Results 141 to 150 of about 12,445,180 (205)
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Predicting substrate influence

2008
Abstract In Chapter 4, I demonstrated that a significant amount of morphological expansion occurred in the pidgin predecessors of both Melanesian Pidgin and Hawai’i Creole, and that a significant proportion of the expanded features were modelled on the grammatical morphology of the substrate languages.
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Substrate influences on CIS device performance

Proceedings of 1994 IEEE 1st World Conference on Photovoltaic Energy Conversion - WCPEC (A Joint Conference of PVSC, PVSEC and PSEC), 2002
It has been reported that the substrate plays an active role in copper indium diselenide (CIS) devices. The physical properties of the substrate, i.e., thermal expansion coefficient, chemical composition, strain point, surface quality and cleanliness may all play a role in device efficiency and process reproducibility.
D.F. Dawson-Elli   +3 more
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Influence of the substrate on the optical and photoelectrochemical properties of monolayer MoS2.

ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces, 2020
Substrates influence the electrical and optical properties of monolayer (ML) MoS2 in field effect transistors and photodetectors. Photoluminescence (PL) and Raman spectroscopy measurements have shown that conducting substrates can vary the doping ...
Li Wang   +4 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Constraints on Substrate Influence

2008
Abstract In an earlier article (Siegel 1997a ), I proposed that there are two types of constraints, or what Mufwene (1991: 137) calls ‘regulatory principles’— i.e. factors that influence the selection of features, both from the substrate languages and the lexifier.
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Substrate influences in Mindanao Chabacano

2011
Mindanao Chabacano (henceforth MC), a cluster of varieties of Philippine Creole Spanish with almost 600,000 speakers recorded in the 2000 Philippines census, is rather unusual among creole languages because it has been in constant contact both with its chief lexifier Spanish, and with the languages which most strongly shaped it typologically, the ...
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Substrate Curvature Influences the Direction of Nerve Outgrowth

Annals of Biomedical Engineering, 2005
Nerve outgrowth in the developing nervous system utilizes a variety of attractive and repulsive molecules found in the extracellular environment. In addition, physical cues may play an important regulatory role in determining directional outgrowth of nervous tissue. Here, by culturing nerve cells on filamentous surfaces and measuring directional growth,
Roy M, Smeal   +3 more
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Influencing energy expenditure and substrate utilisation

2008
Most of the anti-obesity drugs used over the past 50 years, and one (sibutramine) of the two globally licensed for long-term use today have acted centrally. With the exception of sibutramine (and the possible further approval of rimonabant), however, all of these have been withdrawn due to concerns over toxicity or abuse potential, or their use is ...
John C. Clapham, Jonathan R. Arch
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Influence of inhomogeneous substrate curvature on line tension

Physical Review E, 2005
Line tension accompanying equilibrium liquidlike films adsorbed at cylinder-shaped substrates equipped with chemical heterogeneities is studied within an effective interfacial Hamiltonian approach. The heterogeneity has the form of a stripe of width 2L. The leading corrections to the line tension coefficient due to nonzero substrate curvature R(-1) are
P, Jakubczyk, M, Napiórkowski
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Factors influencing substrate utilization by Tetrahymena pyriformis

Experimental Cell Research, 1958
Abstract T. pyriformis H resembled other Protozoa and bacteria in the occurrence of reduced average cell volume with aging of cultures, and in undergoing initial contraction or expansion in transfers from cultures of comparable growth stages to fresh medium. Initial expansion of the ciliate depended upon substrate uptake and consequent increase in
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Metal coordination influences substrate binding in horseradish peroxidase

European Biophysics Journal, 2000
To clarify the role of metal ion coordination in horseradish peroxidase C (HRPC), the effect of pressure and of an externally applied electric field on spectral holes was compared for both metal-free and Mg-mesoporphyrin-substituted horseradish peroxidase C (MP-HRP and MgMP-HRP), as affected by the binding of 2-naphthohydroxamic acid (NHA).
E, Balog   +4 more
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