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Träfflista för sökning "WFRF:(Andersson Mats O) srt2:(2010-2014)"

Search: WFRF:(Andersson Mats O) > (2010-2014)

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1.
  • Berglund, Mats, et al. (author)
  • Perceived Risk for Cannabis, Tobacco and Alcohol : Comparison of US and Swedish High School Students
  • 2014
  • In: Alcoholism. - : John Wiley & Sons. - 0145-6008 .- 1530-0277. ; 38:s1, s. 347A-347A
  • Journal article (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • Aims: Perceived risk is related to use of cannabis, alcohol, and tobacco among youth. Sweden and US have different policies and customs related to these substances thatmay influence both risk perception and behavior regarding use of these substances. Differences in perceived risk of cannabis, cigarettes, chewing tobacco and alcohol in Sweden and the US have been reported but no direct systematic comparison has been performed. Design and setting: The ATLAS Project is a long-term longitudinal study comparing the development of substance use from high school to the young adult life period (18–23 years) in the US and Sweden. Participants: Baseline data for 3352 17–19 year-old high school students (65%from Sweden, 56% women, mean age 17.8, 35%from US 58%women,mean age 17.6). Measurements: Surveys of perceived risk items, ever use of cannabis, cigarettes and alcohol, as well as conduct problems, mental health symptoms, and impulsivity. Findings: The largest differences between the countries were found for the risk of cannabis use. Swedish participants reported much higher perceived risk both for continuous and occasional use than US students. For cigarettes, chewing tobacco and alcohol students from the US reported higher risk perception than the Swedish students did. Females reported higher perceived risk for all substances than male students.Conduct problems were associated with less perceived risk in all examples and impulsivity in cannabis and alcohol issues. Increasedmental health symptoms were associated with increased perceived risk for alcohol. Those who have used the specific drug reported lower levels of risk for that drug butmostly not for other drugs. Conclusions: Perceived risk for cannabis was higher in Swedish students than in US students while cigarette smoking, chewing tobacco and alcohol use were perceived as more risky in the US. One possibility could be that Sweden has much tougher drug laws than the US while less stringent alcohol and tobacco laws.
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2.
  • Fenwick, O., et al. (author)
  • Efficient red electroluminescence from diketopyrrolopyrrole copolymerised with a polyfluorene
  • 2013
  • In: APL Materials. - : AIP Publishing. - 2166-532X. ; 1:3, s. Art. no. 032108-
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • We report the synthesis, characterization, and device incorporation of copolymers based on a common green-emitting polyfluorene but containing a small proportion of a low energy gap donor-acceptor-donor unit for red emission in photo- and electroluminescence. At just 1%-3% random incorporation, the low-gap unit is not present on all chains, yet we demonstrate that efficient charge and energy transfer can yield electroluminescent devices with 1% quantum efficiency and a color that can be tuned by adjusting the density of low-gap units to achieve primary red (National Television System Committee). The high current density tail off in the efficiency is reduced by replacing the hole-injection layer with a photochemically cross-linked electron-blocking layer.
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3.
  • Fossos-Wong, Nicole, et al. (author)
  • Changes in Alcohol Expectancies, Drinking and Alcohol-Related Negative Consequences in the Transition out of High School
  • 2014
  • In: Alcoholism. - : John Wiley & Sons. - 0145-6008 .- 1530-0277. ; 38:s1, s. 59A-59A
  • Journal article (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • The transition fromadolescence to emerging adulthood is a period of increased risk for heavy drinking behavior. Prior research has found that college students drink more and experience more consequences than their non-college counterparts. However, sparse research has examined whether students who are college- versus work-bound show differences in drinking and related consequences in high school (HS) as well. In addition, little research has explored whether alcohol expectancies also change over time as a function of selection into college versus non-college environments. The current study examined whether alcohol-related expectancies, consequences, and drinking changed over the course of a year as a function of whether participants transitioned into a four-year university (UNI), community college/trade school (CC), or workforce setting (WF). Participants (N=848) were HS seniors (mean age=17.5 years; 37%male, 73%Caucasian) taking part in a larger study examining alcohol use trajectories.Measures included alcohol expectancies (CEOA), drinking (DDQ), and alcohol-related problems (RAPI) assessed during their senior year and one year later. Repeatedmeasures ANOVAs revealed significant main effects for time, indicating increases in drinks per week F(1, 807)=19.18, p>0.001 and alcohol-related problems F(1, 808)=8.78, p>0.01 and a decrease in alcohol expectancies F(1, 808)=14.35, p>0.001 from baseline to 12 month follow-up. Results also found a main effect for group, indicating UNI students held higher expectancies F(2, 808)=8.15, p>0.001 and drank more F(2, 807)=6.26, p>0.01 than other participants. A significant time9group interaction showed that whereas UNI-bound students drank less thanWF-bound students in HS, the roles reversed one year later with UNI students drinking more thanWF students F (2, 807)=27.56, p>0.001. Similarly, WF-bound students had more alcohol-related problems in HS followed by CC-bound students and UNI-bound students, but one year later the order reversed with UNI students exhibiting the most alcohol-related problems F(2, 807)=5.21, p>0.01. Results indicate that whereas UNI-bound seniors exhibit the highest expectancies, drink less, and experience fewer problems during HS, upon entry into UNI, they experience more problems and out-drink their CC andWF counterparts. These results highlight the importance of prevention strategies, including an expectancy challenge component, especially for UNI-bound HS seniors.
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4.
  • Jansson, Stefan P.O. 1959- (author)
  • A Longitudinal Study of Diabetes Mellitus : With Special Reference to Incidence and Prevalence, and to Determinants of Macrovascular Complications and Mortality
  • 2014
  • Doctoral thesis (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • Objectives. To investigate diabetes prevalence, incidence, mortality trends, the effects of hyperglycaemia and blood pressure, diabetes and hypertension treatment, and the effect of screening detection on total and cardiovascular disease (CVD), myocardial infarction (MI) and stroke incidence.Study population and methods. Between 1972 and 2001 all patients with diabetes, some detected clinically and some by case-finding procedures (screening), were entered in a diabetes register at Laxå Primary Health Care Center in Sweden. The register included information on medical treatment and laboratory data as well as information on mortality and morbidity from National Registers. The register was supplemented with five non-diabetic subjects, matched to each diabetes patients by age, sex, and year of detection.Results. During the study period 776 new diabetes cases was found, 36 type 1 diabetes mellitus and 740 type 2 diabetes mellitus. Age standardised incidence and prevalence rates for type 1 and type 2 diabetes did not increase over time. Diabetic patients had 17% higher mortality rate than non-diabetic persons, 22% in women and 13% in men. The corresponding over-mortality in CVD was 33%, 41% in women and 27% in men. CVD mortality decreased across time in non-diabetic subjects and in diabetic men but not in diabetic women. Results regarding coronary heart disease (CHD) were similar. CVD incidence increased with fasting blood glucose (FBG), body mass index (BMI), mean arterial blood pressure (MABP), and decreased with metformin treatment and sulfonylurea. Myocardial infarction incidence increased with FBG, BMI and MABP, and decreased with metformin treatment. Stroke incidence increased with MABP. There was no difference in prognoses between those detected by screening or clinically.Conclusions. Diabetes prevalence and incidence did not change over time. The over-mortality according to diabetes was moderate. CVD and MI during follow up were negatively affected by hypertension and hyperglycaemia, and positively by pharmacological diabetic treatment. For stroke no pharmacological protective effect was seen. Screening did not improve prognosis.
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5.
  • Kadigrobov, Anatoli M., 1937, et al. (author)
  • Hot electrons in magnetic point contacts as a photon source
  • 2011
  • In: New Journal of Physics. - : IOP Publishing. - 1367-2630. ; 13
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • We propose to use a point contact between a ferromagnetic and a normal metal in the presence of a magnetic field for creating a large inverted spin population of hot electrons in the contact core. The key point of the proposal is that when these hot electrons relax by flipping their spin, microwave photons are emitted, with a frequency tunable by the applied magnetic field. While point contacts are an established technology, their use as a photon source is a new and potentially very useful application. We show that this photon emission process can be detected by means of transport spectroscopy and demonstrate stimulated emission of radiation in the 10–100 GHz range for a model point contact system using a minority-spin ferromagnetic injector. These results can potentially lead to new types of lasers based on spin injection in metals.
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8.
  • Lundström, Jan O., et al. (author)
  • Transstadial Transmission of Francisella tularensis holarctica in Mosquitoes, Sweden
  • 2011
  • In: Emerging Infectious Diseases. - : Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). - 1080-6040 .- 1080-6059. ; 17:5, s. 794-799
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • In Sweden, human cases of tularemia caused by Francisella tularensis holarctica are assumed to be transmitted by mosquitoes, but how mosquito vectors acquire and transmit the bacterium is not clear. To determine how transmission of this bacterium occurs, mosquito larvae were collected in an area where tularemia is endemic, brought to the laboratory, and reared to adults in their original pond water. Screening of adult mosquitoes by real-time PCR demonstrated F tularensis IpnA sequences in 14 of the 48 mosquito pools tested; IpnA sequences were demonstrated in 6 of 9 identified mosquito species. Further analysis confirmed the presence of F tularensis holarctica-specific 30-bp deletion region sequences (FtM19inDel) in water from breeding containers and in 3 mosquito species (Aedes sticticus, Ae. vexans, and Ae. punctor) known to take blood from humans. Our results suggest that the mosquitoes that transmit F tularensis holarctica during tularemia outbreaks acquire the bacterium already as larvae.
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9.
  • Naidyuk, Yu. G., et al. (author)
  • Stimulated emission and absorption of photons in magnetic point contacts
  • 2012
  • In: New Journal of Physics. - : IOP Publishing. - 1367-2630. ; 14
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Point contacts between high anisotropy ferromagnetic SmCo5 and normal metal Cu are used to achieve a strong spin-population inversion in the contact core. Subjected to microwave irradiation in resonance with the Zeeman splitting in Cu, the inverted spin population relaxes through stimulated spin-flip photon emission, detected as peaks in the point-contact resistance. Resonant spin-flip photon absorption is detected as resistance minima, corresponding to sourcing the photon field energy into the electrical circuit. These results demonstrate fundamental mechanisms that are potentially useful in designing metallic spin-based lasers.
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  • Result 1-10 of 13
Type of publication
journal article (9)
editorial collection (2)
conference paper (1)
doctoral thesis (1)
Type of content
peer-reviewed (8)
other academic/artistic (5)
Author/Editor
Andersson, Mats, 196 ... (3)
Berglund, Mats (3)
Andersson, Claes (3)
Kilmer, Jason (3)
Johnsson, Kent O (3)
Larimer, Mary E (3)
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Cacialli, F. (3)
Fenwick, O (3)
Steckler, Timothy, 1 ... (3)
Shekhter, Robert I., ... (2)
Jonson, Mats, 1947 (2)
Bergh, Andreas (2)
Andersson, Sebastian (2)
Korenivski, Vladisla ... (2)
Balkashin, O. P. (2)
Fisun, V. V. (2)
Yanson, I. K. (2)
Naidyuk, Yu G. (2)
Lee, Christine M (2)
Kadigrobov, Anatoli ... (2)
Dillworth, Tiara (2)
Chen, Z. (1)
Seifert, M (1)
Forsman, Mats (1)
Thelaus, Johanna (1)
Andersson, Staffan (1)
Andersson, Ann-Chris ... (1)
Andersson, Staffan, ... (1)
Andersson, P O (1)
Erlingsson, Gissur Ó (1)
Erlingsson, Gissur Ó ... (1)
Lee, M. J. (1)
Sjölin, Mats (1)
Nyberg, Ulf (1)
Ouchterlony, Finn (1)
Olsson, Mats (1)
Jansson, Stefan P.O. ... (1)
Sjölin, Mats, 1954- (1)
Witkiewitz, Katie (1)
Litt, Dana (1)
Lundström, Jan O. (1)
Henriksson, Patrik, ... (1)
Lee, Christine A. (1)
Lewis, Melissa (1)
Di Stasio, F (1)
Fusco, Sandra, 1979 (1)
Baig, T. N (1)
Flechon, C. (1)
Fossos-Wong, Nicole (1)
Grazioli, Veronique ... (1)
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University
Malmö University (3)
Chalmers University of Technology (3)
University of Gothenburg (2)
Royal Institute of Technology (2)
Uppsala University (2)
Linnaeus University (2)
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Luleå University of Technology (1)
Linköping University (1)
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Language
English (10)
Swedish (3)
Research subject (UKÄ/SCB)
Natural sciences (4)
Engineering and Technology (3)
Social Sciences (2)
Medical and Health Sciences (1)

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