163 research outputs found
‘A small town of character’: locating a new Scottish university, 1963-1965
The 1960s are generally regarded as a decisive decade for the postwar expansion of British universities, the process widely associated with the publication of the Robbins Report on Higher Education in October 1963. This period saw significant increases in the number of full-time university students and in the level of public expenditure devoted to higher education. This chapter analyses the debates triggered by the Robbins committee’s recommendation to establish a new university in Scotland, eventually located in the county town of Stirling. Based on previously unexamined documents in the UK National Archives, we argue that the decision to create the new university in Stirling rather than the alternative locations of Ayr, Cumbernauld, Dumfries, Falkirk, Inverness, and Perth arose from the interplay of three somewhat contradictory pressures: the preference of the Robbins committee for new universities in or near to large cities; the prejudices of the academics charged with making this decision for environments that reproduced the perceived creative advantages of the ancient universities where they were educated or employed, specifically Oxford; and the highly successful lobbying campaign in support of Stirling
Gene Expression Profiling in the Type 1 Diabetes Rat Diaphragm
BACKGROUND:Respiratory muscle contractile performance is impaired by diabetes, mechanisms of which included altered carbohydrate and lipid metabolism, oxidative stress and changes in membrane electrophysiology. The present study examined to what extent these cellular perturbations involve changes in gene expression. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS:Diaphragm muscle from streptozotocin-diabetic rats was analyzed with Affymetrix gene expression arrays. Diaphragm from diabetic rats had 105 genes with at least +/-2-fold significantly changed expression (55 increased, 50 decreased), and these were assigned to gene ontology groups based on over-representation analysis using DAVID software. There was increased expression of genes involved in palmitoyl-CoA hydrolase activity (a component of lipid metabolism) (P = 0.037, n = 2 genes, fold change 4.2 to 27.5) and reduced expression of genes related to carbohydrate metabolism (P = 0.000061, n = 8 genes, fold change -2.0 to -8.5). Other gene ontology groups among upregulated genes were protein ubiquitination (P = 0.0053, n = 4, fold change 2.2 to 3.4), oxidoreductase activity (P = 0.024, n = 8, fold change 2.1 to 6.0), and morphogenesis (P = 0.012, n = 10, fold change 2.1 to 4.3). Other downregulated gene groups were extracellular region (including extracellular matrix and collagen) (P = 0.00032, n = 13, fold change -2.2 to -3.7) and organogenesis (P = 0.032, n = 7, fold change -2.1 to -3.7). Real-time PCR confirmed the directionality of changes in gene expression for 30 of 31 genes tested. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE:These data indicate that in diaphragm muscle type 1 diabetes increases expression of genes involved in lipid energetics, oxidative stress and protein ubiquitination, decreases expression of genes involved in carbohydrate metabolism, and has little effect on expression of ion channel genes. Reciprocal changes in expression of genes involved in carbohydrate and lipid metabolism may change the availability of energetic substrates and thereby directly modulate fatigue resistance, an important issue for a muscle like the diaphragm which needs to contract without rest for the entire lifetime of the organism
Sports coaching and the law of negligence: implications for coaching practice
The ordinary principles of the law of negligence are applicable in the context of sport, including claims brought against volunteer and professional coaches. Adopting the perspective of the coach, this article intends to raise awareness of the emerging intersection between the law of negligence and sports coaching, by utilising an interdisciplinary analysis designed to better safeguard and reassure coaches mindful of legal liability. Detailed scrutiny of two cases concerning alleged negligent coaching, with complementary discussion of some of the ethical dilemmas facing modern coaches, reinforces the legal duty and obligation of all coaches to adopt objectively reasonable and justifiable coaching practices when interacting with athletes. Problematically, since research suggests that some coaching practice may be underpinned by ‘entrenched legitimacy’ and ‘uncritical inertia’, it is argued that coach education and training should place a greater emphasis on developing a coach’s awareness and understanding of the evolving legal context in which they discharge the duty of care incumbent upon them
Communication media and the dead:from the Stone Age to Facebook
This article argues as follows: (i) The presence of the dead within a society depends in part on available communication technologies, specifically speech, stone, sculpture, writing, printing, photography and phonography (including the mass media), and most recently the internet. (ii) Each communication technology affords possibilities for the dead to construct and legitimate particular social groups and institutions – from the oral construction of kinship, to the megalithic legitimation of the territorial rights of chiefdoms, to the written word’s construction of world religions and nations, to the photographic and phonographic construction of celebrity-based neo-tribalism, and to the digital reconstruction of family and friendship. (iii) Historically, concerns about the dead have on a number of occasions aided the development of new communication technologies – the causal connection between the two can go both ways. The argument is based primarily on critical synthesis of existing research literature
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A Quantitative and Qualitative Exploration of Critical Factors in the IAI-CGM Framework: The Perspective of Saudi Patients with Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus
An internet of things-enabled continuous glucose monitor (IoT-CGM) is a medical device designed for continuous monitoring of patients’ glucose levels without the need for frequent fingerstick blood samples. This study aims to measure the adoption intention of individuals with type-1 diabetes in Saudi Arabia, with a specific focus on identifying the critical factors influencing their intention to adopt IoT-CGMs. The surge in the number of type-1 diabetes patients in Saudi Arabia demands prompt and effective measures. This medical condition is becoming significantly more prevalent, with reports indicating that a quarter of Saudi adults are expected to develop diabetes by 2030. This study employed both quantitative and qualitative approaches to investigate the significance of practical, technological, and user behaviour factors in the intention to adopt internet of things-enabled continuous glucose monitors (IAI-CGM) among patients with type-1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) in Saudi Arabia. Quantitative data were collected from 873 T1DM patients in Saudi Arabia. Simultaneously, semi-structured interviews were conducted with 15 T1DM patients from King Khaled Najran Hospital (KKNH) and the Najran region in Saudi Arabia. The framework predicts a significant impact of all factors on the adoption intention except for technology-related self-efficacy (TRSE), allowing for the assessment of Saudi T1DM patients’ readiness for IoT-CGM. Conversely, accuracy and accessibility emerge as the primary driving themes, with accurate results significantly influencing individuals towards adopting IoT-CGMs, as revealed in the qualitative results. The complexity of new technologies and the lengthy process involved in acquiring the device hindered the adoption of IoT-CGMs. However, the user-friendly interfaces of such devices contributed to the adoption intention. Patients’ attitudes significantly influenced the tendency to adopt the technology, although concerns about appearance were also evident. The results of this study provide recommendations to enhance the overall quality of the user experience with IoT-CGMs. It is recommended that CGM makers explore ways to reduce the cost of these devices through mass production, particularly for individuals residing in countries with lower standards of living. Furthermore, the novelty of the framework may inspire the development of comparable frameworks for wearable or attached health-monitoring devices catering to patients with various medical conditions and in different geographical locations.</p
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