453 research outputs found

    Consequences and Peer Influence as Proximal and Contextual Factors in Alcohol Consumption

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    The present study examines the role of positive and negative consequences and peer influence as proximal and contextual variables that influence drinking in college students. Data from a sample of 1482 students who completed the CORE survey in 2006 and 2007 were utilized to test three models predicting the likelihood of alcohol use in the 30 days prior to survey completion. The final model reflected the best fit of the data and indicated that both positive and negative consequences were positively associated with a greater likelihood of drinking while freshman standing and being a racial and ethnic minority were negatively associated. Two variables assessing the influence of peer pressure were also significant in the final model, suggesting that peer pressure continues to play a role in drinking behavior, even when controlling for the role of consequences. The implications of the findings for interventions are discussed

    Photoexcitation and ionization in molecular oxygen: Theoretical studies of electronic transitions in the discrete and continuous spectral intervals

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    Theoretical studies of valence-electron (1Ļ€g, 1Ļ€u, 3Ļƒg) photoexcitation and ionization cross sections in molecular oxygen are reported employing separated-channel static-exchange calculations and the Stieltjesā€“Tchebycheff moment-theory technique. As in previously reported investigations of photoexcitation and ionization in small molecules following this approach, canonical Hartreeā€“Fock orbitals, large Gaussian basis sets, and many-electron eigenstates of correct symmetry are used in defining appropriate noncentral static-exchange potentials and in computations of the appropriate discrete and continuum transition strengths. It is particularly important in molecular oxygen to incorporate the appropriate ionic parentages of the various photoionization multiplet states in order to obtain the correct partial-channel cross sections. The calculated discrete series associated with 1Ļ€g excitation are found to be in good agreement with available experimental assignments and previously reported theoretical studies, and the predicted states associated with 1Ļ€u and 3Ļƒg excitations are in general accord with assignments for the higher series based on spectral and quantum-defect analysis. Although the observed photoelectron spectra and photoionization cross sections are relatively complex, the calculated total vertical electronic photoabsorption cross section and the partial-channel photoionization cross sections for production of X 2Ļ€g, a 4Ļ€u, A 2Ļ€u, 2 2Ļ€u, 3 3IIu, b 4āˆ‘g-, and B 2āˆ‘g-, ionic states are found to be in good accord with recent synchrotron radiation, line-source, electron-impact, and (e,2e) dipole oscillator-strength measurements when proper account is taken of the parentages of the various multiplet states. The partial-channel cross sections exhibit resonancelike structures that can be attributed to contributions from diabatic valencelike virtual states that appear in the appropriate photoionization continua, rather that in the corresponding discrete spectral intervals. These features in the dipole spectrum of molecular oxygen are discussed and are contrasted and compared with the results of previously reported related studies in molecular nitrogen and carbon monoxide

    Synergistic Effect of Physical Therapy Plus Pharmacological Therapy with Eperisone in Tension-Type Cervicalgia

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    Background. This study assessed the effect of eperisone + physical therapy compared with physical therapy alone on the alleviation of pain and disability experienced by patients with tension-type cervicalgia. Methods. Patients with tension-type cervicalgia were randomized to eperisone + physical therapy (Group A) or physical therapy alone (Group B). Patients were assessed at baseline (T0), after 4-weeksā€™ treatment (T1), and at 2 monthsā€™ follow-up (T2). Outcome measures included the Numerical Rating Scale, the Italian version of the Neck Pain and Disability Scale, the Short Form-McGill Pain Questionnaire, and the Italian version of the Neck Disability Index. Results. Ninety-eight patients (50 patients in Group A and 48 patients in Group B) completed the study. Pain and disability scores for all outcome measures were significantly lower at both T1 and T2 for patients in Group A compared with Group B (all p<0.001). A small, improvement between T1 and T2 was observed in Group A patients but not in Group B patients, and significantly more Group B than Group A patients were worse at 2 monthsā€™ follow-up (all p<0.001). Conclusions. Eperisone in synergy with physical therapy can be a valuable tool in the therapeutic management of patients suffering from tension-type cervicalgia

    Wetting layer thickness and early evolution of epitaxially strained thin films

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    We propose a physical model which explains the existence of finite thickness wetting layers in epitaxially strained films. The finite wetting layer is shown to be stable due to the variation of the non-linear elastic free energy with film thickness. We show that anisotropic surface tension gives rise to a metastable enlarged wetting layer. The perturbation amplitude needed to destabilize this wetting layer decreases with increasing lattice mismatch. We observe the development of faceted islands in unstable films.Comment: 4 pages, 3 eps figure

    Early Neuromuscular Blockade in Moderate-to-Severe Pediatric Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome

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    Objectives: The use of neuromuscular blocking agents (NMBAs) in pediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome (PARDS) is common but unsupported by efficacy data. We sought to compare the outcomes between patients with moderate-to-severe PARDS receiving continuous NMBA during the first 48 hours of endotracheal intubation (early NMBA) and those without. Design: Secondary analysis of data from the Randomized Evaluation of Sedation Titration for Respiratory Failure (RESTORE) clinical trial, a pediatric multicenter cluster randomized trial of sedation. Setting: Thirty-one PICUs in the United States. Patients: Children 2 weeks to 17 years receiving invasive mechanical ventilation (MV) for moderate-to-severe PARDS (i.e., oxygenation index >= 8 and bilateral infiltrates on chest radiograph on days 0-1 of endotracheal intubation). Interventions: NMBA for the entire duration of days 1 and 2 after intubation. Measurements and Main Results: Among 1,182 RESTORE patients with moderate-to-severe PARDS, 196 (17%) received early NMBA for a median of 50.0% ventilator days (interquartile range, 33.3-60.7%). The propensity score model predicting the probability of receiving early NMBA included high-frequency oscillatory ventilation on days 0-2 (odds ratio [OR], 7.61; 95% CI, 4.75-12.21) and severe PARDS on days 0-1 (OR, 2.16; 95% CI, 1.50-3.12). After adjusting for risk category, early use of NMBA was associated with a longer duration of MV (hazard ratio, 0.57; 95% CI, 0.48-0.68; p < 0.0001), but not with mortality (OR, 1.62; 95% CI, 0.92-2.85; p = 0.096) compared with no early use of NMBA. Other outcomes including cognitive, functional, and physical impairment at 6 months post-PICU discharge were similar. Outcomes did not differ when comparing high versus low NMBA usage sites or when patients were stratified by baseline PaO2/FIO2 less than 150. Conclusions: Early NMBA use was associated with a longer duration of MV. This propensity score analysis underscores the need for a randomized controlled trial in pediatrics

    Stability of Solid State Reaction Fronts

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    We analyze the stability of a planar solid-solid interface at which a chemical reaction occurs. Examples include oxidation, nitridation, or silicide formation. Using a continuum model, including a general formula for the stress-dependence of the reaction rate, we show that stress effects can render a planar interface dynamically unstable with respect to perturbations of intermediate wavelength

    Robot rights? Towards a social-relational justification of moral consideration \ud

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    Should we grant rights to artificially intelligent robots? Most current and near-future robots do not meet the hard criteria set by deontological and utilitarian theory. Virtue ethics can avoid this problem with its indirect approach. However, both direct and indirect arguments for moral consideration rest on ontological features of entities, an approach which incurs several problems. In response to these difficulties, this paper taps into a different conceptual resource in order to be able to grant some degree of moral consideration to some intelligent social robots: it sketches a novel argument for moral consideration based on social relations. It is shown that to further develop this argument we need to revise our existing ontological and social-political frameworks. It is suggested that we need a social ecology, which may be developed by engaging with Western ecology and Eastern worldviews. Although this relational turn raises many difficult issues and requires more work, this paper provides a rough outline of an alternative approach to moral consideration that can assist us in shaping our relations to intelligent robots and, by extension, to all artificial and biological entities that appear to us as more than instruments for our human purpose

    Modeling Elasticity in Crystal Growth

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    A new model of crystal growth is presented that describes the phenomena on atomic length and diffusive time scales. The former incorporates elastic and plastic deformation in a natural manner, and the latter enables access to times scales much larger than conventional atomic methods. The model is shown to be consistent with the predictions of Read and Shockley for grain boundary energy, and Matthews and Blakeslee for misfit dislocations in epitaxial growth.Comment: 4 pages, 10 figure
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