5,081 research outputs found
Factors Affecting Doctoral Educational Leadership Program Selection
Although recruitment has always been vital to sustained university admissions, it is true perhaps now more than ever as traditional public university programs face fierce competition for students from digitally-delivered and for-profit programs. Competition is fierce at every level of higher education, including the doctoral level. As competition has increased, so have the number of universities offering doctoral degrees (U.S. Department of Education [DOE], 2013). In 2011, Texas ranked fourth behind California, Florida, and North Carolina in the number of doctoral degrees granted in the United States. Furthennore, the number of doctoral degrees conferred in Texas grew from 8,959 in 2008 to 9,705 in 201 l(DOE, 2013) - a similar trend to most states across the nation that year. Of those, Texas has 26 public and private institutions - not including online universities - granting doctoral degrees in Educational Leadership (DOE, 2013). With the increase in traditional, online, and for-profit doctoral programs in Texas, existing programs may need to reevaluate efforts to stay competitive to survive in the current climate
Astrometric observations of the faint satellites of Jupiter during the 1975 - 1976 opposition
The series of astrometric observations of the satellites of the trans-martian planets re-established at the McDonald Observatory in 1972 is continued. The positions deduced from photographic observations of the jovian system obtained during the 1975-76 opposition are presented together with the discovery positions of four asteroids found on these plates
Dynamics of molecular nanomagnets in time-dependent external magnetic fields: Beyond the Landau-Zener-St\"{u}ckelberg model
The time evolution of the magnetization of a magnetic molecular crystal is
obtained in an external time-dependent magnetic field, with sweep rates in the
kT/s range. We present the 'exact numerical' solution of the time dependent
Schr\"{o}dinger equation, and show that the steps in the hysteresis curve can
be described as a sequence of two-level transitions between adiabatic states.
The multilevel nature of the problem causes the transition probabilities to
deviate significantly from the predictions of the Landau-Zener-St\"{u}ckelberg
model. These calculations allow the introduction of an efficient approximation
method that accurately reproduces the exact results. When including phase
relaxation by means of an appropriate master equation, we observe an interplay
between coherent dynamics and decoherence. This decreases the size of the
magnetization steps at the transitions, but does not modify qualitatively the
physical picture obtained without relaxation.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Hubble Space Telescope Astrometry Science Team
Topics considered include: Calibration and Astrometry Pipeline; Astrometry Anomaly Analysis; The STAT pipeline and software analysis tools; GTO Program; Parallaxes of Astrophysically Interesting Objects; HST- Hipparcos Extragalactic Link; Ground-Based Observations of Radial Velocities; GTO Globular Cluster Internal Motions; and GTO Hyades Cluster Member FGS Parallaxes
Loss of Individual MicroRNAs Causes Mutant Phenotypes in Sensitized Genetic Backgrounds in \u3cem\u3eC. elegans\u3c/em\u3e
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small, noncoding RNAs that regulate the translation and/or stability of their mRNA targets. Previous work showed that for most miRNA genes of C. elegans, single-gene knockouts did not result in detectable mutant phenotypes. This may be due, in part, to functional redundancy between miRNAs. However, in most cases, worms carrying deletions of all members of a miRNA family do not display strong mutant phenotypes. They may function together with unrelated miRNAs or with non-miRNA genes in regulatory networks, possibly to ensure the robustness of developmental mechanisms. To test this, we examined worms lacking individual miRNAs in genetically sensitized backgrounds. These include genetic backgrounds with reduced processing and activity of all miRNAs or with reduced activity of a wide array of regulatory pathways. With these two approaches, we identified mutant phenotypes for 25 out of 31 miRNAs included in this analysis. Our findings describe biological roles for individual miRNAs and suggest that the use of sensitized genetic backgrounds provides an efficient approach for miRNA functional analysis
Vasco de Quiroga and His Pueblo-Hospitals of Santa Fe
Vasco de Quiroga, one of the truly great figures sent from Spain to New Spain in the sixteenth century, stands out for his contributions to the political ecclesiastical, and social development of Mexico. He was sent to the New World by the Spanish crown as a member of the Second Audienoia of Mexico in an effort to straighten out the confusion and turmoil which had resulted from ten years of struggling factionalism in the young colony and from the disastrous regime of Nuflo de Guzman and his companies of the First Audienoia
Virus Targeting of the Tumor Necrosis Factor Superfamily
AbstractHerpesviruses appear to peacefully coexist with their natural hosts, with infection typically manifested as a benign, but lifelong process. However, coexistence depends on active resistance by innate and specific immune defenses as revealed in the striking virulence of herpesviruses when immunity fails. This pattern of infection is characteristic of a viral pathogen, such as cytomegalovirus, that has evolved efficient strategies targeted at host defense systems. Targeting members of the tumor necrosis factor (TNF)/lymphotoxin (LT) superfamily of cytokines is a strategy found in all herpesviruses, which suggests the existence of an intimate evolutionary link in their host–parasite relationship. Here we examine some of the strategies used by herpesvirus that target members of the TNF superfamily and discuss a recent study that revealed a novel mechanism that links LT-related ligands and interferons (IFN) to the establishment of coexistence between herpesvirus and its host cell
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