2,238 research outputs found
Sample Size and Robustness of Inferences from Logistic Regression in the Presence of Nonlinearity and Multicollinearity
The logistic regression models has been widely used in the social and natural sciences and results from studies using this model can have significant impact. Thus, confidence in the reliability of inferences drawn from these models is essential. The robustness of such inferences is dependent on sample size. The purpose of this study is to examine the impact of sample size on the mean estimated bias and efficiency of parameter estimation and inference for the logistic regression model. A number of simulations are conducted examining the impact of sample size, nonlinear predictors, and multicollinearity on substantive inferences (e.g. odds ratios, marginal effects) and goodness of fit (e.g. pseudo-R2, predictability) of logistic regression models. Findings suggest that sample size can affect parameter estimates and inferences in the presence of multicollinearity and nonlinear predictor functions, but marginal effects estimates are relatively robust to sample size.Logistic Regression Model, Multicollinearity, Nonlinearity, Robustness, Small Sample Bias, Research Methods/ Statistical Methods,
Isoscalar g Factors of Even-Even and Odd-Odd Nuclei
We consider T=0 states in even-even and odd-odd N=Z nuclei. The g factors
that emerge are isoscalar. We find that the single j shell model gives simple
expressions for these g factors which for even-even nuclei are suprisingly
close to the collective values for K=0 bands. The g factors of many 2+ in
even-even nuclei and 1+ and 3+ states in odd-odd nuclei have g factors close to
0.5
Electrophysiology of Concatameric Pannexin 1 Channels Reveals the Stoichiometry of C-Terminal Autoinhibition
Codi d'Art Públic: 8008-1 (La República); Reportatge realitzat als dies 4 i 18-7-1990Pericas, Enric (arquitecte); Viaplana, Albert (arquitecte i estructura); Viladomat Massanas, Josep (escultura);Joan Pie (Medalló); Piñón, Helio (Estr
Surveillance of RNase P, PMMoV, and CrAssphage in wastewater as indicators of human fecal concentration across urban sewer neighborhoods, Louisville, Kentucky
Wastewater surveillance has been widely used as a supplemental method to track the community infection levels of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2. A gap exists in standardized reporting for fecal indicator concentrations, which can be used to calibrate the primary outcome concentrations from wastewater monitoring for use in epidemiological models. To address this, measurements of fecal indicator concentration among wastewater samples collected from sewers and treatment centers in four counties of Kentucky (N = 650) were examined. Results from the untransformed wastewater data over 4 months of sampling indicated that the fecal indicator concentration of human ribonuclease P (RNase P) ranged from 5.1 × 101 to 1.15 × 106 copies/ml, pepper mild mottle virus (PMMoV) ranged from 7.23 × 103 to 3.53 × 107 copies/ml, and cross-assembly phage (CrAssphage) ranged from 9.69×103 to 1.85×108 copies/ml. The results showed both regional and temporal variability. If fecal indicators are used as normalization factors, knowing the daily sewer system flow of the sample location may matter more than rainfall. RNase P, while it may be suitable as an internal amplification and sample adequacy control, has less utility than PMMoV and CrAssphage as a fecal indicator in wastewater samples when working at different sizes of catchment area. The choice of fecal indicator will impact the results of surveillance studies using this indicator to represent fecal load. Our results contribute broadly to an applicable standard normalization factor and assist in interpreting wastewater data in epidemiological modeling and monitoring
Pressure Induced Topological Phase Transitions in Membranes
Some highly unusual features of a lipid-water liquid crystal are revealed by
high pressure x-ray diffraction, light scattering and dilatometric studies of
the lamellar (bilayer ) to nonlamellar inverse hexagonal ()
phase transition. (i) The size of the unit cell of the phase increases
with increasing pressure. (ii) The transition volume, ,
decreases and appears to vanish as the pressure is increased. (iii) The
intensity of scattered light increases as decreases. Data are
presented which suggest that this increase is due to the formation of an
intermediate cubic phase, as predicted by recent theoretical suggestions of the
underlying universal phase sequence.Comment: 12 pages, typed using REVTEX 2.
A new type of carbon resistance thermometer with excellent thermal contact at millikelvin temperatures
Using a new brand of commercially available carbon resistor we built a
cryogenic thermometer with an extremely good thermal contact to its thermal
environment. Because of its superior thermal contact the thermometer is
insensitive to low levels of spurious radio frequency heating. We calibrated
our thermometer down to 5mK using a quartz tuning fork He-3 viscometer and
measured its thermal resistance and thermal response time.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Clinical and Experimental Applications of NIR-LED Photobiomodulation
This review presents current research on the use of far-red to near-infrared (NIR) light treatment in various in vitro and in vivo models. Low-intensity light therapy, commonly referred to as “photobiomodulation,” uses light in the far-red to near-infrared region of the spectrum (630–1000 nm) and modulates numerous cellular functions. Positive effects of NIR–light-emitting diode (LED) light treatment include acceleration of wound healing, improved recovery from ischemic injury of the heart, and attenuated degeneration of injured optic nerves by improving mitochondrial energy metabolism and production. Various in vitro and in vivo models of mitochondrial dysfunction were treated with a variety of wavelengths of NIR-LED light. These studies were performed to determine the effect of NIR-LED light treatment on physiologic and pathologic processes. NIRLED light treatment stimulates the photoacceptor cytochrome c oxidase, resulting in increased energy metabolism and production. NIR-LED light treatment accelerates wound healing in ischemic rat and murine diabetic wound healing models, attenuates the retinotoxic effects of methanol-derived formic acid in rat models, and attenuates the developmental toxicity of dioxin in chicken embryos. Furthermore, NIR-LED light treatment prevents the development of oral mucositis in pediatric bone marrow transplant patients. The experimental results demonstrate that NIR-LED light treatment stimulates mitochondrial oxidative metabolism in vitro, and accelerates cell and tissue repair in vivo. NIR-LED light represents a novel, noninvasive, therapeutic intervention for the treatment of numerous diseases linked to mitochondrial dysfunction
Low-level dissolved organic carbon subsidies drive a trophic upsurge in a boreal stream
1. Energy pathways in stream food webs are often driven by allochthonous basal resources. However, allochthonous dissolved organic carbon (DOC) is generally viewed as a minor if not insignificant basal resource because much of the DOC pool comprises high molecular weight, recalcitrant compounds and is inefficiently incorporated into biomass. Nevertheless, there is increasing evidence that the relatively small, labile fraction of DOC may indeed fuel microbial activity to a level that stimulates productivity across multiple trophic levels, resulting in a trophic upsurge. Here, we tested the trophic upsurge hypothesis by subsidising the labile DOC pool of an Alaskan boreal stream that had relatively high nutrient availability but low levels of naturally occurring DOC.
2. We continuously added ecologically relevant (0.250 mg C/L, c. 10% increase above ambient bulk DOC) concentrations of labile DOC (acetate-C) for 62 days to a treatment reach that was statistically indistinguishable in its channel form and chemistry from an upstream reference reach. We measured responses of pe-riphyton production and biomass, whole reach metabolism and nutrient uptake, benthic invertebrate abundances, and juvenile salmonid (Dolly Varden, Salvelinus malma) abundance and growth.
3. Measurements of basal ecosystem responses collectively indicated increased en-ergy mobilization at the base of the food web in response to labile DOC addition. Periphyton bacterial production in the treatment reach was generally >1.5× refer-ence reach values, and periphyton ash-free dry mass, chlorophyll-a, and chloro-phyll-a:ash-free dry mass were all greater in the treatment reach by the end of the study. Throughout dosing, ecosystem respiration was 1.3× greater in the treat-ment reach and dissolved inorganic nitrogen uptake was greater in the treatment reach on eight out of nine measurements.
4. Benthic invertebrate counts, dominated by Baetis spp. and Chironomidae, were c. 4× greater after 28 dosing days and c. 8× greater after 56 days in the upstream portion of the treatment reach. Abundance generally declined with increasing dis-tance from the dosing station. Dolly Varden fry and parr age classes were nearly 2× more abundant in the upstream portion of the treatment reach than in any section of the reference reach and also declined with increasing distance from the dosing station. Further, Dolly Varden tagged with passive integrated transponders prior to the experiment had significantly higher instantaneous growth rates in the treatment reach than those recaptured in the reference reach.
5. The strong consumer responses to small quantities of labile DOC mirrored sig-nificant treatment reach increases in basal ecosystem function and therefore demonstrated a response consistent with a trophic upsurge. Terrestrial DOC has historically been viewed as contributing little to metazoan consumers, instead modulating the influence of nutrients and being respired out of a disconnected microbial loop. Because we dosed the treatment reach with a relevant concentra-tion of labile DOC, based on measurements in nearby peatland-draining streams, we suggest that terrestrial DOC deserves more attention as a basal resource for whole food webs, akin to nutrients fuelling green (autochthonous) pathways.Alaska Sustainable Salmon Fund, Grant/Award Number: 4470
Morphology of supported polymer electrolyte ultra-thin films: a numerical study
Morphology of polymer electrolytes membranes (PEM), e.g., Nafion, inside PEM
fuel cell catalyst layers has significant impact on the electrochemical
activity and transport phenomena that determine cell performance. In those
regions, Nafion can be found as an ultra-thin film, coating the catalyst and
the catalyst support surfaces. The impact of the hydrophilic/hydrophobic
character of these surfaces on the structural formation of the films has not
been sufficiently explored yet. Here, we report about Molecular Dynamics
simulation investigation of the substrate effects on the ionomer ultra-thin
film morphology at different hydration levels. We use a mean-field-like model
we introduced in previous publications for the interaction of the hydrated
Nafion ionomer with a substrate, characterized by a tunable degree of
hydrophilicity. We show that the affinity of the substrate with water plays a
crucial role in the molecular rearrangement of the ionomer film, resulting in
completely different morphologies. Detailed structural description in different
regions of the film shows evidences of strongly heterogeneous behavior. A
qualitative discussion of the implications of our observations on the PEMFC
catalyst layer performance is finally proposed
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