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Neutrophils promote CXCR3-dependent itch in the development of atopic dermatitis.
Chronic itch remains a highly prevalent disorder with limited treatment options. Most chronic itch diseases are thought to be driven by both the nervous and immune systems, but the fundamental molecular and cellular interactions that trigger the development of itch and the acute-to-chronic itch transition remain unknown. Here, we show that skin-infiltrating neutrophils are key initiators of itch in atopic dermatitis, the most prevalent chronic itch disorder. Neutrophil depletion significantly attenuated itch-evoked scratching in a mouse model of atopic dermatitis. Neutrophils were also required for several key hallmarks of chronic itch, including skin hyperinnervation, enhanced expression of itch signaling molecules, and upregulation of inflammatory cytokines, activity-induced genes, and markers of neuropathic itch. Finally, we demonstrate that neutrophils are required for induction of CXCL10, a ligand of the CXCR3 receptor that promotes itch via activation of sensory neurons, and we find that that CXCR3 antagonism attenuates chronic itch
Mass dependence of light nucleus production in ultrarelativistic heavy ion collisions
Light nuclei can be produced in the central reaction zone via coalescence in
relativistic heavy ion collisions. E864 at BNL has measured the production of
ten light nuclei with nuclear number of A=1 to A=7 at rapidity and
. Data were taken with a Au beam of momentum of 11.5 A
on a Pb or Pt target with different experimental settings. The
invariant yields show a striking exponential dependence on nuclear number with
a penalty factor of about 50 per additional nucleon. Detailed analysis reveals
that the production may depend on the spin factor of the nucleus and the
nuclear binding energy as well.Comment: (6 pages, 3 figures), some changes on text, references and figures'
lettering. To be published in PRL (13Dec1999
Antideuteron yield at the AGS and coalescence implications
We present Experiment 864's measurement of invariant antideuteron yields in
11.5A GeV/c Au + Pt collisions. The analysis includes 250 million triggers
representing 14 billion 10% central interactions sampled for events with high
mass candidates. We find (1/2 pi pt) d^(2)N/dydpt = 3.5 +/- 1.5 (stat.)
+0.9,-0.5 (sys.) x 10^(-8) GeV^(-2)c^(2) for 1.8=0.35 GeV/c
(y(cm)=1.6) and 3.7 +/- 2.7 (stat.) +1.4,-1.5 (sys.) x 10^(-8) GeV^(-2)c^(2)
for 1.4=0.26 GeV/c, and a coalescence parameter B2-bar of 4.1 +/-
2.9 (stat.) +2.3,-2.4 (sys.) x 10^(-3) GeV^(2)c^(-3). Implications for the
coalescence model and antimatter annihilation are discussed.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, Latex, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Measurements of Light Nuclei Production in 11.5 A GeV/c Au+Pb Heavy-Ion Collisions
We report on measurements by the E864 experiment at the BNL-AGS of the yields
of light nuclei in collisions of Au(197) with beam momentum of 11.5 A GeV/c on
targets of Pb(208) and Pt(197). The yields are reported for nuclei with baryon
number A=1 up to A=7, and typically cover a rapidity range from y(cm) to
y(cm)+1 and a transverse momentum range of approximately 0.1 < p(T)/A < 0.5
GeV/c. We calculate coalescence scale factors B(A) from which we extract model
dependent source dimensions and collective flow velocities. We also examine the
dependences of the yields on baryon number, spin, and isospin of the produced
nuclei.Comment: 21 figures-to be published in Phys. Rev.
Depression at Work, Authenticity in Question: Experiencing, Concealing and Revealing
Australia and the UK have both introduced policies to protect employees who experience mental illness, including depression. However, a better understanding of the issues workers face (e.g. sense of moral failure) is needed for the provision of appropriate and beneficial support. We analysed 73 interviews from the UK and Australia where narratives of depression and work intersected. Participants encountered difficulties in being (and performing as if) ‘authentic’ at work, with depression contributing to confusions about the self. The diffuse post-1960s imperative to ‘be yourself’ is experienced in conflicting ways: While some participants sought support from managers and colleagues (e.g. sick leave, back to work plans), many others put on a façade in an attempt to perform the ‘well’ and ‘authentic’ employee. We outline the contradictory forces at play for participants when authenticity and visibility are expected, yet moral imperatives to be good (healthy) employees are normative
Class talk: habitus and class in parental narratives of school choice
© 2016 Westburn Publishers Ltd. This article explores how social class is linguistically negotiated and contested in parental narratives of school choice in the British education marketplace. Our study reveals prevalent yet obscured vestiges of ‘class talk’, and in doing so, unmasks ‘micro-political’ acts of status claiming. Using interactional narrative interviewing with 30 parents, we explore how inter- and intra-class differences are emotionally expressed, thus exposing the embodied dispositions of parents’ habitus and its’ subtle influence on school choice. The parental narratives also unveil a moral and political tension between the neoliberal ideal of entrepreneurial self-advancement and an egalitarian sentiment for social equality. Our study therefore challenges the neoliberal educational policy of market choice in closing the attainment gap
Centrality Dependence of the High p_T Charged Hadron Suppression in Au+Au collisions at sqrt(s_NN) = 130 GeV
PHENIX has measured the centrality dependence of charged hadron p_T spectra
from central Au+Au collisions at sqrt(s_NN)=130 GeV. The truncated mean p_T
decreases with centrality for p_T > 2 GeV/c, indicating an apparent reduction
of the contribution from hard scattering to high p_T hadron production. For
central collisions the yield at high p_T is shown to be suppressed compared to
binary nucleon-nucleon collision scaling of p+p data. This suppression is
monotonically increasing with centrality, but most of the change occurs below
30% centrality, i.e. for collisions with less than about 140 participating
nucleons. The observed p_T and centrality dependence is consistent with the
particle production predicted by models including hard scattering and
subsequent energy loss of the scattered partons in the dense matter created in
the collisions.Comment: 7 pages text, LaTeX, 6 figures, 2 tables, 307 authors, resubmitted to
Phys. Lett. B. Revised to address referee concerns. Plain text data tables
for the points plotted in figures for this and previous PHENIX publications
are publicly available at
http://www.phenix.bnl.gov/phenix/WWW/run/phenix/papers.htm
A comprehensive laboratory study on the immersion freezing behavior of illite NX particles: A comparison of 17 ice nucleation measurement techniques
Immersion freezing is the most relevant heterogeneous ice nucleation mechanism through which ice crystals are formed in mixed-phase clouds. In recent years, an increasing number of laboratory experiments utilizing a variety of instruments have examined immersion freezing activity of atmospherically relevant ice-nucleating particles. However, an intercomparison of these laboratory results is a difficult task because investigators have used different ice nucleation (IN) measurement methods to produce these results. A remaining challenge is to explore the sensitivity and accuracy of these techniques and to understand how the IN results are potentially influenced or biased by experimental parameters associated with these techniques. \u3c br\u3e \u3c br\u3e Within the framework of INUIT (Ice Nuclei Research Unit), we distributed an illite-rich sample (illite NX) as a representative surrogate for atmospheric mineral dust particles to investigators to perform immersion freezing experiments using different IN measurement methods and to obtain IN data as a function of particle concentration, temperature ( \u3c i\u3e T ), cooling rate and nucleation time. A total of 17 measurement methods were involved in the data intercomparison. Experiments with seven instruments started with the test sample pre-suspended in water before cooling, while 10 other instruments employed water vapor condensation onto dry-dispersed particles followed by immersion freezing. The resulting comprehensive immersion freezing data set was evaluated using the ice nucleation active surface-site density, \u3c i\u3e n s, to develop a representative \u3c i\u3e n s( \u3c i\u3e T ) spectrum that spans a wide temperature range (g\u2737 °C \u3c \u3c i\u3e T \u3c g\u2711 °C) and covers 9 orders of magnitude in \u3c i\u3e n s. \u3c br\u3e \u3c br\u3e In general, the 17 immersion freezing measurement techniques deviate, within a range of about 8 °C in terms of temperature, by 3 orders of magnitude with respect to \u3c i\u3e n s. In addition, we show evidence that the immersion freezing efficiency expressed in \u3c i\u3e n s of illite NX particles is relatively independent of droplet size, particle mass in suspension, particle size and cooling rate during freezing. A strong temperature dependence and weak time and size dependence of the immersion freezing efficiency of illite-rich clay mineral particles enabled the \u3c i\u3e n s parameterization solely as a function of temperature. We also characterized the \u3c i\u3e n s( \u3c i\u3e T ) spectra and identified a section with a steep slope between g\u2720 and g\u2727 °C, where a large fraction of active sites of our test dust may trigger immersion freezing. This slope was followed by a region with a gentler slope at temperatures below g\u2727 °C. While the agreement between different instruments was reasonable below ∼ g\u2727 °C, there seemed to be a different trend in the temperature-dependent ice nucleation activity from the suspension and dry-dispersed particle measurements for this mineral dust, in particular at higher temperatures. For instance, the ice nucleation activity expressed in \u3c i\u3e n s was smaller for the average of the wet suspended samples and higher for the average of the dry-dispersed aerosol samples between about g\u2727 and g\u2718 °C. Only instruments making measurements with wet suspended samples were able to measure ice nucleation above g\u2718°C. A possible explanation for the deviation between g\u2727 and g\u2718 °C is discussed. Multiple exponential distribution fits in both linear and log space for both specific surface area-based \u3c i\u3e n s( \u3c i\u3e T ) and geometric surface area-based \u3c i\u3e n s( \u3c i\u3e T ) are provided. These new fits, constrained by using identical reference samples, will help to compare IN measurement methods that are not included in the present study and IN data from future IN instruments
Net Charge Fluctuations in Au + Au Interactions at sqrt(s_NN) = 130 GeV
Data from Au + Au interactions at sqrt(s_NN) = 130 GeV, obtained with the
PHENIX detector at RHIC, are used to investigate local net charge fluctuations
among particles produced near mid-rapidity. According to recent suggestions,
such fluctuations may carry information from the Quark Gluon Plasma. This
analysis shows that the fluctuations are dominated by a stochastic distribution
of particles, but are also sensitive to other effects, like global charge
conservation and resonance decays.Comment: 6 pages, RevTeX 3, 3 figures, 307 authors, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Lett. on 21 March, 2002. Plain text data tables for the points plotted in
figures for this and previous PHENIX publications are (will be made) publicly
available at http://www.phenix.bnl.gov/phenix/WWW/run/phenix/papers.htm
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