1,606 research outputs found
Growth studies of beef cattle in Queensland
A progress report on growth rate studies of various breeds and crosses of beef cattle at several centres is presented. The data indicate that the seasonal variation common to all centres may be controlled to some extent by the use of winter-growing pastures and forage crops and by using cattle of tropical origin in breeding programmes. This review of the present knowledge of growth rates in Queensland beef cattle has been undertaken to supplement the comprehensive unpublished information compiled by Dr. M. C. Franklin on growth rates of cattle in other States
A role for Q/N-rich aggregation-prone regions in P-body localization
P-bodies are cytoplasmic foci that are sites of mRNA degradation and translational repression. It is not known what causes the accumulation of RNA degradation factors in P-bodies, although RNA is required. The yeast Lsm1-7p complex is recruited to P-bodies under certain stress conditions. It is required for efficient decapping and degradation of mRNAs, but not for the assembly of P-bodies. Here we show that the Lsm4p subunit and its asparagine-rich carboxy-terminus are prone to aggregation and that this tendency to aggregate promotes efficient accumulation of Lsm1-7p in P-bodies. The presence of Q/N-rich regions in other P-body components suggests a more general role for aggregation-prone residues in P-body localization and assembly. This is supported by reduced P-body accumulation of Ccr4p, Pop2p and Dhh1p after deletion of these domains, and by the observed aggregation of the Q/N-rich region from Ccr4p
Job Shadowing Experiences as a Teaching Tool: A New Twist on a Tried and True Technique
Job shadowing has a long history of utilization. It is primarily considered a way for youth to become aware of the world-of-work through programs sponsored by schools or social organizations. For example, Junior Achievement International, in cooperation with several government agencies, has sponsored Groundhog Job Shadow Day for nearly 20 years. A quick internet search for job shadowing yielded over 24 million hits with the vast majority of those focused on programs aimed at high school students. Internet offerings detail anecdotal accounts of experiences, methods for setting up and executing programs, and extolment of the virtues of shadowing as a tool for high school students to prepare for college career direction. Other internet offerings focus on employer-developed programs aimed at internal advancement or as a recruitment tool for potential employees. There has been very little published addressing the use of job shadowing at the college level. Yet, job shadowing can be a great tool for college students to explore potential careers prior to committing to a specific major. This project details a pilot program in which professional selling students engage in a job shadowing experience that yields not only personal experience for themselves, but that also generates information which can be used as a teaching tool for all students
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Inkjet Printing of Materials with Resistance to Bacterial Attachment
Biofilm formation on the surface of medical devices is a major source of health-care
associated infections. The discovery of new materials that inherently avoid formation of such
biofilms on their surface points the way to the fabrication of biofilm resistant devices, with
the consequent reduction in the incidence rate of device centred infections and therefore a
reduction in suffering and costs for health-care systems. Drop on Demand (DOD) Three
Dimensional (3D) Inkjet Printing presents higher versatility than common techniques for
printing biomaterials. One of the main representations of this enhanced versatility is
polymerisation post-jetting, which provides a great range of printable polymers. The
combination of such materials with inkjet printing could revolutionise the biomedical
industry.
In this paper, the printability of four acrylates with resistance to bacterial attachment
was assessed using the printability indicator or Z parameter. Three of the materials showed a
value of Z within the printability range. The remainder displayed a Z value higher than the
maximum suggested. However, this material was ejected with stability using a complex
waveform designed for low viscosity inks. Drop spacing was optimised for each ink using
PET and glass as substrates. The combination of printability optimisation together with ideal
drop spacing allowed the construction of 3D structures of three of the four inks that were
tested.Mechanical Engineerin
Quantumgroups in the Higgs Phase
In the Higgs phase we may be left with a residual finite symmetry group H of
the condensate. The topological interactions between the magnetic- and electric
excitations in these so-called discrete H gauge theories are completely
described by the Hopf algebra or quantumgroup D(H). In 2+1 dimensional space
time we may add a Chern-Simons term to such a model. This deforms the
underlying Hopf algebra D(H) into a quasi-Hopf algebra by means of a 3-cocycle
H. Consequently, the finite number of physically inequivalent discrete H gauge
theories obtained in this way are labelled by the elements of the cohomology
group H^3(H,U(1)). We briefly review the above results in these notes. Special
attention is given to the Coulomb screening mechanism operational in the Higgs
phase. This mechanism screens the Coulomb interactions, but not the
Aharonov-Bohm interactions. (Invited talk given by Mark de Wild Propitius at
`The III International Conference on Mathematical Physics, String Theory and
Quantum Gravity', Alushta, Ukraine, June 13-24, 1993. To be published in Theor.
Math. Phys.)Comment: 19 pages in Latex, ITFA-93-3
Axion-induced oscillations of cooperative electric field in a cosmic magneto-active plasma
We consider one cosmological application of an axionic extension of the
Maxwell-Vlasov theory, which describes axionically induced oscillatory regime
in the state of global magnetic field evolving in the anisotropic expanding
(early) universe. We show that the cooperative electric field in the
relativistic plasma, being coupled to the pseudoscalar (axion) and global
magnetic fields, plays the role of a regulator in this three-level system; in
particular, the cooperative (Vlasov) electric field converts the regime of
anomalous growth of the pseudoscalar field, caused by the axion-photon coupling
at the inflationary epoch of the universe expansion, into an oscillatory regime
with finite density of relic axions. We analyze solutions to the dispersion
equations for the axionically induced cooperative oscillations of the electric
field in the relativistic plasma.Comment: 7 pages, misprints correcte
Structural, item, and test generalizability of the psychopathology checklist - revised to offenders with intellectual disabilities
The Psychopathy ChecklistâRevised (PCL-R) is the most widely used measure of psychopathy in forensic clinical practice, but the generalizability of the measure to offenders with intellectual disabilities (ID) has not been clearly established. This study examined the structural equivalence and scalar equivalence of the PCL-R in a sample of 185 male offenders with ID in forensic mental health settings, as compared with a sample of 1,212 male prisoners without ID. Three models of the PCL-Râs factor structure were evaluated with confirmatory factor analysis. The 3-factor hierarchical model of psychopathy was found to be a good fit to the ID PCL-R data, whereas neither the 4-factor model nor the traditional 2-factor model fitted. There were no cross-group differences in the factor structure, providing evidence of structural equivalence. However, item response theory analyses indicated metric differences in the ratings of psychopathy symptoms between the ID group and the comparison prisoner group. This finding has potential implications for the interpretation of PCL-R scores obtained with people with ID in forensic psychiatric settings
HYPER-RESPONSIVENESS OF ALDOSTERONE TO METOCLOPRAMIDE IN ALDOSTERONISM
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73101/1/j.1365-2265.1982.tb02761.x.pd
Critical temperature oscillations in magnetically coupled superconducting mesoscopic loops
We study the magnetic interaction between two superconducting concentric
mesoscopic Al loops, close to the superconducting/normal phase transition. The
phase boundary is measured resistively for the two-loop structure as well as
for a reference single loop. In both systems Little-Parks oscillations,
periodic in field are observed in the critical temperature Tc versus applied
magnetic field H. In the Fourier spectrum of the Tc(H) oscillations, a weak
'low frequency' response shows up, which can be attributed to the inner loop
supercurrent magnetic coupling to the flux of the outer loop. The amplitude of
this effect can be tuned by varying the applied transport current.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Diffusion in a generalized Rubinstein-Duke model of electrophoresis with kinematic disorder
Using a generalized Rubinstein-Duke model we prove rigorously that kinematic
disorder leaves the prediction of standard reptation theory for the scaling of
the diffusion constant in the limit for long polymer chains
unaffected. Based on an analytical calculation as well as Monte Carlo
simulations we predict kinematic disorder to affect the center of mass
diffusion constant of an entangled polymer in the limit for long chains by the
same factor as single particle diffusion in a random barrier model.Comment: 29 pages, 3 figures, submitted to PR
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