6,832 research outputs found

    Impact of the Spruce Budworm (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae) on the Ottawa and Hiawatha National Forests, 1978-1980

    Get PDF
    The Michigan Impact Plot System was established during 1978 and 1979 to obtain a data base for quantifying the impact of the spruce budworm in the Ottawa and Hiawatha National Forests. The formulae used to estimate the mean, total, and associated standard errors of the various parameters at the national forest and forest district levels are presented. We present the 1978, 1979, and 1980 impact data for the following parameters; percent mortality, total dead volume. dead volume per ha, live volume per ha, defoliation ranking, frequency and extent of top-kill, and incidence of spruce budworm feeding on saplings and regenera- tion. Statistics from an annual inventory of 108 composite ground sampling units (CGSU) in 1978, and 136 CGSU\u27s in 1979 and 1980 provide a more precise estimate ofthe impact of the spruce budworm in Michigan\u27s Upper Peninsula than ha~ been available to date

    Spatial-temporal analysis of breast cancer in upper Cape Cod, Massachusetts

    Get PDF
    INTRODUCTION. The reasons for elevated breast cancer rates in the upper Cape Cod area of Massachusetts remain unknown despite several epidemiological studies that investigated possible environmental risk factors. Data from two of these population-based case-control studies provide geocoded residential histories and information on confounders, creating an invaluable dataset for spatial-temporal analysis of participants' residency over five decades. METHODS. The combination of statistical modeling and mapping is a powerful tool for visualizing disease risk in a spatial-temporal analysis. Advances in geographic information systems (GIS) enable spatial analytic techniques in public health studies previously not feasible. Generalized additive models (GAMs) are an effective approach for modeling spatial and temporal distributions of data, combining a number of desirable features including smoothing of geographical location, residency duration, or calendar years; the ability to estimate odds ratios (ORs) while adjusting for confounders; selection of optimum degree of smoothing (span size); hypothesis testing; and use of standard software. We conducted a spatial-temporal analysis of breast cancer case-control data using GAMs and GIS to determine the association between participants' residential history during 1947–1993 and the risk of breast cancer diagnosis during 1983–1993. We considered geographic location alone in a two-dimensional space-only analysis. Calendar year, represented by the earliest year a participant lived in the study area, and residency duration in the study area were modeled individually in one-dimensional time-only analyses, and together in a two-dimensional time-only analysis. We also analyzed space and time together by applying a two-dimensional GAM for location to datasets of overlapping calendar years. The resulting series of maps created a movie which allowed us to visualize changes in magnitude, geographic size, and location of elevated breast cancer risk for the 40 years of residential history that was smoothed over space and time. RESULTS. The space-only analysis showed statistically significant increased areas of breast cancer risk in the northern part of upper Cape Cod and decreased areas of breast cancer risk in the southern part (p-value = 0.04; ORs: 0.90–1.40). There was also a significant association between breast cancer risk and calendar year (p-value = 0.05; ORs: 0.53–1.38), with earlier calendar years resulting in higher risk. The results of the one-dimensional analysis of residency duration and the two-dimensional analysis of calendar year and duration showed that the risk of breast cancer increased with increasing residency duration, but results were not statistically significant. When we considered space and time together, the maps showed a large area of statistically significant elevated risk for breast cancer near the Massachusetts Military Reservation (p-value range:0.02–0.05; ORs range: 0.25–2.5). This increased risk began with residences in the late 1940s and remained consistent in size and location through the late 1950s. CONCLUSION. Spatial-temporal analysis of the breast cancer data may help identify new exposure hypotheses that warrant future epidemiologic investigations with detailed exposure models. Our methods allow us to visualize breast cancer risk, adjust for known confounders including age at diagnosis or index year, family history of breast cancer, parity and age at first live- or stillbirth, and test for the statistical significance of location and time. Despite the advantages of GAMs, analyses are for exploratory purposes and there are still methodological issues that warrant further research. This paper illustrates that GAM methods are a suitable alternative to widely-used cluster detection methods and may be preferable when residential histories from existing epidemiological studies are available.National Cancer Institute (5R03CA119703-02); National Institute of Enviornmental Health (5P42ES007381

    THE ROLE OF EPIGENETICS IN TRANSCRIPTIONAL REGULATION OF FXR AND SILENCING FXR EXPRESSION IN HUMAN COLON CANCER

    Get PDF
    Farnesoid X receptor (FXR) is a ligand activated transcription factor belonging to the nuclear receptor superfamily and bile acids are its endogenous ligands. FXR is a critical regulator of the enterohepatic circulation of bile acids, lipid homeostasis, glucose metabolism, and tumor suppression in liver and intestine. Consequently, FXR has become a very promising therapeutic target for the prevention and/or treatment of cholestasis, hyperlipidemic disorders, metabolic syndrome, and liver and colon cancer. Studies suggest epigenetic mechanisms are critical for proper transcriptional induction of nuclear receptors. Likewise, evidence shows epigenetic mechanisms are responsible for modulating the tissue/cell-specific FXR expression in human colon cancer. However, how epigenetic mechanisms are involved in FXR induced transcription or tissue-specific FXR expression remains elusive. Understanding these mechanisms is crucial for future development of pharmacological modulators of FXR as well as understanding the full physiological roles of FXR. This dissertation was designed to elucidate epigenetic mechanisms involved in tissue-specific FXR induced gene transcription, orphan nuclear receptors critical for regulating FXR function, and epigenetic mechanisms responsible for FXR silencing in colon cancer. In specific aim 1, a genome-wide FXR binding assay was done in mouse liver and intestine. Specific aim 2 focuses on the role of the orphan nuclear receptor hepatocyte nuclear factor 4fnalpha (HNF4&alpha) in regulating liver-specific functions of FXR. And finally, in specific aim 3, DNA methylation of FXR promoter was investigated as the mechanism responsible for FXR silencing in human colon cancer. In conclusion, genome-wide binding of FXR implicates novel epigenetic mechanisms and orphan nuclear receptors in regulating FXR function. Furthermore, this study indicates that HNF4&alpha is at least one orphan nuclear receptor capable of regulating FXR function in the liver. Findings from these first two aims succeeded in progressing drug development fields aimed at finding new FXR modulators for the treatment of multiple metabolic disorders by elucidating novel epigenetic mechanisms that may be investigated as therapeutic targets. Finally, FXR is at least partially down-regulated by DNA methylation in human colon cancer, suggesting a potential mechanism to be targeted for the prevention, treatment, and/or diagnosis of colon cancer

    NASA/DOD Aerospace Knowledge Diffusion Research Project. Paper 19: Computer and information technology and aerospace knowledge diffusion

    Get PDF
    To remain a world leader in aerospace, the US must improve and maintain the professional competency of its engineers and scientists, increase the research and development (R&D) knowledge base, improve productivity, and maximize the integration of recent technological developments into the R&D process. How well these objectives are met, and at what cost, depends on a variety of factors, but largely on the ability of US aerospace engineers and scientists to acquire and process the results of federally funded R&D. The Federal Government's commitment to high speed computing and networking systems presupposes that computer and information technology will play a major role in the aerospace knowledge diffusion process. However, we know little about information technology needs, uses, and problems within the aerospace knowledge diffusion process. The use of computer and information technology by US aerospace engineers and scientists in academia, government, and industry is reported

    NASA/DoD Aerospace Knowledge Diffusion Research Project. Paper 30: The electronic transfer of information and aerospace knowledge diffusion

    Get PDF
    Increasing reliance on and investment in information technology and electronic networking systems presupposes that computing and information technology will play a major role in the diffusion of aerospace knowledge. Little is known, however, about actual information technology needs, uses, and problems within the aerospace knowledge diffusion process. The authors state that the potential contributions of information technology to increased productivity and competitiveness will be diminished unless empirically derived knowledge regarding the information-seeking behavior of the members of the social system - those who are producing, transferring, and using scientific and technical information - is incorporated into a new technology policy framework. Research into the use of information technology and electronic networks by U.S. aerospace engineers and scientists, collected as part of a research project designed to study aerospace knowledge diffusion, is presented in support of this assertion

    NASA/DoD Aerospace Knowledge Diffusion Research Project. Paper 31: The information-seeking behavior of engineers

    Get PDF
    Engineers are an extraordinarily diverse group of professionals, but an attribute common to all engineers is their use of information. Engineering can be conceptualized as an information processing system that must deal with work-related uncertainty through patterns of technical communications. Throughout the process, data, information, and tacit knowledge are being acquired, produced, transferred, and utilized. While acknowledging that other models exist, we have chosen to view the information-seeking behavior of engineers within a conceptual framework of the engineer as an information processor. This article uses the chosen framework to discuss information-seeking behavior of engineers, reviewing selected literature and empirical studies from library and information science, management, communications, and sociology. The article concludes by proposing a research agenda designed to extend our current, limited knowledge of the way engineers process information

    Age-Related Gene Expression Differences in Monocytes from Human Neonates, Young Adults, and Older Adults.

    Get PDF
    A variety of age-related differences in the innate and adaptive immune systems have been proposed to contribute to the increased susceptibility to infection of human neonates and older adults. The emergence of RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) provides an opportunity to obtain an unbiased, comprehensive, and quantitative view of gene expression differences in defined cell types from different age groups. An examination of ex vivo human monocyte responses to lipopolysaccharide stimulation or Listeria monocytogenes infection by RNA-seq revealed extensive similarities between neonates, young adults, and older adults, with an unexpectedly small number of genes exhibiting statistically significant age-dependent differences. By examining the differentially induced genes in the context of transcription factor binding motifs and RNA-seq data sets from mutant mouse strains, a previously described deficiency in interferon response factor-3 activity could be implicated in most of the differences between newborns and young adults. Contrary to these observations, older adults exhibited elevated expression of inflammatory genes at baseline, yet the responses following stimulation correlated more closely with those observed in younger adults. Notably, major differences in the expression of constitutively expressed genes were not observed, suggesting that the age-related differences are driven by environmental influences rather than cell-autonomous differences in monocyte development

    Prenatal Exposure to Tetrachloroethylene-Contaminated Drinking Water and the Risk of Congenital Anomalies: A Retrospective Cohort Study

    Get PDF
    BACKGROUND: Prior animal and human studies of prenatal exposure to solvents including tetrachloroethylene (PCE) have shown increases in the risk of certain congenital anomalies among exposed offspring. OBJECTIVES: This retrospective cohort study examined whether PCE contamination of public drinking water supplies in Massachusetts influenced the occurrence of congenital anomalies among children whose mothers were exposed around the time of conception. METHODS: The study included 1,658 children whose mothers were exposed to PCE-contaminated drinking water and a comparable group of 2,999 children of unexposed mothers. Mothers completed a self-administered questionnaire to gather information on all of their prior births, including the presence of anomalies, residential histories and confounding variables. PCE exposure was estimated using EPANET water distribution system modeling software that incorporated a fate and transport model. RESULTS: Children whose mothers had high exposure levels around the time of conception had an increased risk of congenital anomalies. The adjusted odds ratio of all anomalies combined among children with prenatal exposure in the uppermost quartile was 1.5 (95% CI: 0.9, 2.5). No meaningful increases in the risk were seen for lower exposure levels. Increases were also observed in the risk of neural tube defects (OR: 3.5, 95% CI: 0.8, 14.0) and oral clefts (OR 3.2, 95% CI: 0.7, 15.0) among offspring with any prenatal exposure. CONCLUSION: The results of this study suggest that the risk of certain congenital anomalies is increased among the offspring of women who were exposed to PCE-contaminated drinking water around the time of conception. Because these results are limited by the small number of children with congenital anomalies that were based on maternal reports, a follow-up investigation should be conducted with a larger number of affected children who are identified by independent records.National Institute of Environmental Health (5 P42 ES007381); National Institutes of Healt

    Climate and Land Use Consequences to 100-Year Flooding

    Get PDF

    The Ursinus Weekly, April 8, 1957

    Get PDF
    Co-editors choose staffs, make plans for 1958 Ruby • Dr. Staiger given grant to attend chemistry meeting • Curtain Club to present two plays • Pre-medders make visit to psychiatric hospital • U.C. April Forum to hear address on Egypt, Wed. eve. • Dead Sea scrolls to be Chi Alpha program topic • Annual Spring prom to be presented Friday, April 12th • Program to be held on various fields of social welfare • New Weekly editor-in-chief chooses staff editors, members • Seniors present Two-timer musical comedy, Fri. & Sat. • YW-YMCA present last song program • May Day court, committees chosen • Sig Nu, Delta Pi plan bake sale, orphans\u27 party • UC senior married March 23 • UC grad assigned to new post • Pancoast speaks at Thiel • Editorial: And they said they couldn\u27t do it • Ach, ist Fruhling • Lantern review • Play review: Two timer • Modern fairy tale • Meistersingers give concert • Inter-fraternity field, track events scheduled for Tuesday, April 9th • Sowers high in free throw • Belles complete successful season • Belles beginning tennis practice • U.C. mermaids complete season; Finish with two wins, three losses • Five members of U.C. Band attend annual festivalhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/weekly/1425/thumbnail.jp
    • …
    corecore