435 research outputs found
Dynamic visualization of membrane-inserted fraction of pHluorin-tagged channels using repetitive acidification technique.
Background
Changes in neuronal excitability, synaptic efficacy and generally in cell signaling often result from insertion of key molecules into plasma membrane (PM). Many of the techniques used for monitoring PM insertion lack either spatial or temporal resolution.
Results
We improved the imaging method based on time-lapse total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy and pHluorin tagging by supplementing it with a repetitive extracellular acidification protocol. We illustrate the applicability of this method by showing that brief activation of NMDA receptors ("chemical LTP") in cultured hippocampal neurons induced a persistent PM insertion of glutamate receptors containing the pHluorin-tagged GluR-A(flip) subunits.
Conclusion
The repetitive acidification technique provides a more accurate way of monitoring the PM-inserted fraction of fluorescently tagged molecules and offers a good temporal and spatial resolution
Liquid Crystal-Solid Interface Structure at the Antiferroelectric-Ferroelectric Phase Transition
Total Internal Reflection (TIR) is used to probe the molecular organization
at the surface of a tilted chiral smectic liquid crystal at temperatures in the
vicinity of the bulk antiferroelectric-ferroelectric phase transition. Data are
interpreted using an exact analytical solution of a real model for
ferroelectric order at the surface. In the mixture T3, ferroelectric surface
order is expelled with the bulk ferroelectric-antiferroelectric transition. The
conditions for ferroelectric order at the surface of an antiferroelectric bulk
are presented
Towards a Big Crunch Dual
We show there exist smooth asymptotically anti-de Sitter initial data which
evolve to a big crunch singularity in a low energy supergravity limit of string
theory. This opens up the possibility of using the dual conformal field theory
to obtain a fully quantum description of the cosmological singularity. A
preliminary study of this dual theory suggests that the big crunch is an
endpoint of evolution even in the full string theory. We also show that any
theory with scalar solitons must have negative energy solutions. The results
presented here clarify our earlier work on cosmic censorship violation in N=8
supergravity.Comment: 27 pages, 3 figures;v2:minor correction
The Magnetic Phase Diagram and the Pressure and Field Dependence of the Fermi Surface in UGe
The ac susceptibility and de Haas-van Alphen (dHvA) effect in UGe are
measured at pressures {\it P} up to 17.7 kbar for the magnetic field {\it B}
parallel to the {\it a} axis, which is the easy axis of magnetization. Two
anomalies are observed at {\it B}({\it P}) and {\it B}({\it P}) ({\it
B} {\it B} at any {\it P}), and the {\it P}-{\it B} phase diagram
is presented. The Fermi surface and quasiparticle mass are found to vary
smoothly with pressure up to 17.7 kbar unless the phase boundary {\it
B}({\it P}) is crossed. The observed dHvA frequencies may be grouped into
three according to their pressure dependences, which are largely positive,
nearly constant or negative. It is suggested that the quasiparticle mass
moderately increases as the boundary {\it B}({\it P}) is approached. DHvA
effect measurements are also performed across the boundary at 16.8 kbar.Comment: to be published in Phys. Rev.
Physician experiences of screen-level features in a prominent electronic health record: Design recommendations from a qualitative study
The goal of this qualitative study was to assess physicians’ perceptions around features of key screens within a prominent commercial EHR, and to solicit end-user recommendations for improved retrieval of high-priority clinical information. We conducted a qualitative, descriptive study of 25 physicians in a medical ICU setting. at a tertiary academic medical center. An in-depth, semi-structured interview guide was developed to elicit physician perceptions on information retrieval as well as favorable and unfavorable features of specific EHR screens. Transcripts were independently coded in a qualitative software management tool by at least two trained coders using a common code book. We successfully obtained vendor permission to map physicians perception’s on full Epic© screenshots. Among the 25 physician participants (13 female; 5 attending physicians, 9 fellows, 11 residents), the majority of participants reported experiencing challenges finding clinical information in the EHR. We present the most favorable and unfavorable screen-level features for four central EHR screens: Flowsheet, Notes/Chart Review, Results Review, and Vital Signs. We also compiled participants’ recommendations for a comprehensive EHR dashboard screen to better support clinical workflow and information retrieval in the medical ICU through User-Centered Design. ICU physicians demonstrated a mix of positive and negative attitudes toward specific screen-level features in a major vendor-based EHR system. Physician perceptions of information overload emerged as a theme across multiple EHR screens. Our findings underscore the importance of qualitative research and end-user feedback in EHR software design and interface optimization at both the vendor and institutional level
Global Phase Diagram of the Kondo Lattice: From Heavy Fermion Metals to Kondo Insulators
We discuss the general theoretical arguments advanced earlier for the T=0
global phase diagram of antiferromagnetic Kondo lattice systems, distinguishing
between the established and the conjectured. In addition to the well-known
phase of a paramagnetic metal with a "large" Fermi surface (P_L), there is also
an antiferromagnetic phase with a "small" Fermi surface (AF_S). We provide the
details of the derivation of a quantum non-linear sigma-model (QNLsM)
representation of the Kondo lattice Hamiltonian, which leads to an effective
field theory containing both low-energy fermions in the vicinity of a Fermi
surface and low-energy bosons near zero momentum. An asymptotically exact
analysis of this effective field theory is made possible through the
development of a renormalization group procedure for mixed fermion-boson
systems. Considerations on how to connect the AF_S and P_L phases lead to a
global phase diagram, which not only puts into perspective the theory of local
quantum criticality for antiferromagnetic heavy fermion metals, but also
provides the basis to understand the surprising recent experiments in
chemically-doped as well as pressurized YbRh2Si2. We point out that the AF_S
phase still occurs for the case of an equal number of spin-1/2 local moments
and conduction electrons. This observation raises the prospect for a global
phase diagram of heavy fermion systems in the Kondo-insulator regime. Finally,
we discuss the connection between the Kondo breakdown physics discussed here
for the Kondo lattice systems and the non-Fermi liquid behavior recently
studied from a holographic perspective.Comment: (v3) leftover typos corrected. (v2) Published version. 32 pages, 4
figures. Section 7, on the connection between the Kondo lattice systems and
the holographic models of non-Fermi liquid, is expanded. (v1) special issue
of JLTP on quantum criticalit
Trace anomaly driven inflation
This paper investigates Starobinsky's model of inflation driven by the trace
anomaly of conformally coupled matter fields. This model does not suffer from
the problem of contrived initial conditions that occurs in most models of
inflation driven by a scalar field. The universe can be nucleated
semi-classically by a cosmological instanton that is much larger than the
Planck scale provided there are sufficiently many matter fields. There are two
cosmological instantons: the four sphere and a new ``double bubble'' solution.
This paper considers a universe nucleated by the four sphere. The AdS/CFT
correspondence is used to calculate the correlation function for scalar and
tensor metric perturbations during the ensuing de Sitter phase. The analytic
structure of the scalar and tensor propagators is discussed in detail.
Observational constraints on the model are discussed. Quantum loops of matter
fields are shown to strongly suppress short scale metric perturbations, which
implies that short distance modifications of gravity would probably not be
observable in the cosmic microwave background. This is probably true for any
model of inflation provided there are sufficiently many matter fields. This
point is illustrated by a comparison of anomaly driven inflation in four
dimensions and in a Randall-Sundrum brane-world model.Comment: LaTeX, 42 pages, 5 .eps figures. v2: typos corrected, references
added and 2 new paragraphs in conclusions section. v3: comments about strong
coupling and unboundedness of action changed, other minor changes. v4:
Comments about strong coupling changed again (2-point functions of metric
perturbations do not depend on Yang-Mills coupling
Quantum Mechanics of the Vacuum State in Two-Dimensional QCD with Adjoint Fermions
A study of two-dimensional QCD on a spatial circle with Majorana fermions in
the adjoint representation of the gauge groups SU(2) and SU(3) has been
performed. The main emphasis is put on the symmetry properties related to the
homotopically non-trivial gauge transformations and the discrete axial symmetry
of this model. Within a gauge fixed canonical framework, the delicate interplay
of topology on the one hand and Jacobians and boundary conditions arising in
the course of resolving Gauss's law on the other hand is exhibited. As a
result, a consistent description of the residual gauge symmetry (for
SU(N)) and the ``axial anomaly" emerges. For illustrative purposes, the vacuum
of the model is determined analytically in the limit of a small circle. There,
the Born-Oppenheimer approximation is justified and reduces the vacuum problem
to simple quantum mechanics. The issue of fermion condensates is addressed and
residual discrepancies with other approaches are pointed out.Comment: 44 pages; for hardcopies of figures, contact
[email protected]
Dynamical Symmetry Breaking in Spaces with Constant Negative Curvature
By using the Nambu-Jona-Lasinio model, we study dynamical symmetry breaking
in spaces with constant negative curvature. We show that the physical reason
for zero value of critical coupling value in these spaces is
connected with the effective reduction of dimension of spacetime in the infrared region, which takes place for any dimension . Since
the Laplace-Beltrami operator has a gap in spaces with constant negative
curvature, such an effective reduction for scalar fields is absent and there
are not problems with radiative corrections due to scalar fields. Therefore,
dynamical symmetry breaking with the effective reduction of the dimension of
spacetime for fermions in the infrared region is consistent with the
Mermin-Wagner-Coleman theorem, which forbids spontaneous symmetry breaking in
(1 + 1)-dimensional spacetime.Comment: minor text changes, added new reference
Gravitation and inertia; a rearrangement of vacuum in gravity
We address the gravitation and inertia in the framework of 'general gauge
principle', which accounts for 'gravitation gauge group' generated by hidden
local internal symmetry implemented on the flat space. We connect this group to
nonlinear realization of the Lie group of 'distortion' of local internal
properties of six-dimensional flat space, which is assumed as a toy model
underlying four-dimensional Minkowski space. The agreement between proposed
gravitational theory and available observational verifications is satisfactory.
We construct relativistic field theory of inertia and derive the relativistic
law of inertia. This theory furnishes justification for introduction of the
Principle of Equivalence. We address the rearrangement of vacuum state in
gravity resulting from these ideas.Comment: 17 pages, no figures, revtex4, Accepted for publication in Astrophys.
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