15,990 research outputs found

    Ceramide Glycanase Activities in Human Cancer Cells

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    Ceramide glycanase (CGase) activities have been detected in different human tumor cells (colon, carcinoma Colo-205; neuroblastoma, IMR-32; breast cancer lines, SKBr3 and MCF7). However, the level of enzymatic activity is lower in these cells compared to that present in other mammalian tissues reported before (Basu, M., Kelly, P., Girzadas, M. A., Li, Z., and Basu, S. Methods Enzymol. (in press)). The majority of CGase activity was found in the 100,000g soluble supernatant fraction isolated from all these cell lines and tissues. Using the soluble enzyme, the requirement for optimum CGase activity was found to be consistent with previous observations found for rat and rabbit tissues (Basu, M., Dastgheib, S., Girzadas, M. A., O'Donnell, P. H., Westervelt, C. W., Li, Z., Inokuchi, J. I., and Basu, S. (1998) Acta Pol. Biochim. 42:327). The CGase activities from both Colo-205 and IMR-32 cells are optimum at a protein to detergent ratio of one. All the mammalian CGases, including human cancer cells, show an optimum pH between 5.5 and 5.8 in sodium acetate buffer. The CGase activities from cancer cells are found to be cation-independent; however, mercury, zinc, and copper ions seem to inhibit the enzyme activity substantially in both tumor cells lines. The mercury ion inhibition of CGase activities from ail different sources indicates a possible structural homology in the CGase proteins. Radiolabeled substrates, labeled at the sphingosine double bond or at the 3-position of sphingosine without modifying double bond of sphingosine were used in this investigation. Both were active substrates with all enzyme preparations isolated from different cancer cells (apparent Km, 500 mu M for nLcOse5[H-3-DT]Cer and 350 mu M for GgOse4[sph-3-H-3]Cer with Colo-205 enzyme). Structural analogues of ceramide and sphingosine (L-PPMP, L-PDMP, alkylamines, and Tamoxifen) inhibited cancer cell CGase activities in vitro

    The Basu measure as an indicator of conditional conservatism: Evidence from U.K. earnings components

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    Following the work of Basu in 1997, the excess of the sensitivity of accounting earnings to negative share return over its sensitivity to positive share return (the Basu coefficient) has been interpreted as an indicator of conditional accounting conservatism. Although this interpretation is supported by substantial evidence that the Basu coefficient is associated with likely demands for conservatism, concerns have arisen that it may reflect factors not directly related to conservatism, and that this may adversely affect its validity as an indicator of that phenomenon. We argue that evidence on the validity of the Basu coefficient as an indicator of conditional conservatism can be obtained by disaggregating earnings into components, classifying those components by whether or not they are likely to be affected by conditional conservatism, and examining whether the Basu coefficient arises primarily from components likely to be affected by conditional conservatism. We implement this procedure for UK firms reporting under FRS 3: Reporting Financial Performance from 1992 to 2004. Although a substantial proportion of the Basu coefficient emanates from cash flow from operating and investing activities (CFOI), which cannot directly reflect accounting conservatism, its incidence across other components of earnings is predominantly within those components likely to be affected by conditional conservatism. Also, although the bias documented by Patatoukas and Thomas in 2009 is present in all of our aggregate earnings measures, it is heavily concentrated in the CFOI component of earnings and largely absent from components classified as likely to be affected by conditional conservatism. With the important caveat that researchers should test the robustness of their results to the exclusion of the element of the Basu coefficient due to cash flows, our findings are consistent with the conditional conservatism interpretation of the coefficient

    Data and Analysis Scripts in support of Basu et al.

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    Data and Analysis Scripts in support of Basu et al. "Frontal norepinephrine represents a threat prediction error under uncertainty"</p

    Basu, Sanjay P.

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    Consistent estimation of conditional conservatism

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    In this paper, we propose an econometric model that presents three advantages in relation to the Basu model: (1) it is robust to the aggregation problem; that is, we prove that the Basu model produces inconsistent estimations of conditional conservatism and that this problem is solved with our proposal; (2) it can produce firm-specific measures of conservatism by using time-series; and (3) it completes the understanding of the intercept in the Basu model by breaking it down between unconditional conservatism and the reversion of the differences between market and book values of equity. In other words, we can provide firm-specific measures of both conditional and unconditional conservatism with the same model. We demonstrate all these theoretical assertions using simulated dataAccounting conservatism, Conditional conservatism, Unconditional conservatism, The Basu model, Aggregation effect

    Bahumukhī mana, bahurupī prema

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    The document contains a novel written by the Bengali author Nirpendra Kumar Basu (1898-1979). The monograph is from the private collection of Sharmadip Basu

    Outer Length Scales in Nocturnal Stable Boundary Layers

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    Recently, Basu and Holstlag (2021) proposed a unified framework for describing outer length scales (OLS). By utilizing this framework, we document various characteristics of OLS in nocturnal boundary layers over the US Great Plains.Green Open Access added to TU Delft Institutional Repository 'You share, we take care!' - Taverne project https://www.openaccess.nl/en/you-share-we-take-care Otherwise as indicated in the copyright section: the publisher is the copyright holder of this work and the author uses the Dutch legislation to make this work public.Atmospheric Remote Sensin

    3D Online Multimedia and Games

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    Online applications have been gaining wide acceptance among the general public. Companies like Amazon, Google, Yahoo! and NetFlicks have been doing extremely well over the last few years largely because of people becoming more comfortable and trusting of the Internet. The increasing acceptance of online products makes it increasingly important to address some of the scientific techniques involved in developing efficient 3D online systems. The topics discussed in this book broadly cover four categories: networking issues in online multimedia; joint texture-mesh simplification and view independent transmission; view dependent transmission and server-side rendering; content and background creation; and creating simple online games. Contents: Adaptive Bandwidth Monitoring for QoS Based Retrievel (A Basu et al.) Wireless Protocols (A Khan) Overview of 3D Coding and Simplification (I Cheng & L Ying) Scale-Space Filtering and LOD — The TexMesh Model (I Cheng) Adaptive Online Transmission of Photo-Realistic Textured Mesh (I Cheng) Perceptual Issues in a 3D TexMesh Model (I Cheng) Quality Metric for Approximating Subjective Evaluation of 3D Objects (A Basu et al.) Perceptually Optimized 3D Transmission Over Wireless Networks (I Cheng & A Basu) Predictive Schemes for Remote Visualization of 3D Models (P Zanuttigh & G M Cortelazzo) A Rate Distortion Theoretic Approach to Remote Visualization of 3D Models (N Brusco et al.) 3D Content Creation by Passive Optical Methods (L Ballan et al.) 3D Visualization and Compression of Photorealistic Panoramic Backgrounds (P Zanuttigh et al.) A 3D Game — Castles (G Xiao et al.) A Networked Version of Castles (D Lien et al.) A Networked Multiplayer Java3D Game — Siege (E Benner et al.) Collaborative Online 3D Editing (I Cheng et al.

    Optimal dynamic labor taxation

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    We analyze optimal dynamic taxation when labor supply is indivisible. As in Hansen (1985) and Rogerson (1988), markets are complete, and an employment lottery determines who works. The consumer can buy insurance to diversify this income uncertainty. The optimal wage tax is generally positive except for some special cases when leisure is nonnormal and the government can use debt as a policy instrument in addition to its tax instruments. We derive a HARA class of preferences, for which we characterize the dynamic paths of the wage tax. The optimal paths of the labor tax differ between divisible- and indivisible-labor economies

    Cupid Joins the War

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    The author explores the history of love and sex in war though the ages. This monograph is from the private collection of Sharmadip Basu, Kolkata, W.B., India
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