1,016 research outputs found
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Support-Free Infiltration of Selective Laser Sintered (SLS) Silicon Carbide Preforms
Non-metallic objects are often difficult to manufacture due to high melting temperatures,
poor sinterability, limited ductility, and difficulty in machining. Freeform fabrication techniques
coupled with liquid infiltration offer a cost-effective and rapid manufacturing mechanism for
composite parts with complex geometry and adequate properties. Selective laser sintered (SLS)
silicon carbide (SiC) preforms infiltrated with liquid silicon develop localized infiltrant overextrusions onto surfaces and at surface irregularities. Several shrinkage mechanisms including
densification were studied as possible causes of these overfilling extrusions, and the results are
discussed below. This research was supported by NSF Grant Number DMI-0522176.Mechanical Engineerin
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Contrasting effects of changing rhythm and content on auditory distraction in immediate memory
Across five experiments, the temporal regularity and content of an irrelevant speech stream were varied and their effects on a serial recall task examined. Variations of the content, but not the rhythm, of the irrelevant speech stimuli reliably disrupted serial recall performance in all experiments. Bayesian analyses supported the null hypothesis over the hypothesis that irregular rhythms would disrupt memory to a greater extent than regular rhythms. Pooling the data in a combined analysis revealed that regular presentation of the irrelevant speech was significantly more disruptive to serial recall than irregular presentation. These results are consistent with the idea that auditory distraction is sensitive to both intra-item and inter-item relations and challenge an orienting-based account of auditory distraction
Chromosome Complements in Desmanthus (Leguminosae)
Desmanthus, a genus of the subfamily Mimosoideae of the Leguminosae, is represented in the United States by ten species, one of which has two varieties. Nine species are found in Texas (Turner, 1950b). The genus has its greatest concentration in Mexico where sixteen species occur (Turner, 1950a). In the present paper chromosome studies on Desmanthus acuminatus, D. brevipes, D. leptolobus, D. velutinus and D. virgatus var. depressus are reported. These five species occur in Texas
Intracellular Water Exchange for Measuring the Dry Mass, Water Mass and Changes in Chemical Composition of Living Cells
We present a method for direct non-optical quantification of dry mass, dry density and water mass of single living cells in suspension. Dry mass and dry density are obtained simultaneously by measuring a cell’s buoyant mass sequentially in an H[subscript 2]O-based fluid and a D[subscript 2]O-based fluid. Rapid exchange of intracellular H[subscript 2]O for D[subscript 2]O renders the cell’s water content neutrally buoyant in both measurements, and thus the paired measurements yield the mass and density of the cell’s dry material alone. Utilizing this same property of rapid water exchange, we also demonstrate the quantification of intracellular water mass. In a population of E. coli, we paired these measurements to estimate the percent dry weight by mass and volume. We then focused on cellular dry density – the average density of all cellular biomolecules, weighted by their relative abundances. Given that densities vary across biomolecule types (RNA, DNA, protein), we investigated whether we could detect changes in biomolecular composition in bacteria, fungi, and mammalian cells. In E. coli, and S. cerevisiae, dry density increases from stationary to exponential phase, consistent with previously known increases in the RNA/protein ratio from up-regulated ribosome production. For mammalian cells, changes in growth conditions cause substantial shifts in dry density, suggesting concurrent changes in the protein, nucleic acid and lipid content of the cell.National Cancer Institute (U.S.). Physical Sciences-Oncology Center (U54CA143874)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Center for Cell Division Process Grant P50GM6876)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Contract R01CA170592)United States. Army Research Office (Institute for Collaborate Biotechnologies Contract W911NF-09-D-0001
U.S. House: Legislative: Bill files: 109th Congress: H.J. Res. 55, Withdrawal of U.S. Armed Forces from Iraq Resolution of 2005: Miscellaneous (2 of 3): Fax from Congressman Walter B. Jones to Congressman Neil Abercrombie containing CRS report on H.J. Res. 55
Comparison between Spanish young and elderly people evaluated using Rivermead Behavioural Memory Test
The first objective of this work was to compare scores obtained in the daily memory function between young and elderly people, and to check whether there are differences between the groups for each of the profile scores obtained in the memory test. A second aim of this paper is to study the relationship between everyday memory and age, while controlling for gender and educational level. The total and profile scores obtained in the Rivermead Behavioural Memory Test were compared in a sample of 60 young and 120 elderly people from Valencia (Spain). Results showed significant differences between the two groups: those between 18 and 30 years obtained a higher average than those over 65. Once the group comparison was controlled for gender and educational level, the statistical effect of age group disappeared. The non-significant effect of group can not be explained by the introduction of gender, because both its main effect and the interaction were not statistically significant. However, educational level had a statistically significant effect which may explain the non-significant effect of group in this new analysis. The main conclusion is the need to carefully control for educational level in all studies related with everyday memory and ageing, as the differences found could be due to generational differences more than to biological deterioratio
Identification and Characterization of RcMADS1, an AGL24 Ortholog from the Holoparasitic Plant Rafflesia cantleyi Solms-Laubach (Rafflesiaceae)
10.1371/journal.pone.0067243PLoS ONE86-POLN
Identifying practical indicators of biodiversity for stand-level management of plantation forests
Sperm competition as an under-appreciated factor in domestication
Humans created an environment that increased selective pressures on subgroups of those species that became domestic. We propose that the domestication process may in some cases have been facilitated by changes in mating behaviour and resultant sperm competition. By adapting to sperm competition, proto-domestic animals could potentially have outcompeted their wild counterparts in human-constructed niches. This could have contributed to the restriction of gene flow between the proto-domesticates and their wild counterparts, thereby promoting the fixation of other domestication characteristics. Further to this novel perspective for domestication, we emphasise the general potential of postcopulatory sexual selection in the restriction of gene flow between populations, and urge more studies
Post-glacial colonisation of Europe by the wood mouse, Apodemus sylvaticus : evidence of a northern refugium and dispersal with humans
The wood mouse Apodemus sylvaticus is an opportunistic rodent that is found throughout most of
the European mainland. It is present on many islands around the margins of the continent and in
northern Africa. The species has been the subject of previous phylogeographic studies but these
have focussed on the more southerly part of its range. A substantial number of new samples,
many of them from the periphery of the species’ range, contribute to an exceptional dataset
comprising 981 mitochondrial cytochrome b sequences. These new data provide sufficient
resolution to transform our understanding of the species’ survival through the last glaciation and
its subsequent re-colonisation of the continent. The deepest genetic split we found is in
agreement with previous studies and runs from the Alps to central Ukraine, but we further
distinguish two separate lineages in wood mice to the north and west of this line. It is likely that
this part of Europe was colonised from two refugia, putatively located in the Iberian peninsula and
the Dordogne or Carpathian region. The wood mouse therefore joins the growing number of
species with extant populations that appear to have survived the Last Glacial Maximum in
northern refugia, rather than solely in traditionally recognised refugial locations in the southern
European peninsulas. Furthermore, the existence of a northern refugium for the species was
predicted in a study of mitochondrial variation in a specific parasite of the wood mouse,
demonstrating the potential value of data from parasites to phylogeographic studies. Lastly, the
presence of related haplotypes in widely disparate locations, often on islands or separated by
substantial bodies of water, demonstrates the propensity of the wood mouse for accidental
human-mediated transport
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