Institution
Applied Science Private University
Education•Amman, Jordan•
About: Applied Science Private University is a education organization based out in Amman, Jordan. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Catalysis. The organization has 4124 authors who have published 5299 publications receiving 116167 citations.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, Monte Carlo simulations are performed after mapping the regularized theory onto a U(N) lattice gauge theory in d = 2, where two directions are non-commutative.
Abstract: Recent perturbative studies show that in 4d non-commutative spaces, the trivial (classically stable) vacuum of gauge theories becomes unstable at the quantum level, unless one introduces sufficiently many fermionic degrees of freedom. This is due to a negative IR-singular term in the one-loop effective potential, which appears as a result of the UV/IR mixing. We study such a system non-perturbatively in the case of pure U(1) gauge theory in four dimensions, where two directions are non-commutative. Monte Carlo simulations are performed after mapping the regularized theory onto a U(N) lattice gauge theory in d = 2. At intermediate coupling strength, we find a phase in which open Wilson lines acquire non-zero vacuum expectation values, which implies the spontaneous breakdown of translational invariance. In this phase, various physical quantities obey clear scaling behaviors in the continuum limit with a fixed non-commutativity parameter θ, which provides evidence for a possible continuum theory. The extent of the dynamically generated space in the non-commutative directions becomes finite in the above limit, and its dependence on θ is evaluated explicitly. We also study the dispersion relation. In the weak coupling symmetric phase, it involves a negative IR-singular term, which is responsible for the observed phase transition. In the broken phase, it reveals the existence of the Nambu-Goldstone mode associated with the spontaneous symmetry breaking.
94 citations
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TL;DR: This study supports the value of restricting the use of certain antimicrobial classes to control ESBL, and demonstrates the feasibility of reversing resistance patterns post successful antibiotic restriction.
Abstract: WHAT IS ALREADY KNOWN ABOUT THIS SUBJECT
• The emergence and spread of bacteria producing extended-spectrum beta-lactamases (ESBLs) has important therapeutic and epidemiologic implications.
• A key target for the establishment of hospital antibiotic stewardship is reducing the occurrence of additional antibiotic resistance.
• Further research is needed to accumulate supporting evidence that reducing antibiotic use will result in a parallel reduction in antibiotic resistance.
WHAT THIS STUDY ADDS
• Fluoroquinolone restriction reversed ciprofloxacin resistance in primary and secondary healthcare settings.
• Fluoroquinolone restriction reduced ESBL-producing bacteria incidence rates in both the primary and secondary healthcare settings.
• This study highlights the value of time-series analysis in designing efficient antibiotic stewardship.
AIMS
The objective of the present study was to study the relationship between hospital antibiotic use, community antibiotic use and the incidence of extended-spectrum beta-lactamase (ESBL)-producing bacteria in hospitals, while assessing the impact of a fluoroquinolone restriction policy on ESBL-producing bacteria incidence rates.
METHODS
The study was retrospective and ecological in design. A multivariate autoregressive integrated moving average (ARIMA) model was built to relate antibiotic use to ESB-producing bacteria incidence rates and resistance patterns over a 5 year period (January 2005–December 2009).
RESULTS
Analysis showed that the hospital incidence of ESBLs had a positive relationship with the use of fluoroquinolones in the hospital (coefficient = 0.174, P= 0.02), amoxicillin-clavulanic acid in the community (coefficient = 1.03, P= 0.03) and mean co-morbidity scores for hospitalized patients (coefficient = 2.15, P= 0.03) with various time lags. The fluoroquinolone restriction policy was implemented successfully with the mean use of fluoroquinolones (mainly ciprofloxacin) being reduced from 133 to 17 defined daily doses (DDDs)/1000 bed days (P < 0.001) and from 0.65 to 0.54 DDDs/1000 inhabitants/day (P= 0.0007), in both the hospital and its surrounding community, respectively. This was associated with an improved ciprofloxacin susceptibility in both settings [ciprofloxacin susceptibility being improved from 16% to 28% in the community (P < 0.001)] and with a statistically significant reduction in ESBL-producing bacteria incidence rates.
DISCUSSION
This study supports the value of restricting the use of certain antimicrobial classes to control ESBL, and demonstrates the feasibility of reversing resistance patterns post successful antibiotic restriction. The study also highlights the potential value of the time-series analysis in designing efficient antibiotic stewardship.
94 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, a first-principles-based dynamic Monte Carlo (MC) algorithm was developed to simulate catalytic kinetics on well-defined transition metal surface, which was applied to two relevant catalytic systems.
94 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, a diagenetic rank factor was applied to peak shear strength and slake durability of mudrocks excavated from UK coal mines, and a tentative fully weathered effective stress peak strength for the weakest clays was deduced to be φ′ = 22°( c ′ = 0).
Abstract: British Coal Measures mudrocks are dominantly non-marine, mature sediments with a high average clay minerals content of over 75%. A geological classification based on quartz content does not differentiate the dominant durable mudrocks from the non-durable types and overconsolidated clays in the formation. A uniaxial compressive strength greater than 3.6MN/m 2 with a three cycle slake durability value of over 60% is suggested as an appropriate division between durable and non-durable mudrocks of this age. Physical breakdown, which acts as a control on chemical weathering triggered by pyrite oxidation, is considered to be governed by incidence of sedimentary structures, slaking and expandable mixed-layer clay content. Shear strength reduction during post-glacial weathering can be significant. A tentative fully weathered effective stress peak strength for the weakest mudrocks and clays is deduced to be φ′ = 22°( c ′ = 0). Colliery tip investigations indicate that chemical weathering effects on the shear strength of the mudrocks are small. A diagenetic rank factor applies both to peak shear strength and slake durability of mudrocks excavated from UK coal mines.
94 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, uncertainties in simulated hydrological responses were derived from the implementations of different integrated downscaling methods, reflecting our imperfect knowledge of the future climate, and were amplified through the incorporation of different weather generators.
93 citations
Authors
Showing all 4150 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Hua Zhang | 163 | 1503 | 116769 |
Menachem Elimelech | 157 | 547 | 95285 |
Yu Huang | 136 | 1492 | 89209 |
Dmitri Golberg | 129 | 1024 | 61788 |
Andrea Carlo Marini | 123 | 1236 | 72959 |
Dionysios D. Dionysiou | 116 | 675 | 48449 |
Liyuan Han | 114 | 766 | 65277 |
Shunichi Fukuzumi | 111 | 1256 | 52764 |
John A. Stankovic | 109 | 559 | 51329 |
Judea Pearl | 107 | 512 | 83978 |
Feng Wang | 107 | 1136 | 64644 |
O. C. Zienkiewicz | 107 | 455 | 71204 |
Jeffrey I. Zink | 99 | 509 | 42667 |
Kazuhiro Hono | 98 | 878 | 33534 |
Robert W. Boyd | 98 | 1161 | 37321 |