55 research outputs found
Experience With Radical Resection in The Management of Proximal Bile Duct Cancer
Multiple surgical and nonsurgical approaches have been advocated for the treatment of proximal bile duct
cancer. However, survival appears longest when a resection can be performed. Fifteen patients treated at a
university center were managed with an aggressive surgical approach. Resection of the tumor was
performed in 13 of 15 patients (87%). Of the patients undergoing resection, major hepatic resection was
performed in 8 (62%), while excision of vessels with reconstruction was performed in 5 (38%). Eleven of
the 13 resected patients (85%) were discharged from the hospital. Clinical symptoms of recurrent disease
occurred between 3 and 36 months after surgery in 7 patients, 6 of whom have died. Three other patients
are alive at 5, 21, and 36 months without clinical evidence of recurrence. There was no correlation between
the completeness of resection and the duration of disease-free survival
The Complexity of Approximating complex-valued Ising and Tutte partition functions
We study the complexity of approximately evaluating the Ising and Tutte
partition functions with complex parameters. Our results are partly motivated
by the study of the quantum complexity classes BQP and IQP. Recent results show
how to encode quantum computations as evaluations of classical partition
functions. These results rely on interesting and deep results about quantum
computation in order to obtain hardness results about the difficulty of
(classically) evaluating the partition functions for certain fixed parameters.
The motivation for this paper is to study more comprehensively the complexity
of (classically) approximating the Ising and Tutte partition functions with
complex parameters. Partition functions are combinatorial in nature and
quantifying their approximation complexity does not require a detailed
understanding of quantum computation. Using combinatorial arguments, we give
the first full classification of the complexity of multiplicatively
approximating the norm and additively approximating the argument of the Ising
partition function for complex edge interactions (as well as of approximating
the partition function according to a natural complex metric). We also study
the norm approximation problem in the presence of external fields, for which we
give a complete dichotomy when the parameters are roots of unity. Previous
results were known just for a few such points, and we strengthen these results
from BQP-hardness to #P-hardness. Moreover, we show that computing the sign of
the Tutte polynomial is #P-hard at certain points related to the simulation of
BQP. Using our classifications, we then revisit the connections to quantum
computation, drawing conclusions that are a little different from (and
incomparable to) ones in the quantum literature, but along similar lines
The effects of problem-oriented policing on crime and disorder
Problem-oriented Policing (POP) was first introduced by Herman Goldstein in 1979. The
approach was one of a series of responses to a crisis in effectiveness and legitimacy in
policing that emerged in the 1970s and 1980s. Goldstein argued that police were not
being effective in preventing and controlling crime because they had become too focused
on the âmeansâ of policing and had neglected the âgoalsâ of preventing and controlling
crime and other community problems. Goldstein argued that the unit of analysis in
policing must become the âproblemâ rather than calls or crime incidents as was the case
during that period. POP has had tremendous impact on American policing, and is now
one of the most widely implemented policing strategies in the US.
To synthesize the extant problem-oriented policing evaluation literature and assess the
effects of problem-oriented policing on crime and disorder
Eligible studies had to meet three criteria: (1) the SARA model was used for a problemoriented
policing intervention; (2) a comparison group was included; (3) at least one
crime or disorder outcome was reported with sufficient data to generate an effect size.
The unit of analysis could be people or places.
Several strategies were used to perform an exhaustive search for literature fitting the
eligibility criteria. First, a keyword search was performed on an array of online abstract
databases. Second, we reviewed the bibliographies of past reviews of problem-oriented
policing. Third, we performed forward searches for works that have cited seminal
problem-oriented policing studies. Fourth, we performed hand searches of leading
journals in the field. Fifth, we searched the publications of several research and
professional agencies. Sixth, after finishing the above searches we e-mailed the list of
studies meeting our eligibility criteria to leading policing scholars knowledgeable in the
area of problem-oriented policing to ensure we had not missed any relevant studies.
For our ten eligible studies, we provide both a narrative review of effectiveness and a
meta-analysis. For the meta-analysis, we coded all primary outcomes of the eligible
studies and we report the mean effect size (for studies with more than one primary
outcome, we averaged effects to create a mean), the largest effect, and the smallest effect.
Because of the heterogeneity of our studies, we used a random effects model.
Based on our meta-analysis, overall problem-oriented policing has a modest but
statistically significant impact on reducing crime and disorder. Our results are consistent
when examining both experimental and quasi-experimental studies.
Conclusions:
We conclude that problem-oriented policing is effective in reducing crime and disorder,
although the effect is fairly modest. We urge caution in interpreting these results because
of the small number of methodologically rigorous studies on POP and the diversity of
problems and responses used in our eligible studies
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