1,805 research outputs found

    Mechanisms of cross and multiple herbicide resistance in Alopecurus myosuroides and Lolium rigidum

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    L’Alopecurus myosuroides et le Lolium rigidum ont développé des résistances croisées et multiples à des herbicides ayant différents modes d'action et provenant de diverses classes chimiques. Un biotype d'Amyosuroides, Peldon AI, possède une capacité élevée de dégradation métabolique des herbicides de types urée substituée et aryloxypheno-xypropionate (APP), lui conférant une résistance croisée non reliée à la cible d'action. Un biotype australien de L. rigidum, SLR 31, possède de multiples mécanismes de résistance, comprenant à la fois des mécanismes de résistance croisée non reliés à la cible et d'autres reliés à la cible. La majorité des individus de la population SLR 31 a une capacité élevée de dégradation métabolique du chlorsulfuron et du diclofop-méthyl, en plus d'un mécanisme associé à une altération de la membrane cellulaire, lequel est corrélé avec la résistance à plusieurs herbicides de types APP et cyclohexanedione (CHD). De plus, une faible proportion des individus de cette population possède une cible d'action modifiée conférant une grande résistance à tous les APP et CHD. Bien que la biologie d'A. myosuroides et de L. rigidum présente beaucoup de points communs, ces deux espèces ne sont pas uniques. Nous prédisons que les résistances aux herbicides de type croisée non reliée à la cible et les résistances multiples vont se développer chez d'autres espèces. Les implications potentielles de ces types de résistance justifient l'adoption de mesures préventives.Alopecurus myosuroides and Lolium rigidum have developed resistance to herbicides with several modes of action in many herbicide classes. A. myosuroides biotype Peldon A1 from England exhibits non-target site cross resistance to substituted urea and aryloxyphenoxypropionate herbicides (APP) due to enhanced metabolism. L. rigidum biotype SLR 31 from Australia has multiple resistance mechanisms, including both non-target site cross resistance and target site cross resistance. The majority of the SLR 31 population has enhanced metabolism of chlorsulfuron and diclofop-methyl and a mechanism correlated with altered plasma membrane response, which correlates with resistance to some APP and cyclohexanedione (CHD) herbicides. A small proportion of the population also has target site cross resistance to APP and CHD herbicides. While A myosuroides and L. rigidum share common biological elements, they are not unique. Non-target site cross resistance and multiple herbicide resistance is predicted to develop in other weed species. The repercussions of cross and multiple resistance warrant proactive measures to prevent or delay onset

    Bisimple monogenic orthodox semigroups

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    We give a complete description of the structure of all bisimple orthodox semigroups generated by two mutually inverse elements

    Calcitonin gene-related peptide receptor antagonist BIBN 4096 BS for the acute treatment of migraine

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    Background: Calcitonin gene–related peptide (CGRP) may have a causative role in migraine. We therefore hypothesized that a CGRP-receptor antagonist might be effective in the treatment of migraine attacks. Methods: In an international, multicenter, double-blind, randomized clinical trial of BIBN 4096 BS, a highly specific and potent nonpeptide CGRP-receptor antagonist, 126 patients with migraine received one of the following: placebo or 0.25, 0.5, 1, 2.5, 5, or 10 mg of BIBN 4096 BS intravenously over a period of 10 minutes. A group-sequential adaptive treatment-assignment design was used to minimize the number of patients exposed. Results: The 2.5-mg dose was selected, with a response rate of 66 percent, as compared with 27 percent for placebo (P=0.001). The BIBN 4096 BS group as a whole had a response rate of 60 percent. Significant superiority over placebo was also observed with respect to most secondary end points: the pain-free rate at 2 hours; the rate of sustained response over a period of 24 hours; the rate of recurrence of headache; improvement in nausea, photophobia, phonophobia, and functional capacity; and the time to meaningful relief. An effect was apparent after 30 minutes and increased over the next few hours. The overall rate of adverse events was 25 percent after the 2.5-mg dose of the drug and 20 percent for the BIBN 4096 BS group as a whole, as compared with 12 percent for placebo. The most frequent side effect was paresthesia. There were no serious adverse events. Conclusions: The CGRP antagonist BIBN 4096 BS was effective in treating acute attacks of migraine

    Social and cultural origins of motivations to volunteer a comparison of university students in six countries

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    Although participation in volunteering and motivations to volunteer (MTV) have received substantial attention on the national level, particularly in the US, few studies have compared and explained these issues across cultural and political contexts. This study compares how two theoretical perspectives, social origins theory and signalling theory, explain variations in MTV across different countries. The study analyses responses from a sample of 5794 students from six countries representing distinct institutional contexts. The findings provide strong support for signalling theory but less so for social origins theory. The article concludes that volunteering is a personal decision and thus is influenced more at the individual level but is also impacted to some degree by macro-level societal forces

    A Geometry of the Generations

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    We propose a geometric theory of flavor based on the discrete group (S3)3(S_3)^3, in the context of the minimal supersymmetric standard model. The group treats three objects symmetrically, while making fundamental distinctions between the generations. The top quark is the only heavy quark in the symmetry limit, and the first and second generation squarks are degenerate. The hierarchical nature of Yukawa matrices is a consequence of a sequential breaking of (S3)3(S_3)^3.Comment: 10 pages, 1 EPS figure as uuencoded tar-compressed file, uses psfig.st

    THE CONJUGATE OF A SINGULAR FUNCTIONAL DIFFERENTIAL OPERATOR

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    An explicit representation of the conjugate of a singular functional differential operator is given. Some theorems and their corollaries are proven

    Radiocarbon Date List X: Baffin Bay, Baffin Island, Iceland, Labrador Sea, and the Northern North Atlantic

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    Date List X contains an annotated listing of 213 radiocarbon dates determined on samples from marine and terrestrial environments. The marine samples were collected from the East Greenland, Iceland, Spitzbergen, and Norwegian margins, Baffin Bay, and Labrador Sea. The terrestrial samples were collected from Vestfirdir, Iceland and Baffin Island. The samples were submitted by INSTAAR and researchers affiliated with INSTAAR\u27s Micropaleontology Laboratory under the direction of Dr.’s John T. Andrews and Anne E. Jennings. All of the dates from marine sediment cores were determined from either shells or foraminifera (both benthic and planktic). All dates were obtained by the Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS) method. Regions of concentrated marine research include: Baffin Bay, Baffin Island, Labrador Sea, East Greenland fjords, shelf and slope, Denmark Strait, the southwestern and northwestern Iceland shelves, and Vestfirdir, Iceland. The non-marine radiocarbon dates are from peat, wood, plant microfossils, and mollusc. The radiocarbon dates have been used to address a variety of research objectives such as: 1. determining the timing of northern hemisphere high latitude environmental changes including glacier advance and retreat, and 2. assessing the accuracy of a fluctuating reservoir correction. Thus, most of the dates constrain the timing, rate, and interaction of late Quaternary paleoenvironmental fluctuations in sea level, glacier extent, sediment input, and changes in ocean circulation patterns. Where significant, stratigraphic and sample contexts are presented for each core to document the basis for interpretations

    Maximal Neutrino Mixing from a Minimal Flavor Symmetry

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    We study a number of models, based on a non-Abelian discrete group, that successfully reproduce the simple and predictive Yukawa textures usually associated with U(2) theories of flavor. These models allow for solutions to the solar and atmospheric neutrino problems that do not require altering successful predictions for the charged fermions or introducing sterile neutrinos. Although Yukawa matrices are hierarchical in the models we consider, the mixing between second- and third-generation neutrinos is naturally large. We first present a quantitative analysis of a minimal model proposed in earlier work, consisting of a global fit to fermion masses and mixing angles, including the most important renormalization group effects. We then propose two new variant models: The first reproduces all important features of the SU(5)xU(2) unified theory with neither SU(5) nor U(2). The second demonstrates that discrete subgroups of SU(2) can be used in constructing viable supersymmetric theories of flavor without scalar universality even though SU(2) by itself cannot.Comment: 34 pages LaTeX, 1 eps figure, minor revisions and references adde

    Observed photodetachment in parallel electric and magnetic fields

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    We investigate photodetachment from negative ions in a homogeneous 1.0-T magnetic field and a parallel electric field of approximately 10 V/cm. A theoretical model for detachment in combined fields is presented. Calculations show that a field of 10 V/cm or more should considerably diminish the Landau structure in the detachment cross section. The ions are produced and stored in a Penning ion trap and illuminated by a single-mode dye laser. We present preliminary results for detachment from S- showing qualitative agreement with the model. Future directions of the work are also discussed.Comment: Nine pages, five figures, minor revisions showing final publicatio

    SuperWIMP Dark Matter Signals from the Early Universe

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    Cold dark matter may be made of superweakly-interacting massive particles, superWIMPs, that naturally inherit the desired relic density from late decays of metastable WIMPs. Well-motivated examples are weak-scale gravitinos in supergravity and Kaluza-Klein gravitons from extra dimensions. These particles are impossible to detect in all dark matter experiments. We find, however, that superWIMP dark matter may be discovered through cosmological signatures from the early universe. In particular, superWIMP dark matter has observable consequences for Big Bang nucleosynthesis and the cosmic microwave background (CMB), and may explain the observed underabundance of 7Li without upsetting the concordance between deuterium and CMB baryometers. We discuss implications for future probes of CMB black body distortions and collider searches for new particles. In the course of this study, we also present a model-independent analysis of entropy production from late-decaying particles in light of WMAP data.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures, typos correcte
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