5,085 research outputs found
The Effect of Online Chapter Quizzes on Exam Performance in an Undergraduate Social Psychology Course
Assigned textbook readings are a common requirement in undergraduate courses, but students often do not complete reading assignments or do not do so until immediately before an exam. This may have detrimental effects on learning and course performance. Regularly scheduled quizzes on reading material may increase completion of reading assignments and therefore course performance. This study examined the effectiveness of compulsory, mastery-based, weekly reading quizzes as a means of improving exam and course performance. Completion of reading quizzes was related to both better exam and course performance. The discussion includes recommendations for the use of quizzes in undergraduate courses
Host proteins used in HIV assembly and budding
Abstract only availableHuman immunodeficiency virus (HIV), the virus responsible for the AIDS pandemic, uses host cell machinery to assist its replication during the viral life cycle. A recent study randomly screened 21,000 host cell genes using siRNA to knock down the gene's expression and determine the effect gene disruption on HIV replication. This study indicated that many host genes are involved in viral replication. We are interested in pursuing the individual genes that were reported to be required for HIV assembly and budding, the process of how the virus forms and gets out of the cell. We are selecting genes indicated to be involved in assembly and budding by this study. We will use siRNA, short double strands of RNA used in interfering with gene expression, to knock down the host gene's expression to see whether the gene has any effect on infectivity. We are attempting to verify the effect on infectivity that these host genes have and, if we confirmed the previous results, we will attempt to look at which part of viral assembly and budding is affected. We can use a variety of techniques to determine this. Single round infectivity assays allow us to see if the virus is still infectious using flow cytometry. Scanning Electron Microscopy allows us to see if the virus is budding correctly. SDS page gels allows us to stain for viral proteins which can show us if viral proteins are being made and processed correctly to form functional viral particles. Once we have established which host proteins are required for replication, we hope to determine at which step in the viral cycle the host gene comes into play and how the virus uses the host's mechanisms to spread to other uninfected cells.Life Sciences Undergraduate Research Opportunity Progra
The Stellar Metallicity Distribution Function of the Galactic Halo from SDSS Photometry
We explore the stellar metallicity distribution function of the Galactic halo
based on SDSS ugriz photometry. A set of stellar isochrones is calibrated using
observations of several star clusters and validated by comparisons with
medium-resolution spectroscopic values over a wide range of metal abundance. We
estimate distances and metallicities for individual main-sequence stars in the
multiply scanned SDSS Stripe 82, at heliocentric distances in the range 5 - 8
kpc and |b| > 35 deg, and find that the in situ photometric metallicity
distribution has a shape that matches that of the kinematically-selected local
halo stars from Ryan & Norris. We also examine independent kinematic
information from proper-motion measurements for high Galactic latitude stars in
our sample. We find that stars with retrograde rotation in the rest frame of
the Galaxy are generally more metal poor than those exhibiting prograde
rotation, which is consistent with earlier arguments by Carollo et al. that the
halo system comprises at least two spatially overlapping components with
differing metallicity, kinematics, and spatial distributions. The observed
photometric metallicity distribution and that of Ryan & Norris can be described
by a simple chemical evolution model by Hartwick (or by a single Gaussian
distribution); however, the suggestive metallicity-kinematic correlation
contradicts the basic assumption in this model that the Milky Way halo consists
primarily of a single stellar population. When the observed metallicity
distribution is deconvolved using two Gaussian components with peaks at [Fe/H]
~ -1.7 and -2.3, the metal-poor component accounts for ~20% - 35% of the entire
halo population in this distance range.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Metallicity Mapping with gri Photometry: The Virgo Overdensity and the Halos of the Galaxy
We describe the methodology required for estimation of photometric estimates
of metallicity based on the SDSS gri passbands, which can be used to probe the
properties of main-sequence stars beyond ~ 10 kpc, complementing studies of
nearby stars from more metallicity-sensitive color indices that involve the u
passband. As a first application of this approach, we determine photometric
metal abundance estimates for individual main-sequence stars in the Virgo
Overdensity, which covers almost 1000 square degrees on the sky, based on a
calibration of the metallicity sensitivity of stellar isochrones in the gri
filter passbands using field stars with well-determined spectroscopic metal
abundances. Despite the low precision of the method for individual stars,
internal errors of in [Fe/H] ~ +/- 0.1 dex can be achieved for bulk stellar
populations. The global metal abundance of the Virgo Overdensity determined in
this way is = -2.0 +/- 0.1 (internal) +/- 0.5 (systematic), from
photometric measurements of 0.7 million stars with heliocentric distances from
~ 10 kpc to ~ 20 kpc. A preliminary metallicity map, based on results for 2.9
million stars in the northern SDSS DR-7 footprint, exhibits a shift to lower
metallicities as one proceeds from the inner- to the outer-halo population,
consistent with recent interpretation of the kinematics of local samples of
stars with spectroscopically available metallicity estimates and full space
motions.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, to appear in IAU Symp. 26
Diverse viral glycoproteins as well as CD4 co-package into the same human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) particles
BACKGROUND: Retroviruses can acquire not only their own glycoproteins as they bud from the cellular membrane, but also some cellular and foreign viral glycoproteins. Many of these non-native glycoproteins are actively recruited to budding virions, particularly other viral glycoproteins. This observation suggests that there may be a conserved mechanism underlying the recruitment of glycoproteins into viruses. If a conserved mechanism is used, diverse glycoproteins should localize to a single budding retroviral particle. On the other hand, if viral glycoproteins have divergent mechanisms for recruitment, the different glycoproteins could segregate into different particles. RESULTS: To determine if co-packaging occurs among different glycoproteins, we designed an assay that combines virion antibody capture and a determination of infectivity based on a luciferase reporter. Virions were bound to a plate with an antibody against one glycoprotein, and then the infectivity was measured with cells that allow entry only with a second glycoprotein. We tested pairings of glycoproteins from HIV, murine leukemia virus (MLV), Rous sarcoma virus (RSV), vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), and Ebola virus. The results showed that glycoproteins that were actively recruited into virions were co-packaged efficiently with each other. We also tested cellular proteins and found CD4 also had a similar correlation between active recruitment and efficient co-packaging, but other cellular proteins did not. CONCLUSION: Glycoproteins that are actively incorporated into HIV-1 virions are efficiently co-packaged into the same virus particles, suggesting that the same general mechanism for recruitment may act in many viruses
Clarification of the relationship between bound and scattering states in quantum mechanics: Application to 12C + alpha
Using phase-equivalent supersymmetric partner potentials, a general result
from the inverse problem in quantum scattering theory is illustrated, i.e.,
that bound-state properties cannot be extracted from the phase shifts of a
single partial wave, as a matter of principle. In particular, recent R-matrix
analyses of the 12C + alpha system, extracting the asymptotic normalization
constant of the 2+ subthreshold state, C12, from the l=2 elastic-scattering
phase shifts and bound-state energy, are shown to be unreliable. In contrast,
this important constant in nuclear astrophysics can be deduced from the
simultaneous analysis of the l=0, 2, 4, 6 partial waves in a simplified
potential model. A new supersymmetric inversion potential and existing models
give C12=144500+-8500 fm-1/2.Comment: Expanded version (50% larger); three errors corrected (conversion of
published reduced widths to ANCs); nine references added, one remove
Dynamical and gravitational instability of an oscillating-field dark energy and dark matter
Coherent oscillations of a scalar field can mimic the behavior of a perfect fluid with an equation-of-state parameter determined by the properties of the potential, possibly driving accelerated expansion in the early Universe (inflation) and/or in the Universe today (dark energy) or behaving as dark matter. We consider the growth of inhomogeneities in such a field, mapping the problem to that of two coupled anharmonic oscillators. We provide a simple physical argument that oscillating fields with a negative equation-of-state parameter possess a large-scale dynamical instability to growth of inhomogeneities. This instability renders these models unsuitable for explaining cosmic acceleration. We then consider the gravitational instability of oscillating fields in potentials that are close to, but not precisely, harmonic. We use these results to show that if axions make up the dark matter, then the small-scale cutoff in the matter power spectrum is around 10^-15M⊕
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