Factors Affecting (factor + affecting)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


INTERNATIONAL INTER-LABORATORY TRIALS TO DETERMINE THE FACTORS AFFECTING THE MEASUREMENT OF CHOCOLATE VISCOSITY

JOURNAL OF TEXTURE STUDIES, Issue 5 2000
J.-M. AESCHLIMANN
The working group of the International Office of Cocoa, Chocolate and Sugar Confectionery (IOCCC) performed a sequence of five ring tests to improve the agreement of the standard method for measuring viscosity of chocolate between laboratories. Reporting shear stress measurements instead of using the Casson equation improved the agreement, as did standardising the method of cleaning the concentric cylinder and calibrating the viscometers. In the revised method, the standard deviation for shear stress measurement at shear rates greater than 5 s,1 from 23 laboratories was less than 8%. However, the Casson yield values had a seven-fold range and the Casson plastic viscosity a two-fold range, which was unacceptably high. A new method (IOCCC 2000) has been published as a result of this work and is available from CAOBISCO in Bruxelles, Belgium. [source]


Study of Factors Affecting the Performance of Voltammetric Copper Sensors Based on Gly-Gly-His Modified Glassy Carbon and Gold Electrodes

ELECTROANALYSIS, Issue 12 2006
Guozhen Liu
Abstract This paper reports a study of the factors affecting the analytical performance of gold and glassy carbon electrodes modified with the tripeptide Gly-Gly-His for the detection of copper ions. Gly-Gly-His is attached to a glassy carbon (GC) surface modified with 4-carboxyphenyl moieties or a gold surface modified with 3-mercaptopropionic acid by the reaction of the N-terminal amine group of the peptide with the carboxylic acid groups of the monolayer via carbodiimide activation. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy was used to characterize the steps in the biosensor fabrication. It was found that the analytical performance of a sensor prepared with Gly-Gly-His on a GC electrode was similar to that on a gold electrode under the same conditions. The performance was greatly enhanced at higher temperature, no added salt during copper accumulation and longer accumulation time within a pH range of 7,9. Interference studies and investigations of stability of the Gly-Gly-His sensor are reported. Analysis of natural water samples show that the sensors measure only copper ions that can complex at the sensor surface. Strongly complexed copper in natural water is not measured. Despite greater stability of diazonium salt derived monolayers on carbon surfaces compared with alkanethiols self-assembled monolayers on gold, the stability of the sensors was essentially the same regardless of the modification procedure. [source]


Factors Affecting the Hydroxycinnamate Decarboxylase/Vinylphenol Reductase Activity of Dekkera/Brettanomyces: Application for Dekkera/Brettanomyces Control in Red Wine Making

JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE, Issue 1 2009
S. Benito
ABSTRACT:, The growth of Dekkera/Brettanomyces yeasts during the ageing of red wines,which can seriously reduce the quality of the final product,is difficult to control. The present study examines the hydroxycinnamate decarboxylase/vinylphenol reductase activity of different strains of Dekkera bruxellensis and Dekkera anomala under a range of growth-limiting conditions with the aim of finding solutions to this problem. The yeasts were cultured in in-house growth media containing different quantities of growth inhibitors such as ethanol, SO2, ascorbic acid, benzoic acid and nicostatin, different sugar contents, and at different pHs and temperatures. The reduction of p -coumaric acid and the formation of 4-ethylphenol were periodically monitored by HPLC-PDA. The results of this study allow the optimization of differential media for detecting/culturing these yeasts, and suggest possible ways of controlling these organisms in wineries. [source]


Chemical Modification of Pigskin Gelatin: Factors Affecting the Esterification of Gelatin with Fatty Acid

JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE, Issue 9 2001
K.B. Djagny
ABSTRACT: This study investigated the esterification of pigskin gelatin with fatty acid catalyzed by acid in aqueous medium. Factors affecting the esterification reaction B temperature, pH, water content, fatty acid concentration, fatty acid type and reaction time- were elucidated in the view of optimizing the reaction. Under the same experimental conditions, increase in fatty acid concentration permitted the determination of the maximum amount of fatty acid that could be esterified per unit weight of gelatin and demonstrated that not all the hydroxyl functional groups present in the gelatin could be blocked by the fatty acid chains. [source]


Factors Affecting %CDT Status at Entry Into a Multisite Clinical Treatment Trial: Experience from the COMBINE Study

ALCOHOLISM, Issue 11 2006
Raymond F. Anton
Background: Carbohydrate-deficient transferrin (CDT) occurs as a higher percentage of normal transferrin (%CDT) in heavy drinkers. %CDT is used as a marker of both alcohol use disorder severity and treatment outcome both clinically and in treatment trials. Nevertheless, little is known about the parameters that predict which patients are %CDT positives at treatment entry. These parameters might include level of drinking, days of abstinence before testing, and severity of alcohol dependence before evaluation. Methods: %CDT levels were collected before randomization from participants of the COMBINE Study, a large federally sponsored multisite clinical trial evaluating medications and behavioral therapies in alcohol-dependent outpatients. %CDT (assayed in a central laboratory) was available in 1,193 individuals for whom drinking history in the 30 days before testing and measures of alcoholism severity were documented. The effects of drinking history and alcohol severity were evaluated for prediction of a %CDT-positive test status. Results: Less percent days abstinent (PDA) and more drinks per drinking day (DDD) were predictive of higher rates of %CDT-positive patients (maximum 67%). Up to 14 days of continuous abstinence before testing did not appear to significantly affect %CDT status. Rates of %CDT positives remained reasonably steady up to about 40% PDA. Years of drinking at dependence levels had an unexpected negative impact on %CDT-positive rates while previous treatment had a small but positive impact of %CDT-positive rates. ADS and DrInC scores had no predictive value over and above recent drinking amounts on %CDT status. Conclusions: %CDT is more likely to be positive in those who have more days of drinking and to a lesser degree in those who drink more per drinking day. It can remain positive even in those alcoholic subjects who stop drinking many days before testing. Alcoholic subjects with more treatment experiences appear to have a marginally higher %CDT-positive rate. [source]


Critical Factors Affecting the Wettability of ,-Alumina by Molten Aluminum

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CERAMIC SOCIETY, Issue 11 2004
Ping Shen
The wetting behaviors of ,-Al2O3 single crystals with three different faces,R(0112), A(01120), and C(0001),and polycrystals (PC) by molten aluminum were studied over a wide temperature range using both a conventional and an improved sessile-drop method. The critical factors affecting the wettability, such as temperature, atmosphere, substrate surface roughness, and crystallographic orientation, and the influence from the experimental technique, were thoroughly investigated. The results show that the aluminum surface oxidation and the thickness of the oxide film have a pronounced effect on the wettability, especially at low temperatures. To eliminate this effect, the experimental temperature must be over a critical value. Vacuum favors lowering this value compared with atmosphere, and the improved sessile-drop method, particularly using an impingement-dropping mode (I-mode), helps to weaken this effect by mechanical disruption and removal of the oxide film. However, the dropping distance and the dropping force must be controlled to prevent an overspreading of the drop. The effects of the substrate surface roughness and temperature are not significant in the case of a clean aluminum surface and a fine-prepared alumina surface. On the other hand, the effect of the alumina surface crystallographic orientation is noticeable and the wettability is in the order of R > A > PC > C. The intrinsic contact angles of the Al/,-Al2O3 system in the temperature range of 1000°,1500°C were estimated to be 76°,85° for the R and A faces, 88°,100° for the C face, and 77°,90° for the polycrystal, depending on the temperature. [source]


Factors Affecting the Job,to,joblessness Turnover and Gender

LABOUR, Issue 4 2002
I. Theodossiou
This paper explores gender differences with respect to the factors affecting the job,to,joblessness turnover. It casts light on the characteristics of those men and women who experience the highest propensity of their job ending in joblessness, taking into account the reasons for the job loss. The findings highlight the determinants of gender differences in labour turnover patterns. [source]


Factors Affecting How Second Language Spanish Students Derive Meaning from Context

MODERN LANGUAGE JOURNAL, Issue 2 2003
Diana Frantzen
Although first language (L1) and second language (L2) research has indicated that the meanings of unknown words can be derived from the contexts in which they occur, research has also found limitations to the value of context. Using data gathered in a classroom experiment on L2 vocabulary acquisition (Frantzen, 1998), the present study sought to determine some of the reasons why the context in which a word appears does not always lead a language learner to an accurate interpretation of its meaning. It expands the existing research by using a natural, intact, unmanipulated text as the context (an aspect underrepresented in current L2 word inferencing literature). Analysis of the students' answers, their self,reported guessing strategies, the contexts in which the words appeared, and the text's glossing revealed that the "blame" for the incorrect answers may be placed on: (a) the context itself, (b) the students' behavior, and in a minor way (c) the story's glossing. Numerous patterns are presented and discussed in light of other L1 and L2 research and new patterns are reported. [source]


Factors Affecting the Quality of Cryopreserved Buffalo (Bubalus bubalis) Bull Spermatozoa

REPRODUCTION IN DOMESTIC ANIMALS, Issue 3 2009
SMH Andrabi
Contents Storage of buffalo (Bubalus bubalis) bull semen in the cryopreserved state is discussed in this article. Fertility rate in buffalo following artificial insemination with frozen,thawed semen is reviewed. To better understand the freezability of bubaline spermatozoa, the available data on biochemical components and the activity of specific enzymes of semen/spermatozoa are given. Moreover, the major factors that may influence the post-thaw viability and fertility of buffalo spermatozoa are examined in detail. In addition, suggestions for improvement in cryogenic procedures for buffalo spermatozoa are also given. [source]


Retrovirus-Polymer Complexes: Study of the Factors Affecting the Dose Response of Transduction

BIOTECHNOLOGY PROGRESS, Issue 2 2007
Natalia Landázuri
We have previously shown that complexes of Polybrene (PB), chondroitin sulfate C (CSC), and retrovirus transduce cells more efficiently than uncomplexed virus because the complexes are large and sediment, reaching the cells more rapidly than by diffusion. Transduction reaches a peak at equal weight concentrations of CSC and PB and declines when the dose of PB is higher or lower than CSC. We hypothesized that the nonlinear dose response of transduction was a complex function of the molecular characteristics of the polymers, cell viability, and the number of viruses incorporated into the complexes. To test this hypothesis, we formed complexes using an amphotropic retrovirus and several pairs of oppositely charged polymers and used them to transduce murine fibroblasts. We examined the effect of the type and concentration of polymers used on cell viability, the size and charge of the complexes, the number of viruses incorporated into the complexes, and virus binding and transduction. Transduction was enhanced (2.5- to 5.5-fold) regardless of which polymers were used and was maximized when the number of positive charge groups was in slight excess (15,28%) of the number of negative charge groups. Higher doses of cationic polymer were cytotoxic, whereas complexes formed with lower doses were smaller, contained fewer viruses, and sedimented more slowly. These results show that the dose response of transduction by virus-polymer complexes is nonlinear because excess cationic polymer is cytotoxic, whereas excess anionic polymer reduces the number of active viruses that are delivered to the cells. [source]


Factors Affecting the Distribution and Abundance of Asplenium nidus L. in a Tropical Lowland Rain Forest in Peninsular Malaysia

BIOTROPICA, Issue 4 2010
Liwen Zhang
ABSTRACT Asplenium nidus is an abundant epiphytic fern of tropical rain forests in the Old World, where it plays an important ecological role in the forest canopy as host to diverse arthropod communities. We investigated the factors that determine the distribution and abundance of A. nidus in the canopy of an aseasonal lowland dipterocarp forest at Pasoh Forest Reserve, Malaysia. We found that A. nidus was more abundant in the understory, and on hosts with smooth bark and relatively flat branch angles. Ferns were found on a wide diversity and size range of host taxa. However, both host taxa and host diameter at breast height had a significant effect on A. nidus occupancy. Asplenium nidus had an aggregated spatial distribution at all scales within the study area. Spatial aggregation at larger scales appears to be driven by habitat preference, as A. nidus abundance was positively associated with swampy areas and negatively associated with hilly areas. At smaller scales, limited dispersal of their wind-dispersed spores most likely explains the aggregated distribution. Larger individuals occurred higher in the canopy and were more common in the hilly area. Thus, the distribution of A. nidus may represent a trade-off between the availability of suitable microsites for establishment in the understory and better growth conditions higher in the canopy. However, A. nidus is known to comprise a complex of cryptic species, and future studies should incorporate molecular techniques to elucidate the potential role of speciation in explaining these patterns. Abstract in Malaysian is available at http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/loi/btp [source]


Factors Affecting the Small Mammal Community Inside and Outside Katavi National Park, Tanzania1

BIOTROPICA, Issue 2 2002
T. M. Caro
ABSTRACT Small mammal trapping showed that a minimum of 12 species live in and around Katavi National Park in western Tanzania. Species richness and abundance were greater outside the park than inside, extending results of an earlier study. Species richness and abundance were not significantly associated with vegetation cover or plant biomass but were negatively correlated with seed diversity, seed biomass, and possibly small carnivore abundance. Unfortunately, small mammal diets are unknown in this ecosystem and it can be argued that carnivores are unlikely to reduce species diversity, casting doubt on the importance of these variables. While the factors causing small mammals to fare poorly in this protected area are not yet understood, reduced food availability remains the best candidate. [source]


Union Mobilization: A Consideration of the Factors Affecting the Willingness of Union Members to Take Industrial Action

BRITISH JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS, Issue 2 2008
Donna M. Buttigieg
Drawing on mobilization theory, this article seeks to identify the factors that shape the willingness of union members to take industrial action. The study utilized data from a large-scale survey (N = 1,111) carried out in a financial services union during the renegotiation of a collective bargaining contract. The results suggested that individuals were more willing to engage in industrial action when they experienced a sense of injustice or unfairness in the employment relationship and when they held a collectivist orientation to work. Moreover, their propensity to take industrial action was greater when they considered that their union was an effective instrument of power. Workplace representatives were also important, particularly when they were seen as being responsive to their members' needs in situations of perceived injustice. The implications for mobilization theory and for union strategy are discussed. [source]


ChemInform Abstract: Zirconium-Catalyzed Methylalumination of Heterosubstituted Arylethynes: Factors Affecting the Regio-, Stereo-, and Chemoselectivities.

CHEMINFORM, Issue 6 2008
Guangwei Wang
Abstract ChemInform is a weekly Abstracting Service, delivering concise information at a glance that was extracted from about 200 leading journals. To access a ChemInform Abstract of an article which was published elsewhere, please select a "Full Text" option. The original article is trackable via the "References" option. [source]