3,260 research outputs found
A Monolithically Fabricated Combinatorial Mixer for Microchip-Based High-Throughput Cell Culturing Assays
We present an integrated method to fabricate 3-
D microfluidic networks and fabricated the first on-chip
cell culture device with an integrated combinatorial mixer.
The combinatorial mixer is designed for screening the
combinatorial effects of different compounds on cells. The
monolithic fabrication method with parylene C as the
basic structural material allows us to avoid wafer bonding
and achieves precise alignment between microfluidic
channels. As a proof-of-concept, we fabricated a device
with a three-input combinatorial mixer and demonstrated
that the mixer can produce all the possible combinations.
Also, we demonstrated the ability to culture cells on-chip
and performed a simple cell assay on-chip using trypan
blue to stain dead cells
Modulation of inherent dynamical tendencies of the bisabolyl cation via preorganization in epi-isozizaene synthase.
The relative importance of preorganization, selective transition state stabilization and inherent reactivity are assessed through quantum chemical and docking calculations for a sesquiterpene synthase (epi-isozizaene synthase, EIZS). Inherent reactivity of the bisabolyl cation, both static and dynamic, appears to determine the pathway to product, although preorganization and selective binding of the final transition state structure in the multi-step carbocation cascade that forms epi-isozizaene appear to play important roles
Nanomembrane-driven co-elution and integration of active chemotherapeutic and anti-inflammatory agents
The release of therapeutic drugs from the surface of implantable devices is instrumental for the reduction of medical costs and toxicity associated with systemic administration. In this study we demonstrate the triblock copolymer-mediated deposition and release of multiple therapeutics from a single thin film at the air-water interface via Langmuir–Blodgett deposition. The dual drug elution of dexamethasone (Dex) and doxorubicin hydrochloride (Dox) from the thin film is measured by response in the RAW 264.7 murine macrophage cell line. The integrated hydrophilic and hydrophobic components of the polymer structure allows for the creation of hybrids of the copolymer and the hydrophobic Dex and the hydrophilic Dox. Confirmation of drug release and functionality was demonstrated via suppression of the interleukin 6 (IL-6) and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF α) inflammatory cytokines (Dex), as well as TUNEL staining and DNA fragmentation analysis (Dox). The inherent biocompatibility of the copolymeric material is further demonstrated by the lack of inflammation and apoptosis induction in cells grown on the copolymer films. Thus a layer-by-layer anchored deposition of an anti-inflammatory and chemotherapeutic functionalized copolymer film is able to localize drug dosage to the surface of a medical device, all with an innate material thickness of 4 nm per layer
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Estimating Achievement Gaps from Test Scores Reported in Ordinal "Proficiency" Categories
Test scores are commonly reported in a small number of ordered categories. Examples of such reporting include state accountability testing, Advanced Placement tests, and English proficiency tests. This paper introduces and evaluates methods for estimating achievement gaps on a familiar standard-deviation-unit metric using data from these ordered categories alone. These methods hold two practical advantages over alternative achievement gap metrics. First, they require only categorical proficiency data, which are often available where means and standard deviations are not. Second, they result in gap estimates that are invariant to score scale transformations, providing a stronger basis for achievement gap comparisons over time and across jurisdictions. We find three candidate estimation methods that recover full-distribution gap estimates well when only censored data are available
Managing outsourcing to develop business : goal interdependence for sharing effective business practices in China
This study proposes that when partners develop cooperative relationships with each other, rather than competitive or independent ones, they are open with their ideas and resources as they believe that they both will use this exchange for mutual benefit. The structural equation analysis of findings from 95 outsourcing partnerships in China supported the reasoning that cooperative goals foster open discussion of effective practices that in turn results in business development. Results were interpreted as providing support that cooperative interdependence is a foundation for effective interaction and learning between outsourcing partners in China and perhaps in other countries as well
Business confidence in government regulators: cooperative goals and confirmation of face in China
Purpose – This study aims to examine the conditions that help businesses develop confidence in their government regulators. Businesses are dependent upon governments and subject to their regulations. This study proposes that businesses and governments that confirm each other’s social face have the relationship that helps businesses become confident in their government regulators. It also uses the theory of cooperation and competition to identify when they confirm social face.
Design/methodology/approach – Data were collected in Shanghai, China, from government bodies and business organizations from diverse industries. One hundred forty-six pairs of government officials and business managers provided us data for our analysis.
Findings – Structural equation analysis suggests that cooperative, but not competitive or independent, goals provide the foundation for mutual confirmation of social face that in turn results in business confidence that the government is competent, caring and regulates effectively.
Practical implications – These findings were interpreted as reaffirming the value of relationships for collaboration between business and government and the usefulness of the concepts of social face and goal interdependence for understanding how to develop high-quality business–government relationships in China.
Originality/value – This study directly investigates social face among Chinese people and explores its impact on inter-organizational government–business relationships. This study uses social face and goal interdependence to understand when business and regulators develop relationships that promote effective regulation
Stabilization of highly polar BiFeO-like structure: a new interface design route for enhanced ferroelectricity in artificial perovskite superlattices
In ABO3 perovskites, oxygen octahedron rotations are common structural
distortions that can promote large ferroelectricity in BiFeO3 with an R3c
structure [1], but suppress ferroelectricity in CaTiO3 with a Pbnm symmetry
[2]. For many CaTiO3-like perovskites, the BiFeO3 structure is a metastable
phase. Here, we report the stabilization of the highly-polar BiFeO3-like phase
of CaTiO3 in a BaTiO3/CaTiO3 superlattice grown on a SrTiO3 substrate. The
stabilization is realized by a reconstruction of oxygen octahedron rotations at
the interface from the pattern of nonpolar bulk CaTiO3 to a different pattern
that is characteristic of a BiFeO3 phase. The reconstruction is interpreted
through a combination of amplitude-contrast sub 0.1nm high-resolution
transmission electron microscopy and first-principles theories of the
structure, energetics, and polarization of the superlattice and its
constituents. We further predict a number of new artificial ferroelectric
materials demonstrating that nonpolar perovskites can be turned into
ferroelectrics via this interface mechanism. Therefore, a large number of
perovskites with the CaTiO3 structure type, which include many magnetic
representatives, are now good candidates as novel highly-polar multiferroic
materials [3].Comment: Phys. Rev. X, in productio
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Discrepancies Between Score Trends from NAEP and State Tests: A Scale-Invariant Perspective
State test score trends are widely interpreted as indicators of educational improvement. To validate these interpretations, state test score trends are often compared to trends on other tests such as the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP). These comparisons raise serious technical and substantive concerns. Technically, the most commonly used trend statistics – for example, the change in the percent of proficient students – are misleading in the context of cross-test comparisons. Substantively, it may not be reasonable to expect that NAEP and state test score trends should be similar. This paper motivates then applies a “scale-invariant” framework for cross-test trend comparisons to compare “high-stakes” state test score trends from 2003 to 2005 to NAEP trends over the same period. Results show that state trends are significantly more positive than NAEP trends. The paper concludes with cautions against the positioning of trend discrepancies in a framework where only one trend is considered “true.
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The Epidemiology of Modern Test Score Use: Anticipating Aggregation, Adjustment, and Equating
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