1,694 research outputs found
The equilibrium states of open quantum systems in the strong coupling regime
In this work we investigate the late-time stationary states of open quantum
systems coupled to a thermal reservoir in the strong coupling regime. In
general such systems do not necessarily relax to a Boltzmann distribution if
the coupling to the thermal reservoir is non-vanishing or equivalently if the
relaxation timescales are finite. Using a variety of non-equilibrium formalisms
valid for non-Markovian processes, we show that starting from a product state
of the closed system = system + environment, with the environment in its
thermal state, the open system which results from coarse graining the
environment will evolve towards an equilibrium state at late-times. This state
can be expressed as the reduced state of the closed system thermal state at the
temperature of the environment. For a linear (harmonic) system and environment,
which is exactly solvable, we are able to show in a rigorous way that all
multi-time correlations of the open system evolve towards those of the closed
system thermal state. Multi-time correlations are especially relevant in the
non-Markovian regime, since they cannot be generated by the dynamics of the
single-time correlations. For more general systems, which cannot be exactly
solved, we are able to provide a general proof that all single-time
correlations of the open system evolve to those of the closed system thermal
state, to first order in the relaxation rates. For the special case of a
zero-temperature reservoir, we are able to explicitly construct the reduced
closed system thermal state in terms of the environmental correlations.Comment: 20 pages, 2 figure
Cancer-associated mutations reveal a novel role for EpCAM as an inhibitor of cathepsin-L and tumor cell invasion
BACKGROUND: EpCAM (Epithelial cell adhesion molecule) is often dysregulated in epithelial cancers. Prior studies implicate EpCAM in the regulation of oncogenic signaling pathways and epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition. It was recently demonstrated that EpCAM contains a thyroglobulin type-1 (TY-1) domain. Multiple proteins with TY-1 domains are known to inhibit cathepsin-L (CTSL), a cysteine protease that promotes tumor cell invasion and metastasis. Analysis of human cancer sequencing studies reveals that somatic EpCAM mutations are present in up to 5.1% of tested tumors.
METHODS: The Catalogue of Somatic Mutations in Cancer (COSMIC) database was queried to tabulate the position and amino acid changes of cancer associated EpCAM mutations. To determine how EpCAM mutations affect cancer biology we studied C66Y, a damaging TY-1 domain mutation identified in liver cancer, as well as 13 other cancer-associated EpCAM mutations. In vitro and in vivo models were used to determine the effect of wild type (WT) and mutant EpCAM on CTSL activity and invasion. Immunoprecipitation and localization studies tested EpCAM and CTSL protein binding and determined compartmental expression patterns of EpCAM mutants.
RESULTS: We demonstrate that WT EpCAM, but not C66Y EpCAM, inhibits CTSL activity in vitro, and the TY-1 domain of EpCAM is responsible for this inhibition. WT EpCAM, but not C66Y EpCAM, inhibits tumor cell invasion in vitro and lung metastases in vivo. In an extended panel of human cancer cell lines, EpCAM expression is inversely correlated with CTSL activity. Previous studies have demonstrated that EpCAM germline mutations can prevent EpCAM from being expressed at the cell surface. We demonstrate that C66Y and multiple other EpCAM cancer-associated mutations prevent surface expression of EpCAM. Cancer-associated mutations that prevent EpCAM cell surface expression abrogate the ability of EpCAM to inhibit CTSL activity and tumor cell invasion.
CONCLUSIONS: These studies reveal a novel role for EpCAM as a CTSL inhibitor, confirm the functional relevance of multiple cancer-associated EpCAM mutations, and suggest a therapeutic vulnerability in cancers harboring EpCAM mutations
Sensitivity of Cerebellar Purkinje Neurons to Neurotransmitters in Genetically Epileptic Rats1
ABSTRACT ABBREVIATIONS: GEPR, genetically epilepsy-prone rat; NE, norepinephrine; GABA, -y-aminobutyric acid; C.l., confidence interval
Super Yang-Mills on the lattice with domain wall fermions
The dynamical N=1, SU(2) Super Yang-Mills theory is studied on the lattice
using a new lattice fermion regulator, domain wall fermions. This formulation
even at non-zero lattice spacing does not require fine-tuning, has improved
chiral properties and can produce topological zero-mode phenomena. Numerical
simulations of the full theory on lattices with the topology of a torus
indicate the formation of a gluino condensate which is sustained at the chiral
limit. The condensate is non-zero even for small volume and small supersymmetry
breaking mass where zero mode effects due to gauge fields with fractional
topological charge appear to play a role.Comment: LaTeX, 35 pages, 11 eps figures. A few changes in sec. 5.3, figure 11
added. To appear in Phys. Rev.
The abolition of the General Teaching Council for England and the future of teacher discipline
With the abolition of the General Teaching Council for England in the 2011 Education Act, this article considers the future of teacher discipline in England. It provides a critique of the changes to the regulation of teacher misconduct and incompetence that draws on a Foucauldian framework, especially concerning the issue of public displays of discipline and the concomitant movement to more hidden forms. In addition, the external context of accountability that accompanies the reforms to teacher discipline are considered including the perfection of the panoptic metaphor presented by the changes to Ofsted practices such as the introduction of zero-notice inspections. The article concludes that the reforms will further move teachers from being occupational professionals to being organisational professionals marking them apart from comparable professions in medicine and law
On the structure of phase transition maps for three or more coexisting phases
This paper is partly based on a lecture delivered by the author at the ERC
workshop "Geometric Partial Differential Equations" held in Pisa in September
2012. What is presented here is an expanded version of that lecture.Comment: 23 pages, 6 figure
B Physics at the Tevatron: Run II and Beyond
This report provides a comprehensive overview of the prospects for B physics
at the Tevatron. The work was carried out during a series of workshops starting
in September 1999. There were four working groups: 1) CP Violation, 2) Rare and
Semileptonic Decays, 3) Mixing and Lifetimes, 4) Production, Fragmentation and
Spectroscopy. The report also includes introductory chapters on theoretical and
experimental tools emphasizing aspects of B physics specific to hadron
colliders, as well as overviews of the CDF, D0, and BTeV detectors, and a
Summary.Comment: 583 pages. Further information on the workshops, including
transparencies, can be found at the workshop's homepage:
http://www-theory.lbl.gov/Brun2/. The report is also available in 2-up
http://www-theory.lbl.gov/Brun2/report/report2.ps.gz or chapter-by-chapter
http://www-theory.lbl.gov/Brun2/report
Developing autonomous learning in first year university students using perspectives from positive psychology
Autonomous learning is a commonly occurring learning outcome from university study, and it is argued that students require confidence in their own abilities to achieve this. Using approaches from positive psychology, this study aimed to develop confidence in firstâyear university students to facilitate autonomous learning. Psychological character strengths were assessed in 214 students on day one at university. Two weeks later their top three strengths were given to them in study skills modules as part of a psychoâeducational intervention designed to increase their selfâefficacy and selfâesteem. The impact of the intervention was assessed against a control group of 40 students who had not received the intervention. The results suggested that students were more confident after the intervention, and that levels of autonomous learning increased significantly compared to the controls. Character strengths were found to be associated with selfâefficacy, selfâesteem and autonomous learning in ways that were theoretically meaningful
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Beyond dis-identification: A discursive approach to self-alienation in contemporary organizations
Dis-identification has become a key research area in organization studies, demonstrating how employees subjectively distance themselves from managerial domination by protecting/constructing their more âauthenticâ identities. But how should we understand situations where even these ârealâ selves are experienced as alien and foreign? We revise the theory of self-alienation to explain cases beyond disidentification, where even back-stage identities (âwho we really areâ) are considered something polluted, objectified and foreign. Drawing on an illustrative empirical vignette of a consultant, we demonstrate how a revised version of self-alienation might usefully capture experiences of work where the back-stage/front-stage boundary breaks down. We tentatively posit three causes of this self-alienation in relation to contemporary organizations, and discuss their significance in the context of organizational dis identification
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