209 research outputs found

    Technological cost%3CU%2B2010%3Ereduction pathways for axial%3CU%2B2010%3Eflow turbines in the marine hydrokinetic environment.

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    This report considers and prioritizes potential technical costreduction pathways for axialflow turbines designed for tidal, river, and ocean current resources. This report focuses on technical research and development costreduction pathways related to the device technology rather than environmental monitoring or permitting opportunities. Three sources of information were utilized to understand current cost drivers and develop a list of potential costreduction pathways: a literature review of technical work related to axialflow turbines, the U.S. Department of Energy Reference Model effort, and informal webinars and other targeted interactions with industry developers. Data from these various information sources were aggregated and prioritized with respect to potential impact on the lifetime levelized cost of energy. The four most promising costreduction pathways include structural design optimization; improved deployment, maintenance, and recovery; system simplicity and reliability; and array optimization

    Lesion Loci of Impaired Affective Prosody: A Systematic Review of Evidence from Stroke

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    Affective prosody, or the changes in rate, rhythm, pitch, and loudness that convey emotion, has long been implicated as a function of the right hemisphere (RH), yet there is a dearth of literature identifying the specific neural regions associated with its processing. The current systematic review aimed to evaluate the evidence on affective prosody localization in the RH. One hundred and ninety articles from 1970 to February 2020 investigating affective prosody comprehension and production in patients with focal brain damage were identified via database searches. Eleven articles met inclusion criteria, passed quality reviews, and were analyzed for affective prosody localization. Acute, subacute, and chronic lesions demonstrated similar profile characteristics. Localized right antero-superior (i.e., dorsal stream) regions contributed to affective prosody production impairments, whereas damage to more postero-lateral (i.e., ventral stream) regions resulted in affective prosody comprehension deficits. This review provides support that distinct RH regions are vital for affective prosody comprehension and production, aligning with literature reporting RH activation for affective prosody processing in healthy adults as well. The impact of study design on resulting interpretations is discussed

    Frequency and co-occurrence of suppression and coarse coding deficits in adults with RHD

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    This study examines two language processing functions that have the potential to create socially handicapping language comprehension difficulties in adults with right hemisphere brain damage (RHD). The first, coarse semantic coding, allows normal comprehenders to bring to mind distant meanings or features of words that are appropriate in highly specific contexts (e.g., the "rotten" feature of the word "apple" in the context of spoiled produce). The second, suppression, is a process that inhibits contextually-irrelevant meanings (e.g., the "card-playing" meaning of the word "spade" in "He dug with the spade."). In prior work, some adults with RHD were found to have impaired suppression1-4 or coarse coding processes5-6. These language processing impairments can make it difficult for individuals with RHD to participate in everyday social communication. For example, they can have trouble thinking beyond the most typical instance of an entity (e.g., an apple that's red, round, and crunchy) when another instance is being referred to (e.g., an apple that's rotten). Another possibility is they can be misled by ambiguities which are commonplace in conversation, and have difficulty getting back on track (e.g., keeping in mind the "card-playing" meaning of the word "spade" in a sentence like "He dug with the spade"). These problems predict comprehension performance on measures of narrative comprehension, as well7,8. To date, there is no information about how prevalent these deficits are, or how often they may co-occur in the same individual. This project identifies the proportions of a sizeable group of adults with RHD that have either a coarse coding deficit, a suppression deficit, co-occurring deficits, or neither deficit in reference to criteria developed from prior studies of healthy control subjects1-3,5,6

    The Company Prosodic Deficits Keep Following Right Hemisphere Stroke: A Systematic Review

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    Objectives: The aim of this systematic review was to identify the presence and nature of relationships between specific forms of aprosodia (i.e., expressive and receptive emotional and linguistic prosodic deficits) and other cognitive-communication deficits and disorders in individuals with right hemisphere damage (RHD) due to stroke. Methods: One hundred and ninety articles from 1970 to February 2020 investigating receptive and expressive prosody in patients with relatively focal right hemisphere brain damage were identified via database searches. Results: Fourteen articles were identified that met inclusion criteria, passed quality reviews, and included sufficient information about prosody and potential co-occurring deficits. Twelve articles investigated receptive emotional aprosodia, and two articles investigated receptive linguistic aprosodia. Across the included studies, receptive emotional prosody was not systematically associated with hemispatial neglect, but did co-occur with deficits in emotional facial recognition, interpersonal interactions, or emotional semantics. Receptive linguistic processing was reported to co-occur with amusia and hemispatial neglect. No studies were found that investigated the co-occurrence of expressive emotional or linguistic prosodic deficits with other cognitive-communication impairments. Conclusions: This systematic review revealed significant gaps in the research literature regarding the co-occurrence of common right hemisphere disorders with prosodic deficits. More rigorous empirical inquiry is required to identify specific patient profiles based on clusters of deficits associated with right hemisphere stroke. Future research may determine whether the co-occurrences identified are due to shared cognitive-linguistic processes, and may inform the development of evidence-based assessment and treatment recommendations for individuals with cognitive-communication deficits subsequent to RHD

    Mutations in AKAP5 Disrupt Dendritic Signaling Complexes and Lead to Electrophysiological and Behavioral Phenotypes in Mice

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    AKAP5 (also referred to as AKAP150 in rodents and AKAP79 in humans) is a scaffolding protein that is highly expressed in neurons and targets a variety of signaling molecules to dendritic membranes. AKAP5 interacts with PKA holoenzymes containing RIIα or RIIβ as well as calcineurin (PP2B), PKC, calmodulin, adenylyl cyclase type V/VI, L-type calcium channels, and β-adrenergic receptors. AKAP5 has also been shown to interact with members of the MAGUK family of PSD-scaffolding proteins including PSD95 and SAP97 and target signaling molecules to receptors and ion channels in the postsynaptic density (PSD). We created two lines of AKAP5 mutant mice: a knockout of AKAP5 (KO) and a mutant that lacks the PKA binding domain of AKAP5 (D36). We find that PKA is delocalized in both the hippocampus and striatum of KO and D36 mice indicating that other neural AKAPs cannot compensate for the loss of PKA binding to AKAP5. In AKAP5 mutant mice, a significant fraction of PKA becomes localized to dendritic shafts and this correlates with increased binding to microtubule associated protein-2 (MAP2). Electrophysiological and behavioral analysis demonstrated more severe deficits in both synaptic plasticity and operant learning in the D36 mice compared with the complete KO animals. Our results indicate that the targeting of calcineurin or other binding partners of AKAP5 in the absence of the balancing kinase, PKA, leads to a disruption of synaptic plasticity and results in learning and memory defects

    Treatment for language comprehension processes in right hemisphere brain damage: Phase I data

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    This study presents preliminary, Phase I data from a novel, implicit language processing treatment for adults with right hemisphere damage (RHD). The focus of treatment is motivated by two major accounts of common language comprehension problems in adults with RHD: Coarse coding and suppression deficits. The treatment approach is novel in that it aims to facilitate coarse coding and suppression processes implicitly, through contextual prestimulation. The treatment also targets partially domain-general operations with broad implications for language comprehension, rather than specific language structures or forms. Discussion will address the promise and limitations of treatment results for three adults with RHD

    Implicit Treatment of Underlying Comprehension Processes Improves Narrative Comprehension in Right Hemisphere Brain Damage

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    Language comprehension deficits in adults with focal right hemisphere brain damage (RHD) can cause considerable social handicap. To date, however, treatment for these deficits remains almost entirely untested. This abstract reports an investigation of whether Contextual Constraint Treatment (CCT) -- a novel, implicit, stimulation-facilitation treatment for language comprehension processes1,2 -- can yield generalized gains to measures of discourse comprehension in adults with RHD. The focus of CCT is motivated by two major accounts of typical RHD language comprehension problems: that they are due to coarse coding or suppression deficits. Coarse coding (CC) activates wide-ranging aspects of word meaning independent of surrounding context. In RHD, CC deficits impair processing of distant meanings/features of words (e.g., “rotten” as a feature of “apple”)3. A normal suppression (SUPP) process reduces mental activation of concepts that become less relevant to a current context. RHD SUPP impairment is indexed by prolonged processing interference from contextually-inappropriate interpretations (e.g., the “ink” meaning of the word “pen,” in the sentence “He built a pen”)4,5. CC and SUPP are partially domain-general language comprehension processes. For example, both predict aspects of discourse comprehension and are hypothesized to underpin figurative language comprehension; SUPP is important for resolving lexical and inferential ambiguities; and CC is involved in processing both literal lexical items and phrasal metaphors1,2,6. Thus, treatment that improves CC and SUPP processes may hold promise for improving a broad range of communicative outcomes. CCT is novel in aiming to facilitate comprehension processes implicitly, through contextual prestimulation. Adults with RHD who perform well on implicit assessments of language processing often have difficulty on metalinguistic assessments of the same operations2. Thus we implemented this approach to avoid confounding treatment of impaired processes with irrelevant, and potentially difficult, task demands

    Generalization of a Novel, Implicit Treatment for Coarse Coding Deficit

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    The language comprehension deficits in adults with focal right hemisphere brain damage (RHD) can cause considerable social handicap. To date, however, treatment for language deficits in this population remains almost entirely untested. This abstract reports a single-subject experimental design study, performed to investigate whether Contextual Constraint Treatment -- a novel, implicit, stimulation-facilitation treatment for language comprehension processes -- can yield generalized gains to broader measures of language comprehension in adults with RHD. The focus of Contextual Constraint Treatment (CCT) is motivated by two major accounts of common language comprehension problems in adults with RHD: coarse coding and suppression deficits. The patient in this study had a coarse coding (CC) deficit, so we describe here only the CC version of the treatment. CC processes activate wide-ranging aspects of word meaning independent of the surrounding context, and CC deficits in adults with RHD impair the processing of distant meanings or features of words (e.g., “rotten” as a feature of “apple”)1. CC is a partially domain-general language comprehension process. That is, CC ability predicts aspects of discourse comprehension, is hypothesized to underpin figurative language comprehension, and is involved in processing phrasal metaphors2. Thus, treatment that improves CC processes has the potential to generalize to a range of communicative outcomes. CCT is novel in aiming to facilitate comprehension processes implicitly, through contextual prestimulation. This approach contrasts with the majority of treatments for neurologically-based cognitive-linguistic disorders, which are direct, explicit, and/or metalinguistic. We implemented this approach to avoid confounding treatment of impaired processes with irrelevant, and potentially difficult, task demands, as adults with RHD who can perform well on implicit assessments of language processing often have difficulty with metalinguistic assessments of the same processing operations2

    UNL Libraries Deposit Programs

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    The University of Nebraska–Lincoln Libraries offers several avenues for preserving and providing access to digital and physical research materials. This document outlines the four main avenues for depositing materials with UNL Libraries. Although there are separate repositories with specific missions—Archives & Special Collections, DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska–Lincoln, UNL Data Repository, and UNL Image & Multimedia Collections—all work together toward the goal of preserving the intellectual and creative output of the university and to make our contributions discoverable to state, national, and international communities. This document describes the operations of each repository. The Libraries policy is to publish, or provide online access to, materials (1) when the Libraries holds copyright, (2) when the copyright holder has granted the Libraries permission for online publication, or (3) when the Libraries do not hold copyright but may manage access behind a firewall. The University Libraries is committed to preserving and providing access to the full range of in-tellectual contributions of the faculty and staff at UNL for the benefit of current and future gen-erations. All members of the University of Nebraska–Lincoln are encouraged to deposit content with UNL Libraries. Materials deposited in our institutional repositories are historical and not all historical events confirm to current standards of civility. As such, they may contain racial or sexual stereotypes that are inappropriate by today’s standards. They have been retained in order to fully represent the materials in their original context. All members of the University of Nebraska–Lincoln are encouraged to deposit content with UNL Libraries. Content can be nondigital items supplied to Archives & Special Collections or digital content deposited in the Data, Image & Multimedia Collections, Digital Commons repositories, or University Archives
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