39,018 research outputs found
Physiotherapists’ perceptions of problematic musculoskeletal soft tissue disorders
Original article can be found at: http://www.ijtr.co.uk/ Copyright MA Healthcare Limited.Aims: Many common musculoskeletal disorders are resistant to existing management strategies,causing long-term pain and disability. While arthritic and spinal problems have been prioritized for research, several soft tissue disorders may be equally burdensome for individuals and difficult to treat successfully. dentifying those that are least responsive to reatment may help focus the limited resources available for research and treatment provision. This study aimed to rank the most problematic disorders, and identify contributory factors, to inform the debate on research and service priorities in the management of musculoskeletal disorders. Methods: The views of practising physiotherapists on the most problematic soft tissue disorders were sought using a postal questionnaire survey and telephone interviews. The questionnaire was sent to 193 experienced musculoskeletal physiotherapists working in National Health Service and private clinics in south-east England. Findings: The response rate was 48%. The top three problematic disorders were identifi ed as frozen shoulder, plantar fasciitis and tennis elbow. Subsequent interviews with 20 respondents indicated that inadequate differential diagnosis, triaging and differences in therapeutic practice may account for some of the observed variation in outcomes. Conclusions: A greater focus on these particular disorders and issues by both clinicians and the research community is warranted.Peer reviewe
Advanced Computer Dormant Reliability Study Final Report
Reliability of integrated circuits and discrete components of electronics for computer and dormant module for Minuteman
The impact of stochastic physics on climate sensitivity in EC-Earth
Stochastic schemes, designed to represent unresolved sub-grid scale
variability, are frequently used in short and medium-range weather forecasts,
where they are found to improve several aspects of the model. In recent years,
the impact of stochastic physics has also been found to be beneficial for the
model's long term climate. In this paper, we demonstrate for the first time
that the inclusion of a stochastic physics scheme can notably affect a model's
projection of global warming, as well as its historical climatological global
temperature. Specifically, we find that when including the 'stochastically
perturbed parametrisation tendencies' scheme (SPPT) in the fully coupled
climate model EC-Earth v3.1, the predicted level of global warming between 1850
and 2100 is reduced by 10% under an RCP8.5 forcing scenario. We link this
reduction in climate sensitivity to a change in the cloud feedbacks with SPPT.
In particular, the scheme appears to reduce the positive low cloud cover
feedback, and increase the negative cloud optical feedback. A key role is
played by a robust, rapid increase in cloud liquid water with SPPT, which we
speculate is due to the scheme's non-linear interaction with condensation.Comment: Under review in Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmosphere
Microstructural analysis of solar cell welds
Parallel-gap resistance welding of silicon solar cells with copper interconnects results in complex microstructural variations that depend on the welding variables. At relatively low heat input solid-state welds are produced. At medium heat the Ag-Cu eutectic forms resulting in a braze joint. High heat produces a fusion weld with complete melting of the silver layer on the silicon solar cell. If the silicon is also melted, cracking occurs in the silicon cell below the weld nugget. These determinations were made using light microscopy, microprobe, and scanning electron microscopy analyses
Comparison of herbage yield, nutritive value and ensilability traits of three ryegrass species evaluated for the Irish Recommended List
peer-reviewedThis study examined 169 of the newest varieties of three ryegrass species, perennial (Lolium perenne L.), Italian (Lolium multiflorum Lam.) and hybrid (Lolium boucheanum Kunth), from Recommended List trials in Ireland. The traits examined were yield, dry matter concentration, three nutritive value traits (in vitro dry matter digestibility, water-soluble carbohydrate on a dry matter basis and crude protein concentration) and two ensilability traits (buffering capacity and water soluble carbohydrate concentration on an aqueous phase basis). Varietal monocultures of each species underwent a six cut combined simulated grazing and silage management in each of two years following sowing. Perennial ryegrass yielded less than both other species in one-year-old swards, but less than only Italian ryegrass in two-year-old swards, but generally had the higher in vitro dry matter digestibility and crude protein values. Italian ryegrass displayed the most favourable ensilability characteristics of the three species with perennial ryegrass less favourable and hybrid ryegrass intermediate. Overall, despite the high yields and favourable nutritive value and ensilability traits recorded, the general differences between the three ryegrass species studied were in line with industry expectations. These findings justify assessing the nutritive value and ensilability of ryegrass species, in addition to yield, to allow farmers select species that match farming enterprise requirements.We acknowledge the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine for funding provided through the Research Stimulus Fund (07 526
Defining the gap between research and practice in public relations programme evaluation - towards a new research agenda
The current situation in public relations programme evaluation is neatly summarized by McCoy who commented that 'probably the most common buzzwords in public relations in the last ten years have been evaluation and accountability' (McCoy 2005, 3). This paper examines the academic and practitioner-based literature and research on programme evaluation and it detects different priorities and approaches that may partly explain why the debate on acceptable and agreed evaluation methods continues. It analyses those differences and proposes a research agenda to bridge the gap and move the debate forward
String windings in the early universe
We study string dynamics in the early universe. Our motivation is the
proposal of Brandenberger and Vafa, that string winding modes may play a key
role in decompactifying three spatial dimensions. We model the universe as a
homogeneous but anisotropic 9-torus filled with a gas of excited strings. We
adopt initial conditions which fix the dilaton and the volume of the torus, but
otherwise assume all states are equally likely. We study the evolution of the
system both analytically and numerically to determine the late-time behavior.
We find that, although dynamical evolution can indeed lead to three large
spatial dimensions, such an outcome is not statistically favored.Comment: 26 pages, LaTeX, 4 eps figure
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