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Institution

University of Hawaii at Manoa

EducationHonolulu, Hawaii, United States
About: University of Hawaii at Manoa is a education organization based out in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 13693 authors who have published 25161 publications receiving 1023924 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Female hamsters were mated shortly after the onset of oestrus and results suggest that there is no change in the surface of the oviduct mucosa that causes the release of spermatozoa from the caudal isthmus near the time of ovulation.
Abstract: Female hamsters were mated shortly after the onset of oestrus. At 3 or 6 h after mating, the right oviduct was flushed in situ with 30, 90 or 180 microliters medium to remove spermatozoa from the lumen, leaving only those firmly attached to the isthmic mucosa of the oviduct. When eggs were recovered from oviducts at 20 h after flushing the majority were fertilized, indicating that the spermatozoa that were firmly attached to the mucosa were capable of detaching and ascending to the ampulla to fertilize eggs. Neither the time of flushing nor the volume of flushing medium had a significant effect on the percentage of spermatozoa that remained in the isthmus after flushing. These results suggest that there is no change in the surface of the oviduct mucosa that causes the release of spermatozoa from the caudal isthmus near the time of ovulation. When incapacitated spermatozoa were introduced into the oviduct, many of them attached to oviductal mucosa, while capacitated spermatozoa did not. This indicates that it is a change in the sperm surface, rather than the mucosal surface, that causes the release of spermatozoa, i.e. spermatozoa remain attached to the isthmic mucosa until they become capacitated and then detach and migrate to the ampulla to fertilize the eggs.

219 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The growing interest in marine-derived antiviral compounds, along with the development of new technology in marine cultures and extraction, will significantly expedite the current exploration of the marine environment for compounds with significant pharmacological applications.

218 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper present a clear and unitary concept of preference and investigate the properties of that concept, differentiate related concepts (including conversational implicature), and reveal common confusions. But they do not discuss the relationship between preference as a technical concept and its everyday usage.
Abstract: Preference is treated as a single concept in conversation analysis, but it has in fact developed into an assemblage of loosely related concepts. It has also been construed in a variety of mutually incompatible, and sometimes meth-odologically questionable, ways. This is due, at least in part, to a confusion between preference in its everyday usage and preference as a technical notion. This paper attempts to present a clear and unitary concept of preference and investigate the properties of that concept, differentiate related concepts (including conversational implicature), and reveal common confusions. (Conversation analysis, preference, methodology, implicature)

217 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results demonstrate that either subject nouns or main verbs can trigger visual imagery, but only when used in literal sentences about real space-metaphorical language does not yield significant effects-which implies that it is the comprehension of the sentence as a whole and not simply lexical associations that yields imagery effects.

217 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study reveals the crucial aspects of activity–driven interactions of self-propelled particles with passive objects, and brings into question the use of colloidal tracers as probes of active matter.
Abstract: Self-propelled particles can exhibit surprising non-equilibrium behaviors, and how they interact with obstacles or boundaries remains an important open problem. Here we show that chemically propelled micro-rods can be captured, with little change in their speed, into close orbits around solid spheres resting on or near a horizontal plane. We show that this interaction between sphere and particle is short-range, occurring even for spheres smaller than the particle length, and for a variety of sphere materials. We consider a simple model, based on lubrication theory, of a force- and torque-free swimmer driven by a surface slip (the phoretic propulsion mechanism) and moving near a solid surface. The model demonstrates capture, or movement towards the surface, and yields speeds independent of distance. This study reveals the crucial aspects of activity–driven interactions of self-propelled particles with passive objects, and brings into question the use of colloidal tracers as probes of active matter.

217 citations


Authors

Showing all 13867 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Pulickel M. Ajayan1761223136241
Steven N. Blair165879132929
Qiang Zhang1611137100950
Jack M. Guralnik14845383701
Thomas J. Smith1401775113919
James A. Richardson13636375778
Donna Neuberg13581072653
Jian Zhou128300791402
Eric F. Bell12863172542
Jorge Luis Rodriguez12883473567
Bin Wang126222674364
Nicholas J. Schork12558762131
Matthew Jones125116196909
Anthony F. Jorm12479867120
Adam G. Riess118363117310
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202362
2022244
20211,111
20201,164
20191,151
20181,154