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Institution

Williams College

EducationWilliamstown, Massachusetts, United States
About: Williams College is a education organization based out in Williamstown, Massachusetts, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Politics. The organization has 2257 authors who have published 5015 publications receiving 213160 citations. The organization is also known as: Williams.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the relationship between production in the photic zone and export processes responsible for the fluxes into the traps, over an annual cycle, examining a series of indicators of production regime set in surface waters.
Abstract: Sediment traps in the northern and north central Bay of Bengal are characterized by highly seasonal fluxes and unusually high efficiency of organic carbon export. However, the mechanism for high export production remains under debate. To evaluate the relationships between production in the photic zone and export processes responsible for the fluxes into the traps, over an annual cycle we examine a series of indicators of production regime set in surface waters. These indicators include communities of planktic foraminifera and coccolithophores, stable isotopic chemistry of foraminifera and coccoliths, and the Sr/Ca ratios in coccoliths. Coccolith and foraminiferal assemblages confirm that the Bay of Bengal is a region of high productivity. Coccolithophore communities are dominated to an unusually high degree (90%) by the lower photic zone dweller Florisphaera profunda, a species adapted to high-nutrient and low-light conditions typical of stratified waters like those induced by the strong halocline in the Bay of Bengal. Cyclonic eddy pumping and strong winds during the southwest monsoon (SWM) increase the relative abundance of upwelling indicator species like foraminifera Globigerina bulloides and the upper photic coccolithophores Globigerina oceanica and Emiliania huxleyi. However, while upwelling and eddy pumping do coincide with high opal and coccolith export, in both traps peak organic carbon export precedes the onset of eddy pumping and upwelling indicators. These data suggest an alternate mode of production in the Bay of Bengal, which is not driven by upwelling but rather high production deeper in the water column, probably by taxa adapted to lower light levels. In both traps, the pulses of organic carbon export coincide with elevated fluxes of planktonic foraminifera, which likely reflect increased primary production. Consequently, while major export pulses of organic carbon coincide with pulses of lithogenic export, the pulses of organic carbon export are not likely to reflect simple scavenging of suspended organic carbon by lithogenic pulses. Rather, they reflect increased organic carbon production. Nonetheless, some seasonal changes increase in coccolith export efficiency during the SWM are suggested by coccolith Sr/Ca ratios. In the northern trap, coccolith carbonate export is decoupled from the main pulse of organic carbon export. Consequently, ballasting of organic carbon aggregates by coccolith carbonate does not play a major role in the seasonal cycle of organic carbon export from the photic zone to shallow (800-m) traps.

53 citations

Posted Content
TL;DR: An identity model is proposed to explain the effect of relative income on marriage, which shows that the ratio between a man's income and a local reference group median is a strong predictor of marital status, but only for low-income men.
Abstract: In this paper we investigate the effect of relative income on marital status We develop an identity model based on Akerlof and Kranton (2000) and apply it to the marriage decision The empirical evidence is consistent with the idea that people are more likely to marry when their incomes approach a financial level associated with idealized norms of marriage We hypothesize that the marriage ideal is determined by the median income in an individual?s local reference group After controlling flexibly for the absolute level of income and a number of other factors, the ratio between a man?s income and the marriage ideal is a strong predictor of marital status but only if he is below the ideal For white men, relative income considerations jointly drive coresidence, marriage, and fatherhood decisions For black men, relative income affects the marriage decision only, and relative income is tied to marital status even for those living with a partner and children Relative income concerns explain 10-15 percent of the decline in marriage since 1970 for low income white men, and account for more than half of the persistent marriage gap between high- and low-income men

53 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study examined the role of three RSV-induced tRFs derived from the 5-end of mature tRNAs decoding GlyCCC, LysCTT and CysGCA in controlling RSV replication and found that tRF5-GlyCCC and t RF5-LysCTT, but not tRF 5-CysG CA, promote RSV replicate, demonstrating the functional specificity of t RFs.
Abstract: Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the leading cause of lower respiratory tract infection (LRTI) in children from infancy up to early childhood. Recently, we demonstrated that RSV infection alters cellular small non-coding RNA (sncRNA) expression, most notably the tRNA-derived RNA fragments (tRFs). However, the functions of the tRFs in virus-host interaction are largely unknown. Herein, we examined the role of three RSV-induced tRFs derived from the 5-end of mature tRNAs decoding GlyCCC, LysCTT and CysGCA (named tRF5-GlyCCC, tRF5-LysCTT and tRF5-CysGCA, respectively) in controlling RSV replication. We found that tRF5-GlyCCC and tRF5-LysCTT, but not tRF5-CysGCA, promote RSV replication, demonstrating the functional specificity of tRFs. The associated molecular mechanisms underlying the functions of tRF5-GlyCCC and tRF5-LysCTT were also investigated. Regulating the expression and/or activity of these tRFs may provide new insights into preventive and therapeutic strategies for RSV infection. The study also accumulated data for future development of a tRF targeting algorithm.

53 citations


Authors

Showing all 2291 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Alfred Kröner10137431665
Gabriel B. Brammer9133430335
William M. Tierney8442324235
Larry L. Jacoby7716625631
David P. DiVincenzo7128240038
James T. Carlton7019721690
Robert K. Merton6719074002
Allen Taylor6322216589
John A. Smolin6315024657
Qing Wang6254817215
Neal I. Lindeman6221731462
Michael I. Norton6027317597
Charles H. Bennett6011767435
Brian D. Fields5725063673
Hans C. Oettgen5712410056
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202313
202271
2021209
2020237
2019216
2018190