203 research outputs found
Morphological variation and sensitivity to frequency of forms among native speakers of Czech
This article looks at inter-speaker variation in two environments: the genitive and locative singular cases of masculine âhard inanimateâ nouns in Czech, using a large-scale survey of native speakers that used two tasks to test their preferences for certain forms (acceptability) and their choices (gap filling). Our hypothesis that such variation exists was upheld, but only within limited parameters. Most biographical data (age, gender, education) played no role in respondentsâ choices or preferences. Their region of origin played a small but significant role, although not the one expected. Relating the two types of tasks to each other, we found that respondentsâ use of the ratings scale did not correlate to their choice of forms, but their overall strength of preference for one form over another did correlate with their choices. Inter-speaker variation does thus go some way to explaining the persistent diversity in this paradigm and arguably may contribute to its maintenance
Frequency-selective near-field enhancement of radiative heat transfer via photonic-crystal slabs: a general computational approach for arbitrary geometries and materials
We demonstrate the possibility of achieving enhanced frequency-selective
near-field radiative heat transfer between patterned (photonic crystal) slabs
at designable frequencies and separations, exploiting a general numerical
approach for computing heat transfer in arbitrary geometries and materials
based on the finite-difference time-domain method. Our simulations reveal a
tradeoff between selectivity and near-field enhancement as the slab--slab
separation decreases, with the patterned heat transfer eventually reducing to
the unpatterned result multiplied by a fill factor (described by a standard
proximity approximation). We also find that heat transfer can be further
enhanced at selective frequencies when the slabs are brought into a
glide-symmetric configuration, a consequence of the degeneracies associated
with the non-symmorphic symmetry group
Tailoring optical nonlinearities via the Purcell effect
We predict that the effective nonlinear optical susceptibility can be
tailored using the Purcell effect. While this is a general physical principle
that applies to a wide variety of nonlinearities, we specifically investigate
the Kerr nonlinearity. We show theoretically that using the Purcell effect for
frequencies close to an atomic resonance can substantially influence the
resultant Kerr nonlinearity for light of all (even highly detuned) frequencies.
For example, in realistic physical systems, enhancement of the Kerr coefficient
by one to two orders of magnitude could be achieved
13C-direct detected NMR experiments for the sequential J-based resonance assignment of RNA oligonucleotides
We present here a set of 13C-direct detected NMR experiments to facilitate the resonance assignment of RNA oligonucleotides. Three experiments have been developed: (1) the (H)CC-TOCSY-experiment utilizing a virtual decoupling scheme to assign the intraresidual ribose 13C-spins, (2) the (H)CPC-experiment that correlates each phosphorus with the C4Ⲡnuclei of adjacent nucleotides via J(C,P) couplings and (3) the (H)CPC-CCH-TOCSY-experiment that correlates the phosphorus nuclei with the respective C1â˛,H1Ⲡribose signals. The experiments were applied to two RNA hairpin structures. The current set of 13C-direct detected experiments allows direct and unambiguous assignment of the majority of the hetero nuclei and the identification of the individual ribose moieties following their sequential assignment. Thus, 13C-direct detected NMR methods constitute useful complements to the conventional 1H-detected approach for the resonance assignment of oligonucleotides that is often hindered by the limited chemical shift dispersion. The developed methods can also be applied to large deuterated RNAs
High dimensional and high resolution pulse sequences for backbone resonance assignment of intrinsically disordered proteins
Four novel 5D (HACA(N)CONH, HNCOCACB, (HACA)CON(CA)CONH, (H)NCO(NCA)CONH), and one 6D ((H)NCO(N)CACONH) NMR pulse sequences are proposed. The new experiments employ non-uniform sampling that enables achieving high resolution in indirectly detected dimensions. The experiments facilitate resonance assignment of intrinsically disordered proteins. The novel pulse sequences were successfully tested using δ subunit (20 kDa) of Bacillus subtilis RNA polymerase that has an 81-amino acid disordered part containing various repetitive sequences
Diffusion and relaxation edited proton NMR spectroscopy of plasma reveals a high-fidelity supramolecular biomarker signature of SARS-CoV-2 infection
We have applied nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy based plasma phenotyping to reveal diagnostic molecular signatures of SARS-CoV-2 infection via combined diffusional and relaxation editing (DIRE). We compared plasma from healthy age-matched controls (n = 26) with SARS-CoV-2 negative non-hospitalized respiratory patients and hospitalized respiratory patients (n = 23 and 11 respectively) with SARS-CoV-2 rRT-PCR positive respiratory patients (n = 17, with longitudinal sampling time-points). DIRE data were modelled using principal component analysis and orthogonal projections to latent structures discriminant analysis (O-PLS-DA), with statistical cross-validation indices indicating excellent model generalization for the classification of SARS-CoV-2 positivity for all comparator groups (area under the receiver operator characteristic curve = 1). DIRE spectra show biomarker signal combinations conferred by differential concentrations of metabolites with selected molecular mobility properties. These comprise the following: (a) composite N-acetyl signals from Îą-1-acid glycoprotein and other glycoproteins (designated GlycA and GlycB) that were elevated in SARS-CoV-2 positive patients [p = 2.52 Ă 10â10 (GlycA) and 1.25 Ă 10â9 (GlycB) vs controls], (b) two diagnostic supramolecular phospholipid composite signals that were identified (SPC-A and SPC-B) from the â+Nâ(CH3)3 choline headgroups of lysophosphatidylcholines carried on plasma glycoproteins and from phospholipids in high-density lipoprotein subfractions (SPC-A) together with a phospholipid component of low-density lipoprotein (SPCâB). The integrals of the summed SPC signals (SPCtotal) were reduced in SARS-CoV-2 positive patients relative to both controls (p = 1.40 Ă 10â7) and SARS-CoV-2 negative patients (p = 4.52 Ă 10â8) but were not significantly different between controls and SARS-CoV-2 negative patients. The identity of the SPC signal components was determined using one and two dimensional diffusional, relaxation, and statistical spectroscopic experiments. The SPCtotal/GlycA ratios were also significantly different for control versus SARS-CoV-2 positive patients (p = 1.23 Ă 10â10) and for SARS-CoV-2 negatives versus positives (p = 1.60 Ă 10â9). Thus, plasma SPCtotal and SPCtotal/GlycA are proposed as sensitive molecular markers for SARS-CoV-2 positivity that could effectively augment current COVID-19 diagnostics and may have value in functional assessment of the disease recovery process in patients with long-term symptoms
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