2,019 research outputs found
Untwisting of a cholesteric elastomer by a mechanical field
A mechanical strain field applied to a monodomain cholesteric elastomer will
unwind the helical director distribution. There is an analogy with the
classical problem of an electric field applied to a cholesteric liquid crystal,
but with important differences. Frank elasticity is of minor importance unless
the gel is very weak. The interplay is between director anchoring to the rubber
elastic matrix and the external mechanical field. Stretching perpendicular to
the helix axis induces the uniform unwound state via the elimination of sharp,
pinned twist walls above a critical strain. Unwinding through conical director
states occurs when the elastomer is stretched along the helical axis.Comment: 4 pages, RevTeX 3 style, 3 EPS figure
A Bayesian test for the appropriateness of a model in the biomagnetic inverse problem
This paper extends the work of Clarke [1] on the Bayesian foundations of the
biomagnetic inverse problem. It derives expressions for the expectation and
variance of the a posteriori source current probability distribution given a
prior source current probability distribution, a source space weight function
and a data set. The calculation of the variance enables the construction of a
Bayesian test for the appropriateness of any source model that is chosen as the
a priori infomation. The test is illustrated using both simulated
(multi-dipole) data and the results of a study of early latency processing of
images of human faces.
[1] C.J.S. Clarke. Error estimates in the biomagnetic inverse problem.
Inverse Problems, 10:77--86, 1994.Comment: 13 pages, 16 figures. Submitted to Inverse Problem
Imprinted Networks as Chiral Pumps
We investigate the interaction between a chirally imprinted network and a
solvent of chiral molecules. We find, a liquid crystalline polymer network is
preferentially swollen by one component of a racemic solvent. This ability to
separate is linked to the chiral order parameter of the network, and can be
reversibly controlled via temperature or a mechanical deformation. It is
maximal near the point at which the network loses its imprinted structure. One
possible practical application of this effect would be a mechanical device for
sorting mixed chiral molecules.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Untwisting of a Strained Cholesteric Elastomer by Disclination Loop Nucleation
The application of a sufficiently strong strain perpendicular to the pitch
axis of a monodomain cholesteric elastomer unwinds the cholesteric helix.
Previous theoretical analyses of this transition ignored the effects of Frank
elasticity which we include here. We find that the strain needed to unwind the
helix is reduced because of the Frank penalty and the cholesteric state becomes
metastable above the transition. We consider in detail a previously proposed
mechanism by which the topologically stable helical texture is removed in the
metastable state, namely by the nucleation of twist disclination loops in the
plane perpendicular to the pitch axis. We present an approximate calculation of
the barrier energy for this nucleation process which neglects possible spatial
variation of the strain fields in the elastomer, as well as a more accurate
calculation based on a finite element modeling of the elastomer.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figure
Effect of sediment load boundary conditions in predicting sediment Delta of Tarbela Reservoir in Pakistan
Setting precise sediment load boundary conditions plays a central role in robust modeling of sedimentation in reservoirs. In the presented study, we modeled sediment transport in Tarbela Reservoir using sediment rating curves (SRC) and wavelet artificial neural networks (WA-ANNs) for setting sediment load boundary conditions in the HEC-RAS 1D numerical model. The reconstruction performance of SRC for finding the missing sediment sampling data was at R-2 = 0.655 and NSE = 0.635. The same performance using WA-ANNs was at R-2 = 0.771 and NSE = 0.771. As the WA-ANNs have better ability to model non-linear sediment transport behavior in the Upper Indus River, the reconstructed missing suspended sediment load data were more accurate. Therefore, using more accurately-reconstructed sediment load boundary conditions in HEC-RAS, the model was better morphodynamically calibrated with R-2 = 0.980 and NSE = 0.979. Using SRC-based sediment load boundary conditions, the HEC-RAS model was calibrated with R-2 = 0.959 and NSE = 0.943. Both models validated the delta movement in the Tarbela Reservoir with R-2 = 0.968, NSE = 0.959 and R-2 = 0.950, NSE = 0.893 using WA-ANN and SRC estimates, respectively. Unlike SRC, WA-ANN-based boundary conditions provided stable simulations in HEC-RAS. In addition, WA-ANN-predicted sediment load also suggested a decrease in supply of sediment significantly to the Tarbela Reservoir in the future due to intra-annual shifting of flows from summer to pre- and post-winter. Therefore, our future predictions also suggested the stability of the sediment delta. As the WA-ANN-based sediment load boundary conditions precisely represented the physics of sediment transport, the modeling concept could very likely be used to study bed level changes in reservoirs/rivers elsewhere in the world
Chirality transfer and stereo-selectivity of imprinted cholesteric networks
Imprinting of cholesteric textures in a polymer network is a method of
preserving a macroscopically chiral phase in a system with no molecular
chirality. By modifying the elastics properties of the network, the resulting
stored helical twist can be manipulated within a wide range since the
imprinting efficiency depends on the balance between the elastics constants and
twisting power at network formation. One spectacular property of phase
chirality imprinting is the created ability of the network to adsorb
preferentially one stereo-component from a racemic mixture. In this paper we
explore this property of chirality transfer from a macroscopic to the molecular
scale. In particular, we focus on the competition between the phase chirality
and the local nematic order. We demonstrate that it is possible to control the
subsequent release of chiral solvent component from the imprinting network and
the reversibility of the stereo-selective swelling by racemic solvents
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Dynamic assessment of children with language impairments: A pilot study
This article describes the construction of a procedure for dynamic assessment of the expressive grammar of children already identified with language impairments. Few instruments exist for the dynamic assessment of language, and those that have been developed have been largely used to successfully differentiate language impaired from culturally different or typically developing populations. The emphasis in this study was on eliciting clinically useful information that may be used to inform intervention for children with specific language impairment (SLI). The method was piloted on three children with specific language impairments.The test—train—retest format made use of standardized administration of the CELF-3 (UK) before and after a designated training protocol. The training procedure required the children to formulate sentences from randomly presented words, assisted by mediation from the assessor. Results showed that the task used was valuable and appropriate for use as a dynamic measure, and elicited differentiated amounts of change in the children in response to the mediated training phase. Pre-test—post-test results were inconclusive, however, and the frameworks for summarizing information could benefit from revision
Stereo-selective swelling of imprinted cholesteric networks
Molecular chirality, and the chiral symmetry breaking of resulting
macroscopic phases, can be topologically imprinted and manipulated by
crosslinking and swelling of polymer networks. We present a new experimental
approach to stereo-specific separation of chiral isomers by using a cholesteric
elastomer in which a helical director distribution has been topological
imprinted by crosslinking. This makes the material unusual in that is has a
strong phase chirality, but no molecular chirality at all; we study the nature
and parameters controlling the twist-untwist transition. Adding a racemic
mixture to the imprinted network results in selective swelling by only the
component of ``correct'' handedness. We investigate the capacity of demixing in
a racemic environment, which depends on network parameters and the underlying
nematic order
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Circulating Biomarkers to Identify Responders in Cardiac Cell therapy.
Bone marrow mononuclear cell (BM-MNC) therapy in ST-elevation acute myocardial infarction (STEMI) has no biological inclusion criteria. Here, we analyzed 63 biomarkers and cytokines in baseline plasma samples from 77 STEMI patients treated with BM-MNCs in the TIME and Late-TIME trials as well as 61 STEMI patients treated with placebo. Response to cell therapy was defined by changes in left ventricular ejection fraction, systolic/diastolic volumes, and wall motion indexes. We investigated the clinical value of circulating proteins in outcome prediction using significance testing, partial least squares discriminant analysis, and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis. Responders had higher biomarker levels (76-94% elevated) than non-responders. Several biomarkers had values that differed significantly (P < 0.05) between responders and non-responders including stem cell factor, platelet-derived growth factor, and interleukin-15. We then used these lead candidates for ROC analysis and found multiple biomarkers with values areas under the curve >0.70 including interleukin 15. These biomarkers were not involved in the placebo-treated subjects suggesting that they may have predictive power. We conclude that plasma profiling after STEMI may help identify patients with a greater likelihood of response to cell-based treatment. Prospective trials are needed to assess the predictive value of the circulating biomarkers
Separate processing of texture and form in the ventral stream : evidence from fMRI and visual agnosia.
Real-life visual object recognition requires the processing of more than just geometric (shape, size, and orientation) properties. Surface properties such as color and texture are equally important, particularly for providing information about the material properties of objects. Recent neuroimaging research suggests that geometric and surface properties are dealt with separately, within the lateral occipital cortex (LOC) and the collateral sulcus (CoS), respectively. Here we compared objects that either differed in aspect ratio or in surface texture only, keeping all other visual properties constant. Results on brain-intact participants confirmed that surface texture activates an area in the posterior CoS, quite distinct from the area activated by shape within LOC. We also tested two patients with visual object agnosia, one of whom (DF) performed well on the texture task but at chance on the shape task, while the other (MS) showed the converse pattern. This behavioral double dissociation was matched by a parallel neuroimaging dissociation, with activation in CoS but not LOC in patient DF, and activation in LOC but not CoS in patient MS. These data provide presumptive evidence that the areas respectively activated by shape and texture play a causally necessary role in the perceptual discrimination of these features
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