340 research outputs found

    Mine and me: exploring the neural basis of object ownership.

    Get PDF
    This document is made available in accordance with publisher policies. Please cite only the published version using the reference above. Full terms of use are available

    Adult Attachment and Personal Recovery in Clients With a Psychotic Disorder

    Get PDF
    Background: Personal recovery has become a key objective in the treatment of clients with a psychotic disorder. So far it has been established that the two attachment dimensions, ie, anxious and avoidant, are negatively associated with subjective well-being, self-esteem and hope. This study is the first to explore whether attachment styles are related to personal recovery in this population. Aims: To study the effects of anxious and avoidant attachment on personal recovery in a population with a psychotic disorder. Method: This cross-sectional study is part of the UP's multicenter cohort study on recovery from psychotic disorders, in which 265 participants are currently included. Attachment was assessed using the Psychosis Attachment Measure, including the anxious and avoidant attachment dimensions. Personal recovery was measured using the Recovering Quality of Life-10 (ReQOL-10) and the Individual Recovery Outcomes Counter (I.ROC). Regression analysis was used to investigate the effect of attachment on personal recovery. Results: We found negative effects of the anxious attachment style on the total scores of the ReQoL-10 (b = -4.54, SE = 0.69, β = β0.37) and the I.ROC (b = -5.21, SE = 0.89, β = -0.32). Although there were also negative effects of the avoidant attachment style on the total scores of the ReQoL-10 (b = -3.08, SE = 0.93, β = -0.18) and the I.ROC (b = -4.24, SE = 1.24, β = -0.19), these were less pronounced. Conclusion: Results show that both forms of insecure attachment (anxious and avoidant) are related to poorer personal recovery in clients with a psychotic disorder.</p

    Counting Complex Disordered States by Efficient Pattern Matching: Chromatic Polynomials and Potts Partition Functions

    Full text link
    Counting problems, determining the number of possible states of a large system under certain constraints, play an important role in many areas of science. They naturally arise for complex disordered systems in physics and chemistry, in mathematical graph theory, and in computer science. Counting problems, however, are among the hardest problems to access computationally. Here, we suggest a novel method to access a benchmark counting problem, finding chromatic polynomials of graphs. We develop a vertex-oriented symbolic pattern matching algorithm that exploits the equivalence between the chromatic polynomial and the zero-temperature partition function of the Potts antiferromagnet on the same graph. Implementing this bottom-up algorithm using appropriate computer algebra, the new method outperforms standard top-down methods by several orders of magnitude, already for moderately sized graphs. As a first application, we compute chromatic polynomials of samples of the simple cubic lattice, for the first time computationally accessing three-dimensional lattices of physical relevance. The method offers straightforward generalizations to several other counting problems.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure

    Rapid Mixing for Lattice Colorings with Fewer Colors

    Full text link
    We provide an optimally mixing Markov chain for 6-colorings of the square lattice on rectangular regions with free, fixed, or toroidal boundary conditions. This implies that the uniform distribution on the set of such colorings has strong spatial mixing, so that the 6-state Potts antiferromagnet has a finite correlation length and a unique Gibbs measure at zero temperature. Four and five are now the only remaining values of q for which it is not known whether there exists a rapidly mixing Markov chain for q-colorings of the square lattice.Comment: Appeared in Proc. LATIN 2004, to appear in JSTA

    Dementia incidence trend over 1992-2014 in the Netherlands: analysis of primary care data

    Get PDF
    Background:\textbf{Background:} Recent reports have suggested declining age-specific incidence rates of dementia in high-income countries over time. Improved education and cardiovascular health in early age have been suggested to bring about this effect. The aim of this study was to estimate the age- specific dementia-incidence trend in primary care records from a large population in the Netherlands. Methods and findings:\textbf{Methods and findings:} A dynamic cohort representative of the Dutch population was composed using primary care records from general practice registration networks (GPRN) across the country. Data regarding dementia incidence were obtained using general practitioner-recorded diagnosis of dementia within the electronic health records. Age-specific dementia incidence rates were calculated for all persons aged 60 years and over; negative binomial regression analysis was used to estimate the time trend. Nine out of eleven GPRNs provided data on more than 800,000 older people between 1992 and 2014, corresponding to over 4 million person- years and 23,186 incident dementia cases. The annual growth in dementia incidence rate was estimated to be 2.1% (95%CI 0.5 to 3.8%), and incidence rates were 1.08 (95%CI 1.04 to 1.13) times higher for women compared to men. There was no significant overall change since the start of a national dementia program in 2003. Despite their relatively low numbers of person years, the highest age groups contributed most to the increasing trend. Increased awareness of dementia by patients and doctors in more recent years may have influenced dementia diagnosis in GPs’ electronic health records, and needs to be taken into account when interpreting the data. Conclusions:\textbf{Conclusions:} Within the clinical records of a large, representative sample of the Dutch population, we found no evidence for a declining incidence trend of dementia in the Netherlands. This could indicate true stability in incidence rates, or a balance between increased detection and a true reduction. Irrespective of the exact rates and mechanisms underlying these findings, they illustrate that the burden of work for physicians and nurses in general practice associated with newly diagnosed dementia has not been subject to substantial change in the past two decades. Hence, with the ageing of Western societies, we still need to anticipate on a dramatic absolute increase of dementia occurrence over the years to come

    The Structure of Chromatic Polynomials of Planar Triangulation Graphs and Implications for Chromatic Zeros and Asymptotic Limiting Quantities

    Full text link
    We present an analysis of the structure and properties of chromatic polynomials P(Gpt,m⃗,q)P(G_{pt,\vec m},q) of one-parameter and multi-parameter families of planar triangulation graphs Gpt,m⃗G_{pt,\vec m}, where m⃗=(m1,...,mp){\vec m} = (m_1,...,m_p) is a vector of integer parameters. We use these to study the ratio of ∣P(Gpt,m⃗,τ+1)∣|P(G_{pt,\vec m},\tau+1)| to the Tutte upper bound (τ−1)n−5(\tau-1)^{n-5}, where τ=(1+5 )/2\tau=(1+\sqrt{5} \ )/2 and nn is the number of vertices in Gpt,m⃗G_{pt,\vec m}. In particular, we calculate limiting values of this ratio as n→∞n \to \infty for various families of planar triangulations. We also use our calculations to study zeros of these chromatic polynomials. We study a large class of families Gpt,m⃗G_{pt,\vec m} with p=1p=1 and p=2p=2 and show that these have a structure of the form P(Gpt,m,q)=cGpt,1λ1m+cGpt,2λ2m+cGpt,3λ3mP(G_{pt,m},q) = c_{_{G_{pt}},1}\lambda_1^m + c_{_{G_{pt}},2}\lambda_2^m + c_{_{G_{pt}},3}\lambda_3^m for p=1p=1, where λ1=q−2\lambda_1=q-2, λ2=q−3\lambda_2=q-3, and λ3=−1\lambda_3=-1, and P(Gpt,m⃗,q)=∑i1=13∑i2=13cGpt,i1i2λi1m1λi2m2P(G_{pt,\vec m},q) = \sum_{i_1=1}^3 \sum_{i_2=1}^3 c_{_{G_{pt}},i_1 i_2} \lambda_{i_1}^{m_1}\lambda_{i_2}^{m_2} for p=2p=2. We derive properties of the coefficients cGpt,i⃗c_{_{G_{pt}},\vec i} and show that P(Gpt,m⃗,q)P(G_{pt,\vec m},q) has a real chromatic zero that approaches (1/2)(3+5 )(1/2)(3+\sqrt{5} \ ) as one or more of the mi→∞m_i \to \infty. The generalization to p≥3p \ge 3 is given. Further, we present a one-parameter family of planar triangulations with real zeros that approach 3 from below as m→∞m \to \infty. Implications for the ground-state entropy of the Potts antiferromagnet are discussed.Comment: 57 pages, latex, 15 figure

    Opti-Owecs: Final Report Vol. 0: Executive Summary

    Get PDF
    It was the particular mission of the project 'Structural and Economic Optimisation of Bottom-Mounted Offshore Wind Energy Converters' (Opti-OWECS) to extend the state-of-the-art, to determine required methods and to demonstrate practical solutions which will significantly reduce the electricity cost. This will facilitate the exploitation of true offshore sites on a commercial base in a medium time scale of 5 to 10 years from now. In several fields, e.g. support structure design, installation of the offshore wind energy converters, operation and maintenance, dynamics of the entire offshore wind energy converter, structural reliability considerations, etc., the study demonstrated new propositions which will contribute significantly to a mature offshore wind energy technology. This was achieved due to a smooth cooperation of leading industrial engineers and researchers from the wind energy field, offshore technology and power management. Moreover, an innovative design methodology devoted particularly to offshore wind energy conversion systems (OWECS) was developed and successfully demonstrated. The so-called 'integrated OWECS design approach' considers the components of an offshore wind farm as parts of an entire system. Therefore interactions between sub-systems are considered in a complete and practical form as possible so that the design solution is governed by overall criteria such as: levelised production costs, adaptation to the actual site conditions, dynamics of the entire system, installation effort as well as OWECS availability. Furthermore, a novel OWECS cost model was developed which led among other work of the project to the identification of the main cost drivers, i.e. annual mean wind speed, distance from shore, operation and maintenance aspects including wind turbine reliability and availability. A link between these results and a database of the offshore wind energy potential in Europe, developed by the previous Joule project JOUR 0072, facilitated the first estimate of energy cost consistent over entire regions of Northern Europe. The European Commission has supported the project in the scope of the framework of the Non Nuclear Energy Programme JOULE Ill (Research and Technical Development) under grant JOR3-CT95-0087

    Long-term research challenges in wind energy – a research agenda by the European Academy of Wind Energy

    Get PDF
    The European Academy of Wind Energy (eawe), representing universities and institutes with a significant wind energy programme in 14 countries, has discussed the long-term research challenges in wind energy. In contrast to research agendas addressing short- to medium-term research activities, this eawe document takes a longer-term perspective, addressing the scientific knowledge base that is required to develop wind energy beyond the applications of today and tomorrow. In other words, this long-term research agenda is driven by problems and curiosity, addressing basic research and fundamental knowledge in 11 research areas, ranging from physics and design to environmental and societal aspects. Because of the very nature of this initiative, this document does not intend to be permanent or complete. It shows the vision of the experts of the eawe, but other views may be possible. We sincerely hope that it will spur an even more intensive discussion worldwide within the wind energy community
    • …
    corecore