899 research outputs found
Pilot Testing Behavior Therapy for Chronic Tic Disorders in Neurology and Developmental Pediatrics Clinics
Comprehensive Behavioral Intervention for Tics (CBIT) is an efficacious treatment with limited regional availability. As neurology and pediatric clinics are often the first point of therapeutic contact for individuals with tics, the present study assessed preliminary treatment response, acceptability, and feasibility of an abbreviated version, modified for child neurology and developmental pediatrics clinics. Fourteen youth (9-17) with Tourette disorder across 2 child neurology clinics and one developmental pediatrics clinic participated in a small case series. Clinician-rated tic severity (Yale Global Tic Severity Scale) decreased from pre- to posttreatment, z = –2.0, P \u3c .05, r = –.48, as did tic-related impairment, z = –2.4, P \u3c .05, r = –.57. Five of the 9 completers (56%) were classified as treatment responders. Satisfaction ratings were high, and therapeutic alliance ratings were moderately high. Results provide guidance for refinement of this modified CBIT protocol
The 1996 Soft State Transitions of Cygnus X-1
We report continuous monitoring of Cygnus X-1 in the 1.3 to 200 keV band
using ASM/RXTE and BATSE/CGRO for about 200 days from 1996 February 21 to 1996
early September. During this period Cygnus X-1 experienced a hard-to-soft and
then a soft-to-hard state transition. The low-energy X-ray (1.3-12 keV) and
high-energy X-ray (20-200 keV) fluxes are strongly anti-correlated during this
period. During the state transitions flux variations of about a factor of 5 and
15 were seen in the 1.3-3.0 keV and 100-200 keV bands, respectively, while the
average 4.8-12 keV flux remains almost unchanged. The net effect of this
pivoting is that the total 1.3-200 keV luminosity remained unchanged to within
about 15%. The bolometric luminosity in the soft state may be as high as 50-70%
above the hard state luminosity, after color corrections for the luminosity
below 1.3 keV. The blackbody component flux and temperature increase in the
soft state is probably caused by a combination of the optically thick disk mass
accretion rate increase and a decrease of the inner disk radius.Comment: 18 pages, 1 PostScript figure. Accepted for ApJ
A Latent Profile Analysis of Age of Onset in Pathological Skin Picking
Background
Pathological Skin Picking (PSP) may begin at any age, but the most common age of onset is during adolescence. Age of onset is a potentially useful clinical marker to delineate subtypes of psychiatric disorders. The present study sought to examine empirically defined age of onset groups in adults with PSP and assess whether groups differed on clinical characteristics. Method
Participants were 701 adult respondents to an internet survey, who endorsed recurrent skin picking with tissue damage and impairment. Latent profile analysis (LPA) was conducted to identify subtypes of PSP based on age of onset. Then subgroups were compared on demographic and clinical characteristics. Results
The best fitting LPA model was a two-class solution comprised of a large group with average age of onset in adolescence (n = 650; 92.9% of the sample; Mean age of onset = 13.6 years) and a small group with average onset in middle adulthood (n = 50; 7.1% of the sample; Mean age of onset = 42.8 years). Relative to the early onset group, the late onset group reported significantly less focused picking, less skin picking-related impairment, lower rates of co-occurring body-focused repetitive behaviors, and trends towards reduced family history of PSP. Individuals in the late onset group also reported increased rates of comorbid depression, anxiety and posttraumatic stress disorder, and were more likely to report that initial picking onset seemed related to or followed depression/anxiety and physical illness. Conclusion
Findings suggest the presence of two distinct PSP age of onset groups: (1) an early onset group with average onset in adolescence, clinical characteristics suggestive of greater picking-related burden and familiality, and a profile more representative of the general PSP population; and (2) a late onset group with average onset in middle adulthood, increased co-occurring affective and trauma conditions, and initial onset associated with or following other mental health and physical problems. Future replication is needed to assess the validity and clinical utility of these subgroups
Infrared Spectroscopy of Symbiotic Stars. IV. V2116 Ophiuchi/GX 1+4, The Neutron Star Symbiotic
We have computed, based on 17 infrared radial velocities, the first set of
orbital elements for the M giant in the symbiotic binary V2116 Ophiuchi. The
giant's companion is a neutron star, the bright X-ray source GX 1+4. We find an
orbital period of 1161 days by far the longest of any known X-ray binary. The
orbit has a modest eccentricity of 0.10 with an orbital circularization time of
less than 10^6 years. The large mass function of the orbit significantly
restricts the mass of the M giant. Adopting a neutron-star mass of 1.35M(Sun),
the maximum mass of the M giant is 1.22M(Sun), making it the less massive star.
Derived abundances indicate a slightly subsolar metallicity. Carbon and
nitrogen are in the expected ratio resulting from the red-giant first dredge-up
phase. The lack of O-17 suggests that the M-giant has a mass less than
1.3M(Sun), consistent with our maximum mass. The red giant radius is 103R(Sun),
much smaller than the estimated Roche lobe radius. Thus, the mass loss of the
red giant is via a stellar wind. Although the M giant companion to the neutron
star has a mass similar to the late-type star in low-mass X-ray binaries, its
near-solar abundances and apparent runaway velocity are not fully consistent
with the properties of this class of stars.Comment: In press to The Astrophysical Journal (10 April 2006 issue). 23 page
The analysis of facial beauty: an emerging area of research in pattern analysis
Much research presented recently supports the idea that the human perception of attractiveness is data-driven and largely irrespective of the perceiver. This suggests using pattern analysis techniques for beauty analysis. Several scientific papers on this subject are appearing in image processing, computer vision and pattern analysis contexts, or use techniques of these areas. In this paper, we will survey the recent studies on automatic analysis of facial beauty, and discuss research lines and practical application
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Orthographic facilitation in oral vocabulary acquisition
An experiment investigated whether exposure to orthography facilitates oral vocabulary learning. A total of 58 typically developing children aged 8-9 years were taught 12 nonwords. Children were trained to associate novel phonological forms with pictures of novel objects. Pictures were used as referents to represent novel word meanings. For half of the nonwords children were additionally exposed to orthography, although they were not alerted to its presence, nor were they instructed to use it. After this training phase a nonword-picture matching posttest was used to assess learning of nonword meaning, and a spelling posttest was used to assess learning of nonword orthography. Children showed robust learning for novel spelling patterns after incidental exposure to orthography. Further, we observed stronger learning for nonword-referent pairings trained with orthography. The degree of orthographic facilitation observed in posttests was related to children's reading levels, with more advanced readers showing more benefit from the presence of orthography
Laboratory-based evaluation of legionellosis epidemiology in Ontario, Canada, 1978 to 2006
BACKGROUND: Legionellosis is a common cause of severe community acquired pneumonia and
respiratory disease outbreaks. The Ontario Public Health Laboratory (OPHL) has conducted most
testing for Legionella species in the Canadian province of Ontario since 1978, and represents a
multi-decade repository of population-based data on legionellosis epidemiology. We sought to
provide a laboratory-based review of the epidemiology of legionellosis in Ontario over the past 3
decades, with a focus on changing rates of disease and species associated with legionellosis during
that time period.
METHODS: We analyzed cases that were submitted and tested positive for legionellosis from 1978
to 2006 using Poisson regression models incorporating temporal, spatial, and demographic
covariates. Predictors of infection with culture-confirmed L. pneumophila serogroup 1 (LP1) were
evaluated with logistic regression models.
Results: 1,401 cases of legionellosis tested positive from 1978 to 2006. As in other studies, we
found a late summer to early autumn seasonality in disease occurrence with disease risk increasing
with age and in males. In contrast to other studies, we found a decreasing trend in cases in the
recent decade (IRR 0.93, 95% CI 0.91 to 0.95, P-value = 0.001); only 66% of culture-confirmed
isolates were found to be LP1.
CONCLUSION: Despite similarities with disease epidemiology in other regions, legionellosis appears
to have declined in the past decade in Ontario, in contrast to trends observed in the United States
and parts of Europe. Furthermore, a different range of Legionella species is responsible for illness,
suggesting a distinctive legionellosis epidemiology in this North American region
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Nuclear materials stabilization and packaging. Quarterly status report, January 1--March 31, 1996
This report documents progress on the Los Alamos Nuclear Materials Stabilization and Packaging projects for the second quarter of FY 1996. It covers development and production activities for the Plutonium Packaging Project, the Plutonium Recovery and Processing Project, and the Uranium Recovery and Processing Project. In addition, it reports on quality assurance activities for the Plutonium Packaging Project
Initial low/hard state, multiple jet ejections and X-ray/radio correlations during the outburst of XTE J1859+226
We have studied the 1999 soft X-ray transient outburst of XTE J1859+226 at
radio and X-ray wavelengths. The event was characterised by strong variability
in the disc, corona and jet - in particular, a number of radio flares
(ejections) took place and seemed well-correlated with hard X-ray events.
Apparently unusual for the `canonical soft' X-ray transient, there was an
initial period of low/hard state behaviour during the rise from quiescence but
prior to the peak of the main outburst - we show that not only could this
initial low/hard state be an ubiquitous feature of soft X-ray transient
outbursts but that it could also be extremely important in our study of
outburst mechanisms.Comment: 12 pages, Accepted for publication in MNRA
Core outcomes in periodontal trials:study protocol for core outcome set development
Abstract Background There are a large number of clinical outcome measures used to assess the effectiveness of prevention and management strategies of periodontal diseases. This heterogeneity causes difficulties when trying to synthesise data for systematic reviews or clinical guidelines, reducing their impact. Core outcome sets are an agreed, standardised list of outcomes that should be measured and reported in all trials in specific clinical areas. We aim to develop a core outcome set for effectiveness trials investigating the prevention and management of periodontal disease in primary or secondary care. Methods To identify existing outcomes we screened the Cochrane systematic reviews and their included studies on the prevention and management of periodontal diseases. The core outcome set will be defined by consensus of key stakeholders using an online e-Delphi process and face-to-face meeting. Key stakeholders involved in the development will include: patients, dentists, hygienists/therapists, specialists, clinical researchers and policy-makers. Stakeholders will be asked to prioritise outcomes and feedback will be provided in the next round(s). Stakeholders will have an opportunity to add outcomes found in the Cochrane review screening process at the end of the first round. If consensus is not reached after the second round we will provide feedback prior to a third round. Remaining outcomes will be discussed at a face-to-face meeting and agreement will be measured via defined consensus rules of outcome inclusion. Discussion The inclusive consensus process should provide a core outcome set that is relevant to all key stakeholders. We will actively disseminate our findings to help improve clinical trials, systematic reviews and clinical guidelines with the ultimate aim of improving the prevention and management of periodontal diseases. Trial registration COMET ( http://www.comet-initiative.org/studies/details/265?result=true ). Registered on August 2012
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