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Estimability and efficiency in nearly orthogonal 2[m1] x 3[m2] deletion designs
This article considers single replicate factorial experiments in incomplete blocks. A single replicate 2^m1 x 3^m2 deletion design in 3 incomplete blocks is obtained from a single replicate 3^m, where m = m_1 + m_2, preliminary design by deleting all runs (or treatment combinations) with the first m_1 factors at the level two. A systematic method for determining the unbiasedly estimable (u.e.) and not unbiasedly estimable (n.u.e.) factorial effects is provided. It is shown that for m_2 > 0 all factorial effects of the type F( α_1 · · · α_m_1 , α_(m_1 +1) · · · α_m), where α_i; = 0, l for i = 1, · · ·, m_1, α_i; = 0, 1, 2 for i = m_(1+1), · · ·, m, with (α_1 · · · α_m) != (0 · · · 0), and (α_m,+l · · · _m) != α(l · · · 1) for a= 1, 2, are u.e. and the remaining factorial effects are n.u.e. It is noted that (2^m_1 - 1) factorial effects of 2^m_1 factorial experiments and (3^m_2) factorial effects of 3^m, factorial experiments, which are embedded in 2^m_1 x 3^m, factorial experiments, are u. e. The 2 x 3m-l deletion designs were considered in the work of Voss (1986). Defining factorial effects of a 2^m_1 x 3^m, factorial experiment in a form different than in Voss (1986), we develop a simple representation of u.e. and n. u. e. factorial effects. In this representation, there are (2^(m_1 + 1) + 1) n. u. e. factorial effects of the type F( α_1 · · · α_m_1, α· · · α). This number is smaller than the corresponding number of n. u. e. factorial effects in the representation of Voss (1986). The relative efficiency expressions, and their bounds, in the estimation of factorial effects of 2^m_1 x 3^m_2 deletion designs are also given
A self-assembling peptide scaffold functionalized for use with neural stem cells
Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Materials Science and Engineering, 2005.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 33-35).The performance of a biological scaffold formed by the self-assembling peptide RADA16 is comparable to the most commonly used synthetic materials employed in the culture of neural stem cells. Furthermore, improvements in the performance of RADA16 have recently been made by appending the self-assembling peptide sequence with various functional motifs from naturally occurring proteins. The focus of this work is to further analyze the performance of these functionalized self-assembling peptide scaffolds when used for the culture of neural stem cells, and to characterize these newly developed materials for comparison with RADA16. The effect of the functional motifs on the structure of the peptide scaffold was evaluated with circular dichroism and scanning electron microscopy, and the mechanical properties of the peptide scaffolds were examined through theological analysis. The functionalized peptides were found to have lower percentages of beta-sheet structure as well as reduced storage moduli in comparison with RADA16. SEM images confirmed the ability of the functionalized peptides to form three-dimensional nanofiber scaffolds capable of encompassing, neural stem cells. Three-dimensional cell culture techniques were used to evaluate the ability of the functionalized peptide scaffolds to promote neural stem cell proliferation, and a scaffold formed by the combination of different functionalized peptides was found to increase the proliferation of neural stem cells in comparison to non-functionalized RADA 16.by Angus M. Hucknall.S.M
Planning for Excellence: Insights from an International Review of Regulators’ Strategic Plans
What constitutes regulatory excellence? Answering this question is an indispensable first step for any public regulatory agency that is measuring, striving towards, and, ultimately, achieving excellence. One useful way to answer this question would be to draw on the broader literature on regulatory design, enforcement, and management. But, perhaps a more authentic way would be to look at how regulators themselves define excellence. However, we actually know remarkably little about how the regulatory officials who are immersed in the task of regulation conceive of their own success.
In this Article, we investigate regulators’ definitions of regulatory excellence by drawing on a unique source of data that provides an important window on regulators’ own aspirations: their strategic plans. Strategic plans have been required or voluntarily undertaken for the past decade or longer by regulators around the globe. In these plans, regulators offer mission statements, strategic goals, and measurable and achievable outcomes, all of which indicate what regulators value and are striving to become. Occasionally, they even state explicitly where they have fallen short of “best-in-class” status and how they intend to improve. To date, a voluminous literature exists examining agency practices in strategic planning, but we are aware of no study that tries to glean from the substance of a sizeable number of plans how regulators themselves construe regulatory excellence. The main task of this Article is undertaking this effort. This Article draws on twenty plans from different regulators in nine countries. We found most generally that excellent regulators describe themselves (though not necessarily using exactly these words) as institutions that are more (1) efficient, (2) educative, (3) multiplicative, (4) proportional, (5) vital, (6) just, and (7) honest. In addition to these seven shared attribute categories, our reading of the plans also revealed five other “unusual” attributes that only one or two agencies mentioned. Beyond merely cataloguing the attributes identified by agencies, this Article also discusses commonalities (and differences) between plan structures, emphases, and framings. We found that the plans differed widely in features such as the specificity of their mission statements, the extent to which they emphasized actions over outcomes (or vice versa), and the extent to which commitments were organized along organizational fiefdoms or cut across bureaucratic lines.
We urge future scholarship to explore alternative methods of text mining, and to study strategic plans over time within agencies, in order to track how agencies’ notions of regulatory excellence respond to changes in the regulatory context and the larger circumstances within which agencies operate. Looking longitudinally will also shed light on how agencies handle strategic goals that are either met or that prove to be unattainable
Protist predation can favour cooperation within bacterial species
Here, we studied how protist predation affects cooperation in the opportunistic pathogen bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa, which uses quorum sensing (QS) cell-to-cell signalling to regulate the production of public goods. By competing wild-type bacteria with QS mutants (cheats), we show that a functioning QS system confers an elevated resistance to predation. Surprisingly, cheats were unable to exploit this resistance in the presence of cooperators, which suggests that resistance does not appear to result from activation of QS-regulated public goods. Instead, elevated resistance of wild-type bacteria was related to the ability to form more predation-resistant biofilms. This could be explained by the expression of QS-regulated resistance traits in densely populated biofilms and floating cell aggregations, or alternatively, by a pleiotropic cost of cheating where less resistant cheats are selectively removed from biofilms. These results show that trophic interactions among species can maintain cooperation within species, and have further implications for P. aeruginosa virulence in environmental reservoirs by potentially enriching the cooperative and highly infective strains with functional QS system
Dual ion beam deposition of carbon films with diamondlike properties
A single and dual ion beam system was used to generate amorphous carbon films with diamond like properties. A methane/argon mixture at a molar ratio of 0.28 was ionized in the low pressure discharge chamber of a 30-cm-diameter ion source. A second ion source, 8 cm in diameter was used to direct a beam of 600 eV Argon ions on the substrates (fused silica or silicon) while the deposition from the 30-cm ion source was taking place. Nuclear reaction and combustion analysis indicate H/C ratios for the films to be 1.00. This high value of H/C, it is felt, allowed the films to have good transmittance. The films were impervious to reagents which dissolve graphitic and polymeric carbon structures. Although the measured density of the films was approximately 1.8 gm/cu cm, a value lower than diamond, the films exhibited other properties that were relatively close to diamond. These films were compared with diamondlike films generated by sputtering a graphite target
A statistical approach to identify superluminous supernovae and probe their diversity
We investigate the identification of hydrogen-poor superluminous supernovae
(SLSNe I) using a photometric analysis, without including an arbitrary
magnitude threshold. We assemble a homogeneous sample of previously classified
SLSNe I from the literature, and fit their light curves using Gaussian
processes. From the fits, we identify four photometric parameters that have a
high statistical significance when correlated, and combine them in a parameter
space that conveys information on their luminosity and color evolution. This
parameter space presents a new definition for SLSNe I, which can be used to
analyse existing and future transient datasets. We find that 90% of previously
classified SLSNe I meet our new definition. We also examine the evidence for
two subclasses of SLSNe I, combining their photometric evolution with
spectroscopic information, namely the photospheric velocity and its gradient. A
cluster analysis reveals the presence of two distinct groups. `Fast' SLSNe show
fast light curves and color evolution, large velocities, and a large velocity
gradient. `Slow' SLSNe show slow light curve and color evolution, small
expansion velocities, and an almost non-existent velocity gradient. Finally, we
discuss the impact of our analyses in the understanding of the powering engine
of SLSNe, and their implementation as cosmological probes in current and future
surveys.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures, accepted by ApJ on 23/01/201
Right of Mortgagee of a Surety To Compel a Prior Mortgagee To Resort to a Personal Remedy Against His Principal Before Approaching Property of the Surety Mortgaged as Security
Case Commen
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