570 research outputs found

    Germination and storage of apple seeds

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    Apple seeds will not germinate immediately after the fruit has become mature enough for picking. It is necessary for the seed to pass thru a stage of after-ripening. The freshly extracted apple seed contains about 85 percent moisture. At room temperature approximately one-half of the moisture is lost during the first five days. Soaking the seed prior to planting does not increase germination. Ninety-one percent of apple seeds prevented from drying out when they were extracted from the fruit germinated. The best temperature for storage was found to be a temperature between 10 and 30 C. Seeds which had air dried germinated poorly in all cases. Apple seeds which had been air dried and kept for a year did not germinate. Apple seeds may be planted any time after Nov. 1. Where seeds are to be shipped long distances, special precaution must be made to keep the seeds from deteriorating. The seed coat is not a factor in causing delayed germination

    Effect of Hormodin A, a growth substance, on the rooting of cuttings

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    Florists, nurserymen and gardeners are deeply interested in recent discoveries that certain chemical compounds, when absorbed into the appropriate living plant tissues, induce or stimulate the initiation of roots. Depending on species, point of application of the chemical and various environmental conditions, roots appear on stems or leaves at points where roots do not ordinarily arise. The chemicals used have been variously designated by different investigators as growth substances (6), hormones (3), phytohormones (28) and auxins (28). When applied to the rootage of cuttings, these substances may have a wide practical use. Some of the most effective growth substances are offered to the trade under proprietary names. This bulletin deals with a series of experiments designed to test, under Iowa conditions, the efficacy of Hormodin A, a widely distributed trade product known to contain an effective growth-promoting chemical, indolebutyric acid, for the rooting of cuttings of many species and varieties of horticultural plants. The project was sponsored by the Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research, located at Yonkers, N. Y., under a cooperative agreement with the Iowa Agricultural Experiment Station. The study covered a period of 2 years and included tests with approximately 50 species and varieties. The immediate objectives of the research were: 1. To discover the most effective concentration of Hormodin A for the rooting of each species or variety; ~. to determine the effect of the treatment on cuttings taken at different stages of maturity; 3. to determine the reaction of cuttings taken at different seasons of the year to the treatments

    Design of a Prostate Cancer Patient Navigation Intervention for a Veterans Affairs Hospital

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    Patient navigation programs have been launched nationwide in an attempt to reduce racial/ethnic and socio-demographic disparities in cancer care, but few have evaluated outcomes in the prostate cancer setting. The National Cancer Institute-funded Chicago Patient Navigation Research Program (C-PNRP) aims to implement and evaluate the efficacy of a patient navigation intervention for predominantly low-income minority patients with an abnormal prostate cancer screening test at a Veterans Affairs (VA) hospital in Chicago

    R-matrix Quantization of the Elliptic Ruijsenaars--Schneider model

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    It is shown that the classical L-operator algebra of the elliptic Ruijsenaars-Schneider model can be realized as a subalgebra of the algebra of functions on the cotangent bundle over the centrally extended current group in two dimensions. It is governed by two dynamical r and rˉ\bar{r}-matrices satisfying a closed system of equations. The corresponding quantum R and R\overline{R}-matrices are found as solutions to quantum analogs of these equations. We present the quantum L-operator algebra and show that the system of equations on R and R\overline{R} arises as the compatibility condition for this algebra. It turns out that the R-matrix is twist-equivalent to the Felder elliptic R^F-matrix with R\overline{R} playing the role of the twist. The simplest representation of the quantum L-operator algebra corresponding to the elliptic Ruijsenaars-Schneider model is obtained. The connection of the quantum L-operator algebra to the fundamental relation RLL=LLR with Belavin's elliptic R matrix is established. As a byproduct of our construction, we find a new N-parameter elliptic solution to the classical Yang-Baxter equation.Comment: latex, 29 pages, some misprints are corrected and the meromorphic version of the quantum L-operator algebra is discusse

    Effect of Acute Heat Exposure on the Pressor Response to a Voluntary Hypoxic Apnea: A Cross-tolerance Study

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    The pressor response induced by a voluntary hypoxic apnea is exaggerated in individuals with obstructive sleep apnea and is strongly correlated to sympathetic overactivity. Acute heat exposure alters neural control of blood pressure, but its effect on the pressor response to a voluntary hypoxic apnea has never been explored. PURPOSE: To test the hypothesis that acute heat exposure attenuates the pressor response to a voluntary hypoxic apnea, and thereby manifest as a form of physiological cross-tolerance. METHODS: Eight adults (3 females, 26 ± 2 yrs) were exposed to passive heat stress (water perfused suit) sufficient to increase body core temperature by 1.2 °C. Voluntary hypoxic apneas were performed in duplicate before acute heat exposure (pre-heat) and in recovery when body core temperature returned to ≤ 0.3 °C of baseline. Participants breathed gas mixtures of varying FiO2 (21%, 16%, and 12%; randomized) for 1 min followed immediately by a 15 s end-expiratory apnea. Beat-by-beat arterial blood pressure (Finometer) and arterial oxygen saturation (finger pulse oximetry) were measured throughout. The pressor response was calculated as the difference between baseline mean arterial pressure and the peak response following each apnea. RESULTS: The change in arterial oxygen saturation during each apnea did not differ from pre-heat to recovery (FiO2 21%, pre-heat 0 ± 1 % vs. recovery 0 ± 2 %; FiO2 16%, pre-heat -4 ± 1 % vs. recovery -4 ± 2 %; FiO2 12%, pre-heat -8 ± 3 % vs. recovery -10 ± 4 %; P = 0.3 for interaction). The pressor response to a voluntary apnea was attenuated in recovery from acute heat exposure across all concentrations of FiO2 (FiO2 21%, pre-heat 19 ± 8 mmHg vs. recovery 16 ± 8 mmHg; FiO2 16%, pre-heat 27 ± 8 mmHg vs. recovery 20 ± 8 mmHg; FiO2 12%, pre-heat 33 ± 11 mmHg vs. recovery 27 ± 13 mmHg; P = 0.02 for main effect of time). CONCLUSION: These data suggest that acute heat exposure induces a cross-tolerance effect such that the pressor response to a voluntary hypoxic apnea is reduced. Acute heat exposure could improve hypertension in adults with obstructive sleep apnea, secondary to altered chemoreflex function and sympathetic neural control, and provide additional therapeutic options for this population to improve cardiovascular health

    Classes of fast and specific search mechanisms for proteins on DNA

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    Problems of search and recognition appear over different scales in biological systems. In this review we focus on the challenges posed by interactions between proteins, in particular transcription factors, and DNA and possible mechanisms which allow for a fast and selective target location. Initially we argue that DNA-binding proteins can be classified, broadly, into three distinct classes which we illustrate using experimental data. Each class calls for a different search process and we discuss the possible application of different search mechanisms proposed over the years to each class. The main thrust of this review is a new mechanism which is based on barrier discrimination. We introduce the model and analyze in detail its consequences. It is shown that this mechanism applies to all classes of transcription factors and can lead to a fast and specific search. Moreover, it is shown that the mechanism has interesting transient features which allow for stability at the target despite rapid binding and unbinding of the transcription factor from the target.Comment: 65 pages, 23 figure

    Ninth and Tenth Order Virial Coefficients for Hard Spheres in D Dimensions

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    We evaluate the virial coefficients B_k for k<=10 for hard spheres in dimensions D=2,...,8. Virial coefficients with k even are found to be negative when D>=5. This provides strong evidence that the leading singularity for the virial series lies away from the positive real axis when D>=5. Further analysis provides evidence that negative virial coefficients will be seen for some k>10 for D=4, and there is a distinct possibility that negative virial coefficients will also eventually occur for D=3.Comment: 33 pages, 12 figure

    Commodifying development experience: deconstructing development as gift in the development blockbuster

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    This paper discusses the recent rise of popular ‘blockbuster’ books written by international development industry insiders and produced by commercial publishers. The paper explores a set of common stylistic devices found within this emerging genre. Though each book is different, a key trope is the story of an author's earlier professional life—the hard lessons and gritty insights that have supposedly emerged from it—that normally underpins each narrative. By living the challenges involved in development work at first hand, and by making mistakes and experiencing epiphanies along the way, these author-professionals want readers to know that they have found out the hard way that long-cherished beliefs about development now need to be questioned. Readers are invited to relive these lessons and epiphanies, and to think and act differently about development by upholding a highly pragmatic form of development professionalism. Combining elements of research monograph, self-help book and personal memoir, these development blockbuster books can be understood not only as commodities, but also as part of the development gift. The authors promise a gift of experience but, in reality, these books are mundane commodities enmeshed in capitalist exchange relations

    Summer CO2 evasion from streams and rivers in the Kolyma River basin, north-east Siberia

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    Inland water systems are generally supersaturated in carbon dioxide (CO2) and are increasingly recognized as playing an important role in the global carbon cycle. The Arctic may be particularly important in this respect, given the abundance of inland waters and carbon contained in Arctic soils; however, a lack of trace gas measurements from small streams in the Arctic currently limits this understanding.We investigated the spatial variability of CO2 evasion during the summer low-flow period from streams and rivers in the northern portion of the Kolyma River basin in north-eastern Siberia. To this end, partial pressure of carbon dioxide (pCO2) and gas exchange velocities (k) were measured at a diverse set of streams and rivers to calculate CO2 evasion fluxes. We combined these CO2 evasion estimates with satellite remote sensing and geographic information system techniques to calculate total areal CO2 emissions. Our results show that small streams are substantial sources of atmospheric CO2 owing to high pCO2 and k, despite being a small portion of total inland water surface area. In contrast, large rivers were generally near equilibrium with atmospheric CO2. Extrapolating our findings across the Panteleikha-Ambolikha sub-watersheds demonstrated that small streams play a major role in CO2 evasion, accounting for 86% of the total summer CO2 emissions from inland waters within these two sub-watersheds. Further expansion of these regional CO2 emission estimates across time and space will be critical to accurately quantify and understand the role of Arctic streams and rivers in the global carbon budget

    Population policies and education: exploring the contradictions of neo-liberal globalisation

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    The world is increasingly characterised by profound income, health and social inequalities (Appadurai, 2000). In recent decades development initiatives aimed at reducing these inequalities have been situated in a context of increasing globalisation with a dominant neo-liberal economic orthodoxy. This paper argues that neo-liberal globalisation contains inherent contradictions regarding choice and uniformity. This is illustrated in this paper through an exploration of the impact of neo-liberal globalisation on population policies and programmes. The dominant neo-liberal economic ideology that has influenced development over the last few decades has often led to alternative global visions being overlooked. Many current population and development debates are characterised by polarised arguments with strongly opposing aims and views. This raises the challenge of finding alternatives situated in more middle ground that both identify and promote the socially positive elements of neo-liberalism and state intervention, but also to limit their worst excesses within the population field and more broadly. This paper concludes with a discussion outling the positive nature of middle ground and other possible alternatives
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