5,842 research outputs found
The Fall of the Tragic Hero: A Critique of the “Hubristic Principle”
The idea of attaching moral depravity to the fall of the tragic heroes (according to Aristotle, those men who enjoy prosperity and high reputation like Oedipus and Thyestes etc.) did not start with the three tragic poets, namely; Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides, but rather it dates back even to Homer. This idea is, of course, influenced by the old Greek tradition of Koros, Hubris, Nemesis and Ate. The totality of this traditional view and its application is equated to the phrase ‘hubristic principle’, in the scheme of this work. The hubristic principle makes specific that the fall of the herois as a result of a sin or wrong that he committed. The commission of this wrong must not go unpunished. In effect, the hand of Justice, what they call nemesis, no matter how delayed must fall on the hero. The problem is how then do you reconcile situations where the fall of the hero is not hismaking? In other words, where do you place undeserved misfortune that befalls the hero? Apparently, it is this inadequacy of the hubristic syndrome that Aristotle proposes hamartia (Greek, for error) as the appropriate means in accounting for the fall of the tragic hero. This paperdiscusses first, the hubristic principle and its application and second, assesses the reliability of the theory in accounting for the fall of the tragic hero
Anatomical And Physiological Responses Of Citrus Trees To Varying Boron Availability Are Dependent On Rootstock
Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)In Citrus, water, nutrient transport and thereby fruit production, are influenced among other factors, by the interaction between rootstock and boron (B) nutrition. This study aimed to investigate how B affects the anatomical structure of roots and leaves as well as leaf gas exchange in sweet orange trees grafted on two contrasting rootstocks in response to B supply. Plants grafted on Swingle citrumelo or Sunki mandarin were grown in a nutrient solution of varying B concentration (deficient, adequate, and excessive). Those grafted on Swingle were more tolerant to both B deficiency and toxicity than those on Sunki, as revealed by higher shoot and root growth. In addition, plants grafted on Sunki exhibited more severe anatomical and physiological damages under B deficiency, showing thickening of xylem cell walls and impairments in whole plant leaf -specific hydraulic conductance and leaf CO2 assimilation. Our data revealed that trees grafted on Swingle sustain better growth under low B availablitlity in the root medium and still respond positively to increased B levels by combining higher B absorption and root growth as well as better organization of xylem vessels. Taken together, those traits improved water and B transport to the plant canopy. Under B toxicity, Swingle rootstock would also favor plant growth by reducing anatomical and ultrastructural damage to leaf tissue and improving water transport compared with plants grafted on Sunki. From a practical point of view, our results highlight that B management in citrus orchards shall take into account rootstock varieties, of which the Swingle rootstock was characterized by its performance on regulating anatomical and ultrastructural damages, improving water transport and limiting negative impacts of B stress conditions on plant growth.7Sao Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP, Brazil) [2010/52154-3, 2011/21226-1]National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq, Brazil)Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq
The Interaction of Diabetes and Tuberculosis: Translating Research to Policy and Practice.
Diabetes Mellitus increases the risk of developing Tuberculosis (TB) disease by about three times; it also doubles the risk of death during TB treatment and other poor TB treatment outcomes. Diabetes may increase the risk of latent infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (LTBI), but the magnitude of this effect is less clear. Whilst this syndemic has received considerable attention, most of the published research has focussed on screening for undiagnosed diabetes in TB patients or observational follow-up of TB treatment outcomes by diabetes status. There are thus substantial research and policy gaps, particularly with regard to prevention of TB disease in people with diabetes and management of patients with TB-diabetes, both during TB treatment and after successful completion of TB treatment, when they likely remain at high risk of TB recurrence, mortality from TB and cardiovascular disease. Potential strategies to prevent development of TB disease might include targeted vaccination programmes, screening for LTBI and preventive therapy among diabetes patients or, perhaps ideally, improved diabetes management and prevention. The cost-effectiveness of each of these, and in particular how each strategy might compare with targeted TB prevention among other population groups at higher risk of developing TB disease, is also unknown. Despite research gaps, clinicians urgently need practical management advice and more research evidence on the choice and dose of different anti-diabetes medication and effective medical therapies to reduce cardiovascular risks (statins, anti-hypertensives and aspirin). Substantial health system strengthening and integration may be needed to prevent these at risk patients being lost to care at the end of TB treatment
Multiclass Semi-Supervised Learning on Graphs using Ginzburg-Landau Functional Minimization
We present a graph-based variational algorithm for classification of
high-dimensional data, generalizing the binary diffuse interface model to the
case of multiple classes. Motivated by total variation techniques, the method
involves minimizing an energy functional made up of three terms. The first two
terms promote a stepwise continuous classification function with sharp
transitions between classes, while preserving symmetry among the class labels.
The third term is a data fidelity term, allowing us to incorporate prior
information into the model in a semi-supervised framework. The performance of
the algorithm on synthetic data, as well as on the COIL and MNIST benchmark
datasets, is competitive with state-of-the-art graph-based multiclass
segmentation methods.Comment: 16 pages, to appear in Springer's Lecture Notes in Computer Science
volume "Pattern Recognition Applications and Methods 2013", part of series on
Advances in Intelligent and Soft Computin
Focused Deterrence and the Prevention of Violent Gun Injuries: Practice, Theoretical Principles, and Scientific Evidence
Focused deterrence strategies are a relatively new addition to a growing portfolio of evidence-based violent gun injury prevention practices available to policy makers and practitioners. These strategies seek to change offender behavior by understanding the underlying violence-producing dynamics and conditions that sustain recurring violent gun injury problems and by implementing a blended strategy of law enforcement, community mobilization, and social service actions. Consistent with documented public health practice, the focused deterrence approach identifies underlying risk factors and causes of recurring violent gun injury problems, develops tailored responses to these underlying conditions, and measures the impact of implemented interventions. This article reviews the practice, theoretical principles, and evaluation evidence on focused deterrence strategies. Although more rigorous randomized studies are needed, the available empirical evidence suggests that these strategies generate noteworthy gun violence reduction impacts and should be part of a broader portfolio of violence prevention strategies available to policy makers and practitioners
A genome-wide study of Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium with next generation sequence data
Statistical tests for Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium have been an important tool for detecting genotyping errors in the past, and remain important in the quality control of next generation sequence data. In this paper, we analyze complete chromosomes of the 1000 genomes project by using exact test procedures for autosomal and X-chromosomal variants. We find that the rate of disequilibrium largely exceeds what might be expected by chance alone for all chromosomes. Observed disequilibrium is, in about 60% of the cases, due to heterozygote excess. We suggest that most excess disequilibrium can be explained by sequencing problems, and hypothesize mechanisms that can explain exceptional heterozygosities. We report higher rates of disequilibrium for the MHC region on chromosome 6, regions flanking centromeres and p-arms of acrocentric chromosomes. We also detected long-range haplotypes and areas with incidental high disequilibrium. We report disequilibrium to be related to read depth, with variants having extreme read depths being more likely to be out of equilibrium. Disequilibrium rates were found to be 11 times higher in segmental duplications and simple tandem repeat regions. The variants with significant disequilibrium are seen to be concentrated in these areas. For next generation sequence data, Hardy–Weinberg disequilibrium seems to be a major indicator for copy number variation.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version
ST2249-MRSA-III: a second major recombinant methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus clone causing healthcare infection in the 1970s
Typing of healthcare-associated MRSA from Australia in the 1970s revealed a novel clone, ST2249-MRSA-III (CC45), present from 1973 to 1979. This clone was present prior to the Australian epidemic caused by the recombinant clone, ST239-MRSA-III. This study aimed to characterise the genome of ST2249-MRSA-III in order to establish its relationship to other MRSA clones. DNA microarray analysis was conducted and a draft genome sequence of ST2249 was obtained. The recombinant structure of the ST2249 genome was revealed by comparisons to publicly available ST239 and ST45 genomes. Microarray analysis of genomic DNA of 13 ST2249 isolates showed gross similarities with the ST239 chromosome in a segment around the origin of replication and with ST45 for the remainder of the chromosome. Recombination breakpoints were precisely determined by the changing pattern of nucleotide polymorphisms in the genome sequence of ST 2249 isolate SK1585 compared with ST239 and ST45. One breakpoint was identified to the right of oriC, between sites 1014 and 1065 of the gene D484_00045. Another was identified to the left of oriC, between sites 1185 and 1248 of D484_01632. These results indicate that ST2249 inherited approximately 35.3% of its chromosome from an ST239- like parent and 64.7% from an ST45-like parent. ST2249-MRSA-III resulted from a major recombination between parents that resemble ST239 and ST45. Although only limited Australian archival material is available, the oldest extant isolate of ST2249 predates the oldest Australian isolate of ST239 by three years. It is therefore plausible that these two recombinant clones were introduced into Australia separately
Testing supersymmetry at the LHC through gluon-fusion production of a slepton pair
Renormalizable quartic couplings among new particles are typical of
supersymmetric models. Their detection could provide a test for supersymmetry,
discriminating it from other extensions of the Standard Model. Quartic
couplings among squarks and sleptons, together with the SU(3) gauge couplings
for squarks, allow a new realization of the gluon-fusion mechanism for
pair-production of sleptons at the one-loop level. The corresponding production
cross section, however, is at most of fb for slepton and squark
masses of GeV. We then extend our investigation to the
gluon-fusion production of sleptons through the exchange of Higgs bosons. The
cross section is even smaller, of fb, if the exchanged Higgs
boson is considerably below the slepton-pair threshold, but it is enhanced when
it is resonant. It can reach fb for the production of sleptons
of same-chirality, exceeding these values for 's of
opposite-chirality, even when chirality-mixing terms in the squark sector are
vanishing. The cross section can be further enhanced if these mixing terms are
nonnegligible, providing a potentially interesting probe of the Higgs sector,
in particular of parameters such as , , and .Comment: 28 pages, 11 figure
Korn's second inequality and geometric rigidity with mixed growth conditions
Geometric rigidity states that a gradient field which is -close to the
set of proper rotations is necessarily -close to a fixed rotation, and is
one key estimate in nonlinear elasticity. In several applications, as for
example in the theory of plasticity, energy densities with mixed growth appear.
We show here that geometric rigidity holds also in and in
interpolation spaces. As a first step we prove the corresponding linear
inequality, which generalizes Korn's inequality to these spaces
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