8,145 research outputs found
Gene expression analysis of bovine embryonic disc, trophoblast and parietal hypoblast at the start of gastrulation
In cattle early gastrulation-stage embryos (Stage 5), four tissues can be discerned: (i) the top layer of the embryonic disc consisting of embryonic ectoderm (EmE); (ii) the bottom layer of the disc consisting of mesoderm, endoderm and visceral hypoblast (MEH); (iii) the trophoblast (TB); and (iv) the parietal hypoblast. We performed microsurgery followed by RNA-seq to analyse the transcriptome of these four tissues as well as a developmentally earlier pre-gastrulation embryonic disc. The cattle EmE transcriptome was similar at Stages 4 and 5, characterised by the OCT4/SOX2/NANOG pluripotency network. Expression of genes associated with primordial germ cells suggest their presence in the EmE tissue at these stages. Anterior visceral hypoblast genes were transcribed in the Stage 4 disc, but no longer by Stage 5. The Stage 5 MEH layer was equally similar to mouse embryonic and extraembryonic visceral endoderm. Our data suggest that the first mesoderm to invaginate in cattle embryos is fated to become extraembryonic. TGFβ, FGF, VEGF, PDGFA, IGF2, IHH and WNT signals and receptors were expressed, however the representative members of the FGF families differed from that seen in equivalent tissues of mouse embryos. The TB transcriptome was unique and differed significantly from that of mice. FGF signalling in the TB may be autocrine with both FGFR2 and FGF2 expressed. Our data revealed a range of potential inter-tissue interactions, highlighted significant differences in early development between mice and cattle and yielded insight into the developmental events occurring at the start of gastrulation
The effects of peer influence on adolescent pedestrian road-crossing decisions
Objective: Adolescence is a high-risk period for pedestrian injury. It is also a time of heightened susceptibility to peer influence. The aim of this research was to examine the effects of peer influence on the pedestrian road-crossing decisions of adolescents.
Methods: Using 10 videos of road-crossing sites, 80 16- to 18-year-olds were asked to make pedestrian road-crossing decisions. Participants were assigned to one of 4 experimental conditions: negative peer (influencing unsafe decisions), positive peer (influencing cautious decisions), silent peer (who observed but did not comment), and no peer (the participant completed the task alone). Peers from the adolescent’s own friendship group were recruited to influence either an unsafe or a cautious decision.
Results: Statistically significant differences were found between peer conditions. Participants least often identified safe road-crossing
sites when accompanied by a negative peer and more frequently identified dangerous road-crossing sites when accompanied by a positive peer. Both cautious and unsafe comments from a peer influenced adolescent pedestrians’ decisions.
Conclusions: These findings showed that road-crossing decisions of adolescents were influenced by both unsafe and cautious comments from their peers. The discussion highlighted the role that peers can play in both increasing and reducing adolescent risk-taking
The impact of stripped Nuclei on the Super-Massive Black Hole number density in the local Universe
The recent discovery of super-massive black holes (SMBHs) in the centers of
high-mass ultra compact dwarf galaxies (UCDs) suggests that at least some UCDs
are the stripped nuclear star clusters of lower mass galaxies. Tracing these
former nuclei of stripped galaxies provides a unique way to track the assembly
history of a galaxy or galaxy cluster. In this paper we present a new method to
estimate how many UCDs host an SMBH in their center and thus are stripped
galaxy nuclei. We revisit the dynamical mass measurements that suggest many
UCDs have more mass than expected from stellar population estimates, which
recent observations have shown is due to the presence of an SMBH. We revise the
stellar population mass estimates using a new empirical relation between the
mass-to-light ratio (M/L) and metallicity, and use this to predict which UCDs
are most likely to host an SMBH. This enables us to calculate the fraction of
UCDs that host SMBHs across their entire luminosity range for the first time.
We then apply the SMBH occupation fraction to the observed luminosity function
of UCDs and estimate that in the Fornax and Virgo cluster alone there should be
stripped nuclei with SMBHs. This analysis shows that stripped
nuclei with SMBHs are almost as common in clusters as present-day galaxy
nuclei. We estimate the local SMBH number density in stripped nuclei to
, which represents a significant fraction (10-40\%)
of the SMBH density in the local Universe. These SMBHs hidden in stripped
nuclei will increase expected event rates for tidal disruption events and
SMBH-SMBH and SMBH-BH mergers. The existence of numerous stripped nuclei with
SMBHs are a direct consequence of hierarchical galaxy formation, but until now
their impact on the SMBH density had not been quantified.Comment: 15 pages, 8 Figures, accepted for publication in Ap
How multidisciplinary student groups at ITC at the University of Twente address global GeoHealth challenges with local actions
An S-FSCW Based Multi-Channel Reader System for Beamforming Applications using Surface Acoustic Wave Sensors
Interrogating multiple surface acoustic wave (SAW) sensors located within the same radar beam require techniques to separate the multiple superposing SAW sensor responses. The presented multi-channel reader features four parallel transceiver channels, which are based on the switched frequency-stepped continuous-wave principle and high-speed parallelized baseband electronics. Thus classical beamforming applications including angle of arrival measurement of single SAW tags and the angular separation of multiple SAW sensors are presented and compared to a multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) approach. Due to the larger virtual array in the MIMO approach a larger aperture can be synthesized, which leads to significantly better angular separation results. The level analysis for the given system is verified by baseband-power measurements at different readout distances, considering the hardware parameters as well as the free-space propagation aspects. Finally measurements assess the maximum interrogation distance for the system
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Specifying and Monitoring Market Mechanisms Using Rights and Obligations
We provide a formal scripting language to capture the semantics of market mechanisms. The language is based on a set of well-defined principles, and is designed to capture an agent’s rights, as derived from property, and an agent’s obligations, as derived from restrictions placed on its actions, either voluntarily or as a consequence of other actions. Rights and obligations are viewed as first-class goods, from which we define fundamental axioms about well-functioning market-oriented worlds. Coupled with the scripting language is a run-time system that is able to monitor and enforce rights and obligations. Our treatment extends to represent a variety of market mechanisms, ranging from simple two-agent single-good exchanges to complicated combinatorial auctions.Engineering and Applied Science
Men, Trans/Masculine and Non-Binary People’s Views About Pregnancy
Drawing on focus groups conducted with 18 young men, trans/masculine, and non-binary people across three countries, in this chapter we argue that essentialist beliefs about reproduction very much impact the experiences of this diverse group of young people. In the sections that follow we first provide an overview of the limited body of literature in this area. We then briefly describe the background to our project, before presenting the findings of our thematic analysis of the focus group data. We conclude the chapter by exploring what our findings mean for a trans reproductive justice approach
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