756 research outputs found

    Horizontal stress anisotropy and effective stress as regulator of coal seam gas zonation in the Sydney Basin, Australia

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    Coal seam gas zonation in the Sydney Basin, NSW, Australia is related to basin hydrodynamics and hydrochemical facies evolution along the flow path from the subcrop to the basin center. Biogenic methane corresponds with meteoric water under hydrostatic pressure and persists down to the top of the geopressured zone (~800 to 1000m). Thermogenic gases, including wet hydrocarbons, can reach up to relatively shallow horizons of less than 500-600m depth. In the transition zone between the top of the geopressured and base of the hydrostatic zone, a mixed water and gas regime prevails, comprising brackish waters, and gases of mixed biogenic, thermogenic and inorganic origins, including CO. Mechanisms for and the role of stress in the development of this layered hydrogeological and gas environment are investigated in this paper.The inverse relationship between effective horizontal stress and permeability in coals through regulation of cleat volumes is well documented, and there is evidence of regionally compartmentalized stress regimes with depth within the Sydney and other eastern Australian coal basins. This regional stress regime can be overprinted by the effect of localized geological features. It is hypothesized that the in situ stress regime plays an important role in the regulation of groundwater flow regimes and extents, resulting in the development of the reported gas content and compositional zonation.Analysis of regional gas and stress data obtained from public and private databases, as well as literature, supports this hypothesis. Changes in gas concentration and composition with depth correspond with discernable variations in horizontal stress anisotropy. Gas contents generally increase with depth down to a 'peak gas' horizon, below which concentrations decrease. This 'peak gas' zone is coincident with a horizontal stress anisotropy change from moderately high to low levels, associated with reverse to strike-slip faulting conditions, respectively. The stress release zone also marks the top of the thermogenic gas zone, identified by the first appearance of ethane in the vertical profile. This zone also hosts gases of mixed origins: biogenic, thermogenic and inorganic (CO) and represents a mixed (transitional) groundwater flow environment. The base of the mixed gas zone is the top of the 'geopressured-only' flow associated with thermogenic gases and is signaled by the return to high stress reverse faulting conditions below 850-900m depth in the Sydney Basin

    A Crystallized Treatise on Determinants of Motivational Environment in Oil and Natural Gas Corporation Limited (ONGC)

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    Technologies have become stakes and those companies who can turn strategy into action at jet speed can bring seamless changes in the organization. In this context motivation has become an important HR intervention in making human resources effective. Companies realized the importance of the motivation as the contribution of employees directly relates their vision and mission statements. Demotivated workforce can cause havoc in failing to meet the organizational objectives.  It has the role to develop and intensify the desire of every member of the organization to work effectively and efficiently in their roles. After employees are hired and trained, it is important to motivate them to get the desired efforts from them, to achieve organizational objectives. Owing to the stiff competition among the Multi Nationals in retaining them has become challenge, this paper focus on motivating the workforce by introducing various HR Interventions to motivate and retain for the benefit of the organizational objectives.  For this cause a range of motivational factors were considered for a critical assessment on motivational environment in ONGC. Keywords: Motivation, technology, environment, organizational objectives, workforce DOI: 10.7176/EJBM/13-11-03 Publication date:June 30th 202

    Processing of gaze direction within the N170/M170 time window: A combined EEG/MEG study

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    Gaze direction is an important social signal for human beings. Beside the role of gaze in attention orienting, direct gaze (that is, gaze directed toward an observer) is a highly relevant biological stimulus that elicits attention capture and increases face encoding. Brain imaging studies have emphasized the role of the superior temporal sulcus (STS) in the coding of gaze direction and in the integration of gaze and head cues of social attention. The dynamics of the processing and integration of these cues remains, however, unclear. In order to address this question, we used deviated and frontal faces with averted and direct gaze in a combined electro- and magneto- encephalography (EEG–MEG) study. We showed distinct effects of gaze direction on the N170 and M170 responses. There was an interaction between gaze direction and head orientation between 134 and 162 ms in MEG and a main effect of gaze direction between 171 and 186 ms in EEG. These effects involved the posterior and anterior regions of the STS respectively. Both effects also emphasized the sensitivity to direct gaze. These data highlight the central role of the STS in gaze processing

    New perspectives in cancer biology from a study of canonical and non-canonical functions of base excision repair proteins with a focus on early steps

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    Alterations of DNA repair enzymes and consequential triggering of aberrant DNA damage response (DDR) pathways are thought to play a pivotal role in genomic instabilities associated with cancer development, and are further thought to be important predictive biomarkers for therapy using the synthetic lethality paradigm. However, novel unpredicted perspectives are emerging from the identification of several non-canonical roles of DNA repair enzymes, particularly in gene expression regulation, by different molecular mechanisms, such as (i) non-coding RNA regulation of tumour suppressors, (ii) epigenetic and transcriptional regulation of genes involved in genotoxic responses and (iii) paracrine effects of secreted DNA repair enzymes triggering the cell senescence phenotype. The base excision repair (BER) pathway, canonically involved in the repair of non-distorting DNA lesions generated by oxidative stress, ionising radiation, alkylation damage and spontaneous or enzymatic deamination of nucleotide bases, represents a paradigm for the multifaceted roles of complex DDR in human cells. This review will focus on what is known about the canonical and non-canonical functions of BER enzymes related to cancer development, highlighting novel opportunities to understand the biology of cancer and representing future perspectives for designing new anticancer strategies. We will specifically focus on APE1 as an example of a pleiotropic and multifunctional BER protein

    Drop-out rate from the liver transplant waiting list due to HCC progression in HCV-infected patients treated with direct acting antivirals.

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    BACKGROUND & AIM: concerns about an increased hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) recurrence rate following directly acting antiviral (DAA) therapy in cirrhotic patients with a prior complete oncological response have been raised. Data regarding the impact of HCV-treatment with DAAs on waiting list drop-out rates in patients with active HCC and HCV-related cirrhosis awaiting liver transplantation (LT) are lacking. MATERIALS AND METHODS: HCV-HCC patients listed for LT between January 2015 and May 2016 at Padua Liver Transplant Centre were considered eligible for the study. After enrollment patients were divided into 2 groups, depending on whether they underwent DAAs treatment while awaiting LT or not. For each patient clinical, serological and virological data were collected. HCC characteristics were radiologically evaluated at baseline and during follow-up (FU). For transplanted patients, pathological assessment of the explants was performed and recurrence-rates were calculated. RESULTS: twenty-three patients treated with DAAs and 23 controls were enrolled. HCC characteristics at time of LT-listing were comparable between the 2 groups. Median FU was 10 and 7 months, respectively, during which 2/23 (8.7%) and 1/23 (4.3%) drop-out events due to HCC-progression were registered (p = 0.9). No significant differences in terms of radiological progression were highlighted (p = 0.16). Nine out of 23 cases (39%) and 14/23 (61%) controls underwent LT, and histopathological analysis showed no differences in terms of median number and total tumor volume of HCC nodules, tumor differentiation or microvascular invasion. During post-LT FU, 1/8 DAAs treated patient (12,5%) and 1/12 control (8,3%) experienced HCC recurrence (p = 0.6). CONCLUSIONS: Viral eradication does not seem to be associated with an increased risk of drop-out due to neoplastic progression in HCV-HCC patients awaiting LT

    Management of infections pre- and post-liver transplantation: Report of an AISF consensus conference

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    The burden of infectious diseases both before and after liver transplantation is clearly attributable to the dysfunction of defensive mechanisms of the host, both as a result of cirrhosis, as well as the use of immunosuppressive agents. The present document represents the recommendations of an expert panel commended by the Italian Association for the Study of the Liver (AISF), on the prevention and management of infectious complications excluding hepatitis B, D, C, and HIV in the setting of liver transplantation. Due to a decreased response to vaccinations in cirrhosis as well as within the first six months after transplantation, the best timing for immunization is likely before transplant and early in the course of disease. Before transplantation, a vaccination panel including inactivated as well as live attenuated vaccines is recommended, while oral polio vaccine, Calmette-Guerin's bacillus, and Smallpox are contraindicated, whereas after transplantation, live attenuated vaccines are contraindicated. Before transplant, screening protocols should be divided into different levels according to the likelihood of infection, in order to reduce costs for the National Health Service. Recommended preoperative and postoperative prophylaxis varies according to the pathologic agent to which it is directed (bacterial vs. viral vs. fungal). Timing after transplantation greatly determines the most likely agent involved in post-transplant infections, and specific high-risk categories of patients have been identified that warrant closer surveillance. Clearly, specifically targeted treatment protocols are needed upon diagnosis of infections in both the pre- as well as the post-transplant scenarios, not without considering local microbiology and resistance patterns

    The Relationship between Life Course Socioeconomic Conditions and Objective and Subjective Memory in Older Age.

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    While objective memory performance in older adults was primarily shown to be affected by education as indicator of life course socioeconomic conditions, other life course socioeconomic conditions seem to relate to subjective memory complaints. However, studies differ in which life course stages were investigated. Moreover, studies have explored these effects in an isolated way, but have not yet investigated their unique effect when considering several stages of the life course simultaneously. This study, therefore, examined the respective influence of socioeconomic conditions from childhood up to late-life on prospective memory (PM) performance as an objective indicator of everyday memory as well as on subjective memory complaints (SMC) in older age using structural equation modeling. Data came from two waves of the Vivre-Leben-Vivere aging study (n=993, Mage=80.56). The results indicate that only socioeconomic conditions in adulthood significantly predicted late-life PM performance. PM performance was also predicted by age and self-rated health. In contrast, SMC in older age were not predicted by socioeconomic conditions at any stage of the life course but were predicted by level of depression. In line with the cognitive reserve hypothesis, present results highlight the significance of education and occupation (adulthood socioeconomic conditions) for cognitive functioning in later life
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