1,975 research outputs found

    Science Education for Citizenship and a Sustainable Future

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    In this article Jerry Wellington argues very strongly in favour of the role of science in citizenship education. He emphasizes the need for knowledge, skills and action and suggests areas and ways in which pupils can be engaged in the struggle for a sustainable future where interdependence and interconnectedness mesh well with notions of equity and justice

    Alien Registration- Wellington, Bertha M. (Portland, Cumberland County)

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    https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/21765/thumbnail.jp

    Alien Registration- Wellington, Bertha M. (Portland, Cumberland County)

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    https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/21765/thumbnail.jp

    Networking strategies in streptomyces coelicolor

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    We are interested the soil dwelling bacteria Streptomyces coelicolor because its cells grow end to end in a line. New branches have the potential to extend from any point along this line and the result is a network of branches and connections. This is a novel form of colonisation in the bacterial world and it is advantageous for spreading through an environment resourcefully. Networking protocols for communication technologies have similar pressures to be resourceful in terms of time, computing power, and energy. In this preliminary investigation we design a computer model of the biological system to understand its limitations and strategies for survival. The decentralised capacity for organisation of both the bacterial system and the model reflects well on the now-popular conventions for path finding and ad hoc network building in human technologies. The project will ultimately become a comparison of strategies between nature and the man-made

    Detection of the inflammation biomarker C-reactive protein in serum samples: Towards an optimal biosensor formula

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    The development of an electrochemical immunosensor for the biomarker, C-reactive protein (CRP), is reported in this work. CRP has been used to assess inflammation and is also used in a multi-biomarker system as a predictive biomarker for cardiovascular disease risk. A gold-based working electrode sensor was developed, and the types of electrode printing inks and ink curing techniques were then optimized. The electrodes with the best performance parameters were then employed for the construction of an immunosensor for CRP by immobilizing anti-human CRP antibody on the working electrode surface. A sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was then constructed after sample addition by using anti-human CRP antibody labelled with horseradish peroxidase (HRP). The signal was generated by the addition of a mediator/substrate system comprised of 3,3,5',5'-Tetramethylbenzidine dihydrochloride (TMB) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). Measurements were conducted using chronoamperometry at -200 mV against an integrated Ag/AgCl reference electrode. A CRP limit of detection (LOD) of 2.2 ng·mL-1 was achieved in spiked serum samples, and performance agreement was obtained with reference to a commercial ELISA kit. The developed CRP immunosensor was able to detect a diagnostically relevant range of the biomarker in serum without the need for signal amplification using nanoparticles, paving the way for future development on a cardiac panel electrochemical point-of-care diagnostic device

    Pathologies Affecting Reef Corals at the Flower Garden Banks, Northwestern Gulf of Mexico

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    The Flower Garden Banks are high-latitude reefs consisting of coral caps on the top of salt domes in the northwestern Gulf of Mexico. Limited studies to date report low incidence of coral disease on these reefs. Surveys were conducted to document the extent of coral diseases throughout the Flower Garden Banks, including types of disease present, species affected, percentage of recent colony mortality, cases of false disease, and descriptions of new pathologies. Very few of the known (or reported) Western Atlantic diseases were found, and they occurred at extremely low frequencies. Tissue-skeletal anomalies were common. Several conditions resembled known diseases, although their appearance was not wholly consistent with described pathologies and they may represent different conditions. Both ridge-mortality disease and rapid wasting disease were confirmed to be the result of fish biting activities. Several novel pathologic conditions that do not fit the description or known etiology of any currently described coral disease were discovered at relatively high prevalence rates. Because of an absence of standardized coral disease nomenclature and the unknown etiology of these novel syndromes, they are tentatively named pale ring, pale patch, and mottling syndromes on the basis of field characteristics

    Reference values for glucose tolerance test in the urban Zimbabwean pregnant woman

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    A clinical study carried out in urban Zimbabwe on how to derive normal glucose values for the normal woman at different gestations of pregnancy.The oral glucose tolerance test is widely used as a screening test for impaired glucose tolerance. Criteria for abnormal results in pregnancy have been documented from different countries and in Zimbabwe, the North American values as proposed by O’Sulluvan and Mahan1 have been adopted. These standards were derived from populations on Western diets; also the glucose load was 100 g, the gestations were unselected and no allowance had been made for altered glucose tolerance with advancing gestation. The standards may also be inappropriate because of the differences in the nutritional status and the dietary habits of the two population groups. Others that have used a glucose load of 50 g have obtained significantly lower values than O’Sullivan and Mahan.2,3 Although in 1979 the WHO expert committee on diabetes4 recommended a standard glucose load of 75 g, many units, including ours, continue to use the 50 g load. The aim of this study was, therefore, to derive normal glucose values for the normal urban Zimbabwean woman at different gestations of pregnancy

    Functional integral over velocities for a spinning particle with and without anomalous magnetic moment in a constant electromagnetic field

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    The technique of functional integration over velocities is applied to the calculation of the propagator of a spinning particle with and without anomalous magnetic moment. A representation for the spin factor is obtained in this context for the particle in a constant electromagnetic field. As a by-product, we also obtain a Schwinger representation for the first case.Comment: latex, 19 page
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