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Emissions from village cookstoves in Haryana, India, and their potential impacts on air quality
Air quality in rural India is impacted by residential cooking and heating with biomass fuels. In this study, emissions of CO, CO2, and 76 volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and fine particulate matter (PM2.5) were quantified to better understand the relationship between cook fire emissions and ambient ozone and secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formation. Cooking was carried out by a local cook, and traditional dishes were prepared on locally built chulha or angithi cookstoves using brushwood or dung fuels. Cook fire emissions were collected throughout the cooking event in a Kynar bag (VOCs) and on polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) filters (PM2.5). Gas samples were transferred from a Kynar bag to previously evacuated stainless-steel canisters and analyzed using gas chromatography coupled to flame ionization, electron capture, and mass spectrometry detectors. VOC emission factors were calculated from the measured mixing ratios using the carbon-balance method, which assumes that all carbon in the fuel is converted to CO2, CO, VOCs, and PM2.5 when the fuel is burned. Filter samples were weighed to calculate PM2.5 emission factors. Dung fuels and angithi cookstoves resulted in significantly higher emissions of most VOCs (p < 0.05). Utilizing dung-angithi cook fires resulted in twice as much of the measured VOCs compared to dung-chulha and 4 times as much as brushwood-chulha, with 84.0, 43.2, and 17.2g measured VOCkgg fuel carbon, respectively. This matches expectations, as the use of dung fuels and angithi cookstoves results in lower modified combustion efficiencies compared to brushwood fuels and chulha cookstoves. Alkynes and benzene were exceptions and had significantly higher emissions when cooking using a chulha as opposed to an angithi with dung fuel (for example, benzene emission factors were 3.18gkgg fuel carbon for dung-chulha and 2.38gkgg fuel carbon for dung-angithi). This study estimated that 3 times as much SOA and ozone in the maximum incremental reactivity (MIR) regime may be produced from dung-chulha as opposed to brushwood-chulha cook fires. Aromatic compounds dominated as SOA precursors from all types of cook fires, but benzene was responsible for the majority of SOA formation potential from all chulha cook fire VOCs, while substituted aromatics were more important for dung-angithi. Future studies should investigate benzene exposures from different stove and fuel combinations and model SOA formation from cook fire VOCs to verify public health and air quality impacts from cook fires
Neurocomputational mechanisms underlying emotional awareness: Insights afforded by deep active inference and their potential clinical relevance
Emotional awareness (EA) is recognized as clinically relevant to the vulnerability to, and maintenance of, psychiatric disorders. However, the neurocomputational processes that underwrite individual variations remain unclear. In this paper, we describe a deep (active) inference model that reproduces the cognitive-emotional processes and self-report behaviors associated with EA. We then present simulations to illustrate (seven) distinct mechanisms that (either alone or in combination) can produce phenomena â such as somatic misattribution, coarse-grained emotion conceptualization, and constrained reflective capacity â characteristic of low EA. Our simulations suggest that the clinical phenotype of impoverished EA can be reproduced by dissociable computational processes. The possibility that different processes are at work in different individuals suggests that they may benefit from distinct clinical interventions. As active inference makes particular predictions about the underlying neurobiology of such aberrant inference, we also discuss how this type of modelling could be used to design neuroimaging tasks to test predictions and identify which processes operate in different individuals â and provide a principled basis for personalized precision medicine
Investigation of Non-Stable Processes in Close Binary Ry Scuti
We present results of reanalysis of old electrophotometric data of early type
close binary system RY Scuti obtained at the Abastumani Astrophysical
Observatory, Georgia, during 1972-1990 years and at the Maidanak Observatory,
Uzbekistan, during 1979-1991 years. It is revealed non-stable processes in RY
Sct from period to period, from month to month and from year to year. This
variation consists from the hundredths up to the tenths of a magnitude.
Furthermore, periodical changes in the system's light are displayed near the
first maximum on timescales of a few years. That is of great interest with
regard to some similar variations seen in luminous blue variable (LBV) stars.
This also could be closely related to the question of why RY Sct ejected its
nebula.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, 2 table
Hydroxyurea Therapy in UK Children with Sickle Cell Anaemia â A Single Centre Experience
Despite the demonstrated efficacy of hydroxyurea therapy, children with sickle cell anaemia in the United Kingdom (UK) are preferentially managed with supportive care or transfusion. Hydroxyurea is reserved for children with severe disease phenotype. This is in contrast to North America and other countries where hydroxyurea is widely used for children of all clinical phenotypes. The conservative UK practice may in part be due to concerns about toxicity, in particular marrow suppression with high doses, and growth in children. We monitored 37 paediatric patients with sickle cell anaemia who were treated with hydroxyurea at a single UK treatment centre. Therapy was well tolerated and mild transient cytopenias were the only toxicity observed. Comparative analysis of patients receiving â„26mg/kg/day versus <26 mg/kg/day demonstrates increasing dose has a significant positive effect on foetal haemoglobin (29.2% v 20.4%, p=0.0151), mean cell volume (94.4 v 86.5, p=0.0183) and reticulocyte count (99.66 x109/L v 164.3x109/L, p=0.0059). Marrow suppression was not a clinical problem with high dose treatment, haemoglobin 92.25 g/L v 91.81 g/L (ns), neutrophil count 3.3 x109/L v 4.8 x109/L (ns) and platelet count 232.4 x109/L v 302.2 x109/L (ns). Normal growth rates were maintained in all children. Good adherence to therapy was a significant factor in reducing hospitalisations This study demonstrates the effectiveness and safety in practice of high dose hydroxyurea as a disease modifying therapy which we advocate for all children with sickle cell anaemia
Health system performance assessment in small countries: The case study of Latvia
Managing the complexity that characterizes health systems requires sophisticated performance assessment information to support the decisionâmaking processes of healthcare stakeholders at various levels. Accordingly, in the past few decades, many countries have designed and implemented health system performance assessment (HSPA) programmes. Literature and practice agree on the key features that performance measurement in health should have, namely, multidimensionality, evidenceâbased data collection, systematic benchmarking of results, shared design, transparent disclosure, and timeliness.
Nevertheless, the specific characteristics of different countries may pose challenges in the implementation of such programmes. In the case of small countries, many of these challenges are common and related to their inherent characteristics, eg, small populations, small volumes of activity for certain treatments, and lack of benchmarks.
Through the development of the case study of Latvia, this paper aims at discussing the challenges and opportunities for assessing health system performance in a small country.
As a result, for each of the performance measurement features identified by the literature, the authors discuss the issues emerging when adopting them in Latvia and set out the potential solutions that have been designed during the development of the case study
Colony size predicts division of labour in Attine ants
Division of labour is central to the ecological success of eusocial insects, yet the evolutionary factors driving increases in complexity in division of labour are little known. The sizeâcomplexity hypothesis proposes that, as larger colonies evolve, both non-reproductive and reproductive division of labour become more complex as workers and queens act to maximize inclusive fitness. Using a statistically robust phylogenetic comparative analysis of social and environmental traits of species within the ant tribe Attini, we show that colony size is positively related to both non-reproductive (worker size variation) and reproductive (queenâworker dimorphism) division of labour. The results also suggested that colony size acts on non-reproductive and reproductive division of labour in different ways. Environmental factors, including measures of variation in temperature and precipitation, had no significant effects on any division of labour measure or colony size. Overall, these results support the sizeâcomplexity hypothesis for the evolution of social complexity and division of labour in eusocial insects. Determining the evolutionary drivers of colony size may help contribute to our understanding of the evolution of social complexity
Are sweet snacks more sensitive to price increases than sugar-sweetened beverages: analysis of British food purchase data
This is the final published version. Available from BMJ Publishing Group via the DOI in this record.The data for this study were purchased from Kantar Worldpanel but its use is restricted to the persons named in the purchase contract which forbids the users to share the data with other potential (unnamed on the contract) users. Data access requests should be directed to Kantar Worldpanel.Objectives Taxing sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs)
is now advocated, and implemented, in many countries
as a measure to reduce the purchase and consumption
of sugar to tackle obesity. To date, there has been little
consideration of the potential impact that such a measure
could have if extended to other sweet foods, such as
confectionery, cakes and biscuits that contribute more
sugar to the diet than SSBs. The objective of this study is
to compare changes in the demand for sweet snacks and
SSBs arising from potential price increases.
Setting Secondary data on household itemised purchases
of all foods and beverages from 2012 to 2013.
Participants Representative sample of 32249 households in
Great Britain.
Primary and secondary outcome measures Change in
food and beverage purchases due to changes in their own
price and the price of other foods or beverages measured
as price elasticity of demand for the full sample and by
income groups.
Results Chocolate and confectionery, cakes and biscuits
have similar price sensitivity as SSBs, across all income
groups. Unlike the case of SSBs, price increases in these
categories are also likely to prompt reductions in the purchase
of other sweet snacks and SSBs, which magnify the overall
impact. The effects of price increases are greatest in the lowincome group.
Conclusions Policies that lead to increases in the price of
chocolate and confectionery, cakes and biscuits may lead to
additional and greater health gains than similar increases in
the price of SSBs through direct reductions in the purchases
of these foods and possible positive multiplier effects that
reduce demand for other products. Although some uncertainty
remains, the associations found in this analysis are sufficiently
robust to suggest that policiesâand researchâconcerning
the use of fiscal measures should consider a broader range of
products than is currently the case.Department of Health in England Policy Research Programme (Policy Research Unit in Behaviour and HealthMedical Research Council (MRC
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