512 research outputs found
Relations between the Gribov-horizon and center-vortex confinement scenarios
We review numerical evidence on connections between the center-vortex and
Gribov-horizon confinement scenarios.Comment: Plenary talk presented by S. Olejnik at "Quark Confinement and the
Hadron Spectrum VI", Villasimius, Sardinia, Italy, Sep. 21-25, 2004; 10
pages, 11 EPS figures, uses AIP Proceedings style file
Not All Browsers are Created Equal:Comparing Web Browser Fingerprintability
Browsers and their users can be tracked even in the absence of a persistent IP address or cookie. Unique and hence identifying pieces of information, making up what is known as a fingerprint, can be collected from browsers by a visited website, e.g. using JavaScript. However, browsers vary in precisely what information they make available, and hence their fingerprintability may also vary. In this paper, we report on the results of experiments examining the fingerprintable attributes made available by a range of modern browsers. We tested the most widely used browsers for both desktop and mobile platforms. The results reveal significant differences between browsers in terms of their fingerprinting potential, meaning that the choice of browser has significant privacy implications
On the Unicity of Smartphone Applications
Prior works have shown that the list of apps installed by a user reveal a lot
about user interests and behavior. These works rely on the semantics of the
installed apps and show that various user traits could be learnt automatically
using off-the-shelf machine-learning techniques. In this work, we focus on the
re-identifiability issue and thoroughly study the unicity of smartphone apps on
a dataset containing 54,893 Android users collected over a period of 7 months.
Our study finds that any 4 apps installed by a user are enough (more than 95%
times) for the re-identification of the user in our dataset. As the complete
list of installed apps is unique for 99% of the users in our dataset, it can be
easily used to track/profile the users by a service such as Twitter that has
access to the whole list of installed apps of users. As our analyzed dataset is
small as compared to the total population of Android users, we also study how
unicity would vary with larger datasets. This work emphasizes the need of
better privacy guards against collection, use and release of the list of
installed apps.Comment: 10 pages, 9 Figures, Appeared at ACM CCS Workshop on Privacy in
Electronic Society (WPES) 201
Laser-induced Precession of Magnetization in GaMnAs
We report on the photo-induced precession of the ferromagnetically coupled Mn
spins in (Ga,Mn)As, which is observed even with no external magnetic field
applied. We concentrate on various experimental aspects of the time-resolved
magneto-optical Kerr effect (TR-MOKE) technique that can be used to clarify the
origin of the detected signals. We show that the measured data typically
consist of several different contributions, among which only the oscillatory
signal is directly connected with the ferromagnetic order in the sample.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Human and murine IFIT1 proteins do not restrict infection of negative-sense RNA viruses of the Orthomyxoviridae, Bunyaviridae, and Filoviridae families
UNLABELLED: Interferon-induced protein with tetratricopeptide repeats 1 (IFIT1) is a host protein with reported cell-intrinsic antiviral activity against several RNA viruses. The proposed basis for the activity against negative-sense RNA viruses is the binding to exposed 5\u27-triphosphates (5\u27-ppp) on the genome of viral RNA. However, recent studies reported relatively low binding affinities of IFIT1 for 5\u27-ppp RNA, suggesting that IFIT1 may not interact efficiently with this moiety under physiological conditions. To evaluate the ability of IFIT1 to have an impact on negative-sense RNA viruses, we infected Ifit1(-/-) and wild-type control mice and primary cells with four negative-sense RNA viruses (influenza A virus [IAV], La Crosse virus [LACV], Oropouche virus [OROV], and Ebola virus) corresponding to three distinct families. Unexpectedly, a lack of Ifit1 gene expression did not result in increased infection by any of these viruses in cell culture. Analogously, morbidity, mortality, and viral burdens in tissues were identical between Ifit1(-/-) and control mice after infection with IAV, LACV, or OROV. Finally, deletion of the human IFIT1 protein in A549 cells did not affect IAV replication or infection, and reciprocally, ectopic expression of IFIT1 in HEK293T cells did not inhibit IAV infection. To explain the lack of antiviral activity against IAV, we measured the binding affinity of IFIT1 for RNA oligonucleotides resembling the 5\u27 ends of IAV gene segments. The affinity for 5\u27-ppp RNA was approximately 10-fold lower than that for non-2\u27-O-methylated (cap 0) RNA oligonucleotides. Based on this analysis, we conclude that IFIT1 is not a dominant restriction factor against negative-sense RNA viruses.
IMPORTANCE: Negative-sense RNA viruses, including influenza virus and Ebola virus, have been responsible for some of the most deadly outbreaks in recent history. The host interferon response and induction of antiviral genes contribute to the control of infections by these viruses. IFIT1 is highly induced after virus infection and reportedly has antiviral activity against several RNA and DNA viruses. However, its role in restricting infection by negative-sense RNA viruses remains unclear. In this study, we evaluated the ability of IFIT1 to inhibit negative-sense RNA virus replication and pathogenesis both in vitro and in vivo. Detailed cell culture and animal studies demonstrated that IFIT1 is not a dominant restriction factor against three different families of negative-sense RNA viruses
Polarization control of metal-enhanced fluorescence in hybrid assemblies of photosynthetic complexes and gold nanorods
Fluorescence imaging of hybrid nanostructures composed of a bacterial light-harvesting complex LH2 and Au nanorods with controlled coupling strength is employed to study the spectral dependence of the plasmon-induced fluorescence enhancement. Perfect matching of the plasmon resonances in the nanorods with the absorption bands of the LH2 complexes facilitates a direct comparison of the enhancement factors for longitudinal and transverse plasmon frequencies of the nanorods. We find that the fluorescence enhancement due to excitation of longitudinal resonance can be up to five-fold stronger than for the transverse one. We attribute this result, which is important for designing plasmonic functional systems, to a very different distribution of the enhancement of the electric field due to the excitation of the two characteristic plasmon modes in nanorods
Evidence for Excimer Photoexcitations in an Ordered {\pi}-Conjugated Polymer Film
We report pressure-dependent transient picosecond and continuous-wave
photomodulation studies of disordered and ordered films of
2-methoxy-5-(2-ethylhexyloxy) poly(para-phenylenevinylene). Photoinduced
absorption (PA) bands in the disordered film exhibit very weak pressure
dependence and are assigned to intrachain excitons and polarons. In contrast,
the ordered film exhibits two additional transient PA bands in the midinfrared
that blueshift dramatically with pressure. Based on high-order configuration
interaction calculations we ascribe the PA bands in the ordered film to
excimers. Our work brings insight to the exciton binding energy in ordered
films versus disordered films and solutions. The reduced exciton binding energy
in ordered films is due to new energy states appearing below the continuum band
threshold of the single strand.Comment: 5.5 pages, 5 figure
- …
