521 resultados para Butte Symphony
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In this issue...Ceramic testing, Bob LeCoure, Butte Civic Center, Rotary Club, Saint Patrick's Day, First-Aid Class, Mine Rescue, Career Day, American Legion Baseball
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In this issue...computer programming course, Butte Elks Club, IBM, summer jobs, John F. Kennedy, New York World Fair, Butte YMCA, weightlifting, Staghorn Ranch
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In this issue...Spanish class, Peace Corps, Coast Guard, NASA, Allen Winters, M-Days, Alumni Stadium, Chess Club, Charles Russell, computer class, Columbia Riding Club
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In this issue...Junior Prom, Blackbird Mining Camp, badminton, Jean Jacques Rousseau, Finlen Hotel, Continental Oil Company, Lee Saperstein, Oceanography
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In this issue...movie review, Lady Diggers, collegiate volleyball, driverless cars, orientation, Montana Fish Wildlife and Parks, Mount Haggin, HPER, public lecture series
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In this issue...Martin Karplus, Noble Prize, Dodgeball Duel, President Obama, community college, Pintler mountains, cell phone evolution, Facebook, social media
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In this issue...Homecoming Bonfire, campus interviews, Carol Melvin, Berkeley Pit, Pep Band, Chess Club, Alumni Coliseum, cheerleaders, Theta Tau, Mayor Thomas Powers
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In this issue...Beryllium, computer center, NASA, Democrats Club, football, Intramural Sports, Women's News, Fall tea, Bob Toivonen, Mineral Club, Miner's Bank
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In this issue...Hilbilly Hop, Thanksgiving, Dorothy Nile, student elections, Glee Club, Chemical Rubber Company, Victor Burt, student employees, Montana Coal Symposium
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In this issue...Berkeley Pit, parking permit, Christmas Formal, NASA, Metals Bank, Mrs. Peck, Alumni Coliseum, Park Street, Big M, barrel racing, Sparky McGarry
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In this issue...YMCA, weightlifting, Mick Hanley, Alumni Coliseum, Mineral Club, Metal's Bank, Father Burns, Montana Power, Senator Frank Reardon, Party Line
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In this issue...Valentine's Dance, Z-Bar-T, Professor Stolz, registration, Walkerville, E-days, German Club, Herbert Hoover, Oil and Gas Journal, Gregson Hot springs
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In this issue...Rotary Club, ASARCO, Hootenany, Wesley Club, Ellen Hurlbut, Finlen Hotel, Silver bow County Hospital, Mountain View Church, Butte Post Office
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Starch is the major source of food glucose and its digestion requires small intestinal alpha-glucosidic activities provided by the 2 soluble amylases and 4 enzymes bound to the mucosal surface of enterocytes. Two of these mucosal activities are associated with sucrase-isomaltase complex, while another 2 are named maltase-glucoamylase (Mgam) in mice. Because the role of Mgam in alpha-glucogenic digestion of starch is not well understood, the Mgam gene was ablated in mice to determine its role in the digestion of diets with a high content of normal corn starch (CS) and resulting glucose homeostasis. Four days of unrestricted ingestion of CS increased intestinal alpha-glucosidic activities in wild-type (WT) mice but did not affect the activities of Mgam-null mice. The blood glucose responses to CS ingestion did not differ between null and WT mice; however, insulinemic responses elicited in WT mice by CS consumption were undetectable in null mice. Studies of the metabolic route followed by glucose derived from intestinal digestion of (13)C-labeled and amylase-predigested algal starch performed by gastric infusion showed that, in null mice, the capacity for starch digestion and its contribution to blood glucose was reduced by 40% compared with WT mice. The reduced alpha-glucogenesis of null mice was most probably compensated for by increased hepatic gluconeogenesis, maintaining prandial glucose concentration and total flux at levels comparable to those of WT mice. In conclusion, mucosal alpha-glucogenic activity of Mgam plays a crucial role in the regulation of prandial glucose homeostasis.
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INTRODUCTION: Experience-based adaptation of emotional responses is an important faculty for cognitive and emotional functioning. Professional musicians represent an ideal model in which to elicit experience-driven changes in the emotional processing domain. The changes of the central representation of emotional arousal due to musical expertise are still largely unknown. The aim of the present study was to investigate the electroencephalogram (EEG) correlates of experience-driven changes in the domain of emotional arousal. Therefore, the differences in perceived (subjective arousal via ratings) and physiologically measured (EEG) arousal between amateur and professional musicians were examined. PROCEDURE: A total of 15 professional and 19 amateur musicians listened to the first movement of Ludwig van Beethoven's 5th symphony (duration=∼7.4min), during which a continuous 76-channel EEG was recorded. In a second session, the participants evaluated their emotional arousal during listening. In a tonic analysis, we examined the average EEG data over the time course of the music piece. For a phasic analysis, a fast Fourier transform was performed and covariance maps of spectral power were computed in association with the subjective arousal ratings. RESULTS: The subjective arousal ratings of the professional musicians were more consistent than those of the amateur musicians. In the tonic EEG analysis, a mid-frontal theta activity was observed in the professionals. In the phasic EEG, the professionals exhibited an increase of posterior alpha, central delta, and beta rhythm during high arousal. DISCUSSION: Professionals exhibited different and/or more intense patterns of emotional activation when they listened to the music. The results of the present study underscore the impact of music experience on emotional reactions.