27 research outputs found

    Experimental requirements for Grover's algorithm in optical quantum computation

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    The field of linear optical quantum computation (LOQC) will soon need a repertoire of experimental milestones. We make progress in this direction by describing several experiments based on Grover's algorithm. These experiments range from a relatively simple implementation using only a single non-scalable CNOT gate to the most complex, requiring two concatenated scalable CNOT gates, and thus form a useful set of early milestones for LOQC. We also give a complete description of basic LOQC using polarization-encoded qubits, making use of many simplifications to the original scheme of Knill, Laflamme, and Milburn.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figure

    Loss of immune escape mutations during persistent HCV infection in pregnancy enhances replication of vertically transmitted viruses

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    Globally, about 1% of pregnant women are persistently infected with the hepatitis C virus (HCV)1. Vertical transmission occurs in 3–5% of cases2 and accounts for most new childhood HCV infections1,3. HCV-specific CD8+ cytotoxic T-lymphocytes (CTLs) play a vital role in the clearance of acute infections4–6, but in the 60–80% of infections that persist these cells become functionally exhausted or select mutant viruses that escape T-cell recognition7–9. Increased HCV replication during pregnancy10,11 suggests that maternofetal immune tolerance mechanisms12 may further impair HCV-specific CTLs, limiting their selection pressure on persistent viruses. To assess this possibility, we characterized the circulating viral quasispecies during and after consecutive pregnancies. This revealed a loss of some escape mutations in class I epitopes in pregnancy associated with emergence of more fit viruses13. CTL selection pressure was reimposed after childbirth, when escape mutations in these epitopes again predominated in the quasispecies and viral load dropped sharply14. Importantly, viruses transmitted perinatally were those with enhanced fitness due to reversion of escape mutations. Our findings indicate that immunoregulatory changes of pregnancy reduce CTL selection pressure on HCV class I epitopes, thereby facilitating vertical transmission of viruses with optimized replicative fitness

    Measurement of the charge asymmetry in top-quark pair production in the lepton-plus-jets final state in pp collision data at s=8TeV\sqrt{s}=8\,\mathrm TeV{} with the ATLAS detector

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    ATLAS Run 1 searches for direct pair production of third-generation squarks at the Large Hadron Collider

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    Hearing Impairment and Cognitive Decline: A Pilot Study Conducted Within the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Neurocognitive Study

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    Hearing impairment (HI) is prevalent, is modifiable, and has been associated with cognitive decline. We tested the hypothesis that audiometric HI measured in 2013 is associated with poorer cognitive function in 253 men and women from Washington County, Maryland (mean age = 76.9 years) in a pilot study carried out within the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Neurocognitive Study. Three cognitive tests were administered in 1990–1992, 1996–1998, and 2013, and a full neuropsychological battery was administered in 2013. Multivariable-adjusted differences in standardized cognitive scores (cross-sectional analysis) and trajectories of 20-year change (longitudinal analysis) were modeled using linear regression and generalized estimating equations, respectively. Hearing thresholds for pure tone frequencies of 0.5–4 kHz were averaged to obtain a pure tone average in the better-hearing ear. Hearing was categorized as follows: ≤25 dB, no HI; 26–40 dB, mild HI; and >40 dB, moderate/severe HI. Comparing participants with moderate/severe HI to participants with no HI, 20-year rates of decline in memory and global function differed by −0.47 standard deviations (P = 0.02) and −0.29 standard deviations (P = 0.02), respectively. Estimated declines were greatest in participants who did not wear a hearing aid. These findings add to the limited literature on cognitive impairments associated with HI, and they support future research on whether HI treatment may reduce risk of cognitive decline

    Loss of immune escape mutations during persistent HCV infection in pregnancy enhances replication of vertically transmitted viruses

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    Globally, about 1% of pregnant women are persistently infected with the hepatitis C virus (HCV)(1). Vertical transmission occurs in 3–5% of cases(2) and accounts for most new childhood HCV infections(1,3). HCV-specific CD8(+) cytotoxic T-lymphocytes (CTLs) play a vital role in the clearance of acute infections(4–6), but in the 60–80% of infections that persist these cells become functionally exhausted or select mutant viruses that escape T-cell recognition(7–9). Increased HCV replication during pregnancy(10,11) suggests that maternofetal immune tolerance mechanisms(12) may further impair HCV-specific CTLs, limiting their selection pressure on persistent viruses. To assess this possibility, we characterized the circulating viral quasispecies during and after consecutive pregnancies. This revealed a loss of some escape mutations in class I epitopes in pregnancy associated with emergence of more fit viruses(13). CTL selection pressure was reimposed after childbirth, when escape mutations in these epitopes again predominated in the quasispecies and viral load dropped sharply(14). Importantly, viruses transmitted perinatally were those with enhanced fitness due to reversion of escape mutations. Our findings indicate that immunoregulatory changes of pregnancy reduce CTL selection pressure on HCV class I epitopes, thereby facilitating vertical transmission of viruses with optimized replicative fitness
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