339 research outputs found
Correlations, Fluctuations, and Flow Measurements from the STAR Experiment
New measurements of short-range and long-range two-particle correlations,
azimuthal anisotropy, and event-by-event fluctuations from the STAR experiment
for sqrt{s_{NN}}= 130 and 200 GeV Au+Au collisions are summarized. Striking
evidence is presented for large, non-statistical fluctuations in mean
transverse momentum. Descriptions of the data in terms of phenomenological
source function models are also presented.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, Conference proceedin
Phytoplankton communities and acclimation in a cyclonic eddy in the southwest Indian Ocean
A study of phytoplankton in a cyclonic eddy was undertaken in the Mozambique Basin between Madagascar and southern Africa during austral winter. CHEMTAX analysis of pigment data indicated that the community comprised mainly haptophytes and diatoms, with Prochlorococcus, prasinophytes and pelagophytes also being prominent to the east and west of the eddy. There was little difference in community structure, chlorophyll-specific absorption [a*ph(440)] and pigment:TChla ratios between the surface and the sub-surface chlorophyll maximum (SCM), reflecting acclimation to fluctuating light conditions in a well mixed upper layer. Values for a*ph(440) were low for diatom dominance, high where prokaryote proportion was high, and intermediate for flagellate dominated communities. Chlorophyll c and fucoxanthin:TChla ratios were elevated over most of the eddy, while 19′-hexanoyloxyfucoxanthin ratios increased in the eastern and western sectors. In a community comprising mainly flagellates and Prochlorococcus to the west of the eddy, there was high a*ph(440) at the surface and elevated ratios for divinyl chlorophyll a, chlorophyll b and 19′-hexanoyloxyfucoxanthin at the SCM. An increase in diadinoxanthin:TChla ratios and a decline in the quantum efficiency of photochemistry in PSII under high light conditions, indicated some photoprotection and photoinhibition at the surface even in a well mixed environment. Diadinoxanthin was the main photoprotective carotenoid within the eddy, while zeaxanthin was the dominant photoprotective pigment outside the eddy. The results of this study will be useful inputs into appropriate remote sensing models for estimating primary production and the size class distribution of phytoplankton in eddies in the southwest Indian Ocean
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Work relations and the multiple dimensions of the work-life boundary: Hairstyling at home
This article proposes a multidimensional approach to analysis of the work-life boundary and examines the affects of particular social and organizational relations on the preservation or porous-ness of different dimensions. In line with Nippert-Eng (1996), it is suggested that different dimensions of the boundary are reinforced or weakened by different social and organizational pressures. Analysis describes a specific type of multidimensional breaching – instances when work is taken outside of the worksite (spatial breaching) and is carried out outside of work-time (temporal breaching). Empirical research was conducted among hairstylists working in salons and barbershops in a city in the North of England. Because of the nature of the tasks involved in hairstyling – that the skills involved are widely exchangeable and so may be employed in extra-work environments and temporalities – hairstylists provide a nice site for investigating the circumstances when this does (or does not) occur. Data collection involved a comprehensive self-completion survey of salons and barbershops in the city (response rate: 40%; N=132) and semi-structured interviews with 70 stylists working in 52 salons or barbershops. Findings demonstrate that work relations (hairstylists’ structural relations of production – whether a worker is an owner-proprietor, chair-renter, on-commission stylist, basic-only stylist, or trainee) are critical in determining both workers’ ability and desire to resist the seepage of work into their social lives as well as the particular dimensions of the boundary that are breached. This is because work relations affect the relative importance of four identified motivations for taking work out of the salon (income production; training; inter-personal reciprocity rooted in social relations; and inter-personal reciprocity rooted in the workplace)
Environmental influence on phytoplankton communities in the northern Benguela ecosystem
An investigation of surface phytoplankton communities was undertaken on the shelf of the northern Benguela upwelling ecosystem during austral autumn (May) and spring (September), along latitudinal transects at 20° S and 23° S, from 2 to 70 nautical miles offshore, as well as on a zigzag grid located between these transects. Microscopic identification of the phytoplankton and CHEMTAX analysis of pigment biomarkers were used to characterise the community composition. During May 2014, warmer, more-saline water with a shallower upper mixed layer corresponding to periods of less-intense offshore Ekman transport was encountered on the shelf. Satellite imagery indicated high phytoplankton biomass extending for a considerable distance from the coast, and CHEMTAX indicated diatoms as dominant at most of the stations (52–92%), although dinoflagellates were dominant at some inshore localities (57–74%). Species of Chaetoceros, Bacteriastrum and Cylindrotheca were the most abundant, with abundance of the Pseudo-nitzschia ‘seriata-group’ being particularly high at a number of stations. In September 2014, more-intense wind-forcing resulted in a deeper upper mixed layer and stronger upwelling of colder, less-saline water. Elevated phytoplankton biomass was confined close to the coast, where diatoms accounted for most of the population (54–87%), whereas small flagellates, such as prasinophytes, haptophytes and cryptophytes, as well as the cyanobacterium Synechococcus, dominated the communities (58–90%) farther from the coast. It is hypothesised that stronger upwelling and deeper vertical mixing in September of that year were not conducive for widespread diatom growth, and that small flagellates populated the water column by being entrained from offshore onto the shelf in the upwelled water that moved in towards the coast
Mid-infrared optical parametric amplifier using silicon nanophotonic waveguides
All-optical signal processing is envisioned as an approach to dramatically
decrease power consumption and speed up performance of next-generation optical
telecommunications networks. Nonlinear optical effects, such as four-wave
mixing (FWM) and parametric gain, have long been explored to realize
all-optical functions in glass fibers. An alternative approach is to employ
nanoscale engineering of silicon waveguides to enhance the optical
nonlinearities by up to five orders of magnitude, enabling integrated
chip-scale all-optical signal processing. Previously, strong two-photon
absorption (TPA) of the telecom-band pump has been a fundamental and
unavoidable obstacle, limiting parametric gain to values on the order of a few
dB. Here we demonstrate a silicon nanophotonic optical parametric amplifier
exhibiting gain as large as 25.4 dB, by operating the pump in the mid-IR near
one-half the band-gap energy (E~0.55eV, lambda~2200nm), at which parasitic
TPA-related absorption vanishes. This gain is high enough to compensate all
insertion losses, resulting in 13 dB net off-chip amplification. Furthermore,
dispersion engineering dramatically increases the gain bandwidth to more than
220 nm, all realized using an ultra-compact 4 mm silicon chip. Beyond its
significant relevance to all-optical signal processing, the broadband
parametric gain also facilitates the simultaneous generation of multiple
on-chip mid-IR sources through cascaded FWM, covering a 500 nm spectral range.
Together, these results provide a foundation for the construction of
silicon-based room-temperature mid-IR light sources including tunable
chip-scale parametric oscillators, optical frequency combs, and supercontinuum
generators
Latitudinal variability and adaptation of phytoplankton in the Atlantic Ocean
This study assessed the variability of a range of phytoplankton groups between repeat cruises over the mid�Atlantic Ocean (50◦N-50◦S), and demonstrated the important contribution of the pico-phytoplankton to the
microalgal biomass in the oligotrophic tropical and sub-tropical regions. Pigment data from two meridional
transects were analysed by quantitative chemotaxonomic analysis (CHEMTAX) to yield information concerning
the composition of phytoplankton communities along the transects. Total chlorophyll a (TChla) in Octo�ber–November 2012 (AMT22) and 2013 (AMT23) varied from 0.03 mg m− 3 in the southern Sub-Tropical Gyre to
1.13 and 1.92 mg m− 3 at 40o
S and 42o
S respectively. Synechococcus accounted for 35–50% and Prochlorococcus
30–35% of the TChla in oligotrophic surface waters on AMT22, while haptophytes dominated the temperate
regions. Prochlorococcus was dominant (30–60%) on AMT23, with Synechococcus contributing 20–40% and
haptophytes 10–20%, and it was noted that the dominance of Prochlorococcus occurred in water masses where
the inorganic nitrate concentrations were extremely low (≤0.02 mmol m− 3
). Prochlorococcus and haptophytes
dominated the deep chlorophyll maximum (DCM) on AMT22, with the Synechococcus proportion being low,
while Prochlorococcus was generally dominant on AMT23, although Synechococcus and haptophytes were also
prominent. Photo-pigment indices indicated that chlorophyll b was mainly associated with Prochlorococcus but
also related to prasinophytes. Chlorophyll c and photosynthetic carotenoids increased with an increase in the
proportion of haptophytes and to a lesser extent with the proportion of diatoms and pelagophytes. Pro�chlorococcus and Synechococcus were the main contributors to the photoprotective carotenoids and relationships
indicated that Synechococcus accounted for more of this pool in 2012, but the Prochlorococcus contribution was
greater in 2013. Temperature, stratification, nutrients and light appeared to be the main hydrographic variables
influencing phytoplankton composition along the transects
Telomeric expression sites are highly conserved in trypanosoma brucei
Subtelomeric regions are often under-represented in genome sequences of eukaryotes. One of the best known examples of the use of telomere proximity for adaptive purposes are the bloodstream expression sites (BESs) of the African trypanosome Trypanosoma brucei. To enhance our understanding of BES structure and function in host adaptation and immune evasion, the BES repertoire from the Lister 427 strain of T. brucei were independently tagged and sequenced. BESs are polymorphic in size and structure but reveal a surprisingly conserved architecture in the context of extensive recombination. Very small BESs do exist and many functioning BESs do not contain the full complement of expression site associated genes (ESAGs). The consequences of duplicated or missing ESAGs, including ESAG9, a newly named ESAG12, and additional variant surface glycoprotein genes (VSGs) were evaluated by functional assays after BESs were tagged with a drug-resistance gene. Phylogenetic analysis of constituent ESAG families suggests that BESs are sequence mosaics and that extensive recombination has shaped the evolution of the BES repertoire. This work opens important perspectives in understanding the molecular mechanisms of antigenic variation, a widely used strategy for immune evasion in pathogens, and telomere biology
Breeding value prediction for production traits in layer chickens using pedigree or genomic relationships in a reduced animal model
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Genomic selection involves breeding value estimation of selection candidates based on high-density SNP genotypes. To quantify the potential benefit of genomic selection, accuracies of estimated breeding values (EBV) obtained with different methods using pedigree or high-density SNP genotypes were evaluated and compared in a commercial layer chicken breeding line.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>The following traits were analyzed: egg production, egg weight, egg color, shell strength, age at sexual maturity, body weight, albumen height, and yolk weight. Predictions appropriate for early or late selection were compared. A total of 2,708 birds were genotyped for 23,356 segregating SNP, including 1,563 females with records. Phenotypes on relatives without genotypes were incorporated in the analysis (in total 13,049 production records).</p> <p>The data were analyzed with a Reduced Animal Model using a relationship matrix based on pedigree data or on marker genotypes and with a Bayesian method using model averaging. Using a validation set that consisted of individuals from the generation following training, these methods were compared by correlating EBV with phenotypes corrected for fixed effects, selecting the top 30 individuals based on EBV and evaluating their mean phenotype, and by regressing phenotypes on EBV.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Using high-density SNP genotypes increased accuracies of EBV up to two-fold for selection at an early age and by up to 88% for selection at a later age. Accuracy increases at an early age can be mostly attributed to improved estimates of parental EBV for shell quality and egg production, while for other egg quality traits it is mostly due to improved estimates of Mendelian sampling effects. A relatively small number of markers was sufficient to explain most of the genetic variation for egg weight and body weight.</p
Identifying metabolite markers for preterm birth in cervicovaginal fluid by magnetic resonance spectroscopy
Introduction Preterm birth (PTB) may be preceded by
changes in the vaginal microflora and metabolite profiles.
Objectives We sought to characterise the metabolite
profile of cervicovaginal fluid (CVF) of pregnant women
by 1H NMR spectroscopy, and assess their predictive value
for PTB.
Methods A pair of high-vaginal swabs was obtained from
pregnant women with no evidence of clinical infection and
grouped as follows: asymptomatic low risk (ALR) women
with no previous history of PTB, assessed at 20–22 gestational
weeks, g.w., n = 83; asymptomatic high risk
(AHR) women with a previous history of PTB, assessed at
both 20–22 g.w., n = 71, and 26–28 g.w., n = 58; and
women presenting with symptoms of preterm labor (PTL)
(SYM), assessed at 24–36 g.w., n = 65. Vaginal secretions
were dissolved in phosphate buffered saline and scanned
with a 9.4 T NMR spectrometer.
Results Six metabolites (lactate, alanine, acetate, glutamine/glutamate,
succinate and glucose) were analysed. In
all study cohorts vaginal pH correlated with lactate integral
(r = -0.62, p\0.0001). Lactate integrals were higher in
the term ALR compared to the AHR (20–22 g.w.) women
(p = 0.003). Acetate integrals were higher in the preterm
versus term women for the AHR (20–22 g.w.) (p = 0.048)
and SYM (p = 0.003) groups; and was predictive of
PTB\37 g.w. (AUC 0.78; 95 % CI 0.61–0.95), and
delivery within 2 weeks of the index assessment (AUC
0.84; 95 % CI 0.64–1) in the SYM women, whilst other
metabolites were not.
Conclusion High CVF acetate integral of women with
symptoms of PTL appears predictive of preterm delivery,
as well as delivery within 2 weeks of presentation
Antibiotic treatment of bacterial vaginosis to prevent preterm delivery: Systematic review and individual participant data meta-analysis.
BACKGROUND: Bacterial vaginosis (BV) increases preterm delivery (PTD) risk, but treatment trials showed mixed results in preventing PTD.
OBJECTIVES: Determine, using individual participant data (IPD), whether BV treatment during pregnancy reduced PTD or prolonged time-to-delivery.
DATA SOURCES: Cochrane Systematic Review (2013), MEDLINE, EMBASE, journal searches, and searches (January 2013-September 2022) ("bacterial vaginosis AND pregnancy") of (i) clinicaltrials.gov; (ii) Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials; (iii) World Health Organization International Clinical Trials Registry Platform Portal; and (iv) Web of Science ("bacterial vaginosis").
STUDY SELECTION AND DATA EXTRACTION: Studies randomising asymptomatic pregnant individuals with BV to antibiotics or control, measuring delivery gestation. Extraction was from original data files. Bias risk was assessed using the Cochrane tool. Analysis used "one-step" logistic and Cox random effect models, adjusting gestation at randomisation and PTD history; heterogeneity by I2 . Subgroup analysis tested interactions with treatment. In sensitivity analyses, studies not providing IPD were incorporated by "multiple random-donor hot-deck" imputation, using IPD studies as donors.
RESULTS: There were 121 references (96 studies) with 23 eligible trials (11,979 participants); 13 studies (6915 participants) provided IPD; 12 (6115) were incorporated. Results from 9 (4887 participants) not providing IPD were imputed. Odds ratios for PTD for metronidazole and clindamycin versus placebo were 1.00 (95% CI 0.84, 1.17), I2 = 62%, and 0.59 (95% CI 0.42, 0.82), I2 = 0 before; and 0.95 (95% CI 0.81, 1.11), I2 = 59%, and 0.90 (95% CI: 0.72, 1.12), I2 = 0, after imputation. Time-to-delivery did not differ from null with either treatment. Including imputed IPD, there was no evidence that either drug was more effective when administered earlier, or among those with a PTD history.
CONCLUSIONS: Clindamycin, but not metronidazole, was beneficial in studies providing IPD, but after imputing data from missing IPD studies, treatment of BV during pregnancy did not reduce PTD, nor prolong pregnancy, in any subgroup or when started earlier in gestation
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