1,836 research outputs found
Ethyl and isopropyl 4-ferrocenylbenzoate.
The title compounds, [Fe(C5H5)(C14H13O2)] and [Fe(C5H5)-
(C15H15O2)], respectively, contain the ferrocenyl 5(C5H4) and
phenylene ±C6H4± rings in a nearly coplanar arrangement,
with interplanar angles of 6.88 (12) and 10.5 (2), respectively.
Molecules of the ethyl ester form dimers through 5(C5H5)CĂ
H O C hydrogen bonds, with graph set R22
(20), and,
together with Csp3ĂH (C5H5) interactions, generate a
one-dimensional column (irregular ladder). Molecules of the
isopropyl ester aggregate through 5(C5H5)CĂH (C6H4)
interactions
The Family Caregiving Dilemma
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/146879/1/pmr290.pd
Transport through an impurity tunnel coupled to a Si/SiGe quantum dot
Achieving controllable coupling of dopants in silicon is crucial for
operating donor-based qubit devices, but it is difficult because of the small
size of donor-bound electron wavefunctions. Here we report the characterization
of a quantum dot coupled to a localized electronic state, and we present
evidence of controllable coupling between the quantum dot and the localized
state. A set of measurements of transport through this device enable the
determination of the most likely location of the localized state, consistent
with an electronically active impurity in the quantum well near the edge of the
quantum dot. The experiments we report are consistent with a gate-voltage
controllable tunnel coupling, which is an important building block for hybrid
donor and gate-defined quantum dot devices.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Grey matter volume differences in the left caudate nucleus of people who stutter.
The cause of stuttering has many theoretical explanations. A number of research groups have suggested changes in the volume and/or function of the striatum as a causal agent. Two recent studies in children and one in adults who stutter (AWS) report differences in striatal volume compared that seen in controls; however, the laterality and nature of this anatomical volume difference is not consistent across studies. The current study investigated whether a reduction in striatal grey matter volume, comparable to that seen in children who stutter (CWS), would be found in AWS. Such a finding would support claims that an anatomical striatal anomaly plays a causal role in stuttering. We used voxel-based morphometry to examine the structure of the striatum in a group of AWS and compared it to that in a group of matched adult control subjects. Results showed a statistically significant group difference for the left caudate nucleus, with smaller mean volume in the group of AWS. The caudate nucleus, one of three main structures within the striatum, is thought to be critical for the planning and modulation of movement sequencing. The difference in striatal volume found here aligns with theoretical accounts of stuttering, which suggest it is a motor control disorder that arises from deficient articulatory movement selection and sequencing. Whilst the current study provides further evidence of a striatal volume difference in stuttering at the group level compared to controls, the significant overlap between AWS and controls suggests this difference is unlikely to be diagnostic of stuttering
"Ordinary, the same as anywhere else": notes on the management of spoiled identity in 'marginal' middle class neighbourhoods
Urban sociologists are becoming increasingly interested in neighbourhood as a source of middle-class identity. Particular emphasis is currently being given to two types of middle-class neighbourhood; gentrified urban neighbourhoods of âdistinctionâ and inconspicuous âsuburban landscapes of privilegeâ. However, there has been a dearth of work on âmarginalâ middle-class neighbourhoods that are similarly âinconspicuousâ rather than distinctive, but less exclusive, thus containing sources of âspoiled identityâ. This article draws on data gathered from two âmarginalâ middleclass neighbourhoods that contained a particular source of âspoiled identityâ: social renters. Urban sociological analyses of neighbour responses to these situations highlight a process of dis-identification with the maligned object, which exacerbates neighbour differences. Our analysis of data from the âmarginalâ middle-class neighbourhoods suggests something entirely different and Goffmanesque. This entailed the management of spoiled identity, which emphasized similarities rather than differences between neighbours.</p
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