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Kinds of Parallel Terms modified by Parallel Selected Abstracts,A FACT WITHOUT PARALLEL': CONSCIOUSNESS AS AN EMERGENT PROPERTYBRITISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHOTHERAPY, Issue 1 2004David M. Black ABSTRACT Consciousness was described by Freud as,a fact without parallel'. This paper suggests that the attempts by modern psychology and neuroscience to understand consciousness have failed to appreciate that it lies for clear and necessary reasons beyond the reach of 'science'as we have understood it since the seventeenth century. The author goes on to argue that the fact of consciousness implies a world of subjectivity and uniqueness which will only be integrated with the world of empirical science if there can be profound changes in our understanding of science itself; or, alternatively, if clear bounds are recognized to science's domain. [source] Parallel tiled QR factorization for multicore architecturesCONCURRENCY AND COMPUTATION: PRACTICE & EXPERIENCE, Issue 13 2008Alfredo Buttari Abstract As multicore systems continue to gain ground in the high-performance computing world, linear algebra algorithms have to be reformulated or new algorithms have to be developed in order to take advantage of the architectural features on these new processors. Fine-grain parallelism becomes a major requirement and introduces the necessity of loose synchronization in the parallel execution of an operation. This paper presents an algorithm for the QR factorization where the operations can be represented as a sequence of small tasks that operate on square blocks of data (referred to as ,tiles'). These tasks can be dynamically scheduled for execution based on the dependencies among them and on the availability of computational resources. This may result in an out-of-order execution of the tasks that will completely hide the presence of intrinsically sequential tasks in the factorization. Performance comparisons are presented with the LAPACK algorithm for QR factorization where parallelism can be exploited only at the level of the BLAS operations and with vendor implementations. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Hypersensitivity to titanium osteosynthesis with impaired fracture healing, eczema, and T-cell hyperresponsiveness in vitro: case report and review of the literatureCONTACT DERMATITIS, Issue 4 2006Peter Thomas There are very few reports on hypersensitivity reactions in association with titanium-based materials so that the existence of allergy to titanium is still put in question. We report on a patient in whom impaired fracture healing and eczema localized to the perioperative area developed upon titanium-based osteosynthesis. Patch testing gave no reactions to titanium nor to nickel, chromium, or cobalt. However, in the lymphocyte transformation test, the patient's lymphocytes showed markedly enhanced proliferation in vitro to titanium. After removal of the titanium material, fracture healing was achieved and the eczema cleared. Parallel to this, in vitro hyperreactivity to titanium disappeared. Although contact allergic reactions to titanium have been very rarely reported, these findings support a diagnosis of titanium allergy in our patient. [source] Crystal structure of a polar nematogen 4-(trans- 4-undecylcyclohexyl) isothiocyanatobenzeneCRYSTAL RESEARCH AND TECHNOLOGY, Issue 10 2007S. Biswas Abstract Crystal and molecular structures of a nematogenic compound 4-(trans- 4-undecylcyclohexyl) isothiocyanatobenzene (11CHBT) have been determined by direct methods using single crystal X-ray diffraction data. The compound (C24H37N1S1) crystallizes in the monoclinic system with the space group P21/c and Z = 4. The unit cell parameters are a = 5.5539(11) Å, b = 8.1341(10) Å, c = 51.494(5) Å, and (= 91.127(14)0. The structure was refined to Rw = 0.051. The molecule is found to be slightly bow-shaped though the alkyl chain is in all- trans conformation. The phenyl ring and the alkyl chain are planar and the cyclohexyl group is in chair conformation. The isothiocyanato groups are almost linear. Parallel imbricated mode of packing of the molecules is found in the crystalline state which is precursor to the nematic phase structure. There are many van der Waals' interactions particularly in the isothiocyanato benzene part of the molecule. Of the various associated pairs of molecules the one having anti-parallel configuration with overlaps in the isothiocyanato phenyl group probably exists in both the crystalline and the nematic phases. (© 2007 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim) [source] THE MOLECULAR FUTURE IN CYTOLOGYCYTOPATHOLOGY, Issue 2006M. Salto-Tellez Molecular diagnosis is the application of molecular biology techniques and knowledge of the molecular mechanisms of disease to diagnosis, prognostication and treatment of diseases. Molecular Diagnosis is, arguably, the fastest growing area of diagnostic medicine. The US market for molecular testing generated $1.3 billion in 2000, which was predicted to increase to about $4.2 billion by 2007.1 We proposed the term Diagnostic Molecular Cytopathology to define the application of molecular diagnosis to cytopathology2. Diagnostic Molecular Cytopathology is essential for the following reasons: (i) Molecular testing is sometimes indispensable to establish an unequivocal diagnosis on cell preparations; (ii) Molecular testing provides extra information on the prognosis or therapy of diseases diagnosed by conventional cytology; (iii) Molecular testing provides genetic information on the inherited nature of diseases that can be directly investigated in cytology samples, by either exfoliation or by fine needle aspiration; (iv) Sometimes the cytopathology sample is the most convenient (or the only available) source of material for molecular testing; (v). Direct molecular interrogation of cells allows for a diagnostic correlation that would otherwise not be possible. Parallel to this direct diagnostic implication, cytopathology is increasing important in the validation of biomarkers for specific diseases, and in therefore of significant importance in the overall translational research strategies. We illustrate its application in some of the main areas of oncology molecular testing, such as molecular fingerprinting of neoplasms,3 lymphoreticular diseases,2 sarcomas4 and lung cancer,5 as well as translational research using diagnostic cytopathology techniques. The next years will see the consolidation of Diagnostic Molecular Cytopathology, a process that will lead to a change of many paradigms. In general, diagnostic pathology departments will have to reorganize molecular testing to pursue a cost-efficient operation. Sample preparation will have to take into account optimal preservation of nuclear acids. The training of technical staff and the level of laboratory quality control and quality assurance would have to follow strict clinical (not research) laboratory parameters. And, most importantly, those pathologists undertaking molecular diagnosis as a discipline would have to develop their professional expertise within the same framework of fellowships and professional credentials that is offered in other sub-specialties. The price to pay if this effort is not undertaken is too important for the future of diagnostic pathology in general. The increasing characterization of molecular biomarkers with diagnostic, prognostic or therapeutic value is making the analysis of tissue and cell samples prior to treatment a more complex exercise. If cytopathologists and histopathologists allow others to take charge of molecular diagnosis, our overall contribution to the diagnostic process will be diminished. We may not become less important, but we may become less relevant. However, those within the discipline of diagnostic pathology who can combine the clinical background of diseases with the morphological, immunocytochemical and molecular diagnostic interpretation will represent bona fide diagnostic specialists. Such ,molecular cytopathologists' would place themselves at the centre of clinical decision-making. Reference:, 1. Liz Fletcher. Roche leads molecular diagnostics charge. Nature Biotechnol 20, 6,7; 2002 2. Salto-Tellez M and Koay ESC. Molecular Diagnostic Cytopathology - Definitions, Scope and Clinical Utility. Cytopathology 2004; 15:252,255 3. Salto-Tellez M, Zhang D, Chiu LL, Wang SC, Nilsson B, and Koay ESC. Immunocytochemistry Versus Molecular Fingerprinting of Metastases. Cytopathology, 2003 Aug; 14(4):186,90. 4. Chiu LL, Koay SCE, Chan NL and Salto-Tellez M. Molecular Cytopathology: Sequencing of the EWS-WT1 Gene Fusion Transcript in the Peritoneal Effusion of a Patient with Desmoplastic Small Round Cell Tumour. Diagnostic Cytopathology, 2003 Dec; 29(6): 341,3. 5. TM Chin, D Anuar, R Soo, M Salto-Tellez, WQ Li, B Ahmad, SC Lee, BC Goh, K Kawakami, A Segal, B Iacopetta, R Soong. Sensitive and Cost-Effective deptection of epidermal growth factor Receptor Mutations in Small Biopsies by denaturing High Performance Liquid Chromatography. (In press). [source] Upper Pleistocene-Holocene geomorphic changes dictating sedimentation rates and historical land use in the valley system of the Chifeng region, Inner Mongolia, northern ChinaEARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS, Issue 11 2010Y. Avni Abstract This study focuses on the late Quaternary landscape evolution in the Chifeng region of Inner Mongolia, China, its relations to the history of the Pleistocene-Holocene loess accumulation, erosion and redeposition, and their impact on human occupation. Based on 57 optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) ages of loess sediments, fluvial sand and floodplain deposits accumulated on the hill slopes and floodplains, we conclude that during most of the Pleistocene period the region was blanketed by a thick layer of aeolian loess, as well as by alluvial and fluvial deposits. The loess section is divided into two main units that are separated by unconformity. The OSL ages at the top of the lower reddish loess unit yielded an approximate age of 193,ka, roughly corresponding to the transition from MIS 7 to 6, though they could be older. The upper gray loess unit accumulated during the upper Pleistocene glacial phase (MIS 4,3) at a mean accumulation rate of 0·22,m/ka. Parallel to the loess accumulation on top of the hilly topography, active fans were operating during MIS 4,2 at the outlet of large gullies surrounding the major valley at a mean accumulation rate of 0·24,m/ka. This co-accumulation indicates that gullies have been a long-term geomorphic feature at the margins of the Gobi Desert since at least the middle Pleistocene. During the Holocene, the erosion of the Pleistocene loess on the hills led to the burial of the valley floors by the redeposited sediments at a rate that decreases from 3·2,m/ka near the hills to 1,0·4,m/ka1 in the central part of the Chifeng Valley. This rapid accumulation and the frequent shifts of the courses of the river prevented the construction of permanent settlements in the valley floors, a situation which changed only with improved man-made control of the local rivers from the tenth century AD. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Performance-based seismic analysis and design of suspension bridgesEARTHQUAKE ENGINEERING AND STRUCTURAL DYNAMICS, Issue 4-5 2005Serafim Arzoumanidis Abstract This paper presents a performance-based seismic analysis and design of a large suspension bridge, the new Tacoma Narrows Parallel Crossing in the State of Washington. The scope of the project included establishment of design criteria, extensive analysis and validation of the design. The analysis was performed using detailed three-dimensional models that included geometric and material non-linearity. The target post-earthquake level of service was verified using stress, deformation and ductility criteria. In the absence of well-established criteria, which relate the structural response of tower shafts to specific levels of performance, capacity analyses were performed to demonstrate that the design fulfills the performance objectives. The seismic analysis and design of this bridge was reviewed throughout the design process. An independent check team also performed separate analysis and validation of the design. Thus, this bridge constitutes an example of a large-scale design project where the performance-based seismic design procedures underwent rigorous assessment. This work demonstrated that the performance-based approach for seismic design is an appropriate way for designing earthquake-resistant structures. Further data that relate the structural response with the performance objectives are necessary. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Adolescent smoking and depression: evidence for self-medication and peer smoking mediationADDICTION, Issue 10 2009Janet Audrain-McGovern ABSTRACT Aims The nature of the relationship between adolescent smoking and depression is unclear and the mechanisms that account for the comorbidity have received little investigation. The present study sought to clarify the temporal precedence for smoking and depression and to determine whether these variables are linked indirectly through peer smoking. Participants The sample was composed of 1093 adolescents participating in a longitudinal study of the behavioral predictors of smoking adoption. Design and measurements In this prospective cohort study, smoking, depression, peer smoking and other covariates were measured annually from mid-adolescence (9th grade; age 14) to late adolescence (12th grade, age 18). Findings Parallel processes latent growth curve models supported a bidirectional relationship between adolescent smoking and depression, where higher depression symptoms in mid-adolescence (age 14) predicted adolescent smoking progression from mid- to late adolescence (ages 14,18). A significant indirect effect indicated that higher depression symptoms across time predicted an increase in the number of smoking peers, which in turn predicted smoking progression from mid-adolescence to late adolescence. In addition, smoking progression predicted a deceleration of depression symptoms from mid- to late adolescence. A significant indirect effect indicated that greater smoking at baseline predicted a deceleration in the number of smoking peers across time, which predicted a deceleration in depression symptoms from mid-adolescence to late adolescence. Conclusions The current study provides the first evidence of bidirectional self-medication processes in the relationship between adolescent smoking and depression and highlights peer smoking as one explanation for the comorbidity. [source] Unit commitment at frequency security conditionEUROPEAN TRANSACTIONS ON ELECTRICAL POWER, Issue 2 2001X. Lei In island grids and weakly interconnected power systems, the loss of a large proportion of generation will cause the system frequency to fall dramatically. In order to ensure a stable operation with the lowest impact to the system, the disturbed power balance must be equalized within a short specified time by activating the second-reserve of on-line units or by load shedding or both. Unit commitment procedures shall consider these factors to ensure a reliable power supply while minimizing the fuel costs. This paper presents a unit commitment procedure taking the frequency security condition of systems into account. The procedure commits and optimizes units, calculates necessary second-reserve capability, and allocates them among the available on-line units. Parallel to the minimization of daily fuel costs, a specified frequency minimum following the loss of generation is employed as a criterion for maintaining system security. A case study on typical island systems with a large number of different units is demonstrated using the proposed procedure. Results from the study validated robust performance of the proposed procedure that minimizes fuel costs while maintaining frequency security condition. This paper considers only the frequency security condition to be handled. However, it can also be extended with other criteria such transmission capability during transient conditions of interconnected systems. [source] Disruption of structural and functional integrity of ,2 -macroglobulin by cathepsin EFEBS JOURNAL, Issue 6 2003Mitsue Shibata ,2 -Macroglobulin (,2M) is an abundant glycoprotein with the intrinsic capacity for capturing diverse proteins for rapid delivery into cells. After internalization by the receptor- mediated endocytosis, ,2M-protein complexes were rapidly degraded in the endolysosome system. Although this is an important pathway for clearance of both ,2M and biological targets, little is known about the nature of ,2M degradation in the endolysosome system. To investigate the possible involvement of intracellular aspartic proteinases in the disruption of structural and functional integrity of ,2M in the endolysosome system, we examined the capacity of ,2M for interacting with cathepsin E and cathepsin D under acidic conditions and the nature of its degradation. ,2M was efficiently associated with cathepsin E under acidic conditions to form noncovalent complexes and rapidly degraded through the generation of three major proteins with apparent molecular masses of 90, 85 and 30 kDa. Parallel with this reaction, ,2M resulted in the rapid loss of its antiproteolytic activity. Analysis of the N-terminal amino-acid sequences of these proteins revealed that ,2M was selectively cleaved at the Phe811-Leu812 bond in about 100mer downstream of the bait region. In contrast, little change was observed for ,2M treated by cathepsin D under the same conditions. Together, the synthetic SPAFLA peptide corresponding to the Ser808,Ala813 sequence of human ,2M, which contains the cathepsin E-cleavage site, was selectively cleaved by cathepsin E, but not cathepsin D. These results suggest the possible involvement of cathepsin E in disruption of the structural and functional integrity of ,2M in the endolysosome system. [source] Biophysical characterization of the interaction of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) with endotoxinsFEBS JOURNAL, Issue 23 2002Klaus Brandenburg The interaction of bacterial endotoxins [lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and the ,endotoxic principle' lipid A], with high-density lipoprotein (HDL) from serum was investigated with a variety of physical techniques and biological assays. HDL exhibited an increase in the gel to liquid crystalline phase transition temperature Tc and a rigidification of the acyl chains of the endotoxins as measured by Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy and differential scanning calorimetry. The functional groups of the endotoxins interacting with HDL are the phosphates and the diglucosamine backbone. The finding of phosphates as target groups is in accordance to measurements of the electrophoretic mobility showing that the zeta potential decreases from ,50 to ,60 mV to ,20 mV at binding saturation. The importance of the sugar backbone as further target structure is in accordance with the remaining negative potential and competition experiments with polymyxin B (PMB) and phase transition data of the system PMB/dephosphorylated LPS. Furthermore, endotoxin binding to HDL influences the secondary structure of the latter manifesting in a change from a mixed ,-helical/,-sheet structure to a predominantly ,-helical structure. The aggregate structure of the lipid A moiety of the endotoxins as determined by small-angle X-ray scattering shows a change of a unilamellar/inverted cubic into a multilamellar structure in the presence of HDL. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer data indicate an intercalation of pure HDL, and of [LPS],[HDL] complexes into phospholipid liposomes. Furthermore, HDL may enhance the lipopolysaccharide-binding protein-induced intercalation of LPS into phospholipid liposomes. Parallel to these observations, the LPS-induced cytokine production of human mononuclear cells and the reactivity in the Limulus test are strongly reduced by the addition of HDL. These data allow to develop a model of the [endotoxin]/[HDL] interaction. [source] From the Hagedoorn imaging technique to Kirchhoff migration and inversionGEOPHYSICAL PROSPECTING, Issue 6 2001Norman Bleistein The seminal 1954 paper by J.G. Hagedoorn introduced a heuristic for seismic reflector imaging. That heuristic was a construction technique , a ,string construction' or ,ruler and compass' method , for finding reflectors as an envelope of equal traveltime curves defined by events on a seismic trace. Later, Kirchhoff migration was developed. This method is based on an integral representation of the solution of the wave equation. For decades Kirchhoff migration has been one of the most popular methods for imaging seismic data. Parallel with the development of Kirchhoff wave-equation migration has been that of Kirchhoff inversion, which has as its objectives both structural imaging and the recovery of angle-dependent reflection coefficients. The relationship between Kirchhoff migration/inversion and Hagedoorn's constructive technique has only recently been explored. This paper addresses this relationship, presenting the mathematical structure that the Kirchhoff approach adds to Hagedoorn's constructive method and showing the relationship between the two. [source] Asymmetrical Genders: Phenomenological Reflections on Sexual DifferenceHYPATIA, Issue 2 2005SILVIA STOLLER One of the most fundamental premises of feminist philosophy is the assumption of an invidious asymmetry between the genders that has to be overcome. Parallel to this negative account of asymmetry we also find a positive account, developed in particular within the context of so-called feminist philosophies of difference. I explore both notions of gender asymmetry. The goal is a clarification of the notion of asymmetry as it can presently be found in feminist philosophy. Drawing upon phenomenology (Merleau-Ponty, Levinas) as well as feminist difference theory (Irigaray), I argue that a gender asymmetry does exist that cannot,as in the first assumption,be transformed into symmetry. [source] Parallel load-balanced simulation for short-range interaction particle methods with hierarchical particle grouping based on orthogonal recursive bisectionINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR NUMERICAL METHODS IN ENGINEERING, Issue 4 2008Florian Fleissner Abstract We describe an efficient load-balancing algorithm for parallel simulations of particle-based discretization methods such as the discrete element method or smoothed particle hydrodynamics. Our approach is based on an orthogonal recursive bisection of the simulation domain that is the basis for recursive particle grouping and assignment of particle groups to the parallel processors. Particle grouping is carried out based on sampled discrete particle distribution functions. For interaction detection and computation, which is the core part of particle simulations, we employ a hierarchical pruning algorithm for an efficient exclusion of non-interacting particles via the detection of non-overlapping bounding boxes. Load balancing is based on a hierarchical PI-controller approach, where the differences of processor per time step waiting times serve as controller input. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] Magnetically Anisotropic Cobalt and Iron Nanofibers via ElectrospinningADVANCED MATERIALS, Issue 23 2007M. Graeser Magnetically anisotropic cobalt and iron nanofibers (see figure) are obtained via oriented polymer-supported electrospinning and subsequent reduction and thermal treatment. The cobalt and iron nature of the fibers is confirmed by XRD analysis. Fibers of both metals show ferromagnetic behavior. Parallel aligned iron nanofibers revealed anisotropic hysteresis loops depending on field-fiber orientation. [source] Parallel transmit and receive technology in high-field magnetic resonance neuroimagingINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF IMAGING SYSTEMS AND TECHNOLOGY, Issue 1 2010Andrew G. Webb Abstract The major radiofrequency engineering challenges of high-field MR neuroimaging are as follows: (1) to produce a strong, homogeneous transmit B1 field, while remaining within regulatory guidelines for tissue power deposition and (2) to receive the signal with the maximum signal-to-noise and the greatest flexibility in terms of utilizing the benefits of parallel imaging. Borrowing from developments in electromagnetic hyperthermia, the first challenge has been met by the use of transmit arrays, in which the input power to each element of the array can be varied in terms of magnitude and phase. Optimization of these parameters, as well as the form of the applied RF pulse, leads to very homogeneous B1 fields throughout the brain. The design of large receive arrays, using impedance-mismatched preamplifiers and geometrical overlap for interelement isolation, has resulted in significant sensitivity improvements as well as large acceleration factors in parallel imaging. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Imaging Syst Technol, 20, 2,13, 2010 [source] Cell Lysis of Cyanobacteria and Its Implications for Nutrient DynamicsINTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF HYDROBIOLOGY, Issue 3 2010Linlin Ye Abstract The dynamics of nutrients, such as phosphorus, nitrogen, and carbohydrates, during cyanobacteria cell lysis was investigated under darkness incubation in the laboratory. The cell lysis rate of cyanobacteria sampled from Lake Taihu was measured using an esterase assay. Based on particulate esterase activity, the calculated cyanobacteria lysis rate was 0.094 d,1. During 30 days of darkness incubation, Chlorophyll a concentration decreased from 56 ,g L,1 to 2.0 ,g L,1. Parallel to this, total particulate carbohydrate concentration decreased rapidly. The fluctuation of dissolved organic carbon concentration was a function of the production of non-carbohydrate by cyanobacteria and the decomposition of carbohydrate by bacteria. Total dissolved carbohydrates and dissolved polysaccharides concentrations showed a similar pattern, declining at the beginning of the experiment and keeping relatively stable, thereafter. In contrast, the concentration of dissolved monosaccharides remained constant during the entire process. The concentrations of NH4+ and PO43, increased at the early stage, and then decreased afterwards. A gradual decrease in NO3, concentration after day 8 indicated that anaerobic conditions might be produced during the cell lysis process. The present results demonstrated cyanobacteria cell lysis has a big influence on the nutrient status of the surrounding water. (© 2010 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim) [source] STORAGE STABILITY OF STRAWBERRY JAM COLOR ENHANCED WITH BLACK CARROT JUICE CONCENTRATEJOURNAL OF FOOD PROCESSING AND PRESERVATION, Issue 5 2007EGÜL KIRCA ABSTRACT Black carrot juice concentrate was added to enhance the color of strawberry jams prepared from two locally grown cultivars, Osmanl, and Kara. Compared to other cultivars processed to jams, these two cultivars are lightly colored but very aromatic. Color and pigment stability of colored and noncolored (control) strawberry jams were studied during storage. The use of black carrot concentrate as a source of natural colorant stabilized the color of strawberry jam. The stabilization was more noticeable for jams prepared from Osmanl, cultivar. Monomeric anthocyanin degradation was fitted to a first-order reaction model. Storage temperature had a strong influence on anthocyanin degradation. As the storage temperature increased, the stability of anthocyanins decreased significantly in both colored and noncolored jams. Parallel to decrease in monomeric anthocyanins, hue (h°) values of all jam samples increased throughout the storage. However, increase in h° values was much smaller in colored samples than in noncolored samples. High correlation was found between h° value and anthocyanin concentration at 22C (r = 0.910,0.978) and 37C (r = 0.931,0.981). [source] Ultrastructure of spermiogenesis in the Cottonmouth, Agkistrodon piscivorus (Squamata: Viperidae: Crotalinae)JOURNAL OF MORPHOLOGY, Issue 3 2010Kevin M. Gribbins Abstract To date multiple studies exist that examine the morphology of spermatozoa. However, there are limited numbers of data detailing the ontogenic characters of spermiogenesis within squamates. Testicular tissues were collected from Cottonmouths (Agkistrodon piscivorus) and tissues from spermiogenically active months were analyzed ultrastructurally to detail the cellular changes that occur during spermiogenesis. The major events of spermiogenesis (acrosome formation, nuclear elongation/DNA condensation, and flagellar development) resemble that of other squamates; however, specific ultrastructural differences can be observed between Cottonmouths and other squamates studied to date. During acrosome formation vesicles from the Golgi apparatus fuse at the apical surface of the nuclear membrane prior to making nuclear contact. At this stage, the acrosome granule can be observed in a centralized location within the vesicle. As elongation commences the acrosome complex becomes highly compartmentalized and migrates laterally along the nucleus. Parallel and circum-cylindrical microtubules (components of the manchette) are observed with parallel microtubules outnumbering the circum-cylindrical microtubules. Flagella, displaying the conserved 9 + 2 microtubule arrangement, sit in nuclear fossae that have electron lucent shoulders juxtaposed on either side of the spermatids basal plates. This study aims to provide developmental characters for squamates in the subfamily Crotalinae, family Viperidae, which may be useful for histopathological studies on spermatogenesis in semi-aquatic species exposed to pesticides. Furthermore, these data in the near future may provide morphological characters for spermiogenesis that can be added to morphological data matrices that may be used in phylogenetic analyses. J. Morphol. 2010. © 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Morphological evolution of the lizard skull: A geometric morphometrics surveyJOURNAL OF MORPHOLOGY, Issue 1 2005C. Tristan Stayton Abstract Patterns of diversity among lizard skulls were studied from a morphological, phylogenetic, and functional perspective. A sample of 1,030 lizard skulls from 441 species in 17 families was used to create a lizard skull morphospace. This morphospace was combined with a phylogeny of lizard families to summarize general trends in the evolution of the lizard skull. A basal morphological split between the Iguania and Scleroglossa was observed. Iguanians are characterized by a short, high skull, with large areas of attachment for the external adductor musculature, relative to their sister group. The families of the Iguania appear to possess more intrafamilial morphological diversity than families of the Scleroglossa, but rarefaction of the data reveals this to be an artifact caused by the greater number of species represented in Iguanian families. Iguanian families also appear more dissimilar to one another than families of the Scleroglossa. Permutation tests indicate that this pattern is real and not due to the smaller number of families in the Iguanidae. Parallel and convergent evolution is observed among lizards with similar diets: ant and termite specialists, carnivores, and herbivores. However, these patterns are superimposed over the more general phylogenetic pattern of lizard skull diversity. This study has three central conclusions. Different clades of lizards show different patterns of disparity and divergence in patterns of morphospace occupation. Phylogeny imposes a primary signal upon which a secondary ecological signal is imprinted. Evolutionary patterns in skull metrics, taken with functional landmarks, allow testing of trends and the development of new hypotheses concerning both shape and biomechanics. J. Morphol. 263:47,59, 2005. © 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Parallel and antiparallel dimers of magainin 2: their interaction with phospholipid membrane and antibacterial activityJOURNAL OF PEPTIDE SCIENCE, Issue 10 2002Yasuhiro Mukai Abstract Magainin 2 (M2) forms pores by associating with several other M2 molecules in lipid membranes and shows antibacterial activity. To examine the effect of M2 dimerization on biological activity and membrane interaction, parallel and antiparallel M2 dimers were prepared from two monomeric precursors. Antibacterial and haemolytic activities were enhanced by dimerization. CD measurements showed that both dimers and monomers have an ,-helical structure in the presence of lipid vesicles. Tryptophan fluorescence shift and KI quenching studies showed that all the peptides were more deeply embedded in acidic liposomes than in neutral liposomes. Experiments on dye-leakage activity and membrane translocation of peptides suggest that dimers and monomers form pores through lipid membranes, although the pore formation may be accompanied by membrane disturbance. Although dimerization of M2 increased the interaction activity with lipid membranes, no appreciable difference between the activities of parallel and antiparallel M2 dimers was observed. Copyright © 2002 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source] PHOTOSYNTHETIC UTILIZATION OF INORGANIC CARBON IN THE ECONOMIC BROWN ALGA, HIZIKIA FUSIFORME (SARGASSACEAE) FROM THE SOUTH CHINA SEA,JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY, Issue 6 2003Dinghui Zou The mechanism of inorganic carbon (Ci) acquisition by the economic brown macroalga, Hizikia fusiforme (Harv.) Okamura (Sargassaceae), was investigated to characterize its photosynthetic physiology. Both intracellular and extracellular carbonic anhydrase (CA) were detected, with the external CA activity accounting for about 5% of the total. Hizikia fusiforme showed higher rates of photosynthetic oxygen evolution at alkaline pH than those theoretically derived from the rates of uncatalyzed CO2 production from bicarbonate and exhibited a high pH compensation point (pH 9.66). The external CA inhibitor, acetazolamide, significantly depressed the photosynthetic oxygen evolution, whereas the anion-exchanger inhibitor 4,4,-diisothiocyano-stilbene-2,2,-disulfonate had no inhibitory effect on it, implying the alga was capable of using HCO3, as a source of Ci for its photosynthesis via the mediation of the external CA. CO2 concentrations in the culture media affected its photosynthetic properties. A high level of CO2 (10,000 ppmv) resulted in a decrease in the external CA activity; however, a low CO2 level (20 ppmv) led to no changes in the external CA activity but raised the intracellular CA activity. Parallel to the reduction in the external CA activity at the high CO2 was a reduction in the photosynthetic CO2 affinity. Decreased activity of the external CA in the high CO2 grown samples led to reduced sensitiveness of photosynthesis to the addition of acetazolamide at alkaline pH. It was clearly indicated that H. fusiforme, which showed CO2 -limited photosynthesis with the half-saturating concentration of Ci exceeding that of seawater, did not operate active HCO3, uptake but used it via the extracellular CA for its photosynthetic carbon fixation. [source] The natural history of parallel transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic stent shunts using uncovered stent: the role of host-related factorsLIVER INTERNATIONAL, Issue 5 2006Ahmed Helmy Abstract: Objectives: Parallel shunts (PS) are used in the management of transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic stent-shunt (TIPS) insufficiency, a major limitation of the technique. This study describes the natural history of PS, and uses them as a model to assess the role of host factors in the development of primary shunt insufficiency. Methods: Out of 338 patients with TIPS, 40 (11.8%) patients required insertion of a PS. Baseline and follow-up data of these patients were collected. Regular shunt surveillance involved biannual clinic visits and transjugular portography. Results: The non-PS group (group 1; n=298) and the PS group (group 2; n=40) had similar baseline demographic and disease characteristics. Index shunts of both groups and the PS produced a significant portal pressure gradient drop (P<0.001), which was less in the index shunts of Group 2 (P<0.02 for both). PS had similar cumulative shunt patency rates to those of the index shunts of Group 1, and both were greater than those of index shunts in Group 2 (P<0.001 for both). The intervention rate (number of interventions/number of check portograms × 100) was similar for PS and the index shunts of Group 1 (38.7% and 43% respectively), but was significantly higher in the index shunts of Group 2 (85.6%; P<0.01 for both). In Group 1 and Group 2, 144 patients (48.3%) and 21 patients (52.5%) died during follow-up after a median period of 23.4 and 8.9 months respectively. Conclusions: These findings do not support the hypothesis that shunt insufficiency is related to host factors. [source] Labor Market Duality and Leisure Industries in Spain: Quality of Life Versus Standard of LivingAMERICAN JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS AND SOCIOLOGY, Issue 4 2008Juan L. Paramio We discuss the effects that the emergence of the new postindustrial form of flexible capitalist organization has on the Spanish labor market and, by extension, on the working life of two representative groups of employees characterized by their casual and stable working conditions. This brings a growing duality in the labor market, where individuals who cannot escape casual employment coexist with those enjoying long-term contracts. This concern includes how these changes affect the nature and the ways in which these particular groups understand quality of life and standard of living, which in turn serves to call into question the "end of work" and the expected "leisure society." In addition, we highlight several circumstances that illustrate a decay in job quality and working conditions, particularly the increase in working hours. Parallel to this process we identify a work-and-spend behavior, resulting in overspent families that exhibit financial fragility and give up quality of life, associated with more free time, for higher living standards, which demand an increasing job commitment. Free time from work has become a scarce resource in Spain, and for those individuals belonging to what is known as the "new leisure class," it is associated with high-spending leisure activities, which has increased the economic importance of leisure industries. [source] Philosophical assumptions in Freud, Jung and Bion: questions of causalityTHE JOURNAL OF ANALYTICAL PSYCHOLOGY, Issue 1 2000Michael Horne The historical development of concepts of causality in philosophy is described. Since the Enlightenment and the growth of science, exponents of the two most important concepts, determinism and teleology, have been in conflict. At the inception of psychoanalysis at the end of the nineteenth century this conflict was particularly intense. It was the cause of the first major schism in psychoanalysis between Jung and Freud. Psychoanalytic theorists have continued to disagree over this issue. Post-modernist philosophy has abolished all metaphysics and therefore called into question concepts of psychic causality. Parallel to, but uninfluenced by this development, Bion has developed a psychoanalytic conceptualization which may be seen as transcending causality. The clinical and theoretical implications of these developments are described. [source] Efficacy and Safety of Oral Tadalafil in the Treatment of Men in Canada with Erectile Dysfunction: A Randomized, Double-Blind, Parallel, Placebo-Controlled Clinical TrialTHE JOURNAL OF SEXUAL MEDICINE, Issue 5 2005FRCSC, Serge Carrier MD ABSTRACT Introduction., Erectile dysfunction (ED) is a highly prevalent, often undertreated condition. Aim., This 12-week, double-blind, parallel, placebo-controlled study was conducted at 25 sites in Canada to evaluate the efficacy and safety of oral tadalafil, a phosphodiesterase type 5 inhibitor, for the treatment of ED. Methods., Men with ED of organic, psychogenic, or mixed etiology were stratified by baseline ED severity then randomly assigned to placebo (N = 50), tadalafil 10 mg (N = 103), or tadalafil 20 mg (N = 100), taken as needed (maximum, once daily). Main Outcome Measures., Efficacy was assessed by the International Index of Erectile Function (IIEF), a Sexual Encounter Profile diary, and a global assessment question (GAQ). Results., Tadalafil 10 mg and tadalafil 20 mg significantly improved erectile function compared with placebo (P < 0.001, all measures). At end point, the mean IIEF erectile function (EF) domain scores were 14.5, 21.2, and 23.3 of a possible score of 30 for placebo, tadalafil 10 mg, and tadalafil 20 mg, respectively. Patients treated with tadalafil reported greater change from baseline on the IIEF EF domain score compared with placebo, regardless of baseline ED severity. During treatment, the mean per-patient proportion of successful intercourse attempts was higher for tadalafil 10 mg and 20 mg than for placebo (placebo, 31.9%; tadalafil 10 mg, 56.7%; and tadalafil 20 mg, 61.5%), and a greater proportion of patients reported improved erections with tadalafil (GAQ; placebo, 22.0%; tadalafil 10 mg, 67.0%; tadalafil 20 mg, 79.0%). Fifty percent and 62% of patients treated with tadalafil 10 mg and 20 mg, respectively, achieved successful sexual intercourse after their first dose, compared with 31% with placebo. Treatment-emergent adverse events were generally mild or moderate. Conclusion., Tadalafil was an effective, well-tolerated therapy for ED of broad-spectrum etiology and severity. Carrier S, Brock GB, Pommerville PJ, Shin J, Anglin G, Whitaker S, and Beasley CM Jr. Efficacy and safety of oral tadalafil in the treatment of men in Canada with erectile dysfunction: A randomized, double-blind, parallel, placebo-controlled clinical trial. J Sex Med 2005;2:685,698. [source] Efficacy and Safety of On-Demand Oral Tadalafil in the Treatment of Men with Erectile Dysfunction in Taiwan: A Randomized, Double-Blind, Parallel, Placebo-Controlled Clinical StudyTHE JOURNAL OF SEXUAL MEDICINE, Issue 2 2004Kuang-Kuo Chen MD Conflict of Interest. Timothy M. Costigan and Jeffrey T. Emmick are employees of Eli Lilly, Indianapolis. ABSTRACT Introduction., Tadalafil is a phosphodiesterase type 5 inhibitor for the treatment of erectile dysfunction (ED). Past clinical trials have assessed its efficacy and safety in western populations. Tadalafil has not been investigated in a large clinical trial with a South-east Asian population. Aim., To assess the efficacy and safety of on-demand tadalafil for the treatment of ED in a 12-week, double-blind, placebo-controlled study in Taiwan. Methods., Men with mild to severe ED of various etiologies were randomized to receive placebo, tadalafil 10 mg, or tadalafil 20 mg, taken as needed (maximum once daily). Efficacy assessments included the International Index of Erectile Function, the Sexual Encounter Profile (SEP) diary, and a Global Assessment Question (GAQ). Results., Tadalafil significantly improved erectile function compared with placebo (P < 0.005, all measures). At endpoint, the patients receiving tadalafil reported a greater mean per-patient percentage of successful intercourse attempts (SEP question 3: 70.0%, 10 mg; 78.0%, 20 mg) than placebo-treated patients (42.8%) and a greater proportion of improved erections (GAQ: 92.3% and 84.6% vs. 54.5%). Most treatment-emergent adverse events were mild or moderate. The most common adverse events were back pain, dyspepsia, and myalgia. Conclusions., Tadalafil was an effective, well-tolerated therapy for men in Taiwan with ED of broad-spectrum severity and etiology. [source] Parallel and Antiparallel Triple Helices of Naphthyridine Oligoamides,ANGEWANDTE CHEMIE, Issue 10 2010Yann Ferrand Dr. Drei, nicht mehr und nicht weniger, ist die Zahl von Naphthyridin-Oligoamid-Strängen, die sich zu einer robusten Dreifachhelixarchitektur umeinander winden. Ob die helicalen Stränge eine parallele oder antiparallele Anordnung einnehmen, wird von Faktoren wie der Polarität des Lösungsmittels bestimmt (siehe Bild). [source] Mission archéologique de Madain Salih (Arabie Saoudite) : Recherches menées de 2001 à 2003 dans l'ancienne Hijrsa des Nabatéens (1)ARABIAN ARCHAEOLOGY AND EPIGRAPHY, Issue 1 2006L. Nehmé This contribution presents the preliminary results of the Madain Salih archaeological project, which started in 2001 and which, in December 2004, completed its fourth field season. The aims of this five-year project are a systematic recording of the archaeological remains at the site as well as an analysis of its agricultural potential. The former include not only the tombs, sanctuaries, wells, quarries, walls, buildings, etc., but also the inscriptions written in various scripts and languages. Parallel to this exploration of what is visible on the surface, an extensive geophysical survey was undertaken in the so-called residential area, in the central part of the site, in order to obtain an image of the sub-surface remains. This contribution begins with a presentation of the sources, followed by a brief history of the exploration of Madain Salih. The focus is on the conditions which allowed this project to be established as well as the problematics which guided it. J.-B. Rigot then presents his analysis of the agricultural potential of the site, demonstrating the existence, in antiquity, of a large oasis. Finally, a preliminary description of the main components of the sites: the necropoleis, the sanctuaries and the residential area, is given. [source] Parallel, distributed and GPU computing technologies in single-particle electron microscopyACTA CRYSTALLOGRAPHICA SECTION D, Issue 7 2009Martin Schmeisser Most known methods for the determination of the structure of macromolecular complexes are limited or at least restricted at some point by their computational demands. Recent developments in information technology such as multicore, parallel and GPU processing can be used to overcome these limitations. In particular, graphics processing units (GPUs), which were originally developed for rendering real-time effects in computer games, are now ubiquitous and provide unprecedented computational power for scientific applications. Each parallel-processing paradigm alone can improve overall performance; the increased computational performance obtained by combining all paradigms, unleashing the full power of today's technology, makes certain applications feasible that were previously virtually impossible. In this article, state-of-the-art paradigms are introduced, the tools and infrastructure needed to apply these paradigms are presented and a state-of-the-art infrastructure and solution strategy for moving scientific applications to the next generation of computer hardware is outlined. [source] |