531 research outputs found
THE CONCEPT OF INTELLECTUAL CAPITAL IN DEVELOPMENT SYSTEMS
The human capital and structural capital constitute the primary assets of every organisation and more and more every territory: on urban, local, regional, national and global levels. Restructuring technique, technology, organisation of production and work (means of production, subjects of work, power factors and economic factors) necessitates great knowledge, competence and skills, as well as the right organisational culture and philosophy. These factors constitute the basic elements of human capital. Mutual dependency of these factors results in the need of proper management of planning, organisation and motivation as well as of controlling human capital. Business practice confirms the need of developing basic organisational features that would result in creating a unique corporate image. It turns out that an individual character of a company facilitates its winning competitive advantage. Shaping the basic variables in corporate resources enables one to identify technical, organisational, economic and social features. Creating an individual character of a company on the basis of primary material resources rarely brings the desired effect. The material character of technical, organisational and economic resources is a feature that may be easily copied by competitors. Among the distinguished features, only human capital may thus decide on the individual character of a company.human capital, intellectual capital
Bee Products and Essential Oils as Alternative Agents for Treatment of Infections Caused by S. aureus
Bacteria of the genus Staphylococcus are important human and veterinary pathogens. AÂ crucial characteristic for this group of bacteria is that they can easily acquire mechanisms of antibiotic resistance for a plethora of antibiotics currently in use for human and animal therapies. Therefore, there is a great need to find novel, non-antibiotic chemotherapeutics with marked antistaphylococcal activity. Promising but still underestimated group of potential antistaphylococcal chemotherapeutics constitute bee products: honey, pollen, royal jelly, fermented pollen and especially propolis. Another group of natural products that exhibit promising antibacterial activity is essential oils. Usefulness of bee products and essential oils in the treatment of infections caused by S. aureus has been confirmed by results of many investigations carried out by researches in different regions of the world. In this chapter, we have presented the review of publication in this area as well as perspectives and limitations of future applications of these two groups of natural products
Mapping the development of contextual knowledge in the area of the sharing economy
Motivation: Contemporary economics provides to the practice of the social world functioning increasingly precise knowledge about how the modern economy and economics change. Although it seems that it is knowledge necessary to make science more useful for the social world, it creates a risk of blurring the general picture of the studied problems. One of the modern phenomena analysed in economic theory and tested in economic practice is the sharing economy (SE). Because it is a relatively new subject of economic analysis, it seems important to closely follow the development of academic work concerning SE (also on the basis of the knowledge provided by the social world).Aim: The authors of the paper have focused on achieving the following research objectives: (1) identification of literature output in the area of SE, (2) assessment of cooperation between researchers dealing with SE topics and (3) diagnosis of thematic areas related to the studied phenomenon. The basis for the works on the research objectives was a set of 1411 papers related to SE, published in 2011â2018, in the Scopus database. For the research, quantitative analysis with elements of qualitative analysis was used.Results: Based on the research conducted, the following conclusions were formulated: (1) the current literature on the SE phenomenon is fragmentary, (2) the cooperation, if any, between researchers dealing with SE is ephemeral, (3) SE contexts are focused on specific socio-economic phenomena
AFM-based analysis of Wharton's jelly mesenchymal stem cells
Whartonâs jelly mesenchymal stem cells (WJ-MSCs) are multipotent stem cells that can
be used in regenerative medicine. However, to reach the high therapeutic efficacy of WJ-MSCs,
it is necessary to obtain a large amount of MSCs, which requires their extensive in vitro culturing.
Numerous studies have shown that in vitro expansion of MSCs can lead to changes in cell behavior;
cells lose their ability to proliferate, differentiate and migrate. One of the important measures of cellsâ
migration potential is their elasticity, determined by atomic force microscopy (AFM) and quantified
by Youngâs modulus. This work describes the elasticity of WJ-MSCs during in vitro cultivation.
To identify the properties that enable transmigration, the deformability of WJ-MSCs that were able
to migrate across the endothelial monolayer or Matrigel was analyzed by AFM. We showed that
WJ-MSCs displayed differences in deformability during in vitro cultivation. This phenomenon seems
to be strongly correlated with the organization of F-actin and reflects the changes characteristic for
stem cell maturation. Furthermore, the results confirm the relationship between the deformability
of WJ-MSCs and their migration potential and suggest the use of Youngâs modulus as one of the
measures of competency of MSCs with respect to their possible use in therapy
Recompression treatment for decompression illness: 5-year report (2003-2007) from National Centre for Hyperbaric Medicine in Poland
A serious diving accident can occur in recreational diving even in countries where
diving is not very popular due to the fact that diving conditions there are not as great as
in some tropical diving locations. The estimated number of injured divers who need
recompression treatment in European hyperbaric facilities varies between 10 and 100
per year depending on the number of divers in the population, number of dives
performed annually, and number of hyperbaric centres in the country. In 5 years of
retrospective observation in Poland (2003-2007) there were 51 cases of injured
recreational divers recorded. They either dived locally or after returning home by air
from a tropical diving resort. All of them were treated with recompression treatment in
the National Centre for Hyperbaric Medicine in Gdynia which has capability to treat
any patient with decompression illness using all currently available recompression schedules with any breathing mixtures including oxygen, nitrox, heliox or trimix. The
time interval between surfacing and first occurrence of symptoms was significantly
lower in the group of patients with neurological decompression sickness or arterial gas
embolism (median 0.2 hours) than in the group of patients with other types of
decompression sickness (median 2.0 hours). In both groups, there were different types
of recompression tables used for initial treatment and different number of additional
sessions of hyperbaric oxygenation (HBO) prescribed, but the final outcome was
similar. Complete resolution of symptoms after initial recompression treatment was
observed in 24 cases, and this number was increased to 37 cases after additional HBO
sessions (from 1 to 20). In the final outcome, some residual symptoms were observed in
12 cases. In 2 cases initial diagnosis of decompression sickness type I was rejected after
initial recompression treatment and careful re-evaluation of diving profiles, risk factors
and reported symptoms
Long-Lasting Effect of Infant Rats Endotoxemia on Heat Shock Protein 60 in the Pancreatic Acinar Cells: Involvement of Toll-Like Receptor 4
Introduction. Lipopolysaccharide endotoxin (LPS) is responsible for septic shock and multiorgan failure, but pretreatment of rats with low doses of LPS reduced pancreatic acute damage. Aim. We investigated the effects of the endotoxemia induced in the early period of life on Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4), heat shock protein 60 (HSP60) and proapoptotic Bax, caspase-9 and -3 or antiapoptotic Bcl-2 protein expression in the pancreatic acinar cells of adult animals. Material and Methods. Newborn rats (25âg) were injected with endotoxin (Escherichia coli) for 5 consecutive days. Two months later, pancreatic acinar cells were isolated from all groups of animals and subjected to caerulein stimulation (10â8âM). Protein expression was assessed employing Western blot. For detection of apoptosis we have employed DNA fragmentation ladder assay. Results. Preconditioning of newborn rats with LPS increased TLR4, Caspase-9 and -3 levels, but failed to affect basal expression of HSP60, Bax, and Bcl-2. Subsequent caerulein stimulation increased TLR4, Bcl-2, and caspases, but diminished HSP60 and Bax proteins in pancreatic acinar cells. Endotoxemia dose-dependently increased TLR4, Bax, HSP60, and both caspases protein signals in the pancreatic acini, further inhibiting antiapoptotic Bcl-2. Conclusions. Endotoxemia promoted the induction of HSP60 via TLR4 in the infant rats and participated in the LPS-dependent pancreatic tissue protection against acute damage
Draft genome sequence of MCPA-degrading <i>Sphingomonas </i>sp. strain ERG5, isolated from a groundwater aquifer in Denmark
Sphingomonas sp. strain ERG5 was isolated from a bacterial community, originating from a groundwater aquifer polluted with low pesticide concentrations. This bacterium degrades 2-methyl-4-chlorophenoxyacetic acid (MCPA) in a wide spectrum of concentrations and has been shown to function in bioaugmented sand filters. Genes associated with MCPA degradation are situated on a putative conjugative plasmid
Electric Control of Spin Transitions at the Atomic Scale
Electric control of spins has been a longstanding goal in the field of solid
state physics due to the potential for increased efficiency in information
processing. This efficiency can be optimized by transferring spintronics to the
atomic scale. We present electric control of spin resonance transitions in
single molecules by employing electron spin resonance scanning tunneling
microscopy (ESR-STM). We find strong bias voltage dependent shifts in the ESR
signal of about ten times its linewidth, which is due to the electric field
induced displacement of the spin system in the tunnel junction. This opens up
new avenues for ultrafast control of coupled spin systems, even towards atomic
scale quantum computing, and expands on understanding and optimizing spin
electric coupling in bulk materials.Comment: 11 pages, 13 figures, including supplementary informatio
Microwave-assisted tunneling and interference effects in superconducting junctions under fast driving signals
The following article appeared in Physical Review B 101.13 (2020): 134507. DOI:10.1103/PhysRevB.101.134507. Open access publication funded by the Max Planck SocietyAs scanning tunneling microscopy is pushed towards fast local dynamics, a quantitative understanding of tunnel junctions under the influence of a fast ac driving signal is required, especially at the ultralow temperatures relevant to spin dynamics and correlated electron states. We subject a superconductor-insulator-superconductor junction to a microwave signal from an antenna mounted in situ and examine the dc response of the contact to this driving signal. Quasiparticle tunneling and the Josephson effect can be interpreted in the framework of Tien-Gordon theory. The situation is more complex when it comes to higher-order effects such as multiple Andreev reflections. Microwave-assisted tunneling unravels these complex processes, providing deeper insights into tunneling than are available in a pure dc measurementJ.C.C. acknowledges funding from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (MINECO) (Contract No. FIS2017-84057-P). J.A. acknowledges support from the IQST and the German Science Foundation (DFG) under Grant No. AN336/11-1. This work was funded in part by the ERC Consolidator Grant AbsoluteSpin (Grant No. 681164
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