3,473 research outputs found

    Effect of vibration in combined axes on subjective evaluation of ride quality

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    The effects of simultaneous sinusoidal vibration in the vertical and lateral axes on ratings of discomfort were investigated. The first experiment concentrated on the effects of variation of frequency in the two axes, and the second study concentrated on the effects of amplitude variation in the two axes

    On the numerical evaluation of Legendre’s chi-function

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    Residents' annoyance responses to aircraft noise events

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    In a study conducted in the vicinity of Salt Lake City International Airport, community residents reported their annoyance with individual aircraft flyovers during rating sessions conducted in their homes. Annoyance ratings were obtained at different times of the day. Aircraft noise levels were measured, and other characteristics of the aircraft were noted by trained observers. Metrics commonly used for assessing aircraft noise were compared, but none performed significantly better than A-weighted sound pressure level. A significant difference was found between the ratings of commercial jet aircraft and general aviation propeller aircraft, with the latter being judged less annoying. After the effects of noise level were accounted for, no significant differences were found between the ratings of landings and takeoffs. Aircraft noise annoyance reactions are stronger in lowered ambient noise conditions. This is consistent with the theory that reduced nighttime and evening ambient levels could create different reactions at different times of day. After controlling for ambient noise in a multiple regression analysis, no significant differences were found between the ratings of single events obtained during the three time periods: morning, afternoon, and evenings

    Metabolism of Nonessential N15-Labeled Amino Acids and the Measurement of Human Whole-Body Protein Synthesis Rates

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    Eight N-15 labeled nonessential amino acids plus (15)NH4Cl were administered over a 10 h period to four healthy adult males using a primed-constant dosage regimen. The amount of N-15 excreted in the urine and the urinary ammonia, hippuric acid, and plasma alanine N-15 enrichments were measured. There was a high degree of consistency across subjects in the ordering of the nine compounds based on the fraction of N-15 excreted (Kendall coefficient of concordance W = 0.83, P is less than 0.01). Protein synthesis rates were calculated from the urinary ammonia plateau enrichment and the cumulative excretion of N-15. Glycine was one of the few amino acids that gave similar values by both methods

    Correlations, inhomogeneous screening, and suppression of spin-splitting in quantum wires at strong magnetic fields

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    A self-consistent treatment of exchange and correlation interactions in a quantum wire (QW) subject to a strong perpendicular magnetic field is presented using a modified local-density approximation (MLDA). The influence of many-body interactions on the spin-splitting between the two lowest Landau levels (LLs) is calculated within the screened Hartree-Fock approximation (SHFA), for filling factor \nu=1, and the strong spatial dependence of the screening properties of electrons is taken into account. In comparison with the Hartree-Fock result, the spatial behavior of the occupied LL in a QW is strongly modified when correlations are included. Correlations caused by screening at the edges strongly suppress the exchange splitting and smoothen the energy dispersion at the edges. The theory accounts well for the experimentally observed strong suppression of the spin-splitting pertinent to the \nu=1 quantum Hall effect (QHE) state as well as the destruction of this state in long, quasi-ballistic GaAlAs/GaAs QWs.Comment: Text 23 pages in Latex/Revtex/preprint format, 6 Postscript figures, submitted to Physical Review

    A heterokaryon instability gene in the Rockefeller-Lindegren strains of Neurospora crassa and its possible relation to the het i gene in Oak Ridge-St. Lawrence strains

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    The het I/i genes in the Oak Ridge-St. Lawrence (OR-SL) strains of Neurospora crassa are unique among the het genes in that they do not cause cell death in incompatible heterokaryons. Instead, within certain nuclear ratios, forced heterokaryons are unstable. They become homokaryotic for the het I component, and stop growing. Similar alleles have now been found in Rockefeller-Lindegren (RL) strains. The latter differ from those of the OR-SL strains in that the heterokaryons become homokaryotic over a wide range of initial nuclear ratios. Evidence is presented that suggests the two sets of alleles may be the same

    Roles for transforming growth factor-alpha in gastric physiology and pathophysiology.

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    Transforming growth factor alpha (TGF alpha) is a 5.6 kd single-chain polypeptide that acts through binding to the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR). TGF alpha is produced in a wide range of normal as well as embryonic and neoplastic cells and tissues. TGF alpha and EGFR, but not EGF, are expressed in normal gastric mucosa. We have identified the following biological roles for TGF alpha in the stomach, using a variety of primate and rodent models: inhibition of acid secretion; stimulation of mucous cell growth; protection against ethanol- and aspirin-induced injury. This last effect is associated with a time- and dose-dependent increase in levels of insoluble gastric mucin. Based on these known biological actions of TGF alpha, we have examined TGF alpha production in Ménétrier's disease, a disorder characterized by foveolar hyperplasia, hypochlorhydria, and increased gastric mucin content. In four patients with Ménétrier's disease, there was enhanced TGF alpha immunostaining throughout the gastric mucosa. Furthermore, metallothionein (MT)-TGF alpha transgenic mice which overproduce TGF alpha in the stomach exhibit histopathological and biochemical features characteristic of and consistent with the diagnosis of Ménétrier's disease. Thus locally produced TGF alpha may mediate a number of biological processes in the stomach, and its altered production may participate in the pathogenesis of selected pathological states

    Septic shock is correlated with asymmetrical dimethyl arginine levels, which may be influenced by a polymorphism in the dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase II gene: a prospective observational study

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    INTRODUCTION: Asymmetrical dimethyl arginine (ADMA) is an endogenous non-selective inhibitor of nitric oxide synthase that may influence the severity of organ failure and the occurrence of shock secondary to an infectious insult. Levels may be genetically determined by a promoter polymorphism in a regulatory gene encoding dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase II (DDAH II), which functions by metabolising ADMA to citrulline. The aim of this study was to examine the association between ADMA levels and the severity of organ failure and shock in severe sepsis and also to assess the influence of a promoter polymorphism in DDAH II on ADMA levels. METHODS: A prospective observational study was designed, and 47 intensive care unit (ICU) patients with severe sepsis and 10 healthy controls were enrolled. Serum ADMA and IL-6 were assayed on admission to the ICU and seven days later. Allelic variation for a polymorphism at position -449 in the DDAH II gene was assessed in each patient. Clinical and demographic details were also collected. RESULTS: On day 1 more ADMA was detectable in the ICU group than in the control group (p = 0.005). Levels subsequently increased during the first week in ICU (p = 0.001). ADMA levels were associated with vasopressor requirements on day one (p = 0.001). ADMA levels and Sequential Organ Failure Assessment scores were directly associated on day one (p = 0.0001) and day seven (p = 0.002). The degree of acidaemia and lactaemia was directly correlated with ADMA levels at both time points (p < 0.01). On day seven, IL-6 was directly correlated with ADMA levels (p = 0.006). The variant allele with G at position -449 in the DDAH II gene was associated with increased ADMA concentrations at both time points (p < 0.05). CONCLUSION: Severity of organ failure, inflammation and presence of early shock in severe sepsis are associated with increased ADMA levels. ADMA concentrations may be influenced by a polymorphism in the DDAH II gene
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