keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38570964/degenerate-spontaneous-parametric-down-conversion-in-nonlinear-metasurfaces
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tetsuyuki Ochiai
We propose a simple scheme of degenerate spontaneous parametric down-conversion (SPDC) in nonlinear metasurfaces or photonic crystal slabs with quasi-guided modes. It employs a band crossing between even- and odd-parity quasi-guided mode bands inside the light cone (above the light line) and a selection rule in the conversion efficiency of the SPDC. The efficiency can be evaluated fully classically via the inverse process of noncollinear second-harmonic generation (SHG). As a toy model, we study the SPDC and SHG in a monolayer of noncentrosymmetric spheres and confirm that the scenario works well to enhance the SPDC...
March 25, 2024: Optics Express
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38564064/adding-to-the-conversation-language-delays-and-parent-child-interactions-in-the-younger-siblings-of-children-with-autism
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emily Roemer Britsch, Jana M Iverson
In their first three years, children begin to maintain topics and add new information in conversation. In turn, caregivers create opportunities for language learning. Compared to children with no family history of autism (typical likelihood, TL), the younger siblings of children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are at elevated likelihood (EL) for both ASD and language delays. This study asked: (1) Do profiles of spoken language and conversational skills differ across groups? (2) Does spoken language relate to conversational skills? and (3) How does parent speech relate to child spoken language and conversational skills? Child spoken language, conversational skills, and parent speech were examined during toy play at home with three-year-old TL (n = 16) and EL children with ASD (EL-ASD, n = 10), non-ASD language delay (EL-LD, n = 21), and no delays or diagnoses (EL-ND, n = 37)...
April 2, 2024: Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38560278/variations-in-electronic-health-record-based-definitions-of-diabetic-retinopathy-cohorts-a-literature-review-and-quantitative-analysis
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jimmy S Chen, Ivan A Copado, Cecilia Vallejos, Fritz Gerald P Kalaw, Priyanka Soe, Cindy X Cai, Brian C Toy, Durga Borkar, Catherine Q Sun, Jessica G Shantha, Sally L Baxter
PURPOSE: Use of the electronic health record (EHR) has motivated the need for data standardization. A gap in knowledge exists regarding variations in existing terminologies for defining diabetic retinopathy (DR) cohorts. This study aimed to review the literature and analyze variations regarding codified definitions of DR. DESIGN: Literature review and quantitative analysis. SUBJECTS: Published manuscripts. METHODS: Four graders reviewed PubMed and Google Scholar for peer-reviewed studies...
2024: Ophthalmol Sci
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38556325/elucidation-of-the-radius-and-ulna-fracture-mechanisms-in-toy-poodle-dogs-using-finite-element-analysis
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dito Anggoro, Melpa Susanti Purba, Fei Jiang, Norihiro Nishida, Harumichi Itoh, Kazuhito Itamoto, Yuki Nemoto, Munekazu Nakaichi, Hiroshi Sunahara, Kenji Tani
Fractures occurring in the distal radius and ulna of toy breed dogs pose distinctive challenges for veterinary practitioners, requiring specialized treatment approaches primarily based on anatomical features. Finite Element Analysis (FEA) was applied to conduct numerical experiments to determine stress distribution across the bone. This methodology offers an alternative substitute for directly investigating these phenomena in living dog experiments, which could present ethical obstacles. A three-dimensional bone model of the metacarpal, carpal, radius, ulna, and humerus was reconstructed from Computed Tomography (CT) images of the toy poodle and dachshund forelimb...
April 1, 2024: Journal of Veterinary Medical Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38541696/an-overview-of-the-possible-exposure-of-infants-to-microplastics
#25
REVIEW
Csilla Mišľanová, Martina Valachovičová, Zuzana Slezáková
Microplastics are small plastic pieces with sizes less than 5 mm. They are becoming a global concern due to the potential risk to human health. The potential risks of microplastics may be greater for infants because they do not have sufficiently developed metabolizing enzymes, have less ability to remove microplastics, and have highly sensitive target organs. Infants should be breastfed for the first six months of life. Breast milk is considered to be the most complete and suitable source of nutrition. However, if breastfeeding during this period is not possible, it is necessary to use formulas designed for infant initial feeding...
March 12, 2024: Life
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38533741/the-lived-experiences-of-play-and-the-perspectives-of-disabled-children-and-their-parents-surrounding-brain-computer-interfaces
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Carina Siu, Manar Aoude, John Andersen, Kim D Adams
Brain-computer interfaces (BCI) offer promise to the play of children with significant physical impairments, as BCI technology can enable disabled children to control computer devices, toys, and robots using only their brain signals. However, there is little research on the unique needs of disabled children when it comes to BCI-enabled play. Thus, this paper explored the lived experiences of play for children with significant physical impairments and examined how BCI could potentially be implemented into disabled children's play experiences by applying a social model of childhood disability...
March 27, 2024: Disability and Rehabilitation. Assistive Technology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38533525/towards-an-ai-driven-soft-toy-for-automatically-detecting-and-classifying-infant-toy-interactions-using-optical-force-sensors
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rithwik Udayagiri, Jessica Yin, Xinyao Cai, William Townsend, Varun Trivedi, Rohan Shende, O Francis Sowande, Laura A Prosser, James H Pikul, Michelle J Johnson
Introduction: It is crucial to identify neurodevelopmental disorders in infants early on for timely intervention to improve their long-term outcomes. Combining natural play with quantitative measurements of developmental milestones can be an effective way to swiftly and efficiently detect infants who are at risk of neurodevelopmental delays. Clinical studies have established differences in toy interaction behaviors between full-term infants and pre-term infants who are at risk for cerebral palsy and other developmental disorders...
2024: Frontiers in Robotics and AI
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38528816/the-importance-of-decomposing-periodic-and-aperiodic-eeg-signals-for-assessment-of-brain-function-in-a-global-context
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Teresa Del Bianco, Rianne Haartsen, Luke Mason, Virginia Carter Leno, Cilla Springer, Mandy Potter, Wendy Mackay, Petrusa Smit, Carlie Du Plessis, Lucy Brink, Mark H Johnson, Declan Murphy, Eva Loth, Hein Odendaal, Emily J H Jones
Measures of early neuro-cognitive development that are suitable for use in low-resource settings are needed to enable studies of the effects of early adversity on the developing brain in a global context. These measures should have high acquisition rates and good face and construct validity. Here, we investigated the feasibility of a naturalistic electroencephalography (EEG) paradigm in a low-resource context during childhood. Additionally, we examined the sensitivity of periodic and aperiodic EEG metrics to social and non-social stimuli...
May 2024: Developmental Psychobiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38525136/pulmonary-toxicity-assessment-of-polypropylene-polystyrene-and-polyethylene-microplastic-fragments-in-mice
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Isaac Kwabena Danso, Jong-Hwan Woo, Seung Hoon Baek, Kilsoo Kim, Kyuhong Lee
UNLABELLED: Polypropylene (PP), polystyrene (PS), and polyethylene (PE) plastics are commonly used in household items such as electronic housings, food packaging, bottles, bags, toys, and roofing membranes. The presence of inhalable microplastics in indoor air has become a topic of concern as many people spent extended periods of time indoors during the COVID-19 pandemic lockdown restrictions, however, the toxic effects on the respiratory system are not properly understood. We examined the toxicity of PP, PS, and PE microplastic fragments in the pulmonary system of C57BL/6 mice...
April 2024: Toxicological Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38522347/the-relationship-between-home-environment-affordances-and-motor-development-and-sensory-processing-skills-in-premature-infants
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rabia Zorlular, Kamile Uzun Akkaya, Bulent Elbasan
The availability of stimulating materials in the home environment is of great importance to optimizing an infant's development. This study, which has a cross-sectional study design, was conducted to examine the relationship between home environment conditions and equipment support and the motor development and sensory processing skills of premature infants. Children born premature, aged 10-16 months, were included in the study. Motor development was evaluated with the Peabody Motor Development Scale-2, and sensory processing skills were evaluated with the Test of Sensory Function in Infants...
March 23, 2024: Infant Behavior & Development
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38519026/similar-risk-of-kidney-failure-among-patients-with-blinding-diseases-who-receive-ranibizumab-aflibercept-and-bevacizumab-an-ohdsi-network-study
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Cindy X Cai, Akihiko Nishimura, Mary G Bowring, Erik Westlund, Diep Tran, Jia H Ng, Paul Nagy, Michael Cook, Jody-Ann McLeggon, Scott L DuVall, Michael E Matheny, Asieh Golozar, Anna Ostropolets, Evan Minty, Priya Desai, Fan Bu, Brian Toy, Michelle Hribar, Thomas Falconer, Linying Zhang, Laurence Lawrence-Archer, Michael V Boland, Kerry Goetz, Nathan Hall, Azza Shoaibi, Jenna Reps, Anthony G Sena, Clair Blacketer, Joel Swerdel, Kenar D Jhaveri, Edward Lee, Zachary Gilbert, Scott L Zeger, Deidra C Crews, Marc A Suchard, George Hripcsak, Patrick B Ryan
OBJECTIVE OR PURPOSE: A) To characterize the incidence of kidney failure associated with intravitreal anti-vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) exposure, and B) compare the risk of kidney failure in patients treated with ranibizumab, aflibercept, or bevacizumab. DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study across 12 databases in the Observational Health Data Sciences and Informatics (OHDSI) network. SUBJECTS, PARTICIPANTS, AND/OR CONTROLS: Subjects aged ≥18 years with ≥3 monthly intravitreal anti-VEGF medications for a blinding disease (diabetic retinopathy, diabetic macular edema, exudative age-related macular degeneration, or retinal vein occlusion)...
March 20, 2024: Ophthalmology Retina
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38511634/n-representable-one-electron-reduced-density-matrix-reconstruction-with-frozen-core-electrons
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sizhuo Yu, Jean Michel Gillet
Recent advances in quantum crystallography have shown that, beyond conventional charge density refinement, a one-electron reduced density matrix (1-RDM) satisfying N-representability conditions can be reconstructed using jointly experimental X-ray structure factors and directional Compton profiles (DCP) through semidefinite programming. So far, such reconstruction methods for 1-RDM, not constrained to idempotency, have been tested only on a toy model system (CO2 ). In this work, a new method is assessed on crystalline urea [CO(NH2 )2 ] using static (0 K) and dynamic (50 K) artificial experimental data...
May 1, 2024: Acta Crystallographica. Section A, Foundations and Advances
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38507857/neural-correlates-involved-in-perspective-taking-in-early-childhood
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
M Meyer, N Brezack, A L Woodward
Learning to consider another person's perspective is pivotal in early social development. Still, little is known about the neural underpinnings involved in perspective-taking in early childhood. In this EEG study, we examined 4-year-old children's brain activity during a live, social interaction that involved perspective-taking. Children were asked to pass one of two toys to another person. To decide which toy to pass, they had to consider either their partner's perspective (perspective-taking) or visual features unrelated to their partner's perspective (control)...
March 19, 2024: Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38507845/building-language-learning-relations-between-infant-attention-and-social-contingency-in-the-first-year-of-life
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lillian R Masek, Elizabeth V Edgar, Brianna T M McMillan, James Torrence Todd, Roberta Michnick Golinkoff, Lorraine E Bahrick, Kathy Hirsh-Pasek
In Western societies, social contingency, or prompt and meaningful back-and-forth exchanges between infant and caregiver, is a powerful feature of the early language environment. Research suggests that infants with better attentional skills engage in more social contingency during interactions with adults and, in turn, social contingency supports infant attention. This reciprocity is theorized to build infant language skills as the adult capitalizes on and extends the infant's attention during socially contingent interactions...
March 19, 2024: Infant Behavior & Development
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38499474/infant-sustained-attention-differs-by-context-and-social-content-in-the-first-2-years-of-life
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jessica Bradshaw, Xiaoxue Fu, John E Richards
Sustained attention (SA) is an endogenous form of attention that emerges in infancy and reflects cognitive engagement and processing. SA is critical for learning and has been measured using different methods during screen-based and interactive contexts involving social and nonsocial stimuli. How SA differs by measurement method, context, and stimuli across development in infancy is not fully understood. This 2-year longitudinal study examines attention using one measure of overall looking behavior and three measures of SA-mean look duration, percent time in heart rate-defined SA, and heart rate change during SA-in N = 53 infants from 1 to 24 months across four unique task conditions: social videos, nonsocial videos, social interactions (face-to-face play), and nonsocial interactions (toy engagement)...
March 18, 2024: Developmental Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38497445/comparing-parent-child-interaction-during-wordless-book-reading-print-book-reading-and-imaginative-play
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sandra J Mathers, Alex Hodgkiss, Pinar Kolancali, Sophie A Booton, Zhaoyu Wang, Victoria A Murphy
This study investigated differences in adult-child language interactions when parents and their three-to-four-year old children engage in wordless book reading, text-and-picture book reading and a small-world toy play activity. Twenty-two parents recorded themselves completing each activity at home with their child. Parent input was compared across contexts, focusing on interactive and conceptual domains: use of open prompts, expansions or extensions of children's utterances, and use of decontextualised (abstract) language...
March 18, 2024: Journal of Child Language
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38491601/noise-induced-collective-actuation-in-active-solids
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Paul Baconnier, Vincent Démery, Olivier Dauchot
Collective actuation describes the spontaneous synchronized oscillations taking place in active solids when the elasto-active feedback, which generically couples the reorientation of the active forces and the elastic stress, is large enough. In the absence of noise, collective actuation takes the form of a strong condensation of the dynamics on a specific pair of modes and their generalized harmonics. Here we report experiments conducted with centimetric active elastic structures, where collective oscillation takes place along the single lowest energy mode of the system, gapped from the other modes because of the system's geometry...
February 2024: Physical Review. E
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38491581/synchronization-modes-of-triple-flickering-buoyant-diffusion-flames-experimental-identification-and-model-interpretation
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yicheng Chi, Zeying Hu, Tao Yang, Peng Zhang
The synchronization modes of a nonlinear oscillator system consisting of three identical flickering buoyant diffusion flames in isosceles triangles were studied experimentally and theoretically. Five synchronization modes, such as the in-phase, flickering death, partially flickering death, partially in-phase, and rotation modes, were experimentally observed and identified by systematically adjusting the flame distance and fuel flow rates. Two toy models were adopted to interpret the experimentally identified dynamical modes: one is the classical Kuramoto model, and the other is a complexified Stuart-Landau model, which was proposed through the introduction of the complex coupling term...
February 2024: Physical Review. E
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38491575/evolution-of-temporal-fluctuation-scaling-exponent-in-nonstationary-time-series-using-supersymmetric-theory-of-stochastic-dynamics
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
F S Abril, C J Quimbay
Temporal fluctuation scaling (TFS) is an emergent property of complex systems that relates the variance (Ξ_{2}) and the mean (M_{1}) from an empirical data set in the form Ξ_{2}∼M_{1}^{α_{TFS}}, where the dispersion (fluctuation) of the data has been described in terms of Ξ_{2}. At present, it has been shown that this law of complex systems has different multidisciplinary applications such as characterizing the market rate based on its exponent, explaining the spatial spread of a pandemic or measuring dispersion in a counting process, among others, if it is known how the average value M_{1} of a representative quantity in a system changes...
February 2024: Physical Review. E
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38491117/linking-diet-switching-to-reproductive-performance-across-populations-of-two-critically-endangered-mammalian-herbivores
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nick Harvey Sky, Jake Britnell, Rachael Antwis, Tyler Kartzinel, Daniel Rubenstein, Phil Toye, Benedict Karani, Regina Njeru, Jamie Gaymer, Samuel Mutisya, Susanne Shultz
Optimal foraging theory predicts that animals maximise energy intake by consuming the most valuable foods available. When resources are limited, they may include lower-quality fallback foods in their diets. As seasonal herbivore diet switching is understudied, we evaluate its extent and effects across three Kenyan reserves each for Critically Endangered eastern black rhino (Diceros bicornis michaeli) and Grevy's zebra (Equus grevyi), and its associations with habitat quality, microbiome variation, and reproductive performance...
March 15, 2024: Communications Biology
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