83,431 research outputs found
Random fields of multivariate test statistics, with applications to shape analysis
Our data are random fields of multivariate Gaussian observations, and we fit
a multivariate linear model with common design matrix at each point. We are
interested in detecting those points where some of the coefficients are nonzero
using classical multivariate statistics evaluated at each point. The problem is
to find the -value of the maximum of such a random field of test statistics.
We approximate this by the expected Euler characteristic of the excursion set.
Our main result is a very simple method for calculating this, which not only
gives us the previous result of Cao and Worsley [Ann. Statist. 27 (1999)
925--942] for Hotelling's , but also random fields of Roy's maximum root,
maximum canonical correlations [Ann. Appl. Probab. 9 (1999) 1021--1057],
multilinear forms [Ann. Statist. 29 (2001) 328--371], [Statist.
Probab. Lett 32 (1997) 367--376, Ann. Statist. 25 (1997) 2368--2387] and
scale space [Adv. in Appl. Probab. 33 (2001) 773--793]. The trick
involves approaching the problem from the point of view of Roy's
union-intersection principle. The results are applied to a problem in shape
analysis where we look for brain damage due to nonmissile trauma.Comment: Published in the Annals of Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aos/) by
the Institute of Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
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Methodology for profiling literature in healthcare simulation
The publications that relate to the application of simulation to healthcare have steadily increased over the years. These publications are scattered amongst various journals that belong to several subject categories, including Operational Research, Health Economics and Pharmacokinetics. The simulation techniques that are applied to the study of healthcare problems are also varied. The aim of this study is to present
a methodology for profiling literature in
healthcare simulation. In our methodology, we
have considered papers on healthcare that have been published between 1970 and 2007 in
journals with impact factors that belonging to various subject categories reporting on the application of four simulation techniques, namely, Monte Carlo Simulation, Discrete-Event Simulation, System Dynamics and Agent-Based Simulation. The methodology has the following objectives: (a) to categorise the papers under the different simulation techniques and identify the
healthcare problems that each technique is
employed to investigate; (b) to profile, within our dataset, variables such as authors, article citations, etc.; (c) to identify turning point (strategically important) papers and authors through co-citation analysis of references cited
by the papers in our dataset. The focus of the paper is on the literature profiling methodology, and not the results that have been derived through the application of this methodology. The authors hope that the methodology presented here will be used to conduct similar work in not only healthcare but also other research domains
Distributed simulation with COTS simulation packages: A case study in health care supply chain simulation
The UK National Blood Service (NBS) is a public funded body that is responsible for distributing blood and asso-ciated products. A discrete-event simulation of the NBS supply chain in the Southampton area has been built using the commercial off-the-shelf simulation package (CSP) Simul8. This models the relationship in the health care supply chain between the NBS Processing, Testing and Is-suing (PTI) facility and its associated hospitals. However, as the number of hospitals increase simulation run time be-comes inconveniently large. Using distributed simulation to try to solve this problem, researchers have used techniques informed by SISO’s CSPI PDG to create a version of Simul8 compatible with the High Level Architecture (HLA). The NBS supply chain model was subsequently divided into several sub-models, each running in its own copy of Simul8. Experimentation shows that this distri-buted version performs better than its standalone, conven-tional counterpart as the number of hospitals increases
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Differences in the Experience of Caregiving Between Spouse and Adult Child Caregivers in Dementia With Lewy Bodies.
Background and objectivesDementia caregiving has been associated with increased burden, depression, grief, a decreased sense of well-being and quality of life, and a weakening of social support. Little is known about the experience of caregiving in Dementia with Lewy Bodies (DLB). The present study examines differences in the caregiving experience of spouse versus adult child caregivers of individuals with DLB.Research design and methodsIn this cross-sectional analytic study of spouses (n = 255) and adult children (n = 160) caregivers of individuals with DLB, participants completed an online survey of burden, grief, depression, well-being, quality of life, and social support.ResultsAdult child caregivers were more likely to care for women (p < .001) and see the care recipient less often (p < .001) than spouses. Adult child caregivers reported lower quality of life (p < .001) and more caregiver burden (p < .009), but also greater social support (p < .001) than spouses. Between group analyses of caregiver type by disease severity demonstrated that spousal caregivers experience greater grief with advancing disease (p = .005), while adult child caregivers increase social support with advancing disease (p < .001).Discussion and implicationsSpouses and adult children experience DLB caregiving differently. This was explained by the younger age of the adult child caregiver, frequency of contact with the care recipient, and differences in the care recipient's characteristics, frequency of neuropsychiatric symptoms, and disease severity. DLB caregiver support for this population should target psychoeducation for complicated neuropsychiatric symptoms in the care recipient. Screening all DLB caregivers for burden, grief, and depression is suggested to identify those that may benefit most from intervention. Spouses specifically may benefit from interventions that target increasing social support, while adult child caregivers may benefit from interventions aimed at mitigating burden and improving quality of life
Multi-layer light-weight protective coating and method for application
A thin, light-weight, multi-layer coating is provided for protecting metals and their alloys from environmental attack at high temperatures. A reaction barrier is applied to the metal substrate and a diffusion barrier is then applied to the reaction barrier. A sealant layer may also be applied to the diffusion barrier if desired. The reaction barrier is either non-reactive or passivating with respect to the metal substrate and the diffusion barrier. The diffusion barrier is either non-reactive or passivating with respect to the reaction barrier and the sealant layer. The sealant layer is immiscible with the diffusion barrier and has a softening point below the expected use temperature of the metal
Duality Symmetries in N=2 Heterotic Superstring
We review the derivation and the basic properties of the perturbative
prepotential in N=2 compactifications of the heterotic superstring. We discuss
the structure of the perturbative monodromy group and the embedding of rigidly
supersymmetric monodromies associated with enhanced gauge groups, at both
perturbative and non-perturbative level.Comment: Based on talks presented at several conferences. 12 pages, LaTe
Outflow boundary conditions for 3D simulations of non-periodic blood flow and pressure fields in deformable arteries
The simulation of blood flow and pressure in arteries requires outflow
boundary conditions that incorporate models of downstream domains. We
previously described a coupled multidomain method to couple analytical models
of the downstream domains with 3D numerical models of the upstream vasculature.
This prior work either included pure resistance boundary conditions or
impedance boundary conditions based on assumed periodicity of the solution.
However, flow and pressure in arteries are not necessarily periodic in time due
to heart rate variability, respiration, complex transitional flow or acute
physiological changes. We present herein an approach for prescribing lumped
parameter outflow boundary conditions that accommodate transient phenomena. We
have applied this method to compute haemodynamic quantities in different
physiologically relevant cardiovascular models, including patient-specific
examples, to study non-periodic flow phenomena often observed in normal
subjects and in patients with acquired or congenital cardiovascular disease.
The relevance of using boundary conditions that accommodate transient phenomena
compared with boundary conditions that assume periodicity of the solution is
discussed
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