3,292 research outputs found
Music festival motivation in China: free the mind
This paper explores the extent to which music festival attendance is ‘universally’ motivated or determined by the Chinese cultural and socio-political context. A novel qualitative approach was employed comprising observation of social media conversations and ‘chat room’ interviews with members of a festival online community. Seven motivators were identified, some similar to those in Western studies but others more specific to festival-goers in Mainland China. The culturally specific motivators were identified as ‘spiritual escape’ and ‘spiritual pursuit’ and the universal motivators as ‘togetherness’, ‘love of the music’, ‘novel experience’, ‘music sharing’ and ‘educational enrichment’. This paper focuses on the two culturally embedded motivators only. The implications of the study are that, although, growing, there are still very few music festivals featuring ‘pop’ or ‘western’ style music and these few are relatively new to Chinese people. Their attendance at them is, therefore, motivated differently to attendees at similar festivals in western countries. These motivating factors are mediated by the particular social, political and cultural factors at work in this complex country. The findings indicate that although many of the motivational factors for attending a music festival appear to be universal, there are clearly factors which are culturally bound and therefore unique to the cultural context. These differences appear to be created by the social constraints, rapidly changing economy and the many contradictions inherent in modern Mainland China. These conditions create a greater contrast between everyday life in Mainland China and the liminal hedonistic space provided by the festival. Further research is needed to validate theses initial findings within China and to explore how rock music festival motivations differ in other non-western cultures
Domain freezing in potassium dihydrogen phosphate, triglycine sulfate, and CuAlZnNi
The temperature dependence of the dielectric constant and dissipation in potassium dihydrogen phosphate (KDP), its deuterated compound (DKDP), triglycine sulfate (TGS), and TGS doped with α-alanine (LATGS) has been studied at various frequencies. It is found that the relaxation time of domain freezing in KDP and DKDP in the kHz range can be described by the Vogel-Fulcher relation. Evidence of domain freezing in TGS is presented through an analysis of relaxation time related to domain walls and a comparison between TGS and LATGS. Studies of internal friction and compliance show preliminary evidence of domain freezing in CuAlZnNi alloy. A domain-freezing model is proposed based upon the collective pinning of randomly distributed pinning centers to domain walls. Some key experiments related to domain freezing, such as (1) the Vogel-Fulcher relation for relaxation time; (2) the size effect of domain freezing; (3) two kinds of relaxation in low- and high-frequency ranges, respectively; and (4) the dependence of TF on defect density and applied field, etc., are explained.published_or_final_versio
Optimal designs for an additive quadratic mixture model involving the amount of mixture
This paper is concerned with D- and A-optimal designs for a quadratic additive model for experiments with mixtures, in which the response depends not only on the relative proportions but also on the actual amounts of the mixture components. It is found that the origin and vertices of the simplex are support points of these optimal designs, and when the number of mixture components increases, other support points shift gradually from barycentres of depth 1 to barycentres of higher depths. It is shown that the D-optimal designs have high efficiency in terms of A-optimality, and vice versa.published_or_final_versio
Acute oral toxicity and phytochemical study of "Diabenorme" and "Thuquinone" used to treat diabetes
The aim of the study was conducted to search for phytochemicals and evaluate the acute oral toxicity in mice for aqueous extracts of "Diabenorme" and "Thuquinone" used in the treatment of diabetes. "Diabenorme" is a combination of two medicinal plants: Persea americana (Lauraceae) and Anacardium occidentale (Anacardiaceae) while "Thuquinone" is composed of Pycnanthus angolensis (Myristicaceae). Phytochemical analysis was done using standard methods and acute toxicity test (OCDE 423) was performed by a fixed dose procedure consist in administration of three doses of 300, 2000 and 5000 mg/kg body weight of "Diabenorme" and "Thuquinone". Phytochemical analysis showed that the different drugs contained polyphenols, flavonoids, catechin tannins, alkaloids and saponins. Concerning acute toxicity test, no sign of toxicity and mortality were observed during the experiment after limit test of 5000 mg/kg. Thus, there were no significant differences (Fischer test, P ˃ 0.05) in the body weights between the control and treated animals. These results show that the aqueous extracts of "Diabenorme" and "Thuquinone" are potentially safe for oral consumption at acute administration up to dose of 5000 mg/kg. Further investigation is needed to evaluate its sub-acute toxicity.Keywords: Diabenorme, Thuquinone, Phytochemical screening, acute toxicity
Search for K_S K_L in psi'' decays
K_S K_L from psi'' decays is searched for using the psi'' data collected by
BESII at BEPC, the upper limit of the branching fraction is determined to be
B(psi''--> K_S K_L) < 2.1\times 10^{-4} at 90% C. L. The measurement is
compared with the prediction of the S- and D-wave mixing model of the
charmonia, based on the measurements of the branching fractions of J/psi-->K_S
K_L and psi'-->K_S K_L.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figur
Characterization of upstream sequences from the 8S globulin gene of Vigna radiata
Seeds rich in protein in nature, are ideal bioreactors for economic production and storage of valueadded recombinant proteins and enzymes for industries. The upstream region of the seed storage protein gene is able to provide an attractive promoter for seed-specific expression of heterologous genes. Our previous research showed that 8S globulin occupied the majority of total soluble protein stored in seeds of mung bean (Vigna radiata), a rich source of protein, indicating that the promoter of this gene could be a seed-specific promoter with high activity. To improve the expression of heterologous proteins in plants to act as a bioreactor, the putative seed-specific promoter of 8S globulin gene was characterized in this study. Hence, this potential promoter of beta subunit gene of 8S globulin (8SGb) was isolated by genome walking. Analysis with various promoter prediction softwares showed that the promoter sequence possessed many common motifs related to gene transcription in the seed (such as W-box, ABRE element, E-box, etc.). The putative promoter was subsequently cloned into the binary vector pBI121-GFP by replacing the CaMV 35S promoter. The resultant construct designated as pBI-8SGb-GFP was transformed to mung bean cotyledon mesophyll protoplasts. Reporter gene GFP was expressed high in cotyledon protoplasts, which was detected by confocal microscopy, demonstrating the specific activity of 8SGb promoter in driving gene expression. This study also proved that the 8SGb promoter is an efficient regulatory element for plant seeds to act as a bioreactor.Key words: Seed-specific, promoter, genome walking, Vigna radiata
Brief advice and active referral for smoking cessation services among community smokers: a study protocol for randomized controlled trial
published_or_final_versio
Study of psi(2S) decays to X J/psi
Using J/psi -> mu^+ mu^- decays from a sample of approximately 4 million
psi(2S) events collected with the BESI detector, the branching fractions of
psi(2S) -> eta J/psi, pi^0 pi^0 J/psi, and anything J/psi normalized to that of
psi(2S) -> pi^+ pi^- J/psi are measured. The results are B(psi(2S) -> eta
J/psi)/B(psi(2S) -> pi^+ pi^- J/psi) = 0.098 \pm 0.005 \pm 0.010, B(psi(2S) ->
pi^0 pi^0 J/psi)/B(psi(2S) -> pi^+ pi^- J/psi) = 0.570 \pm 0.009 \pm 0.026, and
B(psi(2S) -> anything J/psi)/B(psi(2S) -> pi^+ pi^- J/psi) = 1.867 \pm 0.026
\pm 0.055.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figure
First Measurements of eta_c Decaying into K^+K^-2(pi^+pi^-) and 3(pi^+pi^-)
The decays of eta_c to K^+K^-2(pi^+pi^-) and 3(pi^+pi^-) are observed for the
first time using a sample of 5.8X10^7 J/\psi events collected by the BESII
detector. The product branching fractions are determined to be B(J/\psi-->gamma
eta_c)*B(eta_c-->K^+K^-pi^+pi^-pi^+pi^-)=(1.21+-0.32+-
0.23)X10^{-4}, and (J/\psi-->gamma eta_c)*
B(eta_c-->pi^+pi^-pi^+pi^-pi^+pi^-)= (2.59+-0.32+-0.48)X10^{-4}. The upper
limit for eta_c-->phi pi^+pi^-pi^+pi^- is also obtained as B(J/\psi-->gamma
eta_c)*B(eta_c--> phi pi^+pi^-pi^+pi^-)< 6.03 X10^{-5} at the 90% confidence
level.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Measurement of the Branching Fraction of J/psi --> pi+ pi- pi0
Using 58 million J/psi and 14 million psi' decays obtained by the BESII
experiment, the branching fraction of J/psi --> pi+ pi- pi0 is determined. The
result is (2.10+/-0.12)X10^{-2}, which is significantly higher than previous
measurements.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, RevTex
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