1,214 research outputs found
Random walks on finite quantum groups
Of central interest in the study of random walks on finite groups are ergodic random walks. Ergodic random walks converge to random in the sense that as the number of transitions grows to infinity, the state-distribution converges to the uniform distribution on G. The study of random walks on finite groups is generalised to the study of random walks on quantum groups. Quantum groups are neither groups nor sets and rather what are studied are finite dimensional algebras that have the same properties as the algebra of functions on an actual group â except for commutativity. The concept of a random walk converging to random â and a metric for measuring the distance to random after k transitions â is generalised from the classical case to the case of random walks on quantum groups. A central tool in the study of ergodic random walks on finite groups is the Upper Bound Lemma of Diaconis and Shahshahani. The Upper Bound Lemma uses the representation theory of the group to generate upper bounds for the distance to random and thus can be used to determine convergence rates for ergodic walks. The representation theory of quantum groups is very well understood and is remarkably similar to the representation theory of classical groups. This allows for a generalisation of the Upper Bound Lemma to an Upper Bound Lemma for quantum groups. The Quantum DiaconisâShahshahani Upper Bound Lemma is used to study the convergence of ergodic random walks on classical groups Zn, Z n 2 , the dual group Scn as well as the âtrulyâ quantum groups of Kac and Paljutkin and Sekine. Note that for all of these generalisations, restricting to commutative subalgebras gives the same definitions and results as the classical theory
Minimizing Effective Many-Body Interactions
A simple two-level model is developed and used to test the properties of
effective interactions for performing nuclear structure calculations in
truncated model spaces. It is shown that the effective many-body interactions
sensitively depend on the choice of the single-particle basis and they appear
to be minimized when a self- consistent Hartree-Fock basis is used.Comment: (15 pages of text and 1 postscript figure (Figure available upon
request), Preprint Number not assigned ye
Evidence that the multifunctional polypeptides of vertebrate and fungal fatty acid synthases have arisen by independent gene fusion events
AbstractThe enoyl reductase (NADPH binding site) of rabbit mammary fatty acid synthase has been radioactively labelled using pyridoxal phosphate and sodium [3H]borohydride. Using this method we have been able to add this site to the four sites whose location has already been mapped within the multifunctional polypeptide chain of the protein. The results show that the enoyl reductase lies between the 3-oxoacylsynthase and the acyl carrier. This confirms that the active sites occur in a different order on the single multifunctional polypeptide of vertebrate fatty acid synthase and the two multifunctional polypeptides of fungal fatty acid synthase, and suggests that these two systems have arisen by independent gene fusion events
Long Term Functional and Esthetic Outcomes After Fibula Free Flap Reconstruction of the Mandible
Objectives: To report functional and esthetic outcomes, after fibula free flap (FFF) reconstruction of the mandible for oral cancer, assessed by physicians, non-clinicians and patients.
Materials and Methods: Twenty-five long term survivors from oral cancer after FFF reconstruction were recalled for head and neck examination by surgeons and patient reported outcomes, using EORTC, QLQ C-30, H&N-35 and FACE-Q questionnaires.
Results: Physicians reported 64% restoration of functionality compared to normal. Patients reported high scores on QLQ-C30, but lower scores on H&N-35. Esthetic scores were reported higher by clinicians than non-clinicians. The decline in function and appearance was attributed to loss of lower dentition, trismus, mal occlusion, xerostomia and tissue atrophy.
Conclusion: To minimize the decline in function and appearance, immediate dental implants in FFF, better reconstruction of the temporomandibular joint, newer methods of radiotherapy to minimize xerostomia and oral exercises to prevent trismus should be considered
Rebuttal to Hasan and Pedraza in comments and controversies: "Improving the reliability of manual and automated methods for hippocampal and amygdala volume measurements"
Here we address the critiques offered by Hasan and Pedraza to our recently published manuscript comparing the performance of two automated segmentation programs, FSL/FIRST and FreeSurfer (Morey R, Petty C, Xu Y, Pannu Hayes J, Wagner H, Lewis D, LaBar K, Styner M, McCarthy G. (2009): A comparison of automated segmentation and manual tracing for quantifying of hippocampal and amygdala volumes. Neuroimage 45:855-866). We provide an assessment and discussion of their specific critiques. Hasan and Pedraza bring up some important points concerning our omission of sample demographic features and inclusion of left and right hemisphere volumes as independent measures in correlational analyses. We present additional data on demographic attributes of our sample and correlations analyzed separately on left and right hemispheres of the amygdala and hippocampus. While their commentary aids the reader to more critically asses our study, it falls short of substantiating that our omissions ought to lead readers to significantly revise their interpretations. Further research will help to disentangle the advantages and limitations of the various freely-available automated segmentation software packages
Control of ZnO nanowire arrays by nanosphere lithography (NSL) on laser-produced ZnO substrates
Nanosphere lithography (NSL) is a successful technique for fabricating highly ordered arrays of ZnO nanowires typically on sapphire and GaN substrates. In this work, we investigate the use of thin ZnO films deposited on Si by pulsed laser deposition (PLD) as the substrate. This has a number of advantages over the alternatives above, including cost and potential scalability of production and it removes any issue of inadvertent n-type doping of nanowires by diffusion from the substrate. We demonstrate ordered arrays of ZnO nanowires, on ZnO-coated substrates by PLD, using a conventional NSL technique with gold as the catalyst. The
nanowires were produced by Vapor Phase Transport (VPT) growth in a tube furnace system and grew only on the areas pre-patterned by Au. We have also investigated the growth of ZnO nanowires using ZnO catalyst points deposited by PLD through an NSL mask on a bare silicon substrate
Simple approximation for the starting-energy-independent two-body effective interaction with applications to 6Li
We apply the Lee-Suzuki iteration method to calculate the linked-folded
diagram series for a new Nijmegen local NN potential. We obtain an exact
starting-energy-independent effective two-body interaction for a multi-shell,
no-core, harmonic-oscillator model space. It is found that the resulting
effective-interaction matrix elements can be well approximated by the Brueckner
G-matrix elements evaluated at starting energies selected in a simple way.
These starting energies are closely related to the energies of the initial
two-particle states in the ladder diagrams. The ``exact'' and approximate
effective interactions are used to calculate the energy spectrum of 6Li in
order to test the utility of the approximate form.Comment: 15 text pages and 2 PostScript figures (available upon request).
University of Arizona preprint, Number unassigne
Lumbar posture and trunk muscle activation during static and dynamic seated tasks on a novel dynamic ergonomic chair
peer-reviewedLow back pain (LBP) is a common musculoskeletal disorder and prolonged sitting often aggravates LBP. A novel dynamic ergonomic chair (âBack Appâ), which facilitates less hip flexion while sitting on an unstable base has been developed. This study compared lumbar posture and trunk muscle activation on this novel chair with a standard backless office chair. Twelve painfree participants completed a typing task on both chairs. Lumbar posture and trunk muscle activation were collected simultaneously and were analysed using paired t-tests. Sitting on the novel dynamic chair significantly (p 0.05) between chairs. Maintaining lordosis with less muscle activation during prolonged sitting could reduce the fatigue associated with upright sitting postures. Studies with longer sitting durations, and in people with LBP, are required.
Practitioner Summary: Sitting on a novel dynamic chair resulted in less lumbar flexion and less back muscle activation than sitting on a standard backless office chair during a typing task among pain-free participants. Facilitating lordotic sitting with less muscle activation may reduce the fatigue and discomfort often associated with lordotic sitting postures.ACCEPTEDpeer-reviewe
Scattering of dipole-mode vector solitons: Theory and experiment
We study, both theoretically and experimentally, the scattering properties of
optical dipole-mode vector solitons - radially asymmetric composite
self-trapped optical beams. First, we analyze the soliton collisions in an
isotropic two-component model with a saturable nonlinearity and demonstrate
that in many cases the scattering dynamics of the dipole-mode solitons allows
us to classify them as ``molecules of light'' - extremely robust spatially
localized objects which survive a wide range of interactions and display many
properties of composite states with a rotational degree of freedom. Next, we
study the composite solitons in an anisotropic nonlinear model that describes
photorefractive nonlinearities, and also present a number of experimental
verifications of our analysis.Comment: 8 pages + 4 pages of figure
Trispecific antibody targeting HIV-1 and T cells activates and eliminates latently-infected cells in HIV/SHIV infections.
Agents that can simultaneously activate latent HIV, increase immune activation and enhance the killing of latently-infected cells represent promising approaches for HIV cure. Here, we develop and evaluate a trispecific antibody (Ab), N6/αCD3-αCD28, that targets three independent proteins: (1) the HIV envelope via the broadly reactive CD4-binding site Ab, N6; (2) the T cell antigen CD3; and (3) the co-stimulatory molecule CD28. We find that the trispecific significantly increases antigen-specific T-cell activation and cytokine release in both CD4 <sup>+</sup> and CD8 <sup>+</sup> T cells. Co-culturing CD4 <sup>+</sup> with autologous CD8 <sup>+</sup> T cells from ART-suppressed HIV <sup>+</sup> donors with N6/αCD3-αCD28, results in activation of latently-infected cells and their elimination by activated CD8 <sup>+</sup> T cells. This trispecific antibody mediates CD4 <sup>+</sup> and CD8 <sup>+</sup> T-cell activation in non-human primates and is well tolerated in vivo. This HIV-directed antibody therefore merits further development as a potential intervention for the eradication of latent HIV infection
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