2,300 research outputs found
Testing the decoy effect to improve online survey participation: Evidence from a field experiment
As low participation and retention in online survey participation decrease confidence in its results, traditional research has focused on ways to optimize the survey structure and design. So far, no study has tested the decoy effect (i.e. offering an inferior decoy option to increase the attractiveness of the target option) to increase survey participation. In a field experiment with 203 students, we tested the effectiveness of adding a decoy questionnaire to the choice set to improve online survey participation. The decoy questionnaire featured open-ended instead of close-ended questions and delayed remuneration (1 week vs. 4 weeks). We found that the presence of the decoy questionnaire increased the probability of the target questionnaire being completed from 32.7 % to 55.9 %. Furthermore, while the decoy did not affect response behavior or cause non-response bias, a significant order effect was observed. When the target questionnaire was presented before the decoy, the participation was 82.7 % in comparison to 28.0 % when the decoy was presented first. This study is the first to test the decoy effect in the context of aiming to improve survey participation. These findings offer a ‘proof of principle’ that decoys have the potential to increase participation without negatively influencing question response behavior
Orbital Kondo Effect in CeLaB: Scaling Analysis
Peculiarity of the Kondo effect in CeLaB is investigated on
the basis of the scaling equations up to third order. For the case where the
- charge fluctuation enters in addition to the - one, the
effective exchange interaction becomes anisotropic with respect to the orbital
pseudospins which represent the two different orbitals in the ground
state. Because of different characteristic energies for electric and magnetic
tensors, scaling with the single Kondo temperature does not apply to physical
quantities such as the resistivity and magnetic susceptibility. Possibility of
a bizzare phase is pointed out where the RKKY interaction leads to the spin
ordering without orbital ordering. This phase serves as a candidate of the
phase IV which is observed to be isotropic magnetically.Comment: 10 pages, 4 eps figures, submitted to PR
Acceptability of text messages for safety netting patients with low-risk cancer symptoms: a qualitative study
Background: Safety netting is an important diagnostic strategy for patients presenting to primary care with potential (low-risk) cancer symptoms. Typically, this involves asking patients to return if symptoms persist. However, this relies on patients re-appraising their symptoms and making follow-up appointments, which could contribute to delays in diagnosis. Text messaging is increasingly used in primary care to communicate with patients, and could be used to improve safety netting. / Aim: To explore the acceptability and feasibility of using text messages to safety net patients presenting with low-risk cancer symptoms in GP primary care (txt-netting). / Design and setting: Qualitative focus group and interview study with London-based GPs. / Method: Participants were identified using convenience sampling methods. Five focus groups and two interviews were conducted with 22 GPs between August and December 2016. Sessions were audiorecorded, transcribed verbatim, and analysed using thematic analysis. / Results: GPs were amenable to the concept of using text messages in cancer safety netting, identifying it as an additional tool that could help manage patients and promote symptom awareness. There was wide variation in GP preferences for text message content, and a number of important potential barriers to txt-netting were identified. Concerns were raised about the difficulties of conveying complex safety netting advice within the constraints of a text message, and about confidentiality, widening inequalities, and workload implications. / Conclusion: Text messages were perceived to be an acceptable potential strategy for safety netting patients with low-risk cancer symptoms. Further work is needed to ensure it is cost-effective, user friendly, confidential, and acceptable to patients
Charge Kondo effect toward a non-Fermi-liquid fixed point in the orbitally degenerate exchange model
We show that a Kondo-type model with an orbital degeneracy has a new
non-Fermi-liquid fixed point. Near the fixed point the spin degrees of freedom
are completely quenched, and the residual charge degrees of freedom lead to the
multi-channel Kondo effect. Anomalous behavior appears in electric and thermal
properties, but the magnetic susceptibility should show the local Fermi-liquid
behavior. The non-Fermi-liquid fixed point becomes unstable against
perturbations breaking the particle-hole symmetry. We derive these results
using the third-order scaling for a spherically symmetric model with a
fictitious spin. In contrast to the Coqblin-Schrieffer model, the present model
respects different time-reversal properties of multipole operators.Comment: 4 pages, 2 eps figures, to appear in J. Phys. Soc. Jpn. 68 No.
Association between purchase of over-the-counter medications and ovarian cancer diagnosis in the Cancer Loyalty Card Study (CLOCS): observational case-control study
BACKGROUND: Over-the-counter (OTC) medications are frequently used to self-care for nonspecific ovarian cancer symptoms prior to diagnosis. Monitoring such purchases may provide an opportunity for earlier diagnosis. OBJECTIVE: The aim of the Cancer Loyalty Card Study (CLOCS) was to investigate purchases of OTC pain and indigestion medications prior to ovarian cancer diagnosis in women with and without ovarian cancer in the United Kingdom using loyalty card data. METHODS: An observational case-control study was performed comparing purchases of OTC pain and indigestion medications prior to diagnosis in women with (n=153) and without (n=120) ovarian cancer using loyalty card data from two UK-based high street retailers. Monthly purchases of pain and indigestion medications for cases and controls were compared using the Fisher exact test, conditional logistic regression, and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis. RESULTS: Pain and indigestion medication purchases were increased among cases 8 months before diagnosis, with maximum discrimination between cases and controls 8 months before diagnosis (Fisher exact odds ratio [OR] 2.9, 95% CI 2.1-4.1). An increase in indigestion medication purchases was detected up to 9 months before diagnosis (adjusted conditional logistic regression OR 1.38, 95% CI 1.04-1.83). The ROC analysis for indigestion medication purchases showed a maximum area under the curve (AUC) at 13 months before diagnosis (AUC=0.65, 95% CI 0.57-0.73), which further improved when stratified to late-stage ovarian cancer (AUC=0.68, 95% CI 0.59-0.78). CONCLUSIONS: There is a difference in purchases of pain and indigestion medications among women with and without ovarian cancer up to 8 months before diagnosis. Facilitating earlier presentation among those who self-care for symptoms using this novel data source could improve ovarian cancer patients' options for treatment and improve survival. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03994653; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03994653
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