2,384 research outputs found
Analysis of holograms of reacting sprays Final report
Holograms of reacting and nonreacting droplet sprays for data reductio
Gendered barriers and opportunities among milk traders in the informal sector in peri-urban Nairobi
Vortrag, gehalten vor den Berliner Metallarbeitern
Digitalisat der Ausgabe von 1920, erschienen 201
A Decade Of Starspot Activity On The Eclipsing Short-Period RS Canum Venaticorum Star WY Cancri: 1988-1997
We present optical photometry of the short-period eclipsing RS CVn system WY Cancri for the years 1988–1997. For each light curve, we model the distortion waves in order to study the behavior of starspots in this system. After removing the spot effects f
Situando Aristóteles na Discussão Acerca da Natureza da Causação
I present Aristotle’s theory of causation in a way that privileges a comparison with
contemporary discussion on causation. I do so by selecting in Aristotle’s theory points that are
interesting to contemporary discussion and by translating Aristotle in the contemporary
philosophical terminology. I compare Aristotle’s views with Mackie’s (1993/1965) and Sosa’s
(1993/1980). Mackie is a humean regularist regarding the metaphysics of causal necessity, but his theory postulates some formal aspects of the causal relation which are similar to the Aristotelian theory. By introducing the notion of causal field as a third causal relatum – a sample in which the cause must be picked out as a explanation coextensive to the effect –, Mackie holds a point very similar to Aristotle, inasmuch as both defend that the causal relation is triadic and both have the extensional desideratum. Sosa (1993/1980) defends that every cause necessitates its effect, arguing against classical Humeanism, and he also proposes a causal pluralism. Both these theses are clearly Aristotelian. Aristotle comprehends that the causal relation has three relata: a subjacent C, a property of that subjacent A and a cause B that explains why such property is attributed to that subjacent. The subjacent is similar to Mackie’s notion of causal field, for in regard to it the cause must be coextensive to the property. But Aristotle also says that for each explanandum (property attributed to a subjacent of which one aims to investigate a cause) there is only one cause, which necessitates it. Sosa and Aristotle are similar because both develop a causal pluralism from a theory of causes as having intrinsic necessitation. For Aristotle, causes/explanations [aitiai] are central for attaining scientific knowledge, and its triadic structure determines the syllogistic structure of scientific demonstrations. Aristotle’s theory of causation also involves comprehending the
actualisation of capacities (dispositional properties of objects) affirming that the causal relation is resultant from intrinsic properties of the objects, and the cause B is the essence of the explanandum
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Evidence for DNA-mediated nuclear compartmentalization distinct from phase separation.
RNA Polymerase II (Pol II) and transcription factors form concentrated hubs in cells via multivalent protein-protein interactions, often mediated by proteins with intrinsically disordered regions. During Herpes Simplex Virus infection, viral replication compartments (RCs) efficiently enrich host Pol II into membraneless domains, reminiscent of liquid-liquid phase separation. Despite sharing several properties with phase-separated condensates, we show that RCs operate via a distinct mechanism wherein unrestricted nonspecific protein-DNA interactions efficiently outcompete host chromatin, profoundly influencing the way DNA-binding proteins explore RCs. We find that the viral genome remains largely nucleosome-free, and this increase in accessibility allows Pol II and other DNA-binding proteins to repeatedly visit nearby DNA binding sites. This anisotropic behavior creates local accumulations of protein factors despite their unrestricted diffusion across RC boundaries. Our results reveal underappreciated consequences of nonspecific DNA binding in shaping gene activity, and suggest additional roles for chromatin in modulating nuclear function and organization
Diverse New Microvertebrate Assemblage from the Upper Triassic Cumnock Formation, Sanford Subbasin, North Carolina, USA
The Moncure microvertebrate locality in the Cumnock Formation, Sanford sub-basin, North Carolina, dramatically increases the known Late Triassic age vertebrate assemblage from the Deep River Basin. The 50,000 recovered microvertebrate fossils include osteichthyans, amphibians, and numerous lepidosauromorph, archosauriform, and synapsid amniotes. Actinopterygian fossils consist of thousands of scales, teeth, skull, and lower jaw fragments, principally of redfieldiids and semionotids. Non-tetrapod sarcopterygians include the dipnoan Arganodus sp., the first record of lungfish in the Newark Supergroup. Temnospondyls are comparatively rare but the preserved centra, teeth, and skull fragments probably represent small (juvenile) metoposaurids. Two fragmentary teeth are assigned to the unusual reptile Colognathus obscurus (Case). Poorly preserved but intriguing records include acrodont and pleurodont jaw fragments tentatively assigned to lepidosaurs. Among the archosauriform teeth is a taxon distinct from R. callenderi that we assign to Revueltosaurus olseni new combination, a morphotype best assigned to cf. Galtonia, the first Newark Supergroup record of Crosbysaurus sp., and several other archosauriform tooth morphotypes, as well as grooved teeth assigned to the recently named species Uatchitodon schneideri. Synapsids represented by molariform teeth include both "traversodontids" assigned to aff. Boreogomphodon and the "dromatheriid" Microconodon. These records are biogeographically important, with many new records for the Cumnock Formation and/or the Newark Supergroup. In particular, Colognathus, Crosbysaurus, and Uatchitodon are known from basins of Adamanian age in the southwestern U.S.A. These new records include microvertebrate taxa more typical of non-Newark basins (abundant archosauriforms, temnospondyls, lungfish) as well as more typical Newark osteichthyans and synapsid-rich faunal elements
Understanding mental health difficulties and disclosure within psychology professions
Section A: Supervision is critical in the psychological professions for the development of knowledge and therapeutic skills, as well as for monitoring the safety and effectiveness of interventions. However, supervisee nondisclosure is common and may impact negatively upon the supervisory process and client outcomes. This literature review systematically examined the relationship between supervisee nondisclosure and the supervisory working alliance within the professions of clinical and counselling psychology. Findings relate to content of nondisclosure, psychology culture and expectations, compatibility and supervisory competence, power dynamics, weighing risk, aiding disclosure, alternative strategies, supervisory reactions and the cycle of nondisclosure and the changing supervisory relationship. Practice implications and future research are discussed.
Section B: The prevalence of mental health difficulties among trainee clinical psychologists is reported to be high, with low disclosure rates. Clinical psychology training can be stressful, and it has been suggested that trainees are more likely to experience distress and self-doubt because of their inexperience. Despite this, little is known about how mental health issues are navigated within training. This study explored how trainees, clinical supervisors and training facilitators understand and navigate mental health difficulties, support, and time off. Seven main categories were created, using grounded theory methodology: trainee and staff histories and stressful life events, personal attitudes towards mental health difficulties, power and autonomy, questioning workplace competence, complex systemic issues, navigating access to support and time out, mental health in the psychological trenches and learning and hindsight. The culture within clinical psychology and unclear processes and communication may be implicated and are discussed in relation to practical implications
Close Binaries with Infrared Excess: Destroyers of Worlds?
We present the results of a Spitzer photometric investigation into the IR
excesses of close binary systems. In a sample of 10 objects, excesses in IRAC
and MIPS24 bands implying the presence of warm dust are found for 3. For 2
objects we do not find excesses reported in earlier IRAS studies. We discuss
the results in the context of the scenario suggested by Rhee and co-workers, in
which warm dust is continuously created by destructive collisions between
planetary bodies. A simple numerical model for the steady-state distribution of
dust in one IR excess system shows a central clearing of radius 0.22 AU caused
by dynamical perturbations from the binary star. This is consistent with the
size of the central clearing derived from the Spitzer spectral energy
distribution. We conclude that close binaries could be efficient "destroyers of
worlds", lead to destabilize the orbits of their planetary progeny by
magnetically-driven angular momentum loss and secular shrinkage of the binary
separation.Comment: Accepted by The Astrophysical Journa
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