2,902 research outputs found

    Platelet Response in Hypercholesterol Blood to Thrombin-Induced Aggression

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    A report submitted by David J. Saxon to the Research and Creative Productions Committee in 1989 on whether hypercholesterol platelets are more responsive than normocholesterolemic platelets to thrombin-induced aggregation in whole blood

    Variability in treatment effects in an English national dataset of psychological therapies: the relationships between severity, treatment duration, and therapy type

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    Background: Comparisons between bona fide psychological therapies generally report no effects or small effects favoring cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), suggesting that differences between therapy modalities are of little importance. Methods: An observational, cohort study of patients (N = 11,116), drawn from the English Talking Therapies program. Patients presented with depression and were treated by CBT or person-centered experiential therapy (PCET), 67 % were female and the age range was 15–94. Multilevel modeling was used to identify variables associated with outcomes and CBT and PCET outcomes were compared dependent on the number of sessions patients attended and the severity of their depression at intake. Results: Although overall a small effect size of 0.14 (0.10, 0.18) favored CBT, we found differing effect sizes depending on patient severity and the number of sessions they had attended at outcome. For non-clinical and moderately depressed patients no significant differences between therapies were found. For moderately-severe and severe patients there was a crossover in effectiveness with PCET more effective up to 5 or 6 sessions and CBT more effective thereafter. However, small effects in favour of PCET were unreliable. The largest effects were found for CBT for patients who were moderately-severe and had >10 sessions (d = 0.30, 0.12, 0.48) or were severe and had >12 sessions (d = 0.26 (0.02, 0.49). Limitations: No data was available on therapy allocation decisions or therapists and the results may not be generalizable to non-NHS Talking Therapies services. Conclusions: Small effects can mask important contextual differences between therapies and their study can inform allocation decisions

    Acid-Labile Traceless Click Linker for Protein Transduction

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    Intracellular delivery of active proteins presents an interesting approach in research and therapy. We created a protein transduction shuttle based on a new traceless click linker that combines the advantages of click reactions with implementation of reversible pH-sensitive bonds. The azidomethyl-methylmaleic anhydride (AzMMMan) linker was found compatible with different click chemistries, demonstrated in bioreversible protein modification with dyes, polyethylene glycol, or a transduction carrier. Linkages were stable at physiological pH but reversible at the mild acidic pH of endosomes or lysosomes. We show that pH-reversible attachment of a defined endosome-destabilizing three-arm oligo(ethane amino)amide carrier generates an effective shuttle for protein delivery. The cargo protein nlsEGFP, when coupled via the traceless AzMMMan linker, experiences efficient cellular uptake and endosomal escape into the cytosol, followed by import into the nucleus. In contrast, irreversible linkage to the same shuttle hampers nuclear delivery of nlsEGFP which after uptake remains trapped in the cytosol. Successful intracellular delivery of bioactive Ăź-galactosidase as a model enzyme was also demonstrated using the pH-controlled shuttle system

    Eikonal analysis of Coulomb distortion in quasi-elastic electron scattering

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    An eikonal expansion is used to provide systematic corrections to the eikonal approximation through order 1/k21/k^2, where kk is the wave number. Electron wave functions are obtained for the Dirac equation with a Coulomb potential. They are used to investigate distorted-wave matrix elements for quasi-elastic electron scattering from a nucleus. A form of effective-momentum approximation is obtained using trajectory-dependent eikonal phases and focusing factors. Fixing the Coulomb distortion effects at the center of the nucleus, the often-used ema approximation is recovered. Comparisons of these approximations are made with full calculations using the electron eikonal wave functions. The ema results are found to agree well with the full calculations.Comment: 12 pages, 6 Postscript figure

    Analytic results for Gaussian wave packets in four model systems: I. Visualization of the kinetic energy

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    Using Gaussian wave packet solutions, we examine how the kinetic energy is distributed in time-dependent solutions of the Schrodinger equation corresponding to the cases of a free particle, a particle undergoing uniform acceleration, a particle in a harmonic oscillator potential, and a system corresponding to an unstable equilibrium. We find, for specific choices of initial parameters, that as much as 90% of the kinetic energy can be localized (at least conceptually) in the `front half' of such Gaussian wave packets, and we visualize these effects.Comment: 22 pages, RevTeX, four .eps figures, to appear in Found. Phys. Lett. Vol. 17, Dec. 200

    Production, Decay, and Polarization of Excited Heavy Hadrons

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    We discuss the production via fragmentation of excited heavy mesons and baryons, and their subsequent decay. In particular, we consider the question of whether a net polarization of the initial heavy quark may be detected, either in a polarization of the final ground state or in anisotropies in the decay products of the excited hadron. The result hinges in part on a nonperturbative parameter which measures the net transverse alignment of the light degrees of freedom in the fragmentation process. We use existing data on charmed mesons to extract this quantity for certain excited mesons. Using this result, we estimate the polarization retention of charm and bottom baryons.Comment: 37 pages, 3 figures available upon request, uses phyzzx forma

    Strange Decays of Nonstrange Baryons

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    The strong decays of excited nonstrange baryons into the final states Lambda K, Sigma K, and for the first time into Lambda(1405) K, Lambda(1520) K, Sigma(1385) K, Lambda K*, and Sigma K*, are examined in a relativized quark pair creation model. The wave functions and parameters of the model are fixed by previous calculations of N pi and N pi pi, etc., decays. Our results show that it should be possible to discover several new negative parity excited baryons and confirm the discovery of several others by analyzing these final states in kaon production experiments. We also establish clear predictions for the relative strengths of certain states to decay to Lambda(1405) K and Lambda(1520) K, which can be tested to determine if a three-quark model of the Lambda(1405) K is valid. Our results compare favorably with the results of partial wave analyses of the limited existing data for the Lambda K and Sigma K channels. We do not find large Sigma K decay amplitudes for a substantial group of predicted and weakly established negative-parity states, in contrast to the only previous work to consider decays of these states into the strange final states Lambda K and Sigma K.Comment: 25 pages, 8 figures, RevTe

    Weak localization of light by cold atoms: the impact of quantum internal structure

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    Since the work of Anderson on localization, interference effects for the propagation of a wave in the presence of disorder have been extensively studied, as exemplified in coherent backscattering (CBS) of light. In the multiple scattering of light by a disordered sample of thermal atoms, interference effects are usually washed out by the fast atomic motion. This is no longer true for cold atoms where CBS has recently been observed. However, the internal structure of the atoms strongly influences the interference properties. In this paper, we consider light scattering by an atomic dipole transition with arbitrary degeneracy and study its impact on coherent backscattering. We show that the interference contrast is strongly reduced. Assuming a uniform statistical distribution over internal degrees of freedom, we compute analytically the single and double scattering contributions to the intensity in the weak localization regime. The so-called ladder and crossed diagrams are generalized to the case of atoms and permit to calculate enhancement factors and backscattering intensity profiles for polarized light and any closed atomic dipole transition.Comment: 22 pages Revtex, 9 figures, to appear in PR

    Analytic results for Gaussian wave packets in four model systems: II. Autocorrelation functions

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    The autocorrelation function, A(t), measures the overlap (in Hilbert space) of a time-dependent quantum mechanical wave function, psi(x,t), with its initial value, psi(x,0). It finds extensive use in the theoretical analysis and experimental measurement of such phenomena as quantum wave packet revivals. We evaluate explicit expressions for the autocorrelation function for time-dependent Gaussian solutions of the Schrodinger equation corresponding to the cases of a free particle, a particle undergoing uniform acceleration, a particle in a harmonic oscillator potential, and a system corresponding to an unstable equilibrium (the so-called `inverted' oscillator.) We emphasize the importance of momentum-space methods where such calculations are often more straightforwardly realized, as well as stressing their role in providing complementary information to results obtained using position-space wavefunctions.Comment: 18 pages, RevTeX, to appear in Found. Phys. Lett, Vol. 17, Dec. 200

    A unitary model for meson-nucleon scattering

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    In an effective Lagrangian model employing the K-matrix approximation we extract nucleon resonance parameters. To this end we analyze simultaneously all available data for reactions involving the final states πN\pi N, ππN\pi\pi N, ηN\eta N and KΛK \Lambda in the energy range mN+mπ≤s≤1.9m_N + m_{\pi} \le \sqrt s \le 1.9 GeV. The background contributions are generated consistently from the relevant Feynman amplitudes, thus significantly reducing the number of free parameters.Comment: Revised version. 60 pages, 17 figures. Two figures and a short discussion (\pi N \to \eta N, K \Lambda amplitudes) added, typos and minor errors in the citations correcte
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