Abstract: The present invention relates to a duobinary transceiver. Specifically, the duobinary transceiver circuit proposed by the invention provides a new circuit configure of a precoder in a typical transceiver and a decoder in a typical receiver, based on a conventional transceiver including a transmitter, a transmission medium, and a receiver.
Abstract: A method for targeted delivery of therapeutic compounds from hydrogels is presented. The method involves administering to a cell a hydrogel in which a therapeutic compound is noncovalently bound to heparin.
Abstract: Reactive and modified M13 bacteriophages, and methods of making and using the same, are generally provided. The reactive M13 bacteriophage can include a alkyne functional group covalently attached to the M13 bacteriophage. The modified M13 bacteriophage can include a substituent covalently attached to the M13 bacteriophage via a 1,2,3-triazole linkage. Dual-modified M13 bacteriophages are also generally provided, and can include a cancer-targeting substituent covalently attached to the M13 bacteriophage and a fluorescent group covalently attached to the M13 bacteriophage. The modified M13 bacteriophages can not only be employed as a fluorescent probe for cancer imaging, but also can be used as biomaterials for cell alignment and scaffolding.
Abstract: Methods for diagnosing a pelvic pain disorder that include analyzing samples for increased levels and/or nuclear accumulation of beta-catenin, which indicates presence of the pelvic pain disorder, particularly interstitial cystitis. Therapeutic treatment of a pelvic pain disorder, particularly interstitial cystitis, includes the administration to a patient of an effective amount of an inhibitor of beta-catenin activity. This can be carried out by direct administration of the therapeutic agent or via gene therapy.
Type:
Grant
Filed:
November 5, 2008
Date of Patent:
April 9, 2013
Assignee:
University of Rochester
Inventors:
Jay E. Reeder, Robert D. Mayer, Mary O'Connell
Abstract: Example systems and methods for performing individually customized corneal ablative surgery is presented. The example systems and methods rely on a parametric model that correlates corneal measurements with predicted post-operative results and algorithm updates that facilitate achieving desired post-operative results.
Type:
Grant
Filed:
December 16, 2003
Date of Patent:
April 9, 2013
Assignee:
The Ohio State University
Inventors:
Cynthia L. Roberts, Ashraf Mahmoud, Edward E Herderick
Abstract: The present invention provides a tool for reducing the time and labor required for obtaining a protein by recombinant expression of a gene in a host. A vector characterized by having two restriction recognition sequences different in nucleotide sequence both of which are recognized by a first restriction enzyme, one of the restriction recognition sequences comprising a part of a restriction recognition sequence recognized by a second restriction enzyme that is different from the first restriction enzyme, and the other one of the restriction recognition sequences not comprising the part of the restriction recognition sequence recognized by the second restriction enzyme. A method of producing a protein and/or a protein domain, using the above-described vector.
Type:
Grant
Filed:
August 31, 2004
Date of Patent:
April 9, 2013
Assignee:
Yokohama City University
Inventors:
Hidekazu Hiroaki, Takeshi Tenno, Natsuko Goda
Abstract: Disclosed herein is a method of sensor network localization through reconstruction of a radiation pattern with a characteristic value of an antenna depending on orientation thereof. The method can minimize errors using an antenna characteristic value and a signal strength depending on the orientation. In addition, the method can minimize errors using an artificial neural network to characterize a distorted radiation pattern of an antenna and using it for the localization of a triangulation method. Furthermore, the method can increases the localization rate even in a passive localization method by characterizing an asymmetric antenna radiation pattern and constructing the antenna characteristic through an artificial neural network.
Type:
Grant
Filed:
February 17, 2009
Date of Patent:
April 9, 2013
Assignee:
Sungkyunkwan University Foundation for Corporate Collaboration
Abstract: The present disclosure relates to methods and systems for data tag control for quantum dot cellular automata (QCA). An example method includes receiving data, associating a data tag with the data, communicating the data tag along a first wire-like element to a local tag decoder, reading instructions from the data tag using the local tag decoder, communicating the instructions to a processing element, communicating the data along a second wire-like element to the processing element, and processing the data with the processing element according to the instructions. A length of the first wire-like elements and a length of the second wire-like element are approximately the same such that communication of the instructions and the data to the processing element are synchronized.
Type:
Grant
Filed:
July 30, 2010
Date of Patent:
April 9, 2013
Assignee:
The Board of Regents of the University of Texas System
Abstract: Memory demands of large-memory applications continue to remain one step ahead of the improvements in DRAM capacities of commodity systems. Performance of such applications degrades rapidly once the system hits the physical memory limit and starts paging to the local disk. A distributed network-based virtual memory scheme is provided which treats remote memory as another level in the memory hierarchy between very fast local memory and very slow local disks. Performance over gigabit Ethernet shows significant performance gains over local disk. Large memory applications may access potentially unlimited network memory resources without requiring any application or operating system code modifications, relinkling or recompilation. A preferred embodiment employs kernel-level driver software.
Type:
Grant
Filed:
October 21, 2011
Date of Patent:
April 9, 2013
Assignee:
The Research Foundation of State University of New York
Inventors:
Kartik Gopalan, Michael Hines, Jian Wang
Abstract: Method, apparatus and systems for a quick change lamp ballast assembly for newly manufactured lamp fixtures having the quick change ballast or a retrofit for an existing lamp fixture. The quick change ballast assembly includes a ballast mounting fixture 110 for housing the ballast 300, a wire connector fixture 130 and a mounting plate 120 for mounting the ballast mounting fixture 110. The ballast assembly allows for replacement of a non operating ballast to reduce replacement time and labor costs. In a new lamp fixture, the quick change ballast is thermally isolated from the lamp fixture, which reduces the effects of the waste heat from the ballast, and increase overall building efficiency by reducing the cooling load.
Type:
Grant
Filed:
August 27, 2010
Date of Patent:
April 9, 2013
Assignee:
University of Central Florida Research Foundation, Inc.
Inventors:
Donald Yochum, John C. Elmes, III, Michael Pepper
Abstract: The invention provides an SPR measuring method and a measuring system thereof. According to the measuring method, first, a linear-polarized coherent broadband pulsed light beam is incident onto a surface of a sample under detection of a SPR sensing device to cause reflection; next, a time-domain monotonous chirp is performed on the incident coherent broadband pulsed light and/or the SPR reflected light; finally, the time-domain monotonically chirped SPR reflected light beam is detected, and information of the SPR effect is obtained according to the detected signal. According to the invention, the spectrum detection method used in conventional slow wavelength interrogation is converted into the high-speed real-time detection of time-domain pulse shape signals. Thus, the procedure of the SPR reaction may be monitored closely, and dynamical curves with very high time resolution may be obtained, in that case, fast biochemical reaction procedures may be monitored.
Type:
Grant
Filed:
November 29, 2007
Date of Patent:
April 9, 2013
Assignees:
National Center for Nanoscience and Technology, Beihang University
Abstract: The present invention relates to chemical compounds, methods for their discovery, and their therapeutic use. In particular, the present invention provides benzodiazepine derivatives and methods of using benzodiazepine derivatives as therapeutic agents to treat a number of conditions associated with the faulty regulation of the processes of programmed cell death, autoimmunity, inflammation, and hyperproliferation, and the like.
Type:
Grant
Filed:
December 21, 2006
Date of Patent:
April 9, 2013
Assignee:
The Regents of the University of Michigan
Abstract: The disclosure concerns altering the mechanical and/or chemical property of a body tissue, particularly an ocular tissue. In specific cases, it concerns altering or stabilizing the shape of the cornea, such as in a subject suffering or at risk for ectasia or keratoconus. In other specific cases, it concerns strengthening the sclera in a subject suffering or at risk for myopia. The invention employs light irradiation of a photoactivatable compound, such as one that applies crosslinking to the tissue, for example.
Type:
Grant
Filed:
October 24, 2007
Date of Patent:
April 9, 2013
Assignees:
The Regents of the University of California, California Institute of Technology
Inventors:
Matthew S. Mattson, Julia A. Kornfield, Daniel M. Schwartz, Robert K. Maloney, Robert H. Grubbs
Abstract: MicroRNAs are shown to be up- and/or down-regulated in inflammation and immune cells using a mouse model of asthma and regulatory T cells as source of RNA, respectively. Modulating the expression of these microRNAs can be effective in redirecting inflammation and immunity and hence, can be beneficial as biomarkers or as therapeutic agents against diverse human immunologic and inflammatory diseases.
Abstract: A method for generating metallic nanomaterials using acetylenic-bridged metal-carbonyl complexes as a precursor allows control of nanoparticle properties. The novel method produced metallic nanomaterials resistant to oxidation.
Type:
Grant
Filed:
September 14, 2007
Date of Patent:
April 9, 2013
Assignee:
Board of Supervisors of Lousiana State University And Agricultural and Mechanical College
Inventors:
Challa S. S. R. Kumar, Rohini M. de Silva, Josef Hormes
Abstract: The subject invention pertains to a novel purified polypeptide having laccase activity and the nucleic acid sequences encoding the polypeptide. The disclosed polypeptide works at moderately high temperatures from below 20° C. to about 70° C., both acidic and alkaline pH conditions, high salt concentrations and in the presence of organo solvents. The high stability of the enzyme enables its wide applications under even extreme conditions. The invention also provides methods of producing the laccase enzyme.
Type:
Grant
Filed:
May 10, 2010
Date of Patent:
April 9, 2013
Assignee:
University of Florida Research Foundation, Inc.
Inventors:
Julie A. Maupin-Furlow, Sivakumar Uthandi, Boutaiba Saad, Matthew A. Humbard
Abstract: The invention is a novel family of polyolefins characterized by chain-walking defects of the type that add extra backbone carbons per monomer. These polyolefins display a large decrease in crystallinity relative to polyolefins known in the art. Specifically, the reduction in crystallinity is much greater than for earlier polypropylenes with a matched content of stereo or 1-alkene type defects. The claimed polyolefins can be made by a diimine-based catalyst. The defects in the polyolefin backbone are generated by a chain walking mechanism in which three or more carbons per monomer are added to the polymer backbone instead of two, as in conventional polymerization or copolymerization methods of alpha olefins. The novel polyolefins can be used in applications such as plastic wrapping, thin films, co-extrusion layers or molded parts in the absence of polymer blending or copolymerization. The cost of materials production can be reduced.
Type:
Grant
Filed:
October 4, 2012
Date of Patent:
April 9, 2013
Assignees:
The Florida State University Research Foundation, Inc., Cornell University Cornell Center for Technology, Enterprise & Commercialization