787 resultados para Daily creativity and peripheral youths
Resumo:
Contributing to the acquisition of professional creativity and teamwork skills has been a special challenge for some of the subjects taught at the Technical University of Madrid (UPM), and this has been a starting point for the work described in this paper. Some professors have intuited that the use of cooperative classrooms could facilitate the acquisition of these skills. We describe the new methodologies applied within cooperative classrooms by some professors, and present the procedure for measuring students’ perception of their own learning outcomes, skill improvements, and overall satisfaction with the use of this kind of classroom. For this project, 250 students enrolled in several subjects answered a questionnaire. The featuresof thesubjectsinvolved intheproject arewidely disparate. We present the results of the statistical analysis with special emphasis on creativity and teamwork skills, and we conclude that the use of cooperative classroom has a positive influence on the acquisition of these skills. This work has the added value of being the first analysis of student perception of the use of cooperative classroom in the acquisition of creativity and teamwork skills.
Resumo:
This project is divided into two main parts: The first part shows the integration of an Embedded Linux operating system on a development hardware platform named Zedboard. This platform contains a Zynq-7000 System on Chip (Soc) which is composed by two dual core ARM Cortex-A9 processors and a FPGA Artix-7. The Embedded Linux is built with Linuxlink, a Timesys tool. Meanwhile, the platform hardware configuration is done with Xilinx Vivado. The system is loaded with an SD card which requires to have every files needed for the booting process and for the operation. Some of these files are generated with Xilinx SDK software. The second part starts up from the system already built to integrate a peripheral in the Zynq-7000 FPGA. Also the drivers for controlling the peripheral from the operating system are developed. Finally, a user space program is created to test both of them. RESUMEN. Este proyecto consta de dos partes: La primera muestra la integración de un sistema operativo Linux embebido en una plataforma de desarrollo hardware llamada Zedboard. Esta plataforma utiliza un System on Chip (SoC) Zynq-7000 que está formado por dos procesadores ARM Cortex-A9 de doble núcleo y una FPGA Artix-7. El Linux embebido se construye utilizando la herramienta Linuxlink de Timesys, mientras que el hardware de la plataforma de desarrollo se configura con Vivado de Xilinx. El sistema se carga en una tarjeta SD que debe tener todos los archivos necesarios para completar el arranque y hacer funcionar el sistema. Algunos de esos archivos se generan con la herramienta SDK de Xilinx. En la segunda parte se utiliza el sistema construido para integrar un periférico en la FPGA del Zynq-7000, haciendo uso de Vivado, y se desarrollan los drivers necesarios para utilizarlo mediante el sistema operativo. Para probar esta última parte se desarrolla un programa de espacio de usuario.
Resumo:
Peer reviewed
Resumo:
Heterotrimeric G proteins (peripheral proteins) conduct signals from membrane receptors (integral proteins) to regulatory proteins localized to various cellular compartments. They are in excess over any G protein-coupled receptor type on the cell membrane, which is necessary for signal amplification. These facts account for the large number of G protein molecules bound to membrane lipids. Thus, the protein-lipid interactions are crucial for their cellular localization, and consequently for signal transduction. In this work, the binding of G protein subunits to model membranes (liposomes), formed with defined membrane lipids, has been studied. It is shown that although G protein α-subunits were able to bind to lipid bilayers, the presence of nonlamellar-prone phospholipids (phosphatidylethanolamines) enhanced their binding to model membranes. This mechanism also appears to be used by other (structurally and functionally unrelated) peripheral proteins, such as protein kinase C and the insect protein apolipophorin III, indicating that it could constitute a general mode of protein-lipid interactions, relevant in the activity and translocation of some peripheral (amphitropic) proteins from soluble to particulate compartments. Other factors, such as the presence of cholesterol or the vesicle surface charge, also modulated the binding of the G protein subunits to lipid bilayers. Conversely, the binding of G protein-coupled receptor kinase 2 and the G protein β-subunit to liposomes was not increased by hexagonally prone lipids. Their distinct interactions with membrane lipids may, in part, explain the different cellular localizations of all of these proteins during the signaling process.
Resumo:
The lipid bilayer of the myelin membrane of the central nervous system (CNS) and the peripheral nervous system (PNS) contains the oligodendrocyte- and Schwann cell-specific glycosphingolipids galactocerebrosides (GalC) and GalC-derived sulfatides (sGalC). We have generated a UDP-galactose ceramide galactosyltransferase (CGT) null mutant mouse (cgt−/−) with CNS and PNS myelin completely depleted of GalC and derived sGalC. Oligodendrocytes and Schwann cells are unable to restore the structure and function of these galactosphingolipids to maintain the insulator function of the membrane bilayer. The velocity of nerve conduction of homozygous cgt−/− mice is reduced to that of unmyelinated axons. This indicates a severely altered ion permeability of the lipid bilayer. GalC and sGalC are essential for the unperturbed lipid bilayer of the myelin membrane of CNS and PNS. The severe dysmyelinosis leads to death of the cgt−/− mouse at the end of the myelination period.
Resumo:
The mechanism by which tolerance is induced via systemic administration of high doses of aqueous antigen has been analyzed by using mice transgenic for a T-cell receptor specific for the influenza virus hemagglutinin (HA) peptide comprising amino acids 126-138. After intravenous injection of 750 (but not 75) micrograms of HA peptide, a state of hyporesponsiveness was rapidly induced. In the thymus, in situ apoptosis in the cortex and at the corticomedullary junction was responsible for a synchronous and massive deletion of CD4+ CD8+ thymocytes. In secondary lymphoid organs, HA-reactive T cells were initially activated but were hyporesponsive at the single cell level. After 3 days, however, those cells were rapidly deleted, at least partially, through an apoptotic process. Therefore, both thymic and peripheral apoptosis, in addition to T-cell receptor desensitization, contribute to high-dose tolerance.