1,436 research outputs found
New Record of \u3ci\u3eVanessa Virginiensis\u3c/i\u3e (Drury) (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae) as a Host of \u3ci\u3eThyrateles Procax\u3c/i\u3e (Cresson) (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae)
On 4 August, 2005 a male Thyrateles procax (Cresson) (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae) emerged from a pupa of Vanessa virginiensis (Drury) (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae) which was contained within a screened cage in Cook County, MN. This is the first published record of Vanessa virginiensis as a host of Thyrateles procax. Adults of T. procax appear to be rare, as only two old records (both males) are known from Minnesota (University of Minnesota, Insect Collection
On convergence of higher order schemes for the projective integration method for stiff ordinary differential equations
We present a convergence proof for higher order implementations of the
projective integration method (PI) for a class of deterministic multi-scale
systems in which fast variables quickly settle on a slow manifold. The error is
shown to contain contributions associated with the length of the microsolver,
the numerical accuracy of the macrosolver and the distance from the slow
manifold caused by the combined effect of micro- and macrosolvers,
respectively. We also provide stability conditions for the PI methods under
which the fast variables will not diverge from the slow manifold. We
corroborate our results by numerical simulations.Comment: 43 pages, 7 figures; accepted for publication in the Journal of
Computational and Applied Mathematic
Unfit for Service: The Implications of Rising Obesity for U.S. Military Recruitment
This paper contributes to the literature on the labor market consequences of unhealthy behaviors and poor health by examining a previously underappreciated consequence of the rise in obesity in the United States: challenges for military recruitment. Specifically, this paper estimates the percent of the U.S. military-age population that meets, and does not meet, current active duty enlistment standards for weight-for-height and percent body fat for the U.S. Army, using data from the series of National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys that spans 1959-2008. We calculate that the percentage of military-age adults ineligible for enlistment because they are overweight and overfat doubled for men and tripled for women during that time. We document disparities across race, education, and age in meeting the standards, and finds that a further rise of just 1% in weight and body fat would further reduce eligibility for military service by over 600,000 men and 1 million women of military age. The paper concludes with a discussion of the implications for military recruitment and military policy.military, obesity, labor
The effect of low volume sprint interval training in patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease
Objectives: Exercise is an important part of disease management in patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), but adherence to current exercise recommendations is poor. Novel low-volume sprint interval training (SIT) protocols with total training time commitments of ≤30 min per week have been shown to improve cardiometabolic risk and functional capacity in healthy sedentary participants, but the efficacy of such protocols in the management of NAFLD remains unknown. The aim of the present study was to examine whether a low-volume SIT protocol can be used to improve liver function, insulin resistance, body composition, physical fitness, cognitive function and general well-being in patients with NAFLD.Methods: In the present study, 7 men and 2 women with NAFLD (age: 45±8 y, BMI: 28.7±4.1 kg·m−2) completed a 6-week control period followed by 6 weeks of twice-weekly SIT sessions (5-10×6-s ‘all-out’ cycle sprints). Body composition, blood pressure, liver function, metabolic function, functional capacity, cognitive function and quality of life were assessed at baseline, following the control period, and following the SIT intervention.Results: Walking speed during the walk test (+12%), estimated V̇O2max (+8%), verbal fluency (+44%), and blood platelet count (+12%; all p<0.05) significantly increased during the control period. These measures remained significantly raised compared to baseline following the SIT intervention, but did not significantly change any further compared to the post-control time-point. Diastolic blood pressure decreased from 87±10 to 77±8 mm Hg from the end of the control period to the end of the SIT intervention (p<0.05).Conclusion: This study does not support the use of 6 weeks of a low volume SIT protocol involving twice-weekly sessions with 5-10×6-s ‘all-out’ cycle sprints as an intervention for NAFLD disease management
The Terwilliger algebra of an almost-bipartite P- and Q-polynomial association scheme
Let denote a -class symmetric association scheme with , and
suppose is almost-bipartite P- and Q-polynomial. Let denote a vertex of
and let denote the corresponding Terwilliger algebra. We prove
that any irreducible -module is both thin and dual thin in the sense of
Terwilliger. We produce two bases for and describe the action of on
these bases. We prove that the isomorphism class of as a -module is
determined by two parameters, the dual endpoint and diameter of . We find a
recurrence which gives the multiplicities with which the irreducible
-modules occur in the standard module. We compute this multiplicity for
those irreducible -modules which have diameter at least .Comment: 22 page
Synergistic efficacy of 405 nm light and chlorinated disinfectants for the enhanced decontamination of Clostridium difficile spores
The ability of Clostridium difficile to form highly resilient spores which can survive in the environment for prolonged periods causes major contamination problems. Antimicrobial 405 nm light is being developed for environmental decontamination within hospitals, however further information relating to its sporicidal efficacy is required. This study aims to establish the efficacy of 405 nm light for inactivation of C. difficile vegetative cells and spores, and to establish whether spore susceptibility can be enhanced by the combined use of 405 nm light with low concentration chlorinated disinfectants. Vegetative cells and spore suspensions were exposed to increasing doses of 405 nm light (at 70–225 mW/cm2) to establish sensitivity. A 99.9% reduction in vegetative cell population was demonstrated with a dose of 252 J/cm2, however spores demonstrated higher resilience, with a 10-fold increase in required dose. Exposures were repeated with spores suspended in the hospital disinfectants sodium hypochlorite, Actichlor and Tristel at non-lethal concentrations (0.1%, 0.001% and 0.0001%, respectively). Enhanced sporicidal activity was achieved when spores were exposed to 405 nm light in the presence of the disinfectants, with a 99.9% reduction achieved following exposure to 33% less light dose than required when exposed to 405 nm light alone. In conclusion, C. difficile vegetative cells and spores can be successfully inactivated using 405 nm light, the sporicidal efficacy can be significantly enhanced when exposed in the presence of low concentration chlorinated disinfectants. Further research may lead to the potential use of 405 nm light decontamination in combination with selected hospital disinfectants to enhance C. difficile cleaning and infection control procedures
School-to-university transition as a change of environmental press
No abstract availabl
Some aspects of local immunity and pathogenesis in rodents infected with Nippostrongylus brasiliensis or Trichostrongylus colubriformis
Summary available: p. i-v
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