39 research outputs found
Overt Research Project- 'A Fieldguide to Dark Places - South Edition'
Directed by artist researcher Neal White, Office of Experiments collaborated with researcher and artist Steve Rowell a project manager at the Center for Land Use Interpretation for 18 months in an exchange of methods, standard and experimental, fieldwork and mapping processes. The development of a specifically named research method 'Overt Research' was used to label an inversion of the direction of technologies and techniques exploited in surveillance and security control, and was used in this research to document both the real and imaginary spaces of secrecy in the UK, initially near to Southampton. Using photographic and GIS data sites of experimentation, intelligence and knowledge not normally accessible to the public were brought together in a drupal database. With a taxonomy and vocabulary based on levels of transparency of sites the research output brought together discourse concerning the UK and its techno-scientific and military complex and the public imaginary in relation to these sites. 'A Fieldguide to Dark Places - South Edition' was a central part of the larger exhibition, Dark Places, that White co-curated at John Hansard Gallery in 2009-10. ORP was launched as an 'open project' that also engages members of the public and amateur enthusiasts, and now incorporates them into the research process through attendance of planned activities and events. Many works are also included in 'Critical Dictionary' (Blackdog 2012) and were also exhibited in an installation at Blackdog Gallery, London 2012. Featured extracts from the database appeared in a 6 page article as part of Blueprint magazine edition examining new topographies. March 2010. Critical excursions / mediated bus tours using the ORP have further been supported by ESCR (Experimental Ruins, UCL, London), Big Picture (Secrets of Portland, Portland, Dorset 2011) and The Heritage Lottery Fund (London Orbital Tour 2012)
Koinonia
Spotlight FeaturesSovereign Stumbling: My Life Journey to Date, Larry Crabb
Conversations About Racism, Jessie Brown
Anxiety: A Growing Problem in College Students, Steven M. Conn
Thinking TheologicallyTeaching the Truth, Michael and Stephanie Santarosa
Book ReviewsKingdom Triangle: Recover the Christian Mind, Renovate the Soul, Restore the Spirit\u27s Power (by J.P. Moreland), reviewed by Steve Ivester
The Soul of a Christian University: A Field Guide for Educators (edited by Stephen T. Beers), reviewed by Kyle Lantz
The Outrageous Idea of Academic Faithfullness (by Donald Opitz and Derek Melleby), reviewed by Nathan Geer
I Once Was Lost: What Postmodern Skeptics Taught Us About Their Path to Jesus (by Don Everts and Doug Schaupp), reviewed by Andrew D. Rowell
FeaturesThe President\u27s Corner
Editor\u27s Deskhttps://pillars.taylor.edu/acsd_koinonia/1012/thumbnail.jp
Alu element in the RNA binding motif protein, X-linked 2 (RBMX2) gene found to be linked to bipolar disorder
Objective We have used long-read single molecule, real-time (SMRT) sequencing to fully characterize a similar to 12Mb genomic region on chromosome Xq24-q27, significantly linked to bipolar disorder (BD) in an extended family from a genetic sub-isolate. This family segregates BD in at least four generations with 24 affected individuals. Methods We selected 16 family members for targeted sequencing. The selected individuals either carried the disease haplotype, were non-carriers of the disease haplotype, or served as married-in controls. We designed hybrid capture probes enriching for 5-9Kb fragments spanning the entire 12Mb region that were then sequenced to screen for candidate structural variants (SVs) that could explain the increased risk for BD in this extended family. Results Altogether, 201 variants were detected in the critically linked region. Although most of these represented common variants, three variants emerged that showed near-perfect segregation among all BD type I affected individuals. Two of the SVs were identified in or near genes belonging to the RNA Binding Motif Protein, X-Linked (RBMX) gene family-a 330bp Alu (subfamily AluYa5) deletion in intron 3 of the RBMX2 gene and an intergenic 27bp tandem repeat deletion between the RBMX and G protein-coupled receptor 101 (GPR101) genes. The third SV was a 50bp tandem repeat insertion in intron 1 of the Coagulation Factor IX (F9) gene. Conclusions Among the three genetically linked SVs, additional evidence supported the Alu element deletion in RBMX2 as the leading candidate for contributing directly to the disease development of BD type I in this extended family.Peer reviewe
Imaging 3D Chemistry at 1 nm Resolution with Fused Multi-Modal Electron Tomography
Measuring the three-dimensional (3D) distribution of chemistry in nanoscale
matter is a longstanding challenge for metrological science. The inelastic
scattering events required for 3D chemical imaging are too rare, requiring high
beam exposure that destroys the specimen before an experiment completes. Even
larger doses are required to achieve high resolution. Thus, chemical mapping in
3D has been unachievable except at lower resolution with the most
radiation-hard materials. Here, high-resolution 3D chemical imaging is achieved
near or below one nanometer resolution in a Au-FeO metamaterial,
CoO - MnO core-shell nanocrystals, and
ZnS-CuS nanomaterial using fused multi-modal electron
tomography. Multi-modal data fusion enables high-resolution chemical tomography
often with 99\% less dose by linking information encoded within both elastic
(HAADF) and inelastic (EDX / EELS) signals. Now sub-nanometer 3D resolution of
chemistry is measurable for a broad class of geometrically and compositionally
complex materials
Tactile Presentation of Network Data: Text, Matrix or Diagram?
Visualisations are commonly used to understand social, biological and other
kinds of networks. Currently, we do not know how to effectively present network
data to people who are blind or have low-vision (BLV). We ran a controlled
study with 8 BLV participants comparing four tactile representations: organic
node-link diagram, grid node-link diagram, adjacency matrix and braille list.
We found that the node-link representations were preferred and more effective
for path following and cluster identification while the matrix and list were
better for adjacency tasks. This is broadly in line with findings for the
corresponding visual representations.Comment: To appear in the ACM CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing
Systems (CHI 2020
Establishing a large prospective clinical cohort in people with head and neck cancer as a biomedical resource: head and neck 5000
BACKGROUND: Head and neck cancer is an important cause of ill health. Survival appears to be improving but the reasons for this are unclear. They could include evolving aetiology, modifications in care, improvements in treatment or changes in lifestyle behaviour. Observational studies are required to explore survival trends and identify outcome predictors. METHODS: We are identifying people with a new diagnosis of head and neck cancer. We obtain consent that includes agreement to collect longitudinal data, store samples and record linkage. Prior to treatment we give participants three questionnaires on health and lifestyle, quality of life and sexual history. We collect blood and saliva samples, complete a clinical data capture form and request a formalin fixed tissue sample. At four and twelve months we complete further data capture forms and send participants further quality of life questionnaires. DISCUSSION: This large clinical cohort of people with head and neck cancer brings together clinical data, patient-reported outcomes and biological samples in a single co-ordinated resource for translational and prognostic research
RA-MAP, molecular immunological landscapes in early rheumatoid arthritis and healthy vaccine recipients
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic inflammatory disorder with poorly defined aetiology characterised by synovial inflammation with variable disease severity and drug responsiveness. To investigate the peripheral blood immune cell landscape of early, drug naive RA, we performed comprehensive clinical and molecular profiling of 267 RA patients and 52 healthy vaccine recipients for up to 18 months to establish a high quality sample biobank including plasma, serum, peripheral blood cells, urine, genomic DNA, RNA from whole blood, lymphocyte and monocyte subsets. We have performed extensive multi-omic immune phenotyping, including genomic, metabolomic, proteomic, transcriptomic and autoantibody profiling. We anticipate that these detailed clinical and molecular data will serve as a fundamental resource offering insights into immune-mediated disease pathogenesis, progression and therapeutic response, ultimately contributing to the development and application of targeted therapies for RA.</p
Principles Of Heliophysics: a textbook on the universal processes behind planetary habitability
This textbook gives a perspective of heliophysics in a way that emphasizes
universal processes from a perspective that draws attention to what provides
Earth (and similar (exo-)planets) with a relatively stable setting in which
life as we know it can thrive. The book is intended for students in physical
sciences in later years of their university training and for beginning graduate
students in fields of solar, stellar, (exo-)planetary, and planetary-system
sciences.Comment: 419 pages, 119 figures, and 200 "activities" in the form of problems,
exercises, explorations, literature readings, and "what if" challenge
Current State - Installation View
https://scholarship.claremont.edu/lair/1009/thumbnail.jp