1,441 research outputs found
The Vehicle, Spring 1992
Contents
POEMS
Makin\u27 Mudpies Nancy James page 6
Obscurity Kim Frost page 7
The Plea for a Pink One Victoria Bennett page 8
Mom\u27s Loving Push Amy Boone page 10
Through a Frog Laura Durnell page 12
Cold Snap A.L. Gallion page 12
Dimensity Anthony Smith page 13
Cold War Anthony Smith page 14
Get A Spoon Sheila Taylor page 15
Explore K. Thorsson page 16
FICTION
The Proofreader Jenny L. Shields page 18
Ba, Ba, Black Sheep Victoria Bennett page 22
Eat My Words Sheila Taylor page 27
BIOGRAPHIES page 30
all photography by Dan Kooncehttps://thekeep.eiu.edu/vehicle/1059/thumbnail.jp
Osteoprotegerin reduces the development of pain behaviour and joint pathology in a model of osteoarthritis
Acknowledgements: OPG-Fc was a kind gift from Amgen Ltd. Funding: This work was supported by Arthritis Research UK, grant number 18769Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Recommended from our members
Understanding climate data through commentary metadata: the CHARMe project
We describe the CHARMe project, which aims to link climate datasets with publications, user feedback and other items of "commentary metadata". The system will help users learn from previous community experience and select datasets that best suit their needs, as well as providing direct traceability between conclusions and the data that supported them. The project applies the principles of Linked Data and adopts the Open Annotation standard to record and publish commentary information. CHARMe contributes to the emerging landscape of "climate services", which will provide climate data and information to influence policy and decision-making. Although the project focuses on climate science, the technologies and concepts are very general and could be applied
to other fields
Sea ice extent and seasonality for the Early Pliocene northern Weddell Sea
Growth increment analysis coupled with stable isotopic data (δ18O/δ13C) from Early Pliocene (ca 4.7 Ma)
Austrochlamys anderssoni from shallow marine sediments of the Cockburn Island Formation, northern
Antarctic Peninsula, suggest these bivalves grew through much of the year, even during the coldest parts of
winter recorded in the shells. The high frequency fluctuation in growth increment width of A. anderssoni
appears to reflect periodic, but year-round, agitation of the water column enhancing benthic food supply
from organic detritus. This suggests that Austrochlamys favoured waters that were largely sea ice free. Our
data support interpretation of the Cockburn Island Formation as an interglacial marine deposit and the
previous hypothesis that Austrochlamys retreated from the Antarctic as sea ice extent expanded, this
transition occurring during climate cooling in the Late Pliocene
The importance of integration of stakeholder views in core outcome set development: Otitis Media with Effusion in children with cleft palate
© 2015 Harman et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Background: Approximately 75% of children with cleft palate (CP) have Otitis Media with Effusion (OME) histories. Evidence for the effective management of OME in these children is lacking. The inconsistency in outcome measurement in previous studies has led to a call for the development of a Core Outcome Set (COS). Despite the increase in the number of published COS, involvement of patients in the COS development process, and methods to integrate the views of patients and health professionals, to date have been limited. Methods and Findings: A list of outcomes measured in previous research was identified through reviewing the literature. Opinion on the importance of each of these outcomes was then sought from key stakeholders: Ear, Nose and Throat (ENT) surgeons, audiologists, cleft surgeons, speech and language therapists, specialist cleft nurses, psychologists, parents and children. The opinion of health professionals was sought in a three round Delphi survey where participants were asked to score each outcome using a bespoke online system. Parents and children were also asked to score outcomes in a survey and provided an in-depth insight into having OME through semi-structured interviews. The results of the Delphi survey, interviews and parent/patient survey were brought together in a final consensus meeting with representation from all stakeholders. A final set of eleven outcomes reached the definition of "consensus in" to form the recommended COS: hearing; chronic otitis media (COM); OME; receptive language skills; speech development; psycho social development; acute otitis media (AOM); cholesteatoma; side effects of treatment; listening skills; otalgia. Conclusions: We have produced a recommendation about the outcomes that should be measured, as a minimum, in studies of the management of OME in children with CP. The development process included input from key stakeholders and used novel methodology to integrate the opinion of healthcare professionals, parents and children
The Vehicle, Fall 1991
Table of Contents
ImprovisationAmy Schmitzerpage 5-6
Courthouse ClockAnthony Smithpage 7
The PaintingAngie Gallionpage 8
Empty MoonVictoria Bennettpage 9
ClarissaLaura Durnellpage 10
untitledNancy Jamespage 11
Imprisoned (photo)Dan Kooncepage 12
I Hit Mother Nature with My Ten SpeedJohn Haywardpage 13
The Realm of MotherJennifer Moropage 14-16
untitled (drawing)Mark Randallpage 20
With Purity and PerversionBret Evangelistapage 21
O\u27Hare AirportAnthony Smithpage 22
morgen, my desolationtravis mcdadepage 22-23
Ever GreenChris Rosenstockpage 24
JigsawThomas D. Schnarrepage 25-26
Notes on the Egyptian ExhibitVictoria Bennettpage 27
Moving OnChristina Roypage 28
weep my inquisitive hearttravis mcdadepage 29-30
Dance (drawing)Tim Cullotonpage 31
Roots of the OakThomas D. Schnarrepage 32-33
god\u27s suicideLiam Burkepage 34
The Poa TreeSheila Taylorpage 35https://thekeep.eiu.edu/vehicle/1056/thumbnail.jp
Selective logging shows no impact on the dietary breadth of a generalist bat species: The fawn leaf-nosed bat (Hipposideros cervinus)
Logging activities degrade forest habitats across large areas of the tropics, but the impacts on trophic interactions that underpin forest ecosystems are poorly understood. DNA metabarcoding provides an invaluable tool to investigate such interactions, allowing analysis at a far greater scale and resolution than has previously been possible. We analysed the diet of the insectivorous fawn leaf-nosed bat Hipposideros cervinus across a forest disturbance gradient in Borneo, using a dataset of ecological interactions from an unprecedented number of bat-derived faecal samples. Bats predominantly consumed insects from the orders Lepidoptera, Diptera, Blattodea, and Coleoptera, and the taxonomic composition of their diet remained relatively consistent across sites regardless of logging disturbance. There was little difference in the richness of prey consumed per-bat in each logging treatment, indicating potential resilience of this species to habitat degradation. In fact, bats consumed a high richness of prey items, and intensive sampling is needed to reliably compare feeding ecology over multiple sites. Multiple bioinformatic parameters were used, to assess how they altered our perception of sampling completeness. While parameter choice altered estimates of completeness, a very high sampling effort was always required to detect the entire prey community
Is there an app for that? A case study of the potentials and limitations of the participatory turn and networked publics for classical music audience engagement
The participatory turn, fuelled by discourses and rhetoric regarding social media, and in the
aftermath of the dot.com crash of the early 2000s, enrols to some extent an idea of being
able to deploy networks to achieve institutional aims. The arts and cultural sector in the UK,
in the face of funding cuts, has been keen to engage with such ideas in order to demonstrate
value for money; by improving the efficiency of their operations, improving their respective
audience experience and ultimately increasing audience size and engagement. Drawing on a
case study compiled via a collaborative research project with a UK-based symphony
orchestra (UKSO) we interrogate the potentials of social media engagement for audience
development work through participatory media and networked publics. We argue that the
literature related to mobile phones and applications (‘apps’) has focused primarily on
marketing for engagement where institutional contexts are concerned. In contrast, our
analysis elucidates the broader potentials and limitations of social-media-enabled apps for
audience development and engagement beyond a marketing paradigm. In the case of UKSO,
it appears that the technologically deterministic discourses often associated with institutional
enrolment of participatory media and networked publics may not necessarily apply due to
classical music culture. More generally, this work raises the contradictory nature of
networked publics and argues for increased critical engagement with the concept
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