923 research outputs found

    Nutritional basis of type 2 diabetes remission.

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    Roy Taylor and colleagues explain how type 2 diabetes can be reversed by weight loss and avoidance of weight regai

    The Bolocam Galactic Plane Survey. XIV. Physical Properties of Massive Starless and Star Forming Clumps

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    We sort 46834683 molecular clouds between 10∘<ℓ<65∘10^\circ< \ell <65^\circ from the Bolocam Galactic Plane Survey based on observational diagnostics of star formation activity: compact 7070 μm\mu{\rm m} sources, mid-IR color-selected YSOs, H2O{\rm H_2O} and CH3OH{\rm CH_3OH} masers, and UCHII regions. We also present a combined NH3{\rm NH_3}-derived gas kinetic temperature and H2O{\rm H_2O} maser catalog for 17881788 clumps from our own GBT 100m observations and from the literature. We identify a subsample of 22232223 (47.5%47.5\%) starless clump candidates, the largest and most robust sample identified from a blind survey to date. Distributions of flux density, flux concentration, solid angle, kinetic temperature, column density, radius, and mass show strong (>1>1 dex) progressions when sorted by star formation indicator. The median starless clump candidate is marginally sub-virial (α∼0.7\alpha \sim 0.7) with >75%>75\% of clumps with known distance being gravitationally bound (α<2\alpha < 2). These samples show a statistically significant increase in the median clump mass of ΔM∼170−370\Delta M \sim 170-370 M⊙_\odot from the starless candidates to clumps associated with protostars. This trend could be due to (i) mass growth of the clumps at M˙∼200−440\dot{M}\sim200-440 Msun Myr−1^{-1} for an average free-fall 0.80.8 Myr time-scale, (ii) a systematic factor of two increase in dust opacity from starless to protostellar phases, (iii) and/or a variation in the ratio of starless to protostellar clump lifetime that scales as ∼M−0.4\sim M^{-0.4}. By comparing to the observed number of CH3OH{\rm CH_3OH} maser containing clumps we estimate the phase-lifetime of massive (M>103M>10^3 M⊙_\odot) starless clumps to be 0.37±0.08 Myr (M/103 M⊙)−10.37 \pm 0.08 \ {\rm Myr} \ (M/10^3 \ {\rm M}_\odot)^{-1}; the majority (M<450M<450 M⊙_\odot) have phase-lifetimes longer than their average free-fall time.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ; 33 pages; 22 figures; 7 table

    Financial Analysis of Dalbavancin for Acute Bacterial Skin and Skin Structure Infections for Self-Pay Patients

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    © 2020, The Author(s). Introduction: Acute bacterial skin and skin structure infections (ABSSSI) are an increasing cause of admission in the self-pay population. We previously reported that patients with ABSSSI discharged to receive dalbavancin showed a decreased length of stay (LOS) and total direct costs without increasing 30-day readmission rate. For patients who are financially eligible, a dalbavancin vial replacement program can offset costs. The objective of this study was to determine cost differences in treating ABSSSI in self-pay inpatients discharged to receive dalbavancin compared to standard of care (SOC). Methods: This retrospective cohort within a community health system compared self-pay adult inpatients with ABSSSI from February 3, 2016 to August 5, 2019 discharged to receive dalbavancin at an outpatient infusion center with SOC intravenous antibiotics. Patients were included with cellulitis, abscess, or postoperative wound infections diagnoses on the basis of International Classification of Disease, Tenth Revision (ICD-10) codes. Excluded populations were patients without dalbavancin vial replacement performed, pregnant, infections caused exclusively by gram-negative bacteria or fungi, or ICD-10 codes not consistent with ABSSSI. The primary outcome was direct cost of hospital stay. Secondary outcomes included length of stay (LOS), 30-day readmission rates, adverse events (AE), and indirect hospital costs. On the basis of previous studies, a one-sided Student’s t test was performed on financial data. Results: Twelve dalbavancin and 263 SOC patients met inclusion criteria. Direct cost (2758vs2758 vs 4010, p = 0.105) and indirect hospital cost (2913vs2913 vs 3646 , p = 0.162) per patient were less in the dalbavancin group. There was no significant difference between median LOS (4 vs 4, p = 0.888), AE (0% vs 14.8%), and 30-day readmission rates for dalbavancin vs SOC group (8.3% vs 7.2%, p = 0.604). Conclusion: Self-pay patients with ABSSSI discharged to receive dalbavancin with vial replacement resulted in decreased direct and indirect costs per patient with similar 30-day readmission rates, AE, and LOS. More studies targeted toward this population are warranted to determine ultimate benefit

    Distributed Dynamic Density Coverage for Human-Swarm Interactions

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    © 2015 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other users, including reprinting/ republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted components of this work in other works.DOI: 10.1109/ACC.2015.7170761This paper presents two approaches to externally influence a team of robots by means of time-varying density functions. These density functions represent rough references for where the robots should be located. Recently developed continuous-time algorithms move the robots so as to provide optimal coverage of a given the time-varying density functions. This makes it possible for a human operator to abstract away the number of robots and focus on the general behavior of the team of robots as a whole. Using a distributed approximation to this algorithm whereby the robots only need to access information from adjacent robots allows these algorithms to scale well with the number of robots. Simulations and robotic experiments show that the desired behaviors are achieved

    The Detection and Characterization of cm Radio Continuum Emission from the Low-mass Protostar L1014-IRS

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    Observations by the Cores to Disk Legacy Team with the Spitzer Space Telescope have identified a low luminosity, mid-infrared source within the dense core, Lynds 1014, which was previously thought to harbor no internal source. Followup near-infrared and submillimeter interferometric observations have confirmed the protostellar nature of this source by detecting scattered light from an outflow cavity and a weak molecular outflow. In this paper, we report the detection of cm continuum emission with the VLA. The emission is characterized by a quiescent, unresolved 90 uJy 6 cm source within 0.2" of the Spitzer source. The spectral index of the quiescent component is α=0.37±0.34\alpha = 0.37\pm 0.34 between 6 cm and 3.6 cm. A factor of two increase in 6 cm emission was detected during one epoch and circular polarization was marginally detected at the 5σ5\sigma level with Stokes {V/I} =48±16= 48 \pm 16% . We have searched for 22 GHz H2O maser emission toward L1014-IRS, but no masers were detected during 7 epochs of observations between June 2004 and December 2006. L1014-IRS appears to be a low-mass, accreting protostar which exhibits cm emission from a thermal jet or a wind, with a variable non-thermal emission component. The quiescent cm radio emission is noticeably above the correlation of 3.6 cm and 6 cm luminosity versus bolometric luminosity, indicating more radio emission than expected. We characterize the cm continuum emission in terms of observations of other low-mass protostars, including updated correlations of centimeter continuum emission with bolometric luminosity and outflow force, and discuss the implications of recent larger distance estimates on the physical attributes of the protostar and dense molecular core.Comment: 14 pages. Accepted for publication in Ap

    Comparing variant calling algorithms for target-exon sequencing in a large sample

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    Abstract Background Sequencing studies of exonic regions aim to identify rare variants contributing to complex traits. With high coverage and large sample size, these studies tend to apply simple variant calling algorithms. However, coverage is often heterogeneous; sites with insufficient coverage may benefit from sophisticated calling algorithms used in low-coverage sequencing studies. We evaluate the potential benefits of different calling strategies by performing a comparative analysis of variant calling methods on exonic data from 202 genes sequenced at 24x in 7,842 individuals. We call variants using individual-based, population-based and linkage disequilibrium (LD)-aware methods with stringent quality control. We measure genotype accuracy by the concordance with on-target GWAS genotypes and between 80 pairs of sequencing replicates. We validate selected singleton variants using capillary sequencing. Results Using these calling methods, we detected over 27,500 variants at the targeted exons; >57% were singletons. The singletons identified by individual-based analyses were of the highest quality. However, individual-based analyses generated more missing genotypes (4.72%) than population-based (0.47%) and LD-aware (0.17%) analyses. Moreover, individual-based genotypes were the least concordant with array-based genotypes and replicates. Population-based genotypes were less concordant than genotypes from LD-aware analyses with extended haplotypes. We reanalyzed the same dataset with a second set of callers and showed again that the individual-based caller identified more high-quality singletons than the population-based caller. We also replicated this result in a second dataset of 57 genes sequenced at 127.5x in 3,124 individuals. Conclusions We recommend population-based analyses for high quality variant calls with few missing genotypes. With extended haplotypes, LD-aware methods generate the most accurate and complete genotypes. In addition, individual-based analyses should complement the above methods to obtain the most singleton variants.http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/110906/1/12859_2015_Article_489.pd

    Tracing the Mass during Low-Mass Star Formation. II. Modelling the Submillimeter Emission from Pre-Protostellar Cores

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    We have modeled the emission from dust in pre-protostellar cores, including a self-consistent calculation of the temperature distribution for each input density distribution. Model density distributions include Bonnor-Ebert spheres and power laws. The Bonnor-Ebert spheres fit the data well for all three cores we have modeled. The dust temperatures decline to very low values (\Td \sim 7 K) in the centers of these cores, strongly affecting the dust emission. Compared to earlier models that assume constant dust temperatures, our models indicate higher central densities and smaller regions of relatively constant density. Indeed, for L1544, a power-law density distribution, similar to that of a singular, isothermal sphere, cannot be ruled out. For the three sources modeled herein, there seems to be a sequence of increasing central condensation, from L1512 to L1689B to L1544. The two denser cores, L1689B and L1544, have spectroscopic evidence for contraction, suggesting an evolutionary sequence for pre-protostellar cores.Comment: 22 pages, 9 figures, Ap. J. accepted, uses emulateapj5.st

    The Green Bank Ammonia Survey (GAS): First Results of NH3 mapping the Gould Belt

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    We present an overview of the first data release (DR1) and first-look science from the Green Bank Ammonia Survey (GAS). GAS is a Large Program at the Green Bank Telescope to map all Gould Belt star-forming regions with AV≳7A_V \gtrsim 7 mag visible from the northern hemisphere in emission from NH3_3 and other key molecular tracers. This first release includes the data for four regions in Gould Belt clouds: B18 in Taurus, NGC 1333 in Perseus, L1688 in Ophiuchus, and Orion A North in Orion. We compare the NH3_3 emission to dust continuum emission from Herschel, and find that the two tracers correspond closely. NH3_3 is present in over 60\% of lines-of-sight with AV≳7A_V \gtrsim 7 mag in three of the four DR1 regions, in agreement with expectations from previous observations. The sole exception is B18, where NH3_3 is detected toward ~ 40\% of lines-of-sight with AV≳7A_V \gtrsim 7 mag. Moreover, we find that the NH3_3 emission is generally extended beyond the typical 0.1 pc length scales of dense cores. We produce maps of the gas kinematics, temperature, and NH3_3 column densities through forward modeling of the hyperfine structure of the NH3_3 (1,1) and (2,2) lines. We show that the NH3_3 velocity dispersion, σv{\sigma}_v, and gas kinetic temperature, TKT_K, vary systematically between the regions included in this release, with an increase in both the mean value and spread of σv{\sigma}_v and TKT_K with increasing star formation activity. The data presented in this paper are publicly available.Comment: 33 pages, 27 figures, accepted to ApJS. Datasets are publicly available: https://dataverse.harvard.edu/dataverse/GAS_DR
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