152,954 research outputs found
I Think I Am Philip K. Dick
For years, noted writer Laurence A. Rickels often found himself compared to novelist Philip K. Dickthough in fact Rickels had never read any of the science fiction writers work. When he finally read his first Philip K. Dick novel, while researching for his recent book The Devil Notebooks , it prompted a prolonged immersion in Dicks writing as well as a recognition of Rickelss own long-documented intellectual pursuits. The result of this engagement is I Think I Am: Philip K. Dick , a profound thought experiment that charts the wide relevance of the pulp sci-fi author and paranoid visionary. I Think I Am: Philip K. Dick explores the science fiction authors meditations on psychic reality and psychosis, Christian mysticism, Eastern religion, and modern spiritualism. Covering all of Dicks science fiction, Rickels corrects the lack of scholarly interest in the legendary Californian author and, ultimately, makes a compelling case for the philosophical and psychoanalytic significance of Philip K. Dicks popular and influential science fiction.Intro -- Contents -- Introjection -- Part I -- Endopsychic Allegories -- Schreber Guardian -- Belief System Surveillance -- Part II -- Deeper Problems -- Veil of Tears -- Go West -- Dick Manfred -- Timing -- Glimmung -- Part III -- Spiritualism Analogy -- Imitating the Dead -- Indexical Layer -- Ilse -- Hammers and Things -- Crucifictions -- Over There -- Martyrology -- Can't Live, Can't Live -- Lola -- Umwelt, Mitwelt, and Eigenwelt -- Outer Race -- The German Introject -- Part IV -- Materialism, Idealism, and Cybernetics -- Startling Stories -- A Couple of Years -- Android Empathy -- Homunculus and Robot -- ALL OF YOU ARE DEAD. I AM ALIVE. -- Go with the Flow -- Part V -- Room for Thought -- Caduceus -- Jump -- Still -- A Wake -- Spätwerk -- Let the Dead Be -- Play Bally -- Das Hund -- Notes -- BibliographyFor years, noted writer Laurence A. Rickels often found himself compared to novelist Philip K. Dickthough in fact Rickels had never read any of the science fiction writers work. When he finally read his first Philip K. Dick novel, while researching for his recent book The Devil Notebooks , it prompted a prolonged immersion in Dicks writing as well as a recognition of Rickelss own long-documented intellectual pursuits. The result of this engagement is I Think I Am: Philip K. Dick , a profound thought experiment that charts the wide relevance of the pulp sci-fi author and paranoid visionary. I Think I Am: Philip K. Dick explores the science fiction authors meditations on psychic reality and psychosis, Christian mysticism, Eastern religion, and modern spiritualism. Covering all of Dicks science fiction, Rickels corrects the lack of scholarly interest in the legendary Californian author and, ultimately, makes a compelling case for the philosophical and psychoanalytic significance of Philip K. Dicks popular and influential science fiction.Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, YYYY. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries
Nonlinear dispersion in resonant Auger decay of H2O molecules
We have measured the resonant Auger decay spectrum of the water molecule at the oxygen K edge. Strong deviations from the expected linear dispersion of the participator lines (which correspond to single-hole valence states) are observed. In a simplified picture the effect can be attributed to the combined effect of the intermediate- and final-state potential curves
K(ATP) channel gene expression is induced by urocortin and mediates its cardioprotective effect
Background— Urocortin is a novel cardioprotective agent that can protect cardiac myocytes from the damaging effects of ischemia/reperfusion both in culture and in the intact heart and is effective when given at reperfusion.
Methods and Results— We have analyzed global changes in gene expression in cardiac myocytes after urocortin treatment using gene chip technology. We report that urocortin specifically induces enhanced expression of the Kir 6.1 cardiac potassium channel subunit. On the basis of this finding, we showed that the cardioprotective effect of urocortin both in isolated cardiac cells and in the intact heart is specifically blocked by both generalized and mitochondrial-specific KATP channel blockers, whereas the cardioprotective effect of cardiotrophin-1 is unaffected. Conversely, inhibiting the Kir 6.1 channel subunit greatly enhances cardiac cell death after ischemia.
Conclusions— This is, to our knowledge, the first report of the altered expression of a KATP channel subunit induced by a cardioprotective agent and demonstrates that KATP channel opening is essential for the effect of this novel cardioprotective agent
Protecting Animals 36: Author Witi Ihimaera
In this very special episode of Knowing Animals I am joined by beloved New Zealand author Witi Ihimaera. Witi has written many books featuring nonhuman animals. He offers us a non-colonial lens through which to think about the human/nonhuman relationship
The AM Canum Venaticorum binary SDSS J173047.59+554518.5
The AM Canum Venaticorum (AM CVn) binaries are a rare group of hydrogen-deficient, ultrashort period, mass-transferring white dwarf binaries and are possible progenitors of Type Ia supernovae. We present time-resolved spectroscopy of the recently discovered AM CVn binary SDSS J173047.59+554518.5. The average spectrum shows strong double-peaked helium emission lines, as well as a variety of metal lines, including neon; this is the second detection of neon in an AM CVn binary, after the much brighter system GP Com. We detect no calcium in the accretion disc, a puzzling feature that has been noted in many of the longer period AM CVn binaries. We measure an orbital period, from the radial velocities of the emission lines, of 35.2 ± 0.2 min, confirming the ultracompact binary nature of the system. The emission lines seen in SDSS J1730 are very narrow, although double-peaked, implying a low-inclination, face-on accretion disc; using the measured velocities of the line peaks, we estimate i ≤ 11°. This low inclination makes SDSS J1730 an excellent system for the identification of emission lines
First observation of the decay Bs0→K*0K*0
The first observation of the decay B0s→K∗0K∗0 is reported using 35 pb−1 of data collected by LHCb in proton–proton collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of 7 TeV. A total of 49.8±7.5 B0s→(K+π−)(K−π+) events are observed within ±50 MeV/c2 of the B0s mass and 746 MeV/c2 < mKπ < 1046 MeV/c2, mostly coming from a resonant B0s→K∗0K∗0 signal. The branching fraction and the CP-averaged K∗0 longitudinal polarization fraction are measured to be B(B0s→K∗0K∗0)=(2.81±0.46(stat.)±0.45(syst.)±0.34(fs/ fd))×10−5 and fL =0.31±0.12(stat.)±0.04(syst.)
On the Number of Flats Tangent to Convex Hypersurfaces in Random Position
Motivated by questions in real enumerative geometry (Borcea et al., in Discrete Comput Geom 35(2):287–300, 2006; Bürgisser and Lerario, in J Reine Angew Math, https://doi.org/10.1515/crelle-2018-0009, 2018; Megyesi and Sottile, in Discrete Comput Geom 33(4):617–644, 2005; Megyesi et al., in Discrete Comput Geom 30(4):543–571, 2003; Sottile and Theobald, in Trans Am Math Soc 354(12):4815–4829, 2002; Proc Am Math Soc 133(10):2835–2844, 2005; in: Goodman et al., in Surveys on discrete and computational geometry. AMS, Providence, 2008) we investigate the problem of the number of flats simultaneously tangent to several convex hypersurfaces in real projective space from a probabilistic point of view (here by “convex hypersurfaces” we mean that these hypersurfaces are boundaries of convex sets). More precisely, we say that smooth convex hypersurfaces X1,...,Xdk,n⊂RPn, where dk,n= (k+ 1) (n- k) , are in random position if each one of them is randomly translated by elements g1,...,gdk,n sampled independently from the orthogonal group with the uniform distribution. Denoting by τk(X1,...,Xdk,n) the average number of k-dimensional projective subspaces (k-flats) which are simultaneously tangent to all the hypersurfaces we prove that τk(X1,...,Xdk,n)=δk,n·∏i=1dk,n|Ωk(Xi)||Sch(k,n)|,where δk,n is the expected degree from [6] (the average number of k-flats incident to dk,n many random (n- k- 1) -flats), | Sch (k, n) | is the volume of the Special Schubert variety of k-flats meeting a fixed (n- k- 1) -flat (computed in [6]) and | Ω k(X) | is the volume of the manifold Ω k(X) ⊂ G(k, n) of all k-flats tangent to X. We give a formula for the evaluation of | Ω k(X) | in terms of some curvature integral of the embedding X↪ RP n and we relate it with the classical notion of intrinsic volumes of a convex set: |Ωk(∂C)||Sch(k,n)|=4Vn-k-1(C),k=0,...,n-1.As a consequence we prove the universal upper bound: τk(X1,...,Xdk,n)≤δk,n·4dk,n.Since the right hand side of this upper bound does not depend on the specific choice of the convex hypersurfaces, this is especially interesting because already in the case k= 1 , n= 3 for every m> 0 we can provide examples of smooth convex hypersurfaces X1, ... , X4 such that the intersection Ω 1(X1) ∩ ⋯ ∩ Ω 1(X4) ⊂ G(1 , 3) is transverse and consists of at least m lines. Finally, we present analogous results for semialgebraic hypersurfaces (not necessarily convex) satisfying some nondegeneracy assumptions
Measurement of the ratio of branching fractions B(B0→K∗0γ )/B(B0s→φγ ) and the directCP asymmetry inB 0→K∗0γ
The ratio of branching fractions of the radiative B decays B0→K⁎0γ and B0s→ϕγ has been measured using an integrated luminosity of 1.0 fb−1 of pp collision data collected by the LHCb experiment at a centre-of-mass energy of s√=7TeV. The value obtained is
B(B0→K⁎0γ)B(B0s→ϕγ)=1.23±0.06(stat.)±0.04(syst.)±0.10(fs/fd),
where the first uncertainty is statistical, the second is the experimental systematic uncertainty and the third is associated with the ratio of fragmentation fractions fs/fd. Using the world average value for B(B0→K⁎0γ), the branching fraction B(B0s→ϕγ) is measured to be (3.5±0.4)×10−5.
The direct CP asymmetry in B0→K⁎0γ decays has also been measured with the same data and found to be
ACP(B0→K⁎0γ)=(0.8±1.7(stat.)±0.9(syst.))%.
Both measurements are the most precise to date and are in agreement with the previous experimental results and theoretical expectations
Deuteros 2.0: peptide-level significance testing of data from hydrogen deuterium exchange mass spectrometry
A Summary: Hydrogen deuterium exchange mass spectrometry (HDX-MS) is becoming increasing routine for monitoring changes in the structural dynamics of proteins. Differential HDX-MS allows comparison of protein states, such as in the absence or presence of a ligand. This can be used to attribute changes in conformation to binding events, allowing the mapping of entire conformational networks. As such, the number of necessary cross-state comparisons quickly increases as additional states are introduced to the system of study. There are currently very few software packages available that offer quick and informative comparison of HDX-MS datasets and even fewer which offer statistical analysis and advanced visualization. Following the feedback from our original software Deuteros, we present Deuteros 2.0 which has been redesigned from the ground up to fulfill a greater role in the HDX-MS analysis pipeline. Deuteros 2.0 features a repertoire of facilities for back exchange correction, data summarization, peptide-level statistical analysis and advanced data plotting features.This work was supported by grants from the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) Doctoral Training Partnership [BB/ M009513/1] and The Leverhulme Trust [RPG-2019-178].
The authors thank Justin Benesch, Angela Gehrckens (University of Oxford) and Ruyu Jia (King’s College London) for software testing and feedback
Intermittent antegrade warm cardioplegia: warm blood versus cold crystalloid. A clinical study
Abstract- Intermittent antegrade warm blood cardioplegia (IAWBC) is a not usual technique of myocardial protection. We propose a delivery protocol that standardizes the length of ischemic intervals, duration of each cardioplegic dose and K+ amount. Cardioplegia is represented by blood, taken from the oxygenator and injected directly into the aortic root, and K+, added by means of a syringe pump. We reviewed the first 300 patients who underwent elective or urgent coronary artery by-pass procedures (group A) and compared them with the last 300 patients operated on with intermittent antegrade cold crystalloid cardioplegia (group B). The overall mortality in group A was lower than in group B (0.7 vs 3.0, p < 0.05); there was no in-hospital death in patients with poor left ventricle (LVEF < 35%) in group A (0/64 vs 3/39, p < 0.025). Reduction of mortality was due to a drastic fall of morbidity. In group A no patients needed circulatory assistance (13 in group B, p < 0.0005) or intraaortic balloon pumping (9 in group B, p < 0.005) in operating room or in intensive care unit (ICU); only 1 patient had inotropic drug (29 in group B, p < 0.0005) and only 6 needed lignocaine infusion (27 in group B, p < 0.0005). Incidence of postoperative myocardial infarction was lower in group A (4 vs 9 in group B) as well cerebrovascular accidents (4 vs 10 in group B), but difference was not statistically significant.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS
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