8 research outputs found
Using digital and hand printing techniques to compensate for loss: re-establishing colour and texture in historic textiles
Conservators use a range of 'gap filling' techniques to improve the structural stability and presentation of objects. Textile conservators often use fabric supports to provide reinforcement for weak areas of a textile and to provide a visual infill in missing areas. The most common technique is to use dyed fabrics of a single colour but while a plain dyed support provides good reinforcement, it can be visually obtrusive when used with patterned or textured textiles. Two recent postgraduate dissertation projects at the Textile Conservation Centre (TCC) have experimented with hand printing and digital imaging techniques to alter the appearance of support fabrics so that they are less visually obtrusive and blend well with the colour and texture of the textile being supported. Case studies demonstrate the successful use of these techniques on a painted hessian rocking horse and a knitted glove from an archaeological context
NordicDogs_4mars2014
MAP file with data on genetic markers: NordicDogs_4mars2014.ma
NordicDogs_4mars2014
PED file with individual data: NordicDogs_4mars2014.pe
NordicDogs_ID
Excel file with list of individuals and dog breeds: NordicDogs_ID.xls
Evidence for a familial pregnancy-induced hypertension locus in the eNOS-gene region.
Pregnancy-induced hypertension may be regarded as a manifestation of endothelial-cell dysfunction. The role of the eNOS gene in the development of a familial pregnancy-induced hypertension was evaluated by analysis of linkage among affected sisters and in multiplex families (n = 50). Markers from a 4-cM region encoding the eNOS gene showed distortion from the expected allele sharing among affected sisters (P = .001-.05), and the statistic obtained from the multilocus application of the affected-pedigree-member method also showed distortion (T[f(P)=sqrt(P)] = 3.53; P < .001). A LOD score of 3.36 was obtained for D7S505 when a best-fitting model derived from genetic epidemiological data was used, and LOD scores of 2.54-4.03 were obtained when various other genetic models were used. Estimates of recombination rate, rather than maximum LOD-score values, were affected by changes in the genetic parameters. The transmission-disequilibrium test, a model-free estimate of linkage, showed strongest association and linkage with a microsatellite within intron 13 of the eNOS gene (P = .005). These results support the localization of a familial pregnancy-induced hypertension-susceptibility locus in the region of chromosome 7q36 encoding the eNOS gene