3,513 research outputs found

    Water use and management in an arid region: Fort Collins, Colorado, and vicinity

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    Submitted to the Water Resources Planning Fellowship Steering Committee, Colorado State University, in fulfillment of requirements for AE 795, Special study in planning.Bibliography: page 105

    The Ursinus Weekly, March 8, 1965

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    Freshmen women receive UC colors, learn meaning in 35th annual observance ā€¢ William James scholar to speak in faculty Forum ā€¢ Faculty agrees to publish next Weekly issue ā€¢ Carousel features queen and court, Cub and Key seven: Fine decorations, Al Raymond band add to evening ā€¢ Psych Club hears Phila. social worker ā€¢ Two seniors win electrochemical scholarships ā€¢ Students produce House hearing on Watkins case ā€¢ 33 men join fraternities: Five frats bid ā€¢ Applications urged for political internship plan ā€¢ Track notice ā€¢ Editorial: Fraternity rushing ā€¢ Red China today: Still growing ā€¢ Letters to the editor ā€¢ Book review: Good grief, it\u27s Candy ā€¢ Snellbelles smash East Stroudsburg 63-48, return match no match: Regester, Kohn lead offense with 38; Day, Smiley control defensive boards ā€¢ Wrestlers end, tie last match ā€¢ Fircroft takes the field; Spring finds us ready ā€¢ UC grad presents flag flown over South Pole ā€¢ UC student lectures to DAR ā€¢ Advice column ā€¢ Dean\u27s listhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/weekly/1242/thumbnail.jp

    HoloCam: A subsea holographic camera for recording marine organisms and particles

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    The HoloCam system is a major component of a multi-national multi-discipline project known as HoloMar (funded by the European Commission under the MAST III initiative). The project is concerned with the development of pulsed laser holography to analyse and monitor the populations of living organisms and inanimate particles within the world's oceans. We describe here the development, construction and evaluation of a prototype underwater camera, the purpose of which is to record marine organisms and particles, in-situ. Recording using holography provides several advantages over conventional sampling methods in that it allows non-intrusive, non-destructive, high-resolution imaging of large volumes (up to 10^5 cm^3) in three dimensions. The camera incorporates both in-line and off-axis holographic techniques, which allows particles from a few micrometres to tens of centimetres to be captured. In tandem with development of the HoloCam, a dedicated holographic replay system and an automated data extraction and image processing facility are being developed. These will allow, optimisation of the images recorded by the camera, identification of species and particle concentration plotting

    Creating the Capacity to Screen Deaf Women for Perinatal Depression [poster]

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    There are approximately 1 million Deaf women in the U.S. who depend on American Sign Language (ASL) for communication. Although Deaf women become pregnant and enter motherhood at rates similar to hearing women, Deaf women attend fewer prenatal appointments, receive less information from their physicians, are less satisfied with physician concern and quality of communication, and are less satisfied with their prenatal care. These barriers persist after childbirth, leaving Deaf mothers with little professional support for struggles with postnatal healthcare, breastfeeding, and childcare. Combined with pre-existing mental health disparities observed among members of the Deaf community, such barriers leave Deaf women especially vulnerable to development or exacerbation of depression during the perinatal period (i.e., during pregnancy or within one year postpartum). Expert groups recommend depression screening as a standard of perinatal care - the first critical step to direct women to treatment. Yet, available screening tools are not accessible to Deaf women due to documented low levels of English literacy and health literacy. It is, therefore, critical to develop and validate tools to screen for depression among Deaf perinatal women so they may access the same standard of care as other perinatal women. To address these barriers, our team is conducting a one-year, community-engaged pilot study to develop and perform preliminary psychometric analyses on an ASL translation of the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS). During the poster session, we will outline our unique community-engaged research methods, as well as exhibit the first draft of the ASL EPDS

    Piloting Signs of Safety : A Deaf-Accessible Toolkit for Trauma and Addiction

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    The Deaf community - a minority group of 500,000 Americans who use American Sign Language (ASL) - experiences trauma and addiction at rates double to the general population. Yet, there are no evidence-based treatments that have been evaluated to treat trauma, addiction, or other behavioral health conditions among Deaf people. Current evidence-based treatments fail to meet the needs of Deaf clients. One example is Seeking Safety, a well-validated therapy for people recovering from trauma and addiction. Seeking Safety includes a therapist guide and client handouts for 25 therapy sessions, each teaching clients a safe coping skill. When Seeking Safety was used with Deaf clients, unique barriers were revealed with regard to the client materials: they were presented in complex English instead of ASL, nor sensitive to Deaf peopleā€™s culture, social norms, and history of oppression. To address these barriers, Dr. Anderson assembled a team of Deaf and hearing researchers, clinicians, filmmakers, actors, artists, and Deaf people in recovery to develop Signs of Safety, a Deaf-accessible toolkit to be used with Seeking Safety. Signs of Safety is comprised of a therapist companion guide and population-specific client materials, including visual handouts and ASL teaching stories on digital video, which present key learning points via an ā€œeducational soap opera.ā€ Dr. Anderson is currently leading a pilot study of Signs of Safety. Preliminary results show that participants are reporting symptom reduction from baseline to follow-up and high levels of satisfaction with the model, giving us the confidence to further pursue this line of research

    Symptom Patterns of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder among Deaf Trauma Survivors

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    Details about Deaf peopleā€™s pattern of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms remain relatively unknown due to inaccessible methods used in most epidemiological research. We conducted semi-structured American Sign Language interviews with 16 trauma-exposed Deaf individuals to explore their PTSD symptom patterns. Half met criteria for current PTSD, a rate higher than the general population. Underlying this disparity may be heightened rates of dissociation and psychogenic amnesia reported by many Deaf trauma survivors. Future research with large samples of Deaf survivors is needed to clarify this hypothesis, and to inform interventions that more accurately target Deaf peopleā€™s pattern of trauma symptoms

    Acute treatment of stroke (except thrombectomy)

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    Purpose of Review: The management of patients with acute stroke has been revolutionized in recent years with the advent of new effective treatments. In this rapidly evolving field, we provide an update on the management of acute stroke excluding thrombectomy, looking to recent, ongoing, and future trials.Recent Findings: Large definitive trials have provided insight into acute stroke care including broadening the therapeutic window for thrombolysis, alternatives to standard dose alteplase, the use of dual antiplatelet therapy early after minor ischemic stroke, and treating elevated blood pressure in intracerebral hemorrhage. Further ongoing and future trials are eagerly awaited in this ever-expanding area.Summary: Although definitive trials have led to improvements in acute stroke care, there remains a need for further research to improve our understanding of pathophysiological mechanisms underlying different stroke types with the potential for treatments to be tailored to the individual

    DNA lesion bypass and the stochastic dynamics of transcription coupled repair

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    DNA base damage is a major source of oncogenic mutations and disruption to gene expression. The stalling of RNA polymerase II (RNAP) at sites of DNA damage and the subsequent triggering of repair processes have major roles in shaping the genome-wide distribution of mutations, clearing barriers to transcription, and minimizing the production of miscoded gene products. Despite its importance for genetic integrity, key mechanistic features of this transcription-coupled repair (TCR) process are controversial or unknown. Here, we exploited a well-powered in vivo mammalian model system to explore the mechanistic properties and parameters of TCR for alkylation damage at fine spatial resolution and with discrimination of the damaged DNA strand. For rigorous interpretation, a generalizable mathematical model of DNA damage and TCR was developed. Fitting experimental data to the model and simulation revealed that RNA polymerases frequently bypass lesions without triggering repair, indicating that small alkylation adducts are unlikely to be an efficient barrier to gene expression. Following a burst of damage, the efficiency of transcription-coupled repair gradually decays through gene bodies with implications for the occurrence and accurate inference of driver mutations in cancer. The reinitation of transcription from the repair site is not a general feature of transcription-coupled repair, and the observed data is consistent with reinitiation never taking place. Collectively, these results reveal how the directional but stochastic activity of TCR shapes the distribution of mutations following DNA damage
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