855 research outputs found
Bridging micro, meso, and macro processes in social psychology
In this chapter, we argue that a multilevel analysis of social psychological phenomena, which acknowledges cognition and behavior at macro, meso, and micro levels and the interrelations between them, is necessary. We propose a theoretical synthesis of Identity Process Theory and Social Representations Theory as one way of integrating the three prime levels of analysis and of providing an analysis that is social psychological in essence. We discuss how symbols interact with human identity in the context of the Islamic Veil and the Confederate Flag, and how human rights and duties are communicated and processed in societies. We argue that social representations, or cultural carriers, are continually being transformed, as individuals and groups compete to make their own meaning systems dominant in interpersonal, intergroup, and societal relationships
Citizen surveil-labour: Analysing Crime Stoppers and its alliance of police, media, and publics
Do we understand the incompressibility of neutron-rich matter?
The ``breathing mode'' of neutron-rich nuclei is our window into the
incompressibility of neutron-rich matter. After much confusion on the
interpretation of the experimental data, consistency was finally reached
between different models that predicted both the distribution of isoscalar
monopole strength in finite nuclei and the compression modulus of infinite
matter. However, a very recent experiment on the Tin isotopes at the Research
Center for Nuclear Physics(RCNP) in Japan has again muddled the waters.
Self-consistent models that were successful in reproducing the energy of the
giant monopole resonance (GMR) in nuclei with various nucleon asymmetries (such
as 90Zr, 144Sm, and 208Pb) overestimate the GMR energies in the Tin isotopes.
As important, the discrepancy between theory and experiment appears to grow
with neutron excess. This is particularly problematic as models artificially
tuned to reproduce the rapid softening of the GMR in the Tin isotopes become
inconsistent with the behavior of dilute neutron matter. Thus, we regard the
question of ``why is Tin so soft?'' as an important open problem in nuclear
structure.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, and 1 table. Submitted to the "Focus issue on
Open Problems in Nuclear Structure", Journal of Physics
Nonuniform Neutron-Rich Matter and Coherent Neutrino Scattering
Nonuniform neutron-rich matter present in both core-collapse supernovae and
neutron-star crusts is described in terms of a semiclassical model that
reproduces nuclear-matter properties and includes long-range Coulomb
interactions. The neutron-neutron correlation function and the corresponding
static structure factor are calculated from molecular dynamics simulations
involving 40,000 to 100,000 nucleons. The static structure factor describes
coherent neutrino scattering which is expected to dominate the neutrino
opacity. At low momentum transfers the static structure factor is found to be
small because of ion screening. In contrast, at intermediate momentum transfers
the static structure factor displays a large peak due to coherent scattering
from all the neutrons in a cluster. This peak moves to higher momentum
transfers and decreases in amplitude as the density increases. A large static
structure factor at zero momentum transfer, indicative of large density
fluctuations during a first-order phase transition, may increase the neutrino
opacity. However, no evidence of such an increase has been found. Therefore, it
is unlikely that the system undergoes a simple first-order phase transition. It
is found that corrections to the commonly used single heavy nucleus
approximation first appear at a density of the order of g/cm and
increase rapidly with increasing density. Thus, neutrino opacities are
overestimated in the single heavy nucleus approximation relative to the
complete molecular dynamics simulations.Comment: 17 pages, 23 included ps figure
Influence of agricultural practices and ecological environment on the diversity of the fallows of forest origin (Highlands, Madagascar)
The present study relates to the fallow (kapoka) of forest
origin in western edge of the forested “corridor” Ranomafana-Andringitra on the Malagasy Highlands. The
objectives of this research were to characterize the evolution of the vegetation in the fallows and to describe
the cultivation parameters and those related to the ecological environment in order to determine those which
could infl uence the dynamics of succession. A synchronic approach was adopted: 14 fallow fields of different
ages were retained. Formal investigations and pedological studies were carried out in the fields. The
results showed that: (1) the fallow vegetation can be in a progressive evolution leading to a shrubby and
wooded vegetation when intensity of exploitation, characterized by the cumulated duration of the cultivated
period, mode of tillage, and the age of the fallow, is weak; on the other hand when intensity of exploitation
is high the regressive evolution leading to a grassy formation of pseudo-steppic type occurs; (2) vegetation
diversity within each field in fallow is low (from 3 to 41 species), whereas when scale is changed, total
diversity for the 14 fields is much more important (107 species)La présente étude concerne les jachères (kapoka) d'origine forestière en lisière ouest du « corridor » forestier Ranomafana-Andringitra sur les Hautes-Terres malgaches. Les objectifs de cette recherche sont de caractériser
l'évolution de la végétation dans les jachères et de décrire les paramètres culturaux et liés à la station, afin de déterminer ceux qui pourraient influencer la dynamique de succession. Une approche synchronique a été adoptée: 14 parcelles d'âges différents ont été retenues. Des enquêtes
formelles et des études pédologiques ont été effectuées dans les parcelles. Il ressort des résultats que: (1) la végétation des jachères peut évoluer d'une manière progressive si l'intensité d'exploitation, caractérisée par la durée cumulée de la phase culture, le mode de préparation du sol,
et l'âge de la jachère, est faible, sinon, c'est l'évolution régressive aboutissant à une formation herbeuse de type pseudo-steppe qui l'emporte; (2) la diversité végétale au sein de chaque parcelle en jachère est faible (de 3 à 41 espèces), alors que si l'on change d'échelle, la diversité
totale pour les 14 parcelles est beaucoup plus importante (107 espèces)
PV1 Down-Regulation via shRNA Inhibits the Growth of Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma Xenografts
PV1 is an endothelial-specific protein with structural roles in the formation of diaphragms in endothelial cells of normal vessels. PV1 is also highly expressed on endothelial cells of many solid tumours. On the basis of in vitro data, PV1 is thought to actively participate in angiogenesis. To test whether or not PV1 has a function in tumour angiogenesis and in tumour growth in vivo, we have treated pancreatic tumour-bearing mice by single-dose intratumoural delivery of lentiviruses encoding for two different shRNAs targeting murine PV1. We find that PV1 down-regulation by shRNAs inhibits the growth of established tumours derived from two different human pancreatic adenocarcinoma cell lines (AsPC-1 and BxPC-3). The effect observed is because of down-regulation of PV1 in the tumour endothelial cells of host origin, PV1 being specifically expressed in tumour vascular endothelial cells and not in cancer or other stromal cells. There are no differences in vascular density of tumours treated or not with PV1 shRNA, and gain and loss of function of PV1 in endothelial cells does not modify either their proliferation or migration, suggesting that tumour angiogenesis is not impaired. Together, our data argue that down-regulation of PV1 in tumour endothelial cells results in the inhibition of tumour growth via a mechanism different from inhibiting angiogenesis
Rheological characterization of jet-cooked Lesquerella fendleri seed gum and cornstarch solutions
Abstract Lesquerella is a potential new seed crop that contains hydroxy fatty acid triglycerides and approximately 15% seed coat gums. The polysaccharide gum of the Lesquerella fendleri seed was isolated and jet-cooked with cornstarch in a series of laboratory experiments to investigate the viscoelastic properties of gum-modified starch solutions. The Lesquerella gum was combined with cornstarch at 1, 5, and 10% levels to produce a jet-cooked and drum dried material with potential application as a thickening or suspension agent. Flow curves were determined for 1% solutions of jet-cooked starch and gum combinations. All materials investigated were biodegradable and exhibited positive thixotropic behavior
Structure and Magnetism of well-defined cobalt nanoparticles embedded in a niobium matrix
Our recent studies on Co-clusters embedded in various matrices reveal that
the co-deposition technique (simultaneous deposition of two beams : one for the
pre-formed clusters and one for the matrix atoms) is a powerful tool to prepare
magnetic nanostructures with any couple of materials even though they are
miscible. We study, both sharply related, structure and magnetism of the Co/Nb
system. Because such a heterogeneous system needs to be described at different
scales, we used microscopic and macroscopic techniques but also local selective
absorption ones. We conclude that our clusters are 3 nm diameter f.c.c
truncated octahedrons with a pure cobalt core and a solid solution between Co
and Nb located at the interface which could be responsible for the magnetically
inactive monolayers we found. The use of a very diluted Co/Nb film, further
lithographed, would allow us to achieve a pattern of microsquid devices in view
to study the magnetic dynamics of a single-Co cluster.Comment: 7 TeX pages, 9 Postscript figures, detailed heading adde
Modelling stochastic bivariate mortality
Stochastic mortality, i.e. modelling death arrival via a jump process with stochastic intensity, is gaining increasing reputation as a way to represent mortality risk. This paper represents a first attempt to model the mortality risk of couples of individuals, according to the stochastic intensity approach.
On the theoretical side, we extend to couples the Cox processes set up, i.e. the idea that mortality is driven by a jump process whose intensity is itself a stochastic process, proper of a particular generation within each gender. Dependence between the survival times of the members of a couple is captured by an Archimedean copula.
On the calibration side, we fit the joint survival function by calibrating separately the (analytical) copula and the (analytical) margins. First, we select the best fit copula according to the methodology of Wang and Wells (2000) for censored data. Then, we provide a sample-based calibration for the intensity, using a time-homogeneous, non mean-reverting, affine process: this gives the analytical marginal survival functions. Coupling the best fit copula with the calibrated margins we obtain, on a sample generation, a joint survival function which incorporates the stochastic nature of mortality improvements and is far from representing independency.On the contrary, since the best fit copula turns out to be a Nelsen one, dependency is increasing with age and long-term dependence exists
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