances the strengthening gradient effect
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