6,975 research outputs found
Events, processes, and the time of a killing
The paper proposes a novel solution to the problem of the time of a killing (ToK), which persistently besets theories of act-individuation. The solution proposed claims to expose a crucial wrong-headed assumption in the debate, according to which ToK is essentially a problem of locating some event that corresponds to the killing. The alternative proposal put forward here turns on recognizing a separate category of dynamic occurents, viz. processes. The paper does not aim to mount a comprehensive defense of process ontology, relying instead on extant defenses. The primary aim is rather to put process ontology to work in diagnosing the current state of play over ToK, and indeed in solving it
Perspective: Vitamin D deficiency and COVIDâ19 severity â plausibly linked by latitude, ethnicity, impacts on cytokines, ACE2 and thrombosis
Background
SARSâCoVâ2 coronavirus infection ranges from asymptomatic through to fatal COVIDâ19 characterized by a âcytokine stormâ and lung failure. Vitamin D deficiency has been postulated as a determinant of severity.
Objectives
To review the evidence relevant to vitamin D and COVIDâ19.
Methods
Narrative review.
Results
Regression modelling shows that more northerly countries in the Northern Hemisphere are currently (May 2020) showing relatively high COVIDâ19 mortality, with an estimated 4.4% increase in mortality for each 1 degree latitude north of 28 degrees North (P = 0.031) after adjustment for age of population. This supports a role for ultraviolet B acting via vitamin D synthesis. Factors associated with worse COVIDâ19 prognosis include old age, ethnicity, male sex, obesity, diabetes and hypertension and these also associate with deficiency of vitamin D or its response. Vitamin D deficiency is also linked to severity of childhood respiratory illness. Experimentally, vitamin D increases the ratio of angiotensinâconverting enzyme 2 (ACE2) to ACE, thus increasing angiotensin II hydrolysis and reducing subsequent inflammatory cytokine response to pathogens and lung injury.
Conclusions
Substantial evidence supports a link between vitamin D deficiency and COVIDâ19 severity but it is all indirect. Communityâbased placeboâcontrolled trials of vitamin D supplementation may be difficult. Further evidence could come from study of COVIDâ19 outcomes in large cohorts with information on prescribing data for vitamin D supplementation or assay of serum unbound 25(OH) vitamin D levels. Meanwhile, vitamin D supplementation should be strongly advised for people likely to be deficient
Galactic Center Radio Constraints on Gamma-Ray Lines from Dark Matter Annihilation
Recent evidence for one or more gamma-ray lines at ~ 130 GeV in the Fermi-LAT
data from the Galactic Center has been interpreted as a hint for dark matter
annihilation to Z{\gamma} or H{\gamma} with an annihilation cross section,
~ 10^{-27} cm^3 s^{-1} . We test this hypothesis by comparing
synchrotron fluxes due to the electrons and positrons from the decay of the Z
or the H boson only in the Galactic Center against radio data from the same
region in the Galactic Center. We find that the radio data from single dish
telescopes marginally constrain this interpretation of the claimed gamma lines
for a contracted NFW profile. Already-operational radio telescopes such as LWA,
VLA-Low and LOFAR, and future radio telescopes like SKA, which are sensitive to
annihilation cross sections as small as 10^{-28} cm^3 s^{-1}, can confirm or
rule out this scenario very soon. We discuss the assumptions on the dark matter
profile, magnetic fields, and background radiation density profiles, and show
that the constraints are relatively robust for any reasonable assumptions.
Independent of the above said recent developments, we emphasize that our radio
constraints apply to all models where dark matter annihilates to Z{\gamma} or
H{\gamma}.Comment: v3: 18 pages, 7 figures. Minor changes. Published in Phys. Rev.
Reliability Analysis in the Presence of Aleatory Uncertainty
This paper proposes a method for modeling a systems response using data. In contrast to approaches that identify a limit state function, we focus on the case in which not all uncertain parameters affecting the response are observable and the measured response is corrupted by noise. To this end, the system response is not characterized by a limit state function but instead by a Random Predictor Model (RPM) having a nonparametric structure. Consequently, the resulting failure probability is not a scalar but a random variable. This variable accounts for the aleatory contributions of the model-form uncertainty and the measurement noise into the response. Furthermore, we propose a framework that enables trading off the predicted range of failure probabilities resulting from such an analysis with a measure of risk. In this context, risk is the percentage of all predicted outcomes the analyst is willing to ignore. The reliability analysis of an aeroelastic structure subject to flutter is used to illustrate the ideas proposed
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A Whole-Genome RNA Interference Screen Reveals a Role for Spry2 in Insulin Transcription and the Unfolded Protein Response.
Insulin production by the pancreatic ÎČ-cell is required for normal glucose homeostasis. While key transcription factors that bind to the insulin promoter are known, relatively little is known about the upstream regulators of insulin transcription. Using a whole-genome RNA interference screen, we uncovered 26 novel regulators of insulin transcription that regulate diverse processes including oxidative phosphorylation, vesicle traffic, and the unfolded protein response (UPR). We focused on Spry2-a gene implicated in human type 2 diabetes by genome-wide association studies but without a clear connection to glucose homeostasis. We showed that Spry2 is a novel UPR target and its upregulation is dependent on PERK. Knockdown of Spry2 resulted in reduced expression of Serca2, reduced endoplasmic reticulum calcium levels, and induction of the UPR. Spry2 deletion in the adult mouse ÎČ-cell caused hyperglycemia and hypoinsulinemia. Our study greatly expands the compendium of insulin promoter regulators and demonstrates a novel ÎČ-cell link between Spry2 and human diabetes
How Reasoning Aims at Truth
Many hold that theoretical reasoning aims at truth. In this paper, I ask what it is for reasoning to be thus aim-directed. Standard answers to this question explain reasoningâs aim-directedness in terms of intentions, dispositions, or rule-following. I argue that, while these views contain important insights, they are not satisfactory. As an alternative, I introduce and defend a novel account: reasoning aims at truth in virtue of being the exercise of a distinctive kind of cognitive power, one that, unlike ordinary dispositions, is capable of fully explaining its own exercises. I argue that this account is able to avoid the difficulties plaguing standard accounts of the relevant sort of mental teleology
Hercules X-1: Pulsed gamma-rays detected above 150 GeV
The 1.24 second binary pulsar Her X-1, first observed in X-rays in 1971 by UHURU has now been seen as a sporadic gamma ray source from 1 TeV up to at least 500 TeV. In addition, reprocessed optical and infrared pulses are seen from the companion star HZ Herculis. Thus measurements of the Her X-1/HZ Herculis system span 15 decades in energy, rivaling both the Crab pulsar and Cygnus X-3 in this respect for a discrete galactic source
THE ROLE OF ANXIETY IN GOLF PUTTING PERFORMANCE
Anxietyâs influence on performance continues to be one of the main research interests for sport psychologists (Hanin, 2000). It is apparent, though, that there is a lack of empirical research characterising the multi-disciplinary effect of anxiety on sports performance. The current study aimed to ascertain biomechanical (accuracy, movement variability) and psychological (anxiety) markers to determine how anxiety affects golf putting
Calcium and Zinc Ion Release from Polyalkenoate Cements Formed from Zinc Oxide/apatite Mixtures
Calcium and zinc ion release from hydroxyapatite-zinc oxide-poly (acrylic acid) (HAZnO-PAA) composite cements into deionised water was investigated as a function of HA content, PAA concentration, PAA molecular weight and maturation time. At any given maturation time, zinc ion release was constant until the HA content was at the maximum loading (60 wt%) resulting in the cement matrix breaking up, allowing exacerbated ion release. The calcium ion release increased with increased HA content in the composite until the maximum loading where the release drops off. Up to this point, the release of both ionic species was proportional to square root time for the initial 24-hour period, indicating that the release is diffusion controlled. In agreement with related data from conventional Glass Polyalkenoate Cements (GPCs), it is the concentration of the PAA, not the molecular weight, that influences ion release from these materials. However, unlike GPCs, the release of the active ions results in a pH rise in the deionised water, more conventionally seen with BioglassŸ and related bioactive glasses. It is this pH rise, caused by the ion exchange of Zn2+ and Ca2+ for H+ from the water, leaving an excess of OH-, that should result in a favourable bioactive response both in vitro and in-vivo. © Springer Science + Business Media, LLC 2006
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