100 research outputs found

    New Places for Libraries – An Analysis of Selected Public Libraries at Non-Traditional Locations

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    FĂŒr Öffentliche Bibliotheken wird es immer wichtiger, unkonventionelle Wege zu gehen, um die Aufmerksamkeit der Menschen auf sich zu ziehen. An ungewöhnlichen, viel frequentierten Orten (z. B. in Einkaufszentren, U-Bahnhöfen oder Parks) prĂ€sent zu sein, kann ein Schritt sein, diese Institutionen und ihre Angebote stĂ€rker im Alltag der Bevölkerung zu verankern und innovative Impulse zu setzen. Die vorliegende Arbeit gibt einen Überblick ĂŒber unkonventionelle Standorte und Formen, in denen Bibliotheken dort auftreten – die Bandbreite reicht dabei von mobilen Einrichtungen ĂŒber Ausleihautomaten bis hin zu Filialen und Hauptstellen. Anhand zweier Beispiele – einer Bibliotheksfiliale in einer Stockholmer U-Bahnstation und der Mannheimer Fahrradbibliothek – werden BeweggrĂŒnde fĂŒr das Aufsuchen solcher Orte sowie Ziele, Chancen und Risiken dieser Angebote nĂ€her untersucht; ferner geht es auch um die Frage, welche Funktionen Öffentliche Bibliotheken im Informationszeitalter ĂŒbernehmen können und wie sich die beiden Beispiele in diesem Zusammenhang einordnen lassen.It is getting more and more important for public libraries to take unconventional paths in order to attract people’s attention. Being present at unusual, highly frequented places (e. g. in shopping centres, underground stations or parks) can be one step towards anchoring these institutions, their products and services more firmly in the everyday life of the community members and generating innovative impulses. This thesis gives an overview of non-traditional locations and forms in which libraries occur at these places – ranging from mobile services, book-dispensing machines and branches to main libraries. The question why libraries choose these sites as well as objectives, opportunities and threats are analysed in more depth by looking at two examples – a branch in an underground station in Stockholm and a book bike run by Mannheim Public Library; furthermore, this thesis shines a light on the roles of public libraries in the information age and on how these two examples can be considered respectively

    Hur AI-verktyget ChatGPT klarar en hemtentamen i palliativ vÄrd

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    Dataprogrammet ChatGPT Ă€r en bott som utför automatiska uppgifter. Denna chattbott skapade rubriker under hösten pĂ„ grund av dess förmĂ„ga att med artificiell intelligens (AI) skapa svar pĂ„ riktade frĂ„gor och texter utifrĂ„n ett beskrivet syfte. I slutet av december 2022 lades 16 frĂ„gor frĂ„n en hemtentamen i palliativ vĂ„rd vid sjuksköterskeprogrammet in i AI-botten för att fĂ„ dem besvarade och testa bottens förmĂ„ga att besvara frĂ„gorna korrekt. Vi ville Ă€ven testa om man kunde se nĂ„gon skillnad pĂ„ svaren i rĂ€ttningsmallen och pĂ„ studenternas svar och pĂ„ de svar som genererats frĂ„n AI-botten. En bedömning av bottens svar visade pĂ„ att den hade klarat examinationen. Somliga svar var mycket bra och resonerande till sin natur, nĂ„got gav reducerade poĂ€ng pga. bristande innehĂ„ll och ett par svar felaktiga. Ett svar stack ut dĂ„ det var pĂ„ engelska. Svaren hade ibland smĂ€rre grammatiska fel, men var frĂ€mst betydligt lĂ€ngre och bĂ€ttre strukturerade Ă€n studerandes. Möjligheten att upptĂ€cka försök till vilseledande i examination hade varit liten. Det finns skillnad i svarens diskurs, dĂ€r svaren frĂ„n botten har en mer amerikansk stil i sin formulering.  ENGLSIH ABSTRACT How the AI tool ChatGPT passes a home exam in palliative care The ChatGPT computer program is a bot that performs automatic tasks. This chatbot made headlines during the fall due to its ability to use Artificial Intelligence (AI) to create answers to targeted questions and texts based on a described purpose. At the end of December 2022, 16 questions from a home exam in palliative care at the nursing program were put into the AI bot to get them answered and test its ability to answer the questions correctly but also an assessment of whether the answers could be detected. An evaluation of the bot’s answers showed it had passed the examination. Some answers were excellent and reasoned, some gave reduced points due to lack of content, and some were incorrect. One answer stood out as it was in English. The answers sometimes had minor grammatical errors but were significantly more prolonged and better structured than the students’ answers. The possibility of detecting attempts at deception in the examination had been limited. There is a difference in discourse in the answers, with the answers from the bot having a more American style

    Late recurrence of lymphoid malignancies after initial treatment for Hodgkin lymphoma - A study from the Danish Lymphoma Registry

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    We analysed a large cohort of Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) patients in order to characterize: (1) the pattern of late recurrence of lymphoid malignancies (LR) after initial treatment for HL over a 35‐year period; (2) the clinicopathological parameters influencing the risk of LR; and (3) the outcome of patients experiencing LR. We reviewed data of 3350 HL patients diagnosed in Denmark between 1982 and 2018 and registered in the Danish National Lymphoma Registry (LYFO). LR was defined as a recurrence of lymphoid malignancy at least five years after initial diagnosis. LR occurred in 58 patients, with a cumulative incidence at 10, 15 and 20 years of 2.7%, 4.0% and 5.4% respectively. LR was more frequently observed in patients with nodular lymphocyte‐predominant HL (NLPHL) [hazard ratio (HR) 4.5; 95% confidence interval (CI): 2.4–8.4, p < 0.001]. In classical HL (cHL) patients, older age and lymphocytopenia were risk factors for LR with HRs of 1.04 per additional year (95% CI: 1.02–1.06) and 5.6 (95% CI: 2.7–11.5) respectively. Mixed cellularity histological subtype was a risk factor for LR, but only in females, with a HR of 5.4 (95% CI: 1.4–20.4, p = 0.014). In contrast to what was observed in NLPHL, LR in cHL was associated with an almost threefold increased risk of death compared with patients in continuous complete remission. Approximately one fifth (22.4%) of patients with LR experienced a second relapse

    How formal initiatives to improve teaching can lead to more significant informal conversations and increased sharing practice

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    University teachers grow professionally from conversations about learning and teaching with colleagues. Significant informal conversations can be facilitated through formal activities initiated from the institutional side. This case-study shows how a formal institutional initiative to enhance educational quality has facilitated more significant informal conversations. Such conversations power constructive feedback to the organisation, improve the formal quality development work at the institutional level, and increase the use of collegial experiences across the institution. We identify the formal initiative “Collegial sharing sessions” as particularly efficient for fuelling significant informal conversations within and across departments

    Children of Mentally III Parents at Risk Evaluation (COMPARE): Design and Methods of a Randomized Controlled Multicenter Study—Part I

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    Objectives: Mental disorders are frequent, associated with disability-adjusted life years, societal, and economic costs. Children of parents with a mental illness (COPMI) are at an increased risk to develop disorders themselves. The transgenerational transmission of mental disorders has been conceptualized in a model that takes parental and family factors, the social environment (i.e., school, work, and social support), parent-child-interaction and possible child outcomes into account. The goal of the “Children of Mentally Ill Parents At Risk Evaluation” (COMPARE) study will thus be twofold: (1) to establish the efficacy and cost-effectiveness of a high-quality randomized controlled trial (RCT) with the aim of interrupting the intergenerational transmission of mental disorders in COPMI, (2) to test the components of the trans-generational transmission model of mental disorders. Methods: To implement a randomized controlled trial (RCT: comparison of parental cognitive behavioral therapy/CBT with CBT + Positive Parenting Program) that is flanked by four add-on projects that apply behavioral, psychophysiological, and neuro-imaging methods to examine potential moderators and mediators of risk transmission (projects COMPARE-emotion/-interaction/-work/-school). COMPARE-emotion targets emotion processing and regulation and its impact on the transgenerational disorder transmission; COMPARE-interaction focuses especially on the impact of maternal comorbid diagnoses of depression and anxiety disorders and will concentrate on different pathways of the impact of maternal disorders on socio-emotional and cognitive infant development, such as parent-infant interaction and the infant's stress regulation skills. COMPARE-work analyzes the transmission of strains a person experiences in one area of life to another (i.e., from family to work; spill-over), and how stress and strain are transmitted between individuals (i.e., from parent to child; cross-over). COMPARE-school focuses on the psychosocial adjustment, school performance, and subjective well-being in COPMI compared to an adequate control group of healthy children. Results: This study protocol reports on the interdisciplinary approach of COMPARE testing the model of the transgenerational transmission of mental disorders. Conclusion: The combination of applied basic with clinical research will facilitate the examination of specific risk transmission mechanisms, promotion, dissemination and implementation of results into a highly important but largely neglected field. Clinical Trial Registration: DRKS-ID: DRKS00013516 (German Clinical Trials Register, https://www.drks.de/drks_web/navigate.do?navigationId=trial.HTML&TRIAL_ID=DRKS00013516)

    Stage II/III rectal cancer with intermediate response to preoperative radiochemotherapy: Do we have indications for individual risk stratification?

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Response to preoperative radiochemotherapy (RCT) in patients with locally advanced rectal cancer is very heterogeneous. Pathologic complete response (pCR) is accompanied by a favorable outcome. However, most patients show incomplete response. The aim of this investigation was to find indications for risk stratification in the group of intermediate responders to RCT.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>From a prospective database of 496 patients with rectal adenocarcinoma, 107 patients with stage II/III cancers and intermediate response to preoperative 5-FU based RCT (ypT2/3 and TRG 2/3), treated within the German Rectal Cancer Trials were studied. Surgical treatment comprised curative (R0) total mesorectal excision (TME) in all cases. In 95 patients available for statistical analyses, residual transmural infiltration of the mesorectal compartment, nodal involvement and histolologic tumor grading were investigated for their prognostic impact on disease-free (DFS) and overall survival (OS).</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Residual tumor transgression into the mesorectal compartment (ypT3) did not influence DFS and OS rates (p = 0.619, p = 0.602, respectively). Nodal involvement after preoperative RCT (ypN1/2) turned out to be a valid prognostic factor with decreased DFS and OS (p = 0.0463, p = 0.0236, respectively). Persistent tumor infiltration of the mesorectum (ypT3) and histologic tumor grading of residual tumor cell clusters were strongly correlated with lymph node metastases after neoadjuvant treatment (p < 0.001).</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Advanced transmural tumor invasion after RCT does not affect prognosis when curative (R0) resection is achievable. Residual nodal status is the most important predictor of individual outcome in intermediate responders to preoperative RCT. Furthermore, ypT stage and tumor grading turn out to be additional auxiliary factors. Future clinical trials for risk-adapted adjuvant therapy should be based on a synopsis of clinicopathologic parameters.</p

    Sex-related differences in aging rate are associated with sex chromosome system in amphibians

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    Sex-related differences in mortality are widespread in the animal kingdom. Although studies have shown that sex determination systems might drive lifespan evolution, sex chromosome influence on aging rates have not been investigated so far, likely due to an apparent lack of demographic data from clades including both XY (with heterogametic males) and ZW (heterogametic females) systems. Taking advantage of a unique collection of capture-recapture datasets in amphibians, a vertebrate group where XY and ZW systems have repeatedly evolved over the past 200 million years, we examined whether sex heterogamy can predict sex differences in aging rates and lifespans. We showed that the strength and direction of sex differences in aging rates (and not lifespan) differ between XY and ZW systems. Sex-specific variation in aging rates was moderate within each system, but aging rates tended to be consistently higher in the heterogametic sex. This led to small but detectable effects of sex chromosome system on sex differences in aging rates in our models. Although preliminary, our results suggest that exposed recessive deleterious mutations on the X/Z chromosome (the "unguarded X/Z effect") or repeat-rich Y/W chromosome (the "toxic Y/W effect") could accelerate aging in the heterogametic sex in some vertebrate clades.Peer reviewe

    Prolactin Receptor in Primary Hyperparathyroidism – Expression, Functionality and Clinical Correlations

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    <div><h3>Background</h3><p>Primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT) is an endocrine disorder most commonly affecting women, suggesting a role for female hormones and/or their receptors in parathyroid adenomas. We here investigated the prolactin receptor (PRLr) which is associated with tumours of the breast and other organs.</p> <h3>Methodology/Principal Findings</h3><p>PRLr expression was investigated in a panel of 37 patients with sporadic parathyroid tumours and its functionality in cultured parathyroid tumour cells. In comparison with other tissues and breast cancer cells, high levels of prolactin receptor gene (<em>PRLR</em>) transcripts were demonstrated in parathyroid tissues. PRLr products of 60/70 kDa were highly expressed in all parathyroid tumours. In addition varying levels of the 80 kDa PRLr isoform, with known proliferative activity, were demonstrated. In parathyroid tumours, PRLr immunoreactivity was observed in the cytoplasm (in all cases, n = 36), cytoplasmic granulae (n = 16), the plasma membrane (n = 12) or enlarged lysosomes (n = 4). In normal parathyroid rim (n = 28), PRLr was uniformly expressed in the cytoplasm and granulae. In <em>in vitro</em> studies of short-term cultured human parathyroid tumour cells, prolactin stimulation was associated with significant transcriptional changes in JAK/STAT, RIG-I like receptor and type II interferon signalling pathways as documented by gene expression profiling. Moreover, <em>PRLR</em> gene expression in parathyroid tumours was inversely correlated with the patients’ plasma calcium levels.</p> <h3>Conclusions</h3><p>We demonstrate that the prolactin receptor is highly abundant in human parathyroid tissues and that PRLr isoforms expression and PRLr subcellular localisation are altered in parathyroid tumours. Responsiveness of PRLr to physiological levels of prolactin was observed in the form of increased PTH secretion and altered gene transcription with significant increase of RIG-I like receptor, JAK-STAT and Type II interferon signalling pathways. These data suggest a role of the prolactin receptor in parathyroid adenomas.</p> </div
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