Search results for "inner"

showing 10 items of 384 documents

Automation Inner Speech as an Anthropomorphic Feature Affecting Human Trust: Current Issues and Future Directions

2021

This paper aims to discuss the possible role of inner speech in influencing trust in human–automation interaction. Inner speech is an everyday covert inner monolog or dialog with oneself, which is essential for human psychological life and functioning as it is linked to self-regulation and self-awareness. Recently, in the field of machine consciousness, computational models using different forms of robot speech have been developed that make it possible to implement inner speech in robots. As is discussed, robot inner speech could be a new feature affecting human trust by increasing robot transparency and anthropomorphism.

Computer sciencemedia_common.quotation_subject050105 experimental psychologyHuman–robot interactionhuman-robot interactioninner speechArtificial IntelligenceHuman–computer interactionHypothesis and TheoryTJ1-1570Feature (machine learning)0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesMechanical engineering and machinery050107 human factorsmedia_commonautomationRobotics and AIComputational modelhuman-automation interaction05 social sciencesInternal monologueanthropomorphismtrustrobotQA75.5-76.95Transparency (behavior)Computer Science ApplicationsCovertanthropomorphism automation human-automation interaction human-robot interaction inner speech robot trustElectronic computers. Computer scienceRobotConsciousnessFrontiers in Robotics and AI
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A Theoretical Model to Evaluate the Compressive Behaviour of RС Jacketed Columns

2016

Reinforced concrete (RC) jacketing is becoming increasingly common among the different retrofit techniques for poor RC members, due to its economical and practical advantages. Experimental investigations in the literature have shown that the actual axial capacity of RC jacketed members can be substantially lower than that analytically evaluated by adapting the most common theoretical models for confined concrete. This fact can be explained by taking into account the presence of tensile stresses developing in the concrete, due to a mutual interaction between the inner core and the external jacket. This phenomenon is relevant especially in members where the concrete properties of the jacket a…

Core (optical fiber)Engineeringbusiness.industryLinear elasticityUltimate tensile strengthConstitutive equationInner coreRange (statistics)General MedicineStructural engineeringbusinessSofteningPlane stressApplied Mechanics and Materials
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Ultrastructure of preimplantation genetic diagnosis-derived human blastocysts grown in a coculture system after vitrification

2006

Objective To evaluate ultrastructural features of preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) blastocysts before and after vitrification. Design Descriptive study of both vitrified and fresh hatching blastocysts. Setting PGD program at the Instituto Universitario, Instituto Valenciano de Infertilidad. Patient(s) Patients undergoing PGD donated their abnormal embryos for research (n = 26). Intervention(s) Biopsied embryos were cultured in the presence of human endometrial cells until day 6. Sixteen blastocysts were vitrified. A total of 11 high-scored hatching blastocysts, 6 warmed and 5 fresh, were fixed for ultrastructure. Main Outcome Measure(s) The cytoskeleton structure, type of intercellul…

CryopreservationTight junctionHatchingObstetrics and GynecologyEmbryoAnatomyBiologyPreimplantation genetic diagnosisCoculture TechniquesCryopreservationAndrologyBlastocystmedicine.anatomical_structureReproductive MedicineCytogenetic Analysisembryonic structuresmedicineUltrastructureHumansInner cell massBlastocystCells CulturedPreimplantation DiagnosisFertility and Sterility
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Rhetoric of academic applications : Perspectives from Quentin Skinner’s Forensic Shakespeare

2019

The tools of classical and Renaissance rhetoric that Quentin Skinner uses in his Forensic Shakespeare (2014) are here applied to a contemporary context. Skinner’s discussion might have a fairly direct value for a genre of writing that most academics today must master, namely the rhetoric of applications. They have been seldom discussed from a rhetorical perspective, although knowledge of rhetoric is highly valuable for applicants, evaluators and those deciding between applications. Skinner’s book contains both advices for applicants and discussions on both the criteria of application and the possibilities of their revisions in case of innovative applications. peerReviewed

Cultural StudiesLiteratureHistorybusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectkirjallinen ilmaisuThe RenaissanceContext (language use)Skinner QuentinArtLibrary and Information Sciencesretoriikkahakemuksetacademic applicationsresearch fundingtutkimusrahoitusArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)Forensic ShakespeareRhetoricapplication rhetorickirjallinen viestintärhetorical genresgenretutkimusbusinessmedia_common
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Subcellular localization of pentachlorophenol 4-monooxygenase in Sphingobium chlorophenolicum ATCC 39723.

2002

Abstract We have studied the subcellular localization of pentachlorophenol 4-monooxygenase (PCP4MO) in Sphingobium chlorophenolicum ATCC 39723 during induction by pentachlorophenol (PCP). Using a monoclonal antibody CL6 specific to the native and recombinant PCP4MO, the enzyme was primarily found soluble as determined by immunoblot and ELISA analyses of cellular fractions. However, the enzyme was observed both in the soluble and membrane-bound forms during induction for 2–4 h, suggesting its translocation out from the cytoplasm. Electron microscopy confirmed that PCP4MO was predominantly present in the cytoplasm at 1 h, whereas at 4 h significant amount was detected also in the membrane and…

CytoplasmBiophysicsBiologyProtein Sorting SignalsBiochemistryMixed Function Oxygenaseschemistry.chemical_compoundBiosynthesisAntibody SpecificityInner membraneMolecular BiologySphingobium chlorophenolicumAlphaproteobacteriachemistry.chemical_classificationAntibodies MonoclonalCell BiologyPeriplasmic spacebiology.organism_classificationSubcellular localizationMolecular biologyImmunohistochemistryPentachlorophenolKineticsEnzymechemistryBiochemistryCytoplasmPeriplasmBiochemical and biophysical research communications
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Cadherin 23 is a component of the transient lateral links in the developing hair bundles of cochlear sensory cells

2005

AbstractCadherin 23 is required for normal development of the sensory hair bundle, and recent evidence suggests it is a component of the tip links, filamentous structures thought to gate the hair cells' mechano-electrical transducer channels. Antibodies against unique peptide epitopes were used to study the properties of cadherin 23 and its spatio-temporal expression patterns in developing cochlear hair cells. In the rat, intra- and extracellular domain epitopes are readily detected in the developing hair bundle between E18 and P5, and become progressively restricted to the distal tip of the hair bundle. From P13 onwards, these epitopes are no longer detected in hair bundles, but immunoreac…

CytoplasmTime FactorsStereocilia (inner ear)EpitopesMice0302 clinical medicineCDH23Inner earMicroscopy ImmunoelectronEgtazic AcidCells Cultured0303 health sciencesintegumentary systemReverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain ReactionGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalAnatomyCadherinsHair bundleImmunohistochemistryCochleaCell biologymedicine.anatomical_structureEctodomainHair cellHair cellTransduction (physiology)Signal TransductionMechano-electrical transductionDevelopmentBiologyStereocilia03 medical and health sciencesLanthanumCadherin 23Hair Cells Auditoryotorhinolaryngologic diseasesmedicineAnimalsMolecular BiologyTip link030304 developmental biologyModels GeneticCadherinSubtilisinCell BiologyProtein Structure TertiaryRatsMicroscopy ElectronMicroscopy FluorescenceEar InnerIndicators and Reagentssense organsTip linkLateral linksUsher type 1 syndrome030217 neurology & neurosurgeryPCDH15Developmental BiologyDevelopmental Biology
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Fuel inventory and material migration of JET main chamber plasma facing components compared over three operational periods

2020

Fuel retention and material migration results from JET ITER-like wall beryllium limiter tiles are presented for three operating periods. Ion beam analysis results support the general picture of erosion during limiter configurations with local deposition on tile ends far into the scrape off layer. Similar trends of fuel concentrations are observed in all JET operating periods; (i) low on surfaces exposed to high heat flux and erosion and (ii) higher in deposits. The pattern of fuel retention and deposition correlates with heat flux and distribution of limiter plasmas touching inner and outer limiters. The D/Be ratio in the thickest deposit is similar to 0.01. Global fuel retention attributed…

DESORPTIONMaterials scienceEROSIONJET ITER-like wallchemistry.chemical_element01 natural sciences114 Physical sciences010305 fluids & plasmasmaterial migrationDesorption0103 physical sciencesDEPOSITION010306 general physicsMathematical PhysicsJet (fluid)ITER-LIKE-WALLDivertorMetallurgyPlasmaCondensed Matter PhysicsberylliumAtomic and Molecular Physics and Opticsfuel retentionchemistryINNER WALLErosionDIVERTORBerylliumDeposition (chemistry)
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Analysis of the Ush2a Gene in Medaka Fish (Oryzias latipes)

2013

Patients suffering from Usher syndrome (USH) exhibit sensorineural hearing loss, retinitis pigmentosa (RP) and, in some cases, vestibular dysfunction. USH is the most common genetic disorder affecting hearing and vision and is included in a group of hereditary pathologies associated with defects in ciliary function known as ciliopathies. This syndrome is clinically classified into three types: USH1, USH2 and USH3. USH2 accounts for well over one-half of all Usher cases and mutations in the USH2A gene are responsible for the majority of USH2 cases, but also for atypical Usher syndrome and recessive non-syndromic RP. Because medaka fish (Oryzias latypes) is an attractive model organism for ge…

DNA ComplementaryEmbryo NonmammalianTime FactorsUsher syndromeOryziasved/biology.organism_classification_rank.speciesMolecular Sequence DataOryziaslcsh:MedicineCiliopathiesRetinaMorpholinosEvolution MolecularRetinitis pigmentosamedicineotorhinolaryngologic diseasesAnimalsHumansAmino Acid SequenceModel organismlcsh:ScienceZebrafishIn Situ HybridizationRegulation of gene expressionGeneticsExtracellular Matrix ProteinsMultidisciplinarybiologyved/biologylcsh:RGenetic disorderGene Expression Regulation Developmentalmedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationPhenotypeEar Innerlcsh:Qsense organsResearch ArticlePLoS ONE
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The fine structure of denervated and reinnervated muscle spindles: morphometric study of intrafusal muscle fibers.

1979

The fine structure of normal, denervated, and reinnervated muscle spindles in lower lumbrical muscles of rats was studied morphometrically at time intervals ranging from 3-14 months. In control spindles, the mean transverse area of mitochondria was estimated to be more than twice as large in nuclear chain than in typical nuclear bag fibers. Following denervation, there was a severe decrease of the mean number and transverse area of mitochondria, and a moderate, but statistically significant decrease of the mean transverse area of intrafusal muscle fibers (IMFs) despite an increase of the number of IMFs. At 12-14 months of reinnervation, changes of the transverse areas of IMFs were statistic…

DenervationBiometryTime FactorsChemistryMuscle fiber atrophyMuscle spindleAnatomyMuscle DenervationPathology and Forensic MedicineMitochondria MuscleRatsCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceMuscular Atrophymedicine.anatomical_structuremedicineAnimalsNeurology (clinical)Muscle SpindlesReinnervationActa neuropathologica
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Role of nitric oxide and nitric oxide synthases in experimental models of denervation and reinnervation.

2001

Nitric oxide (NO) is a short-living free molecule synthesized by three different isoforms of nitric oxide synthases (NOS)—neuronal NOS, endothelial NOS, and inducible NOS—associated with neuromuscular transmission, muscle contractility, mitochondrial respiration, and carbohydrate metabolism in skeletal muscle. Neuronal NOS is constitutively expressed at the muscle fiber sarcolemma linked to the dystrophin-glycoprotein complex and concentrated at the neuromuscular endplate. There is increasing evidence that altered expression of neuronal NOS plays a role in muscle fiber damage in neuromuscular diseases such as dystrophinopathies and denervating disorders. Although there have been some previo…

DenervationHistologySarcolemmaNeuromuscular transmissionSynaptogenesisSkeletal muscleBiologyEndothelial NOSNitric OxideMuscle DenervationNitric oxideCell biologyMedical Laboratory Technologychemistry.chemical_compoundmedicine.anatomical_structureBiochemistrychemistrymedicineAnimalsHumansAnatomyNitric Oxide SynthaseMuscle SkeletalInstrumentationReinnervationMicroscopy research and technique
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