2,454 research outputs found
Using Technology Enabled Qualitative Research to Develop Products for the Social Good, An Overview
This paper discusses the potential benefits of the convergence of three recent trends for the design of socially beneficial products and services: the increasing application of qualitative research techniques in a wide range of disciplines, the rapid mainstreaming of social media and mobile technologies, and the emergence of software as a service. Presented is a scenario facilitating the complex data collection, analysis, storage, and reporting required for the qualitative research recommended for the task of designing relevant solutions to address needs of the underserved. A pilot study is used as a basis for describing the infrastructure and services required to realize this scenario. Implications for innovation of enhanced forms of qualitative research are presented
Study of interfacial conductivity Final report
Statistical theory of interfacial thermal conductivity and crystal growth under weightlessnes
Second order phase dispersion by optimised rotation pulses
We show that the duration of broadband universal control pulses can be halved
by choosing control targets with a quadratic function of phase dispersion. This
class of control pulses perform a broadband universal rotation around an axis,
in the Bloch sphere representation of two-level systems, given by this phase
dispersion function. We present an effective optimal control method to avoid
the problem of convergence to local extrema traps.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Resolving LLC Member Disputes in North Carolina
North Carolina has a new LLC act. If LLC members assert that the managers or controlling members have in some manner breached fiduciary or contractual duties owed to the complaining members or to the LLC, how will lawyers handle such claims? This Article first considers the circumstances in which North Carolina LLC managers and members may owe fiduciary duties to other members. Assuming that there is a duty that may have been breached, what are the limits on a member bringing a direct suit either on her own behalf or on behalf of the LLC? Since direct suits will now be prohibited in many cases, the plaintiff must likely resort to bringing a derivative claim. The problems with these suits under the new law are considered in some detail. Lastly, the Article provides drafting suggestions to protect LLC members, as well as alternative methods to resolve disputes among LLC members and managers
Resolving LLC Member Disputes in North Carolina
North Carolina has a new LLC act. If LLC members assert that the managers or controlling members have in some manner breached fiduciary or contractual duties owed to the complaining members or to the LLC, how will lawyers handle such claims? This Article first considers the circumstances in which North Carolina LLC managers and members may owe fiduciary duties to other members. Assuming that there is a duty that may have been breached, what are the limits on a member bringing a direct suit either on her own behalf or on behalf of the LLC? Since direct suits will now be prohibited in many cases, the plaintiff must likely resort to bringing a derivative claim. The problems with these suits under the new law are considered in some detail. Lastly, the Article provides drafting suggestions to protect LLC members, as well as alternative methods to resolve disputes among LLC members and managers
Valence Fluctuation in CeMo2Si2C
We report on the valence fluctuation of Ce in CeMoSiC as studied
by means of magnetic susceptibility , specific heat , electrical
resistivity and x-ray absorption spectroscopy. Powder x-ray
diffraction revealed that CeMoSiC crystallizes in
CeCrSiC-type layered tetragonal crystal structure (space group
\textit{P4/mmm}). The unit cell volume of CeMoSiC deviates from the
expected lanthanide contraction, indicating non-trivalent state of Ce ions in
this compound. The observed weak temperature dependence of the magnetic
susceptibility and its low value indicate that Ce ions are in valence
fluctuating state. The formal Ce valence in CeMoSiC
= 3.11 as determined from x-ray absorption spectroscopy
measurement is well bellow the value 3.4 in
tetravalent Ce compound CeO. The temperature dependence of specific heat
does not show any anomaly down to 1.8 K which rules out any magnetic ordering
in the system. The Sommerfeld coefficient obtained from the specific heat data
is = 23.4 mJ/mol\,K. The electrical resistivity follows the
behavior in the low temperature range below 35 K confirming a Fermi
liquid behavior. Accordingly both the Kadowaki Wood ratio and
the Sommerfeld Wilson ratio are in the range expected for
Fermi-liquid systems. In order to get some information on the electronic
states, we calculated the band structure within the density functional theory,
eventhough this approach is not able to treat 4f electrons accurately. The
non- electron states crossing the Fermi level have mostly Mo 4d character.
They provide the states with which the 4f sates are strongly hybridized,
leading to the intermediate valent state.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures Submitted to Journal of Alloys and Compound
Rotating Boson Stars in 5 Dimensions
We study rotating boson stars in five spacetime dimensions. The boson fields
consist of a complex doublet scalar field. Considering boson stars rotating in
two orthogonal planes with both angular momenta of equal magnitude, a special
ansatz for the boson field and the metric allows for solutions with nontrivial
dependence on the radial coordinate only. The charge of the scalar field equals
the sum of the angular momenta. The rotating boson stars are globally regular
and asymptotically flat. For our choice of a sixtic potential the rotating
boson star solutions possess a flat spacetime limit. We study the solutions in
flat and curved spacetime.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figure
Bundles of Interacting Strings in Two Dimensions
Bundles of strings which interact via short-ranged pair potentials are
studied in two dimensions. The corresponding transfer matrix problem is solved
analytically for arbitrary string number N by Bethe ansatz methods. Bundles
consisting of N identical strings exhibit a unique unbinding transition. If the
string bundle interacts with a hard wall, the bundle may unbind from the wall
via a unique transition or a sequence of N successive transitions. In all
cases, the critical exponents are independent of N and the density profile of
the strings exhibits a scaling form that approaches a mean-field profile in the
limit of large N.Comment: 8 pages (latex) with two figure
Endogenous glucagon-like peptide 1 controls endocrine pancreatic secretion and antro-pyloro-duodenal motility in humans
Background: Exogenous use of the intestinal hormone glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) lowers glycaemia by stimulation of insulin, inhibition of glucagon, and delay of gastric emptying.Aims: To assess the effects of endogenous GLP-1 on endocrine pancreatic secretion and antro-pyloro-duodenal motility by utilising the GLP-1 receptor antagonist exendin(9-39)amide (ex(9-39)NH2).Methods: Nine healthy volunteers underwent four experiments each. In two experiments with and without intravenous infusion of ex(9-39)NH2 300 pmol/kg/min, a fasting period was followed by intraduodenal glucose perfusion at 1 and 2.5 kcal/min, with the higher dose stimulating GLP-1 release. Antro-pyloro-duodenal motility was measured by perfusion manometry. To calculate the incretin effect (that is, the proportion of plasma insulin stimulated by intestinal hormones) the glycaemia observed during the luminal glucose experiments was mimicked using intravenous glucose in two further experiments.Results: Ex(9-39)NH2 significantly increased glycaemia during fasting and duodenal glucose. It diminished plasma insulin during duodenal glucose and significantly reduced the incretin effect by approximately 50%. Ex(9-39)NH2 raised plasma glucagon during fasting and abolished the decrease in glucagon at the high duodenal glucose load. Ex(9-39)NH2 markedly stimulated antroduodenal contractility. At low duodenal glucose it reduced the stimulation of tonic and phasic pyloric motility. At the high duodenal glucose load it abolished pyloric stimulation.Conclusions: Endogenous GLP-1 stimulates postprandial insulin release. The pancreatic \textgreeka cell is under the tonic inhibitory control of GLP-1 thereby suppressing postprandial glucagon. GLP-1 tonically inhibits antroduodenal motility and mediates the postprandial inhibition of antral and stimulation of pyloric motility. We therefore suggest GLP-1 as a true incretin hormone and enterogastrone in humans
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