1,123 research outputs found
The development of tape recorded discussions and check lists for evaluating progression in grades one through four.
Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston Universit
A 2D pixelated optical beam scanner controlled by the laser wavelength
We present a chip-based optical beam scanner based on a dispersive optical phased array (OPA) that illuminates the far field with a pixelated pattern. To scale up theOPAto a large number of antennas, we break it up intomanageable blocks with acceptable losses. The 2D wavelength scanning within a block is handled by dispersive delay lines. Between blocks, there are no delay lines, and theOPAwill only have constructive interference for a discrete set of wavelengths. This results in the far-field illumination of a pixelated pattern along both x and y directions. The sidelobes and the power in the main lobe can be controlled by the power distribution of the individual OPA antennas
Universal cloning of continuous quantum variables
The cloning of quantum variables with continuous spectra is analyzed. A
universal - or Gaussian - quantum cloning machine is exhibited that copies
equally well the states of two conjugate variables such as position and
momentum. It also duplicates all coherent states with a fidelity of 2/3. More
generally, the copies are shown to obey a no-cloning Heisenberg-like
uncertainty relation.Comment: 4 pages, RevTex. Minor revisions, added explicit cloning
transformation, added reference
Monitoring of tumor response to Cisplatin using optical spectroscopy
INTRODUCTION
Anatomic imaging alone is often inadequate for tuning systemic treatment for individual tumor response. Optically based techniques could potentially contribute to fast and objective response monitoring in personalized cancer therapy. In the present study, we evaluated the feasibility of dual-modality diffuse reflectance spectroscopy-autofluorescence spectroscopy (DRS-AFS) to monitor the effects of systemic treatment in a mouse model for hereditary breast cancer.
METHODS
Brca1(-/-); p53(-/-) mammary tumors were grown in 36 mice, half of which were treated with a single dose of cisplatin. Changes in the tumor physiology and morphology were measured for a period of 1 week using dual-modality DRS-AFS. Liver and muscle tissues were also measured to distinguish tumor-specific alterations from systemic changes. Model-based analyses were used to derive different optical parameters like the scattering and absorption coefficients, as well as sources of intrinsic fluorescence. Histopathologic analysis was performed for cross-validation with trends in optically based parameters.
RESULTS
Treated tumors showed a significant decrease in Mie-scattering slope and Mie-to-total scattering fraction and an increase in both fat volume fraction and tissue oxygenation after 2 days of follow-up. Additionally, significant tumor-specific changes in the fluorescence spectra were seen. These longitudinal trends were consistent with changes observed in the histopathologic analysis, such as vital tumor content and formation of fibrosis.
CONCLUSIONS
This study demonstrates that dual-modality DRS-AFS provides quantitative functional information that corresponds well with the degree of pathologic response. DRS-AFS, in conjunction with other imaging modalities, could be used to optimize systemic cancer treatment on the basis of early individual tumor response
Modelling the evolution of distributions : an application to major league baseball
We develop Bayesian techniques for modelling the evolution of entire distributions over time and apply them to the distribution of team performance in Major League baseball for the period 1901-2000. Such models offer insight into many key issues (e.g. competitive balance) in a way that regression-based models cannot. The models involve discretizing the distribution and then modelling the evolution of the bins over time through transition probability matrices. We allow for these matrices to vary over time and across teams. We find that, with one exception, the transition probability matrices (and, hence, competitive balance) have been remarkably constant across time and over teams. The one exception is the Yankees, who have outperformed all other teams
#MeToo, popular feminism and the news: A content analysis of UK newspaper coverage
This article examines the first 6 months of #MeToo’s coverage in the UK press,
revealing how newspapers played an important role in heightening the campaign’s
visibility. Using content analysis, our study demonstrates that the press contributed
to expanding and reinforcing #MeToo’s visibility in important ways. In terms of reach,
the UK press has expanded the movement’s visibility beyond social media, addressing
potentially new and different readerships. This attests to the pivotal role that news
media continue to play in disseminating global issues and debates for a national
audience. Second, in terms of content, while the news coverage developed and
consolidated stories that were originally revealed on social media, it also publicized
new stories. However, our study also highlights how the press’ role in enabling and
expanding the visibility of #MeToo has been characterized by a number of crucial
and, we argue, problematic factors. First, while #MeToo was covered positively
in all newspapers, there was significant variation within newspapers, which was
largely consistent with their traditional ideological alignments. Second, the #MeToo
coverage seems to have followed and reinforced familiar patterns with respect to
news coverage of both sexual violence and feminism, namely, support of feminism alongside a concurrent de-politicization, an individualizing tendency through a
focus on celebrity and the cultural industries, and the centring of the experiences of
celebrity female subjects who are predominately White and wealthy
Low-loss singlemode PECVD silicon nitride photonic wire waveguides for 532-900 nm wavelength window fabricated within a CMOS pilot line
PECVD silicon nitride photonic wire waveguides have been fabricated in a CMOS pilot line. Both clad and unclad single mode wire waveguides were measured at lambda = 532, 780, and 900 nm, respectively. The dependence of loss on wire width, wavelength, and cladding is discussed in detail. Cladded multimode and singlemode waveguides show a loss well below 1 dB/cm in the 532-900 nm wavelength range. For singlemode unclad waveguides, losses < 1 dB/cm were achieved at lambda = 900 nm, whereas losses were measured in the range of 1-3 dB/cm for lambda = 780 and 532 nm, respectively
It's all in the details: methods in breast development and cancer
The inaugural European Network for Breast Development and Cancer (ENBDC) meeting on 'Methods in Mammary Gland Development and Cancer' was held in Weggis, Switzerland last April. The goal was to discuss the details of techniques used to study mammary gland biology and tumourigenesis. Highlights of this meeting included the use of four-colour fluorescence for protein co-localisation in tissue microarrays, genome analysis at single cell resolution, technical issues in the isolation of normal and tumour stem cells, and the use of mouse models and mammary gland transplantations to elucidate gene function in mammary development and to study drug resistance in breast cancer
Characterization of PECVD Silicon Nitride Photonic Components at 532 and 900 nm Wavelength
Low temperature PECVD silicon nitride photonic waveguides have been fabricated by both electron beam lithography and 200 mm DUV lithography. Propagation losses and bend losses were both measured at 532 and 900 nm wavelength, revealing sub 1dB/cm propagation losses for cladded waveguides at both wavelengths for single mode operation. Without cladding, propagation losses were measured to be in the 1-3 dB range for 532 nm and remain below 1 dB/cm for 900 nm for single mode waveguides. Bend losses were measured for 532 nm and were well below 0.1 dB per 90 degree bend for radii larger than 10 mu m
- …