242 research outputs found

    Narrator Myopia in “Goodwood Comes Back”

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    In “Goodwood Comes Back,” Warren creates an emotionally myopic narrator whose inability to see Goodwood for who he really is ironically points to the fact that, however short-lived, Goodwood’s personal comeback has been as triumphant as his foray into baseball. The contrast between Goodwood’s intimate knowledge of baseball and the narrator’s ignorance of the game sets the narrator up as a foil to Goodwood. His limitations only serve to highlight Goodwood’s accomplishments

    From Gent to Gentil: Jed Tewksbury and the Function of Literary Allusion in A Place to Come To

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    A Latin aficionado, medieval scholar, and college professor, protagonist Tewksbury struggles emotionally to sort through his often sordid past. In the process, his allusions to a French chante fable, Virgil\u27s Aeneid, and Dante\u27s Divine Comedy illuminate both his sinning and his awakening to the power of redemptive love

    Kirigami Actuators

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    Thin elastic sheets bend easily and, if they are patterned with cuts, can deform in sophisticated ways. Here we show that carefully tuning the location and arrangement of cuts within thin sheets enables the design of mechanical actuators that scale down to atomically-thin 2D materials. We first show that by understanding the mechanics of a single, non-propagating crack in a sheet we can generate four fundamental forms of linear actuation: roll, pitch, yaw, and lift. Our analytical model shows that these deformations are only weakly dependent on thickness, which we confirm with experiments at centimeter scale objects and molecular dynamics simulations of graphene and MoS2_{2} nanoscale sheets. We show how the interactions between non-propagating cracks can enable either lift or rotation, and we use a combination of experiments, theory, continuum computational analysis, and molecular dynamics simulations to provide mechanistic insights into the geometric and topological design of kirigami actuators.Comment: Soft Matter, 201

    Design, Stability and Efficacy of a New Targeting Peptide for Nanoparticulate Drug Delivery to SH-SY5Y Neuroblastoma Cells

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    In recent years, rabies virus-derived peptide (RDP) has shown promise as a specific neural cell targeting ligand, however stability of the peptide in human serum was unknown. Herein, we report the molecular modelling and design of an optimised peptide sequence based on interactions of RDP with the α7 subunit of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR). The new sequence, named DAS, designed around a 5-mer sequence which demonstrated optimal nAChR binding in silico, showed greatly improved stability for up to 8 hours in human serum in comparison to RDP, which degraded within 2 hours at 37 °C. In vitro analysis using SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells showed that DAS-conjugated nanoparticles containing the cytotoxic drug doxorubicin (DAS-Dox-NP) displayed significantly enhanced cytotoxicity compared with untargeted doxorubicin-loaded nanoparticles (Dox-NP). DAS-Dox-NP had no significant effect on non-neural cell types, confirming its neural-specific targeting properties. In this manuscript, we report the design and testing of an optimised peptide ligand, conjugated to a nanoparticulate delivery vehicle and specifically targeted to neural cells. Future impact of an innovative targeting peptide ligand combining the ability to selectively identify the target and facilitate cellular internalisation could enable the successful treatment of many neural cell disorders

    A Neurodisparity Index of Nationwide Access to Neurological Health Care in Northern Ireland.

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    Nationwide disparities in managing neurological patients have rarely been reported. We compared neurological health care between the population who reside in a Health and Social Care Trust with a tertiary neuroscience center and those living in the four non-tertiary center Trusts in Northern Ireland. Using the tertiary center Trust population as reference, neurodisparity indices (NDIs) defined as the number of treated patients resident in each Trust per 100,000 residents compared to the same ratio in the tertiary center Trust for a fixed time period. NDIs were calculated for four neurological pathways-intravenous thrombolysis (iv-tPA) and mechanical thrombectomy (MT) for acute ischemic stroke (AIS), disease modifying treatment (DMT) in multiple sclerosis (MS) and admissions to a tertiary neurology ward. Neurological management was recorded in 3,026 patients. Patients resident in the tertiary center Trust were more likely to receive AIS treatments (iv-tPA and MT) and access to the neurology ward (p < 0.001) than patients residing in other Trusts. DMT use for patients with MS was higher in two non-tertiary center Trusts than in the tertiary center Trust. There was a geographical gradient for MT for AIS patients and ward admissions. Averaged NDIs for non-tertiary center Trusts were: 0.48 (95%CI 0.32-0.71) for patient admissions to the tertiary neurology ward, 0.50 (95%CI 0.38-0.66) for MT in AIS patients, 0.78 (95%CI 0.67-0.92) for iv-tPA in AIS patients, and 1.11 (95%CI 0.99-1.26) for DMT use in MS patients. There are important neurodisparities in Northern Ireland, particularly for MT and tertiary ward admissions. Neurologists and health service planners should be aware that geography and time-dependent management of neurological patients worsen neurodisparities
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