231 research outputs found

    Paula Kane Studio Wall

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    Paula Kane Studio Wall was produced as part of 'How Art Thinks', a collaborative project engaging with artists' practice and process. It brings together notes and images relating to the artist’s Studio Wall project, in which Kane exhibited a wall-mounted assemblage of evidence that also functioned as an artwork in its own right. It has been designed as a visual record of the artist’s process, enabling the readerviewer to find a path through the work, supplemented by responsive essays from painter Mikey Cuddihy and critic Ian Heywood. The book is the first in a series produced by the International Centre for Fine Art Research at UAL as part of the research project How Art Thinks. The project takes artist’s publication as one of several sites of creative and critical enquiry, providing insight into the visual, material and intellectual processes of making. It aims to find creative ways to document artists’ decision-making processes, as well as listening and responding to artists’ narratives

    American Revival Songs, 1820-1850: The Christian Lyre and Spiritual Songs for Social Worship

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    This thesis focuses on the period 1820-1850, the heyday of revivalism and revival songs. The first section describes the background, nature and dynamics of 19th-century revivals in order to provide the historical setting and theological climate for the emergence of revival songs. The second section examines the origins, development and use of revival music in general. Two song collections are emphasized: the Christian Lyre compiled by Joshua Leavitt and Spiritual Songs for Social Worship by Thomas Hastings and Lowell Mason

    Visualizing Constraints and Awareness of Submarine Maneuverability and Detectability

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    AbstractSubmariners must balance mission imperatives with own ship safety and operational security. A prime measure of safety is avoiding collisions with other contacts, including fishing and other commercial vessels—and especially other submarines and warships. A current problem for submariners is maintaining the submarine's manueverability when factors change, including the density of surrounding contacts, sea state, and weather/visibility, which impose constraints on the submarine's manueverability. These factors can also increase the submarine's detectability if the situation requires longer or more frequent periscope views to maintain situation awareness. Having visualization tools that help submariners manage manueverability and detectability aids decision making by identifying recommended boundaries in the area of operation and recommended patterns of periscope operation. To provide the tools submariners need, we designed and developed several visual aids that identify recommended courses of action for various situations, which promotes greater awareness for future missions. These visual aids were formulated from a combination of Knowledge Elicitation (KE) sessions and cognitive task analysis with development of an abstraction hierarchy and a decision ladder. Our visual aids consist of mapping out a submariner's area of operation by highlighting an optimized path the submariner can take when trying to avoid collisions. By having the ability to visualize these important factors and metrics that are involved in lowering a submarine's detectability while still promoting safety helps increase a submariner's awareness while also providing continuous improvement through risk management and mitigation for risky situations

    A 3-dimensional in vitro model of epithelioid granulomas induced by high aspect ratio nanomaterials

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The most common causes of granulomatous inflammation are persistent pathogens and poorly-degradable irritating materials. A characteristic pathological reaction to intratracheal instillation, pharyngeal aspiration, or inhalation of carbon nanotubes is formation of epithelioid granulomas accompanied by interstitial fibrosis in the lungs. In the mesothelium, a similar response is induced by high aspect ratio nanomaterials, including asbestos fibers, following intraperitoneal injection. This asbestos-like behaviour of some engineered nanomaterials is a concern for their potential adverse health effects in the lungs and mesothelium. We hypothesize that high aspect ratio nanomaterials will induce epithelioid granulomas in nonadherent macrophages in 3D cultures.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Carbon black particles (Printex 90) and crocidolite asbestos fibers were used as well-characterized reference materials and compared with three commercial samples of multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs). Doses were identified in 2D and 3D cultures in order to minimize acute toxicity and to reflect realistic occupational exposures in humans and in previous inhalation studies in rodents. Under serum-free conditions, exposure of nonadherent primary murine bone marrow-derived macrophages to 0.5 μg/ml (0.38 μg/cm<sup>2</sup>) of crocidolite asbestos fibers or MWCNTs, but not carbon black, induced macrophage differentiation into epithelioid cells and formation of stable aggregates with the characteristic morphology of granulomas. Formation of multinucleated giant cells was also induced by asbestos fibers or MWCNTs in this 3D <it>in vitro </it>model. After 7-14 days, macrophages exposed to high aspect ratio nanomaterials co-expressed proinflammatory (M1) as well as profibrotic (M2) phenotypic markers.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Induction of epithelioid granulomas appears to correlate with high aspect ratio and complex 3D structure of carbon nanotubes, not with their iron content or surface area. This model offers a time- and cost-effective platform to evaluate the potential of engineered high aspect ratio nanomaterials, including carbon nanotubes, nanofibers, nanorods and metallic nanowires, to induce granulomas following inhalation.</p

    Effects of dimethyl sulfoxide on the globally ischemic heart: Possible general relevance to hypothermic organ preservation

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    Isolated perfused rabbit hearts were made globally ischemic for 2 hr, then reperfused. For 5 min before and after ischemia hearts were perfused with hypothermic (20 or 27 [deg]C), hypoxic, substrate-free cardioplegic solutions, some of which contained 70 mM dimethyl sulfoxide. Postischemic ventricular pressure development, spontaneous heart rate, coronary flow, lactate dehydrogenase release, tissue Ca2+ content, and in vitro mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation were used to evaluate the protective effects of the various solutions. Aside from the expected observations that cold cardioplegia lessens ischemic damage, we found that dimethyl sulfoxide gave no indication that it exacerbated ischemic damage or lessened the protection afforded by cardioplegia. We also found that, compared to values measured in comparable drug-free treated hearts, dimethyl sulfoxide significantly improved mitochondrial State 3 respiratory rates, respiratory control, and oxidative phosphorylation rates, and essentially prevented mitochondrial changes due to ischemia and reperfusion. We propose that dimethyl sulfoxide may act as a "scavenger" of cytotoxic free radicals, many of which are known to be generated by mitochondria during reoxygenation. Since hypoxia, ischemia, and reoxygenation are common accompaniments of most organ preservation protocols, we suggest that low concentrations of dimethyl sulfoxide might serve as a useful adjunct to organ preservation in the nonfrozen state, when cryoprotective concentrations are not needed.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/24063/1/0000315.pd

    The PTF Orion Project: a Possible Planet Transiting a T-Tauri Star

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    We report observations of a possible young transiting planet orbiting a previously known weak-lined T-Tauri star in the 7-10 Myr old Orion-OB1a/25-Ori region. The candidate was found as part of the Palomar Transient Factory (PTF) Orion project. It has a photometric transit period of 0.448413 +- 0.000040 days, and appears in both 2009 and 2010 PTF data. Follow-up low-precision radial velocity (RV) observations and adaptive optics imaging suggest that the star is not an eclipsing binary, and that it is unlikely that a background source is blended with the target and mimicking the observed transit. RV observations with the Hobby-Eberly and Keck telescopes yield an RV that has the same period as the photometric event, but is offset in phase from the transit center by approximately -0.22 periods. The amplitude (half range) of the RV variations is 2.4 km/s and is comparable with the expected RV amplitude that stellar spots could induce. The RV curve is likely dominated by stellar spot modulation and provides an upper limit to the projected companion mass of M_p sin i_orb < 4.8 +- 1.2 M_Jup; when combined with the orbital inclination, i orb, of the candidate planet from modeling of the transit light curve, we find an upper limit on the mass of the planetary candidate of M_p < 5.5 +- 1.4 M_Jup. This limit implies that the planet is orbiting close to, if not inside, its Roche limiting orbital radius, so that it may be undergoing active mass loss and evaporation.Comment: Corrected typos, minor clarifications; minor updates/corrections to affiliations and bibliography. 35 pages, 10 figures, 3 tables. Accepted to Ap

    Preparation and control of a cavity-field state through atom-driven field interaction: towards long-lived mesoscopic states

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    The preparation of mesoscopic states of the radiation and matter fields through atom-field interactions has been achieved in recent years and employed for a range of striking applications in quantum optics. Here we present a technique for the preparation and control of a cavity mode which, besides interacting with a two-level atom, is simultaneously submitted to linear and parametric amplification processes. The role of the amplification-controlling fields in the achievement of real mesoscopic states, is to produce highly-squeezed field states and, consequently, to increase both: i) the distance in phase space between the components of the prepared superpositions and ii) the mean photon number of such superpositions. When submitting the squeezed superposition states to the action of similarly squeezed reservoirs, we demonstrate that under specific conditions the decoherence time of the states becomes independent of both the distance in phase space between their components and their mean photon number. An explanation is presented to support this remarkable result, together with a discussion on the experimental implementation of our proposal. We also show how to produce number states with fidelities higher than those derived as circular states

    CB1 Expression Is Attenuated in Fallopian Tube and Decidua of Women with Ectopic Pregnancy

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    BACKGROUND: Embryo retention in the Fallopian tube (FT) is thought to lead to ectopic pregnancy (EP), a considerable cause of morbidity. In mice, genetic/pharmacological silencing of cannabinoid receptor Cnr1, encoding CB1, causes retention of embryos in the oviduct. The role of the endocannabinoids in tubal implantation in humans is not known. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Timed FT biopsies (n = 18) were collected from women undergoing gynecological procedures for benign conditions. Endometrial biopsies and whole blood were collected from women undergoing surgery for EP (n = 11); management of miscarriage (n = 6), and termination of pregnancy (n = 8). Using RT-PCR and immunohistochemistry, CB1 mRNA and protein expression levels/patterns were examined in FT and endometrial biopsies. The distribution of two polymorphisms of CNR1 was examined by TaqMan analysis of genomic DNA from the whole blood samples. In normal FT, CB1 mRNA was higher in luteal compared to follicular-phase (p<0.05). CB1 protein was located in smooth muscle of the wall and of endothelial vessels, and luminal epithelium of FT. In FT from women with EP, CB1 mRNA expression was low. CB1 mRNA expression was also significantly lower (p<0.05) in endometrium of women with EP compared to intrauterine pregnancies (IUP). Although of 1359G/A (rs1049353) polymorphisms of CNR1 gene suggests differential distribution of genotypes between the small, available cohorts of women with EP and those with IUP, results were not statistically significant. CONCLUSIONS: CB1 mRNA shows temporal variation in expression in human FT, likely regulated by progesterone. CB1 mRNA is expressed in low levels in both the FT and endometrium of women with EP. We propose that aberrant endocannabinoid-signaling in human FT leads to EP. Furthermore, our finding of reduced mRNA expression along with a possible association between polymorphism genotypes of the CNR1 gene and EP, suggests a possible genetic predisposition to EP that warrants replication in a larger sample pool
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