44 research outputs found
Attributing scientific and technical progress: the case of holography
Holography, the three-dimensional imaging technology, was portrayed widely as a paradigm
of progress during its decade of explosive expansion 1964–73, and during its subsequent
consolidation for commercial and artistic uses up to the mid 1980s. An unusually
seductive and prolific subject, holography successively spawned scientific insights, putative
applications and new constituencies of practitioners and consumers. Waves of forecasts,
associated with different sponsors and user communities, cast holography as a field on the
verge of success—but with the dimensions of success repeatedly refashioned. This retargeting
of the subject represented a degree of cynical marketeering, but was underpinned by
implicit confidence in philosophical positivism and faith in technological progressivism.
Each of its communities defined success in terms of expansion, and anticipated continual
progressive increase. This paper discusses the contrasting definitions of progress in holography,
and how they were fashioned in changing contexts. Focusing equally on reputed ‘failures’ of some aspects of the subject, it explores the varied attributes by which success and failure were linked with progress by different technical communities. This important case illuminates the peculiar post-World War II environment that melded the military, commercial and popular engagement with scientific and technological subjects, and the
competing criteria by which they assessed the products of science
Political strategies of external support for democratization
Political strategies of external support to democratization are contrasted and critically examined in respect of the United States and European Union. The analysis begins by defining its terms of reference and addresses the question of what it means to have a strategy. The account briefly notes the goals lying behind democratization support and their relationship with the wider foreign policy process, before considering what a successful strategy would look like and how that relates to the selection of candidates. The literature's attempts to identify strategy and its recommendations for better strategies are compared and assessed. Overall, the article argues that the question of political strategies of external support for democratization raises several distinct but related issues including the who?, what?, why?, and how? On one level, strategic choices can be expected to echo the comparative advantage of the "supporter." On a different level, the strategies cannot be divorced from the larger foreign policy framework. While it is correct to say that any sound strategy for support should be grounded in a theoretical understanding of democratization, the literature on strategies reveals something even more fundamental: divergent views about the nature of politics itself. The recommendations there certainly pinpoint weaknesses in the actual strategies of the United States and Europe but they have their own limitations too. In particular, in a world of increasing multi-level governance strategies for supporting democratization should go beyond preoccupation with just an "outside-in" approach
Expression of Multiple Artificial MicroRNAs from a Chicken miRNA126-Based Lentiviral Vector
Background: The use of RNAi in both basic and translational research often requires expression of multiple siRNAs from the
same vector.
Methods/Principal Findings: We have developed a novel chicken miR126-based artificial miRNA expression system that can
express one, two or three miRNAs from a single cassette in a lentiviral vector. We show that each of the miRNAs expressed
from the same lentiviral vector is capable of potent inhibition of reporter gene expression in transient transfection and
stable integration assays in chicken fibroblast DF-1 cells. Transduction of Vero cells with lentivirus expressing two or three
different anti-influenza miRNAs leads to inhibition of influenza virus production. In addition, the chicken miR126-based
expression system effectively inhibits reporter gene expression in human, monkey, dog and mouse cells. These results
demonstrate that the flanking regions of a single primary miRNA can support processing of three different stem-loops in a
single vector.
Conclusions/Significance: This novel design expands the means to express multiple miRNAs from the same vector for
potent and effective silencing of target genes and influenza virus.National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant R01AI056267)Cobb-Vantress, inc
Principles of physics : instructor's manual with complete solutions
674, 43 p. : ill. ; 28 c
DevoWorm Dataset
<p>Dataset for the DevoWorm project. See the paper "From Waves to Wriggling" -- Figshare.</p