1,877 research outputs found
Trade between China and the Netherlands: a case study of globalization
During the last decades, the growth of trade between China and the Netherlands has been larger than the increase in bilateral trade flows between China and most other countries. Using a time series based gravity model, this paper investigates the main determinants of this increase. The empirical analysis indicates that, apart from GDP growth, Dutch in-house offshoring to China is a major determinant of Dutch import growth from China. Dutch firms tend to offshore production in-house when the asset specificity of the traded inputs is high and offshore via the market when this asset specificity is low. Controlling for these product types also reveals that transport costs are more important for trade in homogeneous and reference priced goods than for trade in differentiated good
Expression of chicken DEC205 reflects the unique structure and function of the avian immune system
The generation of appropriate adaptive immune responses relies critically on dendritic cells, about which relatively little is known in chickens, a vital livestock species, in comparison with man and mouse. We cloned and sequenced chicken DEC205 cDNA and used this knowledge to produce quantitative PCR assays and monoclonal antibodies to study expression of DEC205 as well as CD83. The gene structure of DEC205 was identical to those of other species. Transcripts of both genes were found at higher levels in lymphoid tissues and the expression of DEC205 in normal birds had a characteristic distribution in the primary lymphoid organs. In spleen, DEC205 was seen on cells ideally located to trap antigen. In thymus it was found on cells thought to participate in the education of T cells, and in the bursa on cells that may be involved in presentation of antigen to B cells and regulation of B cell migration. The expression of DEC205 on cells other than antigen presenting cells (APC) is also described. Isolated splenocytes strongly expressing DEC205 but not the KUL01 antigen have morphology similar to mammalian dendritic cells and the distinct expression of DEC205 within the avian-specific Bursa of Fabricius alludes to a unique function in this organ of B cell diversification. © 2013 Staines et al
Silicon on ceramic process. Silicon sheet growth development for the large-area silicon sheet task of the low-cost silicon solar array project
The technical and economic feasibility of producing solar-cell-quality sheet silicon was investigated. The sheets were made by coating one surface of carbonized ceramic substrates with a thin layer of large-grain polycrystalline silicon from the melt. Significant progress was made in all areas of the program
Evolution of an expanded mannose receptor gene family
Sequences of peptides from a protein specifically immunoprecipitated by an antibody, KUL01, that recognises chicken
macrophages, identified a homologue of the mammalian mannose receptor, MRC1, which we called MRC1L-B. Inspection of
the genomic environment of the chicken gene revealed an array of five paralogous genes, MRC1L-A to MRC1L-E, located
between conserved flanking genes found either side of the single MRC1 gene in mammals. Transcripts of all five genes were
detected in RNA from a macrophage cell line and other RNAs, whose sequences allowed the precise definition of spliced
exons, confirming or correcting existing bioinformatic annotation. The confirmed gene structures were used to locate
orthologues of all five genes in the genomes of two other avian species and of the painted turtle, all with intact coding
sequences. The lizard genome had only three genes, one orthologue of MRC1L-A and two orthologues of the MRC1L-B
antigen gene resulting from a recent duplication. The Xenopus genome, like that of most mammals, had only a single
MRC1-like gene at the corresponding locus. MRC1L-A and MRC1L-B genes had similar cytoplasmic regions that may be
indicative of similar subcellular migration and functions. Cytoplasmic regions of the other three genes were very divergent,
possibly indicating the evolution of a new functional repertoire for this family of molecules, which might include novel
interactions with pathogens
Introduction: Ideologies of Youth
In a number of countries in Africa, such as Uganda and Kenya, national publics have been discussing whether citizens of age 50 or even 60 should be regarded as ‘youth’. Under the current dispensation of donor funding, relief programmes and international aid, these discussions have made the ‘youth’ the major beneficiary of what these policies offer and imply. There is a general feeling, however, that these policies should target all age groups in their youth-oriented programmes. If the donorideology prescribes youthfulness for societal and developmental relevance, it will then dictate practice. This is just one example of what this special issue will address in an attempt to explore what we see as an emerging development in Africa and beyond: the rise of youth as an ideology. Whereas Africa has witnessed the rise of a fast-growing study of youth as a phenomenon and as a concept, the aspect of youth as ideology has, so far, not been elaborated on
The linear multiplet and ectoplasm
In the framework of the superconformal tensor calculus for 4D N=2
supergravity, locally supersymmetric actions are often constructed using the
linear multiplet. We provide a superform formulation for the linear multiplet
and derive the corresponding action functional using the ectoplasm method (also
known as the superform approach to the construction of supersymmetric
invariants). We propose a new locally supersymmetric action which makes use of
a deformed linear multiplet. The novel feature of this multiplet is that it
corresponds to the case of a gauged central charge using a one-form potential
not annihilated by the central charge (unlike the standard N=2 vector
multiplet). Such a gauge one-form can be chosen to describe a variant nonlinear
vector-tensor multiplet. As a byproduct of our construction, we also find a
variant realization of the tensor multiplet in supergravity where one of the
auxiliaries is replaced by the field strength of a gauge three-form.Comment: 31 pages; v3: minor corrections and typos fixed, version to appear in
JHE
Superform formulation for vector-tensor multiplets in conformal supergravity
The recent papers arXiv:1110.0971 and arXiv:1201.5431 have provided a
superfield description for vector-tensor multiplets and their Chern-Simons
couplings in 4D N = 2 conformal supergravity. Here we develop a superform
formulation for these theories. Furthermore an alternative means of gauging the
central charge is given, making use of a deformed vector multiplet, which may
be thought of as a variant vector-tensor multiplet. Its Chern-Simons couplings
to additional vector multiplets are also constructed. This multiplet together
with its Chern-Simons couplings are new results not considered by de Wit et al.
in hep-th/9710212.Comment: 28 pages. V2: Typos corrected and references updated; V3: References
updated and typo correcte
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