11 research outputs found

    A services approach to social marketing

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    Stereo–SCIDAR System for Improvement of Adaptive Optics Space Debris-tracking Activities

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    The Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics (RSAA) in conjunction with the Space Environment Research Centre (SERC) has developed a single detector stereo-SCIDAR (SCintillation Detection And Ranging) system to characterise atmospheric turbulence. We present the mechanical and optical design, as well as some preliminary results. SERC has a vested interest in space situational awareness (SSA), with a focus on space debris. RSAA is developing adaptive optics (AO) systems to aid in the detection of, ranging to, and orbit propagation of said debris. These AO systems will be directly improved by measurements provided by the usage of the stereoSCIDAR system developed. SCIDAR is a triangulation technique that utilises a detector to take short exposures of the scintillation pupil patterns of a double star. There is an altitude at which light propagating from these stars passes through the same 'patch' of turbulence in Earth's atmosphere: this patch induces wavefront aberrations that are projected onto different regions of the scintillation pupil patterns. An auto-correlation function is employed to extract the height at which the turbulence was introduced into the wavefronts. Unlike stereo-SCIDAR systems developed by other organisations-which utilise a dedicated detector for each of the pupil images-our system will use a pupil-separating prism and a single detector to image both pupils. Using one detector reduces cost as well as design and optical complexity. The system has been installed (in generalised SCIDAR form with a stereoSCIDAR upgrade scheduled for next year), tested and operated on the EOS Space Systems' 1.8m debris-ranging telescope at Mount Stromlo, Canberra. Specifically, it was designed to observe double stars separated by 5 to 25 arcseconds with a greater magnitude difference tolerance than conventional SCIDAR, that conventional difference being roughly 2.5. We anticipate taking measurements of turbulent layers up to 15km in altitude with a resolution of approximately 1km. Our system will also be sensitive to ground layer atmospheric turbulence. Here we present details of the optical and mechanical design in addition to preliminary results.The authors would like to acknowledge the support of the Cooperative Research Centre for Space Environment Management (SERC Limited) through the Australian Government's Cooperative Research Centre Programme. This research is supported by an Australian Government Research Training Program (RTP) scholarshi

    Talking About the Smokes: a large-scale, community-based participatory research project

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    Objective: To describe the Talking About The Smokes (TATS) project according to the World Health Organization guiding principles for conducting community-based participatory research (PR) involving indigenous peoples, to assist others planning large-scale PR projects.\ud \ud Design, setting and participants: The TATS project was initiated in Australia in 2010 as part of the International Tobacco Control Policy Evaluation Project, and surveyed a representative sample of 2522 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander adults to assess the impact of tobacco control policies. The PR process of the TATS project, which aimed to build partnerships to create equitable conditions for knowledge production, was mapped and summarised onto a framework adapted from the WHO principles.\ud \ud Main outcome measures: Processes describing consultation and approval, partnerships and research agreements, communication, funding, ethics and consent, data and benefits of the research.\ud \ud Results: The TATS project involved baseline and follow-up surveys conducted in 34 Aboriginal community-controlled health services and one Torres Strait community. Consistent with the WHO PR principles, the TATS project built on community priorities and strengths through strategic partnerships from project inception, and demonstrated the value of research agreements and trusting relationships to foster shared decision making, capacity building and a commitment to Indigenous data ownership.\ud \ud Conclusions: Community-based PR methodology, by definition, needs adaptation to local settings and priorities. The TATS project demonstrates that large-scale research can be participatory, with strong Indigenous community engagement and benefits

    Using action research to support quality early years practice

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    This article examines the effectiveness of action research as a continuous professional development (CPD) tool. The aim of the CPD programme was to support 14 community-based Early Childhood Care and Education (ECCE) centres in Ireland to improve quality in their settings through the implementation of the national quality and curriculum frameworks for early childhood education. A community action research approach informed the development of the programme and ensured that plans were implemented. Learning communities, reflective practice and professional dialogue were key elements. Participants found the programme easy to understand and useful to their practice. The combination of purposeful peer interaction and learning through action helped improve the quality of teaching and learning in the settings. Action research supported the implementation of change by helping participants develop the skills needed, both individually and collectively, to deliver outcomes they really cared about

    The EADC-ADNI Harmonized Protocol for manual hippocampal segmentation on magnetic resonance: Evidence of validity

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    BackgroundAn international Delphi panel has defined a harmonized protocol (HarP) for the manual segmentation of the hippocampus on MR. The aim of this study is to study the concurrent validity of the HarP toward local protocols, and its major sources of variance.MethodsFourteen tracers segmented 10 Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) cases scanned at 1.5 T and 3T following local protocols, qualified for segmentation based on the HarP through a standard web-platform and resegmented following the HarP. The five most accurate tracers followed the HarP to segment 15 ADNI cases acquired at three time points on both 1.5 T and 3T.ResultsThe agreement among tracers was relatively low with the local protocols (absolute left/right ICC 0.44/0.43) and much higher with the HarP (absolute left/right ICC 0.88/0.89). On the larger set of 15 cases, the HarP agreement within (left/right ICC range: 0.94/0.95 to 0.99/0.99) and among tracers (left/right ICC range: 0.89/0.90) was very high. The volume variance due to different tracers was 0.9% of the total, comparing favorably to variance due to scanner manufacturer (1.2), atrophy rates (3.5), hemispheric asymmetry (3.7), field strength (4.4), and significantly smaller than the variance due to atrophy (33.5%, P < .001), and physiological variability (49.2%, P < .001).ConclusionsThe HarP has high measurement stability compared with local segmentation protocols, and good reproducibility within and among human tracers. Hippocampi segmented with the HarP can be used as a reference for the qualification of human tracers and automated segmentation algorithms

    Blessed or Not? The New Spinster in England and the United States in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries

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    Analgesic antipyretic use among young children in the TEDDY study : No association with islet autoimmunity

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    Background: The use of analgesic antipyretics (ANAP) in children have long been a matter of controversy. Data on their practical use on an individual level has, however, been scarce. There are indications of possible effects on glucose homeostasis and immune function related to the use of ANAP. The aim of this study was to analyze patterns of analgesic antipyretic use across the clinical centers of The Environmental Determinants of Diabetes in the Young (TEDDY) prospective cohort study and test if ANAP use was a risk factor for islet autoimmunity. Methods: Data were collected for 8542 children in the first 2.5 years of life. Incidence was analyzed using logistic regression with country and first child status as independent variables. Holm's procedure was used to adjust for multiplicity of intercountry comparisons. Time to autoantibody seroconversion was analyzed using a Cox proportional hazards model with cumulative analgesic use as primary time dependent covariate of interest. For each categorization, a generalized estimating equation (GEE) approach was used. Results: Higher prevalence of ANAP use was found in the U.S. (95.7%) and Sweden (94.8%) compared to Finland (78.1%) and Germany (80.2%). First-born children were more commonly given acetaminophen (OR 1.26; 95% CI 1.07, 1.49; p = 0.007) but less commonly Non-Steroidal Anti-inflammatory Drugs (NSAID) (OR 0.86; 95% CI 0.78, 0.95; p = 0.002). Acetaminophen and NSAID use in the absence of fever and infection was more prevalent in the U.S. (40.4%; 26.3% of doses) compared to Sweden, Finland and Germany (p < 0.001). Acetaminophen or NSAID use before age 2.5 years did not predict development of islet autoimmunity by age 6 years (HR 1.02, 95% CI 0.99-1.09; p = 0.27). In a sub-analysis, acetaminophen use in children with fever weakly predicted development of islet autoimmunity by age 3 years (HR 1.05; 95% CI 1.01-1.09; p = 0.024). Conclusions: ANAP use in young children is not a risk factor for seroconversion by age 6 years. Use of ANAP is widespread in young children, and significantly higher in the U.S. compared to other study sites, where use is common also in absence of fever and infection

    Heterozygous loss-of-function variants significantly expand the phenotypes associated with loss of GDF11

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    Growth differentiation factor 11 (GDF11) is a key signaling protein required for proper development of many organ systems. Only one prior study has associated an inherited GDF11 variant with a dominant human disease in a family with variable craniofacial and vertebral abnormalities. Here, we expand the phenotypic spectrum associated with GDF11 variants and document the nature of the variants.We present a cohort of six probands with de novo and inherited nonsense/frameshift (4/6 patients) and missense (2/6) variants in GDF11. We generated gdf11 mutant zebrafish to model loss of gdf11 phenotypes and used an overexpression screen in Drosophila to test variant functionality.Patients with variants in GDF11 presented with craniofacial (5/6), vertebral (5/6), neurological (6/6), visual (4/6), cardiac (3/6), auditory (3/6), and connective tissue abnormalities (3/6). gdf11 mutant zebrafish show craniofacial abnormalities and body segmentation defects that match some patient phenotypes. Expression of the patients’ variants in the fly showed that one nonsense variant in GDF11 is a severe loss-of-function (LOF) allele whereas the missense variants in our cohort are partial LOF variants.GDF11 is needed for human development, particularly neuronal development, and LOF GDF11 alleles can affect the development of numerous organs and tissues
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