4,045 research outputs found

    Defect-mediated turbulence in systems with local deterministic chaos

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    We show that defect-mediated turbulence can exist in media where the underlying local dynamics is deterministically chaotic. While many of the characteristics of defect-mediated turbulence, such as the exponential decay of correlations and a squared Poissonian distribution for the number of defects, are identical to those seen in oscillatory media, the fluctuations in the number of defects differ significantly. The power spectra suggest the existence of underlying correlations that lead to a different and non-universal scaling structure in chaotic media.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure

    Mechanisms of kinetic trapping in self-assembly and phase transformation

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    In self-assembly processes, kinetic trapping effects often hinder the formation of thermodynamically stable ordered states. In a model of viral capsid assembly and in the phase transformation of a lattice gas, we show how simulations in a self-assembling steady state can be used to identify two distinct mechanisms of kinetic trapping. We argue that one of these mechanisms can be adequately captured by kinetic rate equations, while the other involves a breakdown of theories that rely on cluster size as a reaction coordinate. We discuss how these observations might be useful in designing and optimising self-assembly reactions

    Reduction and reconstruction of stochastic differential equations via symmetries

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    An algorithmic method to exploit a general class of infinitesimal symmetries for reducing stochastic differential equations is presented and a natural definition of reconstruction, inspired by the classical reconstruction by quadratures, is proposed. As a side result the well-known solution formula for linear one-dimensional stochastic differential equations is obtained within this symmetry approach. The complete procedure is applied to several examples with both theoretical and applied relevance

    Life and Death at the Edge of a Windy Cliff

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    The survival probability of a particle diffusing in the two dimensional domain x>0x>0 near a ``windy cliff'' at x=0x=0 is investigated. The particle dies upon reaching the edge of the cliff. In addition to diffusion, the particle is influenced by a steady ``wind shear'' with velocity v⃗(x,y)=v sign(y) x^\vec v(x,y)=v\,{\rm sign}(y)\,\hat x, \ie, no average bias either toward or away from the cliff. For this semi-infinite system, the particle survival probability decays with time as t−1/4t^{-1/4}, compared to t−1/2t^{-1/2} in the absence of wind. Scaling descriptions are developed to elucidate this behavior, as well as the survival probability within a semi-infinite strip of finite width ∣y∣<w|y|<w with particle absorption at x=0x=0. The behavior in the strip geometry can be described in terms of Taylor diffusion, an approach which accounts for the crossover to the t−1/4t^{-1/4} decay when the width of the strip diverges. Supporting numerical simulations of our analytical results are presented.Comment: 13 pages, plain TeX, 5 figures available upon request to SR (submitted to J. Stat. Phys.

    The accuracy of interpreting key psychiatric terms by ad hoc interpreters at a South African psychiatric hospital

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    Objective: This study examined the competence and accuracy of ad hoc interpreters in interpreting key psychiatric terms at a South African psychiatric hospital.Method: Nine individuals were asked to translate key psychiatric terms from English to Xhosa. These translations were then back-translated by independent translators, who do not have knowledge of psychiatric terminology. These back-translations were then compared with the original English. Results: It was clear that not all the participants were fully competent in English. None had formal training in interpreting or psychiatric terminology. Not all of the participants were familiar with the psychiatric concepts that clinicians use and they often made mistakes while interpreting. Conclusion: The competency levels of interpreters are unsatisfactory to ensure the optimal delivery of mental health care. It is clear that there is a need for trained interpreters in South Africa, as the continuous use of untrained interpreters compromises the effectiveness of mental health care and could lead to adverse health outcomes.Keywords: Translation; Cultural Diversity; South Africa; Health Care Quality; Access and EvaluationAfrican Journal of Psychiatry • November 2013, 16(6
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