Showing 4661 - 4670 of 5701 Items

Winslows: Pilgrims, Patrons, and Portraits

Date: 1974-01-01

Access: Open access

Catalogue from a joint exhibition at Bowdoin College Museum of Art and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Includes biographical references.


Pectin activation of MAP kinase and gene expression is WAK2 dependent

Date: 2009-12-01

Creator: Bruce D. Kohorn, Susan Johansen, Akira Shishido, Tanya Todorova, Rhysly, Martinez, Elita Defeo, Pablo Obregon

Access: Open access

The angiosperm extracellular matrix, or cell wall, is composed of a complex array of cellulose, hemicelluose, pectins and proteins, the modification and regulated synthesis of which are essential for cell growth and division. The wall associated kinases (WAKs) are receptor-like proteins that have an extracellular domain that bind pectins, the more flexible portion of the extracellular matrix, and are required for cell expansion as they have a role in regulating cellular solute concentrations. We show here that both recombinant WAK1 and WAK2 bind pectin in vitro. In protoplasts pectins activate, in a WAK2-dependent fashion, the transcription of vacuolar invertase, and a wak2 mutant alters the normal pectin regulation of mitogen-activated protein kinases. Microarray analysis shows that WAK2 is required for the pectin activation of numerous genes in protoplasts, many of which are involved in cell wall biogenesis. Thus, WAK2 plays a major role in signaling a diverse array of cellular events in response to pectin in the extracellular matrix. © 2009 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.


Photographs: John McKee

Date: 1973-01-01

Access: Open access

"Catalogue published in conjunction with an exhibition held at the Bowdoin College Museum of Art, April 6-May 27, 1984"--T.p. verso


Dead end words in lamplighter groups and other wreath products

Date: 2005-09-22

Creator: Sean Cleary, Jennifer Taback

Access: Open access

We explore the geometry of the Cayley graphs of the lamplighter groups and a wide range of wreath products. We show that these groups have dead end elements of arbitrary depth with respect to their natural generating sets. An element w in a group G with finite generating set X is a dead end element if no geodesic ray from the identity to w in the Cayley graph Γ(G, X) can be extended past w. Additionally, we describe some non-convex behaviour of paths between elements in these Cayley graphs and seesaw words, which are potential obstructions to these graphs satisfying the k-fellow traveller property. © The Author 2005. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.


Word Embedding Driven Concept Detection in Philosophical Corpora

Date: 2020-01-01

Creator: Dylan Hayton-Ruffner

Access: Open access

During the course of research, scholars often explore large textual databases for segments of text relevant to their conceptual analyses. This study proposes, develops and evaluates two algorithms for automated concept detection in theoretical corpora: ACS and WMD retrieval. Both novel algorithms are compared to key word retrieval, using a test set from the Digital Ricoeur corpus tagged by scholarly experts. WMD retrieval outperforms key word search on the concept detection task. Thus, WMD retrieval is a promising tool for concept detection and information retrieval systems focused on theoretical corpora.


Bowdoin College - Medical School of Maine Catalogue (1915-1916)

Date: 1916-01-01

Access: Open access

Bowdoin College Bulletin no. 61


Simplified insertion of transgenes onto balancer chromosomes via recombinase-mediated cassette exchange

Date: 2012-05-01

Creator: Florence F. Sun, Justine E. Johnson, Martin P. Zeidler, Jack R. Bateman

Access: Open access

Balancer chromosomes are critical tools for Drosophila genetics. Many useful transgenes are inserted onto balancers using a random and inefficient process. Here we describe balancer chromosomes that can be directly targeted with transgenes of interest via recombinase-mediated cassette exchange (RMCE). ©2012 Sun et al.


Attention training for reducing spider fear in spider-fearful individuals

Date: 2010-10-01

Creator: Hannah E. Reese, Richard J. McNally, Sadia Najmi, Nader Amir

Access: Open access

Cognitive theorists propose that attentional biases for threatening information play an important role in the development and maintenance of anxiety disorders. If attentional biases for threat figure in the maintenance of anxiety, then the experimental reduction of the bias for threat (attention training) should reduce anxiety. We randomly assigned 41 spider-fearful individuals to receive either attention training (n=20) or control procedures (n=21). We used a modified dot-probe discrimination paradigm with photographs of spiders and cows to train attention. Training reduced attentional bias for spiders, but only temporarily. Although both groups declined in spider fear and avoidance, reduction in attentional bias did not produce significantly greater symptom reduction in the training group than in the control group. However, reduction in attentional bias predicted reduction in self-reported fear for the training group. The reduction in attentional bias for threat may have been insufficiently robust to produce symptom reduction greater than that produced by exposure to a live spider and spider photographs alone. Alternatively, attention training may be an unsuitable intervention for spider fear. © 2010 Elsevier Ltd.


New insights on obtaining phytoplankton concentration and composition from in situ multispectral Chlorophyll fluorescence

Date: 2010-01-01

Creator: Christopher W. Proctor, Collin S. Roesler

Access: Open access

A three-channel excitation (435 nm, 470 nm, and 532 nm) Chlorophyll fluorometer (695 nm emission) was calibrated and characterized to improve uncertainty in estimated in situ Chlorophyll concentrations. Protocols for reducing sensor-related uncertainties as well as environmental-related uncertainties were developed. Sensor calibrations were performed with thirteen monospecific cultures in the laboratory, grown under limiting and saturating irradiance, and sampled at different growth phases. Resulting uncertainties in the calibration slope induced by natural variations in the in vivo fluorescence per extracted Chlorophyll yield were quantified. Signal variations associated with the sensors (i.e., dark current configurations, drift, and stability) and the environment (i.e., temperature dependent dark currents and contamination by colored dissolved organic matter [CDOM] fluorescence) yielded errors in estimating in situ Chlorophyll concentration exceeding 100%. Calibration protocols and concurrent observations of in situ temperature and CDOM fluorescence eliminate these uncertainties. Depending upon excitation channel, biomass calibration slopes varied between 6-and 10-fold between species and as a function of growth irradiance or growth phase. The largest source of slope variability was due to variations in accessory pigmentation, and thus the variance could be reduced among pigment-based taxonomic lines. Fluorescence ratios were statistically distinct among the pigment-based taxonomic groups, providing not only a means for approximating bulk taxonomic composition, but also for selecting the appropriate calibration slope to statistically improve the accuracy of in situ Chlorophyll concentration estimates. Application to 5 months of deployment in China Lake, Maine, USA reduced the error in estimating extracted Chlorophyll concentration from > 30% to < 6%. © 2010, by the American Society of Limnology and Oceanography, Inc.


James Bowdoin III: Pursuing Style in the Age of Independence

Date: 2008-01-01

Creator: Vernon Scott

Access: Open access

Catalog of an exhibition held at the Bowdoin College Museum of Art from Sept. 9, 2008, through June 7, 2009. Essay by V. Scott Dimond