1,009 research outputs found
Cadmium uptake by the water hyacinth: Effects of root mass, solution volume, complexers and other metal ions1
At a fixed Cd2+ concentration water hyacinth () plants with greater root mass (dry weight) take up more metal ions as a function of time, and more metal ions are taken up by a plant as the solution volume is increased. Experiments in which several different metal ion complexers were present suggest that (1) the roots possess sites which initially reversibly bind free Cd2+, (2) some added complexers can compete with these root sites for free Cd2+, and (3) with time Cd2+ bound to the roots is translocated into into the root tissues effectively removing it from the equilibrium processes in solution. Many metal ions are taken up by the plant but only the micronutrient Zn2+ competes well with Cd2+ for uptake. Thus, there may be binding sites on the roots for specific metal ions.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/25899/1/0000462.pd
Gene validation and remodelling using proteogenomics of Phytophthora cinnamomi, the causal agent of Dieback
Phytophthora cinnamomi is a pathogenic oomycete that causes plant dieback disease
across a range of natural ecosystems and in many agriculturally important crops on a
global scale. An annotated draft genome sequence is publicly available (JGI Mycocosm)
and suggests 26,131 gene models. In this study, soluble mycelial, extracellular
(secretome), and zoospore proteins of P. cinnamomi were exploited to refine the genome
by correcting gene annotations and discovering novel genes. By implementing the
diverse set of sub-proteomes into a generated proteogenomics pipeline, we were
able to improve the P. cinnamomi genome annotation. Liquid chromatography mass
spectrometry was used to obtain high confidence peptides with spectral matching
to both the annotated genome and a generated 6-frame translation. Two thousand
seven hundred sixty-four annotations from the draft genome were confirmed by spectral
matching. Using a proteogenomic pipeline, mass spectra were used to edit the
P. cinnamomi genome and allowed identification of 23 new gene models and 60
edited gene features using high confidence peptides obtained by mass spectrometry,
suggesting a rate of incorrect annotations of 3% of the detectable proteome. The
novel features were further validated by total peptide support, alongside functional
analysis including the use of Gene Ontology and functional domain identification. We
demonstrated the use of spectral data in combination with our proteogenomics pipeline
can be used to improve the genome annotation of important plant diseases and identify
missed genes. This study presents the first use of spectral data to edit and manually
annotate an oomycete pathogen
Principal forms X^2 + nY^2 representing many integers
In 1966, Shanks and Schmid investigated the asymptotic behavior of the number
of positive integers less than or equal to x which are represented by the
quadratic form X^2+nY^2. Based on some numerical computations, they observed
that the constant occurring in the main term appears to be the largest for n=2.
In this paper, we prove that in fact this constant is unbounded as n runs
through positive integers with a fixed number of prime divisors.Comment: 10 pages, title has been changed, Sections 2 and 3 are new, to appear
in Abh. Math. Sem. Univ. Hambur
The role of pre-school quality in promoting resilience in the cognitive development of young children
The study reported here investigates the role of pre-school education as a protective factor in the development of children who are at risk due to environmental and individual factors. This investigation builds upon earlier research by examining different kinds of 'quality' in early education and tests the hypothesis that pre-schools of high quality can moderate the impacts of risks upon cognitive development. Cognitive development was measured in 2857 English pre-schoolers at 36 and 58 months of age, together with 22 individual risks to children's development, and assessments were made of the quality of their pre-school provision. Multilevel Structural Equation Modelling revealed that: the global quality of pre-school can moderate the effects of familial risk (such as poverty); the relationships between staff and children can moderate the effects of child level risk (such as low birth weight); and the specific quality of curricular provision can moderate the effects of both. Policy makers need to take quality into account in their efforts to promote resilience in young 'at risk' children through early childhood services
Effects of SlowMo, a Blended Digital Therapy Targeting Reasoning, on Paranoia Among People With Psychosis: A Randomized Clinical Trial.
IMPORTANCE: Persistent paranoia is common among patients with psychosis. Cognitive-behavioral therapy for psychosis can be effective. However, challenges in engagement and effectiveness remain.
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the effects on paranoia and mechanisms of action of SlowMo, a digitally supported reasoning intervention, plus usual care compared with usual care only.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This parallel-arm, assessor-blinded, randomized clinical trial recruited participants at UK community health services from May 1, 2017, to May 14, 2019. Eligible participants consisted of a referral sample with schizophrenia-spectrum psychosis and distressing, persistent (≥3 months) paranoia.
INTERVENTIONS: Individuals were randomized 1:1 to SlowMo, consisting of 8 digitally supported face-to-face sessions and a mobile app, plus usual care (n = 181) and usual care only (n = 181).
MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: The primary outcome was paranoia, measured by the Green et al Paranoid Thoughts Scale (GPTS) total score at 24 weeks. Secondary outcomes included GPTS total score at 12 weeks and GPTS Part A (reference) and Part B (persecutory) scores, the Psychotic Symptom Rating Scales (PSYRATS Delusion subscale), reasoning (belief flexibility, possibility of being mistaken [Maudsley Assessment of Delusions, rated 0%-100%]), and jumping to conclusions (Beads Task).
RESULTS: A total of 361 participants were included in intention-to-treat analysis, of whom 252 (69.8%) were male and 249 (69.0%) were White; the mean (SD) age was 42.6 (11.6) years. At 24 weeks, 332 participants (92.0%) provided primary outcome data. Of 181 participants in the SlowMo group, 145 (80.1%) completed therapy. SlowMo plus usual care was not associated with greater reductions than usual care in GPTS total score at 24 weeks (Cohen d, 0.20; 95% CI, −0.02 to 0.40; P = .06). There were significant effects on secondary paranoia outcomes at 12 weeks, including GPTS total score (Cohen d, 0.30; 95% CI, 0.09-0.51; P = .005), Part A score (Cohen d, 0.22; 95% CI, 0.06-0.39; P = .009), and Part B score (Cohen d, 0.32; 95% CI, 0.08-0.56; P = .009), and at 24 weeks, including Part B score (Cohen d, 0.25; 95% CI, 0.01-0.49; P = .04) but not Part A score (Cohen d, 0.12; 95% CI, −0.05 to 0.28; P = .18). Improvements were observed in an observer-rated measure of persecutory delusions (PSYRATS delusion) at 12 weeks (Cohen d, 0.47; 95% CI, 0.17-0.78; P = .002) and 24 weeks (Cohen d, 0.50; 95% CI, 0.20-0.80; P = .001) and belief flexibility at 12 weeks (Cohen d, 0.29; 95% CI, 0.09-0.49; P = .004) and 24 weeks (Cohen d, 0.28; 95% CI, 0.08-0.49; P = .005). There were no significant effects on jumping to conclusions. Improved belief flexibility and worry mediated paranoia change (range mediated, 36%-56%).
CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: SlowMo did not demonstrate significant improvements in the primary measure of paranoia at 24 weeks; however, a beneficial effect of SlowMo on paranoia was indicated by the results on the primary measure at an earlier point and on observer-rated paranoia and self-reported persecution at 12 and 24 weeks. Further work to optimize SlowMo’s effects is warranted.
TRIAL REGISTRATION: isrctn.org Identifier: ISRCTN 3244867
(G)hosting television: Ghostwatch and its medium
This article’s subject is Ghostwatch (BBC, 1992), a drama broadcast on Halloween night of 1992 which adopted the rhetoric of live non-fiction programming, and attracted controversy and ultimately censure from the Broadcasting Standards Council. In what follows, we argue that Ghostwatch must be understood as a televisually-specific artwork and artefact. We discuss the programme’s ludic relationship with some key features of television during what Ellis (2000) has termed its era of ‘availability’, principally liveness, mass simultaneous viewing, and the flow of the television super-text. We trace the programme’s television-specific historicity whilst acknowledging its allusions and debts to other media (most notably film and radio). We explore the sophisticated ways in which Ghostwatch’s visual grammar and vocabulary and deployment of ‘broadcast talk’ (Scannell 1991) variously ape, comment upon and subvert the rhetoric of factual programming, and the ends to which these strategies are put. We hope that these arguments collectively demonstrate the aesthetic and historical significance of Ghostwatch and identify its relationship to its medium and that medium’s history. We offer the programme as an historically-reflexive artefact, and as an exemplary instance of the work of art in television’s age of broadcasting, liveness and co-presence
Angular position of nodes in the superconducting gap of YBCO
The thermal conductivity of a YBCO single crystal has been studied as a
function of the relative orientation of the crystal axes and a magnetic field
rotating in the Cu-O planes. Measurements were carried out at several
temperatures below T_c and at a fixed field of 30 kOe. A four-fold symmetry
characteristic of a superconducting gap with nodes at odd multiples of 45
degrees in k-space was resolved. Experiments were performed to exclude a
possible macroscopic origin for such a four-fold symmetry such as sample shape
or anisotropic pinning. Our results impose an upper limit of 10% on the weight
of the s-wave component of the essentially d-wave superconducting order
parameter of YBCO.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figure
Angle-dependence of quantum oscillations in YBa2Cu3O6.59 shows free spin behaviour of quasiparticles
Measurements of quantum oscillations in the cuprate superconductors afford a
new opportunity to assess the extent to which the electronic properties of
these materials yield to a description rooted in Fermi liquid theory. However,
such an analysis is hampered by the small number of oscillatory periods
observed. Here we employ a genetic algorithm to globally model the field,
angular, and temperature dependence of the quantum oscillations observed in the
resistivity of YBa2Cu3O6.59. This approach successfully fits an entire data set
to a Fermi surface comprised of two small, quasi-2-dimensional cylinders. A key
feature of the data is the first identification of the effect of Zeeman
splitting, which separates spin-up and spin-down contributions, indicating that
the quasiparticles in the cuprates behave as nearly free spins, constraining
the source of the Fermi surface reconstruction to something other than a
conventional spin density wave with moments parallel to the CuO2 planes.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Non-maximally entangled states: production, characterization and utilization
Using a spontaneous-downconversion photon source, we produce true
non-maximally entangled states, i.e., without the need for post-selection. The
degree and phase of entanglement are readily tunable, and are characterized
both by a standard analysis using coincidence minima, and by quantum state
tomography of the two-photon state. Using the latter, we experimentally
reconstruct the reduced density matrix for the polarization. Finally, we use
these states to measure the Hardy fraction, obtaining a result that is from any local-realistic result.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. To appear in Phys. Rev. Let
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