1,936 research outputs found
Avian Use of a Bottomland Hardwood Afforestation Site in the Red River Alluvial Valley
Colby W. Sharp is a Graduate Associate in the School of Biological Sciences at Louisiana Tech University.
Heidi L. Adams and William B. Patterson are Assistant Professors in the School of Biological Sciences at Louisiana Tech University
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Diversity Synthesis of Complex Pyridines Yields a Probe of a Neurotrophic Signaling Pathway
Recognizing the value of including complex pyridines in small-molecule screening collections, we developed a previously unexplored [2 + 2 + 2]-cycloaddition of silyl-tethered diynes with nitriles. The tether provides high regioselectivity, while the solvent THF allows catalytic CpCo(CO)2 to be used without exogenous irradiation. One of the resulting bicyclic and monocyclic (desilylated) pyridines was identified as an inhibitor of neuregulin-induced neurite outgrowth (EC50 = 0.30 µM) in a screen that probes a pathway likely to be involved in breast cancers and schizophrenia.Chemistry and Chemical Biolog
Multiple indices of diffusion identifies white matter damage in mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's disease
The study of multiple indices of diffusion, including axial (DA), radial (DR) and mean diffusion (MD), as well as fractional anisotropy (FA), enables WM damage in Alzheimer's disease (AD) to be assessed in detail. Here, tract-based spatial statistics (TBSS) were performed on scans of 40 healthy elders, 19 non-amnestic MCI (MCIna) subjects, 14 amnestic MCI (MCIa) subjects and 9 AD patients. Significantly higher DA was found in MCIna subjects compared to healthy elders in the right posterior cingulum/precuneus. Significantly higher DA was also found in MCIa subjects compared to healthy elders in the left prefrontal cortex, particularly in the forceps minor and uncinate fasciculus. In the MCIa versus MCIna comparison, significantly higher DA was found in large areas of the left prefrontal cortex. For AD patients, the overlap of FA and DR changes and the overlap of FA and MD changes were seen in temporal, parietal and frontal lobes, as well as the corpus callosum and fornix. Analysis of differences between the AD versus MCIna, and AD versus MCIa contrasts, highlighted regions that are increasingly compromised in more severe disease stages. Microstructural damage independent of gross tissue loss was widespread in later disease stages. Our findings suggest a scheme where WM damage begins in the core memory network of the temporal lobe, cingulum and prefrontal regions, and spreads beyond these regions in later stages. DA and MD indices were most sensitive at detecting early changes in MCIa
Adapting School-Based Substance Use Prevention Curriculum Through Cultural Grounding: A Review and Exemplar of Adaptation Processes for Rural Schools
A central challenge facing twenty-first century community-based researchers and prevention scientists is curriculum adaptation processes. While early prevention efforts sought to develop effective programs, taking programs to scale implies that they will be adapted, especially as programs are implemented with populations other than those with whom they were developed or tested. The principle of cultural grounding, which argues that health message adaptation should be informed by knowledge of the target population and by cultural insiders, provides a theoretical rational for cultural regrounding and presents an illustrative case of methods used to reground the keepin’ it REAL substance use prevention curriculum for a rural adolescent population. We argue that adaptation processes like those presented should be incorporated into the design and dissemination of prevention interventions
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Winter 1972
The Mode of Action of Arsenicals in the Soil by Cecil F. Kerr (page 3) The Golf Course Superintendent: A Job Description (5) Factors Affecting Carbohydrate Reserves of Cool Season Turfgrasses by L.J. Zanoni, L. F. Michelson, W.G. COlby, and M. Drake (6) Turf Bulletin\u27s Photo Quiz by Frederick G. Cheney (9) A Close Look at TCDD (10) Environmental News--Environmental Protection Agency Cancels Registration of Herbicide Amitrole (11) Homeowner\u27s Section--Crabgrass in Perspective by R.A. Peters (12) Merion Tees--Maintenance Suggestions (14) Use of Ammonium Sulfate in Fluid Fertilizers by Frank P. Achorn and W.C. Scott, Jr. (15) River Ecology and the Impact on Man (17) To Roll or Not to Roll (18) Editorial--Talkin\u27 Turfie (24
The Demographics of Terrestrial Planets in the Venus Zone
Understanding the physical characteristics of Venus, including its
atmosphere, interior, and its evolutionary pathway with respect to Earth,
remains a vital component for terrestrial planet evolution models and the
emergence and/or decline of planetary habitability. A statistical strategy for
evaluating the evolutionary pathways of terrestrial planets lies in the
atmospheric characterization of exoplanets, where the sample size provides
sufficient means for determining required runaway greenhouse conditions.
Observations of potential exoVenuses can help confirm hypotheses about Venus'
past, as well as the occurrence rate of Venus-like planets in other systems.
Additionally, the data from future Venus missions, such as DAVINCI, EnVision,
and VERITAS, will provide valuable information regarding Venus, and the study
of exoVenuses will be complimentary to these missions. To facilitate studies of
exoVenus candidates, we provide a catalog of all confirmed terrestrial planets
in the Venus Zone, including transiting and non-transiting cases, and quantify
their potential for follow-up observations. We examine the demographics of the
exoVenus population with relation to stellar and planetary properties, such as
the planetary radius gap. We highlight specific high-priority exoVenus targets
for follow-up observations including: TOI-2285 b, LTT 1445 A c, TOI-1266 c, LHS
1140 c, and L98-59 d. We also discuss follow-up observations that may yield
further insight into the Venus/Earth divergence in atmospheric properties.Comment: 27 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in the Astronomical
Journa
Deciphering the past to inform the future: preparing for the next (“really big”) extreme event
Climate change will bring more extremes in temperature and precipitation that will impact productivity and ecosystem resilience throughout agroecosystems worldwide. Historical events can be used to identify drivers that impact future events. A catastrophic drought in the US in the 1930s resulted in an abrupt boundary between areas severely impacted by the Dust Bowl and areas that were less severely affected. Historical primary production data confirmed the location of this boundary at the border between two states (Nebraska and Iowa). Local drivers of weather and soils explained production responses across the boundary before and after the drought (1926–1948). During the drought, however, features at the landscape scale (soil properties and wind velocities) and regional scale (the Missouri River, its floodplain, and the nearby Loess Hills) explained most of the observed variance in primary production. The impact of future extreme events may be affected by land surface properties that either accentuate or ameliorate the effects of these events. Consideration of large-scale geomorphic processes may be necessary to interpret and manage for catastrophic events
Large-scale Graphitic Thin Films Synthesized on Ni and Transferred to Insulators: Structural and Electronic Properties
We present a comprehensive study of the structural and electronic properties
of ultrathin films containing graphene layers synthesized by chemical vapor
deposition (CVD) based surface segregation on polycrystalline Ni foils then
transferred onto insulating SiO2/Si substrates. Films of size up to several
mm's have been synthesized. Structural characterizations by atomic force
microscopy (AFM), scanning tunneling microscopy (STM), cross-sectional
transmission electron microscopy (XTEM) and Raman spectroscopy confirm that
such large scale graphitic thin films (GTF) contain both thick graphite regions
and thin regions of few layer graphene. The films also contain many wrinkles,
with sharply-bent tips and dislocations revealed by XTEM, yielding insights on
the growth and buckling processes of the GTF. Measurements on mm-scale
back-gated transistor devices fabricated from the transferred GTF show
ambipolar field effect with resistance modulation ~50% and carrier mobilities
reaching ~2000 cm^2/Vs. We also demonstrate quantum transport of carriers with
phase coherence length over 0.2 m from the observation of 2D weak
localization in low temperature magneto-transport measurements. Our results
show that despite the non-uniformity and surface roughness, such large-scale,
flexible thin films can have electronic properties promising for device
applications.Comment: This version (as published) contains additional data, such as cross
sectional TEM image
Multivisceral intestinal transplantation: Surgical pathology
We report the diagnostic surgical pathology of two children who underwent multivisceral abdominal transplantation and survived for 1 month and 6 months. There is little relevant literature, and diagnostic criteria for the various clinical possibilities are not established; this is made more complicated by the simultaneous occurrence of more than one process. We based our interpretations on conventional histology, augmented with immunohistology, including HLA staining that distinguished graft from host cells in situ. In some instances functional analysis of T cells propagated from the same biopsies was available and was used to corroborate morphological interpretations. A wide spectrum of changes was encountered. Graft-versus-host disease, a prime concern before surgery, was not seen. Rejection was severe in 1 patient, not present in the other, and both had evidence of lymphoproliferative disease, which was related to Epstein-Barr virus. Bacterial translocation through the gut wall was also a feature in both children. This paper documents and illustrates the various diagnostic possibilities.. © 1989 Informa UK Ltd All rights reserved: reproduction in whole or part not permitted
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