3,698 research outputs found
Crafting Audience Encounters
This paper documents a research project
demonstrating the potential to engage audiences,
promote practitioners and add value to craft work,
through the use of relatively low-cost and accessible
digital communications technologies in the context
of a public exhibition. The project involves: filming,
photographing and editing together audio-visual
material; the creation of a website from which to
access films and leave feedback; and a number of
options for viewing web-based film footage including
Quick Response (QR) codes and smartphone
technology, iPads and a desktop computer to deliver
internet-hosted content.
‘In the Frame’ is an interdisciplinary research project
involving a team of researchers, film-makers and
technologists, and Level 3 Contemporary Craft
students at Falmouth University. It is a pilot study
within Supercrafted,
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a two year research project at
Falmouth University, exploring and developing online
digital interaction of benefit to craft practitioners
and stakeholders in the craft value chain, including
audiences, customers, makers and suppliers
Impact of Groundwater Flow on Permafrost Degradation and Transportation Infrastructure Stability
INE/AUTC 13.0
High-efficiency light-wave control with all-dielectric optical Huygens' metasurfaces
Optical metasurfaces have developed as a breakthrough concept for advanced
wave-front engineering enabled by subwavelength resonant nanostructures.
However, reflection and/or absorption losses as well as low
polarisation-conversion efficiencies pose a fundamental obstacle for achieving
high transmission efficiencies that are required for practical applications.
Here we demonstrate, for the first time to our knowledge, highly efficient
all-dielectric metasurfaces for near-infrared frequencies using arrays of
silicon nanodisks as meta-atoms. We employ the main features of Huygens'
sources, namely spectrally overlapping electric and magnetic dipole resonances
of equal strength, to demonstrate Huygens' metasurfaces with a full
transmission-phase coverage of 360 degrees and near-unity transmission, and we
confirm experimentally full phase coverage combined with high efficiency in
transmission. Based on these key properties, we show that all-dielectric
Huygens' metasurfaces could become a new paradigm for flat optical devices,
including beam-steering, beam-shaping, and focusing, as well as holography and
dispersion control.Comment: 17 pages, 5 figure
Portraying the hosts: Stellar science from planet searches
Information on the full session can be found on this website: https://sites.google.com/site/portrayingthehostscs18/We present a compendium of the splinter session on stellar science from planet searches that was organized as part of the Cool Stars 18 conference. Seven speakers discussed techniques to infer stellar information from radial velocity, transit and microlensing data, as well as new instrumentation and missions designed for planet searches that will provide useful for the study of the cool stars
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Evolutionary consequences of intra-patient phage predation on microbial populations
The impact of phage predation on bacterial pathogens in the context of human disease is not currently appreciated. Here, we show that predatory interactions of a phage with an important environmentally transmitted pathogen, Vibrio cholerae, can modulate the evolutionary trajectory of this pathogen during the natural course of infection within individual patients. We analyzed geographically and temporally disparate cholera patient stool samples from Haiti and Bangladesh and found that phage predation can drive the genomic diversity of intra-patient V. cholerae populations. Intra-patient phage-sensitive and phage-resistant isolates were isogenic except for mutations conferring phage resistance, and moreover, phage-resistant V. cholerae populations were composed of a heterogeneous mix of many unique mutants. We also observed that phage predation can significantly alter the virulence potential of V. cholerae shed from cholera patients. We provide the first molecular evidence for predatory phage shaping microbial community structure during the natural course of infection in humans. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.03497.00
Hsp70 and Hsp40 inhibit an inter-domain interaction necessary for transcriptional activity in the androgen receptor.
Molecular chaperones such as Hsp40 and Hsp70 hold the androgen receptor (AR) in an inactive conformation. They are released in the presence of androgens, enabling transactivation and causing the receptor to become aggregation-prone. Here we show that these molecular chaperones recognize a region of the AR N-terminal domain (NTD), including a FQNLF motif, that interacts with the AR ligand-binding domain (LBD) upon activation. This suggests that competition between molecular chaperones and the LBD for the FQNLF motif regulates AR activation. We also show that, while the free NTD oligomerizes, binding to Hsp70 increases its solubility. Stabilizing the NTD-Hsp70 interaction with small molecules reduces AR aggregation and promotes its degradation in cellular and mouse models of the neuromuscular disorder spinal bulbar muscular atrophy. These results help resolve the mechanisms by which molecular chaperones regulate the balance between AR aggregation, activation and quality control
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