2,043 research outputs found

    Chapter Three. EED library as a basis for systematic reviews

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    3.1 Defining Systematic Review Question Priorities 3.2 Determining Relevance to the Systematic Review 3.3 Acquisition of References and Copyright Fair Use Compliance 3.4 Documenting Relevance to the Systematic Review 3.5 Data Extraction for the Systematic Review 3.6 EED Library: Search Results Overview 3.7 Quality Control 3.8 EED Library Statushttps://digitalcommons.wustl.edu/tropicalenteropathybook/1004/thumbnail.jp

    Chapter Five. Systematic review results by biomarker classifications

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    5.1 Markers of Absorption and Permeability Overview 5.2 Markers of Absorption 5.3 Markers of Permeability 5.4 Markers of Digestion 5.5 Markers of Intestinal Inflammation and Intestinal Immune Activation 5.6 Markers of Systemic Inflammation and Systemic Immune Activation 5.7 Markers of Microbial Drivers 5.8 Markers of Nonspecific Intestinal Injury 5.9 Markers of Extra-Small Intestinal Function 5.10 Relationships Between Markers of EED, Including Histopathology 5.11 Relationships between EED Biomarkers and Growth or Other Outcomes of Interesthttps://digitalcommons.wustl.edu/tropicalenteropathybook/1006/thumbnail.jp

    Why Pay Attention to You? The Role of Moderation Effects on the Power-Attention Relationship

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    Stories in today’s society focus poor relationships between leaders or those in high power positions and people lower in power, which may be explained by a pattern found in the literature demonstrating a negative relationship between power and attention to others. We contend that this relationship may have boundary conditions, and this paper proposes and tests such moderators. We propose moderators that will increase the attention of high-power people, and others that will decrease the attention of low-power people. Results from longitudinal data support some moderators for powerholders, the moderators for low-power individuals work in the opposite direction as hypothesized

    I Feel Where You’re Coming From: Power, Emotional Contagion, and the Mediating Role of Attention

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    This paper examines how attention plays a role in the relationship between power and emotional contagion. In two separate studies, we hypothesize and test that the relationship between power and emotional contagion is mediated by attention. In Study 1, data were collected from participants (N = 120) in a controlled laboratory setting, and we draw upon cognitive psychology research to develop a novel behavioral measurement of attention. Results marginally supported the hypothesized mediation of attention but only for negative affect contagion. In Study 2, a longitudinal survey method was employed (N = 221) where respondents indicated their attention to, and emotional contagion from, someone at their workplace with a different level of power. Results from our second study support our hypotheses for both positive and negative affect contagion. Implications for theory on power and social influence, emotion, as well as organizational and leadership practices are discussed

    Chapter Six. Conclusions and future implications

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    6.1 Summary of Findings 6.2 Future Biomarker and Diagnostics Researchhttps://digitalcommons.wustl.edu/tropicalenteropathybook/1007/thumbnail.jp

    Dis-Locations: Mapping the Banlieue

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    Representations of the French suburbs in contemporary French film have, since the late 1980s, identified an apparent generic specificity that is linked closely to this location. I will explore the narrative tropes of alienation and exclusion—as dislocations—which have dominated the filmic representation of banlieue spaces and their populations before examining examples in which the realignment of sociocultural topographies and film space foregrounds the question of whether representations of the banlieue remain inherently and generically connected to realist discourses dominated by spatial representation of exclusions, or whether the over-determined spaces of the banlieue can act as dĂ©cor, as setting and wider spatial frame. I will then focus on the presence and function of banlieue spaces and narratives in two recent French films—Girlhood/Bande de filles (CĂ©line Sciamma 2014) and Palme d’or winner Dheepan (Jacques Audiard 2015)—suggesting that the banlieue continues to provide a complex site that both asserts socio-economic specificities and serves as a stylized setting through which to foreground other negotiations of territory and agency

    HIV-Infektion : Update 2009 fĂŒr HausĂ€rzte. Teil 1

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    Quintessenz: In der Schweiz werden jĂ€hrlich >750 HIV-Infektionen neu diagnostiziert. Die Ansteckung geschieht via Blut oder Sex, und nicht bei alltĂ€glichen sozialen Kontakten. Die CD4-Lymphozytenzahl ist bestens etabliert zur Messung der Immunsuppression. Die grösste Gefahr opportunistischer Infekte droht bei CD4-Werten <200/ÎŒl. Dank antiretroviraler Therapie (ART) sollten viele HIV-infizierte Patienten in der Schweiz eine quasi normale Lebenserwartung haben. Momentan ist eine ART bei CD4-Werten <350/ÎŒl indiziert. Die HIV-Diagnose wird auch in der Schweiz hĂ€ufig zu spĂ€t gestellt. HausĂ€rzte spielen bei der frĂŒhzeitigen Diagnosestellung (grosszĂŒgiges Anbieten von HIV-Tests) und bei der PrĂ€vention von Immundefizienz und opportunistischen Komplikationen eine entscheidende Rolle. P Bei HIV-Neudiagnose soll der Patient einem HIV-Spezialisten zugewiesen werden, um weitere AbklĂ€rungen durchzufĂŒhren und die Indikation zum ART-Beginn zu stellen

    Why the visual recognition system might encode the effects of illumination

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    A key problem in recognition is that the image of an object depends on the lighting conditions. We investigated whether recognition is sensitive to illumination using 3-D objects that were lit from either the left or right, varying both the shading and the cast shadows. In experiments 1 and 2 participants judged whether two sequentially presented objects were the same regardless of illumination. Experiment 1 used six objects that were easily discriminated and that were rendered with cast shadows. While no cost was found in sensitivity, there was a response time cost over a change in lighting direction. Experiment 2 included six additional objects that were similar to the original six objects making recognition more difficult. The objects were rendered with cast shadows, no shadows, and as a control, white shadows. With normal shadows a change in lighting direction produced costs in both sensitivity and response times. With white shadows there was a much larger cost in sensitivity and a comparable cost in response times. Without cast shadows there was no cost in either measure, but the overall performance was poorer. Experiment 3 used a naming task in which names were assigned to six objects rendered with cast shadows. Participants practised identifying the objects in two viewpoints lit from a single lighting direction. Viewpoint and illumination invariance were then tested over new viewpoints and illuminations. Costs in both sensitivity and response time were found for naming the familiar objects in unfamiliar lighting directions regardless of whether the viewpoint was familiar or unfamiliar. Together these results suggest that illumination effects such as shadow edges: (1) affect visual memory; (2) serve the function of making unambigous the three-dimensional shape
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