16,285 research outputs found
The history of insanity as a defence for criminal activity in Massachusetts
Thesis (M.A.)--Boston University, 1946. This item was digitized by the Internet Archive
Studies on the changes in protein fluorescence and enzymic activity of aspartate aminotransferase on binding of pyridoxal 5'-Phosphate
1. The a and ,B subforms of aspartate aminotransferase were purified from pig heart. 2. The
a subform contained 2mol of pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. The apo-(a subform) could be fully
reactived by combination with 2mol of cofactor. 3. The protein fluorescence of the apo-
(a subform) decreased non-linearly with increase in enzyme activity and concentration of
bound cofactor. 4. It is concluded that the enzyme activity/mol ofbound cofactor is largely
independent of the number ofcofactors bound to the dimer. 5. The /Jsubformhad approximately
half the specific enzyme activity of the a subform, and contained an average of one
active pyridoxal 5'-phosphate molecule per molecule, which could be removed by glutamate,
and another inactive cofactor which could only be removed with NaOH. 6. On
recombination with pyridoxal 5'-phosphate the protein fluorescence of the apo-(fl subform)
decreased linearly, showing that each dimeric enzyme molecule contained one active
and one inactive bound cofactor. 7. The results are not consistent with a flip-flop mechanism
for this enzyme
Basic research in wake vortex alleviation using a variable twist wing
The variable twist wing concept was used to investigate the relative effects of lift and turbulence distribution on the rolled up vortex wake. Several methods of reducing the vortex strength behind an aircraft were identified. These involve the redistribution of lift spanwise on the wing and drag distribution along the wing. Initial attempts to use the variable twist wing velocity data to validate the WAKE computer code have shown a strong correlation, although the vorticity levels were not exactly matched
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Perseverers, recencies and deferrers : new experimental evidence for multiple inference strategies in understanding
In the course of understanding a text, a succession of decision points arise at which readers are faced with the task of choosing among alternative possible interpretations ofthattext. We present new experimental evidence that different readers use different inference strategies to guide their inference behavior during understanding. The choices available to an understander range from various alternative inferential paths to the option of making no inference at a particular point, leaving a 'loose end'. Different inference strategies result in observably different behaviors during understanding, including consistent differences in reading times, and different interpretations of a text. The preliminary experimental results given here so far consistently support a previously published set of hypotheses about the inference process that we have called Judgmental Inference theory
European Starlings (Sturnus Vulgaris) : Avian Model and Monitor of Contaminant and Remedial Effects at Crab Orchard National Wildlife Refuge
WMRC Project #94-12
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