830 research outputs found
STUDIES ON ANEMIA IN F1 HYBRID MICE INJECTED WITH PARENTAL STRAIN LYMPHOID CELLS
The survival of 51Cr-labeled erythrocytes has been studied in F1 hybrid mice in which wasting disease was produced by injection of parental lymphoid cells taken either from lymph nodes and thymus or from the spleen. Coincident with the development of the disease syndrome, there occurred a severe anemia accompanied by a sudden loss of circulating labeled erythrocytes, whether host or parental. This finding suggests that the anemia is not due solely to specific immunologic reaction of donor tissue against host erythrocytes
Chemistry of aerosols, cloud droplets, and rain in the Puerto Rican marine atmosphere
The chemical changes occurring during the transformation of aerosols to cloud droplets and rain were observed in orographic clouds on the eastern end of the island of Puerto Rico. Comparisons of elemental ratios in particles and rain and of elemental particle size distributions in and out of the clouds demonstrated scavenging efficiencies of >100% for the elements I, Br, and Cl relative to Na and of <25% for the elements Al, Mn, and V relative to Na. These different scavenging efficiencies are consistent with predictions based on existing cloud physics theory and are a reflection of the geochemical properties of the aerosol consisting partly of a hygroscopic sea salt component containing I, Br, Cl, and Na and partly of a soil dust component containing Al, Mn, and possibly V
BORON IN COASTAL NORTH FLORIDA RAINFALL.
Dissolved boron and sodium concentrations were determined in rainfall collected on the Gulf Coast of northern Florida in order to investigate chemical and physical processes influencing natural concentration levels in the coastal marine atmosphere. Rainfall samples were collected during summer showers, during drizzle and heavy downpours associated with winter frontal activities, and sequentially during tropical storm Becky. Mean calculated B enrichments E//N//a(B) for summer and winter sample sets were 32 and 11, respectively. A surprisingly constant concentration of 'excess' B above that expected from direct seawater injection of approximately 6 mu g 1** minus **1 was observed in the sequential Becky samples. The lower winter B/Na ratios, and thus the calculated E//N//a(B) values, appear related to higher Na concentrations; however, several alternative hypotheses can be advanced to explain the results, including greater particulate sea-salt injection during winter months, incorporation of soil materials with a B/Na ratio above the seawater value, and possible influences of temperature variation on gaseous B incorporation in rain and evaporation from the sea surface
Hypoxia in head and neck cancer in theory and practice: a PET-based imaging approach
Hypoxia plays an important role in tumour recurrence among head and neck cancer patients. The identification and quantification of hypoxic regions are therefore an essential aspect of disease management. Several predictive assays for tumour oxygenation status have been developed in the past with varying degrees of success. To date, functional imaging techniques employing positron emission tomography (PET) have been shown to be an important tool for both pretreatment assessment and tumour response evaluation during therapy. Hypoxia-specific PET markers have been implemented in several clinics to quantify hypoxic tumour subvolumes for dose painting and personalized treatment planning and delivery. Several new radiotracers are under investigation. PET-derived functional parameters and tracer pharmacokinetics serve as valuable input data for computational models aiming at simulating or interpreting PET acquired data, for the purposes of input into treatment planning or radio/chemotherapy response prediction programs. The present paper aims to cover the current status of hypoxia imaging in head and neck cancer together with the justification for the need and the role of computer models based on PET parameters in understanding patient-specific tumour behaviour.Loredana G. Marcu, Wendy M. Harriss-Phillips and Sanda M. Fili
Experiencing spaceâtime: the stretched lifeworlds of migrant workers in India
In the relatively rare instances when the spatialities of temporary migrant work, workersâ journeys, and labour-market negotiations have been the subject of scholarly attention, there has been little work that integrates time into the analysis. Building on a case study of low-paid and insecure migrant manual workers in the context of rapid economic growth in India, we examine both material and subjective dimensions of these workersâ spatiotemporal experiences. What does it mean to live life stretched out, multiplyattached to places across national space? What kinds of place attachments emerge for people temporarily sojourning in, rather than moving to, new places to reside and work? Our analysis of the spatiotemporalities of migrant workersâ experiences in India suggests that, over time, this group of workers use their own agency to seek to avoid the experience of humiliation and indignity in employment relations. Like David Harvey, we argue that money needs to be integrated into such analysis, along with space and time. The paper sheds light on processes of exclusion, inequality and diff erentiation, unequal power geometries, and social topographies that contrast with neoliberalist narratives of âIndian shining
Abetting the market: on property, propriety and actually existing capitalisms
Global Challenges (FGGA
Translating transactions: markets as epistemic and moral spheres
In this Modern Asian Studies book symposium, scholars of South Asia analyse the political, ethical, and epistemic aspects of market life. They build on the 2020 Cambridge volume, Rethinking Markets in Modern India: Embedded Exchange and Contested Jurisdiction, edited by Ajay Gandhi, Barbara Harriss-White, Douglas Haynes, and Sebastian Schwecke. This interdisciplinary conversation approaches transactional realms from the disciplines of history, anthropology, development studies, and political economy. The symposiumâs contributors examine a range of pertinent issues that encompass customary forms of exchange and capitalist aspects of trade. Among the topics discussed are those of market fetishism, bazaar knowledge, social embeddedness, forms of transactional representation and translation, and institutional and regulatory contexts for commerce.Global Challenges (FGGA
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