33 research outputs found

    Alternative proof for the localization of Sinai's walk

    Full text link
    We give an alternative proof of the localization of Sinai's random walk in random environment under weaker hypothesis than the ones used by Sinai. Moreover we give estimates that are stronger than the one of Sinai on the localization neighborhood and on the probability for the random walk to stay inside this neighborhood

    Microbial diversity in waters, sediments and microbial mats evaluated using fatty acid-based methods

    Get PDF
    The review summarises recent advances towards a greater comprehensive assessment of microbial diversity in aquatic environments using the fatty acid methyl esters and phospholipid fatty acids approaches. These methods are commonly used in microbial ecology because they do not require the culturing of micro-organisms, are quantitative and reproducible and provide valuable information regarding the structure of entire microbial communities. Because some fatty acids are associated with taxonomic and functional groups of micro-organisms, they allow particular groups of micro-organisms to be distinguished. The integration of fatty acid-based methods with stable isotopes, RNA and DNA analyses enhances our knowledge of the role of micro-organisms in global nutrient cycles, functional activity and phylogenetic lineages within microbial communities. Additionally, the analysis of fatty acid profiles enables the shifts in the microbial diversity in pristine and contaminated environments to be monitored. The main objective of this review is to present the use of lipid-based approaches for the characterisation of microbial communities in water columns, sediments and biomats

    Measures of frailty in population-based studies: An overview

    Get PDF
    Although research productivity in the field of frailty has risen exponentially in recent years, there remains a lack of consensus regarding the measurement of this syndrome. This overview offers three services: first, we provide a comprehensive catalogue of current frailty measures; second, we evaluate their reliability and validity; third, we report on their popularity of use

    2013 WSES guidelines for management of intra-abdominal infections

    Get PDF
    Peer reviewe

    Quantification of normal cell death in the rat retina: Implications for clone composition in cell lineage analysis

    No full text
    Naturally occurring cell death complicates the analysis of cell lineage studies by making the surviving members of a clone appear more closely related than they actually are. Here we ask how much normal cell death occurs during rat retinal development, and whether that amount of death is sufficient to confuse the analysis of cell lineage relationships. We measure total cell death in the retina by combining relative counts of dead cells with absolute measurements of total cell loss. For most cell types, but not rods, we find that half of the cells generated die during normal retinal development. We use a computer model to quantify the effects of different amounts of cell death in a simulated lineage study. The simulation indicates that 50% cell death means that clonal variability analysed after the cell death period is not necessarily a good indicator of how much variability actually occurs in the underlying lineage
    corecore