1,590 research outputs found
I worship, so I download? Idol worship, music purchase and piracy by young consumers in Taiwan
Design/methodology/approach – A stratified, two-stage, cluster sampling procedure was applied to a list of high schools obtained from the Ministry of Education in Taiwan. A return rate of 80 per cent yielded 723 usable questionnaires, the data from which were analysed by the LISREL structural equation modelling software. Findings – The results suggest that both social worship and personal worship have a significant and positive impact on the intention to purchase music. However, personal worship has a negative impact on the intention to pirate music while social worship appears to strengthen it. Research limitations/implications – The findings suggest that idol worship is more complex than previously understood. The constructs chosen in this research should be seen only as a snapshot but other variables such as vanity trait, autonomy, romanticism or involvement are not taken into account. Future studies would benefit from inclusion of these variables and a wider geographical scope. Practical implications – The findings contain many implications to help marketing executives and planners better revise their existing marketing and communication strategies to increase their revenue. Originality/value – Existing research has tended to examine the impact of idol worship as a whole on the reduction of music piracy, but overlook the two-dimensional aspects of idol worship, hence ignoring the fact that many music firms have not properly utilised idol worship to deal with the challenges associated with music piracy. The findings broaden existing understanding about the causes of two different dimensions of idol worship and their different impacts on the intention to music piracy
Use of an open-source CAD software program and additive manufacturing technology to design and fabricate a definitive cast for retrofitting a crown to an existing removable partial denture
This technical report describes a digital process for designing and fabricating a stackable definitive cast and die system to facilitate the fabrication of a new surveyed crown to retrofit to a removable partial denture (RPD). By using an open-source computer-aided design (CAD) software program, this technique provides an economical option for dental clinicians and laboratory technicians to use intraoral scans and design a stackable definitive cast and die system with minimal financial investment in the CAD software. In addition, this technique provides the advantage of a conventional indirect technique in that it can create a definitive cast with an RPD clasp assembly ready for the dental technician to properly contour the new surveyed crown, but without the need for the patient to be without the RPD during the process
Electromagnetic induced transparency and slow light in interacting quantum degenerate atomic gases
We systematically develop the full quantum theory for the electromagnetic
induced transparency (EIT) and slow light properties in ultracold Bose and
Fermi gases. It shows a very different property from the classical theory which
assumes frozen atomic motion. For example, the speed of light inside the atomic
gases can be changed dramatically near the Bose-Einstein condensation
temperature, while the presence of the Fermi sea can destroy the EIT effect
even at zero temperature. From experimental point of view, such quantum EIT
property is mostly manifested in the counter-propagating excitation schemes in
either the low-lying Rydberg transition with a narrow line width or in the D2
transitions with a very weak coupling field. We further investigate the
interaction effects on the EIT for a weakly interacting Bose-Einstein
condensate, showing an inhomogeneous broadening of the EIT profile and
nontrivial change of the light speed due to the quantum many-body effects
beyond mean field energy shifts.Comment: 7 figure
Two distinct topological phases in the mixed valence compound YbB6 and its differences from SmB6
We discuss the evolution of topological states and their orbital textures in
the mixed valence compounds SmB6 and YbB6 within the framework of the
generalized gradient approximation plus onsite Coulomb interaction (GGA+U)
scheme for a wide range of values of U. In SmB6, the topological Kondo
insulator (TKI) gap is found to be insensitive to the value of U, but in sharp
contrast, Kondo physics in isostructural YbB6 displays a surprising sensitivity
to U. In particular, as U is increased in YbB6, the correlated TKI state in the
weak-coupling regime transforms into a d-p-type topological insulator phase
with a band inversion between Yb-5d and B-2p orbitals in the intermediate
coupling range, without closing the insulating energy gap throughout this
process. Our theoretical predictions related to the TKI and non-TKI phases in
SmB6 and YbB6 are in substantial accord with recent angle-resolved
photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) experiments.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevB.91.15515
Implantation of platelet-rich fibrin and cartilage granules facilitates cartilage repair in the injured rabbit knee: preliminary report
Effects of Particle Size Fractions on Reducing Heart Rate Variability in Cardiac and Hypertensive Patients
It is still unknown whether the associations between particulate matter (PM) and heart rate variability (HRV) differ by particle sizes with aerodynamic diameters between 0.3 μm and 1.0 μm (PM(0.3–1.0)), between 1.0 μm and 2.5 μm (PM(1.0–2.5)), and between 2.5 μm and 10 μm (PM(2.5–10)). We measured electrocardiographics and PM exposures in 10 patients with coronary heart disease and 16 patients with either prehypertension or hypertension. The outcome variables were standard deviation of all normal-to-normal (NN) intervals (SDNN), the square root of the mean of the sum of the squares of differences between adjacent NN intervals (r-MSSD), low frequency (LF; 0.04–0.15 Hz), high frequency (HF; 0.15–0.40 Hz), and LF:HF ratio for HRV. The pollution variables were mass concentrations of PM(0.3–1.0), PM(1.0–2.5), and PM(2.5–10). We used linear mixed-effects models to examine the association between PM exposures and log(10)-transformed HRV indices, adjusting for key personal and environmental attributes. We found that PM(0.3–1.0) exposures at 1- to 4-hr moving averages were associated with SDNN and r-MSSD in both cardiac and hypertensive patients. For an interquartile increase in PM(0.3–1.0), there were 1.49–4.88% decreases in SDNN and 2.73–8.25% decreases in r-MSSD. PM(0.3–1.0) exposures were also associated with decreases in LF and HF for hypertensive patients at 1- to 3-hr moving averages except for cardiac patients at moving averages of 2 or 3 hr. By contrast, we found that HRV was not associated with either PM(1.0–2.5) or PM(2.5–10). HRV reduction in susceptible population was associated with PM(0.3–1.0) but was not associated with either PM(1.0–2.5) or PM(2.5–10)
Effect of Supplementation of Tanshinone IIA and Sodium Tanshinone IIA Sulfonate on the Anticancer Effect of Epirubicin: An In Vitro Study
Tanshinone IIA (Tan IIA) and sodium tanshinone IIA sulfonate (STS) were found to have protective effects on cardiomyocyte against adriamycin-induced damage and may be used clinically. It is unclear whether the supplementation of STS or Tan IIA would affect the anticancer activity of anthracycline. To evaluate the effect of Tan IIA or STS on the anticancer of epirubicin, the cell viability, apoptosis, Akt expression, and uptake of epirubicin after supplementation of Tan IIA or STS in the epirubicin-treated BT-20 cells were measured and compared. Tan IIA inhibited BT-20 cell growth and induced apoptosis in a time- and dose-dependent manner. When Tan IIA was used with epirubicin, an increase of BT-20 cells apoptosis was accompanied by the decreasing phosphorylation of Akt. STS had no effect on the cell viability of BT-20 cells. However, when used with epirubicin, STS decreased the epirubicin-induced cytotoxicity and apoptosis in BT-20 cells. The antagonistic effect of STS on epirubicin-induced cytotoxicity in BT-20 cells occurred concomitantly with the reduced epirubicin uptake and the increased phosphorylation of Akt. STS decreased the uptake of epirubicin in BT-20 cells and blocked epirubicin-induced apoptosis through activation of Akt
Second-trimester Maternal Serum Quadruple Test for Down Syndrome Screening: A Taiwanese Population-based Study
SummaryObjectiveTo assess the usefulness of quadruple test screening for Down syndrome in Taiwan.Materials and MethodsMaternal serum concentrations of a-fetoprotein, human chorionic gonadotropin, unconjugated estriol, and inhibin A were measured in 21,481 pregnant women from 15 to 20 weeks of gestation.ResultsOf the 21,481 women, 977 returned values greater than the high-risk cut-off value (1 in 270). Most of these women (86.2%) decided to have an invasive procedure for genetic diagnosis. Nine cases of Down syndrome and 19 cases of other chromosomal anomalies were detected prenatally. Two children with Down syndrome were diagnosed after delivery even though a low estimated risk was determined following the quadruple test. The detection rate was 81.8% (nine out of 11 cases), with a 4.4% false-positive rate. The median multiple of the median value for a-fetoprotein, human chorionic gonadotropin, unconjugated estriol and inhibin A were 0.87, 2.34, 0.77 and 2.16, respectively, in affected cases.ConclusionThis is the first study of the quadruple test for Down syndrome in a Chinese population. Our findings suggested that the second-trimester quadruple test provides an effective screening tool for Down syndrome in Taiwan
Bioactive constituent characterization and antioxidant activity of ganoderma lucidum extract fractionated by supercritical carbon dioxide
Ganoderma lucidum has been recognized as a precious fungus in both Chinese and Japanese traditional medicine for centuries. It contains many bioactive ingredients such as triterpenoids and polysaccharides. The present study used supercritical carbon dioxide (SC-CO2) fractionation to fractionate Ganoderma lucidum extract into four fractions (R, F1, F2, & F3) and evaluate the correlation between the content of functional components and their antioxidant ability. Relatively high concentrations of the three types of bioactive constituents were simultaneously partitioned into different fractionation collecting vessels. The free radical scavenging ability was greatest in F1. The IC50 of DPPH scavenging ability was 0.90 mg/mL and that of ABTS radicals scavenging activity was 0.45 mg/mL. The correlation analysis of antioxidant ability with total triterpenoids and total polyphenols showed a positive relationship. In conclusion, this study showed that fractionation of Ganoderma lucidum extract using SC-CO2 fractionation technology was able to effectively partition its bioactive components including triterpenoids, polysaccharides and phenolic compounds and also to increase the antioxidant activities of the fractions
Reduction pathway of cis-5 unsaturated fatty acids in intact rat-liver and rat-heart mitochondria: assessment with stable-isotype-labelled substrates
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