1,063 research outputs found
Forehead Skin Blood Flow in Normal Neonates during Active and Quiet Sleep, Measured with a Diode Laser Doppler Instrument
Changes in forehead skin blood flow during active and quiet sleep were determined in 16 healthy neonates using a recently developed semi-conductor laser Doppler flow meter without light conducting fibres. Measurements were carried out at a postnatal age varying from 5 hours to 7 days. The two sleep states could be distinguished in 17 recordings. The mean skin blood flow values during active sleep were significantly higher (p<0.01) than those during quiet sleep, the mean increase being 28.1%. The variability of the flow signal, expressed as the coefficient of variation, changed significantly from 23.1% during active sleep to 18.2% during quiet sleep
What do the JAMA editors say when they discuss manuscripts that they are considering for publication? Developing a schema for classifying the content of editorial discussion
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>In an effort to identify previously unrecognized aspects of editorial decision-making, we explored the words and phrases that one group of editors used during their meetings.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We performed an observational study of discussions at manuscript meetings at <it>JAMA</it>, a major US general medical journal. One of us (KD) attended 12 editorial meetings in 2003 as a visitor and took notes recording phrases from discussion surrounding 102 manuscripts. In addition, editors attending the meetings completed a form for each manuscript considered, listing the reasons they were inclined to proceed to the next step in publication and reasons they were not (DR attended 4/12 meetings). We entered the spoken and written phrases into NVivo 2.0. We then developed a schema for classifying the editors' phrases, using an iterative approach.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Our classification schema has three main themes: science, journalism, and writing. We considered 2,463 phrases, of which 87 related mainly to the manuscript topic and were not classified (total 2,376 classified). Phrases related to science predominated (1,274 or 54%). The editors, most of whom were physicians, also placed major weight on goals important to JAMA's mission (journalism goals) such as importance to medicine, strategic emphasis for the journal, interest to the readership, and results (729 or 31% of phrases). About 16% (n = 373) of the phrases used related to writing issues, such as clarity and responses to the referees' comments.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Classification of editorial discourse provides insight into editorial decision making and concepts that need exploration in future studies.</p
Sensitivity of projected long-term CO 2 emissions across the Shared Socioeconomic Pathways
Scenarios showing future greenhouse gas emissions are needed to estimate climate impacts and the mitigation efforts required for climate stabilization. Recently, the Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSPs) have been introduced to describe alternative social, economic and technical narratives, spanning a wide range of plausible futures in terms of challenges to mitigation and adaptation. Thus far the key drivers of the uncertainty in emissions projections have not been robustly disentangled. Here we assess the sensitivities of future CO 2 emissions to key drivers characterizing the SSPs. We use six state-of-the-art integrated assessment models with different structural characteristics, and study the impact of five families of parameters, related to population, income, energy efficiency, fossil fuel availability, and low-carbon energy technology development. A recently developed sensitivity analysis algorithm allows us to parsimoniously compute both the direct and interaction effects of each of these drivers on cumulative emissions. The study reveals that the SSP assumptions about energy intensity and economic growth are the most important determinants of future CO 2 emissions from energy combustion, both with and without a climate policy. Interaction terms between parameters are shown to be important determinants of the total sensitivities
Molecular evolution of HoxA13 and the multiple origins of limbless morphologies in amphibians and reptiles
Developmental processes and their results, morphological characters, are inherited through transmission of genes regulating development. While there is ample evidence that cis-regulatory elements tend to be modular, with sequence segments dedicated to different roles, the situation for proteins is less clear, being particularly complex for transcription factors with multiple functions. Some motifs mediating protein-protein interactions may be exclusive to particular developmental roles, but it is also possible that motifs are mostly shared among different processes. Here we focus on HoxA13, a protein essential for limb development. We asked whether the HoxA13 amino acid sequence evolved similarly in three limbless clades: Gymnophiona, Amphisbaenia and Serpentes. We explored variation in ω (dN/dS) using a maximum-likelihood framework and HoxA13sequences from 47 species. Comparisons of evolutionary models provided low ω global values and no evidence that HoxA13 experienced relaxed selection in limbless clades. Branch-site models failed to detect evidence for positive selection acting on any site along branches of Amphisbaena and Gymnophiona, while three sites were identified in Serpentes. Examination of alignments did not reveal consistent sequence differences between limbed and limbless species. We conclude that HoxA13 has no modules exclusive to limb development, which may be explained by its involvement in multiple developmental processes
Counting all dyons in N =4 string theory
For dyons in heterotic string theory compactified on a six-torus, with
electric charge vector Q and magnetic charge vector P, the positive integer I =
g.c.d.(Q \wedge P) is an invariant of the U-duality group. We propose the
microscopic theory for computing the spectrum of all dyons for all values of I,
generalizing earlier results that exist only for the simplest case of I=1. Our
derivation uses a combination of arguments from duality, 4d-5d lift, and a
careful analysis of fermionic zero modes. The resulting degeneracy agrees with
the black hole degeneracy for large charges and with the degeneracy of
field-theory dyons for small charges. It naturally satisfies several physical
requirements including integrality and duality invariance. As a byproduct, we
also derive the microscopic (0,4) superconformal field theory relevant for
computing the spectrum of five-dimensional Strominger-Vafa black holes in ALE
backgrounds and count the resulting degeneracies
No entropy enigmas for N=4 dyons
We explain why multi-centered black hole configurations where at least one of
the centers is a large black hole do not contribute to the indexed degeneracies
in theories with N=4 supersymmetry. This is a consequence of the fact that such
configurations, although supersymmetric, belong to long supermultiplets. As a
result, there is no entropy enigma in N=4 theories, unlike in N=2 theories.Comment: 14 page
Negative discriminant states in N=4 supersymmetric string theories
Single centered BPS black hole solutions exist only when the charge carried
by the black hole has positive discriminant. On the other hand the exact dyon
spectrum in heterotic string theory compactified on T^6 is known to contain
states with negative discriminant. We show that all of these negative
discriminant states can be accounted for as two centered black holes. Thus
after the contribution to the index from the two centered black holes is
subtracted from the total microscopic index, the index for states with negative
discriminant vanishes even for finite values of charges, in agreement with the
results from the black hole side. Bound state metamorphosis -- which requires
us to identify certain apparently different two centered configurations
according to a specific set of rules -- plays a crucial role in this analysis.
We also generalize these results to a class of CHL string theories.Comment: LaTeX file, 32 pages; v2: reference added; v3: added new section 3.
A Twist in the Dyon Partition Function
In four dimensional string theories with N=4 and N=8 supersymmetries one can
often define twisted index in a subspace of the moduli space which captures
additional information on the partition function than the ones contained in the
usual helicity trace index. We compute several such indices in type IIB string
theory on K3 x T^2 and T^6, and find that they share many properties with the
usual helicity trace index that captures the spectrum of quarter BPS states in
N=4 supersymmetric string theories. In particular the partition function is a
modular form of a subgroup of Sp(2,Z) and the jumps across the walls of
marginal stability are controlled by the residues at the poles of the partition
function. However for large charges the logarithm of this index grows as 1/n
times the entropy of a black hole carrying the same charges where n is the
order of the symmetry generator that is used to define the twisted index. We
provide a macroscopic explanation of this phenomenon using quantum entropy
function formalism. The leading saddle point corresponding to the attractor
geometry fails to contribute to the twisted index, but a Z_n orbifold of the
attractor geometry produces the desired contribution.Comment: LaTeX file, 35 pages; v2: references adde
MiRNA-Mediated Control of HLA-G Expression and Function
HLA-G is a non-classical HLA class-Ib molecule expressed mainly by the extravillous cytotrophoblasts (EVT) of the placenta. The expression of HLA-G on these fetal cells protects the EVT cells from immune rejection and is therefore important for a healthy pregnancy. The mechanisms controlling HLA-G expression are largely unknown. Here we demonstrate that miR-148a and miR-152 down-regulate HLA-G expression by binding its 3′UTR and that this down-regulation of HLA-G affects LILRB1 recognition and consequently, abolishes the LILRB1-mediated inhibition of NK cell killing. We further demonstrate that the C/G polymorphism at position +3142 of HLA-G 3′UTR has no effect on the miRNA targeting of HLA-G. We show that in the placenta both miR-148a and miR-152 miRNAs are expressed at relatively low levels, compared to other healthy tissues, and that the mRNA levels of HLA-G are particularly high and we therefore suggest that this might enable the tissue specific expression of HLA-G
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