We aimed to quantify contemporary changes in physician Medicare reimbursement for surgical and transcatheter valvular procedures. Publicly available 2015–2023 data from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services were used to identify annual physician reimbursement fees for four procedures: surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR), transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR), mitral valve repair (MVr), and MitraClip. Physician reimbursement fees were adjusted for inflation into 2023 U.S. dollars. Changes over time were analyzed using linear regression to account for differences in average annual U.S. dollar decline, average annual percent change, and total percent change over the study period. Reimbursement for surgical and transcatheter valve procedures declined by a combined total of 28.5%: 25.8% SAVR, 34.2% TAVR, 25.8% MVr, and 28.3% MitraClip. They corresponded to average annual percent changes of −3.7% (SAVR), −5.1% (TAVR), −3.7% (MVr), and −4.1% (MitraClip)—representing a collective decline in reimbursement fee per patient of $784.96 (SAVR), $624.73 (TAVR), $823.54 (MVr), and $706.12 (MitraClip) over the nine-year study span. Over the last decade, physician reimbursement for surgical and transcatheter valve procedures has significantly decreased, potentially threatening access to quality cardiac care within the heart team approach.
Thrust-vectoring UAVs can realize decoupling of position and attitude compared with conventional quadrotors due to the ability to change thrust direction, and are used to perform various complex indoor and outdoor missions. However, existing trajectory generation frameworks are mostly for quadrotors with fixed thrust direction and a coplanar surface, and do not consider the dynamics of thrust-vectoring UAVs. To address this, this paper proposes a multi-objective trajectory generation method for thrust-vectoring UAVs in constraint space. By parametrically modeling the constraint space, the method considers the effects of environmental boundary constraints and platform dynamics characteristics on the collision constraints and motion decoupling of the trajectory, and comprehensively optimizes the trajectory’s indicators of stability, speed, and safety to plan the states and input actions of the flight trajectory. Meanwhile, a trajectory generation evaluation system is proposed, given that compared with the conventional quadratic objective function, the proposed method is effective in reducing the attitude change of the trajectory, improving the rapidity and safety, in which $$L_{\theta}$$ and $$L_{r i s k}$$ are reduced by 70.4% and 19.1%, respectively. Meanwhile, by comparing with the conventional quadrotor, the advantages of the thrust-vectoring in decoupling motion are quantified, especially in reducing the attitude change during flight, the pitch angle of the generated trajectory is reduced from ±30° to within ±20° degrees, which exerts the motion decoupling advantages of the thrust-vectoring.
Dispersion in porous media is a multiscale process that governs the distribution and mixing of fluids in the subsurface. In underground hydrogen storage, dispersion is particularly critical due to hydrogen’s low molecular weight and large density contrast relative to natural gas. In addition to this, cyclic operations amplify mixing and transport effects beyond what is typically observed during conventional gas injection and storage. The apparent mixing observed during storage arises from the combined influences of localized dispersion, heterogeneity-driven channeling, and gravity segregation. Distinguishing between local, echo, and transmission dispersion provides a start for understanding reversible and irreversible components of mixing, and for connecting localized processes with field-scale performance. This study develops a systematic method to quantify dispersion in hydrogen storage within depleted gas reservoirs by combining analytical solutions of the convective–diffusive equation with multidimensional numerical simulations. The approach translates concentration fields into effective dispersion coefficients using different methods for mixing-zone length analysis. This enables evaluation across different permeability distributions, anisotropies, and spatial correlation lengths. The method is applied under both linear and radial flow conditions, including cyclic injection and production, to capture the distinct roles of gravity segregation, heterogeneity, and boundary conditions. Across the studied cases, the effective dispersion coefficient increases from approximately 1.03 to 3.5 m2/day as the Dykstra–Parsons coefficient increases from 0.3 to 0.9. Gravity segregation significantly alters plume evolution, reducing effective mixing zone lengths and introducing asymmetric displacement behavior. Under cyclic radial injection–production, incomplete plume reversal leads to persistent concentration halos, indicating irreversible mixing. The ratio of echo to transmission dispersion further quantifies the degree of irreversibility in the system. This work establishes a quantitative framework for characterizing dispersive transport in hydrogen storage systems and provides a basis for evaluating storage performance and reversibility under realistic subsurface conditions.
The evaluation of eyewitness memories has benefited greatly from basic memory research, which has shown that suggestive information or misinformation presented by a social source after an event can create substantial memory biases in participants’ memory, or even completely fabricated false memories. However, possible social influence occurring already at the stage of encoding (during the event) has so far been widely neglected. In basic research, meanwhile, several studies address this issue specifically with regard to incidental encoding of information (non-intentional encoding “along the way”, as it also occurs in eyewitness memories). The studies demonstrate that the social context at encoding influences how stimuli are encoded, and in one case even supports the occurrence of rich and detailed false memories. There are still many differences between the laboratory studies performed so far and any conceivable real-life scenarios of eyewitness situations. However, based on the results, it seems highly promising to evaluate the actual relevance of these initial findings for forensic science by modifying the paradigms to better reflect social encoding contexts that more closely resemble typical real-life eyewitness situations.
This review aims to address the environmental issues associated with the textile sector and explores innovative and optimal approaches for the zero-waste recycling of post-consumer cotton waste. The textile industry can transition toward a circular economy by implementing various recycling techniques. This will significantly cut the waste and raw material consumption, while promoting sustainability and environmental responsibility in textile manufacturing and consumption practices. This study focuses on several key techniques, including producing carbon fibres from waste, which provides a sustainable alternative to petroleum-based precursors. In addition, the regeneration of viscose fibres is achieved by chemical recycling of cotton waste and enzymatitc recycling. Method of Gasification and Thermochemical Valorisation, ioncell process is also discussed, emphasizing its potential to encourage resource conservation and lessen dependency on virgin resources. It also explains how cellulose nanofibrils (CNFs) can be extracted from post-consumer textiles and utilised to produce high-performance materials. Additionally, despite difficulties in preserving fibre quality, the potential of mechanical recycling techniques to yield viable yarns from recycled fibres is investigated.