Publications by authors named "Deni J"

Objective: Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP) is a critical complication in patients with liver cirrhosis, often resulting in high mortality. Understanding the microbiological agents causing SBP and their antibiotic resistance patterns is essential for effective treatment, particularly in tertiary care settings. This prospective observational study aimed to identify the microbial profile of SBP, evaluate antibiotic sensitivity, and assess patient outcomes.

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DNA transfer from transgenic plants to native intestinal bacteria and introduced Acinetobacter BD413 was assessed in the gut of the tobacco horn worm (Manduca sexta). The marker was kanamycin resistance gene (nptll), and tobacco carrying the nptll gene in the chloroplasts served as the donor. We detected neither whole gene transfer to native bacteria, nor transfer of fragments of nptll to Acinetobacter, using a marker exchange assay.

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Previous investigations have shown that ammonia oxidation is not inhibited by diesel fuel in a soil with a long history of contamination contrary to a non-contaminated soil. As a consequence, ammonia oxidation does not constitute a Limited step in nitrification process (Appl. Environ.

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In vitro ammonia-oxidizing bacteria are capable of oxidizing hydrocarbons incompletely. This transformation is accompanied by competitive inhibition of ammonia monooxygenase, the first key enzyme in nitrification. The effect of hydrocarbon pollution on soil nitrification was examined in situ.

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The magnitude of the Ebbinghaus illusion has been reported to be greater when test element and context elements are figurally similar as opposed to figurally dissimilar. In the current investigation with 16 observers, illusion magnitude was greater for a figurally similar configuration even though the context elements of the figurally similar configuration were perceived as smaller than the context elements of a figurally dissimilar configuration. Hence, figural similarity appears to have a prepotent effect in the Ebbinghaus illusion.

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It was hypothesized that the apparent depth of the Benussi effect could be elicited using stimuli corresponding to retinally disparate images. When such stimuli were presented rapidly and successively in a manner approximating apparent motion, 21 of 22 observers reported apparent depth.

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The perceived depth of the Benussi effect is usually demonstrated by presenting a configuration of nonconcentric circles on a rotating disc. However, in the current investigation with 21 undergraduates the Benussi effect was elicited by presenting an eccentric configuration of rectangles. Depth was reported when the configuration of eccentric rectangles was alternated rapidly and successively with its mirror image.

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A circle was attached to one of three lines which were changing in length and direction simultaneously. This configuration of moving lines had been found previously to induce the perception of depth. Of 26 observers 20 reported that the moving circle appeared smaller in size than a physically equal stationary circle which was located outside the changing, depth-inducing configuration.

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Using the single staircase psychophysical method, the apparent depth threshold for the Benussi effect was determined for 5 observers. The threshold occurred at an eccentricity of 2r/3, where r equals the radius of the larger circle expressed in millimeters.

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Many observers perceive depth when a configuration of nonconcentric circles is rotated on a disc. While it has been suggested by a number of investigators that motion parallax has a role in generating this phenomenon, the supporting data are equivocal. The current study proposed that the ambiguity regarding the role of motion parallax may have arisen because there are contradictions between relative size cues and motion parallax cues in the configuration of rotating circles.

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Rapid, successive presentations of an eccentric circle pattern and its mirror-image elicited apparent depth and, as has been previously demonstrated for the Benussi effect, there was an increase in apparent depth with an increase in circle eccentricity. Taken together, these data were interpreted as contravening Wallach, Adams, and Weisz's account of the Benussi effect as an instance of the kinetic depth effect.

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Rapid, apparent, to-and-fro (right-left) rotation of the Necker cube sharply reduced reversals in depth for 10 undergraduates. This finding was considered consistent with the satiation theory of Necker cube reversals.

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Blackness enhancement.

Percept Mot Skills

June 1991

Since apparent brightness increases as an intermittent luminous source decreases from flicker fusion to approximately 10 cps, the phenomenal blackness induced by an intermittent annulus should also increase as a result of brightness contrast. However, data from 5 observers showed the phenomenal blackness occurring with a 10-cps inducer was greater than that expected on the basis of brightness contrast.

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