5,128 results on '"Magan, A"'
Search Results
2. Modular invariance as completeness
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Benedetti, Valentin, Casini, Horacio, Kawahigashi, Yasuyuki, Longo, Roberto, and Magan, Javier M.
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High Energy Physics - Theory - Abstract
We review the physical meaning of modular invariance for unitary conformal quantum field theories in d=2. For QFT models, while T invariance is necessary for locality, S invariance is not mandatory. S invariance is a form of completeness of the theory that has a precise meaning as Haag duality for arbitrary multi-interval regions. We present a mathematical proof as well as derive this result from a physical standpoint using Renyi entropies and the replica trick. For rational CFT's, the failure of modular invariance or Haag duality can be measured by an index, related to the quantum dimensions of the model. We show how to compute this index from the modular transformation matrices. The index also appears in a limit of the Renyi mutual informations. Cases of infinite index are briefly discussed. Part of the argument can be extended to higher dimensions, where the lack of completeness can also be diagnosed using the CFT data through the thermal partition function and measured by an index., Comment: 30 pages, 3 figures. New appendix with proof of symmetry resolved entropy for general sectors. Improved discussion. Version to appear in PRD
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- 2024
3. Outcomes of chronic myeloid leukemia patients after therapeutic failure to conventional tyrosine kinase inhibitors and asciminib
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Pérez-Lamas, Lucía, Díaz, Adrián Segura, Casterá, Elvira Mora, Soto, Marta Hidalgo, Coll, Antonio Paz, De las Heras, Natalia, Cortes, Montse, Tenza, Patricia Vélez, Pacho, Magdalena Sierra, Magan, Alicia Senin, Angona, Anna, Cervero, Carlos, de Paz, Raquel, Cuenca, Araceli Salamanca, Santaliestra, Marta, Marín, Javier López, Casado, Luis Felipe, and García-Gutiérrez, Valentín
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- 2024
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4. Tunable dielectric features of newly synthesized vanadium-doped titanium oxide nanoparticles doped liquid crystal nanocomposites
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Nidhi, Chauhan, Shikha, Prakash, Jai, Varshney, Depanshu, Himanshu, Magan, Yadav, Kamlesh, and Singh, Gautam
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- 2024
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5. Impact of Dispersion of V-TiO2/MoSe2/MoO3 Composite on the Dielectric Properties of 8CB Liquid Crystal
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Nidhi, Prakash, Jai, Chauhan, Shikha, Himanshu, Magan, and Yadav, Kamlesh
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- 2024
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6. Universal Construction of Black Hole Microstates
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Climent, Ana, Emparan, Roberto, Magan, Javier M., Sasieta, Martin, and López, Alejandro Vilar
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High Energy Physics - Theory ,General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology - Abstract
We refine and extend a recent construction of sets of black hole microstates with semiclassical interiors that span a Hilbert space of dimension $e^S$, where $S$ is the black hole entropy. We elaborate on the definition and properties of microstates in statistical and black hole mechanics. The gravitational description of microstates employs matter shells in the interior of the black hole, and we argue that in the limit where the shells are very heavy, the construction acquires universal validity. To this end, we show it for very wide classes of black holes: we first extend the construction to rotating and charged black holes, including extremal and near-extremal solutions, with or without supersymmetry, and we sketch how the construction of microstates can be embedded in String Theory. We then describe how the approach can include general quantum corrections, near or far from extremality. For supersymmetric black holes, the microstates we construct differ from other recent constructions in that the interior excitations are not confined within the near-extremal throat., Comment: 17 pages + appendices; v2: typos corrected, references added, added paragraph at the end of Sec. VB
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- 2024
7. Tearing down spacetime with quantum disentanglement
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Emparan, Roberto and Magan, Javier M.
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High Energy Physics - Theory - Abstract
A longstanding enigma within AdS/CFT concerns the entanglement entropy of holographic quantum fields in Rindler space. The vacuum of a quantum field in Minkowski spacetime can be viewed as an entangled thermofield double of two Rindler wedges at a temperature $T=1/2\pi$. We can gradually disentangle the state by lowering this temperature, and the entanglement entropy should vanish in the limit $T\to 0$ to the Boulware vacuum. However, holography yields a non-zero entanglement entropy at arbitrarily low $T$, since the bridge in the bulk between the two wedges retains a finite width. We show how this is resolved by bulk quantum effects of the same kind that affect the entropy of near-extremal black holes. Specifically, a Weyl transformation maps the holographic Boulware states to near-extremal hyperbolic black holes. A reduction to an effective two-dimensional theory captures the large quantum fluctuations in the geometry of the bridge, which bring down to zero the density of entangled states in the Boulware vacuum. Using another Weyl transformation, we construct unentangled Boulware states in de Sitter space., Comment: 14 pages. v2: 15 pages. Added section on disentangling deSitter and appendix on 2d Rindler entanglement. Other minor improvements and refs added. v3: ref added. Matches published version
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- 2023
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8. Quantum chaos, integrability, and late times in the Krylov basis
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Balasubramanian, Vijay, Magan, Javier M., and Wu, Qingyue
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High Energy Physics - Theory ,Condensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics ,Nonlinear Sciences - Chaotic Dynamics ,Quantum Physics - Abstract
Quantum chaotic systems are conjectured to display a spectrum whose fine-grained features (gaps and correlations) are well described by Random Matrix Theory (RMT). We propose and develop a complementary version of this conjecture: quantum chaotic systems display a Lanczos spectrum whose local means and covariances are well described by RMT. To support this proposal, we first demonstrate its validity in examples of chaotic and integrable systems. We then show that for Haar-random initial states in RMTs the mean and covariance of the Lanczos spectrum suffices to produce the full long time behavior of general survival probabilities including the spectral form factor, as well as the spread complexity. In addition, for initial states with continuous overlap with energy eigenstates, we analytically find the long time averages of the probabilities of Krylov basis elements in terms of the mean Lanczos spectrum. This analysis suggests a notion of eigenstate complexity, the statistics of which differentiate integrable systems and classes of quantum chaos. Finally, we clarify the relation between spread complexity and the universality classes of RMT by exploring various values of the Dyson index and Poisson distributed spectra.
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- 2023
9. “I Talk to Myself”: Exploring the Mental and Emotional Health Experiences of Muslim Rohingya Refugee Adolescents
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Magan, Ifrah Mahamud, Sanchez, Elizabeth, and Munson, Michelle R.
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- 2024
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10. ABJ anomaly as a U(1) symmetry and Noether's theorem
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Benedetti, Valentin, Casini, Horacio, and Magan, Javier M.
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High Energy Physics - Theory ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
The Adler-Bell-Jackiw anomaly determines the violation of chiral symmetry when massless fermions are coupled to an abelian gauge field. In its seminal paper, Adler noticed that a modified chiral U(1) symmetry could still be defined, at the expense of being generated by a non-gauge-invariant conserved current. We show this internal U(1) symmetry has the special feature that it transforms the Haag duality violating sectors (or non local operator classes). This provides a simple unifying perspective on the origin of anomaly quantization, anomaly matching, applicability of Goldstone theorem, and the absence of a Noether current. We comment on recent literature where this symmetry is considered to be either absent or non-invertible. We end by recalling the DHR reconstruction theorem, which states 0-form symmetries cannot be non-invertible for d>2, and argue for a higher form-symmetry reconstruction theorem., Comment: 37 pages
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- 2023
11. Improving the precision of shock resuscitation by predicting fluid responsiveness with machine learning and arterial blood pressure waveform data.
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Gupta, Chitrabhanu, Basu, Debraj, Williams, Timothy, Neff, Lucas, Johnson, Michael, Patel, Nathan, Ganapathy, Aravindh, Lane, Magan, Radaei, Fatemeh, Chuah, Chen-Nee, and Adams, Jason
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Humans ,Swine ,Animals ,Arterial Pressure ,Retrospective Studies ,Respiration ,Artificial ,Resuscitation ,Cardiac Output ,Hemodynamics ,Blood Pressure ,Stroke Volume ,Shock ,ROC Curve - Abstract
Fluid bolus therapy (FBT) is fundamental to the management of circulatory shock in critical care but balancing the benefits and toxicities of FBT has proven challenging in individual patients. Improved predictors of the hemodynamic response to a fluid bolus, commonly referred to as a fluid challenge, are needed to limit non-beneficial fluid administration and to enable automated clinical decision support and patient-specific precision critical care management. In this study we retrospectively analyzed data from 394 fluid boluses from 58 pigs subjected to either hemorrhagic or distributive shock. All animals had continuous blood pressure and cardiac output monitored throughout the study. Using this data, we developed a machine learning (ML) model to predict the hemodynamic response to a fluid challenge using only arterial blood pressure waveform data as the input. A Random Forest binary classifier referred to as the ML fluid responsiveness algorithm (MLFRA) was trained to detect fluid responsiveness (FR), defined as a ≥ 15% change in cardiac stroke volume after a fluid challenge. We then compared its performance to pulse pressure variation, a commonly used metric of FR. Model performance was assessed using the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC), confusion matrix metrics, and calibration curves plotting predicted probabilities against observed outcomes. Across multiple train/test splits and feature selection methods designed to assess performance in the setting of small sample size conditions typical of large animal experiments, the MLFRA achieved an average AUROC, recall (sensitivity), specificity, and precision of 0.82, 0.86, 0.62. and 0.76, respectively. In the same datasets, pulse pressure variation had an AUROC, recall, specificity, and precision of 0.73, 0.91, 0.49, and 0.71, respectively. The MLFRA was generally well-calibrated across its range of predicted probabilities and appeared to perform equally well across physiologic conditions. These results suggest that ML, using only inputs from arterial blood pressure monitoring, may substantially improve the accuracy of predicting FR compared to the use of pulse pressure variation. If generalizable, these methods may enable more effective, automated precision management of critically ill patients with circulatory shock.
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- 2024
12. Strengthening facility-based integrated emergency care services for time sensitive emergencies at all levels of healthcare in India: An implementation research study protocol
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Tej Prakash Sinha, Sanjeev Bhoi, Dolly Sharma, Sushmita Chauhan, Radhika Magan, Ankit Kumar Sahu, Stuti Bhargava, Patanjali Dev Nayar, Venkatnarayan Kannan, Rakesh Lodha, Garima Kacchawa, Narendra Kumar Arora, Moji Jini, Pramod Kumar Sinha, Satyajeet Verma, Pawan Goyal, K. V. Viswanathan, Kemba Padu, Pallavi Boro, Yogesh Kumar, Pratibha Gupta, Srikanth Damodaran, and Nasar Jubair
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Emergency care services ,India ,Implementation research ,Time-sensitive conditions ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background The healthcare system in India is tiered and has primary, secondary and tertiary levels of facilities depending on the complexity and severity of health challenges at these facilities. Evidence suggests that emergency services in the country is fragmented. This study aims to identify the barriers and facilitators of emergency care delivery for patients with time-sensitive conditions, and develop and implement a contextually relevant model, and measure its impact using implementation research outcomes. Methods We will study 85 healthcare facilities across five zones of the country and focus on emergency care delivery for 11 time-sensitive conditions. This implementation research will include seven phases: the preparatory phase, formative assessment, co-design of Model “Zero”, co-implementation, model optimization, end-line evaluation and consolidation phase. The “preparatory phase” will involve stakeholder meetings, approval from health authorities and the establishment of a research ecosystem. The “formative assessment” will include quantitative and qualitative evaluations of the existing healthcare facilities and personnel to identify gaps, barriers and facilitators of emergency care services for time-sensitive conditions. On the basis of the results of the formative assessment, context-specific implementation strategies will be developed through meetings with stakeholders, providers and experts. The “co-design of Model ‘Zero’” phase will help develop the initial Model “Zero”, which will be pilot tested on a small scale (co-implementation). In the “model optimization” phase, iterative feedback loops of meetings and testing various strategies will help develop and implement the final context-specific model. End-line evaluation will assess implementation research outcomes such as acceptability, adoption, fidelity and penetration. The consolidation phase will include planning for the sustenance of the interventions. Discussion In a country such as India, where resources are scarce, this study will identify the barriers and facilitators to delivering emergency care services for time-sensitive conditions across five varied zones of the country. Stakeholder and provider participation in developing consensus-based implementation strategies, along with iterative cycles of meetings and testing, will help adapt these strategies to local needs. This approach will ensure that the developed models are practical, feasible and tailored to the specific challenges and requirements of each region.
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- 2024
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13. Understanding Why Youth Drop out of School in South Africa
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Rachana Desai, Ansuyah Magan, Robert A.C. Ruiter, Priscilla S. Reddy, and Liesbeth A.G. Mercken
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Out of school youth (OSY) are adolescents who have not completed their schooling and are not currently enrolled in school. This study sought to understand why learners drop out of school by interviewing 41 OSY (aged 13-20 years). Respondent Driven Sampling was used to recruit OSY. Content analysis was used to analyze the data. Gender differences were found in the reasons for leaving school. Males dropped out due to poor school performance, vocational aspirations, and social interactions at school. Females dropped out due to family-related reasons. In males and females, friends played a role in students dropping out of school. Participants who performed well academically left school to be with their OSY friends. Those who did not pass and had friends who progressed to the next grade also dropped out of school. Preventing students from early school leaving involves targeting the interpersonal, school and policy levels with gender-specific intervention.
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- 2024
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14. A Study Comparing Text-Based WhatsApp and Face-to-Face Interviews to Understand Early School Dropout
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Desai, Rachana, Magan, Ansuyah, Maposa, Innocent, Ruiter, Robert, Rochat, Tamsen, and Mercken, Liesbeth
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The majority of adolescents communicate via text-based messaging, particularly through WhatsApp, a widely used free communication application. Written content on WhatsApp has the methodological potential to provide rich qualitative interview data. This study compares data collected using text-based WhatsApp versus face-to-face interview techniques. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with a sample of early school leavers in South Africa, using WhatsApp (n = 9) and face-to-face (n = 27) followed by a focus group discussion with interviewers. Mann-Whitney U and chi-squared were used to assess associations. WhatsApp text-based interviews took significantly longer to complete but were comparable to face-to-face on the number of themes generated. Rapport, measured as the number of statements from the interviewer aimed at creating a sense of affinity, comfort, and distress reduction, differed between interview conditions. It may be methodologically appropriate for researchers to offer participants a choice of a preferred method of interviewing or consider pragmatic blended approaches of face-to-face and WhatsApp.
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- 2024
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15. Seroprevalence of strongyloides stercoralis in patients about to receive immunosuppressive treatment in Gran Canaria (Spain)
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Carranza-Rodriguez, Cristina, Lopez-Delgado, Laura, Granados-Magan, Alvaro, and Perez-Arellano, Jose-Luis
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- 2023
16. Krylov complexity of modular Hamiltonian evolution
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Caputa, Pawel, Magan, Javier M., Patramanis, Dimitrios, and Tonni, Erik
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High Energy Physics - Theory ,Condensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics ,Quantum Physics - Abstract
We investigate the complexity of states and operators evolved with the modular Hamiltonian by using the Krylov basis. In the first part, we formulate the problem for states and analyse different examples, including quantum mechanics, two-dimensional conformal field theories and random modular Hamiltonians, focusing on relations with the entanglement spectrum. We find that the modular Lanczos spectrum provides a different approach to quantum entanglement, opening new avenues in many-body systems and holography. In the second part, we focus on the modular evolution of operators and states excited by local operators in two-dimensional conformal field theories. We find that, at late modular time, the spread complexity is universally governed by the modular Lyapunov exponent $\lambda^{mod}_L=2\pi$ and is proportional to the local temperature of the modular Hamiltonian. Our analysis provides explicit examples where entanglement entropy is indeed not enough, however the entanglement spectrum is, and encodes the same information as complexity., Comment: 16 pages, 4 appendices
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- 2023
17. Strengthening facility-based integrated emergency care services for time sensitive emergencies at all levels of healthcare in India: An implementation research study protocol
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Sinha, Tej Prakash, Bhoi, Sanjeev, Sharma, Dolly, Chauhan, Sushmita, Magan, Radhika, Sahu, Ankit Kumar, Bhargava, Stuti, Nayar, Patanjali Dev, Kannan, Venkatnarayan, Lodha, Rakesh, Kacchawa, Garima, Arora, Narendra Kumar, Jini, Moji, Sinha, Pramod Kumar, Verma, Satyajeet, Goyal, Pawan, Viswanathan, K. V., Padu, Kemba, Boro, Pallavi, Kumar, Yogesh, Gupta, Pratibha, Damodaran, Srikanth, and Jubair, Nasar
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- 2024
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18. Generalized Symmetries For Generalized Gravitons
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Benedetti, Valentin, Bueno, Pablo, and Magan, Javier M.
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High Energy Physics - Theory ,General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology - Abstract
We construct generalized symmetries for linearized Einstein gravity in arbitrary dimensions. First-principle considerations in QFT force generalized symmetries to appear in dual pairs. Verifying this prediction helps us find the full set of non-trivial conserved charges -- associated, in equal parts, with 2-form and $(D-2)$-form currents. Their total number is $D(D+1)$. We compute the quantum commutators of pairs of dual charges, showing that they are non-vanishing for regions whose boundaries are non-trivially linked with each other and zero otherwise, as expected on general grounds. We also consider general linearized higher-curvature gravities. These propagate, in addition to the usual graviton, a spin-0 mode as well as a massive ghost-like spin-2 one. When the latter is absent, the theory is unitary and the dual-pairs principle is respected. In particular, we find that the number and types of charges remain the same as for Einstein gravity, and that they correspond to continuous generalizations of the Einsteinian ones., Comment: 13 pages
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- 2023
19. Unveiling acute myocardial infarction in young adults of rural India: Exploring demographic, clinical, and angiographic profiles
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Manna Bhattacharjee, Amitesh Nagarwal, Sai Durga Prakash, Vishal Gaurab, Bijay Prakash Yadav, Sheshkaran Singh Charan, Vishvajit Magan Wakade, and Sundeep Mishra
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acute coronary syndrome ,coronary artery disease risk factors ,myocardial infraction ,risk of myocardial infarction in lower socioeconomic group ,young myocardial infarction ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Introduction: Cardiovascular disease, particularly myocardial infarction (MI), remains a leading cause of mortality globally and in India. The prevalence of coronary artery disease (CAD) among young adults in India presents unique challenges, marked by earlier onset and distinct risk factor profiles. However, comprehensive data on young MI patients in rural areas are scarce, necessitating an investigation into their demographics, clinical characteristics, and outcomes. Materials and Methods: This institution-based, cross-sectional study was conducted at the Department of Cardiology, NIMS Super Specialty Hospital, Jaipur, focused on individuals under 45 years old admitted with MI. Data encompassing demographic, clinical, echocardiographic, and angiographic profiles were collected and analyzed. The study spanned from December 2022 to December 2023. Results: Among 45 young MI patients studied, males constituted a substantial majority (86.67%). Lower socioeconomic status (SES) was prevalent (71.11%), and risk factors such as smoking (51.11%) and hypertension (35.56%) were notable. Troponin-T/CPK MB levels were significantly elevated in 57.78% of cases, indicating myocardial damage. Angiographic assessments revealed predominance in left anterior descending (LAD) artery abnormalities (55.56%) and a significant proportion underwent primary percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) (46.67%). Conclusion: The study highlights the concerning prevalence of MI among young adults in rural areas of India, with a predominance of males and a high prevalence of traditional risk factors such as smoking and hypertension, as well as the notable influence of low SES (P = 0.0046). Contrary to previous studies that linked higher SES and sedentary lifestyles to an increased risk of CAD, this study underscores the significant burden of CAD among young individuals from lower socioeconomic groups. The elevated levels of troponin-T and CPK-MB, along with the predominance of LAD artery abnormalities, emphasize the severity and distinct coronary involvement patterns in this demographic. These findings highlight the urgent need for targeted preventive strategies and improved access to health-care services for young adults in lower socioeconomic groups in rural areas.
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- 2024
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20. Publisher Correction: Effect of the vanadium doped titanium oxide nanoparticles on ionic contribution in dielectric behaviour of a nematic liquid crystal
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Chauhan, Shikha, Aafreen, Himanshu, Magan, and Yadav, Kamlesh
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- 2024
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21. The CARMENES search for exoplanets around M dwarfs. Guaranteed time observations Data Release 1 (2016-2020)
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Ribas, I., Reiners, A., Zechmeister, M., Caballero, J. A., Morales, J. C., Sabotta, S., Baroch, D., Amado, P. J., Quirrenbach, A., Abril, M., Aceituno, J., Anglada-Escudé, G., Azzaro, M., Barrado, D., Béjar, V. J. S., de Haro, D. Benítez, Bergond, G., Bluhm, P., Ortega, R. Calvo, Guillén, C. Cardona, Chaturvedi, P., Cifuentes, C., Colomé, J., Cont, D., Cortés-Contreras, M., Czesla, S., Díez-Alonso, E., Dreizler, S., Duque-Arribas, C., Espinoza, N., Fernández, M., Fuhrmeister, B., Galadí-Enríquez, D., García-López, A., González-Álvarez, E., Hernández, J. I. González, Guenther, E. W., de Guindos, E., Hatzes, A. P., Henning, Th., Herrero, E., Hintz, D., Huelmo, Á. L., Jeffers, S. V., Johnson, E. N., de Juan, E., Kaminski, A., Kemmer, J., Khaimova, J., Khalafinejad, S., Kossakowski, D., Kürster, M., Labarga, F., Lafarga, M., Lalitha, S., Lampón, M., Lillo-Box, J., Lodieu, N., González, M. J. López, López-Puertas, M., Luque, R., Magán, H., Mancini, L., Marfil, E., Martín, E. L., Martín-Ruiz, S., Molaverdikhani, K., Montes, D., Nagel, E., Nortmann, L., Nowak, G., Pallé, E., Passegger, V. M., Pavlov, A., Pedraz, S., Perdelwitz, V., Perger, M., Ramón-Ballesta, A., Reffert, S., Revilla, D., Rodríguez, E., Rodríguez-López, C., Sadegi, S., Carrasco, M. Á. Sánchez, Sánchez-López, A., Sanz-Forcada, J., Schäfer, S., Schlecker, M., Schmitt, J. H. M. M., Schöfer, P., Schweitzer, A., Seifert, W., Shan, Y., Skrzypinski, S. L., Solano, E., Stahl, O., Stangret, M., Stock, S., Stürmer, J., Tabernero, H. M., Tal-Or, L., Trifonov, T., Vanaverbeke, S., Yan, F., and Osorio, M. R. Zapatero
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The CARMENES instrument was conceived to deliver high-accuracy radial velocity (RV) measurements with long-term stability to search for temperate rocky planets around a sample of nearby cool stars. The broad wavelength coverage was designed to provide a range of stellar activity indicators to assess the nature of potential RV signals and to provide valuable spectral information to help characterise the stellar targets. The CARMENES Data Release 1 (DR1) makes public all observations obtained during the CARMENES guaranteed time observations, which ran from 2016 to 2020 and collected 19,633 spectra for a sample of 362 targets. The CARMENES survey target selection was aimed at minimising biases, and about 70% of all known M dwarfs within 10 pc and accessible from Calar Alto were included. The data were pipeline-processed, and high-level data products, including 18,642 precise RVs for 345 targets, were derived. Time series data of spectroscopic activity indicators were also obtained. We discuss the characteristics of the CARMENES data, the statistical properties of the stellar sample, and the spectroscopic measurements. We show examples of the use of CARMENES data and provide a contextual view of the exoplanet population revealed by the survey, including 33 new planets, 17 re-analysed planets, and 26 confirmed planets from transiting candidate follow-up. A subsample of 238 targets was used to derive updated planet occurrence rates, yielding an overall average of 1.44+/-0.20 planets with 1 M_Earth < M sin i < 1000 M_Earth and 1 d < P_orb < 1000 d per star, and indicating that nearly every M dwarf hosts at least one planet. CARMENES data have proven very useful for identifying and measuring planetary companions as well as for additional applications, such as the determination of stellar properties, the characterisation of stellar activity, and the study of exoplanet atmospheres., Comment: Published in A&A (https://www.aanda.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202244879), 25 pages, 12 figures, Tables 1 and 2 only available online
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- 2023
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22. Corporate Social Responsibility as Perceived by Business People
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Fu, Xiayang, primary, Bernard, Prosper, additional, Magan, Rhodora G., additional, Plaisent, Michel, additional, and Liu, Gongzhao, additional
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- 2024
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23. Charges in the UV completion of neutral electrodynamics
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Benedetti, Valentin, Casini, Horacio, and Magan, Javier M.
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High Energy Physics - Theory - Abstract
A theory with a non-compact form-symmetry is described by two closed form fields of degrees k and d-k. Effective theory examples are non-linear electrodynamics, a photon field coupled to a neutron field, and a low energy Goldstone boson. We show these models cannot be completed in the UV without breaking the non-compact form-symmetry down to a compact one. This amounts to the existence of electric or magnetic charges. A theory with an unbroken non-compact k-form symmetry is massless and free., Comment: 19 pages + Appendices
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- 2022
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24. Microscopic origin of the entropy of astrophysical black holes
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Balasubramanian, Vijay, Lawrence, Albion, Magan, Javier M., and Sasieta, Martin
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High Energy Physics - Theory ,General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology - Abstract
We construct an infinite family of microstates for black holes in Minkowski spacetime which have effective semiclassical descriptions in terms of collapsing dust shells in the black hole interior. Quantum mechanical wormholes cause these states to have exponentially small, but universal, overlaps. We show that these overlaps imply that the microstates span a Hilbert space of log dimension equal to the event horizon area divided by four times the Newton constant, explaining the statistical origin of the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy., Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures. v3: minor edits, discussion section added
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- 2022
25. Microscopic origin of the entropy of black holes in general relativity
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Balasubramanian, Vijay, Lawrence, Albion, Magan, Javier M., and Sasieta, Martin
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High Energy Physics - Theory ,General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology - Abstract
We construct an infinite family of microstates with geometric interiors for eternal black holes in general relativity with negative cosmological constant in any dimension. Wormholes in the Euclidean path integral for gravity cause these states to have small, but non-zero, quantum mechanical overlaps that have a universal form. The overlaps have a dramatic consequence: the microstates span a Hilbert space of log dimension equal to the Bekenstein-Hawking entropy. The semiclassical microstates we construct contain Einstein-Rosen bridges of arbitrary size behind their horizons. Our results imply that all these bridges can be interpreted as quantum superpositions of wormholes of size at most exponential in the entropy., Comment: 46 pages + appendices. v4: minor edits, added references
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- 2022
26. Evidence-Based Research in Neuroscience of Yoga: Quality, Ethics, and Integrity Perspectives
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Magan, Dipti, Yadav, Raj Kumar, and Anand, Akshay, editor
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- 2024
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27. Microbial Biostimulants: A Sustainable Approach Toward Potential Plant Nutrition and Improved Crop Production
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Praveen, B. R., Hegde, Vinay, Singh, Magan, Reddy, M. B., Rundan, V., Chethan Babu, R. T., Prashanth, D. V., Sannagoudar, Manjanagouda S., Rajanna, G. A., Sowmya, M. S., Kumar, Rakesh, Kumar, Sandeep, El-Ramady, Hassan, Editor-in-Chief, Olle, Margit, Series Editor, Eichler-Löbermann, Bettina, Series Editor, Schnug, Ewald, Series Editor, Sayyed, R. Z., editor, and Ilyas, Noshin, editor
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- 2024
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28. Neutronics Calculations for the Common Shielding Project at ESS
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Santoro, V., Andersen, K. H, Khaplanov, A., Kolevatov, R., Gonzalez, O., Gruenauer, F., Magan, M., and Randriamalala, T. H.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Physics - Computational Physics - Abstract
The European Spallation Source ESS is being constructed in Lund, Sweden, to be the world's brightest cold pulsed spallation neutron source. The facility uses a 2GeV proton beam hitting a target to produce neutrons. The neutrons are then thermalized in a moderator. Surrounding the moderator are several beam ports connected to neutron guides that transport the cold neutrons. Due to the long-pulse source nature of the ESS, neutron scattering instruments are significantly longer than at most existing facilities, with approximately half the instruments requiring neutron guides that are 150 meters long and only a few shorter than 50 meters. Therefore the shielding cost is dominated by the guide shielding. To fulfill the shielding requirement, a 'Common Shielding Project' has been initiated to deliver cost-effective and standardized solutions for several instruments. This includes both a consistent design of the shielding blocks, as well as a common approach to neutronics simulations., Comment: 4 pages, 8 figures, presented at the 14th International Conference on Radiation Shielding and 21st Topical Meeting of the Radiation Protection and Shielding Division, September 25 to 29, 2022 Seattle WA, USA, accepted for publication in the conference proceedings
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- 2022
29. Psychosocial Impact on Primary Caregivers of Patients with Alcohol Related Disorders: A Review Based Indian Perspective
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Kaira, Srishti S. and Magan, Anika
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- 2024
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30. Google’s Cloud Computing Platform-Based Performance Assessment of Machine Learning Algorithms for Precisely Maize Crop Mapping Using Integrated Satellite Data of Sentinel-2A/B and Planetscope
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Kumar, Himanshu, Kumar, Rohan, Dutta, Sujay, and Singh, Magan
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- 2023
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31. Prevalence of co-existent neoplasia in clinically diagnosed pterygia in a UK population
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Quhill, Hibba, Magan, Tejal, Thaung, Caroline, and Sagoo, Mandeep S.
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- 2023
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32. Improvement of Growth, Yield and Soil Fertility in Wheat through Tillage and Nutrient Management Practices
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Dutta, Susanta, Singh, Magan, Begam, Ankita, Bhattacharjee, Subhradip, Meena, B. L., and Kumar, Sourabh
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- 2023
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33. A Tale of Two Hungarians: Tridiagonalizing Random Matrices
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Balasubramanian, Vijay, Magan, Javier M., and Wu, Qingyue
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High Energy Physics - Theory ,Condensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics ,Mathematical Physics ,Nonlinear Sciences - Chaotic Dynamics - Abstract
The Hungarian physicist Eugene Wigner introduced random matrix models in physics to describe the energy spectra of atomic nuclei. As such, the main goal of Random Matrix Theory (RMT) has been to derive the eigenvalue statistics of matrices drawn from a given distribution. The Wigner approach gives powerful insights into the properties of complex, chaotic systems in thermal equilibrium. Another Hungarian, Cornelius Lanczos, suggested a method of reducing the dynamics of any quantum system to a one-dimensional chain by tridiagonalizing the Hamiltonian relative to a given initial state. In the resulting matrix, the diagonal and off-diagonal Lanczos coefficients control transition amplitudes between elements of a distinguished basis of states. We connect these two approaches to the quantum mechanics of complex systems by deriving analytical formulae relating the potential defining a general RMT, or, equivalently, its density of states, to the Lanczos coefficients and their correlations. In particular, we derive an integral relation between the average Lanczos coefficients and the density of states, and, for polynomial potentials, algebraic equations that determine the Lanczos coefficients from the potential. We obtain these results for generic initial states in the thermodynamic limit. As an application, we compute the time-dependent ``spread complexity'' in Thermo-Field Double states and the spectral form factor for Gaussian and Non-Gaussian RMTs., Comment: 30 pages. References added
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- 2022
34. Effect of the vanadium doped titanium oxide nanoparticles on ionic contribution in dielectric behaviour of a nematic liquid crystal
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Chauhan, Shikha, Aafreen, Himanshu, Magan, and Yadav, Kamlesh
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- 2024
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35. Delineating the significance of sharp boundaries between horizons and their synergetic linkage in calcareous vineyard soils
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Jiménez-Ballesta, Raimundo, Pérez-de-los-Reyes, Caridad, Bravo, Sandra, Gómez-Magan, Andrés, Amorós, Jose A., and García-Navarro, Francisco J.
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- 2024
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36. Finger Millet Scientific Cultivation and Its Uses in India
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Kumar, Brijesh, primary, Singh, Magan, additional, Kumar, Avaneesh, additional, Kumar, Deepak, additional, Kumar Singh, Ankit, additional, Kumar, Rakesh, additional, and Kumar, Sandeep, additional
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- 2024
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37. Extremophiles-Mediated Carbon Dioxide Sequestration
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Govil, Tanvi, primary, Vaughn, Magan, additional, Kaur, Jasmeet, additional, Ustunisik, Gokce, additional, Soeder, Daniel J., additional, Lingwall, Bret N., additional, and Sani, Rajesh K., additional
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- 2024
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38. Contributors
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Abulreesh, Hussein Hasan, primary, Adserias-Garriga, Joe, additional, Ahmad, Iqbal, additional, Aich, Palok, additional, Ali, Asghar, additional, Ansari, Firoz Ahmad, additional, Appanna, Varun P., additional, Appanna, Vasu D., additional, Bano, Ambreen, additional, Baraúna, Rafael Azevedo, additional, Bay, Denice C., additional, Bhadury, Punyasloke, additional, Bhattacharyya, Maitree, additional, Brasiliense, Danielle Murici, additional, Brown, Damon C., additional, C. Zapico, Sara, additional, Chakraborty, Chiranjib, additional, Chatterjee, Shruti, additional, Chaudhary, Srishti, additional, Chaudhary, Nikita, additional, Cherry, Pauline, additional, Choudhary, Meena, additional, Correa, Sulamita Santos, additional, Daimai, Chamjailiu, additional, Daroch, Priya, additional, Das, Ankita, additional, Das, Biswajit, additional, Dash, Stiti Prangya, additional, da Silva, Beatriz Lobato, additional, De, Arka Jyoti, additional, de Francisco, Patricia, additional, Demeter, Marc, additional, Dey, Subhamoy, additional, dos Santos, Alef, additional, Dwivedi, Isha, additional, Furtak, Karolina, additional, Garg, Gauri, additional, Gałązka, Anna, additional, Ghosh, Anwesha, additional, Ghosh, Chandradipa, additional, Gillet, Sébastien, additional, Gouda, Sudhansu Kumar, additional, Govil, Tanvi, additional, Gupta, Varsha, additional, Gutiérrez, Juan-Carlos, additional, Haque, Ekramul, additional, Helene, Luisa Caroline Ferraz, additional, Hira, Princy, additional, Hungria, Mariangela, additional, Hurrell, Tracey, additional, Jadhav, Sushama, additional, Jadhav, Abhijeet, additional, Jana, Pradip, additional, Jana, Debarati, additional, Johannink, Paige, additional, Kahali, Tuhin, additional, Kaur, Jasmeet, additional, Kaur, Baljinder, additional, Kesh, Rishi, additional, Khan, Atif, additional, Khan, Asma Sattar, additional, Khan, Sarah Ahmad, additional, Klepa, Milena Serenato, additional, Kumar, Raghawendra, additional, Kumari, Khushbu, additional, Kumawat, Dharmendra Kumar, additional, Lal, Rup, additional, Lingwall, Bret N., additional, Lobato, Amália Raiana Fonseca, additional, Mallick, Swarupa, additional, Manage, P.M., additional, Mande, Sharmila S., additional, Manna, Mousumi, additional, Martín-González, Ana, additional, Matroule, Jean-Yves, additional, Merchant, Mitali, additional, Mishra, Avinash, additional, Mohanta, Vivekananda, additional, Mohanty, Tanuja, additional, Mohapatra, Reecha, additional, Mohapatra, Madhusmita, additional, Muduli, Monali, additional, Mukhopadhyay, Sohini, additional, Naidoo, Jerolen, additional, Naik, Arya Kumar Dibyananda, additional, Nandi, Shyam Sundar, additional, Negi, Vidya Devi, additional, Nema, Vijay, additional, Nkera-Gutabara, Claudine, additional, Nural Yaman, Belma, additional, Panda, Ananta Narayan, additional, Panda, Amiya Kumar, additional, Panigrahi, Satyanarayan, additional, Patil, Sunil A., additional, Patra, Anuttam, additional, Phalke, Sakshi, additional, Poon, Lauren, additional, Pradhan, Jasmin, additional, Pramanik, Arnab, additional, Raina, Vishakha, additional, Rao, Toleti Subba, additional, Rastogi, Gurdeep, additional, Raturi, Ayushi, additional, Raul, Priyanka, additional, Ray, Sanak, additional, Rosado, Alexandre Soares, additional, Sadeepa, H.D.D., additional, Sahu, Binod Bihari, additional, Samudra, Prasanna, additional, Sani, Rajesh K., additional, Sar, Pinaki, additional, Saranya, Elumalai, additional, Sawant, Sonali Ankush, additional, Schultz, Júnia, additional, Sehgal, Alka, additional, Shakarad, Mallikarjun, additional, Sharma, Pooja, additional, Sharma, Barkha, additional, Siddiqui, Shirjeel Ahmad, additional, Silva, Artur, additional, Singh, Ramandeep, additional, Singh, Surendra Pratap, additional, Sirisena, K.A., additional, Soeder, Daniel J., additional, Sood, Utkarsh, additional, Suman, Kirti, additional, Sunaina, Sunaina, additional, Çabuk, Ahmet, additional, Takami, Hideto, additional, Tewari, Lakshmi, additional, Toleti, Subba Rao, additional, Tong, Yen Wah, additional, Tu, Zhihao, additional, Turner, Raymond J., additional, Ustunisik, Gokce, additional, Vaughn, Magan, additional, Yadav, Sukrampal, additional, Yadav, Pragya, additional, and Yaroshuk, Timothy, additional
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- 2024
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39. Genetics healthcare providers' experiences counseling patients with results from consumer genomic testing
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Magan Trottier, Dina Green, Hannah Ovadia, Amanda Catchings, Julia Gruberg, Victoria Groner, Catherine Fanjoy, Sita Dandiker, Kathleen Blazer, Jada G. Hamilton, and Kenneth Offit
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consumer‐initiated genetic testing ,direct‐to‐consumer genetic testing ,genetic counseling ,genetics healthcare providers ,Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
Abstract Background Consumer genomic testing (CGT), including direct‐to‐consumer and consumer‐initiated testing, is increasingly widespread yet has limited regulatory oversight. To assess the current state, we surveyed genetics healthcare providers' experiences with CGT. Methods A retrospective survey about experiences counseling on CGT results was completed by 139 respondents recruited from the National Society of Genetic Counselors, Clinical Cancer Genomics Community of Practice, and genetics professional societies. Results Among respondents, 41% disagreed with the statement that potential benefits of CGT outweigh harms, 21% agreed, and 38% were undecided. A total of 94% encountered ≥1 challenge counseling CGT patients, including adverse psychosocial events (76%), incorrect variant interpretation (68%), and unconfirmed results (69%); unconfirmed results were more common among oncology providers (p = 0.03). Providers reporting higher total challenge scores (p = 0.004) or more psychosocial or interpretation challenges (p ≤ 0.01) were more likely to indicate CGT harms outweigh benefits. Those with higher CGT clinical volume were more likely to indicate benefits outweigh harms (p = 0.003). Additional CGT challenges included patient understanding and communication of results, false negatives, incorrect testing/care, and financial costs; seven respondents (6%) documented positive outcomes. Conclusion Providers counseling CGT patients encounter psychosocial and medical challenges. Collaborations between regulators, CGT laboratories, providers, and consumers may help mitigate risks.
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- 2024
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40. Cost-effectiveness of craniotomy versus decompressive craniectomy for UK patients with traumatic acute subdural haematoma
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Emma Toman, David K Menon, Antonio Belli, Sridevi Nagarajan, Julie Woodfield, Ruichong Ma, Jason J Chang, Jonathan Cook, Mark Kotter, Vin Shen Ban, Martin Smith, John D Pickard, Diederik Bulters, Giles Critchley, Damian Holliman, Nicole Keong, Andrew King, Catherine McMahon, Carole Turner, Peter Whitfield, Mark Wilson, Melvin Stone, Paul Brennan, David Turner, Garry Barton, Rasheed Zakaria, Angelos G Kolias, Simon Shaw, Sean Christie, Dmitri Shastin, Allison Hirst, Soumya Mukherjee, Gareth Roberts, Simon Thomson, Peter J Hutchinson, Alexis Joannides, Emanuel Cirstea, Ashish Bindra, Vairavan Narayanan, David Menon, Francesca Hill, Ashwin Kumaria, Franco Servadei, Rhys Thomas, Midhun Mohan, Silvia Tarantino, Ioana Moldovan, Sara Venturini, Tariq Khan, Marianne Hare, Louise Young, Joan Grieve, Ardalan Zolnourian, Paula Carroll, Diederik Oliver Bulters, Mathew Guilfoyle, Lisa Julien, Barbara Gregson, Martin Hunn, Richard Nelson, Stuart Smith, Shahid Khan, András Büki, Deepak Gupta, Christos Tolias, David A Turner, Christopher Madden, Paul Johnston, Peter John Hutchinson, Patrick Holton, Panagiota Gkolia, Nicola Owen, Kesava Reddy, Hani Marcus, Ibrahim Jalloh, Shabin Joshi, Ian Anderson, Himanshu Shekhar, Daniel Holsgrove, Erin Lewis, Tracey Moore, Marios C Papadopoulos, Paula Kareclas, Peter Kirkpatrick, Laura Parker, Martina Stippler, Sarah Pyne, Peter J Kirkpatrick, James Piercy, Neil Davidson, Prasanna Epaliyanage, Barbara A Gregson, Christopher Uff, Malik Zaben, Charlotte Eglinton, Linetty Makawa, Jane Perez, Louise Harrison, Mutwakil Abdulla, Garry R Barton, Mathew Joseph, Anthony Bell, Sarah Trippier, Michael Canty, Jonathan Pollock, Manjul Tripathi, Harry Mee, Ivan Timofeev, Ellie Edlmann, Nadia Scantlebury, Joseph Frantzias, Yahia Al-Tamimi, Kismet Hossain-Ibrahim, Ciaran Hill, Elisa Visentin, Sonia Raj, Ioannis Fouyas, Siobhan Kearney, Karen Caldwell, Tamara Tajsic, Belinda Gunning, Emma Clarkson, Manjunath Prasad, Mary Kambafwile, Tim Lawrence, Emily Galea, Sebastian Ille, Hadie Adams, Shumaila Hasan, Matthew G Stovell, Edoardo Viaroli, Adel E Helmy, Ivan S Timofeev, Kirsty Grieve, Liz Corteen, Janet Corn, Mohammad Naushahi, Richard Mair, Kamila Walker, Selma Tülü, Chipo Chitsenega, Geetha Boyapati, Muhammad Bhatti, Natalia Ermalai, Joseph Merola Liudmila, Laurence Glanz, Lani Patterson, Colin Bergin, Maximina Ventura, Laura Ortiz-Ruiz de Gordoa, Husam Georges, Sam Jeffrey, Natasha Wilmhurst, Philip Kane, Geraint Sunderland, John Kitchen, Mathew JosephMathew JosephGallagher, Sonia Fernandez Lopez, Andrea D’Mello, Jo-Anna Conyngham, Miriam Taylor, Charlaine Reeve, Vasileios Arzoglou, Arif Zafar, Efosa Ukponmwan, Anastasios Giamouriadis, Adam Wahba, Patrick Easton, Rose Clegg, Grace Cole, Louise Finlay, Alex Leggate, Terrie-Louise Cromie, Javier Magan Ventura, Ruth Womer, Beverley Fulkner, Geraldine Ward, Kareen Damley, Emma Fleming, Roddy O’Kane, Indira Devi Bhagavatula, Dhananjaya Ishwar Bhat, Dhaval Prem Shukla, Kanti Konar, Nagesh Shanhag, Vaishali Nl Valluri, Manoj Kumar Tewari, Kaveri Sharma, Christine Lock, Chen Min Wei, Julian Han, Janell Kwok, Nicolas Kon, Kam King, Emmalin Nelton, Louis Anthony Whitworth, Sonja Stutzman, Caryn Harper, Alice Salazar, Rocco Armonda, George B Moses, Patricia Tanjucto, Jamie Ullman, Orseola Arapi, Betsy Moclair, Nrupen Baxi, John Adair Prall, Meghan Baldwin, Jamie Jones, Clare Gallagher, Ish Bains, Leodante Da Costa, Fahad Alkherayf, Rafael Ochoa Sanchez, Kostas Fountas, Thanasis Paschalis, Sandro Krieg, Maria Luisa, Gandia Gomez, Alfonso Legares, Ana Maria Castaño Leon, Gábor Lenzsér, Mukhtar Khan, Massimo Tomei, Ronie Romelean Jayapalan, Sarah C Pyne, A David Mendelow, Christopher Cowie, Carol Davis-Wilkie, Tapiwa Tungamirai, Kerstin Wolf, Natalia Igosheva, Alicia Gore, Michele Jillings, Christopher Bushell, and Peter McCabe
- Subjects
Medicine - Abstract
Objective To estimate the cost-effectiveness of craniotomy, compared with decompressive craniectomy (DC) in UK patients undergoing evacuation of acute subdural haematoma (ASDH).Design Economic evaluation undertaken using health resource use and outcome data from the 12-month multicentre, pragmatic, parallel-group, randomised, Randomised Evaluation of Surgery with Craniectomy for Patients Undergoing Evacuation-ASDH trial.Setting UK secondary care.Participants 248 UK patients undergoing surgery for traumatic ASDH were randomised to craniotomy (N=126) or DC (N=122).Interventions Surgical evacuation via craniotomy (bone flap replaced) or DC (bone flap left out with a view to replace later: cranioplasty surgery).Main outcome measures In the base-case analysis, costs were estimated from a National Health Service and Personal Social Services perspective. Outcomes were assessed via the quality-adjusted life-years (QALY) derived from the EuroQoL 5-Dimension 5-Level questionnaire (cost-utility analysis) and the Extended Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOSE) (cost-effectiveness analysis). Multiple imputation and regression analyses were conducted to estimate the mean incremental cost and effect of craniotomy compared with DC. The most cost-effective option was selected, irrespective of the level of statistical significance as is argued by economists.Results In the cost-utility analysis, the mean incremental cost of craniotomy compared with DC was estimated to be −£5520 (95% CI −£18 060 to £7020) with a mean QALY gain of 0.093 (95% CI 0.029 to 0.156). In the cost-effectiveness analysis, the mean incremental cost was estimated to be −£4536 (95% CI −£17 374 to £8301) with an OR of 1.682 (95% CI 0.995 to 2.842) for a favourable outcome on the GOSE.Conclusions In a UK population with traumatic ASDH, craniotomy was estimated to be cost-effective compared with DC: craniotomy was estimated to have a lower mean cost, higher mean QALY gain and higher probability of a more favourable outcome on the GOSE (though not all estimated differences between the two approaches were statistically significant).Ethics Ethical approval for the trial was obtained from the North West—Haydock Research Ethics Committee in the UK on 17 July 2014 (14/NW/1076).Trial registration number ISRCTN87370545.
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- 2024
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41. Generalized symmetries and Noether's theorem in QFT
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Benedetti, Valentin, Casini, Horacio, and Magan, Javier M.
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High Energy Physics - Theory ,General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,Mathematical Physics - Abstract
We show that generalized symmetries cannot be charged under a continuous global symmetry having a Noether current. Further, only non-compact generalized symmetries can be charged under a continuous global symmetry. These results follow from a finer classification of twist operators, which naturally extends to finite group global symmetries. They unravel topological obstructions to the strong version of Noether's theorem in QFT, even if under general conditions a global symmetry can be implemented locally by twist operators (weak version). We use these results to rederive Weinberg-Witten's theorem within local QFT, generalizing it to massless particles in arbitrary dimensions and representations of the Lorentz group. Several examples with local twists but without Noether currents are described. We end up discussing the conditions for the strong version to hold, dynamical aspects of QFT's with non-compact generalized symmetries, scale vs conformal invariance in QFT, connections with the Coleman-Mandula theorem and aspects of global symmetries in quantum gravity., Comment: 47 pages, 6 figures
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- 2022
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42. Role of oxygen vacancy enriched m-BiVO4/t-BiVO4 isotype heterojunction for enhanced photocatalytic degradation of rhodamine B dye and in ferroelastic to paraelastic phase transition
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Kukreti, Kalpana, Roy, Ayan, Biswas, Rathindranath, Adhikari, Soumyashree Das, Himanshu, Magan, Singh, Ravi Pratap, Dutta, Arnab, Sharma, M.P., Yadav, Kanhaiya Lal, and Yadav, Kamlesh
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- 2024
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43. Two-Dimensional Versus Three-Dimensional Preoperative Planning in Total Hip Arthroplasty
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Fontalis, Andreas, Yasen, Adam T., Kayani, Babar, Luo, Tianyi David, Mancino, Fabio, Magan, Ahmed, Plastow, Ricci, and Haddad, Fares S.
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- 2024
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44. Clinical-Hematological Changes and Predictors of Severity in Acute Food Protein–Induced Enterocolitis Syndrome Reactions at Oral Food Challenge: A Multicenter Observational Study
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Argiz, L., Valsami-Fokianos, M., Arasi, S., Barni, S., Boscia, S., Bracaglia, G., Bracamonte, T., Carballeira, I., Dinardo, G., Echeverria, L., Garcia, E., Garcia-Magan, C., Gomez-Rial, J., Gonzalez-Delgado, P., Fiocchi, A., Garriga, T., Ibrahim, T., Infante, S., Machinena, A., Mangone, G., Mori, F., Moure, J.D., O’Valle, V., Pascal, M., Pecora, V., Prieto, A., Quevedo, S., Salas, A., Vazquez-Cortes, S., Vila, L., Martinon-Torres, F., Gomez-Carballa, A., Boyle, R.J., and Vazquez-Ortiz, Marta
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- 2024
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45. Evaluation of sustainability of fabrication process and characterization studies of activated carbon nanocatalyst from waste chestnut peels
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Singh, Anjali, Himanshu, Magan, Verma, Bhawna, Singh, Rajeev, Lal, Basant, Syed, Asad, Elgorban, Abdallah M., Wong, Ling Shing, and Srivastava, Neha
- Published
- 2025
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46. Improving the precision of shock resuscitation by predicting fluid responsiveness with machine learning and arterial blood pressure waveform data
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Chitrabhanu B. Gupta, Debraj Basu, Timothy K. Williams, Lucas P. Neff, Michael A. Johnson, Nathan T. Patel, Aravindh S. Ganapathy, Magan R. Lane, Fatemeh Radaei, Chen-Nee Chuah, and Jason Y. Adams
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Fluid bolus therapy (FBT) is fundamental to the management of circulatory shock in critical care but balancing the benefits and toxicities of FBT has proven challenging in individual patients. Improved predictors of the hemodynamic response to a fluid bolus, commonly referred to as a fluid challenge, are needed to limit non-beneficial fluid administration and to enable automated clinical decision support and patient-specific precision critical care management. In this study we retrospectively analyzed data from 394 fluid boluses from 58 pigs subjected to either hemorrhagic or distributive shock. All animals had continuous blood pressure and cardiac output monitored throughout the study. Using this data, we developed a machine learning (ML) model to predict the hemodynamic response to a fluid challenge using only arterial blood pressure waveform data as the input. A Random Forest binary classifier referred to as the ML fluid responsiveness algorithm (MLFRA) was trained to detect fluid responsiveness (FR), defined as a ≥ 15% change in cardiac stroke volume after a fluid challenge. We then compared its performance to pulse pressure variation, a commonly used metric of FR. Model performance was assessed using the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC), confusion matrix metrics, and calibration curves plotting predicted probabilities against observed outcomes. Across multiple train/test splits and feature selection methods designed to assess performance in the setting of small sample size conditions typical of large animal experiments, the MLFRA achieved an average AUROC, recall (sensitivity), specificity, and precision of 0.82, 0.86, 0.62. and 0.76, respectively. In the same datasets, pulse pressure variation had an AUROC, recall, specificity, and precision of 0.73, 0.91, 0.49, and 0.71, respectively. The MLFRA was generally well-calibrated across its range of predicted probabilities and appeared to perform equally well across physiologic conditions. These results suggest that ML, using only inputs from arterial blood pressure monitoring, may substantially improve the accuracy of predicting FR compared to the use of pulse pressure variation. If generalizable, these methods may enable more effective, automated precision management of critically ill patients with circulatory shock.
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- 2024
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47. Quantum chaos and the complexity of spread of states
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Balasubramanian, Vijay, Caputa, Pawel, Magan, Javier, and Wu, Qingyue
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High Energy Physics - Theory ,Condensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics ,Quantum Physics - Abstract
We propose a measure of quantum state complexity defined by minimizing the spread of the wave-function over all choices of basis. Our measure is controlled by the "survival amplitude" for a state to remain unchanged, and can be efficiently computed in theories with discrete spectra. For continuous Hamiltonian evolution, it generalizes Krylov operator complexity to quantum states. We apply our methods to the harmonic and inverted oscillators, particles on group manifolds, the Schwarzian theory, the SYK model, and random matrix models. For time-evolved thermofield double states in chaotic systems our measure shows four regimes: a linear "ramp" up to a "peak" that is exponential in the entropy, followed by a "slope" down to a "plateau". These regimes arise in the same physics producing the slope-dip-ramp-plateau structure of the Spectral Form Factor. Specifically, the complexity slope arises from spectral rigidity, distinguishing different random matrix ensembles., Comment: 23 pages, double column format. Added references and improved title
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- 2022
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48. Improving the engineer battalion's combat power: Lessons learned in Iraq
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Magan, Aaron P., Capt
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ENGINEERS - Army - Lessons Learned ,ENGINEERS - Army - Equipment ,ENGINEER UNITS - Army - Organization ,OPERATION - Iraqi Freedom - Engineering and Construction ,EXPLOSIVE ORDNANCE DISPOSAL - Lessons Learned - Abstract
illus
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- 2003
49. Measurements of the neutron absorption in supermirror coatings
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DiJulio, D. D., Santoro, V., Devishvili, A., Khaplanov, A., Kolevatov, R., Magán, M., Miller, T. M., and Muhrer, G.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
In this work we report on measurements of neutron absorption in supermirror coatings. The measurements were carried out using the SuperADAM instrument at the Institut Laue-Langevin and by measuring the gamma-ray production from m = 3 and m = 4 neutron supermirrors when illuminated by a beam of neutrons. The results provide a valuable validation for recent computational and theoretical work that can be used as input to Monte-Carlo radiation transport calculations for the design of the shielding of neutron scattering instruments.
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- 2021
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50. Improving the Reliability of Network Intrusion Detection Systems through Dataset Integration
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Magán-Carrión, Roberto, Urda, Daniel, Díaz-Cano, Ignacio, and Dorronsoro, Bernabé
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Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Computer Science - Cryptography and Security ,Computer Science - Networking and Internet Architecture - Abstract
This work presents Reliable-NIDS (R-NIDS), a novel methodology for Machine Learning (ML) based Network Intrusion Detection Systems (NIDSs) that allows ML models to work on integrated datasets, empowering the learning process with diverse information from different datasets. Therefore, R-NIDS targets the design of more robust models, that generalize better than traditional approaches. We also propose a new dataset, called UNK21. It is built from three of the most well-known network datasets (UGR'16, USNW-NB15 and NLS-KDD), each one gathered from its own network environment, with different features and classes, by using a data aggregation approach present in R-NIDS. Following R-NIDS, in this work we propose to build two well-known ML models (a linear and a non-linear one) based on the information of three of the most common datasets in the literature for NIDS evaluation, those integrated in UNK21. The results that the proposed methodology offers show how these two ML models trained as a NIDS solution could benefit from this approach, being able to generalize better when training on the newly proposed UNK21 dataset. Furthermore, these results are carefully analyzed with statistical tools that provide high confidence on our conclusions., Comment: Submitted to the IEEE Transactions on Emerging Topics in Computing journal
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- 2021
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