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A Study for Behavior and Products of Cave Microorganisms
Moore, G.W. The Speleological Society 1998 Journal of the speleological society of korea Vol.8 No.2
The plant life of caves is made up of species that can live in total darkness. If any plant in a cave contains chlorophyll, the chlorophyll obviously cannot be energized by light rays from th sun. With a few exceptions noted below, none of the plants in the perpetually dark zone contains chlorophyll. The chief plant life there consists of bacteria, including actinomycetes, and fungi.(omitted)
Peter G Walley,Graham R Teakle,Jonathan D Moore,Charlotte J Allender,Vicky Buchanan-Wollaston,David AC Pink,Guy C Barker 한국식물생명공학회 2012 식물생명공학회지 Vol.39 No.1
The vegetable brassicas are an important crop worldwide and are of significant commercial value. In order to ensure our targets for food security are met it is important that these crops are continually improved to increase sustainability of production, increase nutritional quality and reduce waste. Development of resistances against both biotic and abiotic stress are recognised as being key. Plant breeding plays a vital role in addressing these issues through the development of new and improved varieties. This continued improvement is becoming evermore dependent on our ability to identify and introgress beneficial alleles from ‘exotic’ germplasm into elite breeding material. Increasingly, more diverse germplasm such as those found in genebanks is being screened for benificial allelic variation, however, plant breeders often find it difficult to make use of such material due to the time required to remove undesirable characteristics from progeny due to linkage drag. This article describes how we have attempted to overcome this and develop resources that make the diversity available within the Brassica oleracea genepool more accessible.
Evidence for phonon skew scattering in the spin Hall effect of platinum
Karnad, G. V.,Gorini, C.,Lee, K.,Schulz, T.,Lo Conte, R.,Wells, A. W. J.,Han, D.-S.,Shahbazi, K.,Kim, J.-S.,Moore, T. A.,Swagten, H. J. M.,Eckern, U.,Raimondi, R.,Klä,ui, M. American Physical Society 2018 Physical Review B Vol.97 No.10
Walley, Peter G.,Teakle, Graham R.,Moore, Jonathan D.,Allender, Charlotte J.,Pink, David A.C.,Buchanan-Wollaston, Vicky,Barker, Guy C. The Korean Society of Plant Biotechnology 2012 식물생명공학회지 Vol.39 No.1
The vegetable brassicas are an important crop worldwide and are of significant commercial value. In order to ensure our targets for food security are met it is important that these crops are continually improved to increase sustainability of production, increase nutritional quality and reduce waste. Development of resistances against both biotic and abiotic stress are recognised as being key. Plant breeding plays a vital role in addressing these issues through the development of new and improved varieties. This continued improvement is becoming evermore dependent on our ability to identify and introgress beneficial alleles from 'exotic' germplasm into elite breeding material. Increasingly, more diverse germplasm such as those found in genebanks is being screened for benificial allelic variation, however, plant breeders often find it difficult to make use of such material due to the time required to remove undesirable characteristics from progeny due to linkage drag. This article describes how we have attempted to overcome this and develop resources that make the diversity available within the $Brassica$ $oleracea$ genepool more accessible.
Assessment of Bradykinesia, Akinesia and Rigidity Using a Home-based Assessment Tool
L,Cunningham,C,Nugent,G,Moore,D,Finlay,D,Craig 동국대학교 정보융합기술원 2009 International Journal of Assistive Robotics and Sy Vol.10 No.4
An increase in the prevalence of age related diseases such as Parkinson's Disease (PD) and the increasingly aging population has created a need for appropriate health and social care services for the elderly and disabled. PD requires close monitoring and regular assessment. In order to be assessed and monitored, people are usually required to attend a clinic or hospital. In this study a home-based assessment tool, which collects information on people’s hand and finger movements, has been developed and evaluated. The tool collects data on the time taken to make a series of movements, the speed at which the movements are made and the path that is taken for each movement. Through the use of this tool movement difficulties such as bradykinesia, akinesia and rigidity could be identified within the home environment. Such an approach has the potential to decrease the number of clinic/hospital visits a person with PD requires. It could also assist with making the current, somewhat subjective, methods of PD assessment become more objective. If used over a long period of time, for example, daily or weekly, it could help identify how effective or otherwise a person's medication is. This would be achieved by the tool collecting data on a regular basis in order to establish what is considered to be ‘normal’ results for that particular person. So for example, a pattern may emerge over a few months that each time a particular participant is ‘off’ they take the same or similar length of time to use the tool. It could be suggested that the length of time the participant took to use the tool when ‘off’ during those months was their ‘normal’ result for their ‘off’ state. If, after a period of time, the results collected seemed ‘abnormal’ for that person it could indicate that a visit to the clinician is needed to identify if the medication needs changed. The developed tool was evaluated by twenty participants. Half of the participants had been diagnosed with PD and the other half were a control group without the disease. Within each group there were a mix of participants who were computer literate and those who had no experience of using computers. Results following evaluation of the tool indicated that the control group were able to conduct assessments using the tool in a time that was significantly shorter than that taken by the PD group (p = 0.034). This in turn suggests that such tools have the ability to assist with enabling more objective assessment of PD.