3,708 research outputs found
The social cognition of medical knowledge, with special reference to childhood epilepsy
This paper arose out of an engagement in medical communication courses at a Gulf university. It deploys a theoretical framework derived from a (critical) sociocognitive approach to discourse analysis in order to investigate three aspects of medical discourse relating to childhood epilepsy: the cognitive processes that are entailed in relating different types of medical knowledge to their communicative context; the types of medical knowledge that are constituted in the three different text types analysed; and the relationship between these different types of medical knowledge and the discursive features of each text type. The paper argues that there is a cognitive dimension to the human experience of understanding and talking about one specialized from of medical knowledge. It recommends that texts be studied in medical communication courses not just in terms of their discrete formal features but also critically, in terms of the knowledge which they produce, transmit and reproduce
Interaction of ballistic quasiparticles and vortex configurations in superfluid He3-B
The vortex line density of turbulent superfluid He3-B at very low temperature
is deduced by detecting the shadow of ballistic quasiparticles which are
Andreev reflected by quantized vortices. Until now the measured total shadow
has been interpreted as the sum of shadows arising from interactions of a
single quasiparticle with a single vortex. By integrating numerically the
quasi-classical Hamiltonian equations of motion of ballistic quasiparticles in
the presence of nontrivial but relatively simple vortex systems (such as
vortex-vortex and vortex-antivortex pairs and small clusters of vortices) we
show that partial screening can take place, and the total shadow is not
necessarily the sum of the shadows. We have also found that it is possible
that, upon impinging on complex vortex configurations, quasiparticles
experience multiple reflections, which can be classical, Andreev, or both.Comment: To appear in Phys Rev
Notes on Stein-Sahi representations and some problems of non harmonic analysis
We discuss one natural class of kernels on pseudo-Riemannian symmetric
spaces.Comment: 40p
Nanoantenna-enhanced ultrafast nonlinear spectroscopy of a single gold nanoparticle
Optical nanoantennas are a novel tool to investigate previously unattainable
dimensions in the nanocosmos. Just like their radio-frequency equivalents,
nanoantennas enhance the light-matter interaction in their feed gap. Antenna
enhancement of small signals promises to open a new regime in linear and
nonlinear spectroscopy on the nanoscale. Without antennas especially the
nonlinear spectroscopy of single nanoobjects is very demanding. Here, we
present for the first time antenna-enhanced ultrafast nonlinear optical
spectroscopy. In particular, we utilize the antenna to determine the nonlinear
transient absorption signal of a single gold nanoparticle caused by mechanical
breathing oscillations. We increase the signal amplitude by an order of
magnitude which is in good agreement with our analytical and numerical models.
Our method will find applications in linear and nonlinear spectroscopy of
nanoobjects, ranging from single protein binding events via nonlinear tensor
elements to the limits of continuum mechanics
Dynamics of Sleep-Wake Transitions During Sleep
We study the dynamics of the awakening during the night for healthy subjects
and find that the wake and the sleep periods exhibit completely different
behavior: the durations of wake periods are characterized by a scale-free
power-law distribution, while the durations of sleep periods have an
exponential distribution with a characteristic time scale. We find that the
characteristic time scale of sleep periods changes throughout the night. In
contrast, there is no measurable variation in the power-law behavior for the
durations of wake periods. We develop a stochastic model which agrees with the
data and suggests that the difference in the dynamics of sleep and wake states
arises from the constraints on the number of microstates in the sleep-wake
system.Comment: Final form with some small corrections. To be published in
Europhysics Letters, vol. 57, issue no. 5, 1 March 2002, pp. 625-63
Effects of comorbidity on Tourette's tic severity and quality of life
Objective The aim of this study is to gain more insight in the differential contributions of anxiety, depression and obsessive-compulsive (OC) symptom severity to quality of life (QoL) and tic severity in adults with Tourette Disorder (TD). Methods Self-reported OC symptom, anxiety and depression severity measures were used to investigate their predictive value on QoL and Tic severity in adult TD patients (N = 187), using correlation, regression, and mediation analyses. Results Tic severity has no effect on QoL. Depression severity directly reduces QoL, whereas anxiety and OC symptom severity have an indirect effect on QoL, mediated by depression severity. OC symptom severity directly affects tic severity, whereas depression and anxiety severity do not have a direct effect on tic or OC severity. Finally, anxiety severity indirectly impacts tic severity, with OC symptom severity functioning as a mediator. Conclusion In line with and extending previous studies, these findings indicate that OC symptom severity directly influences tic symptom severity whereas depression severity directly influences QoL in TD. Results imply that to improve QoL in TD patients, treatment should primarily focus on diminishing OC and depressive symptom severity rather than focusing on tic reduction
Structural insight into African horsesickness virus infection
African horsesickness (AHS) is a devastating disease of horses. The disease is caused by the double-stranded RNA-containing African horsesickness virus (AHSV). Using electron cryomicroscopy and three-dimensional image reconstruction, we determined the architecture of an AHSV serotype 4 (AHSV-4) reference strain. The structure revealed triple-layered AHS virions enclosing the segmented genome and transcriptase complex. The innermost protein layer contains 120 copies of VP3, with the viral polymerase, capping enzyme, and helicase attached to the inner surface of the VP3 layer on the 5-fold axis, surrounded by double-stranded RNA. VP7 trimers form a second, T 13 layer on top of VP3. Comparative analyses of the structures of bluetongue virus and AHSV-4 confirmed that VP5 trimers form globular domains and VP2 trimers form triskelions, on the virion surface. We also identified an AHSV-7 strain with a truncated VP2 protein (AHSV-7 tVP2) which outgrows AHSV-4 in culture. Comparison of AHSV-7 tVP2 to bluetongue virus and AHSV-4 allowed mapping of two domains in AHSV-4 VP2, and one in bluetongue virus VP2, that are important in infection. We also revealed a protein plugging the 5-fold vertices in AHSV-4. These results shed light on virus-host interactions in an economically important orbivirus to help the informed design of new vaccines
29-Si NMR and Hidden Order in URu2Si2
We present new 29-Si NMR spectra in URu2Si2 for varying temperature T, and
external field H. On lowering T, the systematics of the low-field lineshape and
width reveal an extra component (lambda) to the linewidth below T_N ~ 17 K not
observed previously. We find that lambda is magnetic-field independent and
dominates the low-field lineshape for all orientations of H with respect to the
tetragonal c axis. The behavior of lambda indicates a direct relationship
between the 29-Si spin and the transition at T_N, but it is inconsistent with a
coupling of the nuclei to static antiferromagnetic order/disorder of the U-spin
magnetization. This leads us to conjecture that lambda is due to a coupling of
29-Si to the system's hidden-order parameter. A possible coupling mechanism
involving charge degrees of freedom and indirect nuclear spin/spin interactions
is proposed. We also propose further experiments to test for the existence of
this coupling mechanism.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, submitted to PR
- …