152 research outputs found

    Elementy japońskich wierzeń i obrzędów w mandze Mieruko-chan. Dziewczyna, która widzi więcej Tomoki Izumiego

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    The aim of the article is to reflect on religious themes in contemporary Japanese comics. The manga Mieruko-chan by Tomoki Izumi is analyzed. The themes include the Japanese tradition of horror, derived from folk beliefs, as well as Shintō and Buddhist rituals. The author draws attention to religion as an important element of creating cultural reality and its function that makes it more attractive.The aim of the article is to reflect on religious themes in contemporary Japanese comics. The manga Mieruko-chan by Tomoki Izumi is analyzed. The themes include the Japanese tradition of horror, derived from folk beliefs, as well as Shintō and Buddhist rituals. The author draws attention to religion as an important element of creating cultural reality and its function that makes it more attractive

    Spin-orbit coupling in a hexagonal ring of pendula

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    journal_title: New Journal of Physics article_type: paper article_title: Spin–orbit coupling in a hexagonal ring of pendula copyright_information: © 2017 IOP Publishing Ltd and Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft license_information: cc-by Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 licence. Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOI. date_received: 2016-09-30 date_accepted: 2017-04-07 date_epub: 2017-05-1

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    Ultraviolet light responses in photovoltaic properties of TiO₂ / conducting polymer heterostructure devices

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    This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and AIP Publishing. This article appeared in Tokiyoshi Umeda, Yuuki Hashimoto, Hiroyoshi Mizukami, Tomoki Shirakawa, Akihiko Fujii, and Katsumi Yoshino, Appl. Phys. Lett. 85, 3139 (2004) and may be found at https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1804234.Photovoltaic properties of heterostructure devices of titanium oxide (TiO2) and conducting polymer thin films have been studied. Normal photovoltaic properties were stably observed upon the visible light irradiation of the wavelength range corresponding to the absorption of a conducting polymer, and unique photovoltaic properties were also observed upon the ultraviolet (UV) light irradiation of the wavelength range corresponding to the absorption of TiO2. UV light irradiation caused marked increases in the short-circuit current at the visible-wavelength range and in the open-circuit voltage. These properties have been discussed by considering the enhancement of the built-in field which originates from the hole accumulation caused by the trap levels in the TiO2 layer or TiO2 ∕ conducting polymer interface. This work was partly supported by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology and from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

    <Review Articles>R.D .Hill. Rice in Malaya : A Study in Historical Geography. Oxford University Press. 1975

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    この論文は国立情報学研究所の学術雑誌公開支援事業により電子化されました。Rice in Malaya aims to relate the historical changes and regional diversity of rice cultivation in the Malay Peninsula to the geographical and socioeconomic situation there from prehistoric times to the beginning of the twentieth century. Rice in the prehistoric and early historic cultures of Southeast Asia is described in the first two chapters, which cite archaeological and historical evidence for the age and area of origination of rice cultivation and its spread to the Malay Peninsula. Rice cultivation had become widespread throughout the peninsula by the beginning of the nineteenth century, and chapter 3 illustrates the cycle of operations involved in shifting, semipermanent and permanent cultivation at that time. It also describes land tenure and the gradual changes in the concept of land as real property in Malayan society. As a means to understand the diversity of development of rice cultivation, the author proposes that four major regions of rice cultivation emerged between the nineteenth and the early twentieth century. The first is the northern region centered upon Kedah, the colonized lands of Penang and Province Wellesley, and Kelantan, Trengganu. Perak, apart from the tin-mining areas in the south, is also included and offers a fine example of development under British rule. Second, the southern region includes the plain of Malacca, which is largely non-Minangkabau in its techniques, tradition and law, together with the contrasting Minangkabau lands of Negri Sembilan. The third region, which includes southern Perak, the whole of Selangor and Pahang, comprised the 'marches' areas, where rice-growing was of little importance. The fourth region, that of the hill peoples, was only partly known during the nineteenth century. The remaining chapters focus mainly on the northern and southern centers of rice cultivation, dealing with the traditional or common cultivation methods and their distribution; acreages of paddy fields, with many statistical data on land-ownership and the races engaged in rice-growing; the socioeconomic background; and schemes for expansion of rice cultivation, the motives behind them and the fates they met. The discussion on the expansion of cultivated area in relation to the regional pattern of economic development in a colonized area indicates that large-scale development succeeded more often under Malay initiative than British. Finally, the author proposes a typological scheme which comprehends all the spatial patterns of rice-growing in the Malay Peninsula. The scheme could be used to classify the ecotypically varied pattern of rice-growing, but difficulty remains in its application to evolutional development, because multi-ancestral and different types of rice-growing were introduced into the peninsula in different ages and in different areas. On the origin and dispersion of cultivated rice in the Malay Peninsula and adjacent areas, a more detailed and precise theory should be provided by recent studies in this field. Throughout this volume, the author has successfully combined geographical and historical approaches in depicting rice in Malaya

    Commune-Level Estimation of Poverty Measure and its Application in Cambodia

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    One of the major limitations in addressing child malnutrition is lack of information that could be used to target resources. By combining demographic and health survey (DHS) and population census data, the author disaggregates the estimates of the prevalence of child malnutrition in Cambodia from currently available 17 DHS strata into 1,594 communes. The methodology is built on the small-area estimation technique developed by Elbers, Lanjouw, and Lanjouw. The author extends it to jointly estimate multiple indicators and to allow for a richer structure of error terms. Average standard errors for the commune-level estimates in this study were about 4 percent, a magnitude comparable to those for stratum-level estimates derived from DHS only. The author demonstrates three applications of these estimates. First, he explores the relationship between malnutrition, consumption poverty, and inequality. The nonlinear effects of consumption on nutritional status of children are a key component of the relationship. Second, he conducts a decomposition analysis of health inequality and finds that the between-location share of health inequality is lower than with consumption inequality. Finally, he evaluates the potential gains from geographic targeting. The author finds that the savings in the cost of a nutrition program from commune-level targeting is on average at least two to three times higher than that from stratum-level targeting when the per capita cost of the program is fixed

    Micro-level estimation of child malnutrition indicators and its application in Cambodia

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    One of the major limitations in addressing child malnutrition is lack of information that could be used to target resources. By combining demographic and health survey (DHS) and population census data, the author disaggregates the estimates of the prevalence of child malnutrition in Cambodia from currently available 17 DHS strata into 1,594 communes. The methodology is built on the small-area estimation technique developed by Elbers, Lanjouw, and Lanjouw. The author extends it to jointly estimate multiple indicators and to allow for a richer structure of error terms. Average standard errors for the commune-level estimates in this study were about 4 percent, a magnitude comparable to those for stratum-level estimates derived from DHS only. The author demonstrates three applications of these estimates. First, he explores the relationship between malnutrition, consumption poverty, and inequality. The nonlinear effects of consumption on nutritional status of children are a key component of the relationship. Second, he conducts a decomposition analysis of health inequality and finds that the between-location share of health inequality is lower than with consumption inequality. Finally, he evaluates the potential gains from geographic targeting. The author finds that the savings in the cost of a nutrition program from commune-level targeting is on average at least two to three times higher than that from stratum-level targeting when the per capita cost of the program is fixed.

    Identification of RNA-binding protein LARP4B as a tumor suppressor in Glioma

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    Transposon-based insertional mutagenesis is a valuable method for conducting unbiased forward genetic screens to identify cancer genes in mice. We used this system to elucidate factors involved in the malignant transformation of neural stem cells into glioma-initiating cells. We identified an RNA-binding protein, La-related protein 4b (LARP4B), as a candidate tumor-suppressor gene in glioma. LARP4B expression was consistently decreased in human glioma stem cells and cell lines compared with normal neural stem cells. Moreover, heterozygous deletion of LARP4B was detected in nearly 80% of glioblastomas in The Cancer Genome Atlas database. LARP4B loss was also associated with low expression and poor patient survival. Overexpression of LARP4B in glioma cell lines strongly inhibited proliferation by inducing mitotic arrest and apoptosis in four of six lines as well as in two patient-derived glioma stem cell populations. The expression levels of CDKN1A and BAX were also upregulated upon LARP4B overexpression, and the growth-inhibitory effects were partially dependent on p53 (TP53) activity in cells expressing wild-type, but not mutant, p53. We further found that the La module, which is responsible for the RNA chaperone activity of LARP4B, was important for the growth-suppressive effect and was associated with BAX mRNA. Finally, LARP4B depletion in p53 and Nf1-deficient mouse primary astrocytes promoted cell proliferation and led to increased tumor size and invasiveness in xenograft and orthotopic models. These data provide strong evidence that LARP4B serves as a tumor-suppressor gene in glioma, encouraging further exploration of the RNA targets potentially involved in LARP4B-mediatd growth inhibition.Japan Society for the Promotion of Scienc
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