CHAPTER 1 Coagulation Pathway and Physiology Jerry B. Lefkowitz‚ MD Introduction Our understanding of blood clotting is intimately tied to the history of civilization. With the advent of writing 5000 years ago‚ it could be argued that the first symbols used for blood‚ bleeding‚ or clotting represented the first published coagulation pathway. The ancient peoples of the world always held blood in utmost mystical esteem. Through the ages‚ this esteem has been transmitted to modern times in the
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The direct and indirect pathways are circuits heavily involved in the regulation of movement. The direct pathway is thought to decrease inhibitory basal ganglia output (coming from the GPi/SNpr nuclei)‚ whereas the indirect pathway increases inhibitory basal ganglia output. Therefore one would expect the direct pathway to increase motor activity and movement and the indirect pathway to inhibit it. So‚ when the direct pathway is activated‚ cells in the striatum make inhibitory connections with cells
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DNA COMPUTING ……. The future of Computing By Priya Parmar Paromita Bhattacharyya email: priya.parmar2389@gmail.com email:tan389@gmail.com contact no: 9820154325 contact no:9967585813
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and amplifications of the isoforms of the ras oncogene in oral cancer. Further‚ we addressed the isoformspecific role of the ras in oral carcinogenesis. We also discussed how targeting the Akt and MEK‚ downstream effectors of the PI3K/Akt and MAPK pathways‚ respectively‚ would probably pave the possible molecular therapeutic target for the ras driven tumorigenesis in oral cancer. Analysis of these ras isoforms may critically enlighten specific role of a particular ras isoform in oral carcinogenesis
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Mobile Computing - A Green Computing Resource He Ba‚ Wendi Heinzelman Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering University of Rochester Rochester‚ NY‚ United States Email: {ba‚wheinzel}@ece.rochester.edu Charles-Antoine Janssen HealthyBill 41 rue de Livourne 1050 Brussels Belgium Email: ca@cajanssen.com Jiye Shi UCB Pharma 216 Bath Road Slough‚ SL1 4EN United Kingdom Email: Jiye.Shi@ucb.com Abstract—Cloud computing provides an approach to accessing shared computing resources
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• Latest Developments • Comparison of DNA computers with conventional Computer • Features of DNA computer • DNA BASICS • Operations on DNA sequences DNA Computing (Deoxyribonucleic Acid Computing): DNA computing is a nascent technology that seeks to capitalize on the enormous informational capacity of DNA‚ biological molecules that can store huge amounts of information and are able to perform operations
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Optical Computing Jainam Shah Kalol Institute Of Technology‚ Kalol‚ Gujarat‚ India. jainam_8888@yahoo.co.in Abstract—Optics has been used in computing for a number of years but the main emphasis has been and continues to be to link portions of computers‚ for communications‚ or more intrinsically in devices that have some optical application or component (optical pattern recognition‚ etc). Optical digital computers are still some years away‚ however a number of devices that can ultimately lead to
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Advantages Cloud computing relies on sharing of resources to achieve coherence and economies of scale similar to a utility (like the electricity grid) over a network.[2] At the foundation of cloud computing is the broader concept of converged infrastructure and shared services. The cloud also focuses on maximizing the effectiveness of the shared resources. Cloud resources are usually not only shared by multiple users but are also dynamically re-allocated per demand. This can work for allocating
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Times 12 Jul. 2009. Sosinsky‚ Barrie. Cloud Computing Bible. San Francisco: Wiley & Sons‚ 2011 Miller‚ Michael. “Cloud Computing: Web-Based Applications That Change the Way You Work and Collaborate Online.” Canada: Que Publishing‚ 2008. Hartig‚ Kevin. “What is Cloud Computing?” Cloudcomputing.utilizer.com. 2009. Manning‚ Craig. "The Future of the Internet." The New Zealand Herald 20 Sep. 2010. Horton‚ James L. “A Walk in the Cloud: Broadband Computing And Communications.” Online-pr. 2008
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Introduction to Parallel Computing | | Author: Blaise Barney‚ Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory | UCRL-MI-133316 | Table of Contents 1. Abstract 2. Overview 1. What is Parallel Computing? 2. Why Use Parallel Computing? 3. Concepts and Terminology 3. von Neumann Computer Architecture 4. Flynn’s Classical Taxonomy 5. Some General Parallel Terminology 4. Parallel Computer Memory Architectures 6. Shared Memory 7. Distributed
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