371 research outputs found
Rethinking preemptive consumption: building mechanisms of reciprocity, contextuality, and risk hedging across scenarios
Confronted with fragmentation and retardation in understanding preemption, the authors aim to reassemble the current understanding of preemptive behaviors. Hence, we re-examine multiple mechanisms with three aspects of drive: expectancy, situational, and temporal factors, rooted in consumer psychology and cognition of social crises. Preemptive consumption occurs via three pathways. First, in the explanation of drives, objective-bound motivation, moderated by the opportunism of the outcome, can intensify the intention to behave preemptively, which echoes and extends expectation theory into self-other dual polarity. Second, from the perspective of the behavioral sequence, a defensive or aggressive strategy, tuned by the level of the behavioral barrier, can strengthen the inclination to act preemptively. Finally, an individual's concern about scarcity and the risk of farsightedness, altered by their capacity to handle inequality and threats, impacts preemptive behavior. This study has significant implications for leveraging individual motivations, ethics, and consumer-targeted communication tools.</p
Rethinking preemptive consumption: building mechanisms of reciprocity, contextuality, and risk hedging across scenarios
Confronted with fragmentation and retardation in understanding preemption, the authors aim to reassemble the current understanding of preemptive behaviors. Hence, we re-examine multiple mechanisms with three aspects of drive: expectancy, situational, and temporal factors, rooted in consumer psychology and cognition of social crises. Preemptive consumption occurs via three pathways. First, in the explanation of drives, objective-bound motivation, moderated by the opportunism of the outcome, can intensify the intention to behave preemptively, which echoes and extends expectation theory into self-other dual polarity. Second, from the perspective of the behavioral sequence, a defensive or aggressive strategy, tuned by the level of the behavioral barrier, can strengthen the inclination to act preemptively. Finally, an individual's concern about scarcity and the risk of farsightedness, altered by their capacity to handle inequality and threats, impacts preemptive behavior. This study has significant implications for leveraging individual motivations, ethics, and consumer-targeted communication tools.</p
Long-Term Efficient Interfacial Solar Desalination Enabled by a Biomimetic 2D Water-Transport Structure Based on Silicone Nanofilaments
Solar-driven interfacial evaporation (SIE) has drawn
increasing
attention for seawater desalination. Two-dimensional water-transport
structures (2D-WTS) can enhance SIE performance by reducing heat loss
of conventional evaporators but suffer from poor salt resistance due
to insufficient water supply, which inhibits vapor escape and thus
reduces evaporation rate. Inspired by the transpiration of plant leaves,
we report the design of a 2D-WTS with controllable morphology by growing
silicone nanofilaments on a polyethylene/polypropylene fabric. 2D-WTS
has a hierarchical micro-/nanostructure for fast water supply like
the multiscale vascular system of leaves. Consequently, the separated
solar evaporator composed of 2D-WTS and polypyrrole/attapulgite@aluminium
photothermal sheet achieves long-term efficient SIE, i.e., high evaporation
rate (2.23 kg m–2 h–1, 3.5 wt
% NaCl(aq), 1 sun), stable SIE of concentrated brine over
10 days (∼2.10 kg m–2 h–1, 10 wt % NaCl(aq), 7 h irradiation per day, 1 sun), and
high practical evaporation rate of 7.36 kg m–2 during
7 h outdoor SIE under weak sunlight and low temperature (0.3–0.6
sun, 2–13 °C). This is because fast water transport in
2D-WTS forms a small salt deposition area close to the edge of the
horizontal area of 2D-WTS during long-term SIE, which hardly affects
the vapor escape
Long-Term Efficient Interfacial Solar Desalination Enabled by a Biomimetic 2D Water-Transport Structure Based on Silicone Nanofilaments
Solar-driven interfacial evaporation (SIE) has drawn
increasing
attention for seawater desalination. Two-dimensional water-transport
structures (2D-WTS) can enhance SIE performance by reducing heat loss
of conventional evaporators but suffer from poor salt resistance due
to insufficient water supply, which inhibits vapor escape and thus
reduces evaporation rate. Inspired by the transpiration of plant leaves,
we report the design of a 2D-WTS with controllable morphology by growing
silicone nanofilaments on a polyethylene/polypropylene fabric. 2D-WTS
has a hierarchical micro-/nanostructure for fast water supply like
the multiscale vascular system of leaves. Consequently, the separated
solar evaporator composed of 2D-WTS and polypyrrole/attapulgite@aluminium
photothermal sheet achieves long-term efficient SIE, i.e., high evaporation
rate (2.23 kg m–2 h–1, 3.5 wt
% NaCl(aq), 1 sun), stable SIE of concentrated brine over
10 days (∼2.10 kg m–2 h–1, 10 wt % NaCl(aq), 7 h irradiation per day, 1 sun), and
high practical evaporation rate of 7.36 kg m–2 during
7 h outdoor SIE under weak sunlight and low temperature (0.3–0.6
sun, 2–13 °C). This is because fast water transport in
2D-WTS forms a small salt deposition area close to the edge of the
horizontal area of 2D-WTS during long-term SIE, which hardly affects
the vapor escape
Computational Exploration of Zinc Binding Groups for HDAC Inhibition
Histone
deacetylases (HDACs) have emerged as important drug targets
in epigenetics. The most common HDAC inhibitors use hydroxamic acids
as zinc binding groups despite unfavorable pharmacokinetic properties.
A two-stage protocol of M05-2X calculations of a library of 48 fragments
in a small model active site, followed by QM/MM hybrid calculations
of the full enzyme with selected binders, is used to prospectively
select potential bidentate zinc binders. The energetics and interaction
patterns of several zinc binders not previously used for the inhibition
of HDACs are discussed
Computational Exploration of Zinc Binding Groups for HDAC Inhibition
Histone
deacetylases (HDACs) have emerged as important drug targets
in epigenetics. The most common HDAC inhibitors use hydroxamic acids
as zinc binding groups despite unfavorable pharmacokinetic properties.
A two-stage protocol of M05-2X calculations of a library of 48 fragments
in a small model active site, followed by QM/MM hybrid calculations
of the full enzyme with selected binders, is used to prospectively
select potential bidentate zinc binders. The energetics and interaction
patterns of several zinc binders not previously used for the inhibition
of HDACs are discussed
Computational Exploration of Zinc Binding Groups for HDAC Inhibition
Histone
deacetylases (HDACs) have emerged as important drug targets
in epigenetics. The most common HDAC inhibitors use hydroxamic acids
as zinc binding groups despite unfavorable pharmacokinetic properties.
A two-stage protocol of M05-2X calculations of a library of 48 fragments
in a small model active site, followed by QM/MM hybrid calculations
of the full enzyme with selected binders, is used to prospectively
select potential bidentate zinc binders. The energetics and interaction
patterns of several zinc binders not previously used for the inhibition
of HDACs are discussed
Computational Exploration of Zinc Binding Groups for HDAC Inhibition
Histone
deacetylases (HDACs) have emerged as important drug targets
in epigenetics. The most common HDAC inhibitors use hydroxamic acids
as zinc binding groups despite unfavorable pharmacokinetic properties.
A two-stage protocol of M05-2X calculations of a library of 48 fragments
in a small model active site, followed by QM/MM hybrid calculations
of the full enzyme with selected binders, is used to prospectively
select potential bidentate zinc binders. The energetics and interaction
patterns of several zinc binders not previously used for the inhibition
of HDACs are discussed
Computational Exploration of Zinc Binding Groups for HDAC Inhibition
Histone
deacetylases (HDACs) have emerged as important drug targets
in epigenetics. The most common HDAC inhibitors use hydroxamic acids
as zinc binding groups despite unfavorable pharmacokinetic properties.
A two-stage protocol of M05-2X calculations of a library of 48 fragments
in a small model active site, followed by QM/MM hybrid calculations
of the full enzyme with selected binders, is used to prospectively
select potential bidentate zinc binders. The energetics and interaction
patterns of several zinc binders not previously used for the inhibition
of HDACs are discussed
Computational Exploration of Zinc Binding Groups for HDAC Inhibition
Histone
deacetylases (HDACs) have emerged as important drug targets
in epigenetics. The most common HDAC inhibitors use hydroxamic acids
as zinc binding groups despite unfavorable pharmacokinetic properties.
A two-stage protocol of M05-2X calculations of a library of 48 fragments
in a small model active site, followed by QM/MM hybrid calculations
of the full enzyme with selected binders, is used to prospectively
select potential bidentate zinc binders. The energetics and interaction
patterns of several zinc binders not previously used for the inhibition
of HDACs are discussed
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