139 research outputs found
Mean field games systems of first order
We consider a system of mean field games with local coupling in the
deterministic limit. Under general structure conditions on the Hamiltonian and
coupling, we prove existence and uniqueness of the weak solution,
characterizing this solution as the minimizer of some optimal control of
Hamilton-Jacobi and continuity equations. We also prove that this solution
converges in the long time average to the solution of the associated ergodic
problem
CaM KK Mediates MDM2 Activation in LNCaP Cells
Abstract Agonists and hormones that cause an influx of calcium in LNCaP prostate cancer cells activate the calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (CaM Kinase) pathway and AKT phosphorylation. CaM KK and AKT are essential for promoting LNCaP cell survival. AKT phosphorylation of MDM2 protein may negatively regulate the tumor suppressor protein, p53. CaM KK and AKT have yet to be demonstrated as upstream regulators of MDM2 and p53 in LNCaP cells. Our goals were to examine the ability of carbachol and testosterone to stimulate MDM2 phosphorylation, its association with p53, and whether CaM KK is upstream of MDM2. Stimulation of LNCaP cells with carbachol increased MDM2 phosphorylation that was blocked by the CaM KK inhibitor, STO-609 as well as the AKT inhibitor, AKT-X. Similarly, testosterone also increased MDM2 phosphorylation through CaM KK and AKT. The requirement for CaM KK upstream of MDM2 was also examined using siRNA knockdown of CaM KK. Carbachol treatment of cells triggered phosphorylation of MDM2 that was blocked in cells transfected with siRNA against CaM KK. To assess the biochemical significance of signaling through CaM KK and MDM2 in LNCaP cells we assayed MDM2 association with p53. Carbachol stimulated MDM2 association with p53 in a manner that was dependent upon CaM KK. Our results suggest that carbachol treatment of LNCaP cells promoted phosphorylation of MDM2 and its association with p53 through CaM KK
Birds of a Feather Linked Together: A Discriminative Topic Model using Link-based Priors
Abstract A wide range of applications, from social media to scientific literature analysis, involve graphs in which documents are connected by links. We introduce a topic model for link prediction based on the intuition that linked documents will tend to have similar topic distributions, integrating a max-margin learning criterion and lexical term weights in the loss function. We validate our approach on the tweets from 2,000 Sina Weibo users and evaluate our model's reconstruction of the social network
Television news and the symbolic criminalisation of young people
This is an Author's Accepted Manuscript of an article published in Journalism Studies, 9(1), 75 - 90, 2008, copyright Taylor & Francis, available online at: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/14616700701768105.This essay combines quantitative and qualitative analysis of six UK television news programmes. It seeks to analyse the representation of young people within broadcast news provision at a time when media representations, political discourse and policy making generally appear to be invoking young people as something of a folk devil or a locus for moral panics. The quantitative analysis examines the frequency with which young people appear as main actors across a range of different subjects and analyses the role of young people as news sources. It finds a strong correlation between young people and violent crime. A qualitative analysis of four âspecial reportsâ or backgrounders on channel Five's Five News explores the representation of young people in more detail, paying attention to contradictions and tensions in the reports, the role of statistics in crime reporting, the role of victims of crime and the tensions between conflicting news frames.Arts and Humanities Research Counci
Shallow Water â06 : a joint acoustic propagation/nonlinear internal wave physics experiment
Author Posting. © Oceanography Society, 2007. This article is posted here by permission of Oceanography Society for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Oceanography 20, 4 (2007): 156-167.Since the end of the Cold War,
the US Navy has had an increasing interest
in continental shelves and slopes as
operational areas. To work in such areas
requires a good understanding of ocean
acoustics, coastal physical oceanography,
and, in the modern era, autonomous
underwater vehicle (AUV) operations
A reverse pathway? Actual and perceived skill proficiency and physical activity
Purpose: Motor skills are considered a prerequisite to physical activity, yet the relationship may be reciprocal and perceived sports competence might mediate associations.Methods: In 2006/2007, 215 adolescents completed motor skill proficiency (Get Skilled Get Active), perceived sport competence (Physical Self-Perception Profile) and physical activity assessments (Adolescent Physical Activity Recall Questionnaire) as part of the Physical Activity and Skills Study. Using AMOS (Version 7.0), reciprocal relationships were examined between motor skill (object control and locomotor) and moderate to vigorous physical activity (MVPA). Both models were then run in different versions to understand the role of perceived sports competence as a potential mediator. Results: Mean age was 16.4 yr (SD = 0.6), 51.6% (111/215) were females. A reciprocal relationship between object control and MVPA and a one-way relationship from MVPA to locomotor skill was found. When perceived sports competence was examined as a mediator, the best-fitting model versions explained 16% (R² = 0.16)MVPA variation, and 30% object control (R² = 0.30), and 12% locomotor skill variation (R² = 0.12) (reverse relationship). Perceived sports competence partially mediates the relationship between object control proficiency and physical activity for both directions and fully mediates the relationship between physical activity and locomotor skill; but only when locomotor skill is the outcome.Conclusions: If the relationship between object control skill and physical activity is viewed as a ‘‘positive feedback loop,’’ skill development and increasing physical activity should simultaneously be targeted in physical activity interventions. Increasing perceived sport competence should also be an intervention focus.<br /
Temporal dynamics of the developing lung transcriptome in three common inbred strains of laboratory mice reveals multiple stages of postnatal alveolar development
To characterize temporal patterns of transcriptional activity during normal lung development, we generated genome wide gene expression data for 26 pre- and post-natal time points in three common inbred strains of laboratory mice (C57BL/6J, A/J, and C3H/HeJ). Using Principal Component Analysis and least squares regression modeling, we identified both strain-independent and strain-dependent patterns of gene expression. The 4,683 genes contributing to the strain-independent expression patterns were used to define a murine Developing Lung Characteristic Subtranscriptome (mDLCS). Regression modeling of the Principal Components supported the four canonical stages of mammalian embryonic lung development (embryonic, pseudoglandular, canalicular, saccular) defined previously by morphology and histology. For postnatal alveolar development, the regression model was consistent with four stages of alveolarization characterized by episodic transcriptional activity of genes related to pulmonary vascularization. Genes expressed in a strain-dependent manner were enriched for annotations related to neurogenesis, extracellular matrix organization, and Wnt signaling. Finally, a comparison of mouse and human transcriptomics from pre-natal stages of lung development revealed conservation of pathways associated with cell cycle, axon guidance, immune function, and metabolism as well as organism-specific expression of genes associated with extracellular matrix organization and protein modification. The mouse lung development transcriptome data generated for this study serves as a unique reference set to identify genes and pathways essential for normal mammalian lung development and for investigations into the developmental origins of respiratory disease and cancer. The gene expression data are available from the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) archive (GSE74243). Temporal expression patterns of mouse genes can be investigated using a study specific web resource (http://lungdevelopment.jax.org)
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