666 resultados para Marking
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A apoptose constitui um processo fisiológico de morte celular, caracterizado por alterações morfológicas distintas e mecanismos bioquímicos e moleculares bem definidos. O seu papel de destaque em numerosos eventos biológicos e importantes processos patológicos conduziu a um crescente interesse na investigação dos mecanismos celulares que regulam o processo apoptótico. A aplicação de metodologias capazes de identificar células apoptóticas despoletou um enorme desenvolvimento de técnicas. No entanto, as propriedades demonstradas por estes ensaios nem sempre se aplicam ao estudo de amostras tecidulares, pelo que a escolha dos diferentes métodos deverá ser criteriosamente avaliada, tendo em conta a aplicação pretendida e as alterações morfológicas que se pretendem detetar. Das várias técnicas disponíveis para deteção da apoptose em tecidos, muitos investigadores recomendam o método TUNEL, o qual se baseia na marcação de produtos endonucleossómicos resultantes da fragmentação do DNA. Outros métodos histoquímicos também disponíveis incluem a deteção do citocromo c, libertado da mitocôndria ou a deteção das proteínas pró e anti-apoptóticas, Bax, Bidm e Bcl-2, envolvidas nos mecanismos intrínsecos da apoptose. Mais recentemente, a marcação de produtos específicos resultantes da clivagem de proteínas alvo pelas caspases, tem vindo a ser considerada uma abordagem promissora. Como principal objectivo deste trabalho pretendeu-se avaliar a técnica imunohistoquímica como método de deteção da apoptose a nível celular, em tecidos animais, tendo por base o método TUNEL, o qual permite a deteção de fragmentos de DNA. Os resultados obtidos permitiram concluir que, apesar do método TUNEL possuir as suas limitações ao nível da sensibilidade e especificidade, o mesmo constitui um mecanismo imunohistoquímico útil na deteção de células apoptóticas. Contudo, segundo opinião de vários autores, adverte-se para a necessidade da aplicação de pelo menos dois métodos imunohistoquímicos como forma de validar a ocorrência do processo apoptótico, razão pela qual se optou pela deteção do citocromo c citosólico como método complementar, uma vez que a sua libertação para o espaço citosólico se encontra implicada na ativação da apoptose.
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While the history of taxonomic diversification in open ocean lineages of ray-finned fish and elasmobranchs is increasingly known, the evolution of their roles within the open ocean ecosystem remains poorly understood. To assess the relative importance of these groups through time, we measured the accumulation rate of microfossil fish teeth and elasmobranch dermal denticles (ichthyoliths) in deep sea sediment cores from the North and South Pacific gyres over the past 85 million years. We find three distinct and stable open ocean ecosystem structures, each defined by the relative and absolute abundance of elasmobranch and ray-finned fish remains. The Cretaceous Ocean (pre-66 Ma), was characterized by abundant elasmobranch denticles, but low abundances of fish teeth. The Paleogene Ocean (66-20 Ma), initiated by the Cretaceous/Paleogene Mass Extinction, had nearly 4 times the abundance of fish teeth compared to elasmobranch denticles. This Paleogene Ocean structure remained stable during the Eocene greenhouse (50 Ma) and the Eocene-Oligocene glaciation (34 Ma), despite large changes in overall accumulation of both groups during those intervals, suggesting that climate change is not a primary driver of ecosystem structure. Dermal denticles virtually disappeared from open ocean ichthyolith assemblages about 20 Ma, while fish tooth accumulation increased dramatically in variability, marking the beginning of the Modern Ocean. Together, these results suggest that open ocean fish community structure is stable on long timescales, independent of total production and climate change. The timing of the abrupt transitions between these states suggests that the transitions may be due to interactions with other, non-preserved pelagic consumer groups.
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Especially in functional-typological linguistics, semantic roles have been studied thoroughly, because they constitute a good starting point for any study on argument marking due to their semantically defined nature. However, the very concept of semantic roles is far from being without problems, and there is still no consensus on how the roles are best defined. In this volume, the notion will be discussed from novel perspectives with the aim of providing new insights into our understanding of semantic roles. Two of the papers deal with semantic role clusters, one with semantic roles in verbless constructions, one with diachrony of semantic roles and two with individual semantic roles that have not been studied in too much detail in previous studies. The book may not offer answers to all questions the readers may have, but at least it raises interesting further questions relevant to arriving at a better understanding of semantic roles.
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This paper proposes a diachronic typology for the various patterns that have been referred to as Hierarchical Alignment or Inverse Alignment. Previous typological studies have tried to explain such patterns as grammatical reflections of a universal Referential Hierarchy, in which first person outranks second person outranks third person and humans outrank other animates outrank inanimates. However, our study shows that most of the formal properties of hierarchy-sensitive constructions are essentially predictable from their historical sources. We have identified three sources for hierarchical person marking, three for direction marking, two for obviative case marking, and one for hierarchical constituent ordering. These sources suggest that there is more than one explanation for hierarchical alignment: one is consistent with Givón’s claim that hierarchical patterns are a grammaticalization of generic topicality; another is consistent with DeLancey’s claim that hierarchies reflect the deictic distinction between present (1/2) and distant (3) participants; another is simply a new manifestation of a common asymmetrical pattern, the use of zero marking for third persons. More importantly, the evolution of hierarchical grammatical patterns does not reflect a consistent universal ranking of participants – at least in those cases where we can see (or infer) historical stages in the evolution of these properties, different historical stages appear to reflect different hierarchical rankings of participants, especially first and second person. This leads us to conclude that the diversity of hierarchical patterns is an artifact of grammatical change, and that in general, the presence of hierarchical patterns in synchronic grammars is not somehow conditioned by some more general universal hierarchy.
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Apart from common cases of differential argument marking, referential hierarchies affect argument marking in two ways: (a) through hierarchical marking, where markers compete for a slot and the competition is resolved by a hierarchy, and (b) through co-argument sensitivity, where the marking of one argument depends on the properties of its co-argument. Here we show that while co-argument sensitivity cannot be analyzed in terms of hierarchical marking, hierarchical marking can be analyzed in terms of co-argument sensitivity. Once hierarchical effects on marking are analyzed in terms of co-argument sensitivity, it becomes possible to examine alignment patterns relative to referential categories in exactly the same way as one can examine alignment patterns relative to referential categories in cases of differential argument marking and indeed any other condition on alignment (such as tense or clause type). As a result, instances of hierarchical marking of any kind turn out not to present a special case in the typology of alignment, and there is no need for positing an additional non-basic alignment type such as “hierarchical alignment”. While hierarchies are not needed for descriptive and comparative purposes, we also cast doubt on their relevance in diachrony: examining two families for which hierarchical agreement has been postulated, Algonquian and Kiranti, we find only weak and very limited statistical evidence for agreement paradigms to have been shaped by a principled ranking of person categories.
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"Printed in Great Britain."
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At head of title: Michigan Education Association.
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Autographed from typewritten copy.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"ATRC manual 50-900-9."
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At head of title: Pasadena city schools.
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"December, 1984."
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Errata sheet tipped in.
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Cover title: A study of promotional practices.
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[white outline crop marking in original digitally removed.]