Two studies of U.S. and Japanese respondents assessed attitudes resulting from viewing the film Roger & Me (Moore, 1989). In Experiment 1, the responses of 162 adults who had seen the film in the U.S. were contrasted with 106 people about to view the film. Those who saw the film exhibited more cynical (negative) attitudes toward General Motors in particular and toward U.S. business in general. Experiment 2 employed a Solomon four-group design in Tokyo, Japan, to assess the generalizability of the U.S. results and also to assess attitude change from pretest to posttest. Consistent with the U.S. results, viewing the film had negative effects on Japanese attitudes toward General Motors and toward U.S. business in general. Furthermore, attitudes toward Japanese business became slightly more positive as a function of viewing the film. Implications and future research needs are discussed.
As an extension of the previous investigation (J. Med. Chem. 1988, 31, 919), we synthesized a series of 2-[2-[(aminoalkyl)oxy]-5-methoxyphenyl]-3,4-dihydro-4-methyl-3-oxo-2H- 1,4-benzothiazines (3) and evaluated their Ca2+ antagonistic activities. Ca2+ antagonistic activity was measured with isolated depolarized guinea pig taenia cecum. On the basis of their potent Ca2+ antagonistic activity, six benzothiazines were selected and further evaluated for their vasocardioselectivity. Among these six compounds, the key compound 15 [3,4-dihydro-2-[5-methoxy-2-[3-[N-methyl-N-[2-[3,4- (methylenedioxy)phenoxy]ethyl]amino]propoxy]phenyl]-4-methyl-3-oxo- 2H-1,4-benzothiazine hydrogen fumarate] was recognized as having the lowest cardioselectivity. Following optical resolution, the absolute configuration of the compound's optically active enantiomer was determined by means of X-ray crystallography of a synthetic precursor (+)-4a. The Ca2+ antagonistic activity of 15 was found to reside primarily in (+)-15 (which was about 7 times more potent than (-)-15). The in vitro study showed that (+)-15 had a low cardioselectivity compared to verapamil and diltiazem. This result suggests that (+)-15 would exhibit less adverse effects due to cardiac inhibition than diltiazem and verapamil in therapeutic use.
A panel of seventeen experts from academia, industry, and government laboratories share their thoughts on a variety of matters of importance to the readership of Organometallics. These include directions for the field and recent breakthroughs (illustrated with selected examples), the interface with green chemistry, the quest for reproducible experimental procedures, data and research integrity, laboratory safety, the preparation of coworkers for non-academic careers, and needs regarding instrumentation, infrastructure, shared facilities, and computational methods. A lively give and take is evident in the edited transcript, which continues a biennial tradition initiated in 2011.
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