Publications by authors named "Smolin L"

Parkinson's disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative disorder characterized by dopaminergic neuron loss, leading to motor and non-motor symptoms. Early detection before symptom onset is crucial but challenging. This study presents a framework integrating circuit modeling, non-equilibrium dynamics, and optimization to understand PD pathogenesis and enable precision interventions.

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Vaccinating individuals with more exposure to others can be disproportionately effective, in theory, but identifying these individuals is difficult and has long prevented implementation of such strategies. Here, we propose how the technology underlying digital contact tracing could be harnessed to boost vaccine coverage among these individuals. In order to assess the impact of this "hot-spotting" proposal we model the spread of disease using percolation theory, a collection of analytical techniques from statistical physics.

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A Gedanken experiment is presented where an excited and a ground-state atom are positioned such that, within the former's half-life time, they exchange a photon with 50% probability. A measurement of their energy state will therefore indicate in 50% of the cases that no photon was exchanged. Yet other measurements would reveal that, by the mere possibility of exchange, the two atoms have become entangled.

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We consider the possibility that gravity breaks parity, with left and right-handed gravitons coupling to matter with a different Newton's constant and show that this would affect their zero-point vacuum fluctuations during inflation. Should there be a cosmic background of gravity waves, the effect would translate into anomalous cosmic microwave background polarization. Nonvanishing temperature-magnetic (TB) mode [and electric-magnetic mode] components emerge, revealing interesting experimental targets.

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The purpose of this research was to develop survey instruments to evaluate diabetes knowledge and self-efficacy in a diverse population, and investigate the psychometric properties of data obtained with these instruments using Rasch measurement. Two-hundred and fifty-five urban-dwelling participants with diabetes were recruited to complete surveys through independent interviews. To evaluate the association of health literacy on metabolic control, formal literacy and hemoglobin A1c fingerstick testing were performed.

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Objective: To evaluate a clinic-based multimedia intervention for diabetes education targeting individuals with low health literacy levels in a diverse population.

Research Design And Methods: Five public clinics in Chicago, Illinois, participated in the study with computer kiosks installed in waiting room areas. Two hundred forty-four subjects with diabetes were randomized to receive either supplemental computer multimedia use (intervention) or standard of care only (control).

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The self-organization of space and time.

Philos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci

June 2003

Self-organization is clearly relevant to biology, chemistry, Earth science, economics and other sciences that have to deal with big and complicated issues. This paper shows that self-organization also has a great deal to do with fundamental physics, including quantum mechanics, relativity, quantum gravity and cosmology. This paper also aims to give some insight into what self-organization means and discusses questions such as the kinds of methods that can be used to understand self-organization and how self-organization relates to other modes of explanation such as reductionism.

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The purpose of this research was to use Rasch measurement to study the psychometric properties of data obtained from a newly developed Diabetes Questionnaire designed to measure diabetes knowledge, attitudes, and self-care. Specifically, a methodology using principles of Rasch measurement for investigating the cross-form equivalence of English and Spanish versions of the Diabetes Questionnaire was employed. A total of fifty diabetes patients responded to the questionnaire, with 26 participants completing the English version.

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We propose a modification of special relativity in which a physical energy, which may be the Planck energy, joins the speed of light as an invariant, in spite of a complete relativity of inertial frames and agreement with Einstein's theory at low energies. This is accomplished by a nonlinear modification of the action of the Lorentz group on momentum space, generated by adding a dilatation to each boost in such a way that the Planck energy remains invariant. The associated algebra has unmodified structure constants.

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This study was designed to evaluate whether the same proteins that irreversibly bind reactive electrophiles of drugs also bind glutathione (GSH) under oxidative conditions. Specifically, proteins that can be arylated by acetaminophen were compared to those that form glutathione-protein mixed disulfides (PSSG) after incubation with diamide. Data are presented which suggest that both GSH and acetaminophen bind to a subset of N-ethylmaleimide (NEM)-reactive protein thiols.

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We have studied a child with cystic fibrosis (CF), nephropathic cystinosis, and manifestations of Bartter syndrome, a finding reported previously in both of these diseases (CF and cystinosis). The chance of an individual inheriting a mutant allele for both CF and cystinosis from each of his parents by independent segregation is very small. Therefore, other mechanisms of inheritance were investigated, including whether his diseases were caused by a chromosome deletion or rearrangement that caused defects in both genes, whether his phenotype was caused by a new mutation or variant of either disease, or whether both diseases were inherited together due to inheritance of 2 copies of the same chromosome from one of the parents (uniparental disomy).

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Cysteamine (beta-mercaptoethylamine, MEA) is currently used to treat children with nephropathic cystinosis. In this study MEA was compared to phosphocysteamine (MEAP), a phosphorothioester that tastes and smells better than MEA, with respect to its ability to elevate plasma MEA and deplete leukocytes of cystine. Studies were performed in six children with nephropathic cystinosis ranging in age from 2 to 10 yr.

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Cysteamine is currently used to treat children with the inherited disorder nephropathic cystinosis. A method for the quantitative determination of this aminothiol in human plasma is presented. Whole plasma was reduced with sodium borohydride to convert disulfides to thiols.

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Stimulation of the corticospinal tract (CST) at the mid medullary level in anaesthetized cats evoked contraction of the diaphragm (D) with a perfectly reciprocal inhibition of the abdominal oblique muscles (AOM). On the contrary, its stimulation in the pyramidal decussation caused inhibition of the D and contraction of the AOM. Possible reasons of the opposite effects of stimulation of the CST at different bulbar levels are discussed.

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Heterozygotes for the autosomal recessive disease cystinosis are currently detected by measuring the cystine content of mixed-leukocyte preparations. The present study was designed to reassess the accuracy of this method and to determine whether measuring the cystine content of purified polymorphonuclear leukocytes would improve heterozygote detection. Blood samples were obtained from 29 obligate heterozygotes for nephropathic cystinosis, one obligate heterozygote for benign cystinosis, and 18 individuals presumed to be normal.

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