448 research outputs found

    Restrictions in Spatial Competition: The Effects on Firms and Consumers

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    Despite the rich stream of research that evolved from Hotelling’s spatial competition model, the fact that firms’ strategies are constrained by their technological capabilities, the legal environment, or overriding corporate strategies is commonly neglected. We study a model of Hotelling–Downs competition in which two firms choose a position along a one-dimensional market given that their feasible positions are restricted to an interval. Strategy restrictions turn out to substantially affect firms’ behavior and consumers’ surplus. In contrast to existing results on spatial competition, we find that in equilibrium firms may minimally differentiate away from the center of the market or even locate completely independently of consumers’ preferences. Assessing social welfare by total transportation costs, we observe that restrictions may both enhance and reduce welfare, depending on whether the feasible positions overlap. This document contains some supplemental material. We introduce and discuss a particular model to substantiate the assertion made in the note that the novel cases can also emerge when restrictions are endogenously, not exogenously, determined. In the note we refer to this material in Section 4 in footnote 11

    Texas Business Review

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    Newsletter of the University of Texas Bureau of Business Research outlining statistics and research related to business in Texas

    Reproducible resistive switching in nonvolatile organic memories

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    Resistive switching in nonvolatile, two terminal organic memories can be due to the presence of a native oxide layer at an aluminum electrode. Reproducible solid state memories can be realized by deliberately adding a thin sputtered Al2O3 layer to nominal electron-only, hole-only, and bipolar organic diodes. Before memory operation, the devices have to be formed at an electric field of 10(9) V/m, corresponding to soft breakdown of Al2O3. After forming, the structures show pronounced negative differential resistance and the local maximum in the current scales with the thickness of the oxide layer. The polymer acts as a current limiting series resistance

    First experience with single-source, dual-energy CCTA for monochromatic stent imaging

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    Aims Single-source, dual-energy coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) with monochromatic image reconstruction allows significant noise reduction. The aim of the study was to evaluate the impact of monochromatic CCTA image reconstruction on coronary stent imaging, as the latter is known to be affected by artefacts from highly attenuating strut material resulting in artificial luminal narrowing. Methods and results Twenty-one patients with 62 stents underwent invasive coronary angiography and single-source, dual-energy CCTA after stent implantation. Standard polychromatic images as well as eight monochromatic series (50, 60, 70, 80, 90, 100, 120, and 140 keV) were reconstructed for each CCTA. Signal and noise were measured within the stent lumen and in the aortic root. Mean in-stent luminal diameter was assessed in all CCTA reconstructions and compared with quantitative invasive coronary angiography (QCA). Luminal attenuation was higher in the stent than in the aortic root throughout all monochromatic reconstructions (P < 0.001). An increase in monochromatic energy was associated with a decrease in luminal attenuation values (P < 0.001). The mean in-stent luminal diameter underestimation by monochromatic CCTA compared with QCA was 90% at low monochromatic energy (50 keV) and improved to 37% at high monochromatic (140 keV) reconstruction while stent diameter was underestimated by 39% with standard CCTA. Conclusion Monochromatic CCTA can be used reliably in patients with coronary stents. However, reconstructions with energies below 80 keV are not recommended as the blooming artefacts are most pronounced at such low energies, resulting in up to 90% stent diameter underestimatio

    Coronary computed tomography angiography with model-based iterative reconstruction using a radiation exposure similar to chest X-ray examination

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    Aims To evaluate the feasibility and image quality of coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) acquisition with a submillisievert fraction of effective radiation dose using model-based iterative reconstruction (MBIR) for noise reduction. Methods and results In 42 patients undergoing standard low-dose (100-120 kV; 450-700 mA) and additional ultra-low-dose CCTA (80-100 kV; 150-210 mA) reconstructed with MBIR, segmental image quality was graded on a four-point scale [(i): non-evaluative, (ii): good, (iii): adequate, and (iv): excellent]. Signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) was calculated dividing left main artery (LMA) and right coronary artery (RCA) attenuation by the aortic root noise. Over a wide range of body mass index (18-40 kg/m2), the estimated median radiation dose exposure was 1.19 mSv [interquartile range (IQR): 1.07-1.30 mSv] for standard and 0.21 mSv (IQR: 0.18-0.23 mSv) for ultra-low-dose CCTA (P < 0.001). The median image quality score per segment was 3.5 (IQR: 3.0-4.0) in standard CCTA vs. 3.5 (IQR: 2.5-4.0) in ultra-low dose with MBIR (P = 0.29). Diagnostic image quality (scores 2-4) was found in 98.7 vs. 97.8% coronary segments (P = 0.36). Introduction of MBIR for ultra-low-dose CCTA resulted in a significant increase in SNR (P < 0.001) for LMA (from 15 ± 5 to 29 ± 7) and RCA (from 14 ± 4 to 27 ± 6) despite 82% dose reduction. Conclusion Coronary computed tomography angiography acquisition with diagnostic image quality is feasible at an ultra-lowradiation dose of 0.21 mSv, e.g. in the range reported for a postero-anterior and lateral chest X-ra

    Guidelines and protocols for cardiovascular magnetic resonance in children and adults with congenital heart disease: SCMR expert consensus group on congenital heart disease

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    Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) has taken on an increasingly important role in the diagnostic evaluation and pre-procedural planning for patients with congenital heart disease. This article provides guidelines for the performance of CMR in children and adults with congenital heart disease. The first portion addresses preparation for the examination and safety issues, the second describes the primary techniques used in an examination, and the third provides disease-specific protocols. Variations in practice are highlighted and expert consensus recommendations are provided. Indications and appropriate use criteria for CMR examination are not specifically addressed

    Premotor Gray Matter Volume is Associated with Clinical Findings in Idiopathic and Genetically Determined Parkinson’s Disease

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    In the present voxel-based morphometric study, we investigated whether the severity and duration of disease are associated with alterations in gray matter volume (GMV) in symptomatic Parkin mutation carriers (sPARKIN-MC) and patients with idiopathic Parkinson’s disease (iPD). Regression analyses revealed different negative correlations between GMV in cortical motor areas and the severity as well as the disease duration in sPARKIN-MC and iPD patients. SPARKIN-MC showed a less involvement of cortical motor areas, in particular in the supplementary motor area (SMA) than iPD patients. Specifically, in iPD patients, but not in sPARKIN-MC, there was a negative correlation between the SMA degeneration and the UPDRS-II item freezing. The different degeneration patterns may mirror diverse kinetics of the disease progress in these two groups of PD patients with different underlying etiologies

    Impact of cardiac hybrid single-photon emission computed tomography/computed tomography imaging on choice of treatment strategy in coronary artery disease

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    Aims Cardiac hybrid imaging by fusing single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) myocardial perfusion imaging with coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) provides important complementary diagnostic information for coronary artery disease (CAD) assessment. We aimed at assessing the impact of cardiac hybrid imaging on the choice of treatment strategy selection for CAD. Methods and results Three hundred and eighteen consecutive patients underwent a 1 day stress/rest 99mTc-tetrofosmin SPECT and a CCTA on a separate scanner for evaluation of CAD. Patients were divided into one of the following three groups according to findings in the hybrid images obtained by fusing SPECT and CCTA: (i) matched finding of stenosis by CCTA and corresponding reversible SPECT defect; (ii) unmatched CCTA and SPECT finding; (iii) normal finding by both CCTA and SPECT. Follow-up was confined to the first 60 days after hybrid imaging as this allows best to assess treatment strategy decisions including the revascularization procedure triggered by its findings. Hybrid images revealed matched, unmatched, and normal findings in 51, 74, and 193 patients. The revascularization rate within 60 days was 41, 11, and 0% for matched, unmatched, and normal findings, respectively (P< 0.001 for all inter-group comparisons). Conclusion Cardiac hybrid imaging with SPECT and CCTA provides an added clinical value for decision making with regard to treatment strategy for CA
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