523 research outputs found
Determinates of Success in an ALC Classroom
Students who attend an Alternative Learning Center (ALC) do so for a variety of reasons- They may arrive due to a deficit in credit, teen parent status, at-risk of dropping out, or behavioral issues. Once at the ALC many students comment that they are more successful, than they were in their main public high school. This study is an effort to understand what factors take place in my classroom at the ALC that increases the level of success felt by the students. Through open ended interviewing ten students shared their experiences in my classroom regarding the practices that I, as their teacher, engage in helps them to feel successful. Four key themes emerged from the student interviews concerning what I do in my classroom to help students feel successful. Recommendations based on the findings include ways that I can and should modify my classroom practices to increase student success
Changes in hemlock looper [Lepidoptera: Geometridae] pupal distribution through a 3-year outbreak cycle
La distribution des chrysalides de lâarpenteuse de la pruche, Lambdina fiscellaria, a Ă©tĂ© Ă©tudiĂ©e au cours dâun cycle Ă©pidĂ©mique dâune durĂ©e de trois ans prĂšs du Lac Princeton sur lâĂźle dâAnticosti au QuĂ©bec. Au total, 10 sapins ont Ă©tĂ© coupĂ©s et toutes les chrysalides ont Ă©tĂ© comptĂ©es sur le tronc et les branches (partie non-foliĂ©e vs foliĂ©e) de la cime infĂ©rieure, mĂ©diane et supĂ©rieure, ainsi que sur le tronc sous la cime. En condition prĂ©Ă©pidĂ©mique, les chrysalides ont principalement Ă©tĂ© trouvĂ©es sur les branches des cimes mĂ©dianes et supĂ©rieures. Durant lâĂ©pidĂ©mie, la densitĂ© des chrysalides nâa pas augmentĂ© dans ces sites de pupaison et les larves se sont surtout transformĂ©es en chrysalides sur le tronc, Ă partir du sol jusque dans la cime mĂ©diane, ainsi que sur les branches de la cime infĂ©rieure. Peu de chrysalides ont Ă©tĂ© trouvĂ©es sur la partie foliĂ©e des branches en pĂ©riode post-Ă©pidĂ©mique, la plupart Ă©tant trouvĂ©es sur la partie basale non-foliĂ©e qui apparaĂźt comme un endroit prĂ©fĂ©rentiel pour la pupaison de l'arpenteuse de la pruche. De façon Ă optimiser la dĂ©tection des augmentations de populations dans les rĂ©seaux de surveillance, des piĂšges Ă chrysalides devraient ĂȘtre placĂ©s Ă hauteur de poitrine sur le tronc de sapins baumiers.The hemlock looper, Lambdina fiscellaria, pupal distribution was studied through a 3-year outbreak cycle near Lac Princeton on Anticosti Island in Quebec. Over the 3 years, 10 balsam fir trees were cut and all pupae were counted on the stem and branches (non-foliated vs foliated parts) of the lower, middle and upper crowns and on the stem below crown. In pre-outbreak conditions, pupae were mostly found on branches of the middle and upper crowns. During the outbreak, pupal density did not increase on these parts of the trees, since pupae were mostly found on the stem, from the ground to the middle crown, and on branches of the lower crown. Few pupae were found on the foliated portion of branches in post-outbreak conditions but most were found on the basal non-foliated part of branches, which appears to be a preferred location for hemlock looper pupation. In order to optimize detection of population increases in monitoring networks, we suggest using pupal traps at breast height on balsam fir trees
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Bioinformatics analysis of the early inflammatory response in a rat thermal injury model
BACKGROUND: Thermal injury is among the most severe forms of trauma and its effects are both local and systemic. Response to thermal injury includes cellular protection mechanisms, inflammation, hypermetabolism, prolonged catabolism, organ dysfunction and immuno-suppression. It has been hypothesized that gene expression patterns in the liver will change with severe burns, thus reflecting the role the liver plays in the response to burn injury. Characterizing the molecular fingerprint (i.e., expression profile) of the inflammatory response resulting from burns may help elucidate the activated mechanisms and suggest new therapeutic intervention. In this paper we propose a novel integrated framework for analyzing time-series transcriptional data, with emphasis on the burn-induced response within the context of the rat animal model. Our analysis robustly identifies critical expression motifs, indicative of the dynamic evolution of the inflammatory response and we further propose a putative reconstruction of the associated transcription factor activities. RESULTS: Implementation of our algorithm on data obtained from an animal (rat) burn injury study identified 281 genes corresponding to 4 unique profiles. Enrichment evaluation upon both gene ontologies and transcription factors, verifies the inflammation-specific character of the selections and the rationalization of the burn-induced inflammatory response. Conducting the transcription network reconstruction and analysis, we have identified transcription factors, including AHR, Octamer Binding Proteins, Kruppel-like Factors, and cell cycle regulators as being highly important to an organism's response to burn response. These transcription factors are notable due to their roles in pathways that play a part in the gross physiological response to burn such as changes in the immune response and inflammation. CONCLUSION: Our results indicate that our novel selection/classification algorithm has been successful in selecting out genes with play an important role in thermal injury. Additionally, we have demonstrated the value of an integrative approach in identifying possible points of intervention, namely the activation of certain transcription factors that govern the organism's response
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Resuscitation of Ischemic Donor Livers with Normothermic Machine Perfusion: A Metabolic Flux Analysis of Treatment in Rats
Normothermic machine perfusion has previously been demonstrated to restore damaged warm ischemic livers to transplantable condition in animal models. However, the mechanisms of recovery are unclear, preventing rational optimization of perfusion systems and slowing clinical translation of machine perfusion. In this study, organ recovery time and major perfusate shortcomings were evaluated using a comprehensive metabolic analysis of organ function in perfusion prior to successful transplantation. Two groups, Fresh livers and livers subjected to 1 hr of warm ischemia (WI) received perfusion for a total preservation time of 6 hrs, followed by successful transplantation. 24 metabolic fluxes were directly measured and 38 stoichiometrically-related fluxes were estimated via a mass balance model of the major pathways of energy metabolism. This analysis revealed stable metabolism in Fresh livers throughout perfusion while identifying two distinct metabolic states in WI livers, separated at t = 2 hrs, coinciding with recovery of oxygen uptake rates to Fresh liver values. This finding strongly suggests successful organ resuscitation within 2 hrs of perfusion. Overall perfused livers regulated metabolism of perfusate substrates according to their metabolic needs, despite supraphysiological levels of some metabolites. This study establishes the first integrative metabolic basis for the dynamics of recovery during perfusion treatment of marginal livers. Our initial findings support enhanced oxygen delivery for both timely recovery and long-term sustenance. These results are expected to lead the optimization of the treatment protocols and perfusion media from a metabolic perspective, facilitating translation to clinical use
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Development of Metabolic Indicators of Burn Injury: Very Low Density Lipoprotein (VLDL) and Acetoacetate Are Highly Correlated to Severity of Burn Injury in Rats
Hypermetabolism is a significant sequela to severe trauma such as burns, as well as critical illnesses such as cancer. It persists in parallel to, or beyond, the original pathology for many months as an often-fatal comorbidity. Currently, diagnosis is based solely on clinical observations of increased energy expenditure, severe muscle wasting and progressive organ dysfunction. In order to identify the minimum number of necessary variables, and to develop a rat model of burn injury-induced hypermetabolism, we utilized data mining approaches to identify the metabolic variables that strongly correlate to the severity of injury. A clustering-based algorithm was introduced into a regression model of the extent of burn injury. As a result, a neural network model which employs VLDL and acetoacetate levels was demonstrated to predict the extent of burn injury with 88% accuracy in the rat model. The physiological importance of the identified variables in the context of hypermetabolism, and necessary steps in extension of this preliminary model to a clinically utilizable index of severity of burn injury are outlined
Experimental Demonstration of Squeezed State Quantum Averaging
We propose and experimentally demonstrate a universal quantum averaging
process implementing the harmonic mean of quadrature variances. The harmonic
mean protocol can be used to efficiently stabilize a set of fragile squeezed
light sources with statistically fluctuating noise levels. The averaged
variances are prepared probabilistically by means of linear optical
interference and measurement induced conditioning. We verify that the
implemented harmonic mean outperforms the standard arithmetic mean strategy.
The effect of quantum averaging is experimentally tested both for uncorrelated
and partially correlated noise sources with sub-Poissonian shot noise or
super-Poissonian shot noise characteristics.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Perfect quantum error correction coding in 24 laser pulses
An efficient coding circuit is given for the perfect quantum error correction
of a single qubit against arbitrary 1-qubit errors within a 5 qubit code. The
circuit presented employs a double `classical' code, i.e., one for bit flips
and one for phase shifts. An implementation of this coding circuit on an
ion-trap quantum computer is described that requires 26 laser pulses. A further
circuit is presented requiring only 24 laser pulses, making it an efficient
protection scheme against arbitrary 1-qubit errors. In addition, the
performance of two error correction schemes, one based on the quantum Zeno
effect and the other using standard methods, is compared. The quantum Zeno
error correction scheme is found to fail completely for a model of noise based
on phase-diffusion.Comment: Replacement paper: Lost two laser pulses gained one author; added
appendix with circuits easily implementable on an ion-trap compute
âThese Trees Have Stories to Tellâ: Linking DĂ«nesÇ«ÌĆınĂ© Oral History of Caribou Use with Trample Scar Frequency on Black Spruce Roots at Éedacho KuĂ©
For thousands of years Éedacho KuĂ© (Artillery Lake, Northwest Territories) has been a key water crossing site for barren-ground caribou (Rangifer tarandus groenlandicus). Human disturbance of barren-ground caribou habitat in northern Canada has emerged as an important focus of study in the last decade; particularly in the Bathurst range of the Northwest Territories where caribou populations have declined by more than 95% since the 1980s. Guided by local Indigenous leaders and Elders, a collaborative research project was developed with the DĂ«nesÇ«ÌĆınĂ© people of ĆutsĂ«l Kâe DĂ«ne First Nation (2012 â 14). This paper describes linkages between knowledge derived from DĂ«nesÇ«ÌĆınĂ© oral history and quantitative dendroecological analysis of trample scars on black spruce (Picea mariana) root samples collected at Éedacho KuĂ© to provide a better understanding of caribou use at this location. Findings from oral histories and dendroecology analysis were consistent with one another and with previous dendroecology study in the region, although some discrepancies were detected in data from 1995 â 2006 that require further study to elucidate. Key findings include relatively low caribou use at Éedacho KuĂ© during the 1930s and late 1960s, with use increasing into the 1970s and peaking in the late 1980s, as well as Elder and hunter reports of no caribou in some years between 2005 and 2012. This work addresses a gap in scientific data about barren-ground caribou movements at Éedacho KuĂ© prior to satellite collar use in 1996 and corroborates previously documented oral histories about the enduring value of Éedacho KuĂ© as critical habitat to barren-ground caribou. Given the drastic decline of the Bathurst caribou over the last two decades, more research is needed to understand movements and their relationship to population dynamics. In this context, the research approach described in this paper could be used as an example of how to meaningfully bring together place-based Indigenous knowledge and science in addressing an urgent issue of Arctic sustainability. Â
 Depuis des milliers dâannĂ©es, Éedacho KuĂ© (lac Artillery, Territoires du Nord-Ouest) sert dâimportant point de franchissement de cours dâeau pour le caribou de la toundra (Rangifer tarandus groenlandicus). La perturbation anthropique de lâhabitat du caribou de la toundra dans le Nord canadien a fait lâobjet dâĂ©tudes importantes ces dix derniĂšres annĂ©es, plus particuliĂšrement dans lâaire de rĂ©partition de Bathurst, dans les Territoires du Nord-Ouest, oĂč les populations de caribous ont chutĂ© de plus de 95 % depuis les annĂ©es 1980. Un projet de recherche collaborative guidĂ© par des chefs et des aĂźnĂ©s autochtones locaux a Ă©tĂ© conçu en consultation avec le peuple DĂ«nesÇ«ÌĆınĂ© de la PremiĂšre Nation ĆutsĂ«l Kâe DĂ«ne (2012 â 2014). Cet article dĂ©crit les liens entre les connaissances dĂ©rivĂ©es de lâhistoire orale des DĂ«nesÇ«ÌĆınĂ©s et lâanalyse dendroĂ©cologique quantitative des cicatrices de piĂ©tinement se trouvant sur les Ă©chantillons de racines dâĂ©pinettes noires (Picea mariana) prĂ©levĂ©s Ă Éedacho KuĂ© afin de mieux comprendre lâutilisation de ce lieu par les caribous. Les constatations dĂ©coulant de lâhistoire orale et de lâanalyse dendroĂ©cologique concordaient ensemble ainsi quâavec une Ă©tude dendroĂ©cologique antĂ©rieure de la rĂ©gion, bien que certains Ă©carts aient Ă©tĂ© dĂ©celĂ©s dans les donnĂ©es de 1995 Ă 2006, Ă©carts qui se doivent dâĂȘtre Ă©tudiĂ©s afin dâĂȘtre Ă©lucidĂ©s. Parmi les principales constatations, notons lâutilisation relativement faible de Éedacho KuĂ© par les caribous pendant les annĂ©es 1930 et la fin des annĂ©es 1960, une utilisation accrue dans les annĂ©es 1970 ayant atteint un sommet vers la fin des annĂ©es 1980, ainsi que le signalement de lâabsence de caribous par les aĂźnĂ©s et les chasseurs au cours de certaines annĂ©es entre 2005 et 2012. Notre recherche comble un manque de donnĂ©es scientifiques relativement aux dĂ©placements du caribou de la toundra Ă Éedacho KuĂ© avant que les colliers Ă©metteurs Ă transmission par satellite ne commencent Ă ĂȘtre employĂ©s en 1996. Elle corrobore lâhistoire orale documentĂ©e prĂ©cĂ©demment au sujet de la valeur durable de ?edacho KuĂ© en tant quâhabitat critique du caribou de la toundra. En raison de la chute importante de la population du caribou de Bathurst ces deux derniĂšres dĂ©cennies, de plus amples recherches sâimposent afin de comprendre les dĂ©placements et leur lien avec la dynamique de la population. Dans ce contexte, la dĂ©marche de recherche dĂ©crite dans cet article pourrait servir dâexemple montrant comment concilier les connaissances autochtones dâun endroit avec la science pour faire face Ă un enjeu urgent de durabilitĂ© de lâArctique.
Fe limitation decreases transcriptional regulation over the diel cycle in the model diatom Thalassiosira pseudonana.
Iron (Fe) is an important growth factor for diatoms and its availability is further restricted by changes in the carbonate chemistry of seawater. We investigated the physiological attributes and transcriptional profiles of the diatom Thalassiosira pseudonana grown on a day: night cycle under different CO2/pH and iron concentrations, that in combination generated available iron (Fe\u27) concentrations of 1160, 233, 58 and 12 pM. We found the light-dark conditions to be the main driver of transcriptional patterns, followed by Fe\u27 concentration and CO2 availability, respectively. At the highest Fe\u27 (1160 pM), 55% of the transcribed genes were differentially expressed between day and night, whereas at the lowest Fe\u27 (12 pM), only 28% of the transcribed genes displayed comparable patterns. While Fe limitation disrupts the diel expression patterns for genes in most central metabolism pathways, the diel expression of light- signaling molecules and glycolytic genes was relatively robust in response to reduced Fe\u27. Moreover, we identified a non-canonical splicing of transcripts encoding triose-phosphate isomerase, a key-enzyme of glycolysis, generating transcript isoforms that would encode proteins with and without an active site. Transcripts that encoded an active enzyme maintained a diel expression at low Fe\u27, while transcripts that encoded the non-active enzyme lost the diel expression. This work illustrates the interplay between nutrient limitation and transcriptional regulation over the diel cycle. Considering that future ocean conditions will reduce the availability of Fe in many parts of the oceans, our work identifies some of the regulatory mechanisms that may shape future ecological communities
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