1,022 research outputs found
Effects on L1 During Early Acquisition of L2: Speech Changes in Spanish at First English Contact
Spanish phonological development was examined in six sequential bilingual children at the point of contact with English and eight months later. We explored effects of the English vowel and consonant inventory on Spanish. Children showed a significant increase in consonant cluster accuracy and in vowel errors. These emerging sequential bilingual children showed effects of English on their first language, Spanish. Cross-linguistic transfer did not affect all properties of the phonology equally. Negative transfer may occur in specific areas where the second language is more complex, requiring reorganization of the existing system, as in the transition from the Spanish five-vowel to the English eleven-vowel system
Correcting for the Effects of Interstellar Extinction
This paper addresses the issue of how best to correct astronomical data for
the wavelength-dependent effects of Galactic interstellar extinction. The main
general features of extinction from the IR through the UV are reviewed, along
with the nature of observed spatial variations. The enormous range of
extinction properties found in the Galaxy, particularly in the UV spectral
region, is illustrated. Fortunately, there are some tight constraints on the
wavelength dependence of extinction and some general correlations between
extinction curve shape and interstellar environment. These relationships
provide some guidance for correcting data for the effects of extinction.
Several strategies for dereddening are discussed along with estimates of the
uncertainties inherent in each method. In the Appendix, a new derivation of the
wavelength dependence of an average Galactic extinction curve from the IR
through the UV is presented, along with a new estimate of how this extinction
law varies with the parameter R = A(V)/E(B-V). These curves represent the true
monochromatic wavelength dependence of extinction and, as such, are suitable
for dereddening IR--UV spectrophotometric data of any resolution, and can be
used to derive extinction relations for any photometry system.Comment: To appear in PASP (January 1999) 14 pages including 4 pages of
figures Uses emulateapj style. PASP, in press (January 1999
The ISO SWS on-line system
The software which is currently being developed for the Short Wavelength Spectrometer (SWS) of the Infrared Space Observatory (ISO) is described. The spectrometer has a wide range of capabilities in the 2-45 micron infrared band. SWS contains two independent gratings, one for the long and one for the short wavelength section of the band. With the gratings a spectral resolution of approximately 1000 to approximately 2500 can be obtained. The instrument also contains two Fabry-Perault's yielding a resolution between approximately 1000 and approximately 20000. Software is currently being developed for the acquisition, calibration, and analysis of SWS data. The software is firstly required to run in a pipeline mode without human interaction, to process data as they are received from the telescope. However, both for testing and calibration of the instrument as well as for evaluation of the planned operating procedures the software should also be suitable for interactive use. Thirdly the same software will be used for long term characterization of the instrument. The software must work properly within the environment designed by the European Space Agency (ESA) for the spacecraft operations. As a result strict constraints are put on I/O devices, throughput etc
Investigating situated cultural practices through cross-sectoral digital collaborations: policies, processes, insights
The (Belfast) Good Friday Agreement represents a major milestone in Northern Ireland's recent political history, with complex conditions allowing for formation of a ‘cross-community’ system of government enabling power sharing between parties representing Protestant/loyalist and Catholic/nationalist constituencies. This article examines the apparent flourishing of community-focused digital practices over the subsequent ‘post-conflict’ decade, galvanised by Northern Irish and EU policy initiatives armed with consolidating the peace process. Numerous digital heritage and storytelling projects have been catalysed within programmes aiming to foster social processes, community cohesion and cross-community exchange. The article outlines two projects—‘digital memory boxes’ and ‘interactive galleon’—developed during 2007–2008 within practice-led PhD enquiry conducted in collaboration with the Nerve Centre, a third-sector media education organisation. The article goes on to critically examine the processes involved in practically realising, and creatively and theoretically reconciling, community-engaged digital production in a particular socio-political context of academic-community collaboration
Constellations of identity: place-ma(r)king beyond heritage
This paper will critically consider the different ways in which history and belonging have been treated in artworks situated in the Citadel development in Ayr on the West coast of Scotland. It will focus upon one artwork, Constellation by Stephen Hurrel, as an alternative to the more conventional landscapes of heritage which are adjacent, to examine the relationship between personal history and place history and argue the primacy of participatory process in the creation of place and any artwork therein. Through his artwork, Hurrel has attempted to adopt a material process through which place can be created performatively but, in part due to its non-representational form, proves problematic, aesthetically and longitudinally, in wholly engaging the community. The paper will suggest that through variants of ‘new genre public art’ such as this, personal and place histories can be actively re-created through the redevelopment of contemporary urban landscapes but also highlight the complexities and indeterminacies involved in the relationship between artwork, people and place
Characterization of iodothyronine sulfatase activities in human and rat liver and placenta
In conditions associated with high serum iodothyronine sulfate
concentrations, e.g. during fetal development, desulfation of these
conjugates may be important in the regulation of thyroid hormone
homeostasis. However, little is known about which sulfatases are involved
in this process. Therefore, we investigated the hydrolysis of
iodothyronine sulfates by homogenates of V79 cells expressing the human
arylsulfatases A (ARSA), B (ARSB), or C (ARSC; steroid sulfatase), as well
as tissue fractions of human and rat liver and placenta. We found that
only the microsomal fraction from liver and placenta hydrolyzed
iodothyronine sulfates. Among the recombinant enzymes only the endoplasmic
reticulum-associated ARSC showed activity toward iodothyronine sulfates;
the soluble lysosomal ARSA and ARSB were inactive. Recombinant ARSC as
well as human placenta microsomes hydrolyzed iodothyronine sulfates with a
substrate preference for 3,3'-diiodothyronine sulfate (3,3'-T(2)S)
approximately T(3) sulfate (T(3)S) >> rT(3)S approximately T(4)S, whereas
human and rat liver microsomes showed a preference for 3,3'-T(2)S > T(3)S
>> rT(3)S approximately T(4)S. ARSC and the tissue microsomal sulfatases
were all characterized by high apparent K(m) values (>50 microM) for
3,3'-T(2)S and T(3)S. Iodothyronine sulfatase activity determined using
3,3'-T(2)S as a substrate was much higher in human liver microsomes than
in human placenta microsomes, although ARSC is expressed at higher levels
in human placenta than in human liver. The ratio of estrone sulfate to
T(2)S hydrolysis in human liver microsomes (0.2) differed largely from
that in ARSC homogenate (80) and human placenta microsomes (150). These
results suggest that ARSC accounts for the relatively low iodothyronine
sulfatase activity of human placenta, and that additional arylsulfatase(s)
contributes to the high iodothyronine sulfatase activity in human liver.
Further research is needed to identify these iodothyronine sulfatases, and
to study the physiological importance of the reversible sulfation of
iodothyronines in thyroid hormone metabolism
Characterization of human iodothyronine sulfotransferases
Sulfation is an important pathway of thyroid hormone metabolism that
facilitates the degradation of the hormone by the type I iodothyronine
deiodinase, but little is known about which human sulfotransferase
isoenzymes are involved. We have investigated the sulfation of the
prohormone T4, the active hormone T3, and the metabolites rT3 and
3,3'-diiodothyronine (3,3'-T2) by human liver and kidney cytosol as well
as by recombinant human SULT1A1 and SULT1A3, previously known as
phenol-preferring and monoamine-preferring phenol sulfotransferase,
respectively. In all cases, the substrate preference was 3,3'-T2 >> rT3 >
T3 > T4. The apparent Km values of 3,3'-T2 and T3 [at 50 micromol/L
3'-phosphoadenosine-5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS)] were 1.02 and 54.9
micromol/L for liver cytosol, 0.64 and 27.8 micromol/L for kidney cytosol,
0.14 and 29.1 micromol/L for SULT1A1, and 33 and 112 micromol/L for
SULT1A3, respectively. The apparent Km of PAPS (at 0.1 micromol/L 3,3'-T2)
was 6.0 micromol/L for liver cytosol, 9.0 micromol/L for kidney cytosol,
0.65 micromol/L for SULT1A1, and 2.7 micromol/L for SULT1A3. The sulfation
of 3,3'-T2 was inhibited by the other iodothyronines in a
concentration-dependent manner. The inhibition profiles of the 3,3'-T2
sulfotransferase activities of liver and kidney cytosol obtained by
addition of 10 micromol/L of the various analogs were better correlated
with the inhibition profile of SULT1A1 than with that of SULT1A3. These
results indicate similar substrate specificities for iodothyronine
sulfation by native human liver and kidney sulfotransferases and
recombinant SULT1A1 and SULT1A3. Of the latter, SULT1A1 clearly shows the
highest affinity for both iodothyronines and PAPS, but it remains to be
established whether it is the prominent isoenzyme for sulfation of thyroid
hormone in human liver and kidney
The AKARI diffuse maps
We descibe the calibration of maps of diffuse Galactic Plane emission, and present detailed observations of several complexes. We put especial atention on Cygnus X region showing its temperature and density maps
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