4,822 research outputs found
Extremal limits and black hole entropy
Taking the extremal limit of a non-extremal Reissner-Nordstr\"om black hole
(by externally varying the mass or charge), the region between the inner and
outer event horizons experiences an interesting fate -- while this region is
absent in the extremal case, it does not disappear in the extremal limit but
rather approaches a patch of . In other words, the approach to
extremality is not continuous, as the non-extremal Reissner-Nordstr\"om
solution splits into two spacetimes at extremality: an extremal black hole and
a disconnected space. We suggest that the unusual nature of this limit
may help in understanding the entropy of extremal black holes.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures. Minor corrections and added reference
Forced Alignment for Understudied Language Varieties: Testing Prosodylab-Aligner with Tongan Data
Automated alignment of transcriptions to audio files expedites the process of preparing data for acoustic analysis. Unfortunately, the benefits of auto-alignment have generally been available only to researchers studying majority languages, for which large corpora exist and for which acoustic models have been created by large-scale research projects. Prosodylab-Aligner (PL-A), from McGill University, facilitates automated alignment and segmentation for understudied languages. It allows researchers to train acoustic models using the same audio files for which alignments will be created. Those models can then be used to create time-aligned Praat TextGrids with word and phone boundaries marked.
For the benefit of others who wish to use PL-A for research projects, this paper reports on our use of PL-A on Tongan field recordings, reviewing the software, outlining required steps, and providing tips. Since field recordings often contain more background noise than the laboratory recordings for which PL-A was designed, the paper also discusses the relative benefits of removing background noise for both training and alignment purposes. Finally, it compares acoustic measures based on various alignments and compares boundary placements with those of human aligners, demonstrating that automated alignment is both feasible and less time-consuming than manual alignment.National Foreign Language Resource Cente
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Quality and Publication of Emergency Medicine Trials Registered in ClinicalTrials.gov
Introduction: Promoting emergency medicine (EM) clinical trials research remains a priority. To characterize the status of clinical EM research, this study assessed trial quality, funding source, and publication of EM clinical trials and compared EM and non-EM trials on these key metrics. We also examined the volume of EM trials and their subspecialty areas.Methods: We abstracted data from ClinicalTrials.gov (February 2000 - September 2013) and used individual study National Clinical Trial numbers to identify published trials (January 2007 - September 2016). We used descriptive statistics and chi-square tests to examine study characteristics by EM and non-EM status, and Kaplan-Meier curves and log-rank tests to compare time to publication of completed EM and non-EM studies.Results: We found 638 interventional EM trials and 59,512 non-EM interventional trials conducted in the United States between February 2000 and September 2013, registered on ClinicalTrials.gov. EM studies were significantly less likely than non-EM studies to be National Institutes of Health-funded or to evaluate a drug or biologic. However, EM studies had significantly larger sample sizes, and were significantly more likely to use randomization and blinding. Overall, 34.3% of EM and 26.0% of non-EM studies were published in peer-reviewed journals. By subspecialty, more EM trials concerned medical/surgical and psychiatric/neurological conditions than trauma.Conclusion: Although EM studies were less likely to have received federal or industry funding, and the EM portfolio consisted of only 638 trials over the 14-year study period, the quality of EM trials surpassed that of non-EM trials, based on indices such as randomization and blinding. This novel finding bodes well for the future of clinical EM research, as does the higher proportion of published EM than non-EM trials. Our study also revealed that trauma studies were under-represented among EM studies. Periodic assessment of EM trials with the metrics used here could provide an informative and valuable longitudinal view of progress in clinical EM research
Effects of bromide and iodide on stalk secretion in the biofouling diatom Achnanthes longipes (Bacillariophyceae)
Extracellular polymeric substance (EPS) secretion was examined in the stalked marine diatom Achnanthes longipes Ag. in defined medium. This common biofouling diatom exhibited an absolute requirement for bromide for stalk production and substratum attachment, whereas elevated iodide concentrations in the growth medium inhibited stalk formation and adhesion. Varying EPS morphologtes resulted from altering bromide and iodide levels: pads, stalkâpads, stalks, and no EPS. Cells showed no differences in growth with bromide or iodide concentrations, indicating that they were not physiologically stressed under conditions that impaired EPS secretion. Cells grown in elevated iodide secreted significantly more soluble extracellular carbohydrate into the medium, suggesting that the EPS was soluble and unable to be polymerized into a morphologically distinct gel. By replacing sulfate with methionine, the diatom lost its ability to form stalks even in the presence of bromide, indicating that free sulphate may be required for proper crossâlinking of stalk polymers. LotusâFITC, a fluorescentâtagged lectin, preferentially labeled the EPS and, thus, was used to visualize and quantify EPS secretion along a bromide gradient in conjunction with an image analysis system. This technique demonstrated a direct correlation between the amount of bromide present in the medium and the specific EPS morphology formed. Copyright © 1995, Wiley Blackwell. All rights reserve
Sexual Preference, Feminism, and Women's Perceptions of Their Parents
12 pagesIn an attempt to clarify the relation between parental variables, sexual preference,
and sex-role attitudes, three groups of women were studied: lesbian feminists,
heterosexual feminists, and heterosexual traditional women. The women
were asked about their perceptions of their parents when they were in high
school. The groups differed more from each other with respect to their perceptions
of their fathers than their mothers. The perceived attitudes.of the father
were much more important in differentiating lesbian feminists from heterosexuals
than in differentiating heterosexual feminists from heterosexual traditionals.
Both the heterosexual groups (feminist and traditionals) reported having
a more affectionate and involved father who also encouraged them more in the
expression of anger than the lesbian feminists reported. The results suggest women's
father relationships must not be obscured in research and support Johnson's
hypothesis that the father relationship is more central than the mother relationship
in sex typing and especially in the specifically sexual aspects of sex
typing
Composite Accretion Disk and White Dwarf Photosphere Analyses of the FUSE and HST Observations of EY Cygni
We explore the origin of FUSE and HST STIS far UV spectra of the dwarf nova,
EY Cyg, during its quiescence using \emph{combined} high gravity photosphere
and accretion disk models as well as model accretion belts. The best-fitting
single temperature white dwarf model to the FUSE plus HST STIS spectrum of EY
Cygni has TK, log , with an Si abundance of 0.1 x
solar and C abundance of 0.2 x solar but the distance is only 301 pc. The
best-fitting composite model consists of white dwarf with TK,
log , plus an accretion belt with TK covering 27% of
the white dwarf surface with V km/s. The accretion belt
contributes 63% of the FUV light and the cooler white dwarf latitudes
contribute 37%. This fit yields a distance of 351 pc which is within 100 pc of
our adopted distance of 450 pc. EY Cyg has very weak C {\sc iv} emission and
very strong N {\sc v} emission, which is atypical of the majority of dwarf
novae in quiescence. We also conducted a morphological study of the
surroundings of EY Cyg using direct imaging in narrow nebular filters from
ground-based telescopes. We report the possible detection of nebular material^M
associated with EY Cygni. Possible origins of the apparently large N {\scv}/C
{\sc iv} emission ratio are discussed in the context of nova explosions,
contamination of the secondary star and accretion of nova abundance-enriched
matter back to the white dwarf via the accretion disk or as a descendant of a
precursor binary that survived thermal timescale mass transfer. The scenario
involving pollution of the secondary by past novae may be supported by the
possible presence of a nova remnant-like nebula around EY Cyg.Comment: To appear in AJ, Oct. 2004. 5 figures, including 2 color ones (2D
pictures
Uncovering the Mechanism of Aggregation of Human Transthyretin.
The tetrameric thyroxine transport protein transthyretin (TTR) forms amyloid fibrils upon dissociation and monomer unfolding. The aggregation of transthyretin has been reported as the cause of the life-threatening transthyretin amyloidosis. The standard treatment of familial cases of TTR amyloidosis has been liver transplantation. Although aggregation-preventing strategies involving ligands are known, understanding the mechanism of TTR aggregation can lead to additional inhibition approaches. Several models of TTR amyloid fibrils have been proposed, but the segments that drive aggregation of the protein have remained unknown. Here we identify ÎČ-strands F and H as necessary for TTR aggregation. Based on the crystal structures of these segments, we designed two non-natural peptide inhibitors that block aggregation. This work provides the first characterization of peptide inhibitors for TTR aggregation, establishing a novel therapeutic strategy
Aptamer-Based Detection of Ampicillin in Urine Samples
The misuse of antibiotics in health care has led to increasing levels of drug resistant infections (DRI's) occurring in the general population. Most technologies developed for the detection of DRI's typically focus on phenotyping or genotyping bacterial resistance rather than on the underlying cause and spread of DRI's; namely the misuse of antibiotics. An aptameric based assay has been developed for the monitoring of ampicillin in urine samples, for use in determining optimal antibiotic dosage and monitoring patient compliance with treatment. The fluorescently labelled aptamers were shown to perform optimally at pH 7, ideal for buffered clinical urine samples, with limits of detection as low as 20.6 nM, allowing for determination of ampicillin in urine in the clinically relevant range of concentrations (100 nM to 100 ”M). As the assay requires incubation for only 1 h with a small sample volume, 50 to 150 ”L, the test would fit within current healthcare pathways, simplifying the adoption of the technology
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