Search results for "Positive bias"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Effect of temperature–bias annealing on the hysteresis and subthreshold behavior of multilayer MoS2 transistors

2016

The transfer characteristics (ID-VG) of multilayers MoS2 transistors with a SiO2/Si backgate and Ni source/drain contacts have been measured on as-prepared devices and after annealing at different temperatures (T-ann from 150 degrees C to 200 degrees C) under a positive bias ramp (V-G from 0 V to + 20 V). Larger T-ann resulted in a reduced hysteresis of the ID-VG curves (from similar to 11 V in the as-prepared sample to similar to 2.5 V after Tann at 200 degrees C). The field effect mobility (similar to 30 cm(2) V-1 s(-1)) remained almost unchanged after the annealing. On the contrary, the subthreshold characteristics changed from the common n-type behaviour in the as-prepared device to the…

Materials scienceAnnealing (metallurgy)Schottky barriermultilayersField effect02 engineering and technologyElectron01 natural scienceslaw.inventionlaw0103 physical sciencesGeneral Materials ScienceSchottky barrier010302 applied physicsCondensed matter physicsSubthreshold conductionmultilayerTransistorSettore FIS/01 - Fisica Sperimentale021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyCondensed Matter PhysicsSchottky barrierstransistorField-effect transistorPositive biasannealingtransistorsMaterials Science (all)0210 nano-technologyMoS2
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The mystery of the Polish soul. B. W. Johnson's effectà rebours

1996

Studies conducted in Poland replicated a not very-well known effect discovered by B. W. Johnson (1937). In his study students estimated their mood on several successive days each time comparing it to the mood they usually have. The results revealed a peculiar positive bias in that the students usually defined their mood as 'better than usual'. Johnson's study was replicated in Poland, where demonstration of optimism is not a cultural norm. The results suggest that Polish subjects 'usually define their mood as worse than usual'. The generalization and limitation of this negative bias is discussed in the light of the Pollyanna Principle and related empirical studies involving Polish subjects.

Social Psychologymedia_common.quotation_subjectSocial environmentNegative biasMoodOptimismGeneralization (learning)mental disordersPositive biasPollyanna principleSoulPsychologySocial psychologymedia_commonEuropean Journal of Social Psychology
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Multi-site analytical evaluation of a chemiluminescent magnetic microparticle immunoassay (CMIA) for sirolimus on the Abbott ARCHITECT analyzer.

2009

Objective This study evaluated a new chemiluminescent magnetic microparticle immunoassay (CMIA) for sirolimus on the ARCHITECT analyzer. Design and methods Patient and laboratory proficiency samples were tested at three European sites and one site in the United States. Results The CMIA total %CV's were all < 8% and the Limit of Quantification (LOQ) was < 1.52 ng/mL across the four sites. It cross-reacts to sirolimus metabolites F4 and F5 and showed no hematocrit interference over a range of 25% to 55%. Patient specimen correlations to three LC/MS/MS methods gave R ≥ 0.91 at three sites and mean biases of 14%, 25% and 39%. CMIA patient specimen correlations to the Abbott IMx gave R ≥ 0.94 at…

Spectrum analyzerClinical BiochemistryHematocritSensitivity and Specificitylaw.inventionMagneticslawAntibody SpecificityTandem Mass SpectrometrymedicineHumansParticle SizeChemiluminescenceDetection limitImmunoassaySirolimusChromatographymedicine.diagnostic_testChemistryMulti siteGeneral MedicineImmunoassay methodImmunoassayLuminescent MeasurementsPositive biasImmunosuppressive AgentsChromatography LiquidClinical biochemistry
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