1,220 research outputs found
Staying in place during times of change in Arctic Alaska: The implications of attachment,alternatives, and buffering
The relationship between stability and change in social-ecological systems has received considerable attention in recent years, including the expectation that significant environmental changes will drive observable consequences for individuals, communities, and populations. Migration, as one example of response to adverse economic or environmental changes, has been observed in many places, including parts of the Far North. In Arctic Alaska, a relative lack of demographic or migratory response to rapid environmental and other changes has been observed. To understand why Arctic Alaska appears different, we draw on the literature on environmentally driven migration, focusing on three mechanisms that could account for the lack of response: attachment, the desire to remain in place, or the inability to relocate successfully; alternatives, ways to achieve similar outcomes through different means; and buffering, the reliance on subsidies or use of reserves to delay impacts. Each explanation has different implications for research and policy, indicating a need to further explore the relative contribution that each makes to a given situation in order to develop more effective responses locally and regionally. Given that the Arctic is on the front lines of climate change, these explanations are likely relevant to the ways changes play out in other parts of the world. Our review also underscores the importance of further attention to the details of social dynamics in climate change impacts and responses
The Rhetoric of Text’ Reconsidered in Fiction and Autobiography
L’article présente plusieurs principes rhétoriques que Leech et Short ont introduit dans “The Rhetoric of Text,” chapitre sept de Style in Fiction, afin d’analyser des textes de Hemingway (fiction) et de Sting (non-fiction).
The paper presents several rhetorical principles that Leech and Short first introduced in “The Rhetoric of Text,” chapter seven of Style in Fiction, in order to then analyze texts from Hemingway (fiction) and Sting (non-fiction)
Brass and Percussion Ensembles Concert, Fall 2011
This is the program from the Fall 2011 Brass and Percussion Ensembles concert
Hydrogen bonding in infinite hydrogen fluoride and hydrogen chloride chains
Hydrogen bonding in infinite HF and HCl bent (zigzag) chains is studied using
the ab initio coupled-cluster singles and doubles (CCSD) correlation method.
The correlation contribution to the binding energy is decomposed in terms of
nonadditive many-body interactions between the monomers in the chains, the
so-called energy increments. Van der Waals constants for the two-body
dispersion interaction between distant monomers in the infinite chains are
extracted from this decomposition. They allow a partitioning of the correlation
contribution to the binding energy into short- and long-range terms. This
finding affords a significant reduction in the computational effort of ab
initio calculations for solids as only the short-range part requires a
sophisticated treatment whereas the long-range part can be summed immediately
to infinite distances.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, 3 tables, RevTeX4, corrected typo
Aging reduces left atrial performance during adrenergic stress in middle aged and older patients
Background: During adrenergic stress, the influence of age on left atrial (LA) function is
unknown. We hypothesized that aging decreases LA total emptying fraction (LAEF) during
maximal adrenergic stress. The aim of the study was to determine the influence of aging on LA
function during adrenergic stress in middle aged and older patients.
Methods: We enrolled 167 middle aged and elderly participants, and measured LA and left
ventricular (LV) volumes using a multi-slice three-dimensional cine white blood cardiovascular
magnetic resonance (CMR) technique before and during intravenous dobutamine infused to
achieve 80% of the maximum heart rate response for age. Paired sample t-test was used to
detect differences in LA and LV volumes between baseline and peak dose stage of dobutamine
stress CMR, and multivariable linear regression was used to identify predictors of LA function.
Results: Participants averaged 68 ± 8 years in age, 53% were men, 25% exhibited coronary
artery disease, 35% had diabetes, 9% had a remote history of atrial fibrillation, 90% had
hypertension, and 11% had inducible LV wall motion abnormalities indicative of ischemia
during dobutamine CMR. Increasing age correlated with LA volumes (maximal and minimal)
and inversely correlated with LAEF at rest and after peak adrenergic stress. Age was an independent
predictor of LAEF during adrenergic stress, even after accounting for gender, LV volumes,
and other co-morbidities including inducible ischemia.
Conclusions: Age is associated with a decrease in LA function during adrenergic stress even
after adjusting for co-morbidities associated with cardiovascular disease and LV function.
(Cardiol J 2012; 19, 1: 45–52
Arctic system on trajectory to new state
The Arctic system is moving toward a new state that falls outside the envelope of glacial-interglacial fluctuations that prevailed during recent Earth history. This future Arctic is likely to have dramatically less permanent ice than exists at present. At the present rate of change, a summer ice-free Arctic Ocean within a century is a real possibility, a state not witnessed for at least a million years. The change appears to be driven largely by feedback-enhanced global climate warming, and there seem to be few, if any processes or feedbacks within the Arctic system that are capable of altering the trajectory toward this “super interglacial” state
Particle interactions with single or multiple 3D solar reconnecting current sheets
The acceleration of charged particles (electrons and protons) in flaring
solar active regions is analyzed by numerical experiments. The acceleration is
modelled as a stochastic process taking place by the interaction of the
particles with local magnetic reconnection sites via multiple steps. Two types
of local reconnecting topologies are studied: the Harris-type and the X-point.
A formula for the maximum kinetic energy gain in a Harris-type current sheet,
found in a previous work of ours, fits well the numerical data for a single
step of the process. A generalization is then given approximating the kinetic
energy gain through an X-point. In the case of the multiple step process, in
both topologies the particles' kinetic energy distribution is found to acquire
a practically invariant form after a small number of steps. This tendency is
interpreted theoretically. Other characteristics of the acceleration process
are given, such as the mean acceleration time and the pitch angle distributions
of the particles.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figures, Solar Physics, in pres
Cardiac hypertrophy is inhibited by a local pool of cAMP regulated by phosphodiesterase 2
Rationale: Chronic elevation of 3'-5'-cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) levels has been associated with cardiac remodelling and cardiac hypertrophy. However, enhancement of particular aspects of cAMP/protein kinase A (PKA) signalling appears to be beneficial for the failing heart. cAMP is a pleiotropic second messenger with the ability to generate multiple functional outcomes in response to different extracellular stimuli with strict fidelity, a feature that relies on the spatial segregation of the cAMP pathway components in signalling microdomains.
Objective: How individual cAMP microdomains impact on cardiac pathophysiology remains largely to be established. The cAMP-degrading enzymes phosphodiesterases (PDEs) play a key role in shaping local changes in cAMP. Here we investigated the effect of specific inhibition of selected PDEs on cardiac myocyte hypertrophic growth.
Methods and Results: Using pharmacological and genetic manipulation of PDE activity we found that the rise in cAMP resulting from inhibition of PDE3 and PDE4 induces hypertrophy whereas increasing cAMP levels via PDE2 inhibition is anti-hypertrophic. By real-time imaging of cAMP levels in intact myocytes and selective displacement of PKA isoforms we demonstrate that the anti-hypertrophic effect of PDE2 inhibition involves the generation of a local pool of cAMP and activation of a PKA type II subset leading to phosphorylation of the nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFAT).
Conclusions: Different cAMP pools have opposing effects on cardiac myocyte cell size. PDE2 emerges as a novel key regulator of cardiac hypertrophy in vitro and in vivo and its inhibition may have therapeutic applications
Designer diatom episomes delivered by bacterial conjugation.
Eukaryotic microalgae hold great promise for the bioproduction of fuels and higher value chemicals. However, compared with model genetic organisms such as Escherichia coli and Saccharomyces cerevisiae, characterization of the complex biology and biochemistry of algae and strain improvement has been hampered by the inefficient genetic tools. To date, many algal species are transformable only via particle bombardment, and the introduced DNA is integrated randomly into the nuclear genome. Here we describe the first nuclear episomal vector for diatoms and a plasmid delivery method via conjugation from Escherichia coli to the diatoms Phaeodactylum tricornutum and Thalassiosira pseudonana. We identify a yeast-derived sequence that enables stable episome replication in these diatoms even in the absence of antibiotic selection and show that episomes are maintained as closed circles at copy number equivalent to native chromosomes. This highly efficient genetic system facilitates high-throughput functional characterization of algal genes and accelerates molecular phytoplankton research
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