585 research outputs found
Possible impact of CAP reform on Florida's citrus pulp industry
Agribusiness, Agricultural and Food Policy, International Relations/Trade,
CONDITIONAL DEMAND AND ENDOGENEITY? A CASE STUDY OF DEMAND FOR JUICE PRODUCTS
The question of endogeneity of conditional expenditures, as well as prices, in conditional demand equations for justices is examined. Both conditional expenditures and prices were found to be uncorrelated with the conditional demand errors, based on Wu-Hausman tests. Conditional demand error variance/covariance estimates and corresponding Slutsky coefficient estimates were approximately proportional, as predicted by the theory of rational random behavior, further supporting independence of conditional expenditures and conditional errors for juice demands.Demand and Price Analysis,
Advertising and Product Confusion: A Case Study of Grapefruit Juice
Demand relationships for two closely related products -- grapefruit juice and grapefruit-juice cocktail -- were estimated from grocery-store scanner data to analyze the contention that consumer confusion exists between the two products. Results suggest confusion may exist, with grapefruit-juice advertising not only increasing the demand for grapefruit juice but also for grapefruit-juice cocktail.advertising, demand, grapefruit juice, cocktail, scanner data, Agribusiness, Consumer/Household Economics, Demand and Price Analysis,
Active Fluid Borne Noise Reduction for Aviation Hydraulic Pumps
The aviation environment holds challenging application constraints for efficient hydraulic system noise reduction devices. Besides strong limits on component weight and size, high safety and reliability standards demand simple solutions. Hence, basic silencers like inline expansion chambers and Helmholtz-Resonators are state-of-the-art aboard commercial aircrafts. Unfortunately, they do not meet today’s noise attenuation aims regarding passenger comfort and equipment durability. Significant attenuation performance is expected from active concepts that generate anti-phase noise. However, such concepts remain a long term approach unless related costs, e.g. due to additional power allocation and real-time control equipment can be avoided. In this paper an active fluid borne noise attenuation concept is discussed that accounts for the mentioned constraints. An aircraft hydraulic pump is considered as main noise source. The active attenuator is an in-house rotary valve design. The basic feature is a known direct shaft coupling principle of pump and rotary valve, so no speed/ frequency control of the valve and no separate power supply are required. The common-shaft principle is further simplified here and proposed as integral feature of future “smart pumps”
Uric acid, lung function, physical capacity and exacerbation frequency in patients with COPD: a multi-dimensional approach
Background: Recent investigations showed single associations between uric acid levels, functional parameters,
exacerbations and mortality in COPD patients. The aim of this study was to describe the role of uric acid within the
network of multiple relationships between function, exacerbation and comorbidities.
Methods: We used baseline data from the German COPD cohort COSYCONET which were evaluated by standard
multiple regression analyses as well as path analysis to quantify the network of relations between parameters,
particularly uric acid.
Results: Data from 1966 patients were analyzed. Uric acid was significantly associated with reduced FEV1, reduced
6-MWD, higher burden of exacerbations (GOLD criteria) and cardiovascular comorbidities, in addition to risk factors
such as BMI and packyears. These associations remained significant after taking into account their multiple
interdependences. Compared to uric acid levels the diagnosis of hyperuricemia and its medication played a
minor role.
Conclusion: Within the limits of a cross-sectional approach, our results strongly suggest that uric acid is a
biomarker of high impact in COPD and plays a genuine role for relevant outcomes such as physical capacity
and exacerbations. These findings suggest that more attention should be paid to uric acid in the evaluation
of COPD disease status
Radioimmunotherapy Improves Survival of Rats with Microscopic Liver Metastases of Colorectal Origin
BACKGROUND: Half of the patients with colorectal cancer develop liver metastases during the course of their disease. The aim of the present study was to assess the efficacy of radioimmunotherapy (RIT) with a radiolabeled monoclonal antibody (mAb) to treat experimental colorectal liver metastases. METHODS: Male Wag/Rij rats underwent a minilaparotomy with intraportal injection of 1 x 10(6) CC531 tumor cells. The biodistribution of (111)In-labeled MG1, 1 day after intravenous administration, was determined in vivo and compared with that of an isotype-matched control antibody (UPC-10). The maximal tolerated dose (MTD) of (177)Lu-labeled MG1 was determined and the therapeutic efficacy of (177)Lu-MG1 at MTD was compared with that of (177)Lu-UPC-10 and saline only. RIT was administered either at the day of tumor inoculation or 14 days after tumor inoculation. Primary endpoint was survival. RESULTS: (111)In-MG1 preferentially accumulated in CC531 liver tumors (9.2 +/- 3.7%ID/g), whereas (111)In-UPC-10 did not (0.8 +/- 0.1%ID/g). The MTD of (177)Lu-MG1 was 400 MBq/kg body weight. Both the administration of (177)Lu-MG1 and (177)Lu-UPC-10 had no side-effects except a transient decrease in body weight. The survival curves of the group that received (177)Lu-UPC-10 and the group that received saline only did not differ (P = 0.407). Administration of (177)Lu-MG1 RIT immediately after surgery improved survival significantly compared with administration of (177)Lu-UPC-10 (P = 0.009) whereas delayed treatment did not (P = 0.940). CONCLUSION: This study provides proof of principle that RIT can be an effective treatment modality for microscopic liver metastases, whereas RIT is not effective in larger tumors
D0-D4 brane tachyon condensation to a BPS state and its excitation spectrum in noncommutative super Yang-Mills theory
We investigate the D0-D4-brane system for different B-field backgrounds
including the small instanton singularity in noncommutative SYM theory. We
discuss the excitation spectrum of the unstable state as well as for the BPS
D0-D4 bound state. We compute the tachyon potential which reproduces the
complete mass defect. The relevant degrees of freedom are the massless (4,4)
strings. Both results are in contrast with existing string field theory
calculations. The excitation spectrum of the small instanton is found to be
equal to the excitation spectrum of the fluxon solution on R^2_theta x R which
we trace back to T-duality. For the effective theory of the (0,0) string
excitations we obtain a BFSS matrix model. The number of states in the
instanton background changes significantly when the B-field becomes self-dual.
This leads us to the proposal of the existence of a phase transition or cross
over at self-dual B-field.Comment: a4 11pt Latex2e 40 pages; v2: typos fixed, refined comments on
renormalisation, refs added, v3: ref added, version publishe
Lymphatic endothelial cells are a replicative niche for Mycobacterium tuberculosis
In extrapulmonary tuberculosis, the most common site of infection is within the lymphatic system, and there is growing recognition that lymphatic endothelial cells (LECs) are involved in immune function. Here, we identified LECs, which line the lymphatic vessels, as a niche for Mycobacterium tuberculosis in the lymph nodes of patients with tuberculosis. In cultured primary human LECs (hLECs), we determined that M. tuberculosis replicates both in the cytosol and within autophagosomes, but the bacteria failed to replicate when the virulence locus RD1 was deleted. Activation by IFN-γ induced a cell-autonomous response in hLECs via autophagy and NO production that restricted M. tuberculosis growth. Thus, depending on the activation status of LECs, autophagy can both promote and restrict replication. Together, these findings reveal a previously unrecognized role for hLECs and autophagy in tuberculosis pathogenesis and suggest that hLECs are a potential niche for M. tuberculosis that allows establishment of persistent infection in lymph nodes
Morphological and Molecular Characterizations of Psychrophilic Fungus Geomyces destructans from New York Bats with White Nose Syndrome (WNS)
Background: Massive die-offs of little brown bats (Myotis lucifugus) have been occurring since 2006 in hibernation site
Relationship of hyperlipidemia to comorbidities and lung function in COPD: Results of the COSYCONET cohort
Although hyperlipidemia is common in COPD, its relationship to comorbidities, risk factors and lung function in COPD has not been studied in detail. Using the baseline data of the COSYCONET cohort we addressed this question. Data from 1746 COPD patients (GOLD stage 1–4; mean age 64.6 y, mean FEV1%pred 57%) were evaluated, focusing on the comorbidities hyperlipidemia, diabetes and cardiovascular complex (CVC; including arterial hypertension, cardiac failure, ischemic heart disease). Risk factors comprised age, gender, BMI, and packyears of smoking. The results of linear and logistic regression analyses were implemented into a path analysis model describing the multiple relationships between parameters. Hyperlipidemia (prevalence 42.9%) was associated with lower intrathoracic gas volume (ITGV) and higher forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) when adjusting for its multiple relationships to risk factors and other comorbidities. These findings were robust in various statistical analyses. The associations between comorbidities and risk factors were in accordance with previous findings, thereby underlining the validity of our data. In conclusion, hyperlipidemia was associated with less hyperinflation and airway obstruction in patients with COPD. This surprising result might be due to different COPD phenotypes in these patients or related to effects of medication
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