18,587 research outputs found

    The impact of involvement in mental health research on views about mental health services and service use: findings from a UK survey

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    Background: Involvement of service users in mental health research, whether predicated on rights-based or instrumentalist arguments, is appropriately understood as a purposive social action likely to have both intended and unintended consequences. Despite rhetoric and some evidence that involvement is a good thing and confers benefits on the people involved, the impact on involved individuals remain underexplored. Aims: To describe the impact of involvement in research on views about mental health services and service use. Method: A cross-sectional survey of service users involved in mental health research across the UK. Data collected from 166 respondents using an online questionnaire were analysed using the framework approach and narratively synthesised. Results: Involvement, through enabling ‘behind the scenes’ access shaped views of service users about services and service use. Increased awareness of challenges and shortcomings of service delivery shifted expectations, commonly empowering service users to proactively engage in treatment. However, for some respondents, disillusionment led to discontinuation of services. Conclusions: Empowerment is a common outcome of involvement but a minority of service users may become critical and drop out of services. People considering involvement in research should be informed about the potential impact on their views and service use and be appropriately supported during involvement. The theory of user involvement needed to support robust examination of process and outcomes must encompass unintended consequences

    Magnetomotive drive and detection of clamped-clamped mechanical resonators in water

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    We demonstrate magnetomotive drive and detection of doubly clamped string resonators in water. A compact 1.9 T permanent magnet is used to detect the fundamental and higher flexural modes of 200μm\mathrm{200 \mu m} long resonators. Good agreement is found between the magnetomotive measurements and optical measurements performed on the same resonator. The magnetomotive detection scheme can be used to simultaneously drive and detect multiple sensors or scanning probes in viscous fluids without alignment of detector beams.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Role of oxygen in the electron-doped superconducting cuprates

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    We report on resistivity and Hall measurements in thin films of the electron-doped superconducting cuprate Pr2−x_{2-x}Cex_{x}CuO4±δ_{4\pm\delta}. Comparisons between x = 0.17 samples subjected to either ion-irradiation or oxygenation demonstrate that changing the oxygen content has two separable effects: 1) a doping effect similar to that of cerium, and 2) a disorder effect. These results are consistent with prior speculations that apical oxygen removal is necessary to achieve superconductivity in this compound.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure

    Cavity-enhanced optical detection of carbon nanotube Brownian motion

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    Optical cavities with small mode volume are well-suited to detect the vibration of sub-wavelength sized objects. Here we employ a fiber-based, high-finesse optical microcavity to detect the Brownian motion of a freely suspended carbon nanotube at room temperature under vacuum. The optical detection resolves deflections of the oscillating tube down to 50pm/Hz^1/2. A full vibrational spectrum of the carbon nanotube is obtained and confirmed by characterization of the same device in a scanning electron microscope. Our work successfully extends the principles of high-sensitivity optomechanical detection to molecular scale nanomechanical systems.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figure

    Turkey Production in South Dakota

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    The turkey is truly an American bird and suggests not only Thanksgiving to Americans but America itself to the world. The Cyclopedia of Agriculture comments that America has furnished but few domestic animals and mentions the llama of South America, the turkey, and the bison as a third possible example

    Energy Spectrum Evolution of a Diffuse Field in Elastic Body Caused by Weak Nonlinearity

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    We study the evolution of diffuse elastodynamic spectral energy density under the influence of weak nonlinearity. It is shown that the rate of change of this quantity is given by a convolution of the linear energy at two frequencies. Quantitative estimates are given for sample aluminum and fused silica blocks of experimental interest.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures; revised for better presentatio

    High-Q nested resonator in an actively stabilized optomechanical cavity

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    Experiments involving micro- and nanomechanical resonators need to be carefully designed to reduce mechanical environmental noise. A small scale on-chip approach is to add an additional resonator to the system as a mechanical low-pass filter. Unfortunately, the inherent low frequency of the low-pass filter causes the system to be easily excited mechanically. Fixating the additional resonator ensures that the resonator itself can not be excited by the environment. This, however, negates the purpose of the low-pass filter. We solve this apparent paradox by applying active feedback to the resonator, thereby minimizing the motion with respect the front mirror of an optomechanical cavity. Not only does this method actively stabilize the cavity length, but it also retains the on-chip vibration isolation.Comment: Minor adjustments mad
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