359 research outputs found
Familia y estado en Suecia
Este artículo es la transcripción de una conferencia dictada en la Universidad Autònoma de Barcelona el 19 de mayo de 1981. Problemas en la traducción obligaron a revisar y corregir el primer trabajo, ampliándolo con dos textos de la autora, Roles in Transition, LiberForlag, Suecia, 1978, y A Study of Abortion in Swueden, Royal Ministry for Foreing Affairs, Suecia, 1974. La revisión y la redacción final del artículo fueron realizados por Judith Astelarra
New Maser Emission from Nonmetastable Ammonia in NGC 7538. II. Green Bank Telescope Observations Including Water Masers
We present new maser emission from ^{14}NH_3 (9,6) in NGC 7538. Our
observations include the known spectral features near v_LSR = -60 km/s and -57
km/s and several more features extending to -46 km/s. In three epochs of
observation spanning two months we do not detect any variability in the ammonia
masers, in contrast to the >10-fold variability observed in other ^{14}NH_3
(9,6) masers in the Galaxy over comparable timescales. We also present
observations of water masers in all three epochs for which emission is observed
over the velocity range -105 km/s < v_LSR < -4 km/s, including the highest
velocity water emission yet observed from NGC 7538. Of the remarkable number of
maser species in IRS 1, H_2O and, now, ^{14}NH_3 are the only masers known to
exhibit emission outside of the velocity range -62 km/s < v_LSR < -51 km/s.
However, we find no significant intensity or velocity correlations between the
water emission and ammonia emission. We also present a non-detection in the
most sensitive search to date toward any source for emission from the CC^{32}S
and CC^{34}S molecules, indicating an age greater than \approx 10^4 yr for IRS
1-3. We discuss these findings in the context of embedded stellar cores and
recent models of the region.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, 3 tables; accepted to AJ; color figures only on
arxiv; revised to include references and minor proof change
Acidic cysteine endoproteinase cathepsin K in the degeneration of the superficial articular hyaline cartilage in osteoarthritis
Peer reviewe
Lawful to the World: Protecting the Integrity of the Inevitable Discovery Doctrine
In the 1984 case of Nix v. Williams, the Supreme Court adopted the inevitable discovery exception to the exclusionary rule, which admits illegally-obtained evidence if the prosecution can establish that the evidence would have been discovered by lawful means. Despite ongoing criticism and divided application of the nuances of the inevitable discovery doctrine, the requirement that the hypothetical independent source be lawful is one element that appears straightforward. Nevertheless, a pair of recent cases involving multiple parties has created yet another inter-circuit conflict, and has thrust the lawful means requirement to the forefront of the inevitable discovery debate.
The First Circuit has allowed the prosecution to rely on an illegal search of a third party in order to invoke the inevitable discovery doctrine against the relevant defendant, seizing on the Supreme Court\u27s prohibition against vicarious exclusionary challenges. On the other hand, Judge Richard Posner, writing for the Seventh Circuit, has refused to allow the prosecution to rely on unlawful means, effectively interpreting the lawful means requirement as lawful to the world. This Note asserts that Judge Posner\u27s interpretation of the lawful means requirement of the inevitable discovery doctrine must be the correct one from the standpoint of justice. And while Judge Posner\u27s analogy to concurrent causation in tort law is instructive, it is also subject to criticism. The better analogy is illustrated by the majority and minority conceptions of duty in negligence law, laid out in the seminal tort case, Palsgraf v. Long Island Railroad Company. Judge Andrews\u27s duty to the public at large conception of duty should be injected into the inevitable discovery realm, so that the lawful means requirement is interpreted as lawful to the world. This interpretation halts an unwarranted expansion of the inevitable discovery doctrine, and maintains the integrity of the exclusionary rule
Submillimeter Emission from Water in the W3 Region
We have mapped the submillimeter emission from the 1(10)-1(01) transition of
ortho-water in the W3 star-forming region. A 5'x5' map of the W3 IRS4 and W3
IRS5 region reveals strong water lines at half the positions in the map. The
relative strength of the Odin lines compared to previous observations by SWAS
suggests that we are seeing water emission from an extended region. Across much
of the map the lines are double-peaked, with an absorption feature at -39 km/s;
however, some positions in the map show a single strong line at -43 km/s. We
interpret the double-peaked lines as arising from optically thick,
self-absorbed water emission near the W3 IRS5, while the narrower blue-shifted
lines originate in emission near W3 IRS4. In this model, the unusual appearance
of the spectral lines across the map results from a coincidental agreement in
velocity between the emission near W3 IRS4 and the blue peak of the more
complex lines near W3 IRS5. The strength of the water lines near W3 IRS4
suggests we may be seeing water emission enhanced in a photon-dominated region.Comment: Accepted to A&A Letters as part of the special Odin issue; 4 page
First detection of NH3 (1,0 - 0,0) from a low mass cloud core: On the low ammonia abundance of the rho Oph A core
Odin has successfully observed the molecular core rho Oph A in the 572.5 GHz
rotational ground state line of ammonia, NH3 (J,K = 1,0 - 0,0). The
interpretation of this result makes use of complementary molecular line data
obtained from the ground (C17O and CH3OH) as part of the Odin preparatory work.
Comparison of these observations with theoretical model calculations of line
excitation and transfer yields a quite ordinary abundance of methanol, X(CH3OH)
= 3e-9. Unless NH3 is not entirely segregated from C17O and CH3OH, ammonia is
found to be significantly underabundant with respect to typical dense core
values, viz. X(NH3) = 8e-10.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, 2 tables, to appear in Astron. Astrophys. Letter
Gene silencing in tick cell lines using small interfering or long double-stranded RNA
Gene silencing by RNA interference (RNAi) is an important research tool in many areas of biology. To effectively harness the power of this technique in order to explore tick functional genomics and tick-microorganism interactions, optimised parameters for RNAi-mediated gene silencing in tick cells need to be established. Ten cell lines from four economically important ixodid tick genera (Amblyomma, Hyalomma, Ixodes and Rhipicephalus including the sub-species Boophilus) were used to examine key parameters including small interfering RNA (siRNA), double stranded RNA (dsRNA), transfection reagent and incubation time for silencing virus reporter and endogenous tick genes. Transfection reagents were essential for the uptake of siRNA whereas long dsRNA alone was taken up by most tick cell lines. Significant virus reporter protein knockdown was achieved using either siRNA or dsRNA in all the cell lines tested. Optimum conditions varied according to the cell line. Consistency between replicates and duration of incubation with dsRNA were addressed for two Ixodes scapularis cell lines; IDE8 supported more consistent and effective silencing of the endogenous gene subolesin than ISE6, and highly significant knockdown of the endogenous gene 2I1F6 in IDE8 cells was achieved within 48 h incubation with dsRNA. In summary, this study shows that gene silencing by RNAi in tick cell lines is generally more efficient with dsRNA than with siRNA but results vary between cell lines and optimal parameters need to be determined for each experimental system
Modulation of vaccine-induced immune responses to hepatitis C virus in rhesus macaques by altering priming before adenovirus boosting
BACKGROUND:
Preventive and therapeutic vaccine strategies aimed at controlling hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection should mimic the immune responses observed in patients who control or clear HCV, specifically T helper (Th) type 1 and CD8+ cell responses to multiple antigens, including nonstructural protein (NS) 3. Given the experience with human immunodeficiency virus, the best candidates for this are based on DNA prime, pox, or adenovirus boost regimens.
METHODS:
In rhesus macaques, we compared NS3-expressing DNA prime and adenovirus boost strategy with 2 alternative priming approaches aimed at modifying Th1 and CD8+ responses: DNA adjuvanted with interleukin (IL)-2- and -12-encoding plasmids or Semliki Forest virus (SFV).
RESULTS:
All prime-boost regimens elicited NS3-specific B and T cell responses in rhesus macaques, including CD8+ responses. SFV priming induced higher lymphoproliferation and longer Th1 memory responses. The use of IL-2- and IL-12-expressing vectors resulted in reduced Th2 and antibody responses, which led to increased Th1 skewing but not to an increase in the magnitude of the IFN- gamma and CD8+ responses.
CONCLUSIONS:
All strategies induced Th1 cellular responses to HCV NS3, with fine modulations depending on the different priming approaches. When they are developed for more HCV antigens, these strategies could be beneficial in therapeutic vaccine approaches
Oscillatory activity in prefrontal and posterior regions during implicit letter-location binding.
Many cognitive abilities involve the integration of information from different modalities, a process referred to as “binding.” It remains less clear, however, whether the creation of bound representations occurs in an involuntary manner, and whether the links between the constituent features of an object are symmetrical. We used magnetoencephalography to investigate whether oscillatory brain activity related to binding processes would be observed in conditions in which participants maintain one feature only (involuntary binding); and whether this activity varies as a function of the feature attended to by participants (binding asymmetry). Participants performed two probe recognition tasks that were identical in terms of their perceptual characteristics and only differed with respect to the instructions given (to memorize either consonants or locations). MEG data were reconstructed using a current source distribution estimation in the classical frequency bands. We observed implicit verbal–spatial binding only when participants successfully maintained the identity of consonants, which was associated with a selective increase in oscillatory activity over prefrontal regions in all frequency bands during the first half of the retention period and accompanied by increased activity in posterior brain regions. The increase in oscillatory activity in prefrontal areas was only observed during the verbal task, which suggests that this activity might be signaling neural processes specifically involved in cross-code binding. Current results are in agreement with proposals suggesting that the prefrontal cortex function as a “pointer” which indexes the features that belong together within an object
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