Showing 481 - 490 of 2040 Items

Search for B0 decays to two charged leptons

Date: 1994-01-01

Creator: R. Ammar

S. Ball

P. Baringer

A. Bean

D., Besson

D. Coppage

N. Copty

R. Davis

N. Hancock

M. Kelly

N. Kwak

H. Lam

Y. Kubota

M. Lattery

J. K. Nelson

S. Patton

D. Perticone

R. Poling

V. Savinov

S. Schrenk

R. Wang

M. S. Alam

I. J. Kim

B. Nemati

J. J. O'Neill

H. Severini

C. R. Sun

M. M. Zoeller

G. Crawford

C. M. Daubenmier

R. Fulton

Access: Open access

We have searched for B0 decays to two charged leptons and set 90% confidence level upper limits on the branching fractions: B(B0→e+e-)<5. 9×10-6, B(B0→μ+μ-)<5.9×10-6, B(B0→e±μ) <5.9×10-6, B(B0→e±τ)<5.3×10-4, and B(B0→μ±τ)<8.3×10-4. © 1994 The American Physical Society.


Does differential receptor distribution underlie variable responses to a neuropeptide in the lobster cardiac system?

Date: 2021-08-02

Creator: Audrey J. Muscato

Patrick Walsh

Sovannarath Pong

Alixander Pupo

Roni J., Gross

Andrew E. Christie

J. Joe Hull

Patsy S. Dickinson

Access: Open access

Central pattern generators produce rhythmic behaviors independently of sensory input; however, their outputs can be modulated by neuropeptides, thereby allowing for functional flexibility. We investigated the effects of C-type allatostatins (AST-C) on the cardiac ganglion (CG), which is the central pattern generator that controls the heart of the American lobster, Homarus americanus, to identify the biological mechanism underlying the significant variability in individual responses to AST-C. We proposed that the presence of multiple receptors, and thus differential receptor distribution, was at least partly responsible for this observed variability. Using transcriptome mining and PCR-based cloning, we identified four AST-C receptors (ASTCRs) in the CG; we then characterized their cellular localization, binding potential, and functional activation. Only two of the four receptors, ASTCR1 and ASTCR2, were fully functional GPCRs that targeted to the cell surface and were activated by AST-C peptides in our insect cell expression system. All four, however, were amplified from CG cDNAs. Following the confirmation of ASTCR expression, we used physiological and bioinformatic techniques to correlate receptor expression with cardiac responses to AST-C across individuals. Expression of ASTCR1 in the CG showed a negative correlation with increasing contraction amplitude in response to AST-C perfusion through the lobster heart, suggesting that the differential expression of ASTCRs within the CG is partly responsible for the specific physiological response to AST-C exhibited by a given individual lobster.


Midazolam-induced amnesia reduces memory for details and affects the ERP correlates of recollection and familiarity

Date: 2012-02-01

Creator: Erika Nyhus

Tim Curran

Access: Open access

Dual process models suggest that recognition memory is supported by familiarity and recollection processes. Previous research administering amnesic drugs and measuring ERPs during recognition memory have provided evidence for separable neural correlates of familiarity and recollection. This study examined the effect of midazolam-induced amnesia on memory for details and the proposed ERP correlates of recognition. Midazolam or saline was administered while subjects studied oriented pictures of common objects. ERPs were recorded during a recognition test 1 day later. Subjects' discrimination of old and new pictures as well as orientation discrimination was worse when they were given midazolam instead of saline. As predicted, the parietal old/new effect was decreased with the administration of midazolam. However, weaker effects on FN400 old/new effects were also observed. These results provide converging pharmacological and electrophysiological evidence that midazolam primarily affects recollection as indexed by parietal ERP old/new effects and memory for orientation, while also exerting some weaker effects on familiarity as indexed by FN400 old/new effects. © 2011 Massachusetts Institute of Technology.


Neural inhibition enables selection during language processing

Date: 2010-09-21

Creator: Hannah R. Snyder

Natalie Hutchison

Erika Nyhus

Tim Curran

Marie T., Banich

Randall C. O'Reilly

Yuko Munakata

Access: Open access

Whether grocery shopping or choosing words to express a thought, selecting between options can be challenging, especially for people with anxiety. We investigate the neural mechanisms supporting selection during language processing and its breakdown in anxiety. Our neural network simulations demonstrate a critical role for competitive, inhibitory dynamics supported by GABAergic interneurons. As predicted by our model, we find that anxiety (associated with reduced neural inhibition) impairs selection among options and associated prefrontal cortical activity, even in a simple, nonaffective verb-generation task, and the GABA agonist midazolam (which increases neural inhibition) improves selection, whereas retrieval from semantic memory is unaffected when selection demands are low. Neural inhibition is key to choosing our words.


BEING CAYLEY AUTOMATIC IS CLOSED under TAKING WREATH PRODUCT with VIRTUALLY CYCLIC GROUPS

Date: 2021-12-13

Creator: Dmitry Berdinsky

Murray Elder

Jennifer Taback

Access: Open access

We extend work of Berdinsky and Khoussainov ['Cayley automatic representations of wreath products', International Journal of Foundations of Computer Science 27(2) (2016), 147-159] to show that being Cayley automatic is closed under taking the restricted wreath product with a virtually infinite cyclic group. This adds to the list of known examples of Cayley automatic groups.


Analytical representation of a black hole puncture solution

Date: 2007-03-13

Creator: Thomas W. Baumgarte

Stephen G. Naculich

Access: Open access

The "moving-puncture" technique has led to dramatic advancements in the numerical simulations of binary black holes. Hannam et al. have recently demonstrated that, for suitable gauge conditions commonly employed in moving-puncture simulations, the evolution of a single black hole leads to a well-known, time-independent, maximal slicing of Schwarzschild spacetime. They construct the corresponding solution in isotropic coordinates numerically and demonstrate its usefulness, for example, for testing and calibrating numerical codes that employ moving-puncture techniques. In this brief report we point out that this solution can also be constructed analytically, making it even more useful as a test case for numerical codes. © 2007 The American Physical Society.


A note on convexity properties of Thompson's group F

Date: 2012-01-01

Creator: Matthew Horak

Melanie Stein

Jennifer Taback

Access: Open access

We prove that Thompson's group F is not minimally almost convex with respect to any generating set which is a subset of the standard infinite generating set for F and which contains x1. We use this to show that F is not almost convex with respect to any generating set which is a subset of the standard infinite generating set, generalizing results in [4]. © Gruyter 2012.


An Arabidopsis cell wall-associated kinase required for invertase activity and cell growth

Date: 2006-04-01

Creator: Bruce D. Kohorn

Masaru Kobayashi

Sue Johansen

Jeff Riese

Li Fen, Huang

Karen Koch

Sarita Fu

Anjali Dotson

Nicole Byers

Access: Open access

The wall-associated kinases (WAK), a family of five proteins that contain extracellular domains that can be linked to pectin molecules of the cell wall, span the plasma membrane and have a cytoplasmic serine/threonine kinase domain. Previous work has shown that a reduction in WAK protein levels leads to a loss of cell expansion, indicating that these receptor-like proteins have a role in cell shape formation. Here it is shown that a single wak2 mutation exhibits a dependence on sugars and salts for seedling growth. This mutation also reduces the expression and activity of vacuolar invertase, often a key factor in turgor and expansion. WAKs may thus provide a molecular mechanism linking cell wall sensing (via pectin attachment) to regulation of solute metabolism, which in turn is known to be involved in turgor maintenance in growing cells. © 2006 The Authors.


Improved matrix-model calculation of the N = 2 prepotential

Date: 2004-04-01

Creator: Marta Gómez-Reino

Howard J. Schnitzer

Stephen G. Naculich

Access: Open access

We present a matrix-model expression for the sum of instanton contributions to the prepotential of an N = 2 supersymmetric U (N) gauge theory, with matter in various representations. This expression is derived by combining the renormalization-group approach to the gauge theory prepotential with matrix-model methods. This result can be evaluated order-by-order in matrix-model perturbation theory to obtain the instanton corrections to the prepotential. We also show, using this expression, that the one-instanton prepotential assumes a universal form. © SISSA/ISAS 2004.


The N = 2 U(N) gauge theory prepotential and periods from a perturbative matrix model calculation

Date: 2003-02-24

Creator: Stephen G. Naculich

Howard J. Schnitzer

Niclas Wyllard

Access: Open access

We perform a completely perturbative matrix model calculation of the physical low-energy quantities of the N = 2 U(N) gauge theory. Within the matrix model framework we propose a perturbative definition of the periods a i in terms of certain tadpole diagrams, and check our conjecture up to first order in the gauge theory instanton expansion. The prescription does not require knowledge of the Seiberg-0Witten differential or curve.We also compute the N = 2 prepotential F(a) perturbatively up to the first-instanton level, finding agreement with the known result. 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.