63 research outputs found

    Sleep Homeodynamics And Wellbeing In Asymptomatic Hiv-Seropositive African American Women

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    SLEEP HOMEODYNAMICS AND WELLBEING IN ASYMPTOMATIC HIVā€“SEROPOSITIVE AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMEN by TABETHA LYNN GAYTON December 2013 Advisor: Hossein N. Yarandi, PhD Major: Nursing (Urban Health) Degree: Doctor of Philosophy BACKGROUND: HIVā€“related sleep disruption is a common complaint of persons with HIV infection. With the demographical shifts, African American women have now emerged as one of the fastest growing HIV populations today, yet they remain a vulnerable and underrepresented population in the sleep literature. OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this pilot study was to explore the dynamics of HIVā€“related sleep disruption and wellbeing in asymptomatic HIVā€“seropositive AA women of childbearing age within the context of a holistic, theoretical substruction from Myra Levineā€™s Conservation Model (1967). The rationale for the proposed study was to provide a foundation of both the objective and subjective experience of HIVā€“related sleep disruption, which as a stressor can affect wellbeing. METHODS: A descriptive correlational design was used to examine the immunological integrity, sleep/wake rhythm, sleep quality, daytime sleepiness, ILā€“6 rhythm, and quality of life in 20 asymptomatic HIVā€“seropositive African American women receiving care at Wayne State University Physicians Group Infectious Diseases Clinic in Detroit, MI. In this 4ā€“day protocol, measures included CD4+ cell count, HIV RNA viral load, wrist actigraphy, Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, Subjective Sleep Quality Questionnaire, Epworth Sleepiness Scale, Stanford Sleepiness Scale, plasma ILā€“6, Quality of Life Index, and Quality of Life Visual Analogue Scale. RESULTS: Both the objective and subjective experience of sleep demonstrated severe sleep disruption and disorganized sleep patterns. Nearly half (45%) of the sample slept \u3c 6 hours per night, usually not falling asleep until sometime after 12 midnight. Objective daytime functioning was also disrupted with frequent dozing (\u3e 9 sleep episodes) noted throughout the day. Selfā€“reported daytime sleepiness was inconsistent with the objective assessment and was within normal limits. The sample\u27s mean ILā€“6 level was 2.03 pg/mL, which is much lower than that reported in other asymptomatic samples or normal controls. Quality of life measures indicated a positive sense of wellbeing, but the daily pattern of quality of life was not associated with the daily pattern of sleep efficiency, subjective sleep quality, daytime sleepiness, or ILā€“6 levels when controlling for CD4+ cell count and HIV RNA viral load. And lastly, the 1ā€“item quality of life scale showed agreement with the 66ā€“item quality of life index using Blandā€“Altman agreement analysis, which may help in decreasing participant burden in clinical trials enrolling this population. CONCLUSION: This sample suffered from severe HIVā€“related sleep disruption, as evidenced by an average sleep time of 6.4 hours per night and frequent dozing throughout the day. Despite this disruption, the sample perceived a positive sense of quality of life. These results provide further evidence that future studies exploring efforts to improve sleep and daytime functioning in asymptomatic HIVā€“seropositive African American women are essential in order to maintain quality of life and wellbeing in this population

    Are physiological oscillations 'physiological'?

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    Despite widespread and striking examples of physiological oscillations, their functional role is often unclear. Even glycolysis, the paradigm example of oscillatory biochemistry, has seen questions about its oscillatory function. Here, we take a systems approach to summarize evidence that oscillations play critical physiological roles. Oscillatory behavior enables systems to avoid desensitization, to avoid chronically high and therefore toxic levels of chemicals, and to become more resistant to noise. Oscillation also enables complex physiological systems to reconcile incompatible conditions such as oxidation and reduction, by cycling between them, and to synchronize the oscillations of many small units into one large effect. In pancreatic beta cells, glycolytic oscillations are in synchrony with calcium and mitochondrial oscillations to drive pulsatile insulin release, which is pivotal for the liver to regulate blood glucose dynamics. In addition, oscillation can keep biological time, essential for embryonic development in promoting cell diversity and pattern formation. The functional importance of oscillatory processes requires a rethinking of the traditional doctrine of homeostasis, holding that physiological quantities are maintained at constant equilibrium values, a view that has largely failed us in the clinic. A more dynamic approach will enable us to view health and disease through a new light and initiate a paradigm shift in treating diseases, including depression and cancer. This modern synthesis also takes a deeper look into the mechanisms that create, sustain and abolish oscillatory processes, which requires the language of nonlinear dynamics, well beyond the linearization techniques of equilibrium control theory

    Big Data in Organizations and the Role of Human Resource Management

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    Big data are changing the way we work. This book conveys a theoretical understanding of big data and the related interactions on a socio-technological level as well as on the organizational level. Big data challenge the human resource department to take a new role. An organizationā€™s new competitive advantage is its employees augmented by big data

    On the Nature, Modeling, and Neural Bases of Social Ties

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    This paper addresses the nature, formalization, and neural bases of (affective) social ties and discusses the relevance of ties for health economics. A social tie is defined as an affective weight attached by an individual to the well-being of another individual (ā€˜utility interdependenceā€™). Ties can be positive or negative, and symmetric or asymmetric between individuals. Characteristic of a social tie, as conceived of here, is that it develops over time under the influence of interaction, in contrast with a trait like altruism. Moreover, a tie is not related to strategic behavior such as reputation formation but seen as generated by affective responses. A formalization is presented together with some supportive evidence from behavioral experiments. This is followed by a discussion of related psychological constructs and the presentation of suggestive neural findings, based on the existing literature. We conclude with some suggestions for future research. Publication forthcoming in 'On the Nature, Modeling and Neural Bases of Social Ties', Daniel E. Houser and Kevin A. McCabe (eds), Neuroeconomics, Advances in Health Economics and Health Services Research, Emerald Insight Publishing

    Neuroscience and the artist's mind

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    This paper is a heuristic attempt to put art back into nature by trying to understand the biological basis of mind and its relation to the world. This relationship is negotiated at a physiological level by primary consciousness but, with the development of the human brain over time, higher-level consciousness has evolved symbolic systems to explore the significance of social and cultural experience, as well as to make forays into new ways of thinking about the world through recursive synthesis. The arts ā€“ including the visual arts ā€“ are an important field within higher-consciousness. Their significance for each of us is constrained by genetic inheritance, somatic and social evolution, and is part of the mental repertoire we utilise to process phenomenological experience within a social context.Neurowetenschappen en het geest van de kunstenaar: Dit document is een heuristische poging om kunst terug te plaatsen in de natuur door te proberen de biologische basis van de geest te begrijpen en haar relatie tot de wereld. Deze relatie komt tot stand op een fysiologisch niveau door primaire bewustzijn, maar, met de ontwikkeling van het menselijk brein na verloop van tijd, een hoger-niveau bewustzijn heeft symbolische systemen ontwikkelt om de betekenis van sociale en culturele ervaringen te onderzoeken, en ook om pogingen te maken naar nieuwe manieren van denken over de wereld door middel van recursieve synthese. De kunsten ā€“ met inbegrip van de beeldende kunst ā€“ zijn een belangrijk gebied binnen het hoger bewustzijn. Hun betekenis voor ieder van ons beperkt zich door genetische overerving, somatische en sociale evolutie, en maken deel uit van de geestelijke repertoire dat we gebruiken om fenomenologische ervaringen te verwerken

    Emerging in the Image of God: From Evolution to Ethics in a Second NaĆÆvetĆ© Understanding of Christian Anthropology

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    Through a careful integration of theological, philosophical, and the natural scientific sources, the biblical concepts of the image of God and the knowledge of good and evil have the potential to remain important and appropriate descriptors of the human condition, including the possibility and necessity of human morality. This study employs French philosopher Paul Ricoeur\u27s notion of second naĆÆvetĆ© understanding to demonstrate the hermeneutical significance of contemporary biocultural evolutionary theory for reinterpreting and reappropriating these ancient symbols of Christian anthropology as terms equipped to encapsulate a morally fruitful and intellectually honest conceptual framework for constructing, conducting, and evaluating theological anthropology and ethics today. Forging and polishing this hermeneutical lens for the purpose of recasting a biblically-based picture of humanity involves alloying these ancient concepts with others from the interrelated fields of cognitive linguistics, evolutionary psychology, and emergence. Viewed through this lens, the dissertationing chapters of Genesis describe human beings as creatures wrought of the creation and embedded within it to the same extent as all other creatures. Though ordinary in every other aspect, human creatures are unique in that they have emerged with an ambivalent condition of freedom through which they bear the vocation to re-present the creative beneficence of the God who shares power and does not create through violence. I defend this thesis in seven chapters. In the first chapter, I introduce the research topic, goals, and hermeneutical procedure for this study. Chapters 2 and 3 describe biocultural evolution and evolutionary psychology within a non-reductive emergentist perspective as sources and resources for contemporary theological anthropology. In chapter 4, I propose an articulation of the doctrine of the imago Dei within this evolutionary worldview. Chapter 5 situates the knowledge of good and evil vis-Ć -vis biocultural evolution and recent biblical studies. I then construct a proposal in chapter 6 for how this second naĆÆvetĆ© understanding of the image of God and the knowledge of good and evil dissertations up new frameworks and frontiers for fundamental theological ethics. Finally, chapter 7 offers a summative and prospective conclusion to this study and its likely impact on my future research

    Proteome Stability as a Key Factor of Genome Integrity

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    DNA damage is constantly produced by both endogenous and exogenous factors; DNA lesions then trigger the so-called DNA damaged response (DDR). This is a highly synchronized pathway that involves recognition, signaling and repair of the damage. Failure to eliminate DNA lesions is associated with genome instability, a driving force in tumorigenesis. Proteins carry out the vast majority of cellular functions and thus proteome quality control (PQC) is critical for the maintenance of cellular functionality. PQC is assured by the proteostasis network (PN), which under conditions of proteome instability address the triage decision of protein fold, hold, or degrade. Key components of the PN are the protein synthesis modules, the molecular chaperones and the two main degradation machineries, namely the autophagy-lysosome and the ubiquitin-proteasome pathways; also, part of the PN are a number of stress-responsive cellular sensors including (among others) heat shock factor 1 (Hsf1) and the nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (Nrf2). Nevertheless, the lifestyle- and/or ageing-associated gradual accumulation of stressors results in increasingly damaged and unstable proteome due to accumulation of misfolded proteins and/or protein aggregates. This outcome may then increase genomic instability due to reduced fidelity in processes like DNA replication or repair leading to various age-related diseases including cancer. Herein, we review the role of proteostatic machineries in nuclear genome integrity and stability, as well as on DDR responses

    FROM PHYSIOLOGY OF DISEASE TO SYSTEMIC PATHOBIOLOGY: HISTORY AND CURRENT TRENDS IN PATHOPHYSIOLOGY

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    A paper describes the main events and periods in the history of Pathophysiology as a curriculum element and research area. The national schools of Pathophysiology in Russia, continental Europe, Asia and British-North American world are compared, their history discussed. The evolution of Pathophysiology towards Systemic Pathobiology, its crisis and perspectives are evaluated. The priority of Russian clinical and experimental researchers of late XIX century in foundation of Translational Medicine is supported. The necessity in combined programmes of Pathobiology for current education of medical researchers from biological and medical backgrounds is discussed. The experience of innovative teaching/learning of Pathophysiology at Saint Petersburg State University and Zagreb University is analyzed

    Biofeedback and Anxiety Disorders: A Critical Review of EMG, EEG, and HRV Feedback

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    Anxiety disorders are characterized by ongoing and situationally disproportionate fear and anxiety, and the associated significant distress and impairment of normal functioning (American Psychiatric Association, 2013). These disorders affect nearly one third of Americans in their lifetimes, indicating that a massive group of people stand to benefit from the development of effective and feasible treatments for anxiety symptoms (Valentiner, Fergus, Behar, & Conybeare, 2014). There are certainly many reasons why pharmaceutical treatments for anxiety disorders are so popular with patients and clinicians today, but there are significant drawbacks that should motivate researchers to develop better treatments. Researchers are investigating the general efficacy of biofeedback for anxiety, as well as which types of biofeedback may be most effective for which types of symptoms and disorders. In this review, I summarize findings on electromyography (EMG), electroencephalography (EEG), and heart rate variability (HRV) biofeedback treatments for anxiety. While EMG research seems to have stalled due to minimal supporting evidence, I recommend further research on EEG and HRV as adjunctive treatments for anxiety disorders.Ā  Overall, further research on biofeedback will contribute to the transition away from the disease model of psychopathology with purely pharmaceutical treatment to the complex systems learning model in which the individual patient may receive unique skill-building therapies targeted to his or her particular needs.Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā  Keywords: biofeedback, anxiety disorders, alternative treatment, neurofeedbac
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