1,402 research outputs found
The influence of market wages and parental history on child labour and schooling in Egypt
This paper examines the influence of adult market wages and having parents who were child labourers on child labour, when this decision is jointly determined with child schooling, using data from Egypt. The empirical results suggest that low adult market wages are key determinants of child labour; a 10 percent increase in the illiterate male market wage decreases the probability of child labour by 22 percent for boys and 13 percent for girls. The findings also indicate the importance of social norms in the inter-generational persistence of child labour: parents who were child labourers themselves are on average 10 percent more likely to send their children to work. In addition, higher local regional income inequality increases the likelihood of child labour.
Remigration intentions and migrants' behavior
Using a unique French dataset, we analyze the relationship between remigration intentions and several immigrants' behaviors in the host and origin countries addressing the potential endogeneity of remigration intentions. We also investigate the potential trade-off and complementarities between various immigrants' investment behaviors. We find that temporary migrants are more likely to invest in the country of origin but less likely to invest in the host country. Moreover, our results suggest a trade-off between immigrants' investment in the home and in the host country
Effect of Continuous Education on Readmission Rates for CHF Patients
Aim: To evaluate if continuing the education of Congest Heart Failure patients post-discharge will decrease the amount of readmissions within 6 months of discharge.
Background: Causes for decreased readmission rates in Congestive Heart Failure patients have been evaluated in multiple studies. The evaluation of the current research showed having discharge education and post- discharge follow-ups decreased the rate of readmission within 6 months. There is a sufficient amount of evidence supporting the implementation of education upon discharge and follow-ups of Congestive Heart Failure patients.
Data Source: Databases and search engines used included: PubMed, OneSearch, CINAHL, DogPile, and Google. Of 25 articles read, 10 articles were included in the review of literature.
Results: Three specific forms of patient education were reviewed. These included a telephone follow up program, six months of continued patient education, and a plan tailored to the individual needs of the patient. All three interventions were effective in showing a decrease in readmission rates.
Conclusion: Increased time of continued education is believed to be effective in decreasing the readmission of Congestive Heart Failure patients within 30 days of discharge
On the uniqueness of the surface sources of evoked potentials
The uniqueness of a surface density of sources localized inside a spatial
region and producing a given electric potential distribution in its
boundary is revisited. The situation in which is filled with various
metallic subregions, each one having a definite constant value for the electric
conductivity is considered. It is argued that the knowledge of the potential in
all fully determines the surface density of sources over a wide class of
surfaces supporting them. The class can be defined as a union of an arbitrary
but finite number of open or closed surfaces. The only restriction upon them is
that no one of the closed surfaces contains inside it another (nesting) of the
closed or open surfaces.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figure
Fast stable direct fitting and smoothness selection for Generalized Additive Models
Existing computationally efficient methods for penalized likelihood GAM
fitting employ iterative smoothness selection on working linear models (or
working mixed models). Such schemes fail to converge for a non-negligible
proportion of models, with failure being particularly frequent in the presence
of concurvity. If smoothness selection is performed by optimizing `whole model'
criteria these problems disappear, but until now attempts to do this have
employed finite difference based optimization schemes which are computationally
inefficient, and can suffer from false convergence. This paper develops the
first computationally efficient method for direct GAM smoothness selection. It
is highly stable, but by careful structuring achieves a computational
efficiency that leads, in simulations, to lower mean computation times than the
schemes based on working-model smoothness selection. The method also offers a
reliable way of fitting generalized additive mixed models
A Bayesian Approach to Inverse Quantum Statistics
A nonparametric Bayesian approach is developed to determine quantum
potentials from empirical data for quantum systems at finite temperature. The
approach combines the likelihood model of quantum mechanics with a priori
information over potentials implemented in form of stochastic processes. Its
specific advantages are the possibilities to deal with heterogeneous data and
to express a priori information explicitly, i.e., directly in terms of the
potential of interest. A numerical solution in maximum a posteriori
approximation was feasible for one--dimensional problems. Using correct a
priori information turned out to be essential.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures, revte
The association of NADPH with the guanine nucleotide exchange factor from rabbit reticulocytes: A role of pyridine dinucleotides in eukaryotic polypeptide chain initiation
The guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) was purified to apparent homogeneity from postribosomal supernatants of rabbit reticulocytes by chromatography on DEAE-celiulose and phosphocellulose, fractionation by glycerol gradients, and chromatography on Mono S and Mono Q (Pharmacia). At the Mono S step GEF is isolated as a complex with the eukaryotic polypeptide chain initiation factor 2 (eIF-2) and is separated from this factor by column chromatography on Mono Q. An emission spectrum characteristic of a reduced pyridine dinucleotide was observed when GEF was subjected to fluorescence analysis. By both coupled enzymatic analysis and chromatography on reverse-phase or Mono Q columns, the bound dinucleotide associated with GEF was determined to be NADPH. The GEF-catalyzed exchange of eIF-2-bound GDP for GTP was markedly inhibited by NAD+ and NADP+. This inhibition was not observed in the presence of equimolar concentrations of NADPH. Similarly, the stimulation of ternary complex (eIF-2•GTP•Met-tRNAf) formation by GEF in the presence of 1 mM Mg2+ was abolished in the presence of oxidized pyridine dinucleotide. These results demonstrate that pyridine dinucleotides may be directly involved in the regulation of polypeptide chain initiation by acting as allosteric regulators of GEF activity
Human cardiomyocyte calcium handling and transverse tubules in mid-stage of post-myocardial-infarction heart failure
Aims:
Cellular processes in the heart rely mainly on studies from experimental animal models or explanted hearts from patients with terminal end-stage heart failure (HF). To address this limitation, we provide data on excitation contraction coupling, cardiomyocyte contraction and relaxation, and Ca2+ handling in post-myocardial-infarction (MI) patients at mid-stage of HF.
Methods and results:
Nine MI patients and eight control patients without MI (non-MI) were included. Biopsies were taken from the left ventricular myocardium and processed for further measurements with epifluorescence and confocal microscopy. Cardiomyocyte function was progressively impaired in MI cardiomyocytes compared with non-MI cardiomyocytes when increasing electrical stimulation towards frequencies that simulate heart rates during physical activity (2 Hz); at 3 Hz, we observed almost total breakdown of function in MI. Concurrently, we observed impaired Ca2+ handling with more spontaneous Ca2+ release events, increased diastolic Ca2+, lower Ca2+ amplitude, and prolonged time to diastolic Ca2+ removal in MI (P < 0.01). Significantly reduced transverse-tubule density (−35%, P < 0.01) and sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ adenosine triphosphatase 2a (SERCA2a) function (−26%, P < 0.01) in MI cardiomyocytes may explain the findings. Reduced protein phosphorylation of phospholamban (PLB) serine-16 and threonine-17 in MI provides further mechanisms to the reduced function.
Conclusions:
Depressed cardiomyocyte contraction and relaxation were associated with impaired intracellular Ca2+ handling due to impaired SERCA2a activity caused by a combination of alteration in the PLB/SERCA2a ratio and chronic dephosphorylation of PLB as well as loss of transverse tubules, which disrupts normal intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis and handling. This is the first study that presents these mechanisms from viable and intact cardiomyocytes isolated from the left ventricle of human hearts at mid-stage of post-MI HF
P-splines with derivative based penalties and tensor product smoothing of unevenly distributed data
The P-splines of Eilers and Marx (1996) combine a B-spline basis with a
discrete quadratic penalty on the basis coefficients, to produce a reduced rank
spline like smoother. P-splines have three properties that make them very
popular as reduced rank smoothers: i) the basis and the penalty are sparse,
enabling efficient computation, especially for Bayesian stochastic simulation;
ii) it is possible to flexibly `mix-and-match' the order of B-spline basis and
penalty, rather than the order of penalty controlling the order of the basis as
in spline smoothing; iii) it is very easy to set up the B-spline basis
functions and penalties. The discrete penalties are somewhat less interpretable
in terms of function shape than the traditional derivative based spline
penalties, but tend towards penalties proportional to traditional spline
penalties in the limit of large basis size. However part of the point of
P-splines is not to use a large basis size. In addition the spline basis
functions arise from solving functional optimization problems involving
derivative based penalties, so moving to discrete penalties for smoothing may
not always be desirable. The purpose of this note is to point out that the
three properties of basis-penalty sparsity, mix-and-match penalization and ease
of setup are readily obtainable with B-splines subject to derivative based
penalization. The penalty setup typically requires a few lines of code, rather
than the two lines typically required for P-splines, but this one off
disadvantage seems to be the only one associated with using derivative based
penalties. As an example application, it is shown how basis-penalty sparsity
enables efficient computation with tensor product smoothers of scattered data
- …