415 research outputs found
Law Libraries and Laboratories: The Legacies of Langdell and His Metaphor
Law Librarians and others have often referred to Harvard Law School Dean C.C. Langdellâs statements that the law library is the lawyerâs laboratory. Professor Danner examines the context of what Langdell through his other writings, the educational environment at Harvard in the late nineteenth century, and the changing perceptions of university libraries generally. He then considers how the âlaboratory metaphorâ has been applied by librarians and legal scholars during the twentieth century and into the twenty-first. The article closes with thoughts on Langdellâs legacy for law librarians and the usefulness of the laboratory metaphor
HST FOC spectroscopy of the NLR of NGC 4151. I. Gas kinematics
We present the results from a detailed kinematic analysis of both
ground-based, and Hubble Space Telescope/Faint Object Camera long-slit
spectroscopy at sub-arcsec spatial resolution, of the narrow-line region of NGC
4151. In agreement with previous work, the extended emission gas (R > 4") is
found to be in normal rotation in the galactic plane, a behaviour that we were
able to trace even across the nuclear region, where the gas is strongly
disturbed by the interaction with the radio jet, and connects smoothly with the
large scale rotation defined by the neutral gas emission. The HST data, at
0.029" spatial resolution, allow us for the first time to truly isolate the
kinematic behaviour of the individual clouds in the inner narrow-line region.
We find that, underlying the perturbations introduced by the radio ejecta, the
general velocity field can still be well represented by planar rotation down to
a radius of ~ 0.5" (30 pc), distance at which the rotation curve has its
turnover.
The most striking result that emerges from our analysis is that the galaxy
potential derived fitting the rotation curve changes from a "dark halo" at the
ENLR distances to dominated by the central mass concentration in the NLR, with
an almost Keplerian fall-off in the 1"< R < 4" interval. The observed velocity
of the gas at 0.5" implies a mass of M ~ 10E9 M(sol) within the inner 60 pc.
The presence of a turnover in the rotation curve indicates that this central
mass concentration is extended. The first measured velocity point (outside the
region saturated by the nucleus) would imply an enclosed mass of ~ 5E7 M(sol)
within R ~ 0.15" (10 pc) which represents an upper limit to any nuclear point
mass.Comment: 30 pages (aaspp4.sty), 14 figures. Fig. 1, 2 and 4 available by
anonymous FTP at 143.54.2.51 (cd /pub/winge) as GIF files; or upon request to
[email protected]. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal
(part 1
Computational Cancer Biology: An Evolutionary Perspective
ISSN:1553-734XISSN:1553-735
Protein profiling in hepatocellular carcinoma by label-free quantitative proteomics in two west african populations.
Background Hepatocellular Carcinoma is the third most common cause of cancer related death worldwide, often diagnosed by measuring serum AFP; a poor performance stand-alone biomarker. With the aim of improving on this, our study focuses on plasma proteins identified by Mass Spectrometry in order to investigate and validate differences seen in the respective proteomes of controls and subjects with LC and HCC. Methods Mass Spectrometry analysis using liquid chromatography electro spray ionization quadrupole time-of-flight was conducted on 339 subjects using a pooled expression profiling approach. ELISA assays were performed on four significantly differentially expressed proteins to validate their expression profiles in subjects from the Gambia and a pilot group from Nigeria. Results from this were collated for statistical multiplexing using logistic regression analysis. Results Twenty-six proteins were identified as differentially expressed between the three subject groups. Direct measurements of four; hemopexin, alpha-1-antitrypsin, apolipoprotein A1 and complement component 3 confirmed their change in abundance in LC and HCC versus control patients. These trends were independently replicated in the pilot validation subjects from Nigeria. The statistical multiplexing of these proteins demonstrated performance comparable to or greater than ALT in identifying liver cirrhosis or carcinogenesis. This exercise also proposed preliminary cut offs with achievable sensitivity, specificity and AUC statistics greater than reported AFP averages. Conclusions The validated changes of expression in these proteins have the potential for development into high-performance tests usable in the diagnosis and or monitoring of HCC and LC patients. The identification of sustained expression trends strengthens the suggestion of these four proteins as worthy candidates for further investigation in the context of liver disease. The statistical combinations also provide a novel inroad of analyses able to propose definitive cut-offs and combinations for evaluation of performance
To be an immigrant and a patient in Sweden: A study with an individualised perspective
The aim is to describe how experiences of being an immigrant can influence the situation when becoming a patient in Swedish health care. A hermeneutic approach was used. Sixteen persons born in non-Nordic countries were interviewed. The data was analysed with an empirical hermeneutical method. The findings indicate that positive experiences (i.e., establishing oneself in a new home country) enhance the possibilities of taking part in caring situations and vice versa. Hence, there is a need for individually adapted care that takes one's whole life situation into consideration. Consequently, it is suggested that the concept, âcultural competenceâ merely serves the purpose of illuminating caregivers' need for categorisation. It does not illuminate individual needs in a caring situation
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Resonant Soft X-Ray Contrast Variation Methods as Composition-Specific Probes of Thin Polymer Film Structure
We have developed complementary soft x-ray scattering and reflectometry techniques that allow for the morphological analysis of thin polymer films without resorting to chemical modification or isotopic 2 labeling. With these techniques, we achieve significant, x-ray energy-dependent contrast between carbon atoms in different chemical environments using soft x-ray resonance at the carbon edge. Because carbon-containing samples absorb strongly in this region, the scattering length density depends on both the real and imaginary parts of the atomic scattering factors. Using a model polymer film of poly(styrene-b-methyl methacrylate), we show that the soft x-ray reflectivity data is much more sensitive to these atomic scattering factors than the soft x-ray scattering data. Nevertheless, fits to both types of data yield useful morphological details on the polymer?slamellar structure that are consistent with each other and with literature values
Pyelonephritis in slaughter pigs and sows: Morphological characterization and aspects of pathogenesis and aetiology
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Pyelonephritis is a serious disease in pig production that needs to be further studied. The purpose of this study was to describe the morphology, investigate the pathogenesis, and evaluate the aetiological role of <it>Escherichia coli </it>in pyelonephritis in slaughtered pigs by concurrent bacteriological, gross and histopathological examinations.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>From Danish abattoirs, kidneys and corresponding lymph nodes from 22 slaughtered finishing pigs and 26 slaughtered sows with pyelonephritis were collected and evaluated by bacteriology and pathology. Based on gross lesions, each kidney (lesion) was grouped as acute, chronic, chronic active, or normal and their histological inflammatory stage was determined as normal (0), acute (1), sub-acute (2), chronic active (3), or chronic (4). Immunohistochemical identification of neutrophils, macrophages, T-lymphocytes, B-lymphocytes, plasma cells, <it>E. coli </it>and Tamm-Horsfall protein (THP) in renal sections was performed. The number of <it>E. coli </it>and the proportion of immunohistochemically visualized leukocytes out of the total number of infiltrating leukocytes were scored semi-quantitatively.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Lesions in finishing pigs and sows were similar. Macroscopically, multiple unevenly distributed foci of inflammation mostly affecting the renal poles were observed. Histologically, tubulointerstitial infiltration with neutrophils and mononuclear cells and tubular destruction was the main findings. The significant highest scores of L1 antigen<sup>+ </sup>neutrophils were in inflammatory stage 1 while the significant highest scores of CD79Îący<sup>+ </sup>B-lymphocytes, IgG<sup>+ </sup>and IgA<sup>+ </sup>plasma cells were in stage 3 or 4. Neutrophils were the dominant leukocytes in stage 1 while CD3Îľ<sup>+ </sup>T-lymphocytes dominated in stage 2, 3 and 4. Interstitially THP was seen in 82% and 98% of kidneys with pyelonephritis from finishing pigs and sows, respectively. <it>E. coli </it>was demonstrated in monoculture and/or identified by immunohistochemistry in relation to inflammation in four kidneys from finishing pigs and in 34 kidneys from sows.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p><it>E. coli </it>played a significant role in the aetiology of pyelonephritis. Neutrophils were involved in the first line of defence. CD3Îľ<sup>+ </sup>T-lymphocytes were involved in both the acute and chronic inflammatory response while a humoral immune response was most pronounced in later inflammatory stages. The observed renal lesions correspond with an ascending bacterial infection with presence of intra-renal reflux.</p
Brain-Computer Interface Games: Towards a Framework
The brain-computer interface (BCI) community started to consider games as potential applications while the games community started to consider BCI as a game controller. However, there is a discrepancy between the BCI games developed by the two communities. In this paper, we propose a preliminary BCI games framework that we constructed with respect to the research conducted in both the BCI and the games communities. Developers can situate their BCI games within this framework and benefit from the guidelines we provide and also extend the framework further
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