... mg of the tetrazine deri-
vatized twofold with dansyl, was dissolved in a few drops
of DMSO and then added to the reaction product of A. The
Discussion
Here we demonstrate the synthesis of ... ml chloroform and kept on ice. Then, with continuous
stirring, a mixed solution of 20 ml chloroform and 0.144 mol
chloride acetic acid tert-butyl ester 7 was added over a pe-
riod of 90 minutes. ...
temperature of 4°C.
Int. J. Med. Sci. 2010, 7
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try”, instead of using conventional PNA harboring
nucleobases. The multifaceted spectrum of applica-
tions of Click...
... conjunction of these two sets of results into a
projectivist “analysis” of a thick ethical concept in any meaningful sense of
“analysis.” This would be, putatively, an analysis of the original grasp of ... ethical equivalent of a “view from nowhere” in which
awareness of a set of alternative complete schemes of ethical concepts makes
a return to any particular point of view an exercise of bad faith. ... support a general view of scepticism as an engine of ethical change and
as properly taking the form of a particular kind of critique of our ethical
ideas. That particular form of critique would be...
... participation of every employee in the processes of creation
and transmission of knowledge. This study analyzes the implementation of an innovation and
KM strategy in the Irizar company, a maker of luxury ... teams
have contributed to the creation of a shared view
of the firm’s problems and to a simple transmission
of knowledge. Because of their importance, the par-
ticipation of worker is massive, although ... characterize this type of strategy. It
is remarkable how this cycle, especially the creation
of knowledge, is closely related to innovation. The
creation of new knowledge and of innovations
implies...
... Leu23
of the CT -extension of the rmErv-C
+CT
molecule with
a minimum distance of 1.9 A
˚
between two atoms of
the two leucines (Fig. 8A). Because the Leu23 residue
of the CT -extension of the ... the
extension peptide blocks some of the unprimed sub-
sites of the enzyme (Fig. 7). The interface area of the
CT -extension and the mature catalytic domain is
1037 A
˚
2
, which is 56% of the ... The
enzyme with the extension shows autocatalytic zymogen activation at a
higher pH of 8.0, whereas deletion of the extension results in a more active
form of the enzyme. This CT -extension was not...
... even poorer inhibitor of PpPr, the effect of extend-
ing this polypeptide at its N-terminus was also exam-
ined. Introduction of the MK(H)
7
MQ extension at the
N-terminal end of wild-type S. cerevisiae ... to the active site of
the enzyme. This anchoring function of the extension
residues may allow inhibitory sequences, which, by
A
B
Fig. 5. MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry analysis of S. castellii IA
3
terminating ... acids
on the surface of the enzyme, adjacent to the end of
the active site cleft where the N-terminal residues of
an inhibitory IA
3
helix would be expected to bind
(Fig. 3A). Extensionof the inhibitory...
... strength of log-
likelihood lies in handling low-frequency data. In
our experiments, none of the AMs was able to ex-
tract a substantial number of collocations from the
set of hapaxlegomena.
Acknowledgement
The ... applied: Instead
of examining only a small sample of
-best can-
didates for each measure as it is common practice,
we make use of recall and precision values for -
best samples of arbitrary size, ... either one of the
annotators were considered TPs.
The second set consists of PNV triples ex-
tracted from an 8 million word portion of the
Frankfurter Rundschau Corpus
4
, in which part-
of- speech...
... make the
notion oflexical accumulation complete: the
former is to obtain lexical data of (almost) the
same linguistic structure as the source, the latter
is to create data of totally new linguistic ... lexical group comprises a number of LSs
(real or virtual) that a user uses in a work, and a
set of operations which he may need to do on
them. A lexical group is thus a workstation in a
lexical ... groups. A model of such an
orgamzation is shown in the figure below.
alo~
lex cal
tnd
~ups
LEXICAL SYSTEM
physical
supports
real lexical
sets
virtual
lexical
sets
lexical
groups...
... yield a
consistent set of findings or a general,
non-controverslal theory. In this paper, we review the
results of six experiments which form the basis of a
model of ambiguity resolution ... knows that a person is much
more likely to walk on the surface of a ship than on the
surface of a pack of playing cards.
Other types of contextual information can be brought to
bear on ambiguity ... multiple sources of
dlsamblguatlng information.
Leaving aside vague or misleading cases, it is clear
that all of these types of information yield the
same
outcome, assignment of the contextually-approprlate...
...
seconds.
B. Knowledge Constructs
The fundamental knowledge constructs of the sys-
tem are of two types: 1) static knowledge structures, or
memory elements, which can be thought of as n-
dimensional ... in terms of a theory of
stratified natural language processing in which macro-
level knowledge constructs, such as those used in a
knowledge- based report generator, occur at one of the
higher ... THE DOMAIN-SPECIFIC
KNOWLEDGE REQUIREMENT TENET
How does one determine what knowledge must
incorporated into a knowledge- based report generator?
Because the goal of a knowledge- based report...
... LEXICALKNOWLEDGE
BASES
Robert A. Ameler
Natural-Lsngu.ge and Knowledge- Resource Systems
SRI International
Menlo Park, California 94025, USA
A lexicalknowledge base is a repository of ... dictionaries, the full
text of reference books, the results of statistical analyses of text
usages, and data manually obtained from human world
knowledge.
A lexicalknowledge base is not intended ... intended to provide a means of economically integrating not
only dictionary definitions, but other types of lexieal knowledge.
The task of constructing a lexicalknowledge base is seen as a...
... piece of the problem. A manual
codification of the lexicon is a prohibitive task,
regardless of the framework adopted for semantic
knowledge representation; even when a large team
of knowledge ... field of computers.
An important advantage of surface meaning is that
makes it easier the acquisition of the semantic
lexicon. This issue is examined in the next section.
Acquisition ofLexical ...
agent _of take
put fred speech-action mental-action
consistof
hand foot
source _of
speech-action
destination _of
speech-action
power
human
speed
slow
mass
human
Figure 2. Examples of...
... prior likelihoods ofof their rules.
5.5 Operative Conclusions
Our findings highlight the currently limited re-
call of available resources for lexical inference.
The higher recall of Lin’s resources ... in seman-
tic inference, as the meaning of one term is of-
ten inferred form another. Lexical- semantic re-
sources, which provide the needed knowledge for
lexical inference, are commonly utilized ... expansion using
lexical- semantic relations. In Proceedings of SIGIR.
566
a lexical entailment resource, following an oper-
ative rationale: a rule e’ ⇒ e should be included
in an entailment knowledge...
... C
DAY 16 – PROTOCOL A Vs C
DAY 11 – PROTOCOL C
DAY 11 – PROTOCOL C
SHELF LIFE EXTENSIONOF
SHELF LIFE EXTENSIONOF
TOMATOES
TOMATOES
Shubham Chandra
Shubham Chandra
President
President
Chandra ... Test Results
1. The CA films ensured the quality and freshness of tomato
was maintained and permitted consumption even after 21
days of storage at 56˚F (13.3 ˚C).
2. Proved that designs with a ... Associates films (CA
Film) generate a shelf life greater than that of design without
films (control in air) at a storage temperature of 56˚F (13.3
˚C). 10 Days After Harvest
TOMATO TESTING RESULTS
DAY...
... Frequency of amino acid residues in the flexible region of the C-terminal extensions of human and murine sHsps. Residues present
in the flexible region of the C-terminal extensionof each of the eight ... polarity of the C-termi-
nal extension is reduced [25], and introduction of
hydrophobicity into the C-terminal extension of
aA-crystallin results in immobilization of the C-termi-
nal extension ... part of an
unstructured region, are not important for the determi-
nation of this level of structure. In support of this con-
clusion, mutants of aA- and aB-crystallin, in which the
C-terminal extensions...
... compilation ª 2006 FEBS
Effect of oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy-associated
extension of seven alanines on the fibrillation properties
of the N-terminal domain of PABPN1
Grit Lodderstedt
1
, ... debate.
Huntington’s disease is one of the most prominent
examples of neurodegenerative diseases that are caused
by trinucleotide expansions of CAG repeats and thus
an expansion of a run of glutamine residues ... Fibril formation kinetics of N-WT. (A) N-WT was incubated
at a protein concentration of 1 m
M in the absence (triangles) and
presence (circles) of 0.1% seeds (w ⁄ v). (B) Loss of monomeric
species...