1,234 research outputs found
Groups Excluded from âRepresentativeâ Household Surveys: An Analysis Based on Remittances Sent and Received in Vietnam
The Vietnam Living Standard Surveys (VLSS) are supposed to be representative of the entire population in Vietnam. However, we uncover an anomaly that the amount of remittances received from domestic sources is significantly larger than the amount of remittances sent to domestic sources, implying that the survey is at least not representative of remittance senders. By further exploring a unique characteristic of the survey questions about remittances, we determine that, in particular, female and urban-dwelling remittance senders are underrepresented in the survey.
Alterations in thoracolumbosacral movement when pain causing lameness has been improved by diagnostic analgesia
Lameness, thoracolumbosacral pain and reduced range of motion (ROM) often coexist; better understanding of their relationship is needed. The objectives were to determine if thoracolumbosacral movement of horses changes when pain causing lameness is improved by diagnostic analgesia. We hypothesised that reduction of lameness will increase ROM of the thoracolumbosacral region. Thirteen horses with different types of hind limb lameness were trotted in straight lines and lunged on a 10 m diameter circle on left and right reins before and after lameness was subjectively substantially improved by diagnostic analgesia. Inertial sensor data were collected from the withers, thirteenth (T13) and eighteenth thoracic (T18) vertebrae, third lumbar (13) vertebra, tubera sacrale (TS), left and right tubera coxae. ROM of flexion-extension, axial rotation, lateral bending, dorsoventral, lateral-lateral motion and vertical movement symmetry were quantified at each thoracolumbar site. Hiphike difference (HHD), maximum difference (MaxDiff) and minimum difference (MinDiff) for the pelvic sensors were measured. Percentage changes for before and after diagnostic analgesia were calculated; mean standard deviation (SD) or median [interquartile range] were determined.
Associations between the change in pelvic versus thoracolumbar movement symmetry after each local analgesic technique were tested. After resolution of lameness, HHD decreased by 7% [68%] (P = 0.006). The MinDiff decreased significantly by 33%[61%] (P = 0.01), 45 +/- 13% (P = 0.005) and 52 +/- 23% (P = 0.04), for TS, L3 and T18, respectively. There was significantly increased ROM in flexion-extension at T13, in axial rotation at T13, T18, 13 and in lateral-lateral ROM at 13. Thoracolumbosacral asymmetry and reduced ROM associated with lameness were both altered immediately by improvement in lameness using diagnostic analgesia. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
Mesoscopic ensembles of polar bosons in triple-well potentials
Mesoscopic dipolar Bose gases in triple-well potentials offer a minimal
system for the analysis of the long-range character of the dipole-dipole
interactions. We show that this long-range character may be clearly revealed by
a variety of possible ground-state phases. In addition, an appropriate control
of short-range and dipolar interactions may lead to novel scenarios for the
dynamics of atoms and polar molecules in lattices, including the dynamical
creation of mesoscopic Schr\"odinger cats, which may be employed as a source of
highly-nonclassical states for Heisenberg-limited interferometry.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Identical to the published version, including
supplemental material (4 pages, 6 figures)
Breathing Modes and Hidden Symmetry of Trapped Atoms in 2D
Atoms confined in a harmonic potential show universal oscillations in 2D. We
point out the connection of these ''breathing'' modes to the presence of a
hidden symmetry. The underlying symmetry SO(2,1), i.e. the two dimensional
Lorentz group, allows pulsating solutions to be constructed for the interacting
quantum system and for the corresponding nonlinear Gross-Pitaevskii equation.
We point out how this symmetry can be used as a probe for recently proposed
experiments of trapped atoms in 2D.Comment: 4 pages, small changes in title and text, references adde
Probing the light induced dipole-dipole interaction in momentum space
We theoretically investigate the mechanical effect of the light-induced
dipole-dipole interaction potential on the atoms in a Bose-Einstein condensate.
We present numerical calculations on the magnitude and shape of the induced
potentials for different experimentally accessible geometries. It is shown that
the mechanical effect can be distinguished from the effect of incoherent
scattering for an experimentally feasible setting
Effect of a unilateral hind limb orthotic lift on upper body movement symmetry in the trotting horse
In trotting horses, movement asymmetry is associated with ground reaction force asymmetry. In humans, limb length differences influence contralateral force production. Here we investigate whether horses, in immediate reaction to limb length changes, show movement asymmetry adaptations consistent with reported force differences. Aim of this study was to quantify pelvic and compensatory head and withers movement asymmetry as a function of limb length changes after application of orthotic lifts. In this experimental study movement asymmetry of eleven trotting horses was calculated from vertical displacement of poll, withers, sacrum and left and right tuber coxae with inertial sensors. Horses were assessed in-hand under 5 conditions (all with hind limb boots): without orthotic lifts, and with a 15mm or 30mm orthotic lift applied to the left hind or right hind. A linear mixed model investigated the influence of orthotic lift condition (P<0.05, pairwise posthoc Bonferroni correction). Pelvic movement asymmetry showed increased pelvic downward movement during stance of the shorter limb and increased pelvic upward movement during and after stance of the longer limb (P<0.001) with asymmetry changes of 3-7mm (4-10mm) for 15mm (30mm) lifts. Hip hike (tuber coxae movement asymmetry) was unaffected (P = 0.348). Head and withers movement asymmetry were affected less consistently (2 of 3 respectively 1 of 3 head or withers parameters). The small sample size of the study reduced generalizability, no direct force measurements were conducted and only immediate effects of orthotic lifts were assessed with no re-assessments days or weeks after. Conclusions about mechanical consequences (weight bearing, pushoff) are based on published movement-force associations. Pelvic movement asymmetry with an artificial change in limb length through application of an orthotic lift indicates increased weight support with the shorter limb and increased pushoff with the longer limb. This may be of relevance for the management of horses with different hoof shapes between contralateral limbs, for example some chronically lame horse
Spin-3 Chromium Bose-Einstein Condensates
We analyze the physics of spin-3 Bose-Einstein condensates, and in particular
the new physics expected in on-going experiments with condensates of Chromium
atoms. We first discuss the ground-state properties, which, depending on still
unknown Chromium parameters, and for low magnetic fields can present various
types of phases. We also discuss the spinor-dynamics in Chromium spinor
condensates, which present significant qualitative differences when compared to
other spinor condensates. In particular, dipole-induced spin relaxation may
lead for low magnetic fields to transfer of spin into angular momentum similar
to the well-known Einstein-de Haas effect. Additionally, a rapid large
transference of population between distant magnetic states becomes also
possible.Comment: 4 pages, 3 eps figures. Error in the previous version correcte
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