2,039 research outputs found
The Problem of Confirmation in the Everett Interpretation
I argue that the Oxford school Everett interpretation is internally
incoherent, because we cannot claim that in an Everettian universe the kinds of
reasoning we have used to arrive at our beliefs about quantum mechanics would
lead us to form true beliefs. I show that in an Everettian context, the
experimental evidence that we have available could not provide empirical
confirmation for quantum mechanics, and moreover that we would not even be able
to establish reference to the theoretical entities of quantum mechanics. I then
consider a range of existing Everettian approaches to the probability problem
and show that they do not succeed in overcoming this incoherence
Everettian quantum mechanics and physical probability: Against the principle of “State Supervenience”
Everettian quantum mechanics faces the challenge of how to make sense of probability and probabilistic reasoning in a setting where there is typically no unique outcome of measurements. Wallace has built on a proof by Deutsch to argue that a notion of probability can be recovered in the many worlds setting. In particular, Wallace argues that a rational agent has to assign probabilities in accordance with the Born rule. This argument relies on a rationality constraint that Wallace calls state supervenience. I argue that state supervenience is not defensible as a rationality constraint for Everettian agents unless we already invoke probabilistic notions
An International Cross-Cultural Study of the Role of Chief Informational Officers in Healthcare
The introduction and utilization of Information Systems (IS) in the hospital environment has had a significant and lasting impact on the practice of medicine. The development of this dissertation will attempt to explore a widely overlooked area: The comparison of Chief Information Officers (CIOs) in the United States and the United Kingdom.
Aspects of CIO experiences relating to assumed roles, CIO challenges, skills, frustrations, success, failure, leadership, management, involvement and perceptions about the role of Information Technology (IT) in healthcare are discussed with a comparative global model. This study investigates the managerial roles of the Chief Information Officer based on Mintzberg\u27s classical managerial role model.
To be successful, CIOs need to have relation-building skills, managerial skills, a broad knowledge of technology, and management, technical and business degrees along with certain personal traits and backgrounds.
While high technology has emerged as an important economic issue in all advanced industrial countries, there is much variation between countries in the success of their high technological industries, and in government efforts to encourage high technology in the healthcare sector.
This research will attempt to demonstrate that CIOs as a whole believe IT to be indispensable in effective realization of the healthcare mission in a global, information-intensive civilization, and that IT can positively impact the quality, cost and medical issues of healthcare.
The overall objective of this study is to examine the following: (1) will an increase in global information technology expand awareness of appropriate differing styles? (2) does global information technology have a positive and significant relationship within the international community?
Finally, this study calls for more interdisciplinary research integrating insight from organizational behavior, international business and information technology
Can Everett be Interpreted Without Extravaganza?
Everett's relative states interpretation of quantum mechanics has met with
problems related to probability, the preferred basis, and multiplicity. The
third theme, I argue, is the most important one. It has led to developments of
the original approach into many-worlds, many-minds, and decoherence-based
approaches. The latter especially have been advocated in recent years, in an
effort to understand multiplicity without resorting to what is often perceived
as extravagant constructions. Drawing from and adding to arguments of others, I
show that proponents of decoherence-based approaches have not yet succeeded in
making their ontology clear.Comment: Succinct analysis forthcoming in Found. Phy
QFT, Antimatter, and Symmetry
A systematic analysis is made of the relations between the symmetries of a
classical field and the symmetries of the one-particle quantum system that
results from quantizing that field in regimes where interactions are weak. The
results are applied to gain a greater insight into the phenomenon of
antimatter.Comment: LaTeX; 34 pages; revision corrects a few typos and makes some minor
changes for clarity. Forthcoming in Studies in the History and Philosophy of
Modern Physic
On the attributes of a critical literature review
Exploring and evaluating findings from previous research is an essential aspect of all research projects enabling the work to be set in the context of what is known and what is not known. This necessitates a critical review of the literature in which existing research is discussed and evaluated, thereby contextualising and justifying the project. In this research note we consider what is understood by being critical when reviewing prior to outlining the key attributes of a critical literature review. We conclude with a summary checklist to help ensure a literature review is critical
Evaluation of the angiotensin II receptor blocker azilsartan medoxomil in African-American patients with hypertension
The efficacy and safety of azilsartan medoxomil (AZL-M) were evaluated in African-American patients with hypertension in a 6-week, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial, for which the primary end point was change from baseline in 24-hour mean systolic blood pressure (BP). There were 413 patients, with a mean age of 52years, 57% women, and baseline 24-hour BP of 146/91mmHg. Treatment differences in 24-hour systolic BP between AZL-M 40mg and placebo (-5.0mmHg; 95% confidence interval, -8.0 to -2.0) and AZL-M 80mg and placebo (-7.8mmHg; 95% confidence interval, -10.7 to -4.9) were significant (P.001 vs placebo for both comparisons). Changes in the clinic BPs were similar to the ambulatory BP results. Incidence rates of adverse events were comparable among the treatment groups, including those of a serious nature. In African-American patients with hypertension, AZL-M significantly reduced ambulatory and clinic BPs in a dose-dependent manner and was well tolerated
Real World Interpretations of Quantum Theory
I propose a new class of interpretations, {\it real world interpretations},
of the quantum theory of closed systems. These interpretations postulate a
preferred factorization of Hilbert space and preferred projective measurements
on one factor. They give a mathematical characterisation of the different
possible worlds arising in an evolving closed quantum system, in which each
possible world corresponds to a (generally mixed) evolving quantum state. In a
realistic model, the states corresponding to different worlds should be
expected to tend towards orthogonality as different possible quasiclassical
structures emerge or as measurement-like interactions produce different
classical outcomes. However, as the worlds have a precise mathematical
definition, real world interpretations need no definition of quasiclassicality,
measurement, or other concepts whose imprecision is problematic in other
interpretational approaches. It is natural to postulate that precisely one
world is chosen randomly, using the natural probability distribution, as the
world realised in Nature, and that this world's mathematical characterisation
is a complete description of reality.Comment: Minor revisions. To appear in Foundations of Physic
Elasticity of Diamond at High Pressures and Temperatures
We combine density functional theory within the local density approximation,
the quasiharmonic approximation, and vibrational density of states to calculate
single crystal elastic constants, and bulk and shear moduli of diamond at
simultaneous high pressures and temperatures in the ranges of 0-500 GPa and
0-4800 K. Comparison with experimental values at ambient pressure and high
temperature shows an excellent agreement for the first time with our
first-principles results validating our method. We show that the anisotropy
factor of diamond increases to 40% at high pressures and becomes temperature
independent.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, 1 tabl
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