3,162 research outputs found
Collagen biosynthesis.
Collagen is the major structural protein of the lung. At least five genetically distinct collagen types have been identified in lung tissue. However, the precise role of collagen in nonrespiratory lung function is not well understood, in part because of the difficulties inherent in studying lung collagen, regardless of the type of assay used. A major problem is the insolubility of lung collagen; generally less than 20% of total lung collagen can be solubilized as intact chains, even with harsh extraction procedures. Since such collagen may not be representative of total lung collagen, errors in quantitating collagen types, for example, may arise from using such material. Measurement of total lung collagen content may also pose problems, unless appropriate parameters of normalization are chosen. Biopsy dry weight, protein content, and DNA content, for example, may all change in certain disease states. Despite these difficulties, a number of changes in lung collagen have been documented in experimental pulmonary fibrosis, including increased collagen content, increased collagen synthesis rates, and changes in collagen type ratios. Many questions remain. For example, why do diverse toxic substances appear to cause essentially the same fibrotic response, even though initial sites of damage may vary? Conversely, why do similar toxic substances, such as ozone and NO2, cause diverse responses (fibrosis and emphysema, respectively)? Much work remains to be done to elucidate the mechanisms underlying the lung's choice of response
Bloch electron in a magnetic field and the Ising model
The spectral determinant det(H-\epsilon I) of the Azbel-Hofstadter
Hamiltonian H is related to Onsager's partition function of the 2D Ising model
for any value of magnetic flux \Phi=2\pi P/Q through an elementary cell, where
P and Q are coprime integers. The band edges of H correspond to the critical
temperature of the Ising model; the spectral determinant at these (and other
points defined in a certain similar way) is independent of P. A connection of
the mean of Lyapunov exponents to the asymptotic (large Q) bandwidth is
indicated.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, REVTE
Evolving classification of intensive care patients from event data
Objective: This work aims at predicting the patient discharge outcome on each hospitalization day by introducing a new paradigm—evolving classification of event data streams. Most classification algorithms implicitly assume the values of all predictive features to be available at the time of making the prediction. This assumption does not necessarily hold in the evolving classification setting (such as intensive care patient monitoring), where we may be interested in classifying the monitored entities as early as possible, based on the attributes initially available to the classifier, and then keep refining our classification model at each time step (e.g., on daily basis) with the arrival of additional attributes. / Materials and methods: An oblivious read-once decision-tree algorithm, called information network (IN), is extended to deal with evolving classification. The new algorithm, named incremental information network (IIN), restricts the order of selected features by the temporal order of feature arrival. The IIN algorithm is compared to six other evolving classification approaches on an 8-year dataset of adult patients admitted to two Intensive Care Units (ICUs) in the United Kingdom. / Results: Retrospective study of 3452 episodes of adult patients (≥ 16 years of age) admitted to the ICUs of Guy’s and St. Thomas’ hospitals in London between 2002 and 2009. Random partition (66:34) into a development (training) set n = 2287 and validation set n = 1165. Episode-related time steps: Day 0—time of ICU admission, Day x—end of the x-th day at ICU. The most accurate decision-tree models, based on the area under curve (AUC): Day 0: IN (AUC = 0.652), Day 1: IIN (AUC = 0.660), Day 2: J48 decision-tree algorithm (AUC = 0.678), Days 3–7: regenerative IN (AUC = 0.717–0.772). Logistic regression AUC: 0.582 (Day 0)—0.827 (Day 7). / Conclusions: Our experimental results have not identified a single optimal approach for evolving classification of ICU episodes. On Days 0 and 1, the IIN algorithm has produced the simplest and the most accurate models, which incorporate the temporal order of feature arrival. However, starting with Day 2, regenerative approaches have reached better performance in terms of predictive accuracy
Continuity of the measure of the spectrum for quasiperiodic Schrodinger operators with rough potentials
We study discrete quasiperiodic Schr\"odinger operators on \ell^2(\zee)
with potentials defined by -H\"older functions. We prove a general
statement that for and under the condition of positive Lyapunov
exponents, measure of the spectrum at irrational frequencies is the limit of
measures of spectra of periodic approximants. An important ingredient in our
analysis is a general result on uniformity of the upper Lyapunov exponent of
strictly ergodic cocycles.Comment: 15 page
Enhanced ionization in small rare gas clusters
A detailed theoretical investigation of rare gas atom clusters under intense
short laser pulses reveals that the mechanism of energy absorption is akin to
{\it enhanced ionization} first discovered for diatomic molecules. The
phenomenon is robust under changes of the atomic element (neon, argon, krypton,
xenon), the number of atoms in the cluster (16 to 30 atoms have been studied)
and the fluency of the laser pulse. In contrast to molecules it does not
dissappear for circular polarization. We develop an analytical model relating
the pulse length for maximum ionization to characteristic parameters of the
cluster
Suppressed spin dephasing for 2D and bulk electrons in GaAs wires due to engineered cancellation of spin-orbit interaction terms
We report a study of suppressed spin dephasing for quasi-one-dimensional
electron ensembles in wires etched into a GaAs/AlGaAs heterojunction system.
Time-resolved Kerr-rotation measurements show a suppression that is most
pronounced for wires along the [110] crystal direction. This is the fingerprint
of a suppression that is enhanced due to a strong anisotropy in spin-orbit
fields that can occur when the Rashba and Dresselhaus contributions are
engineered to cancel each other. A surprising observation is that this
mechanisms for suppressing spin dephasing is not only effective for electrons
in the heterojunction quantum well, but also for electrons in a deeper bulk
layer.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Double butterfly spectrum for two interacting particles in the Harper model
We study the effect of interparticle interaction on the spectrum of the
Harper model and show that it leads to a pure-point component arising from the
multifractal spectrum of non interacting problem. Our numerical studies allow
to understand the global structure of the spectrum. Analytical approach
developed permits to understand the origin of localized states in the limit of
strong interaction and fine spectral structure for small .Comment: revtex, 4 pages, 5 figure
Childhood Socioeconomic Status and Executive Function in Childhood and Beyond
Socioeconomic status (SES) predicts health, wellbeing, and cognitive ability, including executive function (EF). A body of recent work has shown that childhood SES is positively related to EF, but it is not known whether this disparity grows, diminishes or holds steady over development, from childhood through adulthood. We examined the association between childhood SES and EF in a sample ranging from 9–25 years of age, with six canonical EF tasks. Analyzing all of the tasks together and in functionally defined groups, we found positive relations between SES and EF, and the relations did not vary by age. Analyzing the tasks separately, SES was positively associated with performance in some but not all EF measures, depending on the covariates used, again without varying by age. These results add to a growing body of evidence that childhood SES is associated with EF abilities, and contribute novel evidence concerning the persistence of this association into early adulthood
Almost Sure Frequency Independence of the Dimension of the Spectrum of Sturmian Hamiltonians
We consider the spectrum of discrete Schr\"odinger operators with Sturmian
potentials and show that for sufficiently large coupling, its Hausdorff
dimension and its upper box counting dimension are the same for Lebesgue almost
every value of the frequency.Comment: 12 pages, to appear in Commun. Math. Phy
- …