1,442 research outputs found
Experimental Evaluation of Wireless Simulation Assumptions
All analytical and simulation research on ad hoc wireless networks must necessarily model radio propagation using simplifying assumptions. We provide a comprehensive review of six assumptions that are still part of many ad hoc network simulation studies, despite increasing awareness of the need to represent more realistic features, including hills, obstacles, link asymmetries, and unpredictable fading. We use an extensive set of measurements from a large outdoor routing experiment to demonstrate the weakness of these assumptions, and show how these assumptions cause simulation results to differ significantly from experimental results. We close with a series of recommendations for researchers, whether they develop protocols, analytic models, or simulators for ad hoc wireless networks
Effects of Lidocaine and Articaine on Neuronal Survival and Recovery
The local anesthetics lidocaine and articaine are among the most widely used drugs in the dentist’s arsenal, relieving pain by blocking voltage-dependent Naþ channels and thus preventing transmission of the pain signal. Given reports of infrequent but prolonged paresthesias with 4% articaine, we compared its neurotoxicity and functional impairment by screening cultured neural SH-SY5Y cells with formulations used in patients (2% lidocaine + 1:100,000 epinephrine or 4% articaine + 1:100,000 epinephrine) and with pure formulations of the drugs. Voltage-dependent sodium channels Na(v)1.2 and Na(v)1.7 were expressed in SH-SY5Y cells. To test the effects on viability, cells were exposed to drugs for 5 minutes, and after washing, cells were treated with the ratiometric Live/Dead assay. Articaine had no effect on the survival of SH-SY5Y cells, while lidocaine produced a significant reduction only when used as pure powder. To determine reversibility of blockage, wells were exposed to drugs for 5 minutes and returned for medium for 30 minutes, and the calcium elevation induced by depolarizing cells with a high-potassium solution was measured using the calcium indicator Fura-2. High potassium raised calcium in control SH-SY5Y cells and those treated with articaine, but lidocaine treatment significantly reduced the response. In conclusion, articaine does not damage neural cells more than lidocaine in this in vitro model. While this does not question the safety of lidocaine used clinically, it does suggest that articaine is no more neurotoxic, at least in the in vitro setting. © 2018 by the American Dental Society of Anesthesiology
Ecologies of co-production in the Anthropocene
The urgency, uncertainty and unevenness of the Anthropocene has foregrounded the spatial and temporal multiplicity of co-production between science and society. In this article, we draw together work in geography, science and technology studies and cognate disciplines concerned with ‘co-producing’ knowledge for environmental governance, and with the ‘co-production’ of science and politics. Yet these existing studies and approaches have tended to focus on discrete moments of co-production within bounded time-spaces. Building on work associated with ecologies of participation and geographies of science, we introduce the notion of ‘ecologies of co-production’ as a way to more faithfully attend to multiple co-existing co-productions and the interrelations between them. We define this as diverse interrelating practices and spaces of co-production which intermingle and are co-produced with(in) wider systems and political cultures in which they are situated. We set out how this opens up new ways of thinking about and attending to the spaces and interrelations, diversities and exclusions, histories and constitutions, and responsibilities and affects of co-productions between science and society in the Anthropocene. We suggest that this approach can make a difference in how we do co-production, how we analyse co-production and how we live, act and figure in an Anthropocene world
Public engagement with sustainable wastewater management and hydrogen technologies:Triple Carbon Reduction project report
This report presents the findings of the social science work package of the Triple Carbon Reduction project, a consortium led by Anglian Water and funded by the Water Breakthrough Challenge which aims to develop and demonstrate new technologies in wastewater processing to reduce process emissions, together with energy efficiency and renewable energy benefits. To do this the TCR project is seeking to generate green hydrogen from electrolysis of final effluent in one of Anglian Water’s wastewater treatment facilities using a novel biological treatment process, called MABR (Membrane Aerated Biofilm Reactor)
The Wide Integral Field Infrared Spectrograph: Commissioning Results and On-sky Performance
We have recently commissioned a novel infrared ( m) integral
field spectrograph (IFS) called the Wide Integral Field Infrared Spectrograph
(WIFIS). WIFIS is a unique instrument that offers a very large field-of-view
(50 x 20) on the 2.3-meter Bok telescope at
Kitt Peak, USA for seeing-limited observations at moderate spectral resolving
power. The measured spatial sampling scale is and
its spectral resolving power is and in the
( m) and ( m) modes, respectively.
WIFIS's corresponding etendue is larger than existing near-infrared (NIR)
IFSes, which are mostly designed to work with adaptive optics systems and
therefore have very narrow fields. For this reason, this instrument is
specifically suited for studying very extended objects in the near-infrared
such as supernovae remnants, galactic star forming regions, and nearby
galaxies, which are not easily accessible by other NIR IFSes. This enables
scientific programs that were not originally possible, such as detailed surveys
of a large number of nearby galaxies or a full accounting of nucleosynthetic
yields of Milky Way supernova remnants. WIFIS is also designed to be easily
adaptable to be used with larger telescopes. In this paper, we report on the
overall performance characteristics of the instrument, which were measured
during our commissioning runs in the second half of 2017. We present
measurements of spectral resolving power, image quality, instrumental
background, and overall efficiency and sensitivity of WIFIS and compare them
with our design expectations. Finally, we present a few example observations
that demonstrate WIFIS's full capability to carry out infrared imaging
spectroscopy of extended objects, which is enabled by our custom data reduction
pipeline.Comment: Published in the Proceedings of SPIE Astronomical Telescopes and
Instrumentation 2018. 17 pages, 13 figure
Multi-scale assembly of hydrogels formed by highly branched arabinoxylans from Plantago ovata seed mucilage studied by USANS/SANS and rheology
© 2018 Elsevier Ltd The structures of two hydrogels formed by purified brush-like polysaccharides from Plantago ovata seed mucilage have been characterised from the nanometre to micrometre scale by using a combination of SANS and USANS techniques. These two hydrogels have distinctly different melting and rheological properties, but the structure of their gel networks bears striking similarity as revealed by USANS/SANS experiments. Surprisingly, we find that the dramatic changes in the rheological properties induced by temperature or change in the solvent quality are accompanied by a small alteration of the network structure as inferred from scattering curves recorded above melting or in a chaotropic solvent (0.7 M KOD). These results suggest that, in contrast to most gel-forming polysaccharides for which gelation depends on a structural transition, the rheological properties of Plantago ovata mucilage gels are dependent on variations in intermolecular hydrogen bonding. By enzymatically cleaving off terminal arabinose residues from the side chains, we have demonstrated that composition of side-chains has a strong effect on intermolecular interactions, which, in turn, has a profound effect on rheological and structural properties of these unique polysaccharides
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