34,120 research outputs found
Old Remedies in the Biotechnology Age: Moore v. Regents
The California Supreme Court, by excluding a potential remedy, has eliminated many concerns generated by a lower court decision resolving rights to the cell line derived from John Moore\u27s spleen. Yet, the Supreme Court gave little attention to remedies that remain. The authors argue that a constructive trust, a remedy of considerable vintage and great flexibility, could be applied to achieve a just result in such circumstances without affecting the biotechnology world at large
Suicide substrate reaction-diffusion equations: varying the source
The suicide substrate reaction is a model for certain enzyme-inhibiting drugs. This reaction system is examined assuming that the substrate diffuses freely while the enzyme remains fixed. Two sets of initial and boundary conditions are examined: one modelling an instantaneous point source, akin to an injection of substrate, the other, a continuous point source, akin to a continuing influx, or intravenous drip, of substrate. The quasi-steady-state assumption is applied to obtain analytical solutions for a limited parameter space. Finally, further applications of numerical and analytical experimentation on pharmaceutical mechanisms are described
On the kinetics of suicide substrates
We consider a realistic suicide substrate reaction which can be represented by four rate equations for the concentrations of the various molecules as functions of time. We present a general procedure to obtain accurate, approximate solutions analytically in terms of the rate equation parameters. This systematic technique provides more accurate approximations to the exact (numerical) solutions than other approximate methods which have been proposed based on a pseudo-steady state hypothesis
The Silent Epidemic: Perspectives of High School Dropouts
Presents findings from a survey that examines why some students do not complete their high school education, and what academic and personal supports would have helped them stay in school. Includes recommendations for improving graduation rates
Describing static correlation in bond dissociation by Kohn-Sham density functional theory
We show that density functional theory within the RPA (random phase
approximation for the exchange-correlation energy) provides a correct
description of bond dissociation in H in a spin-restricted Kohn-Sham
formalism, i.e. without artificial symmetry breaking. We present accurate
adiabatic connection curves both at equilibrium and beyond the Coulson-Fisher
point. The strong curvature at large bond length implies important static
(left-right) correlation, justifying modern hybrid functional constructions but
also demonstrating their limitations. Although exact at infinite and accurate
around the equilibrium bond length, the RPA dissociation curve displays
unphysical repulsion at larger but finite bond lengths. Going beyond the RPA by
including the exact exchange kernel (RPA+X), we find a similar repulsion. We
argue that this deficiency is due to the absence of double excitations in
adiabatic linear response theory. Further analyzing the H dissociation
limit we show that the RPA+X is not size-consistent, in contrast to the RPA.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figure
Recent developments in CID imaging
Readout of CID imaging arrays was first performed by injecting and detecting the signal charge from each sensing site in sequence. A new readout method, termed parallel injection, has been developed in which the functions of signal charge detection and injection have been separated. The level of signal charge at each sensing site is detected during a line scan, and during the line retrace interval, all charge in the selected line is injected. The parallel injection technique is well adapted to TV scan formats in that the signal is read out at high speed, line by line. A 244 line by 248 element TV compatible imager, employing this technique and including an on chip preamplifier, has been constructed and operation demonstrated
Multi-modal information processing for visual workload relief
The simultaneous performance of two single-dimensional compensatory tracking tasks, one with the left hand and one with the right hand, is discussed. The tracking performed with the left hand was considered the primary task and was performed with a visual display or a quickened kinesthetic-tactual (KT) display. The right-handed tracking was considered the secondary task and was carried out only with a visual display. Although the two primary task displays had afforded equivalent performance in a critical tracking task performed alone, in the dual-task situation the quickened KT primary display resulted in superior secondary visual task performance. Comparisons of various combinations of primary and secondary visual displays in integrated or separated formats indicate that the superiority of the quickened KT display is not simply due to the elimination of visual scanning. Additional testing indicated that quickening per se also is not the immediate cause of the observed KT superiority
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