1,058 research outputs found
Effects of contemporary orthodontic composites on tooth color following short-term fixed orthodontic treatment: A controlled clinical study
Background/aim: To determine the color alterations of natural teeth associated with different orthodontic composites used in comprehensive short-term treatment. Materials and methods: Twenty-two patients were treated with fixed appliances and 22 untreated subjects were also evaluated. Lower incisors were bonded with different orthodontic composites: 42 with Grengloo, 41 with Light Bond, 31 with Kurasper F, and 32 with Transbond XT. The color parameters of the Commission Internationale de l’Eclairage (CIE) were measured for each tooth with a spectrophotometer. Color assessment in relation to time, adhesive material, and their interaction was made with 2-way mixed analysis of variance (ANOVA) and 1-way ANOVA for the color differences (ΔE*). Further analyses were done using Tukey’s honestly significant difference tests and paired-samples t-tests. Results: The color of teeth was affected by treatment. The mean L* and a* values increased, whereas the mean b* values decreased. Total color differences of teeth demonstrated visible color changes clinically after treatment, ranging from 1.12 to 3.34 ΔE units. However, there were no significant differences for color of enamel. Conclusion: Teeth may be discolored with fixed appliances during treatment. Moreover, contemporary orthodontic composites have similar effects of enamel discoloration. © TÜBİTAK
Dynamic lot sizing for a warm/cold process: Heuristics and insights
Cataloged from PDF version of article.We consider the dynamic lot sizing problem for a warm/cold process where the process can be kept
warm at a unit variable cost for the next period if more than a prespecified quantity has been produced.
Exploiting the optimal production plan structures, we develop nine rule-based forward solution
heuristics. Proposed heuristics are modified counterparts of the heuristics developed previously for
the classical dynamic lot sizing problem. In a numerical study, we investigate the performance of the
proposed heuristics and identify operating environment characteristics where each particular heuristic
is the best or among the best. Moreover, for a warm/cold process setting, our numerical studies indicate
that, when used on a rolling horizon basis, a heuristic may also perform better costwise than a solution
obtained using a dynamic programming approach.
& 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
Registration of N614, A3N615, N616, and N617 Shattercane Genetic Stocks with Cytoplasmic or Nuclear Male Sterility and Juicy or Dry Midribs
Four shattercane [Sorghum bicolor subsp. drummondii (Nees ex Steud.) de Wet ex Davidse] genetic stocks—N614 (Reg. No. GS-652, PI 665684), A3N615 (Reg. No. GS-651, PI 665683), N616 (Reg. No. GS-653, PI 665685), and N617 (Reg. No. GS-654, PI 665686)—with A3 cytoplasmic male sterility or the nuclear male sterility gene ms3 containing either juicy (dd) or dry (DD) culms were developed jointly by the USDA-ARS; the Iowa Agricultural and Home Economics Experiment Station, College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, Iowa State University; and the Agricultural Research Division, Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources, University of Nebraska. The stocks were released in July 2011. The source material for these genetic stocks was isolated from an archetypical shattercane population found near Lincoln, NE. Release of these genetic stocks makes available shattercane lines with both A3 cytoplasmic male sterility, and ms3 genetic (nuclear) male sterility to facilitate crossing. These genetic stocks also contain juicy (dd) or dry (DD) culms, a visible genetic marker to facilitate screening progeny resulting from crosses. The genetic stocks have immediate application for basic research involving gene flow from cultivated sorghum [Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench] to shattercane and on the fitness of offspring resulting from such crosses
Single Item Lot Sizing Problem for a Warm/Cold Process with Immediate Lost Sales
Cataloged from PDF version of article.We consider the dynamic lot-sizing problem with finite capacity and possible lost sales for a process that could be kept
warm at a unit variable cost for the next period t + 1 only if more than a threshold value Qt has been produced and would
be cold, otherwise. Production with a cold process incurs a fixed positive setup cost, Kt and setup time, St, which may be
positive. Setup costs and times for a warm process are negligible. We develop a dynamic programming formulation of the
problem, establish theoretical results on the structure of the optimal production plan in the presence of zero and positive
setup times with Wagner–Whitin-type cost structures. We also show that the solution to the dynamic lot-sizing problem
with lost sales are generated from the full commitment production series improved via lost sales decisions in the presence of
a warm/cold process.
2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
Quality control chart design under jidoka
We consider design of control charts in the presence of machine stoppages that are exogenously imposed (as under jidoka practices). Each stoppage creates an opportunity for inspection/repair at reduced cost. We first model a single machine facing opportunities arriving according to a Poisson process, develop the expressions for its operating characteristics and construct the optimization problem for economic design of a control chart. We, then, consider the multiple machine setting where individual machine stoppages may create inspection/repair opportunities for other machines. We develop exact expressions for the cases when all machines are either opportunity-takers or not. On the basis of an approximation for the all-taker case, we then propose an approximate model for the mixed case. In a numerical study, we examine the opportunity taking behavior of machines in both single and multiple machine settings and the impact of such practices on the design of an X̄ - Q C chart. Our findings indicate that incorporating inspection/repair opportunities into QC chart design may provide considerable cost savings. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Naval Research Logistics 56: 465-477, 2009
Dynamic lot sizing problem for a warm/cold process
We consider a dynamic lot sizing problem with finite capacity for a process that can be kept warm until the next production period at a unit variable cost ωt only if more than a threshold value has been produced and is cold, otherwise. That is, the setup cost in period t is Kt if xt-1 < Qt-1 and kt, otherwise (0 ≤ kt ≤ Kt). We develop a dynamic programming formulation of the problem, establish theoretical results on the structure of the optimal production plan and discuss its computational complexity in the presence of Wagner-Whitin-type cost structures. Based on our stuctural results, we present an optimal polynomial-time solution algorithm for kt = 0, and also show that an optimal linear-time solution algorithm exists for a special case. Our numerical study indicates that utilizing the undertime option (i.e., keeping the process warm via reduced production rates) results in significant cost savings, which has managerial implications for capacity planning and selection
Perceived Readiness for Hospital Discharge in Adult Medical-Surgical Patients
Purpose: The purpose of the study was to identify predictors and outcomes of adult medical-surgical patients\u27 perceptions of their readiness for hospital discharge. Design: A correlational, prospective, longitudinal design with path analyses was used to explore relationships among transition theory-related variables. Setting: Midwestern tertiary medical center. Sample: 147 adult medical-surgical patients. Methods: Predictor variables included patient characteristics, hospitalization factors, and nursing practices that were measured prior to hospital discharge using a study enrollment form, the Quality of Discharge Teaching Scale, and the Care Coordination Scale. Discharge readiness was measured using the Readiness for Hospital Discharge Scale administered within 4 hours prior to discharge. Outcomes were measured 3 weeks postdischarge with the Post-Discharge Coping Difficulty Scale and self-reported utilization of health services. Findings: Living alone, discharge teaching (amount of content received and nurses\u27 skill in teaching delivery), and care coordination explained 51% of readiness for discharge score variance. Patient age and discharge readiness explained 16% of variance in postdischarge coping difficulty. Greater readiness for discharge was predictive of fewer readmissions. Conclusions: Quality of the delivery of discharge teaching was the strongest predictor of discharge readiness. Study results provided support for Meleis\u27 transitions theory as a useful model for conceptualizing and investigating the discharge transition. Implications for Practice: The study results have implications for the CNS role in patient and staff education, system building for the postdischarge transition, and measurement of clinical care outcomes
Deleterious mutations predicted in the sorghum (\u3ci\u3eSorghum bicolor\u3c/i\u3e) \u3ci\u3eMaturity\u3c/i\u3e (\u3ci\u3eMa\u3c/i\u3e) and \u3ci\u3eDwarf\u3c/i\u3e (\u3ci\u3eDw\u3c/i\u3e) genes from whole‑genome resequencing
In sorghum [Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench] the Maturity (Ma1, Ma2, Ma3, Ma4, Ma5, Ma6) and Dwarf (Dw1, Dw2, Dw3, Dw4) loci, encode genes controlling flowering time and plant height, respectively, which are critical for designing sorghum ideotypes for a maturity timeframe and a harvest method. Publicly available whole-genome resequencing data from 860 sorghum accessions was analyzed in silico to identify genomic variants at 8 of these loci (Ma1, Ma2, Ma3, Ma5, Ma6, Dw1, Dw2, Dw3) to identify novel loss of function alleles and previously characterized ones in sorghum germplasm. From~ 33 million SNPs and~ 4.4 million InDels, 1445 gene variants were identified within these 8 genes then evaluated for predicted effect on the corresponding encoded proteins, which included newly identified mutations (4 nonsense, 15 frameshift, 28 missense). Likewise, most accessions analyzed contained predicted loss of function alleles (425 ma1, 22 ma2, 40 ma3, 74 ma5, 414 ma6, 289 dw1, 268 dw2 and 45 dw3) at multiple loci, but 146 and 463 accessions had no predicted ma or dw mutant alleles, respectively. The ma and dw alleles within these sorghum accessions represent a valuable source for manipulating flowering time and plant height to develop the full range of sorghum types: grain, sweet and forage/biomass
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