580 research outputs found
Supplemental Material, Namino_Supplementary_file_final - Dynamics of Soluble Thrombomodulin and Circulating miRNAs in Patients with Atrial Fibrillation Undergoing Radiofrequency Catheter Ablation
Supplemental Material, Namino_Supplementary_file_final for Dynamics of Soluble Thrombomodulin and Circulating miRNAs in Patients with Atrial Fibrillation Undergoing Radiofrequency Catheter Ablation by Fuminori Namino, Munekazu Yamakuchi, Yasuhisa Iriki, Hideki Okui, Hitoshi Ichiki, Ryuichi Maenosono, Naoya Oketani, Izumi Masamoto, Masaaki Miyata, Masahisa Horiuchi, Teruto Hashiguchi, Mitsuru Ohishi and Ikuro Maruyama in Clinical and Applied Thrombosis/Hemostasis</p
Erratum: The histone demethylase JMJD2B regulates endothelial-to-mesenchymal transition (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2020) 117 (4180-4187) DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1913481117)
Correction for “The histone demethylase JMJD2B regulates endothelial-to-mesenchymal transition,” by Simone F. Glaser, Andreas W. Heumüller, Lukas Tombor, Patrick Hofmann, Marion Muhly-Reinholz, Ariane Fischer, Stefan Günther, Karoline E. Kokot, David Hassel, Sandeep Kumar, Hanjoong Jo, Reinier A. Boon, Wesley Abplanalp, David John, Jes-Niels Boeckel, and Stefanie Dimmeler, which was first published February 7, 2020; 10.1073/pnas.1913481117 (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 117, 4180-4187). The authors note that Hitoshi Okada should be added to the author list between Karoline E. Kokot and David Hassel. Hitoshi Okada should be credited with providing mice. The corrected author line, affiliation line, and author contributions appear below. The online version has been corrected
A case of successful removal of a ureteral stone by using the Rutner balloon dilatation helical stone extractor: accompanied with percutaneous nephrolithotomy
A case of successful removal of a residual upper ureteral stone (9 X 6 mm) by Rutner balloon dilatation helical stone extractor which moved from renal pelvis during percutaneous nephrolithotomy for right renal pelvic stone (12 X 11 mm), is reported. This is the first successful case in Japan
ERRATA
Volume and issue: Vol.6, No.7 (2011)Page: pp.317-322Title: Contribution of Slip and Cleavage in Friction and Wear at (10-14) Surface of Magnesite (MgCO3) CrystalAuthor(s): Kaori Niki, Mai Kobayashi and Hitoshi ShindoVolume and issue: Vol.7, No.1 (2012)Page: pp.8-12Title: Frictional Asymmetry and Wear Pattern Formation by Slip and Cleavage Detected at Directional r {10-14} Face of Calcite (CaCO3)Author(s): Kaori Niki, Mai Kobayashi and Hitoshi Shind
Letter from John Lancaster, Unit President, A.I.F.D., January 29, 1970
Letter from John Lancaster, Chairman, American Institute of Floral Designers (A.I.F.D) addressed to the florists who are interested in attending the Yoke Kuromi Memorial Dinner.This collection contains two photograph albums and material related to Hitoshi "Yoke" Kuromi and Corrine Nobuko Nishimura Kuromi. Subjects in the collection include the Kuromi family, the Gila River incarceration camp, and hot rods, and classic cars
Letter from John Lancaster, Unit President, A.I.F.D., January 29, 1970
Letter from John Lancaster, Unit President, American Institute of Floral Designers (A.I.F.D.), possibly addressed to the Southern California Teleflora Unit about the funeral for Yoke Kuromi.This collection contains two photograph albums and material related to Hitoshi "Yoke" Kuromi and Corrine Nobuko Nishimura Kuromi. Subjects in the collection include the Kuromi family, the Gila River incarceration camp, and hot rods, and classic cars
Meeting minutes for Yoke Kuromi's memorial dinner, May 20, 1970
A copy of the meeting minutes for Yoke Kuromi's Memorial Dinner.This collection contains two photograph albums and material related to Hitoshi "Yoke" Kuromi and Corrine Nobuko Nishimura Kuromi. Subjects in the collection include the Kuromi family, the Gila River incarceration camp, and hot rods, and classic cars
Letter from John Lancaster, General Chairman, A.I.F.D.
Letter from John Lancaster, General Chairman for the American Institute of Floral Designers (A.I.F.D.) regarding the Yoke Kuromi Memorial Dinner.This collection contains two photograph albums and material related to Hitoshi "Yoke" Kuromi and Corrine Nobuko Nishimura Kuromi. Subjects in the collection include the Kuromi family, the Gila River incarceration camp, and hot rods, and classic cars
Recommended from our members
Mixed categories in Japanese
textThe purpose of this dissertation is to explain the syntax and morphology associated
with mixed categories in which both verbal and nominal projections are apparently headed
by a single word. Though the mixed categories seem incompatible with a linguistic
generalization about categorial identity between heads and projections (i.e., X-bar theory), I
claim that the linguistic generalization is tenable at the level of constituent structure. Rather,
following head sharing analysis (Bresnan 1997), I argue that the mixture of verbal and
nominal properties arises as a consequence of mapping a constituent structure of a head and
that of its sister to the same functional structure, within a framework of Lexical Functional
Grammar.
This dissertation focuses on mixed categories in Japanese. In this language, mixed
categories involve mixed case marking in which both a nominal case (i.e., genitive) and a
verbal case (e.g., nominative or accusative) are assigned to arguments of a single predicate.
They are problematic regarding a generalization such that the nominal case is licensed only
within a nominal projection, while the verbal case is licensed only within a verbal
projection. I argue that the mixed case marking is allowed only in a verbal projection.
Assuming a phrase structure rule, which enables a sister of a predicate to bear a nominal
case even in a verbal projection, I show that a head sharing analysis fits well with Japanese
mixed categories.
This dissertation also discusses morphology in Japanese mixed categories. I carefully
examine lexical integrity of head elements in mixed category constructions from both a
viii
phonological and morphological viewpoint. The result suggests that the head of Japanese
mixed categories is a single verb, which is derived from the concatenation of an
argument-taking noun and a verbalizing suffix.
I chiefly deal with Temporal Morpheme Constructions in which a Temporal
Morpheme such as tyuu ‘during’ is combined by a preceding argument-taking noun to form
a single predicate. I also extend my analysis to other mixed categories such as Purpose
Expressions and Nominalized Adjective Constructions, which involve control structures. In
addition, I reexamine the so-called post-syntactic compounds, regarding them as a variant
of mixed categories.Linguistic
Meeting minutes for Yoke Kuromi's memorial dinner
Meeting minutes for Yoke Kuromi's Memorial Dinner.This collection contains two photograph albums and material related to Hitoshi "Yoke" Kuromi and Corrine Nobuko Nishimura Kuromi. Subjects in the collection include the Kuromi family, the Gila River incarceration camp, and hot rods, and classic cars
- …
