765 research outputs found
Nonlinear Bloch modes in two-dimensional photonic lattices
We generate experimentally different types of two-dimensional Bloch waves of
a square photonic lattice by employing the phase imprinting technique. We probe
the local dispersion of the Bloch modes in the photonic lattice by analyzing
the linear diffraction of beams associated with the high-symmetry points of the
Brillouin zone, and also distinguish the regimes of normal, anomalous, and
anisotropic diffraction through observations of nonlinear self-action effects.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figure
Study of the characteristics of GEM detectors for the future FAIR experiment CBM
Characteristics of triple GEM detector have been studied systematically. The
variation of the effective gain and energy resolution of GEM with variation of
the applied voltage has been measured with Fe55 X-ray source for different gas
mixtures and with different gas flow rates. Long-term test of the GEM has also
been performed.Comment: 2 Pages, 6 figure
Effect of two behavioural 'nudging' interventions on management decisions for low back pain: A randomised vignette-based study in general practitioners
Objective €Nudges' are subtle cognitive cues thought to influence behaviour. We investigated whether embedding nudges in a general practitioner (GP) clinical decision support display can reduce low-value management decisions. Methods Australian GPs completed four clinical vignettes of patients with low back pain. Participants chose from three guideline-concordant and three guideline-discordant (low-value) management options for each vignette, on a computer screen. A 2×2 factorial design randomised participants to two possible nudge interventions: €partition display' nudge (low-value options presented horizontally, high-value options listed vertically) or €default option' nudge (high-value options presented as the default, low-value options presented only after clicking for more). The primary outcome was the proportion of scenarios where practitioners chose at least one of the low-value care options. Results 120 GPs (72% male, 28% female) completed the trial (n=480 vignettes). Participants using a conventional menu display without nudges chose at least one low-value care option in 42% of scenarios. Participants exposed to the default option nudge were 44% less likely to choose at least one low-value care option (OR 0.56, 95%CI 0.37 to 0.85; p=0.006) compared with those not exposed. The partition display nudge had no effect on choice of low-value care (OR 1.08, 95%CI 0.72 to 1.64; p=0.7). There was no interaction between the nudges (OR 0.94, 95% CI 0.41 to 2.15; p=0.89). Interpretation A default option nudge reduced the odds of choosing low-value options for low back pain in clinical vignettes. Embedding high value options as defaults in clinical decision support tools could improve quality of care. More research is needed into how nudges impact clinical decision-making in different contexts
A selected ion flow tube study of the reactions of gas-phase cations with PSCl3
A selected ion flow tube was used to investigate the positive ion chemistry of thiophosphoryl chloride, PSCl. Rate coefficients and ion product branching ratios have been determined at room temperature for reactions with nineteen cations ; HO, CF, CF, NO, NO, SF, SF, CF, O, HO, NO, O, CO, CO, N, N, Ar, F and Ne (in order of increasing recombination energy). Complementary data described in the previous paper have been obtained for this molecule via the observation of threshold photoelectron photoion coincidences. For ions whose recombination energies are in the range 10-22 eV, comparisons are made between the product ion branching rations of PSCl from photoionisation and from ion-molecule reactions. In most instances, the data from the two experiments are well correlated, suggesting that long-range charge transfer is the dominant mechanism for these ion-molecule reactions ; the agreement is particularly good for the atomic ions Ar, F and Ne. Some reactions (e.g. O + PSCl), however, exhibit significant differences; short-range charge transfer must then be occurring following the formation of an ion-molecule complex. For ions whose recombination energies are less than 10 eV (i.e. HO, CF, CF and NO), reactions can only occur via a chemical process in which bonds are broken and formed, because the recombination energy of the cation is less than the ionisation energy of PSCl
The reliability of eyetracking to assess attentional bias to threatening words in healthy individuals
Eyetracking is commonly used to investigate attentional bias. Although some studies have investigated the internal consistency of eyetracking, data are scarce on the test–retest reliability and agreement of eyetracking to investigate attentional bias. This study reports the test–retest reliability, measurement error, and internal consistency of 12 commonly used outcome measures thought to reflect the different components of attentional bias: overall attention, early attention, and late attention.
Healthy participants completed a preferential-looking eyetracking task that involved the presentation of threatening (sensory words, general threat words, and affective words) and nonthreatening words. We used intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) to measure test–retest reliability (ICC \u3e .70 indicates adequate reliability). The ICCs(2, 1) ranged from –.31to.71. Reliability varied according to the outcome measure and threat word category. Sensory words had a lower mean ICC (.08) than either affective words (.32) or general threat words (.29). A longer exposure time was associated with higher test–retest reliability. All of the outcome measures, except second-run dwell time, demonstrated low measurement error (\u3c6%). Most of the outcome measures reported high internal consistency (α \u3e.93). Recommendations are discussed for improving the reliability of eyetracking tasks in future research
Postoperative Immune Suppression in Visceral Surgery: Characterisation of an Intestinal Mouse Model
Background: Postoperatively acquired immune dysfunction is associated with a higher mortality rate in case of septic complications. As details of this severe clinical problem are still unknown, animal models are essential to characterise the mechanisms involved. Methods: Mice were laparotomised and the small intestine was pressed smoothly in antegrade direction. For extension of trauma, the intestine was manipulated three times consecutively. Following this, the ex vivo cytokine release of splenocytes was determined. The degree of surgical trauma was analysed by detection of HMGB1 and IL-6 in serum and by neutrophil staining in the muscularis mucosae. Results: We adapted the previously described animal model of intestinal manipulation to provide a model of surgically induced immune dysfunction. Following intestinal manipulation, the mice showed elevated serum levels of HMGB1 and IL-6 and increased infiltration of granulocytes into the muscularis mucosae. Ex vivo cytokine release by splenocytes was suppressed in the postoperative period. The degree of suppression correlated with the extent of surgical trauma. Conclusions: In this study, we describe a surgically induced immune dysfunction animal model, in which a significant surgical trauma is followed by an immune dysfunction. This model may be ideal for the characterisation of the postoperative immune dysfunction syndrome
Sagnac Interferometer as a Speed-Meter-Type, Quantum-Nondemolition Gravitational-Wave Detector
According to quantum measurement theory, "speed meters" -- devices that
measure the momentum, or speed, of free test masses -- are immune to the
standard quantum limit (SQL). It is shown that a Sagnac-interferometer
gravitational-wave detector is a speed meter and therefore in principle it can
beat the SQL by large amounts over a wide band of frequencies. It is shown,
further, that, when one ignores optical losses, a signal-recycled Sagnac
interferometer with Fabry-Perot arm cavities has precisely the same
performance, for the same circulating light power, as the Michelson speed-meter
interferometer recently invented and studied by P. Purdue and the author. The
influence of optical losses is not studied, but it is plausible that they be
fairly unimportant for the Sagnac, as for other speed meters. With squeezed
vacuum (squeeze factor ) injected into its dark port, the
recycled Sagnac can beat the SQL by a factor over the
frequency band 10 {\rm Hz} \alt f \alt 150 {\rm Hz} using the same
circulating power kW as is used by the (quantum limited)
second-generation Advanced LIGO interferometers -- if other noise sources are
made sufficiently small. It is concluded that the Sagnac optical configuration,
with signal recycling and squeezed-vacuum injection, is an attractive candidate
for third-generation interferometric gravitational-wave detectors (LIGO-III and
EURO).Comment: 12 pages, 6 figure
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