14,711 research outputs found
Comparison of central corneal thickness measured by Lenstar LS900, Orbscanâ…¡ and ultrasonic pachmetry
AIM: To investigate the difference of central corneal thickness(CCT)measured by Lenstar LS900, OrbscahⅡ system and ultrasonic pachmetry, and to evaluate the correlation and consistency of the results for providing a theoretical basis for clinical application.<p>METHODS: The mean value of CCT in 70 eyes of 35 patients measured three times by Lenstar LS900, OrbscahⅡ system and ultrasonic pachmetry underwent statistical analysis. The difference of CCT was compared, and the correlation and consistency of three measurements were analyzed to provide theoretical basis for clinical application. CCT values measured by different methods were analyzed with randomized block variance analysis. LSD-<i>t</i> test was used for pairwise comparison between groups. The correlation of three measurement methods were analyzed by linear correlation analysis, and Bland-Altman was used to analyze the consistency.<p>RESULTS: The mean CCT values measured by Lenstar LS900, OrbscanⅡ and ultrasonic pachmetry were 542.75±40.06, 528.74±39.59, 538.54±40.93μm, respectively. The mean difference of CCT measurement was 4.21±8.78μm between Lenstar LS900 and ultrasonic pachmetry, 14.01±13.39μm between Lenstar LS900 and Orbscan Ⅱ, 9.8±10.57μm between ultrasonic pachmetry and Orbscan Ⅱ. The difference was statistically significant(<i>P</i><0.05). Three measurements were highly correlated(<i>P</i>>0.05): There was positive correlation between CCT with Lenstar LS900 and ultrasonic pachmetry(<i>r</i>=0.977, 0.944; <i>P</i><0.05). The analysis method of Bland-Altman: 95% consistent interval of upper and lower value was -13.0~21.4μm between Lenstar LS900 and ultrasonic pachmetry, 1.4% points outside the limits of agreement of 95%, 95% consistent interval of upper and lower value was -30.5~10.9μm between OrbscanⅡ and ultrasonic pachmetry, 7.1% points outside the limits of agreement of 95% consistent interval. <p>CONCLUSION: There are excellent correlation among Lenstar LS900, Orbscan Ⅱ and ultrasonic pachmetry. Lenstar LS900 can be used as CCT non-contact measurement tool
3,3′-(2,2′-Bi-1H-imidazole-1,1′-diyl)dipropanol
In the title compound, C12H18N4O2, unlike other unconjugated disubstituted biimidazole derivatives reported so far, the two imidazole rings in a trans conformation exhibit a large planar rotation angle of 51.27 (4)°, and consist of half-molÂecule asymmetric units related by a twofold rotation. The molÂecules are linked into a three-dimensional framework with a parallel laminated construction via O—H⋯N and C—H⋯O interÂactions
Degree correlation effect of bipartite network on personalized recommendation
In this paper, by introducing a new user similarity index base on the
diffusion process, we propose a modified collaborative filtering (MCF)
algorithm, which has remarkably higher accuracy than the standard collaborative
filtering. In the proposed algorithm, the degree correlation between users and
objects is taken into account and embedded into the similarity index by a
tunable parameter. The numerical simulation on a benchmark data set shows that
the algorithmic accuracy of the MCF, measured by the average ranking score, is
further improved by 18.19% in the optimal case. In addition, two significant
criteria of algorithmic performance, diversity and popularity, are also taken
into account. Numerical results show that the presented algorithm can provide
more diverse and less popular recommendations, for example, when the
recommendation list contains 10 objects, the diversity, measured by the hamming
distance, is improved by 21.90%.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
Synthesizing efficient circuits for Hamiltonian simulation
We provide a new approach for compiling quantum simulation circuits that
appear in Trotter, qDRIFT and multi-product formulas to Clifford and
non-Clifford operations that can reduce the number of non-Clifford operations
by a factor of up to . The central idea behind our approach is to collect
mutually commuting Hamiltonian terms into groups that satisfy one of several
symmetries identified in this work which allow an inexpensive simulation of the
entire group of terms. We further show that the cost can in some cases be
reduced by partially allocating Hamiltonian terms to several groups and provide
a polynomial time classical algorithm that can greedily allocate the terms to
appropriate groupings. We further specifically discuss these optimizations for
the case of fermionic dynamics and provide extensive numerical simulations for
qDRIFT of our grouping strategy to 6 and 4-qubit Heisenberg models, ,
and observe a factor of 1.8-3.2 reduction in the number of non-Clifford
gates. This suggests Trotter-based simulation of chemistry in second
quantization may be even more practical than previously believed.Comment: 51 pages, 11 figures, 2 table
- …