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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
311

A Correlation-Based Method to Detect Weak Dependence

Luo, Yabing 21 January 2011 (has links) (PDF)
The focus of this thesis is an investigation of ways to detect weak dependence between two random variables X and Y. Our approach is to design tests for correlation rather than testing for dependence directly, since X and Y are not independent if they are not uncorrelated. We examined the magnified Pearson correlation after the Box-Cox transformation to determine whether X and Y are dependent. The results indicated that our approach not only has the potential to detect and evaluate the weak dependence cases that have previously been intractable, but also is conceptually simple and easy to implement.
312

Relationship Between Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder and Alcohol Dependence: A Genetic View

Wang, Ke-Sheng 01 January 2013 (has links)
No description available.
313

Healing the leper? Mission Christianity, medicine, and social dependence in 20th century Swaziland

McCoy, Jr., William Kent 08 April 2016 (has links)
This dissertation examines global shifts in medical and religious thinking about leprosy, using the southern African kingdom of Swaziland as a case study from the start of British rule in 1902 to the first decade of the twenty-first century. Involving a wide variety of both local and international actors, these encounters were frequently characterized by highly unequal power dynamics, especially between Swazis and Western doctors, bureaucrats, and missionaries. However, it is a central theme of this work that Swazis often turned Western scientific and religious preoccupations with leprosy into assets for their own benefit. Understanding the reasons why and under what circumstances Swazis did so illuminates the processes by which peoples of different cultures adapt themselves to shifting circumstances. Rather than abandoning local cultural ideas in favor of those of more powerful outsiders, I argue that the adaptations enacted by Swazis were coherent within their own cultural perspectives and are best understood as evolutions of local ideas instead of the byproduct of a foreign value system. Influenced by the narrative approach of microhistory, this project correlates evidence from three major archival collections, representing chiefly the perspective of British colonial figures and medical missionaries from the Church of the Nazarene, with insights derived from oral interviews conducted with both medical personnel and former leprosy patients in Swaziland. In so doing, it investigates themes related to the transfer of stigma across social and cultural boundaries; the clashing expectations of cultures divided by geography, language, education, and more; the limits of Western science and bureaucracy when attempting to exercise control over other cultures; and the continual negotiations through which all parties pursued their particular agendas. In analyzing the interplay between the primarily scientific and political concerns of the British colonial government and the chiefly spiritual concerns of the Nazarene medical missionaries, the story makes possible an understanding of how Swazis created advantageous spaces for themselves. I argue that they did this primarily by entering into relationships of social dependency, which they understood as creating bonds of mutual obligation between themselves and Westerners.
314

An NMR-based Biophysical Study of Protein-Gold Nanoparticle Interactions

Wang, Ailin 07 May 2016 (has links)
The favorable interaction between proteins and nanoparticles has sparked potential applications of nanotechnology in medicine, and the unique electronic and chemical properties of nanoparticles also provide novel strategies for protein-related therapeutics. The formation of the biocorona has attracted substantial interest over the past decades. For instance, as a potential drug delivery mechanism, protein-coated nanoparticles can improve biocompatibility and increase targeting ability. However, the mechanistic details of protein-nanoparticle interactions remain poorly understood. For example, it is currently impossible to predict the orientation and structure of proteins on the nanoparticle surface, as well as the fate of the biocorona in vivo. Since the composition of the biocorona determines the biological response, identifying and stabilizing the biocorona seems critical for the further development of applications in biological system. In this study, we investigated the physicochemical properties of protein interactions with gold nanoparticles (AuNPs). Firstly, we developed an NMR-based approach for measuring the stoichiometry of protein adsorption to AuNPs, which can be generally applied to globular proteins of different size. Quantitative analysis enabled us to create a protein binding model that involves an initial association, structure reorientation and irreversible adsorption. Secondly, we measured the protein hydrogen-deuterium exchange rates and found that they were unperturbed in the presence of AuNPs, suggesting that proteins retain their globular structure upon adsorption. Finally, we investigated the electrostatic contribution to binding, and we identified a dynamically changing surface in which the factors of net charge, binding affinity and protein size play distinct roles at different phases.
315

FROM JUVENILE DELINQUENCY TO ADULT CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR: EXPANDING THE STATE DEPENDENCE PERSPECTIVE ON PERSISTENT CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR

Xu, Qiang 26 June 2006 (has links)
No description available.
316

A precision measurement of the A-dependence of dimuon production in proton-nucleus collisions at 800 GeV/c

Wang, Ming-Jer January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
317

Protein Kinase A Alterations Following Chronic Flurazepam Treatment: Implications for Inhibitory and Excitatory Synaptic Plasticity in Rat Hippocampal CA1

Lilly, Scott Matthew 17 April 2006 (has links)
No description available.
318

Neuronal Adaptations in Rat Hippocampal CA1 Neurons during Withdrawal from Prolonged Flurazepam Exposure: Glutamatergic System Remodeling

Song, Jun 07 May 2007 (has links)
No description available.
319

The role of L-type voltage-gated calcium channels in hippocampal CA1 neuron glutamate and GABA-A receptor-mediated synaptic plasticity following chronic benzodiazepine administration

Xiang, Kun 13 June 2007 (has links)
No description available.
320

Activation of Glutamate Transporter 1 Attenuates Relapse to Alcohol-Seeking Behavior in Rats

Qrunfleh, Abeer Mostafa 08 May 2012 (has links)
No description available.

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