3,840 research outputs found
Ocean warming and acidification may drag down the commercial Arctic cod fishery by 2100
The Arctic Ocean is an early warning system for indicators and effects of climate change. We use a novel combination of experimental and time-series data on effects of ocean warming and acidification on the commercially important Northeast Arctic cod (Gadus morhua) to incorporate these physiological processes into the recruitment model of the fish population. By running an ecological-economic optimization model, we investigate how the interaction of ocean warming, acidification and fishing pressure affects the sustainability of the fishery in terms of ecological, economic, social and consumer-related indicators, ranging from present day conditions up to future climate change scenarios. We find that near-term climate change will benefit the fishery, but under likely future warming and acidification this large fishery is at risk of collapse by the end of the century, even with the best adaptation effort in terms of reduced fishing pressure.publishedVersio
disrupted relationship with memory performance and potential implications for delusions
Recent concepts have highlighted the role of the hippocampus and adjacent
medial temporal lobe (MTL) in positive symptoms like delusions in
schizophrenia. In healthy individuals, the MTL is critically involved in the
detection and encoding of novel information. Here, we aimed to investigate
whether dysfunctional novelty processing by the MTL might constitute a
potential neural mechanism contributing to the pathophysiology of delusions,
using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in 16 unmedicated patients
with paranoid schizophrenia and 20 age-matched healthy controls. All patients
experienced positive symptoms at time of participation. Participants performed
a visual target detection task with complex scene stimuli in which novel and
familiar rare stimuli were presented randomly intermixed with a standard and a
target picture. Presentation of novel relative to familiar images was
associated with hippocampal activation in both patients and healthy controls,
but only healthy controls showed a positive relationship between novelty-
related hippocampal activation and recognition memory performance after 24 h.
Patients, but not controls, showed a robust neural response in the
orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) during presentation of novel stimuli. Functional
connectivity analysis in the patients further revealed a novelty-related
increase of functional connectivity of both the hippocampus and the OFC with
the rostral anterior cingulate cortex (rACC) and the ventral striatum (VS).
Notably, delusions correlated positively with the difference of the functional
connectivity of the hippocampus vs. the OFC with the rACC. Taken together, our
results suggest that alterations of fronto-limbic novelty processing may
contribute to the pathophysiology of delusions in patients with acute
psychosis
Intensive Induction Chemotherapy Followed by Early High-Dose Therapy and Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation Results in Improved Outcome for Patients with Hepatosplenic T-Cell Lymphoma: A Single Institution Experience
AbstractIntroductionHepatosplenic T-cell lymphoma is a rare form of extranodal non-Hodgkin lymphoma, first recognized as a distinct entity in the Revised European-American Lymphoma classification. Typical presentation includes lymphomatous infiltration of spleen and liver, and peripheral lymphadenopathy is rarely seen. The prognosis is almost uniformly poor, and there are no prospective studies of treatment of HSTCL.Patients and MethodsFor this report, we conducted a retrospective review of all pts who underwent treatment for HSTCL at our institution. Individual chart review was performed to report clinical presentation, management, and outcome.ResultsWe identified 14 pts with HSTCL managed at our center, 7 of which remain alive with median follow-up of 65.6 months. Six of 7 received alternative induction chemotherapy regimens such as ICE (ifosfamide, carboplatin, etoposide) or IVAC (ifosfamide, etoposide, high-dose cytarabine) as opposed to CHOP and all surviving pts had proceeded to undergo either autologous or allogeneic SCT.ConclusionOur results suggest that use of non-CHOP induction regimen and early use of high dose therapy and SCT consolidation may translate to improved survival for pts with HSTCL
Knowledge-Level Reflection
This paper presents an overview of the REFLECT project. It defines the notion of knowledge level reflection that has been central to the project, it compares this notion with existing approaches to reflection in related fields, and investigates some of the consequences of the concept of knowledge level reflection: what is a general architecture for knowledge level reflection, how to model the object component in such an architecture, what is the nature of reflective theories, how can we design such architectures, and what are the results of our actual experiments with such systems
Microscopic quantum point contact formation as the electromigration mechanism in granular superconductor nanowires
Granular aluminium is a high kinetic inductance thin film superconductor which, when formed into nanowires can undergo an intrinsic electromigration process. We use a combination of experimental and computational approaches to investigate the role of grain morphology and distribution in granular aluminium thin films, when formed into nanowire constrictions. Treating the granular aluminium film as a network of randomly distributed resistors with parameters motivated by the film microstructure allows us to model the electrical characteristics of the nanowires. This model provides estimates of the dependence of sheet resistance on grain size and distribution, and the resulting device to device variation for superconducting nanowires. By fabricating a series of different length nanowires, we study the electromigration process as a function of applied current, and then compare directly to the results of our computational model. In doing so we show that the electromigration is driven by the formation of quantum point contacts between metallic aluminium grains
Energetic feedback and Al from massive stars and their supernovae in the Carina region
We study the populations of massive stars in the Carina region and their
energetic feedback and ejection of Al. We did a census of the stellar
populations in young stellar clusters within a few degrees of the Carina
Nebula. For each star we estimated the mass, based on the spectral type and the
host cluster age. We used population synthesis to calculate the energetic
feedback and ejection of Al from the winds of the massive stars and
their supernova explosions. We used 7 years of INTEGRAL observations to measure
the Al signal from the region. The INTEGRAL Al signal is not
significant with a best-fit value of about 1.5e-5 ph/cm^2/s, approximately half
of the published Compton Gamma Ray Observatory (CGRO) result, but in agreement
with the latest CGRO estimates. Our analysis of the stellar populations in the
young clusters leads to an expected signal of half the observed value, but the
results are consistent within 2 sigma. We find that the fraction of Al
ejected in Wolf-Rayet winds is high, and the observed signal is unlikely to be
caused by Al ejected in supernovae alone, indicating a strong wind
ejection of Al. Due to the lack of prominent O stars, regions with ages
10 Myr are often neglected in studies of OB associations. We find that
in the Carina region such clusters contribute significantly to the stellar mass
and the energetics of the region.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
Rabi oscillations in a superconducting nanowire circuit
We investigate the circuit quantum electrodynamics of anharmonic superconducting nanowire oscillators. The sample circuit consists of a capacitively shunted nanowire with a width of about 20 nm and a varying length up to 350 nm, capacitively coupled to an on-chip resonator. By applying microwave pulses we observe Rabi oscillations, measure coherence times and the anharmonicity of the circuit. Despite the very compact design, simple top-down fabrication and high degree of disorder in the oxidized (granular) aluminum material used, we observe lifetimes in the microsecond range
Global QCD Analysis and the CTEQ Parton Distributions
The CTEQ program for the determination of parton distributions through a
global QCD analysis of data for various hard scattering processes is fully
described. A new set of distributions, CTEQ3, incorporating several new types
of data is reported and compared to the two previous sets of CTEQ
distributions. Comparison with current data is discussed in some detail. The
remaining uncertainties in the parton distributions and methods to further
reduce them are assessed. Comparisons with the results of other global analyses
are also presented.Comment: (Change in Latex style only: 2up style removed since many don't have
it.) 35 pages, 23 figures separately submitted as uuencoded compressed
ps-file; Michigan State Report # MSU-HEP/41024 and CTEQ 40
A Transient Sub-Eddington Black Hole X-ray Binary Candidate in the Dust Lanes of Centaurus A
We report the discovery of a bright X-ray transient, CXOU J132527.6-430023,
in the nearby early-type galaxy NGC 5128. The source was first detected over
the course of five Chandra observations in 2007, reaching an unabsorbed
outburst luminosity of 1-2*10^38 erg/s in the 0.5-7.0 keV band before returning
to quiescence. Such luminosities are possible for both stellar-mass black hole
and neutron star X-ray binary transients. Here, we attempt to characterize the
nature of the compact object. No counterpart has been detected in the optical
or radio sky, but the proximity of the source to the dust lanes allows for the
possibility of an obscured companion. The brightness of the source after a >100
fold increase in X-ray flux makes it either the first confirmed transient
non-ULX black hole system in outburst to be subject to detailed spectral
modeling outside the Local Group, or a bright (>10^38 erg/s) transient neutron
star X-ray binary, which are very rare. Such a large increase in flux would
appear to lend weight to the view that this is a black hole transient. X-ray
spectral fitting of an absorbed power law yielded unphysical photon indices,
while the parameters of the best-fit absorbed disc blackbody model are typical
of an accreting ~10 Msol black hole in the thermally dominant state.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
- …