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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.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The critical importance of Zap‐70 in TCR signaling and its predominantly T‐cell‐restricted expression pattern make ZAP‐70 an attractive drug target for the inhibition of pathological T‐ cell responses in disease.
Abstract: The tyrosine ZAP-70 (zeta-associated protein of 70 kDa) kinase plays a critical role in activating many downstream signal transduction pathways in T cells following T-cell receptor (TCR) engagement. The importance of ZAP-70 is evidenced by the severe combined immunodeficiency that occurs in ZAP-70-deficient mice and humans. In this review, we describe recent analyses of the ZAP-70 crystal structure, revealing a complex regulatory mechanism of ZAP-70 activity, the differential requirements for ZAP-70 and spleen tyrosine kinase (SyK) in early T-cell development, as well as the role of ZAP-70 in chronic lymphocytic leukemia and autoimmunity. Thus, the critical importance of ZAP-70 in TCR signaling and its predominantly T-cell-restricted expression pattern make ZAP-70 an attractive drug target for the inhibition of pathological T-cell responses in disease.

209 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Kai N. Lee1
TL;DR: ItEraturE CItEd McGregor, P. K. & T. Dablesteen, 1996.
Abstract: lItEraturE CItEd McGregor, P. K., 1993. Signalling in territorial systems: A context for individual identification, ranging and eavesdropping. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B, 340: 237–244. McGregor, P. K. & T. Dablesteen, 1996. Communication networks. Pages 409–425 In D. E. Kroodsma & E. H. Miller (eds.). Ecology and Evolution of Acoustic Communication in Birds. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, New York.

209 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
10 May 1990-Nature
TL;DR: A vitrification procedure is developed that precludes intracellular ice formation so that the embryos can be cooled and warmed at ultra-rapid rates to minimize chilling injury, and have recovered viable embryos following storage in liquid nitrogen.
Abstract: There is an urgent need to preserve the ever-increasing number (greater than 30,000) of different genetic strains of D. melanogaster that are maintained in national and international stock centres and in the laboratories of individual investigators. In all cases, the stocks are maintained as adult populations and require transfer to fresh medium every two to four weeks. This is not only costly in terms of materials, labour and space, but unique strains are vulnerable to accidental loss, contamination, and changes in genotype that can occur during continuous culture through mutation, genetic drift or selection. Although cryopreservation of Drosophila germ-plasm would be an enormous advantage, many attempts using conventional procedures have been unsuccessful. D. melanogaster embryos are refractory to conventional cryopreservation procedures because of the contravening conditions required to minimize mortality resulting from both intracellular ice formation and chilling injury at subzero temperatures. To overcome these obstacles, we have developed a vitrification procedure that precludes intracellular ice formation so that the embryos can be cooled and warmed at ultra-rapid rates to minimize chilling injury, and have recovered viable embryos following storage in liquid nitrogen. In a series of 53 experiments, a total of 3,711 larvae emerged from 17,280 eggs that were cooled in liquid nitrogen (18.4 +/- 8.8%). Further, using a subset from this population, approximately 3% of the surviving larvae (24/800) developed into adults. These adults were fertile and produced an F1 generation.

207 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Two experiments were conducted to determine whether cognitive dissonance is accompanied by physiological arousal, and the results are interpreted as support for viewing dissonance as an arousal process and as indicating that the subjects misattributed their arousal to the physiological recording device.
Abstract: Two experiments were conducted to determine whether cognitive dissonance is accompanied by physiological arousal. In Experiment 1, a standard induced compliance paradigm was replicated and was found to produce the expected pattern of attitude change. In Experiment 2, physiological recordings were obtained within the same paradigm. Subjects who wrote counterattitudinal essays under high-choice conditions displayed significantly more nonspecific skin conductance responses than other subjects, but they did not change their attitudes. The results are interpreted as support for viewing dissonance as an arousal process. The results are also interpreted as indicating that the subjects misattributed their arousal to the physiological recording device. The significance of the findings for dissonance theory, misattribution phenomena, and social psychophysiological research methods is discussed.

205 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the relative sensitivities of various dark matter direct detection experiments are modified such that the DAMA annual modulation signal can be reconciled with the absence of a reported signal at CDMS-Soudan, XENON10, ZEPLIN, CRESST, and KIMS for inelastic WIMPs with masses O(100 GeV).
Abstract: Inelastic dark matter, in which weakly interacting massive particle (WIMP)-nucleus scatterings occur through a transition to an excited WIMP state {approx}100 keV above the ground state, provides a compelling explanation of the DAMA annual modulation signal. We demonstrate that the relative sensitivities of various dark matter direct detection experiments are modified such that the DAMA annual modulation signal can be reconciled with the absence of a reported signal at CDMS-Soudan, XENON10, ZEPLIN, CRESST, and KIMS for inelastic WIMPs with masses O(100 GeV). We review the status of these experiments, and make predictions for upcoming ones. In particular, we note that inelastic dark matter leads to highly suppressed signals at low energy, with most events typically occurring between 20 and 45 keV (unquenched) at xenon and iodine experiments, and generally no events at low ({approx}10 keV) energies. Suppressing the background in this high-energy region is essential to testing this scenario. The recent CRESST data suggest seven observed tungsten events, which is consistent with expectations from this model. If the tungsten signal persists at future CRESST runs, it would provide compelling evidence for inelastic dark matter, while its absence should exclude it.

205 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