386 research outputs found

    The preparation and characterisation of monomeric and linked metal carbonyl clusters containing the closo-Si2Co4 pseudo-octahedral core

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    PhSiH3 reacts with [Co₄(CO)₁₂] at 50 °C in hydrocarbon solvents to give [(µ₄-SiPh)₂Co₄(CO)₁₁], 2c, shown by an X-ray crystal structure determination to have a pseudo-octahedral Si₂Co₄ core. Substituted aryl-silanes behaved similarly. Mixtures of PhSiH₃, H₃SiC₆H₄SiH₃ and [Co₄(CO)₁₂] in a ca. 2 1 2 ratio gave the dimeric cluster [{Co₄(µ₄-SiPh)(CO)₁₁Si}₂C₆H₄], 3a, which has the two Si₂Co₄ cores linked by a C₆H₄ group to give a rigid molecule which an X-ray structure analysis shows to be over 23 Å long. Related dimers linked by –(CH₂)₈– groups were isolated from mixtures of PhSiH₃, α ,ω-(H₃Si)₂(CH₂)₈ and [Co₄(CO)₁₂]. Electrochemical studies show the two cluster units in 3a do not interact electronically

    Examining Museum Visits as Literacy Events: the role of mediators

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    Museum exhibitions are literacy rich environments. Visitors may engage with a range of texts including texts that constitute the exhibition objects themselves, those that convey information about the objects and those that instruct visitors about how the visitors are expected by the museum to navigate through the exhibition. The ways in which visitors engage with these diverse texts are important defining factors of the visitors museum experience. For museums, understanding how texts in their exhibitions are influencing the museum experience, and the possibility of a museum experience for the broad public community is important in the fulfilment of their public mission as cultural and education institutions. In this paper, we adopt a view of literacy as a social practice, the perspective of New Literacy Studies (NLS), that offers a fruitful way for museums to consider the interactions between exhibition texts and their audiences. Such considerations, we argue, can inform museums approaches to broadening their visitor demographics to more strongly fulfill their public mission. We show that the goals of NLS resonate with some of the goals of the New Museology movement in museum studies, a movement that aims to democratize what museums represent and how

    Differentiable but exact formulation of density-functional theory

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    The universal density functional F of density-functional theory is a complicated and ill-behaved function of the density—in particular, F is not differentiable, making many formal manipulations more complicated. While F has been well characterized in terms of convex analysis as forming a conjugate pair (E, F) with the ground-state energy E via the Hohenberg–Kohn and Lieb variation principles, F is nondifferentiable and subdifferentiable only on a small (but dense) subset of its domain. In this article, we apply a tool from convex analysis, Moreau–Yosida regularization, to construct, for any ε > 0, pairs of conjugate functionals (ε E, ε F) that converge to (E, F) pointwise everywhere as ε → 0+, and such that ε F is (Fréchet) differentiable. For technical reasons, we limit our attention to molecular electronic systems in a finite but large box. It is noteworthy that no information is lost in the Moreau–Yosida regularization: the physical ground-state energy E(v) is exactly recoverable from the regularized ground-state energy ε E(v) in a simple way. All concepts and results pertaining to the original (E, F) pair have direct counterparts in results for (ε E, ε F). The Moreau–Yosida regularization therefore allows for an exact, differentiable formulation of density-functional theory. In particular, taking advantage of the differentiability of ε F, a rigorous formulation of Kohn–Sham theory is presented that does not suffer from the noninteracting representability problem in standard Kohn–Sham theory

    Historic evolution and urban planning typology of Olympic Village

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    Article providing a broad historical overview of the role and typology of Olympic villages along the history of the Modern Olympic Games. This article was published in the book entitled 'Olympic Villages: a hundred years of urban planning and shared experiences' compiling the papers given at the 1997 International Symposium on International Chair in Olympism (IOC-UAB).L'article ofereix una exhaustiva visió històrica del paper i la tipologia de les Viles Olímpiques. Aquest text es va publicar en el llibre "Olympic Villages: a hundred years of urban planning and shared experiences" que recull les ponències presentades en el simposi internacional sobre viles olímpiques de la Càtedra Internacional d'Olimpisme (CIO-UAB) l'any 1997.El artículo ofrece una exhaustiva visión histórica del papel y la tipología de las Villas Olímpicas. Este texto fue publicado en el libro "Olympic Villages: a hundred years of urban planning and shared experiences" que recoge las ponencias presentadas en el simposio internacional sobre villas olímpicas de Cátedra Internacional de Olimpismo (CIO-UAB) el año 1997

    Strategic Deception in Adults with Autism Spectrum Disorder

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    Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is often associated with impaired perspective-taking skills. Deception is an important indicator of perspective-taking, and therefore may be thought to pose difficulties to people with ASD (e.g., Baron-Cohen in J Child Psychol Psychiatry 3:1141–1155, 1992). To test this hypothesis, we asked participants with and without ASD to play a computerised deception game. We found that participants with ASD were equally likely—and in complex cases of deception even more likely—to deceive and detect deception, and learned deception at a faster rate. However, participants with ASD initially deceived less frequently, and were slower at detecting deception. These results suggest that people with ASD readily engage in deception but may do so through conscious and effortful reasoning about other people’s perspective

    TNF- α augments intratumoural concentrations of doxorubicin in TNF- α -based isolated limb perfusion in rat sarcoma models and enhances anti-tumour effects

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    We have shown previously that isolated limb perfusion (ILP) in sarcoma-bearing rats results in high response rates when melphalan is used in combination with tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α). This is in line with observations in patients. Here we show that ILP with doxorubicin in combination with TNF-α has comparable effects in two different rat sarcoma tumour models. The addition of TNF-α exhibits a synergistic anti-tumour effect, resulting in regression of the tumour in 54% and 100% of the cases for the BN175-fibrosarcoma and the ROS-1 osteosarcoma respectively. The combination is shown to be mandatory for optimal tumour response. The effect of high dose TNF-α on the activity of cytotoxic agents in ILP is still unclear. We investigated possible modes by which TNF-α could modulate the activity of doxorubicin. In both tumour models increased accumulation of doxorubicin in tumour tissue was found: 3.1-fold in the BN175 and 1.8-fold in the ROS-1 sarcoma after ILP with doxorubicin combined with TNF-α in comparison with an ILP with doxorubicin alone. This increase in local drug concentration may explain the synergistic anti-tumour responses after ILP with the combination. In vitro TNF-α fails to augment drug uptake in tumour cells or to increase cytotoxicity of the drug. These findings make it unlikely that TNF-α directly modulates the activity of doxorubicin in vivo. As TNF-α by itself has no or only minimal effect on tumour growth, an increase in local concentrations of chemotherapeutic drugs might well be the main mechanism for the synergistic anti-tumour effects. © 2000 Cancer Research Campaig

    Tumour necrosis factor alpha increases melphalan concentration in tumour tissue after isolated limb perfusion

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    Several possible mechanisms for the synergistic anti-tumour effects between tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α) and melphalan after isolated limb perfusion (ILP) have been presented. We found a significant sixfold increase in melphalan tumour tissue concentration after ILP when TNF-α was added to the perfusate, which provides a straightforward explanation for the observed synergism between melphalan and TNF-α in ILP. © 2000 Cancer Research Campaig

    Methods for calculating nonconcave entropies

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    Five different methods which can be used to analytically calculate entropies that are nonconcave as functions of the energy in the thermodynamic limit are discussed and compared. The five methods are based on the following ideas and techniques: i) microcanonical contraction, ii) metastable branches of the free energy, iii) generalized canonical ensembles with specific illustrations involving the so-called Gaussian and Betrag ensembles, iv) restricted canonical ensemble, and v) inverse Laplace transform. A simple long-range spin model having a nonconcave entropy is used to illustrate each method.Comment: v1: 22 pages, IOP style, 7 color figures, contribution for the JSTAT special issue on Long-range interacting systems. v2: Open problem and references added, minor typos corrected, close to published versio

    Uniform magnetic fields in density-functional theory

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    We construct a density-functional formalism adapted to uniform external magnetic fields that is intermediate between conventional Density Functional Theory and Current-Density Functional Theory (CDFT). In the intermediate theory, which we term LDFT, the basic variables are the den- sity, the canonical momentum, and the paramagnetic contribution to the magnetic moment. Both a constrained-search formulation and a convex formulation in terms of Legendre–Fenchel transfor- mations are constructed. Many theoretical issues in CDFT find simplified analogues in LDFT. We prove results concerning N-representability, Hohenberg–Kohn-like mappings, existence of minimiz- ers in the constrained-search expression, and a restricted analogue to gauge invariance. The issue of additivity of the energy over non-interacting subsystems, which is qualitatively different in LDFT and CDFT, is also discussed

    Nitric oxide synthase inhibition results in synergistic anti-tumour activity with melphalan and tumour necrosis factor alpha-based isolated limb perfusions

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    Nitric oxide (NO) is an important molecule in regulating tumour blood flow and stimulating tumour angiogenesis. Inhibition of NO synthase by L-NAME might induce an anti-tumour effect by limiting nutrients and oxygen to reach tumour tissue or affecting vascular growth. The anti-tumour effect of L-NAME after systemic administration was studied in a renal subcapsular CC531 adenocarcinoma model in rats. Moreover, regional administration of L-NAME, in combination with TNF and melphalan, was studied in an isolated limb perfusion (ILP) model using BN175 soft-tissue sarcomas. Systemic treatment with L-NAME inhibited growth of adenocarcinoma significantly but was accompanied by impaired renal function. In ILP, reduced tumour growth was observed when L-NAME was used alone. In combination with TNF or melphalan, L-NAME increased response rates significantly compared to perfusions without L-NAME (0–64% and 0–63% respectively). An additional anti-tumour effect was demonstrated when L-NAME was added to the synergistic combination of melphalan and TNF (responses increased from 70 to 100%). Inhibition of NO synthase reduces tumour growth both after systemic and regional (ILP) treatment. A synergistic anti-tumour effect of L-NAME is observed in combination with melphalan and/or TNF using ILP. These results indicate a possible role of L-NAME for the treatment of solid tumours in a systemic or regional setting. © 2000 Cancer Research Campaig
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