1,486 research outputs found

    "Remember Everything": things past in Station Island

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    Book synopsis: Seamus Heaney: Poet, Critic, Translator explores the range of Heaney's writing, emphasizing significant intersections in his work - meeting places; spaces between; tradition meeting the contemporary context as life meets death; liminal poetic representations and political divisions; town and woods, absence and presence; inner reality facing external reality; the timely and the transcendent; region and wider world; Irish tradition encountering Polish tradition; the space between modern English and ancient Greek; the meeting of personal and formal in the translation of Beowulf; different times and perceptions meeting problematic memory; Heaney's Leavisite stance in the face of contemporary critical currents; and Heaney's imagination approaching the imaginations of other poets

    Friction and wear behavior of glasses and ceramics

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    Adhesion, friction, and wear behavior of glasses and ionic solids are reviewed. These materials are shown to behave in a manner similar to other solids with respect to adhesion. Their friction characteristics are shown to be sensitive to environmental constituents and surface films. This sensitivity can be related to a reduction in adhesive bonding and the changes in surficial mechanical behavior associated with Rehbinder and Joffe effects. Both friction and wear properties of ionic crystalline solids are highly anisotropic. With metals in contact with ionic solids the fracture strength of the ionic solid and the shear strength in the metal and those properties that determine these will dictate which of the materials undergoes adhesive wear. The chemical activity of the metal plays an important role in the nature and strength of the adhesive interfacial bond that develops between the metal and a glass or ionic solid

    Historical Criminology and the Explanatory Power of the Past

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    To what extent can the past ‘explain’ the present? This deceptively simple question lies at the heart of historical criminology (research which incorporates historical primary sources while addressing present-day debates and practices in the criminal justice field). This article seeks first to categorise the ways in which criminologists have used historical data thus far, arguing that it is most commonly deployed to ‘problematize’ the contemporary rather than to ‘explain’ it. The article then interrogates the reticence of criminologists to attribute explicative power in relation to the present to historical data. Finally, it proposes the adoption of long time-frame historical research methods, outlining three advantages which would accrue from this: the identification and analysis of historical continuities; a more nuanced, shared understanding of micro/macro change over time in relation to criminal justice; and a method for identifying and analysing instances of historical recurrence, particularly in perceptions and discourses around crime and justice

    Boundaries of Disk-like Self-affine Tiles

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    Let T:=T(A,D)T:= T(A, {\mathcal D}) be a disk-like self-affine tile generated by an integral expanding matrix AA and a consecutive collinear digit set D{\mathcal D}, and let f(x)=x2+px+qf(x)=x^{2}+px+q be the characteristic polynomial of AA. In the paper, we identify the boundary T\partial T with a sofic system by constructing a neighbor graph and derive equivalent conditions for the pair (A,D)(A,{\mathcal D}) to be a number system. Moreover, by using the graph-directed construction and a device of pseudo-norm ω\omega, we find the generalized Hausdorff dimension dimHω(T)=2logρ(M)/logq\dim_H^{\omega} (\partial T)=2\log \rho(M)/\log |q| where ρ(M)\rho(M) is the spectral radius of certain contact matrix MM. Especially, when AA is a similarity, we obtain the standard Hausdorff dimension dimH(T)=2logρ/logq\dim_H (\partial T)=2\log \rho/\log |q| where ρ\rho is the largest positive zero of the cubic polynomial x3(p1)x2(qp)xqx^{3}-(|p|-1)x^{2}-(|q|-|p|)x-|q|, which is simpler than the known result.Comment: 26 pages, 11 figure

    Activated leukocyte cell adhesion molecule in breast cancer: prognostic indicator

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    INTRODUCTION: Activated leukocyte cell adhesion molecule (ALCAM) (CD166) is an immunoglobulin molecule that has been implicated in cell migration. The present study examined the expression of ALCAM in human breast cancer and assessed its prognostic value. METHODS: The immunohistochemical distribution and location of ALCAM was assessed in normal breast tissue and carcinoma. The levels of ALCAM transcripts in frozen tissue (normal breast, n = 32; breast cancer, n = 120) were determined using real-time quantitative PCR. The results were then analyzed in relation to clinical data including the tumor type, the grade, the nodal involvement, distant metastases, the tumor, node, metastasis (TNM) stage, the Nottingham Prognostic Index (NPI), and survival over a 6-year follow-up period. RESULTS: Immunohistochemical staining on tissue sections in ducts/acini in normal breast and in breast carcinoma was ALCAM-positive. Differences in the number of ALCAM transcripts were found in different types of breast cancer. The level of ALCAM transcripts was lower (P = 0.05) in tumors from patients who had metastases to regional lymph nodes compared with those patients without, in higher grade tumors compared with Grade 1 tumors (P < 0.01), and in TNM Stage 3 tumors compared with TNM Stage 1 tumors (P < 0.01). Tumors from patients with poor prognosis (with NPI > 5.4) had significantly lower levels (P = 0.014) of ALCAM transcripts compared with patients with good prognosis (with NPI < 3.4), and tumors from patients with local recurrence had significantly lower levels than those patients without local recurrence or metastases (P = 0.04). Notably, tumors from patients who died of breast cancer had significantly lower levels of ALCAM transcripts (P = 0.0041) than those with primary tumors but no metastatic disease or local recurrence. Patients with low levels of ALCAM transcripts had significantly (P = 0.009) more incidents (metastasis, recurrence, death) compared with patients with primary breast tumors with high levels of ALCAM transcripts. CONCLUSIONS: In the present panel of breast cancer specimens, decreased levels of ALCAM correlated with the nodal involvement, the grade, the TNM stage, the NPI, and the clinical outcome (local recurrence and death). The data suggest that decreased ALCAM expression is of clinical significance in breast cancer, and that reduced expression indicates a more aggressive phenotype and poor prognosis

    Cranial osteopathy: its fate seems clear

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    BACKGROUND: According to the original model of cranial osteopathy, intrinsic rhythmic movements of the human brain cause rhythmic fluctuations of cerebrospinal fluid and specific relational changes among dural membranes, cranial bones, and the sacrum. Practitioners believe they can palpably modify parameters of this mechanism to a patient's health advantage. DISCUSSION: This treatment regime lacks a biologically plausible mechanism, shows no diagnostic reliability, and offers little hope that any direct clinical effect will ever be shown. In spite of almost uniformly negative research findings, "cranial" methods remain popular with many practitioners and patients. SUMMARY: Until outcome studies show that these techniques produce a direct and positive clinical effect, they should be dropped from all academic curricula; insurance companies should stop paying for them; and patients should invest their time, money, and health elsewhere

    A randomized crossover trial assessing the effects of acute exercise on appetite, circulating ghrelin concentrations, and butyrylcholinesterase activity in normal-weight males with variants of the obesity-linked FTO rs9939609 polymorphism

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    Background: The fat mass and obesity-associated gene (FTO) rs9939609 A-allele is associated with higher acyl-ghrelin (AG) concentrations, higher energy intake and obesity, though exercise may mitigate rs9939609 A-allele linked obesity risk. Butyrylcholinesterase (BChE) hydrolyses AG to des-acyl-ghrelin (DAG), potentially decreasing appetite. However, the effects of the FTO rs9939609 genotype and exercise on BChE activity, AG, DAG and energy intake are unknown. Objective: We hypothesized that individuals homozygous for the obesity-risk A-allele (AAs) would exhibit higher postprandial AG and energy intake than individuals homozygous for the low obesity-risk T-allele (TTs), but that exercise would increase BChE activity and diminish these differences. Methods: Twelve AA and 12 TT normal weight males completed a control (8 hours rest) and an exercise (1 hour of exercise at 70% peak oxygen uptake, 7 hours rest) trial in a randomized cross-over design. A fixed meal was consumed at 1.5 hours and an ab libitum buffet meal at 6.5 hours. Appetite, appetite-related hormones, BChE activity and energy intake were assessed. Results: AAs displayed lower baseline BChE activity, higher baseline AG/DAG ratio, attenuated AG suppression after a fixed meal and higher ad libitum energy intake than TTs (ES ≥ 0.76, P ≤ 0.049). Exercise increased delta BChE activity in both genotypes (ES = 0.41, P = 0.004); however, exercise lowered AG and the AG/DAG ratio to a greater extent in AAs (P ≤ 0.041), offsetting the higher AG ghrelin profile observed in AAs during the control trial (ES ≥ 0.88, P ≤ 0.048). Exercise did not elevate energy intake in either genotype (P = 0.282). Conclusions: Exercise increases BChE activity, suppresses AG and the AG/DAG ratio and corrects the higher AG profile observed in obesity-risk AA individuals. These findings suggest that exercise or other methods targeting BChE activity may offer a preventative and/or therapeutic strategy for AA individuals

    Routes for breaching and protecting genetic privacy

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    We are entering the era of ubiquitous genetic information for research, clinical care, and personal curiosity. Sharing these datasets is vital for rapid progress in understanding the genetic basis of human diseases. However, one growing concern is the ability to protect the genetic privacy of the data originators. Here, we technically map threats to genetic privacy and discuss potential mitigation strategies for privacy-preserving dissemination of genetic data.Comment: Draft for comment
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