scholarly journals Searching for NEOs using Lowell observatorys Discovery Channel Telescope (DCT)

2006 ◽  
Vol 2 (S236) ◽  
pp. 363-370
Author(s):  
Edward Bowell ◽  
Robert L. Millis ◽  
Edward W. Dunham ◽  
Bruce W. Koehn ◽  
Byron W. Smith

AbstractWe discuss the potential contribution of the Discovery Channel Telescope (or a clone) to a detection program aimed at discovering 90% of potentially hazardous objects (PHOs) larger than 140 m in diameter. Three options are described, each involving different levels of investment. We believe that LSST, Pan-STARRS, and DCT, working in a coordinated fashion, offer a cost-effective, low-risk way to accomplish the objectives of the extended NEO search program.

Author(s):  
Yi-Fan Yan ◽  
Sheng-Jun Huang

Active learning reduces the labeling cost by actively querying labels for the most valuable data. It is particularly important for multi-label learning, where the annotation cost is rather high because each instance may have multiple labels simultaneously. In many multi-label tasks, the labels are organized into hierarchies from coarse to fine. The labels at different levels of the hierarchy contribute differently to the model training, and also have diverse annotation costs. In this paper, we propose a multi-label active learning approach to exploit the label hierarchies for cost-effective queries. By incorporating the potential contribution of ancestor and descendant labels, a novel criterion is proposed to estimate the informativeness of each candidate query. Further, a subset selection method is introduced to perform active batch selection by balancing the informativeness and cost of each instance-label pair. Experimental results validate the effectiveness of both the proposed criterion and the selection method.


2011 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 300-304 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Negrão ◽  
C. Almadanim ◽  
I. Pires ◽  
K. L. McNally ◽  
M. M. Oliveira

Rice is a salt-sensitive species with enormous genetic variation for salt tolerance hidden in its germplasm pool. The EcoTILLING technique allows us to assign haplotypes, thus reducing the number of accessions to be sequenced, becoming a cost-effective, time-saving and high-throughput method, ideal to be used in laboratories with limited financial resources. Aiming to find alleles associated with salinity tolerance, we are currently using the EcoTILLING technique to detect single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and small indels across 375 germplasm accessions representing the diversity available in domesticated rice. We are targeting several genes known to be involved in salt stress signal transduction (OsCPK17) or tolerance mechanisms (SalT). So far, we found a total of 15 and 23 representative SNPs or indels in OsCPK17 and SalT, respectively. These natural allelic variants are mostly located in 3′-untranslated region, thus opening a new path for studying their potential contribution to the regulation of gene expression and possible role in salt tolerance.


Thorax ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 73 (8) ◽  
pp. 713-722 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carlos Echevarria ◽  
Joanne Gray ◽  
Tom Hartley ◽  
John Steer ◽  
Jonathan Miller ◽  
...  

BackgroundPrevious models of Hospital at Home (HAH) for COPD exacerbation (ECOPD) were limited by the lack of a reliable prognostic score to guide patient selection. Approximately 50% of hospitalised patients have a low mortality risk by DECAF, thus are potentially suitable.MethodsIn a non-inferiority randomised controlled trial, 118 patients admitted with a low-risk ECOPD (DECAF 0 or 1) were recruited to HAH or usual care (UC). The primary outcome was health and social costs at 90 days.ResultsMean 90-day costs were £1016 lower in HAH, but the one-sided 95% CI crossed the non-inferiority limit of £150 (CI −2343 to 312). Savings were primarily due to reduced hospital bed days: HAH=1 (IQR 1–7), UC=5 (IQR 2–12) (P=0.001). Length of stay during the index admission in UC was only 3 days, which was 2 days shorter than expected. Based on quality-adjusted life years, the probability of HAH being cost-effective was 90%. There was one death within 90 days in each arm, readmission rates were similar and 90% of patients preferred HAH for subsequent ECOPD.ConclusionHAH selected by low-risk DECAF score was safe, clinically effective, cost-effective, and preferred by most patients. Compared with earlier models, selection is simpler and approximately twice as many patients are eligible. The introduction of DECAF was associated with a fall in UC length of stay without adverse outcome, supporting use of DECAF to direct early discharge.Trial registration numberRegistered prospectively ISRCTN29082260.


2020 ◽  
Vol 38 (33) ◽  
pp. 3851-3862 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew J. Ehrhardt ◽  
Zachary J. Ward ◽  
Qi Liu ◽  
Aeysha Chaudhry ◽  
Anju Nohria ◽  
...  

PURPOSE Survivors of childhood cancer treated with anthracyclines and/or chest-directed radiation are at increased risk for heart failure (HF). The International Late Effects of Childhood Cancer Guideline Harmonization Group (IGHG) recommends risk-based screening echocardiograms, but evidence supporting its frequency and cost-effectiveness is limited. PATIENTS AND METHODS Using the Childhood Cancer Survivor Study and St Jude Lifetime Cohort, we developed a microsimulation model of the clinical course of HF. We estimated long-term health outcomes and economic impact of screening according to IGHG-defined risk groups (low [doxorubicin-equivalent anthracycline dose of 1-99 mg/m2 and/or radiotherapy < 15 Gy], moderate [100 to < 250 mg/m2 or 15 to < 35 Gy], or high [≥ 250 mg/m2 or ≥ 35 Gy or both ≥ 100 mg/m2 and ≥ 15 Gy]). We compared 1-, 2-, 5-, and 10-year interval-based screening with no screening. Screening performance and treatment effectiveness were estimated based on published studies. Costs and quality-of-life weights were based on national averages and published reports. Outcomes included lifetime HF risk, quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs), lifetime costs, and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs). Strategies with ICERs < $100,000 per QALY gained were considered cost-effective. RESULTS Among the IGHG risk groups, cumulative lifetime risks of HF without screening were 36.7% (high risk), 24.7% (moderate risk), and 16.9% (low risk). Routine screening reduced this risk by 4% to 11%, depending on frequency. Screening every 2, 5, and 10 years was cost-effective for high-risk survivors, and every 5 and 10 years for moderate-risk survivors. In contrast, ICERs were > $175,000 per QALY gained for all strategies for low-risk survivors, representing approximately 40% of those for whom screening is currently recommended. CONCLUSION Our findings suggest that refinement of recommended screening strategies for IGHG high- and low-risk survivors is needed, including careful reconsideration of discontinuing asymptomatic left ventricular dysfunction and HF screening in low-risk survivors.


Author(s):  
Mariagrazia Zuccarini ◽  
Chiara Suttora ◽  
Arianna Bello ◽  
Arianna Aceti ◽  
Luigi Corvaglia ◽  
...  

Parent-implemented language interventions have been used for children with expressive language delays, but no study has yet been carried out using this intervention for low-risk preterm children. The current study examined the effect of a parent-implemented dialogic book reading intervention, determining also whether the intervention differently impacted low-risk preterm and full-term children. Fifty 31-month-old late talkers with their parents participated; 27 late talkers constituted the intervention group, and 23 constituted the control group. The overall results indicated that more children in the intervention group showed partial or full recovery of their lexical expressive delay and acquired the ability to produce complete sentences relative to the control group. Concerning full-term late talkers, those in the intervention group showed a higher daily growth rate of total words, nouns, function words, and complete sentences, and more children began to produce complete sentences relative to those in the control group. Concerning low-risk preterm late talkers, children in the intervention group increased their ability to produce complete sentences more than those in the control group. We conclude that a parent-focused intervention may be an effective, ecological, and cost-effective program for improving expressive lexical and syntactic skills of full-term and low-risk preterm late talkers, calling for further studies in late talkers with biological vulnerabilities.


2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (6) ◽  
pp. 1197-1202
Author(s):  
Eliseo Martínez-García ◽  
Andrew Affleck ◽  
Pariyawan Rakvit ◽  
Salvador Arias-Santiago ◽  
Agustín Buendía-Eisman

Background: Effective doctor–patient communication is of great importance in order to optimize medical consultation outcomes. However, it can be difficult to address all patients’ concerns and expectations in clinic. Objective: To identify how much patients know about their medical condition, their fears and concerns, and their expectations, as well as evaluate the benefits of using a preconsultation questionnaire routinely. Methods: This study included consecutive patients attending dermatology outpatients from Dundee (Scotland) and Granada (Spain) who completed a simple preconsultation 3-part questionnaire. Answers to this questionnaire were discussed during clinic visits. Results: Two hundred patients participated in the study. Of all, 111 (55.5%) patients already knew their diagnosis or were able to describe their symptoms and/or feelings quite accurately at their visit to Dermatology. Most patients (85%) had fears regarding their dermatological problem. A majority of patients (97%) came to clinic with specific expectations, and many (41.5%) had multiple expectations. A high proportion of patients (74%) found the questionnaire useful. Conclusion: Patients attend clinic with different levels of knowledge, fears, and expectations. We recommend using a brief and easy to use preconsultation questionnaire as a cost-effective way of enhancing doctor–patient communication.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Chiara Pennesi ◽  
Alessia Amato ◽  
Stefano Occhialini ◽  
Alan T. Critchley ◽  
Cecilia Totti ◽  
...  

AbstractThe biosorption capacities of dried meal and a waste product from the processing for biostimulant extract of Ascophyllum nodosum were evaluated as candidates for low-cost, effective biomaterials for the recovery of indium(III). The use of indium has significantly grown in the last decade, because of its utilization in hi-tech. Two formats were evaluated as biosorbents: waste-biomass, a residue derived from the alkaline extraction of a commercial, biostimulant product, and natural-biomass which was harvested, dried and milled as a commercial, “kelp meal” product. Two systems have been evaluated: ideal system with indium only, and double metal-system with indium and iron, where two different levels of iron were investigated. For both systems, the indium biosorption by the brown algal biomass was found to be pH-dependent, with an optimum at pH3. In the ideal system, indium adsorption was higher (maximum adsorptions of 48 mg/g for the processed, waste biomass and 63 mg/g for the natural biomass), than in the double metal-system where the maximum adsorption was with iron at 0.07 g/L. Good values of indium adsorption were demonstrated in both the ideal and double systems: there was competition between the iron and indium ions for the binding sites available in the A. nodosum-derived materials. Data suggested that the processed, waste biomass of the algae, could be a good biosorbent for its indium absorption properties. This had the double advantages of both recovery of indium (high economic importance), and also definition of a virtuous circular economic innovative strategy, whereby a waste becomes a valuable resource.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 1901-1901
Author(s):  
Meike Terhorst ◽  
Martina Kleber ◽  
David De Pasquale ◽  
Gabriele Ihorst ◽  
Monika Engelhardt

Abstract Abstract 1901 Introduction: Comorbidities and a deteriorated functional status have been demonstrated to affect progression free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) in various cancer pts, but have as yet not been formally evaluated in MM. Structured comorbidity analyses seem to be exceedingly needed in MM, as these pts are typical elderly and some are frail. The study aim was to develop and validate an easily assessable and cost effective MM-risk score and compare this to previously established comorbidity indices (CIs). Methods: In initially 127 MM pts consecutively treated at our institution between 1997 and 2003, we determined age, Karnofsky-Performance Status, hypertension, diabetes, secondary malignancies, pain, liver-, heart-, lung-diseases and renal impairment (eGFR). Via uni- and multivariate Cox regression analyses, we developed a simple risk score, termed Freiburger comorbidity index (FCI), that consists of 3 risk factors only. We also compared previously established CIs, namely Kaplan Feinstein (KF), Charlson-Comorbidity (CCI), Satariano (SI) and Hematopoietic cell transplantation-specific comorbidity index (HCT-CI), assessing PFS and OS in ‘low- risk’ (scoring ≤median CI points) vs. ‘high-risk group’ pts (>median CI points). In another set of 466 consecutive MM pts treated in our department thereafter (2003-2009), we re-evaluated comorbidity, organ function and MM risk factors via uni- and multivariate analyses and determined the prognostic value of the FCI, KF and HCT-CI on PFS and OS. Results: The multivariate analysis on the initial 127 MM pts identified the Karnofsky-Performance Status <70%, moderate or severe lung impairment and eGFR <30ml/min/1.73m2 as most relevant prognostic factors, with hazard ratios (HR) for decreased OS of 2.2, 2.8 and 2.9, respectively. When incorporating these risk factors into the FCI, we identified a largely different median OS: with 0, 1 and 2–3 risk factors this was 118, 53 and 25 months, respectively (p<0.005). The initial comparison of all 4 CIs (KF, CCI, SI and HCT-CI) identified the KF and HCT-CI as most relevant: ’low-risk’ vs. ‘high-risk’-pts had a strikingly different median OS of 98 vs. 44 months (p=0.007), and 81 vs. 41 months (p=0.002), respectively. The confirmation analysis in 466 MM pts verified the prognostic relevance of the FCI, KF and HCT-CI, showing median OS differences between ‘low-risk’ vs. ‘high-risk’ pts of 113 vs. 39, 143 vs. 36 and 117 vs. 49 months, respectively (log rank-test p< 0.0001 each). The multivariate analysis of prognostic factors revealed that high-risk cytogenetics, elevated LDH, increased bone marrow infiltration, ß2-microglobulin (ß2-MG) and impaired albumin were most relevant. In our current test and validation analysis, we are re-evaluating all MM pts treated between 1997 and 2009, to confirm the value of specific organ function, prognostic risks and comorbidity scores in order to develop a weighted FCI for future analyses. Clinical characteristics of this combined pt set showed a median age of 62 years (27-90); 86% had stage II/III disease by Durie&Salmon and 18% stage B disease. The descriptive comorbidity evaluation revealed a Karnofsky-Performance Status <70% in 64% (median 70%; range: 20–100%), moderate or severe lung disease in 18% and eGFR <30 in 16%. Current results also indicate that weighted comorbidity scores- as realized with the in MM valuable KF and HCT-CI - allow to distinguish significantly different MM risk groups. The by our group developed FCI is currently a non-weighted, but simple, concise and cost effective comorbidity tool consisting of 3 factors only, namely Karnofsky-Performance Status, lung- and renal function, which is of importance to develop further to a weighted score as well as in combination with other indispensable risk factors. Conclusions: The new FCI, KF and HCT-CI proved as useful tools for risk evaluation in MM. The development of a weighted FCI within a test- and validation-set is currently being pursued as well as the inclusion of other prognostic parameters therein (such as ISS). Our results highlight the strong debate on comorbidity scores and comprehensive risk assessment in MM which have not as yet moved into routine clinical practise, but appear appealing and useful to implement into future analyses and clinical trials. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


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