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Terms modified by Constant Rate Selected AbstractsEffects of prolonged gum chewing on pain and fatigue in human jaw musclesEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF ORAL SCIENCES, Issue 2 2001Mauro Farella Gum chewing has been accepted as an adjunct to oral hygiene, as salivary stimulant and vehicle for various agents, as well as for jaw muscle training. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of prolonged gum chewing on pain, fatigue and pressure tenderness of the masticatory muscles. Fifteen women without temporomandibular disorders (TMD) were requested to perform one of the following chewing tasks in three separate sessions: chewing a very hard gum, chewing a soft gum, and empty-chewing with no bolus. Unilateral chewing of gum or empty chewing was performed for 40 min at a constant rate of 80 cycles/min. In each session, perceived muscle pain and masticatory fatigue were rated on visual analog scales (VAS) before, throughout, and after the chewing task. Pressure pain thresholds (PPTs) of masseter and anterior temporalis muscles were assessed before and immediately after the chewing tasks, and again after 24 h. The VAS scores for pain and fatigue significantly increased only during the hard gum chewing, and after 10 min of recovery VAS scores had decreased again, almost to their baseline values. No significant changes were found for PPTs either after hard or soft gum chewing. The findings indicate that the jaw muscles recover quickly from prolonged chewing activity in subjects without TMD. [source] THE MACROEVOLUTIONARY DYNAMICS OF ANT DIVERSIFICATIONEVOLUTION, Issue 11 2009Marcio R. Pie The availability of increasingly comprehensive phylogenies has provided unprecedented opportunities to assess macroevolutionary patterns, yet studies on invertebrate diversification are few. In particular, despite the ecological and evolutionary importance of ants, little is known about their tempo and mode of diversification. Recent advances in ant phylogenetics can now provide a basis for rigorous analyses of the diversification of ant lineages. The goals of the present study are threefold. First, we demonstrate that a hypothesized disproportionate increase in ant diversification during the angiosperm radiation is largely artifactual. Rather, current evidence points to a fairly constant rate of lineage growth during its history. Moreover, an analysis of diversification patterns across the ant phylogeny indicates considerable rate heterogeneity among lineages. Indeed, and contrary to the expectation if lineages had experienced a single rate of lineage increase, we found no correspondence between genus age and diversity. Finally, we demonstrate a statistically significant phylogenetic signal in ant diversification: closely related genera have diversities that are more similar to one another than one would expect by chance. This suggests that the capacity for diversification may be itself a biological trait that evolved during the radiation of the family Formicidae. [source] EVOLUTION AND STABILITY OF THE G-MATRIX ON A LANDSCAPE WITH A MOVING OPTIMUMEVOLUTION, Issue 8 2004Adam G. Jones Abstract In quantitative genetics, the genetic architecture of traits, described in terms of variances and covariances, plays a major role in determining the trajectory of evolutionary change. Hence, the genetic variance-covariance matrix (G-matrix) is a critical component of modern quantitative genetics theory. Considerable debate has surrounded the issue of G-matrix constancy because unstable G-matrices provide major difficulties for evolutionary inference. Empirical studies and analytical theory have not resolved the debate. Here we present the results of stochastic models of G-matrix evolution in a population responding to an adaptive landscape with an optimum that moves at a constant rate. This study builds on the previous results of stochastic simulations of G-matrix stability under stabilizing selection arising from a stationary optimum. The addition of a moving optimum leads to several important new insights. First, evolution along genetic lines of least resistance increases stability of the orientation of the G-matrix relative to stabilizing selection alone. Evolution across genetic lines of least resistance decreases G-matrix stability. Second, evolution in response to a continuously changing optimum can produce persistent maladaptation for a correlated trait, even if its optimum does not change. Third, the retrospective analysis of selection performs very well when the mean G-matrix (,) is known with certainty, indicating that covariance between G and the directional selection gradient (3 is usually small enough in magnitude that it introduces only a small bias in estimates of the net selection gradient. Our results also show, however, that the contemporary ,-matrix only serves as a rough guide to ,. The most promising approach for the estimation of G is probably through comparative phylogenetic analysis. Overall, our results show that directional selection actually can increase stability of the G-matrix and that retrospective analysis of selection is inherently feasible. One ?riajor remaining challenge is to gain a sufficient understanding of the G-matrix to allow the confident estimation of ,. [source] A BAYESIAN FRAMEWORK FOR THE ANALYSIS OF COSPECIATIONEVOLUTION, Issue 2 2000John P. Huelsenbeck Abstract., Information on the history of cospeciation and host switching for a group of host and parasite species is contained in the DNA sequences sampled from each. Here, we develop a Bayesian framework for the analysis of cospeciation. We suggest a simple model of host switching by a parasite on a host phylogeny in which host switching events are assumed to occur at a constant rate over the entire evolutionary history of associated hosts and parasites. The posterior probability density of the parameters of the model of host switching are evaluated numerically using Markov chain Monte Carlo. In particular, the method generates the probability density of the number of host switches and of the host switching rate. Moreover, the method provides information on the probability that an event of host switching is associated with a particular pair of branches. A Bayesian approach has several advantages over other methods for the analysis of cospeciation. In particular, it does not assume that the host or parasite phylogenies are known without error; many alternative phylogenies are sampled in proportion to their probability of being correct. [source] INTEGRATED LANDSCAPE ANALYSES OF CHANGE OF MIOMBO WOODLAND IN TANZANIA AND ITS IMPLICATION FOR ENVIRONMENT AND HUMAN LIVELIHOODGEOGRAFISKA ANNALER SERIES A: PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY, Issue 1 2009LENNART STRÖMQUIST ABSTRACT. Landscapes bear witness to past and present natural and societal processes influencing the environment and human livelihoods. By analysing landscape change at different spatial scales over time the effects on the environment and human livelihoods of various external and internal driving forces of change can be studied. This paper presents such an analysis of miombo woodland surrounding the Mkata plains in central Tanzania. The rich natural landscape diversity of the study area in combination with its historical and political development makes it an ideal observation ground for this kind of study. The paper focuses on long-term physical and biological changes, mainly based on satellite information but also on field studies and a review of documents and literature. The miombo woodlands are highly dynamic semi-arid ecosystems found on a number of nutrient-poor soil groups. Most of the woodlands are related to an old, low-relief geomorphology of erosion surfaces with relatively deep and leached soils, or to a lesser extent also on escarpments and steep Inselberg slopes with poor soils. Each period in the past has cast its footprints on the landscape development and its potential for a sustainable future use. On a regional level there has been a continual decrease in forest area over time. Expansion of agriculture around planned villages, implemented during the 1970s, in some cases equals the loss of forest area (Mikumi-Ulaya), whilst in other areas (Kitulangalo), the pre-independence loss of woodland was small; the agricultural area was almost the same during the period 1975,1999, despite the fact that forests have been lost at an almost constant rate over the same period. Illegal logging and charcoal production are likely causes because of the proximity to the main highway running through the area. Contrasting to the general regional pattern are the conditions in a traditional village (Ihombwe), with low immigration of people and a maintained knowledge of the resource potential of the forest with regards to edible plants and animals. In this area the local community has control of the forest resources in a Forest Reserve, within which the woody vegetation has increased in spite of an expansion of agriculture on other types of village land. The mapping procedure has shown that factors such as access to transport and lack of local control have caused greater deforestation of certain areas than during the colonial period. Planned villages have furthermore continued to expand over forest areas well after their implementation, rapidly increasing the landscape fragmentation. One possible way to maintain landscape and biodiversity values is by the sustainable use of traditional resources, based on local knowledge of their management as illustrated by the little change observed in the traditionally used area. [source] The role of friction and secondary flaws on deflection and re-initiation of hydraulic fractures at orthogonal pre-existing fracturesGEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL, Issue 3 2006Xi Zhang SUMMARY In this study, we explore the nature of plane-strain hydraulic fracture growth in the presence of pre-existing fractures such as joints without or with secondary flaws. The 2-D plane-strain fracture studied can be taken as a cross-section through the short dimensions of an elongated 3-D fracture or as an approximate representation of the leading edge of a 3-D fracture where the edge curvature is negligible. The fluid-driven fracture intersects a pre-existing fracture to which it is initially perpendicular and is assumed not to immediately cross, but is rather deflected into the pre-existing fracture. The intersection results in branching of the fracture and associated fluid flow into the pre-existing fracture. Further growth results in opening and frictional sliding along the pre-existing fracture. Fracture propagation in an impermeable homogeneous elastic medium and fluid invasion into a pre-existing fracture are both driven by an incompressible, Newtonian fluid injected at a constant rate. The frictional stress on the surfaces of pre-existing fractures is assumed to obey the Coulomb law. The governing equations for quasi-static fluid-driven fracture growth are given and a scaling is introduced to help identify important parameters. The displacement discontinuity method and the finite difference method are employed to deal with this coupling mechanism of rock fracture and fluid flow. In order to account for fluid lag, a method for separately tracking the crack tip and the fluid front is included in the numerical model. Numerical results are obtained for internal pressure, frictional contact stresses, opening and shear displacements, and fluid lag size, as well as for fracture re-initiation from secondary flaws. After fracture intersection, the hydraulic fracture growth mode changes from tensile to shearing. This contributes to increased injection pressure and to a reduction in fracture width. In the presence of pre-existing fractures, the fluid-driven cracks can be arrested or retarded in growth rate as a result of diversion of fluid flow into and frictional sliding along the pre-existing fractures. Frictional behaviour significantly affects the ability of the fluid to enter or penetrate the pre-existing fracture only for those situations where the fluid front is within a certain distance from the intersecting point. Importantly, fluid penetration requires higher injection pressure for frictionally weak pre-existing fractures. Fracture re-initiation from secondary flaws can reduce the injection pressure, but re-initiation is suppressed by large sliding on pre-existing fractures that are frictionally weak. [source] Regulatory processes interacting to maintain hepatic blood flow constancy: Vascular compliance, hepatic arterial buffer response, hepatorenal reflex, liver regeneration, escape from vasoconstrictionHEPATOLOGY RESEARCH, Issue 11 2007W. Wayne Lautt Constancy of hepatic blood flow (HBF) is crucial for several homeostatic roles. The present conceptual review focuses on interrelated mechanisms that act to maintain a constant HBF per liver mass. The liver cannot directly control portal blood flow (PF); therefore, these mechanisms largely operate to compensate for PF changes. A reduction in PF leads to reduced intrahepatic distending pressure, resulting in the highly compliant hepatic vasculature passively expelling up to 50% of its blood volume, thus adding to venous return, cardiac output and HBF. Also activated immediately upon reduction of PF are the hepatic arterial buffer response and an HBF-dependent hepatorenal reflex. Adenosine is secreted at a constant rate into the small fluid space of Mall which surrounds the terminal branches of the hepatic arterioles, portal venules and sensory nerves. The concentration of adenosine is regulated by washout into the portal venules. Reduced PFreduces the washout and the accumulated adenosine causes dilation of the hepatic artery, thus buffering the PF change. Adenosine also activates hepatic sensory nerves to cause reflex renal fluid retention, thus increasing circulating blood volume and maintaining cardiac output and PF. If these mechanisms are not able to maintain total HBF, the hemodynamic imbalance results in hepatocyte proliferation, or apoptosis, by a shear stress/nitric oxide-dependent mechanism, to adjust total liver mass to match the blood supply. These mechanisms are specific to this unique vascular bed and provide an excellent example of multiple integrative regulation of a major homeostatic organ. [source] Measuring thaw depth beneath peat-lined arctic streams using ground-penetrating radarHYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, Issue 14 2005John H. Bradford Abstract In arctic streams, depth of thaw beneath the stream channel is likely a significant parameter controlling hyporheic zone hydrology and biogeochemical cycling. As part of an interdisciplinary study of this system, we conducted a field investigation to test the effectiveness of imaging substream permafrost using ground-penetrating radar (GPR). We investigated three sites characterized by low-energy water flow, organic material lining the streambeds, and water depths ranging from 0·2 to 2 m. We acquired data using a 200 MHz pulsed radar system with the antennas mounted in the bottom of a small rubber boat that was pulled across the stream while triggering the radar at a constant rate. We achieved excellent results at all three sites, with a clear continuous image of the permafrost boundary both peripheral to and beneath the stream. Our results demonstrate that GPR can be an effective tool for measuring substream thaw depth. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] The rate of terminal nucleotide loss from a telomere of the mosquito Anopheles gambiaeINSECT MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, Issue 1 2001M. F. Walter Abstract Using a single copy pUChsneo transgene insertion at the Anopheles gambiae 2L telomere, this chromosome end was monitored by genomic Southern blots for forty-four mosquito generations. During this time, the chromosome end lost terminal nucleotides at an apparently constant rate of 55 bp/generation, which can be accounted for by incomplete DNA replication and does not imply exonuclease activity. No telomere elongation events were detected, suggesting that a previously described gene conversion event at this transgene does not occur very frequently. Moreover, no evidence for elongation by transposable elements was found, as described in Drosophila melanogaster. These results are consistent with the proposal that gene conversion between complex terminal satellite repeats that are present at natural telomeres, represents the major telomere elongation mechanism in A. gambiae. Such recombination events between repetitive sequences would occur more frequently than between the single copy pUChsneo transgene on the 2L homologues. [source] Nonuniform video coding by means of multifoveal geometriesINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF IMAGING SYSTEMS AND TECHNOLOGY, Issue 1 2002J.A. Rodríguez This paper presents a control mechanism for video transmission that relies on transmitting nonuniform resolution images depending on the delay of the communication channel. These images are built in an active way to keep the areas of interest of the image at the highest resolution available. In order to shift the areas of high resolution over the image and to achieve a data structure that is easy to process by using conventional algorithms, a shifted foveal multiresolution geometry of adaptive size is used. If delays are too high, the resolution areas of the image can be transmitted at different rates. A functional system has been developed for corridor surveillance with static cameras. Tests with real video images have proven that the method allows an almost constant rate of images per second as long as the channel is not collapsed. A new method for determining the areas of interest is also proposed, based on hierarchical object tracking by means of adaptive stabilization of pyramidal structures. © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Int J Imaging Syst Technol 12, 27,34, 2002 [source] Site-specific percutaneous absorption of methyl salicylate and VX in domestic swineJOURNAL OF APPLIED TOXICOLOGY, Issue 3 2002E. J. Scott Duncan Abstract The site specificity of the percutaneous absorption of methyl salicylate (MeS) and the organophosphate nerve agent VX (O -ethyl S -(2-diisopropylaminoethyl) methylphosphonothioate) was examined in anaesthetized domestic swine that were fully instrumented for physiological endpoints. Four different anatomical sites (ear, perineum, inguinal crease and epigastrium) were exposed to the MeS and the serum levels were measured over a 6-h time period. The dose absorbed at the ear region was 11 ,g cm,2 with an initial flux of 0.063 ,g cm,2min,1, whereas at the epigastrium region the dose absorbed was 3 ,g cm,2 with an initial flux of 0.025 ,g cm,2min,1. For this reason further studies were carried out with VX on the ear and the epigastrium only. In animals treated with agent on the epigastrium, blood cholinesterase (ChE) activity began to drop 90 min after application and continued to decline at a constant rate for the remainder of the experiment to ca. 25% of awake control activity. At this time there were negligible signs of poisoning and the medical prognosis was judged to be good. In contrast, the ChE activity in animals receiving VX on the ear decreased to 25% of awake control values within 45 min and levelled out at 5,6% by 120 min. Clinical signs of VX poisoning paralleled the ChE inhibition, progressing in severity over the duration of the exposure. It was judged that these animals would not survive. The dramatic site dependence of agent absorption leading to vastly different toxicological endpoints demonstrated in this model system has important ramifications for chemical protective suit development, threat assessment, medical countermeasures and contamination control protocols. Copyright © 2002 Crown in the right of Canada. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Daily patterns of body mass gain in four species of small wintering birdsJOURNAL OF AVIAN BIOLOGY, Issue 3 2002Kristjan Lilliendahl Theoretically, the trajectories describing the daily accumulation of body reserves are expected to differ between bird species in relation to whether or not they hoard food. To carry reserves on the body may be costly and hoarding species can be expected to hoard food early in the day when light and retrieve it in the afternoon, with a concomitant rapid increase in body mass. Also, the increased food predictability resulting from being able to consume hoarded food late in the day should lead to a relatively faster gain in body reserves in the afternoon in hoarding species compared to non-hoarders. Non-hoarders may have to hedge against possible afternoon losses of foraging opportunities by accumulating more reserves early in the day. In this study the daily patterns of body mass gain in four small bird species resident during winter in Scandinavia are described. Individually known birds were trained to come to a permanent feeder and their body masses were recorded every hour throughout the day with a remote-controlled balance. The hoarding willow tit Parus montanus, marsh tit P. palustris and European nuthatch Sitta europaea all displayed the most rapid gain in body mass in the early hours of the day. After the initial burst in the morning, reserves were accumulated at a roughly constant rate for the remainder of the day. In contrast, the non-hoarding great tit P. major apparently gained body reserves at a more even rate. The daily pattern of body mass gain found in the hoarding species differs from prevailing theoretical predictions, whereas the pattern in the non-hoarding great tit is in a better agreement with theory, from which this pattern has been predicted repeatedly. [source] PREDICTION OF APPLE FIRMNESS FROM MASS LOSS AND SHRINKAGEJOURNAL OF FOOD QUALITY, Issue 1 2004S.O. LINK ABSTRACT Prediction of firmness from mass loss and shrinkage was investigated in apples (Malus x domestica Borkh.) under regular atmosphere (RA) storage conditions. Apples (,Delicious' and ,Fuji') were repeatedly weighed to determine mass loss. Shrinkage was measured with a strain gauge sensor. ,Delicious' apples lost firmness (73 to 58 N) while ,Fuji' apples maintained firmness at 69 N over 57 days in storage. Apples lost mass at a constant rate with ,Delicious' losing mass slower (0.6 % per month) than ,Fuji' (1.1% per month). ,Delicious' apple shrank less (0.28 mm) than the ,Fuji' (0.70 mm) over 57 days. The relationship between firmness and mass loss, or shrinkage was dependent on apple cultivar. Firmness was significantly and linearly related to mass loss and to shrinkage in ,Delicious' apples. It is possible to predict firmness of ,Delicious' apples under RA storage conditions by tracking mass loss or shrinkage. [source] Nanometre localization of single ReAsH moleculesJOURNAL OF MICROSCOPY, Issue 3 2004H. PARK Summary ReAsH is a red-emitting dye that binds to the unique sequence Cys-Cys-Xaa-Xaa-Cys-Cys (where Xaa is a noncysteine amino acid) in the protein. We attached a single ReAsH to a calmodulin with an inserted tetracysteine motif and immobilized individual calmodulins to a glass surface at low density. Total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy was used to image individual ReAsH molecules. We determined the centre of the distribution of photons in the image of a single molecule in order to determine the position of the dye within 5 nm precision and with an image integration time of 0.5 s. The photostability of ReAsH was also characterized and observation times ranging from several seconds to over a minute were observed. We found that 2-mercaptoethanesulphonic acid increased the number of collected photons from ReAsH molecules by a factor of two. Individual ReAsH molecules were then moved via a nanometric stage in 25 or 40 nm steps, either at a constant rate or at a Poisson-distributed rate. Individual steps were clearly seen, indicating that the observation of translational motion on this scale, which is relevant for many biomolecular motors, is possible with ReAsH. [source] Biomechanical comparison of a novel multilevel hex-head pedicle screw design with a conventional head designJOURNAL OF ORTHOPAEDIC RESEARCH, Issue 8 2007Qi Liu Abstract The objective of the study was to determine the biomechanical effect during insertion of multilevel hex-head design pedicle screws compared to a conventional screw-head design. Eighteen lumbar vertebrae and thoracic vertebrae from human cadavers were instrumented with a novel, multilevel hexagonal head pedicle screw on one side and a conventional head pedicle screw on the contralateral side. Screws were inserted at a constant rate and insertion and removal torques were recorded. A further 14 lumbar and thoracic vertebrae were used to test alterability of screw direction and operational effort required. Electromagnetic sensors recorded the change in angular direction for both screw and screwdriver. The force applied through the insertion screwdriver required to produce the directional change was also recorded. No significant differences were found between the two screw types for insertion or removal torque in either lumbar or thoracic vertebrae. Multilevel hex-head screws had significantly greater directional alterability than conventional head screws in both lumbar and thoracic specimens. Multilevel hex-head screws also required less force applied through the screwdriver than conventional screws to alter direction of screw insertion in both lumbar and thoracic specimens. The multilevel hex-head design did not affect the insertion or removal torque in comparison to a conventional head design. © 2007 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Orthop Res 25:1115,1120, 2007 [source] Stress relaxation of bone significantly affects the pull-out behavior of pedicle screwsJOURNAL OF ORTHOPAEDIC RESEARCH, Issue 6 2004Serkan Inceoglu Abstract The initial fixation strength of pedicle screws is commonly tested using a standard pull-out test with load applied at a constant rate. This method overlooks the cyclic nature of in situ loading responsible for clinical failure. This study was undertaken to determine the effects of stress relaxation properties at the bone,screw interface on screw fixation strength. Pedicle screws were inserted into calf lumbar vertebrae using a paired testing array. After embedding and mounting in a custom fixture, axial pull-out tests were performed at the rates of 1, 5, and 25 mm/min. For each vertebra, one screw was pulled at a continuous rate. The other screw was pulled at increments of 0.5 mm, at the same rate, with 1000 s pause between increments. Peak load, energy-to-failure, displacement-to-failure, and stiffness were calculated for each screw pull-out test. Two-way ANOVA showed that the standard pull-out method yielded significantly higher peak loads (p < 0.05) at faster pull-out rates and higher stiffnesses (p < 0.05) at all rates compared to the stress relaxation pull-out protocol. These results suggest that the stress relaxation properties of bone significantly affect the pull-out behavior of pedicle screws, reducing the peak load and stiffness values observed during testing. This mode of testing may provide a better biomechanical model of screw pull-out failure and a more accurate estimate of initial fixation strength. © 2004 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. [source] Insulin alters cytokine content in two pivotal organs after brain death: a porcine modelACTA ANAESTHESIOLOGICA SCANDINAVICA, Issue 5 2008A. BARKLIN Background: To optimize the quantity and quality of organs available for transplantation, it is crucial to gain further insight into the treatment of brain dead organ donors. In the current study we hypothesized that insulin treatment after brain death alters cytokine content in the heart, liver, and kidney. Methods: Sixteen brain dead pigs (35,40 kg) were treated with either (1) no insulin [brain dead without insulin treatment treatment (BD)], or (2) insulin infusion intravenously (i.v.) at a constant rate of 0.6 mU/kg/min during 360 min [brain dead with insulin treatment (BD+I)]. Blood glucose was clamped at 4.5 mmol/l by infusion of 20% glucose. Blood samples for insulin, glucose, catecholamines, free fatty acids, and glucagon were obtained during the experimental period. Six hours after brain death biopsies were taken from the heart, liver, and kidney. These were analyzed for cytokine mRNA and proteins [tumor necrosis factor-, (TNF-,), interleukin (IL)-6, and IL-10]. Results: The BD+I compared with the BD animals had lower IL-6 concentrations in the right ventricle of the heart (P=0.001), in the renal cortex (P=0.04) and in the renal medulla (P=0.05), and lower IL-6 mRNA in the renal medulla (P=0.0002). Furthermore, the BD+I animals had lower concentrations in the renal medulla of IL-10 (P=0.01), and tended to have lower TNF-, in the renal cortex (P=0.06) than the BD animals. In the right ventricle of the heart TNF-, mRNA and IL-10 mRNA were higher in the BD+I than in the BD group (P=0.002 and 0.004). Conclusion: Insulin has anti-inflammatory effects on cytokine concentration in the heart and kidney after brain death. [source] Role of grafting in the emulsion polymerization of vinyl acetate with poly(vinyl alcohol) as an emulsifier.JOURNAL OF POLYMER SCIENCE (IN TWO SECTIONS), Issue 20 2001Abstract The role of grafting in particle nucleation during the emulsion polymerization of vinyl acetate with partially hydrolyzed poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) as an emulsifier and potassium persulfate as an initiator was investigated. The polymerizations were carried out in batch with a low solids (10%) recipe. An automated reaction calorimeter (Mettler RC1) was used for the direct monitoring of the kinetics of emulsion polymerizations with three medium molecular weight PVAs differing in their degrees of blockiness (Poval 217EE > 217E > 217). Smith,Ewart case 1 kinetics (average number of free radicals per particle < 0.5) were followed in all cases, and no constant rate in interval II was observed. Contrary to what was expected, a nonlinear relationship was observed between the rate of polymerization (Rp) and the number of particles (Np). At Rp max,Np (217E) > Np (217EE) > Np (217), and the final Np was independent of the degree of blockiness of PVA. The particle size distributions were broad (particle diameter = 20,100 nm) and bimodal. On the basis of these data, we concluded that particle nucleation was continuous and was accompanied by extensive limited aggregation during the particle growth stages. The evolution of the amounts of grafted PVA and poly(vinyl acetate) (PVAc) were determined in polymerizations employing the two PVAs differing the most in blockiness (Poval 217EE and 217). The grafted PVAc followed similar profiles, increasing with conversion, particularly near the end of the two reactions. The amounts of grafted PVAc were about the same in the final latexes (37,39%). In contrast, the grafting of PVA was nearly complete by the time monomer droplets had disappeared in each reaction (25% conversion). However, the extent of grafting differed significantly, with the blockier PVA having about one-third the grafting of the more random PVA (,10% vs ,30%). In these low solids recipes, grafting appeared to be primarily a solution event, occurring predominantly in the aqueous phase and not at the particle/water interface, as was previously speculated. The PVAc grafts grew until the molecules became water-insoluble and precipitated, forming polymer particles. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci Part A: Polym Chem 39: 3633,3654, 2001 [source] Measuring Permeability of Rigid Materials by a Beam-Bending Method: I, TheoryJOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CERAMIC SOCIETY, Issue 9 2000George W. Scherer When a saturated porous material is deformed, pressure gradients are created in the liquid, and the liquid flows within the pores to equilibrate the pressure. This phenomenon can be exploited to measure permeability: A rod of saturated porous material is instantaneously bent by a fixed amount, and the force required to sustain the deflection is measured as a function of time. The force decreases as the liquid flows through the pore network, and the rate of decrease depends on the permeability. This technique has been applied successfully to determine the permeability of gels, as well as their viscoelastic properties; in this paper the method is extended to ceramic materials, such as porous glass and cement paste. The theory has been modified to take account of the compressibility of the solid and liquid phases (whereas, those factors are negligible for gels). Analyses are presented for constant deflection, constant rate of deflection, and sinusoidal oscillation, where the solid phase is either purely elastic or viscoelastic, and the beam is either cylindrical or square. Experimental tests on Vycor® glass and cement paste will be presented in companion papers. [source] Measuring Knowledge Stocks: A Process of Creative DestructionKYKLOS INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF SOCIAL SCIENCES, Issue 3 2005Jürgen Bitzer Summary This paper proposes a new method for constructing R&D capital stocks developed to avoid the common assumption of a constant rate of knowledge depreciation, which implies wear and tear of knowledge. The method models the development of R&D capital stocks as a process of creative destruction linking the depreciation of knowledge to the emergence of new knowledge. A first empirical assessment of the new method , measuring the influence of R&D capital stocks on production in the manufacturing sectors of 12 OECD countries , produces plausible and robust results. [source] Magnetic resonance imaging of spatially resolved acrylamide photopolymerizationMAGNETIC RESONANCE IN CHEMISTRY, Issue 4 2003Tom J. Lees Abstract Magnetic resonance imaging was employed to examine spatially and temporally resolved photopolymerization of acrylamide gels. Fast exchange between free and bound water results in single exponential T2 decay, where 1/T2 scales linearly with polymer concentration. Measured T2s are sensitive to the experimental conditions; however, the 1/T2 relationship to polymer concentration allows a straightforward interpretation of image contrast changes during photopolymerization. The polymer appears to form at a nearly constant rate until the monomer concentration is significantly depleted. Conventional spin-echo images and quantitative CPMG-weighted spin-echo images were acquired. Photopolymerization of a partially masked sample produced a sharp transition (1 mm width) between polymer and monomer regions of the sample. The image intensity is uniform throughout the illuminated region of the sample, indicating uniform polymer formation. Interrupting the illumination quenches polymer formation. Copyright © 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Bounds on Derivative Prices in an Intertemporal Setting with Proportional Transaction Costs and Multiple SecuritiesMATHEMATICAL FINANCE, Issue 3 2001George M. Constantinides The observed discrepancies of derivative prices from their theoretical, arbitrage-free values are examined in the presence of transaction costs. Analytic upper and lower bounds on the reservation write and purchase prices, respectively, are obtained when an investor's preferences exhibit constant relative risk aversion between zero and one. The economy consists of multiple primary securities with stationary returns, a constant rate of interest, and any number of American or European derivatives with, possibly, path-dependent arbitrary payoffs. [source] Further Reflections on the Corn,Guano ModelMETROECONOMICA, Issue 3 2001Christian Bidard The corn,guano model is the simplest model with exhaustible resources. On the constant rate of profit hypothesis, a change of the numeraire from corn to corn-and-labour affects the price trajectories. In particular, the corn price at the exhaustion date is no longer equal to its long-term level. The system of intertemporal prices admits one degree of freedom. Only one path, called the natural path, admits a positive price, wage and royalty for any number of periods before exhaustion. But, for a given exhaustion date, the non-natural paths close to it are also associated with positive prices, wages and royalties. In this paper we study the characteristics of the natural path and the properties of the non-natural paths. The results are partly extended to multisector models. [source] Extracting star formation histories from medium-resolution galaxy spectraMONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY, Issue 2 2006H. Mathis ABSTRACT We adapt an existing data compression algorithm, moped, to the extraction of median-likelihood star formation histories from medium-resolution galaxy spectra. By focusing on the high-pass components of galaxy spectra, we minimize potential uncertainties arising from the spectrophotometric calibration and intrinsic attenuation by dust. We validate our approach using model high-pass spectra of galaxies with different star formation histories covering the wavelength range 3650,8500 Å at a resolving power of ,2000. We show that the method can recover the full star formation histories of these models, without prior knowledge of the metallicity, to within an accuracy that depends sensitively on the signal-to-noise ratio. The investigation of the sensitivity of the flux at each wavelength to the mass fraction of stars of different ages allows us to identify new age-sensitive features in galaxy spectra. We also highlight a fundamental limitation in the recovery of the star formation histories of galaxies for which the optical signatures of intermediate-age stars are masked by those of younger and older stars. As an example of application, we use this method to derive average star formation histories from the highest-quality spectra of typical (in terms of their stellar mass), morphologically identified early- and late-type galaxies in the Early Data Release (EDR) of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). We find that, in agreement with the common expectation, early-type galaxies must have formed most of their stars over 8 Gyr ago, although a small fraction of the total stellar mass of these galaxies may be accounted for by stars with ages down to 4 Gyr. In contrast, late-type galaxies appear to have formed stars at a roughly constant rate. We also investigate the constraints set by the high-pass signal in the stacked spectra of a magnitude-limited sample of 20 623 SDSS-EDR galaxies on the global star formation history of the Universe and its distribution among galaxies in different mass ranges. We confirm that the stellar populations in the most massive galaxies today appear to have formed on average earlier than those in the least massive galaxies. Our results do not support the recent suggestion of a statistically significant peak in the star formation activity of the Universe at redshifts below unity, although such a peak is not ruled out. [source] Circular velocity profiles of dark matter haloesMONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY, Issue 1 2006Felix Stoehr ABSTRACT We use a high-resolution simulation of a galaxy-sized dark matter halo, published simulated data as well as four cluster-sized haloes from Fukushige, Kawai & Makino to study the inner halo structure in a , cold dark matter cosmology. We find that the circular velocity curves are substantially better described by Stoehr et al. (SWTS) profiles than by Navarro, Frenk & White (NFW) or Moore et al. profiles. Our findings confirm that no asymptotic slope is reached and that the profiles are nearly universal, but not perfectly. The velocity profiles curve at a constant rate in log (r) over the full converged range in radii and the corresponding extrapolated density profiles reach a finite maximum density. We find that the claim of a strong discrepancy between the observed inner slopes of the density profiles of low surface brightness galaxies and their simulated counterparts on the grounds of currently available observations and simulations is unfounded. In addition, if the SWTS profile turns out to be a good description of the halo profile for the regions that cannot be probed with simulations of today, then even in these regions the agreement between simulations and observations is very reasonable. [source] Production to order and off-line inspection when the production process is partially observableNAVAL RESEARCH LOGISTICS: AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL, Issue 8 2007Abraham Grosfeld-Nir Abstract This study combines inspection and lot-sizing decisions. The issue is whether to INSPECT another unit or PRODUCE a new lot. A unit produced is either conforming or defective. Demand need to be satisfied in full, by conforming units only. The production process may switch from a "good" state to a "bad" state, at constant rate. The proportion of conforming units in the good state is higher than in the bad state. The true state is unobservable and can only be inferred from the quality of units inspected. We thus update, after each inspection, the probability that the unit, next candidate for inspection, was produced while the production process was in the good state. That "good-state-probability" is the basis for our decision to INSPECT or PRODUCE. We prove that the optimal policy has a simple form: INSPECT only if the good-state-probability exceeds a control limit. We provide a methodology to calculate the optimal lot size and the expected costs associated with INSPECT and PRODUCE. Surprisingly, we find that the control limit, as a function of the demand (and other problem parameters) is not necessarily monotone. Also, counter to intuition, it is possible that the optimal action is PRODUCE, after revealing a conforming unit. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Naval Research Logistics, 2007 [source] Apoptosis, anoikis and their relevance to the pathobiology of colon cancerPATHOLOGY INTERNATIONAL, Issue 4 2000Minalini Shanmugathasan The maintenance of a constant number of cells in an adult organism is a tightly regulated process. This is particularly important in organs where cells are in a constant rate of renewal during the entire lifespan. In these organs, cell number homeostasis is the direct consequence of a bal-ance between cell proliferation and apoptosis. The colonic epithelium is an example of such a site and the high prevalence of colon cancer makes the understanding of cell number homeostasis more important to define. Normal colonic epithelium is organized in crypts where cell proliferation, migration, differentiation and apoptosis are topographically organized in a linear fashion along the crypt axis. Normal colonic crypts are composed of stem cells at the base, a proliferation and a differentiation zone in the lower third of the crypt, a migration zone in the upper two-thirds, and the surface epithelium where senescent cells are eliminated by apoptosis. Globally, apoptosis can be defined as a normal process of cell suicide, critical for development and tissue homeostasis. Colonic epithelial cells migrate from the base of the crypt to the surface epithelium in 6,7 days. The normal architecture of the crypt is maintained by a balance between cell proliferation at the base and apoptosis at the top of the crypt and surface epithelium. [source] Interaction of UV Radiation and Inorganic Carbon Supply in the Inhibition of Photosynthesis: Spectral and Temporal Responses of Two Marine Picoplankters,PHOTOCHEMISTRY & PHOTOBIOLOGY, Issue 2 2005Cristina Sobrino ABSTRACT The effect of ultraviolet radiation (UVR) on inhibition of photosynthesis was studied in two species of marine picoplankton with different carbon concentration mechanisms: Nannochloropsis gaditana Lubián possesses a bicarbonate uptake system and Nannochloris atomus Butcher a CO2 active transport system. Biological weighting functions (BWFs) for inhibition of photosynthesis by UVR and photosynthesis vs irradiance (PI) curves for photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) were estimated for both species grown with an enriched CO2 supply (high dissolved inorganic carbon [DIC]: 1% CO2 in air) and in atmospheric CO2 levels (low DIC: 0.03% CO2). The response to UVR and PAR exposures was different in each species depending on the DIC treatment. Under PAR exposure, rates of maximum photosynthesis were similar between treatments in N. gaditana. However, the cultures growing in high DIC had lower sensitivity to UVR than the low DIC cultures. In contrast, N. atomus had higher rates of photosynthesis under PAR exposure with high DIC, but the BWFs were not significantly different between treatments. The results suggest that one or more processes in N. gaditana associated with HCO3, transport are target(s) for UV photodamage because there was relatively less UV inhibition of the high DIC-grown cultures in which inorganic carbon fixation is supplied by passive CO2 diffusion. Time courses of photochemical efficiency in PAR, during UV exposure and during subsequent recovery in PAR, were determined using a pulse amplitude modulated fluorometer. The results were consistent with the BWFs. In all time courses, a steady state was obtained after an initial decrease, consistent with a dynamic balance between damage and repair as found for other phytoplankton. However, the relationship of response to exposure showed a steep decline in activity that is consistent with a constant rate of repair. A novel feature of a model developed from a constant repair rate is an explicit threshold for photosynthetic response to UV. [source] Optimal replacement policy for obsolete components with general failure ratesAPPLIED STOCHASTIC MODELS IN BUSINESS AND INDUSTRY, Issue 3 2008Sophie MercierArticle first published online: 8 JAN 200 Abstract Identical components are considered, which become obsolete once new-type ones are available, more reliable and less energy consuming. We envision different possible replacement strategies for the old-type components by the new-type ones: either purely preventive, where all old-type components are replaced as soon as the new-type ones are available; either purely corrective, where the old-type ones are replaced by new-type ones only at failure; or a mixture of both strategies, where the old-type ones are first replaced at failure by new-type ones and next simultaneously preventively replaced after a fixed number of failed old-type components. To evaluate the respective value of each possible strategy, a cost function is considered, which represents the mean total cost on some finite time interval [0, t]. This function takes into account replacement costs, with economical dependence between simultaneous replacements, and also some energy consumption (and/or production) cost, with a constant rate per unit time. A full analytical expression is provided for the cost function induced by each possible replacement strategy. The optimal strategy is derived in long-time run. Numerical experiments conclude the paper. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Following the path of hydrophobic and hydrophilic particles in a Denver Cell using positron emission particle trackingASIA-PACIFIC JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL ENGINEERING, Issue 2 2009K. E. Waters Abstract Positron emission particle tracking (PEPT) has been used to track the movement of single particles of galena and quartz in a Denver Cell batch flotation system. The particles were labeled with a radionuclide, 18F, and using an ADAC Forte positron camera the positions of the particles were determined during mixing, and once air was added to the cell at a constant rate. The hydrophobic galena particle entered the froth readily, attached to air bubbles, and overflowed the weir. Detachment from an air bubble in the froth was also observed, and this is presumed to be due to coalescence events occurring. The hydrophilic quartz particle did not overflow the weir when the air flow was on. When the particle did enter the froth, it was along the sides of the vessel following the flow of the water. This gives a potential indication of one of the methods of the entrainment of gangue minerals in froth flotation. Copyright © 2009 Curtin University of Technology and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] |