1,058 research outputs found
Exploring Nursing Students\u27 Perceptions of Electronic Fetal Monitoring App
Within the healthcare realm, innovative technology has become an integral part of teaching in today’s nursing education, specifically computer-generated teaching applications. A new application that combines both nursing simulation and teaching methods regarding electronic fetal monitoring and fetal heart rhythms was developed at the University of Tennessee in fall 2014.This application was created in collaboration with both the College of Engineering and the College of Nursing. The Electronic Fetal Monitoring App displays instructor-created fetal heart rate (FHR) and maternal contraction patterns to simulate a monitor enabling live- feed interpretation in the classroom or simulation setting. It also has the potential to be saved and recreated for further simulated learning experiences. With current nursing education using processes such as application involvement and simulation in the clinical environment, the evolvement and merger of simulation and technology applications has the potential to exponentially benefit patient outcomes. Therefore, with the creation of a novel simulation application incorporated into the classroom setting, the purpose of this qualitative descriptive study is to explore nursing students’ learning experiences, attitudes, perceptions, and opinions regarding a fluid, dynamic, instructor-manipulated EFM application
Efficient Quantum Circuits for Schur and Clebsch-Gordan Transforms
The Schur basis on n d-dimensional quantum systems is a generalization of the
total angular momentum basis that is useful for exploiting symmetry under
permutations or collective unitary rotations. We present efficient (size
poly(n,d,log(1/\epsilon)) for accuracy \epsilon) quantum circuits for the Schur
transform, which is the change of basis between the computational and the Schur
bases. These circuits are based on efficient circuits for the Clebsch-Gordan
transformation. We also present an efficient circuit for a limited version of
the Schur transform in which one needs only to project onto different Schur
subspaces. This second circuit is based on a generalization of phase estimation
to any nonabelian finite group for which there exists a fast quantum Fourier
transform.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
The effects of bell vibrations on the sound of the modern trumpet
The acoustic spectrum of a modern trumpet with the bell section heavily damped has been compared to the spectrum of the same instrument with the bell section left free to vibrate. Measurements of the amplitude of vibration indicate that the damping significantly reduces the movement of the metal, and a corresponding change in the acoustic spectrum between the two cases is found. It is shown that the relative power in the fundamental may change by more than 3 dB when the vibrations in the bell section are damped. Two possible causes for the effects are considered: a change in input impedance, and the transfer of mechanical vibrations through the instrument to the lips. Results of modelling and experiments are presented that indicate the latter is the more plausible explanation; however, the etiology of the effect is still unknown
Design of General Purpose Minimal-Auxiliary Ising Machines
Ising machines are a form of quantum-inspired processing-in-memory computer
which has shown great promise for overcoming the limitations of traditional
computing paradigms while operating at a fraction of the energy use. The
process of designing Ising machines is known as the reverse Ising problem.
Unfortunately, this problem is in general computationally intractable: it is a
nonconvex mixed-integer linear programming problem which cannot be naively
brute-forced except in the simplest cases due to exponential scaling of runtime
with number of spins. We prove new theoretical results which allow us to reduce
the search space to one with quadratic scaling. We utilize this theory to
develop general purpose algorithmic solutions to the reverse Ising problem. In
particular, we demonstrate Ising formulations of 3-bit and 4-bit integer
multiplication which use fewer total spins than previously known methods by a
factor of more than three. Our results increase the practicality of
implementing such circuits on modern Ising hardware, where spins are at a
premium.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, submitted to IEEE International Conference on
Rebooting Computing 202
Factores Asociados a la Delincuencia Juvenil en el Barrio Buenos Aires del Municipio de Waspam
El estudio se realizó con el propósito de analizar los comportamientos de la delincuencia juvenil de los jóvenes entre las edades de 18 a 20 años en el barrio Buenos Aires del municipio de Waspam Rio Coco durante el primer semestre del año 2018
Refining the Moose Serum Progesterone Threshold to Diagnose Pregnancy
Pregnancy determination is necessary for sound wildlife management and understanding population dynamics. Pregnancy rates are sensitive to environmental and physiological factors and may indicate the overall trajectory of a population. Pregnancy can be assessed through direct methods (rectal palpation, sonography) or indicated using hormonal assays (serum progesterone or pregnancy-specific protein B, fecal progestogen metabolites). A commonly used threshold of 2 ng/ml of progesterone in serum has been used by moose biologists to indicate pregnancy but has not been rigorously investigated. To refine this threshold, we examined the relationship between progesterone concentrations in serum samples and pregnancy in 87 moose (Alces alces; 64 female, 23 male) captured from 2010 to 2020 in the Grand Portage Indian Reservation in northeastern Minnesota, USA. Pregnancy was confirmed via rectal palpation (n = 25), necropsy (n = 2), calf observation (n = 25) or characteristic pre-calving behavior (n = 6), with a total of 58 females determined pregnant and 6 not pregnant; 23 males were included to increase the non-pregnant sample size. Using receiver operating characteristic analysis, we identified an optimal threshold of 1.115 ng/ml with a specificity of 0.97 (95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.90–1.00) and a sensitivity of 0.98 (95% CI = 0.95–1.00). Progesterone concentrations were significantly higher in cases of pregnant versus non-pregnant cows, but we did not detect a difference between single and twin births. We applied our newly refined threshold to calculate annual pregnancy rates for all female moose (n = 133) captured in Grand Portage from 2010 to 2021. Mean pregnancy rate during this period was 91% and ranged annually from 69.2 to 100%. Developing a reliable method for determining pregnancy status via serum progesterone analyses will allow wildlife managers to assess pregnancy rates of moose without devoting substantial time and resources to palpation and calf monitoring
Dissecting Galaxy Formation: II. Comparing Substructure in Pure Dark Matter and Baryonic Models
We compare the substructure evolution in pure dark matter (DM) halos with
those in the presence of baryons (PDM and BDM). The prime halos have been
analyzed by Romano-Diaz et al (2009). Models have been evolved from identical
initial conditions using Constrained Realizations, including star formation and
feedback. A comprehensive catalog of subhalos has been compiled and properties
of subhalos analyzed in the mass range of 10^8 Mo - 10^11 Mo. We find that
subhalo mass functions are consistent with a single power law, M_sbh^{alpha},
but detect a nonnegligible shift between these functions, alpha -0.86 for the
PDM, and -0.98 for the BDM. Overall, alpha const. in time with variations of
+-15%. Second, we find that the radial mass distribution of subhalos can be
approximated by a power law, R^{gamma} with a steepening around the radius of a
maximal circular velocity, Rvmax, in the prime halos. Gamma ~-1.5 for the PDM
and -1 for the BDM, inside Rvmax, and is steeper outside. We detect little
spatial bias between the subhalo populations and the DM of the main halos. The
subhalo population exhibits much less triaxiality with baryons, in tandem with
the prime halo. Finally, we find that, counter-intuitively, the BDM population
is depleted at a faster rate than the PDM one within the central 30kpc of the
prime. Although the baryons provide a substantial glue to the subhalos, the
main halos exhibit the same trend. This assures a more efficient tidal
disruption of the BDM subhalos. This effect can be reversed for a more
efficient feedback from stellar evolution and supermassive black holes, which
will expel baryons from the center and decrease the concentration of the prime
halo. We compare our results with via Lactea and Aquarius simulations and other
published results.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, to be published by the Astrophysical Journa
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