5,909 research outputs found
Planetary benchmarks
Design criteria and technology requirements for a system of radar reference devices to be fixed to the surfaces of the inner planets are discussed. Offshoot applications include the use of radar corner reflectors as landing beacons on the planetary surfaces and some deep space applications that may yield a greatly enhanced knowledge of the gravitational and electromagnetic structure of the solar system. Passive retroreflectors with dimensions of about 4 meters and weighing about 10 kg are feasible for use with orbiting radar at Venus and Mars. Earth-based observation of passive reflectors, however, would require very large and complex structures to be delivered to the surfaces. For Earth-based measurements, surface transponders offer a distinct advantage in accuracy over passive reflectors. A conceptual design for a high temperature transponder is presented. The design appears feasible for the Venus surface using existing electronics and power components
Activity And Localization Of Maltodextrin Binding Site Mutants Of Glycogen Synthase In Saccharomyces Cerevisiae
Mentor: Wayne A. WilsonGlycogen is a glucose polymer formed by the enzyme glycogen synthase and is used in many organisms
to store chemical energy. Saccharomyces cerevisiae (baker’s yeast) was used to study the activity
and localization of glycogen synthase. Genes GSY1 and GSY2 encode glycogen synthase. GSY2 is
responsible for the formation of Gsy2p, whose action accounts for ~90% of glycogen synthase activity;
the remainder of total glycogen synthase activity stems from Gsy1p. Because glycogen synthase
binds to glycogen, it can be used to determine glycogen localization. Glycogen synthase can appear in
distinct patterns throughout the cell. Gsy2p has been shown to be regulated by phosphorylation. Phosphorylation
of Gsy2p leads to inactivation of the enzyme, a decrease in glycogen storage, and a more
localized pattern of glycogen synthase. Conversely, lowering the phosphorylation state of Gsy2p results
in increased glycogen production and delocalization of glycogen synthase throughout the cell.
Glucose-6-P (glucose-6-phosphate) activates glycogen synthase regardless of its phosphorylation
state.
We obtained a set of plasmids from a collaborator, encoding Gsy2p mutated at sites believed to be
involved with maltodextrin binding. Maltodextrin is a chain of 20 or fewer dextrose molecules with α
(1→4) glycosidic bonds. A protein sequence involved in maltodextrin binding likely would also bind
to glycogen. Our task was to discover the localization pattern shown by the maltodextrin binding site
mutants of glycogen synthase using a GFP tag on GSY2. The goal of this study was to determine the
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effects of Gsy2p maltodextrin binding mutants on glycogen synthase activity, localization, and glycogen
accumulation
The effect of body mass index and melphalan dose adjustments on outcomes in patients undergoing autologous haematopoietic cell transplantation for multiple myeloma: a single-centre retrospective study
Application of Rasch analysis in the development and psychometric evaluation of dental undergraduates preparedness assessment scale
The prevalence and experience of oral diseases in Adelaide nursing home residents
The document attached has been archived with permission from the Australian Dental Association. An external link to the publisher’s copy is included.Background: The twenty-first century will see the evolution of a population of dentate older Australians with dental needs very different from those of older adults in past years. This study provided comprehensive information concerning oral disease prevalence in older South Australian nursing home residents. Methods: This paper presents cross-sectional baseline results. Results: Most of the 224 residents, from seven randomly selected nursing homes, were functionally dependent, medically compromised, cognitively impaired and behaviourally difficult older adults who presented many complex challenges to carers and to dental professionals. Two-thirds (66 per cent) were edentulous with many dental problems and treatment needs. Dentate residents had a mean of 11.9 teeth present, higher than previously reported. The prevalence and experience of coronal and root caries and plaque accumulation was very high in dentate residents; especially males, those admitted more than three years previously, those who ate fewer food types and those who were severely cognitively impaired. These residents had more retained roots, decayed teeth and missing teeth, and fewer filled teeth when compared with data for community-dwelling older adults. Conclusions: This study highlighted the poor oral health status of these nursing home residents and the great impact of dementia on their high levels of oral diseases.JM Chalmers, C Hodge, JM Fuss, AJ Spencer, KD Carte
Neutral Evolution as Diffusion in phenotype space: reproduction with mutation but without selection
The process of `Evolutionary Diffusion', i.e. reproduction with local
mutation but without selection in a biological population, resembles standard
Diffusion in many ways. However, Evolutionary Diffusion allows the formation of
local peaks with a characteristic width that undergo drift, even in the
infinite population limit. We analytically calculate the mean peak width and
the effective random walk step size, and obtain the distribution of the peak
width which has a power law tail. We find that independent local mutations act
as a diffusion of interacting particles with increased stepsize.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. Paper now representative of published articl
Kinetic growth walks on complex networks
Kinetically grown self-avoiding walks on various types of generalized random
networks have been studied. Networks with short- and long-tailed degree
distributions were considered (, degree or connectivity), including
scale-free networks with . The long-range behaviour of
self-avoiding walks on random networks is found to be determined by finite-size
effects. The mean self-intersection length of non-reversal random walks, ,
scales as a power of the system size $N$: $ \sim N^{\beta}$, with an
exponent $\beta = 0.5$ for short-tailed degree distributions and $\beta < 0.5$
for scale-free networks with $\gamma < 3$. The mean attrition length of kinetic
growth walks, , scales as , with an exponent
which depends on the lowest degree in the network. Results of
approximate probabilistic calculations are supported by those derived from
simulations of various kinds of networks. The efficiency of kinetic growth
walks to explore networks is largely reduced by inhomogeneity in the degree
distribution, as happens for scale-free networks.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figure
Individual-level and plant-level predictors of acute, traumatic occupational injuries in a manufacturing cohort
Objectives: Workplace and contextual factors that may affect risk for worker injury are not well described. This study used results from an employee job satisfaction survey to construct aggregate indicators of the work environment and estimate the relative contribution of those factors to injury rates in a manufacturing cohort. Methods: Principal components analysis was used to construct four plant-level factors from responses to a 32 question survey of the entire workforce, administered in 2006. Multilevel Poisson regression was used to evaluate the relationship between injury rate, individual-level and plant-level risk factors, unionisation and plant type. Results: Plant-level ‘work stress’ (incident rate ratio (IRR)=0.50, 95% CI 0.28 to 0.90) was significant in the multilevel model, indicating the rate of injury for an average individual in that plant was halved (conditional on plant) when job stress decreased by a tertile. ‘Overall satisfaction’, ‘work environment’ and ‘perception of supervisor’ showed the same trend but were not significant. Unionisation was protective (IRR=0.40, 95% CI 0.17 to 0.95) as was any plant type compared with smelter. Conclusions: We demonstrated utility of data from a human resources survey to construct indicators of the work environment. Our research suggests that aspects of the work environment, particularly work stress and unionisation, may have a significant effect on risk for occupational injury, emphasising the need for further multilevel studies. Our work would suggest monitoring of employee perceptions of job stress and the possible inclusion of stress management as a component of risk reduction programmes
The scaling limit of the incipient infinite cluster in high-dimensional percolation. II. Integrated super-Brownian excursion
For independent nearest-neighbour bond percolation on Z^d with d >> 6, we
prove that the incipient infinite cluster's two-point function and three-point
function converge to those of integrated super-Brownian excursion (ISE) in the
scaling limit. The proof is based on an extension of the new expansion for
percolation derived in a previous paper, and involves treating the magnetic
field as a complex variable. A special case of our result for the two-point
function implies that the probability that the cluster of the origin consists
of n sites, at the critical point, is given by a multiple of n^{-3/2}, plus an
error term of order n^{-3/2-\epsilon} with \epsilon >0. This is a strong
statement that the critical exponent delta is given by delta =2.Comment: 56 pages, 3 Postscript figures, in AMS-LaTeX, with graphicx, epic,
and xr package
Communication in Hong Kong accident and emergency departments: The clinicians’ perspectives
© The Author(s) 2015. In this article, we report findings from the first qualitatively driven study of patient–clinician communication in Hong Kong Accident and Emergency Departments (AEDs). In light of the Hong Kong Hospital Authority’s policy emphasis on patientcentered care and communication in the public hospitals it oversees, we analyze clinicians’ perceptions of the role and relevance of patient-centered communication strategies in emergency care. Although aware of the importance of effective communication in emergency care, participants discussed how this was frequently jeopardized by chronic understaffing, patient loads, and time pressures. This was raised in relation to the absence of spoken interdisciplinary handovers, the tendency to downgrade interpersonal communication with patients, and the decline in staff attendance at communication training courses. Participants’ frequent descriptions of patient-centered communication as dispensable from, and timeburdensome in, AEDs highlight a discrepancy between the stated Hong Kong Hospital Authority policy of patient-centered care and the reality of contemporary Hong Kong emergency practice
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