518 research outputs found
supplemental_figure_3 - PAX8: A Highly Sensitive Marker for the Glands in Extragenital Endometriosis
supplemental_figure_3 for PAX8: A Highly Sensitive Marker for the Glands in Extragenital Endometriosis by Tomoko Arakawa, Shinya Fukuda, Tetsuya Hirata, Kazuaki Neriishi, Yu Wang, Arisa Takeuchi, Ai Saeki, Miyuki Harada, Yasushi Hirota, Takashi Matsumoto, Kaori Koga, Osamu Wada-Hiraike, Masatoshi Kurihara, Tomoyuki Fujii, and Yutaka Osuga in Reproductive Sciences</p
supplemental_figure_2 - PAX8: A Highly Sensitive Marker for the Glands in Extragenital Endometriosis
supplemental_figure_2 for PAX8: A Highly Sensitive Marker for the Glands in Extragenital Endometriosis by Tomoko Arakawa, Shinya Fukuda, Tetsuya Hirata, Kazuaki Neriishi, Yu Wang, Arisa Takeuchi, Ai Saeki, Miyuki Harada, Yasushi Hirota, Takashi Matsumoto, Kaori Koga, Osamu Wada-Hiraike, Masatoshi Kurihara, Tomoyuki Fujii, and Yutaka Osuga in Reproductive Sciences</p
supplemental_figure_1 - PAX8: A Highly Sensitive Marker for the Glands in Extragenital Endometriosis
supplemental_figure_1 for PAX8: A Highly Sensitive Marker for the Glands in Extragenital Endometriosis by Tomoko Arakawa, Shinya Fukuda, Tetsuya Hirata, Kazuaki Neriishi, Yu Wang, Arisa Takeuchi, Ai Saeki, Miyuki Harada, Yasushi Hirota, Takashi Matsumoto, Kaori Koga, Osamu Wada-Hiraike, Masatoshi Kurihara, Tomoyuki Fujii, and Yutaka Osuga in Reproductive Sciences</p
supplemental_figure_4 - PAX8: A Highly Sensitive Marker for the Glands in Extragenital Endometriosis
supplemental_figure_4 for PAX8: A Highly Sensitive Marker for the Glands in Extragenital Endometriosis by Tomoko Arakawa, Shinya Fukuda, Tetsuya Hirata, Kazuaki Neriishi, Yu Wang, Arisa Takeuchi, Ai Saeki, Miyuki Harada, Yasushi Hirota, Takashi Matsumoto, Kaori Koga, Osamu Wada-Hiraike, Masatoshi Kurihara, Tomoyuki Fujii, and Yutaka Osuga in Reproductive Sciences</p
Prandtl number effects on the decaying and the forced turbulence in stratified fluids
Effects of high-Prandtl number density-stratifying scalar, i.e., active scalar, on decaying and forced turbulence in stratified fluids are investigated by numerical simulations. In decaying turbulence, potential energy spectrum of the high-Prandtl number active scalar (Pr=6) agrees with the kinetic energy spectrum even at small scales. In forced steady turbulence, these two spectra again approach each other at small scales. These phenomena, which are in disagreement with the Batchelor scaling for a high-Schmidt number passive scalar, occur at scales even smaller than the Ozmidov scale, suggesting that these effects would not be negligible in general
The Femme Fatale and the Exotic Queer within Shinya Tuskamoto\u27s Tetsuo: Gender as Narrative Tool within an Allegory for Post WWII Japan\u27s Industrialized Identity Crisis
Within Shinya Tsukamoto’s seminal independent horror masterpiece Tetsuo, the viewer’s perceptions of reality and the present are distorted within a temporally disjointed blend of horrific fantasy and banal existence; this instability reflects the vocal and subconscious critiques of historical ontological truths exhibited within the emergent transnational genres of Japanese cyberpunk and American Avant-pop ideologies of the late 1980’s. Author Takayuki Tatsumi uses Shinya Tsukamoto\u27s Tetsuo to illustrate the emergence of the Japanoid, a technologically driven fusion of American and Japanese post-war identity best understood as a manifestation of Donna Haraway\u27s socio-political cyborg. Tatsumi strongly advises avoiding interpretation through a queer lens, proposing that the use of “cyborg” and scrap iron serve as an analogy for the stratification and integration of disenfranchised post WWII Okinawan “scrap apaches.” However, Tetsuo’s prominent homoerotic elements cannot be ignored. Arguably, The film presents as blatantly non-heteronormative; to ignore queerness and instead focus solely on Tatsumi\u27s definition of identity ignores the meaning of masculinity in a patriarchal culture, rendering an incomplete (post)colonial reading. A queer reading clarifies Tsukamoto\u27s take on the contemporary disenfranchisement of the so-called Japanoid identity that Tatsumi embraces. Within Tetsuo, representation of woman as femme fatale and an overt queering of masculinity problematize the traditional heteronormative Japanese identity
Was the 2012 Nobel Prize in medicine awarded for a Kuhnian paradigm shift? An author co-citation analysis perspective
Stem cell research has been a fast growing, highly successful, and at the
same time highly controversial field in recent years. Using a highly optimized
author co-citation analysis methodology to study the intellectual structure
of this field over the time period 2004–2009, we find that the induced
pluripotent stem cell breakthrough that earned Shinya Yamanaka the 2012
Nobel Prize in Medicine did indeed quickly redefine its entire research field,
and thus might truly qualify as a “paradigm shift” in Kuhn’s sense
Living cells and dynamic molecules observed with the polarized light microscope : the legacy of Shinya Inoué
Author Posting. © Marine Biological Laboratory, 2016. This article is posted here by permission of Marine Biological Laboratory for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Biological Bulletin 231 (2016): 85-95.In 1948, Shinya Inoué arrived in the United States for graduate studies at Princeton. A year later he came to Woods Hole, starting a long tradition of summer research at the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL), which quickly became Inoué's scientific home. Primed by his Japanese mentor, Katsuma Dan, Inoué followed Dan's mantra to work with healthy, living cells, on a fundamental problem (mitosis), with a unique tool set that he refined for precise and quantitative observations (polarized light microscopy), and a fresh and brilliant mind that was unafraid of challenging current dogma. Building on this potent combination, Inoué contributed landmark observations and concepts in cell biology, including the notion that there are dynamic, fine structures inside living cells, in which molecular assemblies such as mitotic spindle fibers exist in delicate equilibrium with their molecular building blocks suspended in the cytoplasm. In the late 1970s and 1980s, Inoué and others at the MBL were instrumental in conceiving video microscopy, a groundbreaking technique which married light microscopy and electronic imaging, ushering in a revolution in how we know and what we know about living cells and the molecular mechanisms of life. Here, we recount some of Inoué's accomplishments and describe how his legacy has shaped current activities in polarized light imaging at the MBL.Preparation of this manuscript
was supported by grants from the National Institutes
of Health (no. GM100160 to TT; no. GM101701 to MS; and
no. GM114274 to RO); and by the Marine Biological Laboratory
start-up funds from the Inoue´ Family Endowment,
to TT
An exact solution of the van der Waals interaction between two ground-state hydrogen atoms
New insights in high-energy electron emission and underlying transport physics of nanocrystalline Si
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