5,835 research outputs found
Cyclic AMP signalling in pancreatic islets
Cyclic 3'5'AMP (cAMP) is an important physiological amplifier of glucose-induced insulin secretion by the pancreatic islet Ī²-cell, where it is formed by the activity of adenylyl cyclases, which are stimulated by glucose, through elevation in intracellular calcium concentrations, and by the incretin hormones (GLP-1 and GIP). cAMP is rapidly degraded in the pancreatic islet Ī²-cell by various cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase (PDE) enzymes. Many steps involved in glucose-induced insulin secretion are modulated by cAMP, which is also important in regulating pancreatic islet Ī²-cell differentiation, growth and survival. This chapter discusses the formation, destruction and actions of cAMP in the islets with particular emphasis on the Ī²-cell
Training within industry (TWI-JS ) program as a tool to improve work safety in the steel industry in Poland
Accidents at work related to the operation of technological machinery are recorded in the steel industry in Poland. A reduction of accidents is possible through the implementation of technical and organizational measures. As regards the elimination of hazards at workplaces, it is possible to apply the Training Within Industry (TWI) program. One of its modules, i.e., Safety (JS), is aimed at creating a safe workplace by the acquisition of the skills of identification and elimination of the causes of hazards leading to accidents. This article aims to present the possibilities of the use of the TWI-JS method to prevent accidents at work in the steel industry
High temperature meson propagators with domain-wall quarks
We study the chiral properties of domain-wall quarks at high temperatures on
an ensemble of quenched configurations. Low lying eigenmodes of the Dirac
operator are calculated and used to check the extent to which the Atiyah-Singer
index theorem is obeyed on lattices with finite . We calculate the
connected and disconnected screening propagators for the lowest mass scalar and
pseudoscalar mesons in the sectors of different topological charge and note
that they behave as expected. Separating out the would-be zero eigenmodes
enables us to accurately estimate the disconnected propagators with far less
effort than would be needed otherwise.Comment: LATTICE99(Finite Temperature and Density), 3 pages, 3 figure
Impact of Organizational Career Management Activities on Organizational Commitment of Early, Mid, and Late Stage Career Professionals
Organizational commitment continues to be studied by researchers and practitioners due to the presumed relationships with important organizational outcomes such as turnover, performance, and absenteeism. Organizations are challenged with identifying practices such as organizational career management activities that will reduce costs associated with low performance and high turnover while recognizing the diversity of their workforces as it relates to early, mid, and late stage career professionals. Understanding the needs and unique characteristics of early, mid, and late career stage professionals can better inform organizationsā decision to invest in organizational career management activities to enhance organizational commitment across all three career stages. In this study, the impact of the availability and utilization of organizational career management activities on organizational commitment is studied through the lens of Perceived Organizational Support Theory. Results indicate that the availability and utilization of organizational career management activities have a positive relationship with perceived organizational support and perceived organizational support has a positive relationship with affective, normative, and continuance organizational commitment. Organizational career management activities do not have a direct relationship with turnover intentions, however, implications of varying levels of affective, normative, and continuance commitment are discussed. Further, no difference was found between early, mid, and late stage career professionals contradicting previous studies and informing future studies
Scalar resonances: scattering and production amplitudes
Scattering and production amplitudes involving scalar resonances are known,
according to Watson's theorem, to share the same phase . We show
that, at low energies, the production amplitude is fully determined by the
combination of with another phase , which describes
intermediate two-meson propagation and is theoretically unambiguous. Our main
result is a simple and almost model independent expression, which generalizes
the usual -matrix unitarization procedure and is suited to be used in
analyses of production data involving scalar resonances.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures. Minor changes, references added, version to
appear in Phys. Rev.
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