1,232 research outputs found
Constructing female entrepreneurship policy in the UK : is the US a relevant benchmark?
Successive UK governments have introduced a range of policy initiatives designed to encourage more women to start new firms. Underpinning these policies has been an explicit ambition for the UK to achieve similar participation rates as those in the US where it is widely reported that women own nearly half the stock of businesses. The data underlying these objectives are critically evaluated and it is argued that the definitions and measures of female enterprise used in the UK and the US restrict meaningful comparisons between the two. It is suggested that the expansion of female entrepreneurship in the US is historically and culturally specific to that country. UK policy goals should reflect the national socioeconomic context, while drawing upon good practice examples from a range of other countries. The paper concludes by discussing the economic and social viability of encouraging more women in the UK to enter self-employment without fully recognising the intensely competitive sectors in which they are often located
Flights in my hands : coherence concerns in designing Strip'TIC, a tangible space for air traffic controllers
Best Paper Honorable Mention awardInternational audienceWe reflect upon the design of a paper-based tangible interactive space to support air traffic control. We have observed, studied, prototyped and discussed with controllers a new mixed interaction system based on Anoto, video projection, and tracking. Starting from the understanding of the benefits of tangible paper strips, our goal is to study how mixed physical and virtual augmented data can support the controllers' mental work. The context of the activity led us to depart from models that are proposed in tangible interfaces research where coherence is based on how physical objects are representative of virtual objects. We propose a new account of coherence in a mixed interaction system that integrates externalization mechanisms. We found that physical objects play two roles: they act both as representation of mental objects and as tangible artifacts for interacting with augmented features. We observed that virtual objects represent physical ones, and not the reverse, and, being virtual representations of physical objects, should seamlessly converge with the cognitive role of the physical object. Finally, we show how coherence is achieved by providing a seamless interactive space
Comparative chromosome painting discloses homologous Segments in distantly related mammals
Comparative chromosome painting, termed ZOO-FISH, using DNA libraries from flow
sorted human chromosomes 1,16,17 and X, and mouse chromosome 11 discloses the
presence of syntenic groups in distantly related mammalian Orders ranging from
primates (Homo sapiens), rodents (Mus musculus), even-toed ungulates (Muntiacus
muntjak vaginalis and Muntiacus reevesi) and whales (Balaenoptera physalus). These
mammalian Orders have evolved separately for 55-80 million years (Myr). We conclude
that ZOO-FISH can be used to generate comparative chromosome maps of a large
number of mammalian species
Dose-dependent effects of Allopurinol on human foreskin fibroblast cell and human umbilical vein endothelial cell under hypoxia
Allopurinol, an inhibitor of xanthine oxidase, has been used in clinical trials of patients with cardiovascular and chronic kidney disease. These are two pathologies with extensive links to hypoxia and activation of the transcription factor hypoxia inducible factor (HIF) family. Here we analysed the effects of allopurinol treatment in two different cellular models, and their response to hypoxia. We explored the dose-dependent effect of allopurinol on Human Foreskin Fibroblasts (HFF) and Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells (HUVEC) under hypoxia and normoxia. Under normoxia and hypoxia, high dose allopurinol reduced the accumulation of HIF-1α protein in HFF and HUVEC cells. Allopurinol had only marginal effects on HIF-1α mRNA level in both cellular systems. Interestingly, allopurinol effects over the HIF system were independent of prolyl-hydroxylase activity. Finally, allopurinol treatment reduced angiogenesis traits in HUVEC cells in an in vitro model. Taken together these results indicate that high doses of allopurinol inhibits the HIF system and pro-angiogenic traits in cells
Paper Session III-A - International High School Space Settlement Design Competition: How SECME is Preparing Me for a Space Age Education
Co-founders Anita Gale, Dick Edwards, and Rob Kolstad originated the International Space Settlement Design Competition to provide high school students with the opportunity to present space-related design proposals in a professional setting. The competition uses the standard business RFP (request for proposal) format for competitors to present their designs for future human settlements in space. The competition draws on professional volunteers, from aerospace engineers to business executives, who mentor the student teams through the design proposal process. Using mentors from such diverse fields introduces topics to the students that they are often unfamiliar with, such as ergonomics and human factors, functionality during construction, and budgeting of resources. By using this format, the students not only gain experience in design and engineering for extraterrestrial environments, they also gain experience in real world business proposals, time management, team work, budgeting and cost benefit analysis. This paper reviews the procedures of this international competition and presents guidelines for fostering this same type of educational program at the local level
Transformation of Cs-IONSIV® into a ceramic wasteform by hot isostatic pressing
A simple method to directly convert Cs-exchanged IONSIV® IE-911 into a ceramic wasteform by hot isostatic pressing (1100 °C/190 MPa/2 hr) is presented. Two major Cs-containing phases, Cs2TiNb6O18 and Cs2ZrSi6O15, and a series of mixed oxides form. The microstructure and phase assemblage of the samples as a function of Cs content were examined using XRD, XRF, SEM and TEM/EDX. The chemical aqueous durability of the materials was investigated using the MCC-1 and PCT-B standard test methods. For HIPed Cs-IONSIV® samples, the MCC-1 normalised release rates of Cs were <1.57 × 10−1 g m−2 d−1 at 0–28 days, and <3.78 × 10−2 g m−2 d−1 for PCT-B at 7 days. The low rates are indicative of a safe long-term immobilisation matrix for Cs formed directly from spent IONSIV®. It was also demonstrated that the phase formation can be altered by adding Ti metal due to a controlled redox environment
A HIF-independent, CD133-mediated mechanism of cisplatin resistance in glioblastoma cells
Purpose
Glioblastoma Multiforme (GBM) is the commonest brain tumour in adults. A population of cells, known as cancer stem cells (CSCs), is thought to mediate chemo/radiotherapy resistance. CD133 is a cell surface marker to identify and isolate CSCs. However, its functional significance and the relevant microenvironment in which to study CD133 remain unknown. We examined the influence of hypoxia on CD133 expression and the potential functional significance of CD133 in glioblastoma chemoresistance.
Methods
Gene expression was analysed by qRT-PCR. siRNA technique was used to downregulate genes and confirmed by flow cytometry. IC50 values was evaluated with the Alamar blue assay.
Results
CD133 expression was upregulated in hypoxia in 2D and 3D models. There was increased resistance to chemotherapeutics, cisplatin, temozolomide and etoposide, in cells cultured in hypoxia compared to normoxia. siRNA knockdown of either HIF1a or HIF2a resulted in reduced CD133 mRNA expression with HIF2a having a more prolonged effect on CD133 expression. HIF2a downregulation sensitized GBM cells to cisplatin to a greater extent than HIF1a but CD133 knockdown had a much more marked effect on cisplatin sensitisation than knockdown of either of the HIFs suggesting a HIF-independent mechanism of cisplatin resistance mediated via CD133. The same mechanism was not involved in temozolomide resistance since downregulation of HIF1a but not HIF2a or CD133 sensitized GBM cells to temozolomide.
Conclusion
Knowledge of the mechanisms involved in the novel hypoxia-induced CD133-mediated resistance to cisplatin observed might lead to identification of new strategies that enable more effective use of current therapeutic agents
Moving inside the box: interacting with interpretation of historical artefacts through tangible augmented reality
We present ARcheoBox, a walk-up-and-use prototype for interacting with interpretation of historical artefacts using tangible augmented reality. ARcheoBox enables users to manipulate virtual representations and interact with interpretation of historical artefacts using cylinder-shaped generic proxies. We also leverage the user interactions with interpretation using three interaction techniques “Move”, “Rotate”, and “Flip” as output modalities in AR. The prototype consists of a wooden box, a tablet display, and generic proxies, which means ARcheoBox does not require any head-mounted displays (HMDs), handheld controllers, or haptic gloves. We conducted a user study with 25 participants in which the findings demonstrate the advantages of tangible AR over more conventional interaction modalities presented in museums such as touch screens. Finally, we present a set of design recommendations for designing tangible AR that enhances the user's interaction experience with historical artefacts
“Don't believe anything I tell you, it's all lies!”: a synthetic ethnography on untruth in large language models
Large Language Models (LLMs) have many practical uses in areas like journalism, search, coding and more. However, a growing concern is that they are also prone to presenting incorrect information, sometimes called “hallucinations”. Here, we are not interested in what specific untruths LLMs presents, but how they do it. We used synthetic ethnography, a methodology for the qualitative study of generative models, to study two LLMs with different size and capability. We collected 3 cases where LLMs presented incorrect information and observed the strategies they used to justify this. From these observations we can start to form an understanding of what happens when an LLM reaches the edge of its knowledge-base and takes corrective action. Our conclusion is that the interfaces should be better designed to reveal this tendency of LLMs to “fill in” information they are missing, but that this ability may also be one of their strengths
Peatland Initiation, Carbon Accumulation, and 2 ka Depth in the James Bay Lowland and Adjacent Regions
Copyright © 2014 University of Colorado at Boulder, Institute of Arctic and Alpine ResearchPeatlands surrounding Hudson and James Bays form the second largest peatland complex in the world and contain major stores of soil carbon (C). This study utilized a transect of eight ombrotrophic peat cores from remote regions of central and northern Ontario to quantify the magnitude and rate of C accumulation since peatland initiation and for the past 2000 calendar years before present (2 ka). These new data were supplemented by 17 millennially resolved chronologies from a literature review covering the Boreal Shield, Hudson Plains, and Taiga Shield bordering Hudson and James Bays. Peatlands initiated in central and northern Ontario by 7.8 ka following deglaciation and isostatic emergence of northern areas to above sea level. Total C accumulated since inception averaged 109.7 ± (std. dev.) 36.2 kg C m–2. Approximately 40% of total soil C has accumulated since 2 ka at an average apparent rate of 20.2 ± 6.9 g C m–2 yr–1. The 2 ka depths correlate significantly and positively with modern gridded climate estimates for mean annual precipitation, mean annual air temperature, growing degree-days > 0 °C, and photosynthetically active radiation integrated over days > 0 °C. There are significantly shallower depths in permafrost peatlands. Vertical peat accumulation was likely constrained by temperature, growing season length, and photosynthetically active radiation over the last 2 ka in the Hudson Bay Lowlands and surrounding regions.US National Science Foundatio
- …
