Publications by authors named "A M Gacy"

Article Synopsis
  • The study developed a computational model to understand automation complacency effects in operators using a robotic arm under varying levels of automation support.
  • Unlike previous models that focused on simple monitoring failures, this research tests complacency within a complex task, allowing system designers to assess automation's benefits and drawbacks without human-in-the-loop experiments.
  • Results showed that while the model successfully predicted routine performance and responses to failures after complacency developed, it highlighted that visuals scanning alone does not capture all attention allocation aspects related to complacency.
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Frataxin is a conserved mitochondrial protein required for iron homeostasis. We showed previously that in the presence of ferrous iron recombinant yeast frataxin (mYfh1p) assembles into a regular multimer of approximately 1.1 MDa storing approximately 3000 iron atoms.

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Each nuclear pore is responsible for both nuclear import and export with a finite capacity for bidirectional transport across the nuclear envelope. It remains poorly understood how the nuclear transport pathway responds to increased demands for nucleocytoplasmic communication. A case in point is cellular hypertrophy in which increased amounts of genetic material need to be transported from the nucleus to the cytosol.

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Frataxin deficiency is the primary cause of Friedreich ataxia (FRDA), an autosomal recessive cardiodegenerative and neurodegenerative disease. Frataxin is a nuclear-encoded mitochondrial protein that is widely conserved among eukaryotes. Genetic inactivation of the yeast frataxin homologue (Yfh1p) results in mitochondrial iron accumulation and hypersensitivity to oxidative stress.

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Nucleic acid triple helices have provoked interest since their discovery more than 40 years ago, but it remains unknown whether such structures occur naturally in cells. To pursue this question, it is important to determine the stabilities of representative triple helices at physiological temperature and pH. Previous investigations have concluded that while both DNA and RNA can participate in the pyrimidine triplex motif under mildly acidic conditions, these structures are often relatively unstable at neutral pH.

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