634 research outputs found

    Feeling (Mis)Understood and Intergroup Friendships in Interracial Interactions

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    The present research investigated whether having out-group friends serves as a buffer for feeling misunderstood in interracial interactions. Across three experience sampling studies, we found that among ethnic minorities who have few White friends or are not interacting with White friends, daily interracial interactions are associated with feeling less understood. By contrast, we found that among ethnic minorities who have more White friends or are interacting with White friends, the relationship between daily interracial interactions and feeling understood is not significant. We did not find similar results for Whites; that is, having ethnic minority friends did not play a role in the relationship between daily interracial interactions and feeling understood. Together, these studies demonstrate the beneficial effects of intergroup friendships for ethnic minorities

    Accurate structure factors from pseudopotential methods

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    Highly accurate experimental structure factors of silicon are available in the literature, and these provide the ideal test for any \emph{ab initio} method for the construction of the all-electron charge density. In a recent paper [J. R. Trail and D. M. Bird, Phys. Rev. B {\bf 60}, 7863 (1999)] a method has been developed for obtaining an accurate all-electron charge density from a first principles pseudopotential calculation by reconstructing the core region of an atom of choice. Here this method is applied to bulk silicon, and structure factors are derived and compared with experimental and Full-potential Linear Augmented Plane Wave results (FLAPW). We also compare with the result of assuming the core region is spherically symmetric, and with the result of constructing a charge density from the pseudo-valence density + frozen core electrons. Neither of these approximations provide accurate charge densities. The aspherical reconstruction is found to be as accurate as FLAPW results, and reproduces the residual error between the FLAPW and experimental results.Comment: 6 Pages, 3 figure

    Effectiveness of the Influenza Vaccine in Preventing Hospitalizations of Patients with Influenza Community-Acquired Pneumonia

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    Introduction: Influenza vaccination is the primary strategy for prevention of influenza infection. Influenza infection can vary from mild or even asymptomatic illness to severe community-acquired pneumonia (CAP). Although many national and international investigators and organizations report annual estimates of influenza vaccine effectiveness for prevention of influenza infection in the community, few studies report estimates for the prevention of hospitalizations due to influenza CAP, the most severe form of the infection. The objective of this study is to determine the effectiveness of the influenza vaccine for prevention of hospitalization in patients with influenza-associated CAP. Methods: This was a test-negative study using data from the first two years of the University of Louisville Pneumonia Study, a prospective, observational study of all hospitalized patients with pneumonia in Louisville, Kentucky from 6/1/2014 – 5/31/2016. Univariate and multivariate logistic models were used to evaluate the association between vaccine status and influenza-associated/non-influenza-associated CAP hospitalization. Unadjusted and adjusted vaccine effectiveness estimates were calculated. Results: A total of 1951 hospitalized patients with CAP were included in the analysis, and 831 (43%) reported having received the influenza vaccination for the influenza season by the time they were hospitalized. A total of 152 (8%) cases of influenza-CAP were confirmed in the study population, with 63 (8%) cases confirmed in vaccinated individuals. The unadjusted vaccine effectiveness was not significant, with a point estimate of 5% (95% CI: -33%, 32%). After adjusting for potential cofounders, vaccine effectiveness was also found to not be significant with a point estimate of 8% (95% CI: -30%, 35%). Conclusions: In conclusion, we found that, over the 2014/2015 and 2015/2016 influenza seasons, influenza vaccine was not effective for prevention of hospitalization with CAP due to influenza. More effective vaccines are necessary to prevent the most serious forms of influenza

    Impact Shocking of a Zircon-Sanidine Mixture and Investigations of Pb Mobility

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    The purpose of this project is to explore the mobility, mixing, and possible clumping of Pb isotopes during laboratory impact shock experiments. Impact events are a common planetary occurrence and their effect on istotope systematics and subsequent geochronology is not fully understood. By artificially shocking mixtures of zircon and sanidine and investigating the sample products, it may be possible to understand if and how Pb is mobilized during impact shock. Isotopes of Pb are the final daughter products of the decay chains of 238U, 235U and 232Th and therefore understanding how mobile the daughter product is during impact events could have consequences for dating impact events. These investigations will also reveal if Pb isotopes can be mixed between minerals
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