2,245 research outputs found

    Media Framing and The Election Integrity Protection Act of 2021

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    It is no secret that today\u27s media landscape is saturated with various narratives and frames that dictate how political events and debates are consumer by the American public. This paper seeks to analyze how national and local media outlets frame the Election Integrity Protection Act of 2021, one of the numerous voting bills that followed the 2020 Election. My expectation is that these sources will vary in terms of their partisan skew as a result of their geographic location and the ideologies of their viewers. This qualitative media analysis focuses on how each publication does or does not align one of two sides of the partisan debate surrounding voting legislation, being voter suppression versus election integrity

    Applying Classical Realism, Institutional Liberalism and Normative Theory to the Development and Distribution of a COVID-19 Vaccine

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    The development of a safe and effective Coronavirus vaccine has dominated the concerns of the international community over the course of the last six months. While the global community agrees on the importance of its development, it is not entirely clear how a vaccine will be distributed globally. The implications of which entity, whether a state or private company, develops a trusted vaccine first and how efficiently and equitably that vaccine is distributed are yet to be seen. Using Classical Realism, Institutional Liberalism, and Normative Theory, this paper seeks to discuss and analyze how the development of a vaccine will affect the international community. Specifically, using Classical Realism, this paper will address the implications of a global power developing a vaccine and how nationalism will affect that development and subsequent distribution. Secondly, through Interdependence Liberalism, this paper will analyze the prospects of vaccine distribution among states, the role of non- governmental organizations (NGOs) and international organizations, as well as private industry, in vaccine development. Furthermore, through this lens this paper will analyze the interdependence of states regarding effective global containment of the coronavirus. Lastly, this paper will employ Normative Theory to analyze the obligation of major world powers, specifically the United States, to ensure a safe and effective vaccine is developed efficiently and distributed equitably. Evidently, containing and eliminating the coronavirus through a vaccine is both of paramount importance and laden with challenges. This paper aims to determine the most predictive theory relating to how the international system will react to the development of a coronavirus vaccine and what the implications and predicted outcomes are for the actors which comprise the global community

    Solution and solid phase electrochemical behaviour of [Os(bpy)3]3[P2W18O62]

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    [Os(bpy)3]3[P2W18O62] has been synthesised and characterised by elemental analysis,spectroscopic (UV/Vis, IR spectroscopy) and electrochemical techniques. In 0.1M Bu4NPF6DMSO the complex shows a series of redox couples associated with the Os3+/2+ and bipyridine ligands of the cationic [Os(bpy)3]2+ moiety and the tungsten-oxo framework of the associated Dawson parent heteropolyanion, [P2W18O62]6-. At this electrolyte concentration the Os3+ redox form of the complex was seen to adsorb onto the electrode surface. When the electrolyte concentration is lowered to 0.01M Bu4NPF6 in addition to the Os3+/2+ redox couple,the redox process associated with the [P2W18O62]8-/7- couple also exhibited properties indicating surface based processes were present. Electroactive films of the complex were formed on carbon macroelectrodes by the redox switching of the transition metal within the complex. Voltammetric investigations into the film’s behaviour in a range of buffer solutions(pH 2.0, 4.5 and 7.0) were performed. The films were found to possess better stability in acidic pH and the same pH dependence for the tungsten-oxo framework of the heteropolyanions as in solution. Solid state electrochemical measurements on mechanically attached microparticles of the complex were performed, with the effect of both the nature and concentration of the aqueous electrolyte on this behaviour being investigated. Upon redox switching between the Os2+/3+ redox states there is an associated insertion/expulsion of anions from/to the solution phase. Scanning electron micrographs of these solid state films were attained before and after redox cycling

    Control Of Flexible Structures-2 (COFS-2) flight control, structure and gimbal system interaction study

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    The second Control Of Flexible Structures Flight Experiment (COFS-2) includes a long mast as in the first flight experiment, but with the Langley 15-m hoop column antenna attached via a gimbal system to the top of the mast. The mast is to be mounted in the Space Shuttle cargo bay. The servo-driven gimbal system could be used to point the antenna relative to the mast. The dynamic interaction of the Shuttle Orbiter/COFS-2 system with the Orbiter on-orbit Flight Control System (FCS) and the gimbal pointing control system has been studied using analysis and simulation. The Orbiter pointing requirements have been assessed for their impact on allowable free drift time for COFS experiments. Three fixed antenna configurations were investigated. Also simulated was Orbiter attitude control behavior with active vernier jets during antenna slewing. The effect of experiment mast dampers was included. Control system stability and performance and loads on various portions of the COFS-2 structure were investigated. The study indicates possible undesirable interaction between the Orbiter FCS and the flexible, articulated COFS-2 mast/antenna system, even when restricted to vernier reaction jets

    Can Seeding in the Clinic Reach a Wide Audience? A Proof of Concept Study on Spreading a Health Message About Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis Using a Shareable Online Video

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    BACKGROUND: Shareable online video offers the potential for spreading a health message across online and real world social networks. Seeding a message in a clinical setting may be advantageous. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the potential of an online video to spread a health message about juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) when delivered or seeded in a clinical setting and investigate factors that influence sharing behavior. METHODS: Multimethod proof of concept study. Concepts for two different styles of video were developed using focus groups and interviews and reviewed by an online market research panel. We compared dissemination of the two videos from two specialist pediatric rheumatology clinics in NHS Hospitals. Participants were 15 patients, family members, and clinical staff with knowledge of JIA at concept stage; 300 market research panel members in development stage; and 38 patients and their parents or guardians in the seeding stage. Newly diagnosed patients with JIA and/or parents or guardians were invited to view and share an online video with a health message about JIA across real-life and electronic social networks. Main outcome measures were viewing statistics, sharing behavior and patterns, and participant feedback. RESULTS: Of 38 patients and/or their parents or guardians given links, 26 visited the video webpage and shared the link, 2 visited and did not share, and 10 did not visit. Most links were viewed and shared within a few days. A total of 3314 pageviews were recorded with a mean of 89.6 pageviews per link (range 0-1245). Links were accessed from 26 countries, with most viewers in the United Kingdom (82.5%). Mothers were the most active group of sharers. CONCLUSIONS: Distribution of a video link in a clinical setting may be an effective way to spread a health message. Parents or guardians of children with JIA are more likely to share a link than young people. Dissemination depends on a small number of active sharers, the content of the video, and the willingness of participants to share health information about themselves. TRIAL REGISTRATION: UK Clinical Research Network Study Portfolio ID (UKCRN): 13747; http://public.ukcrn.org.uk/Search/StudyDetail.aspx?StudyID=13747 (Archived by WebCite at http://www.webcitation.org/6eeXlMmM6)

    Method to Measure Tone of Axial and Proximal Muscle

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    The control of tonic muscular activity remains poorly understood. While abnormal tone is commonly assessed clinically by measuring the passive resistance of relaxed limbs1, no systems are available to study tonic muscle control in a natural, active state of antigravity support. We have developed a device (Twister) to study tonic regulation of axial and proximal muscles during active postural maintenance (i.e. postural tone). Twister rotates axial body regions relative to each other about the vertical axis during stance, so as to twist the neck, trunk or hip regions. This twisting imposes length changes on axial muscles without changing the body's relationship to gravity. Because Twister does not provide postural support, tone must be regulated to counteract gravitational torques. We quantify this tonic regulation by the restive torque to twisting, which reflects the state of all muscles undergoing length changes, as well as by electromyography of relevant muscles. Because tone is characterized by long-lasting low-level muscle activity, tonic control is studied with slow movements that produce "tonic" changes in muscle length, without evoking fast "phasic" responses. Twister can be reconfigured to study various aspects of muscle tone, such as co-contraction, tonic modulation to postural changes, tonic interactions across body segments, as well as perceptual thresholds to slow axial rotation. Twister can also be used to provide a quantitative measurement of the effects of disease on axial and proximal postural tone and assess the efficacy of intervention

    SwiftLib: rapid degenerate-codon-library optimization through dynamic programming

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    Degenerate codon (DC) libraries efficiently address the experimental library-size limitations of directed evolution by focusing diversity toward the positions and toward the amino acids (AAs) that are most likely to generate hits; however, manually constructing DC libraries is challenging, error prone and time consuming. This paper provides a dynamic programming solution to the task of finding the best DCs while keeping the size of the library beneath some given limit, improving on the existing integer-linear programming formulation. It then extends the algorithm to consider multiple DCs at each position, a heretofore unsolved problem, while adhering to a constraint on the number of primers needed to synthesize the library. In the two library-design problems examined here, the use of multiple DCs produces libraries that very nearly cover the set of desired AAs while still staying within the experimental size limits. Surprisingly, the algorithm is able to find near-perfect libraries where the ratio of amino-acid sequences to nucleic-acid sequences approaches 1; it effectively side-steps the degeneracy of the genetic code. Our algorithm is freely available through our web server and solves most design problems in about a second

    Phylogeography and post-glacial dynamics in the clonal-sexual orchid Cypripedium calceolus L.

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    Aim We investigated the phylogeographical history of a clonal-sexual orchid, to test the hypothesis that current patterns of genetic diversity and differentiation retain the traces of climatic fluctuations and of the species reproductive system. Location Europe, Siberia and Russian Far East. Taxon Cypripedium calceolus L. (Orchidaceae). Methods Samples (>900, from 56 locations) were genotyped at 11 nuclear microsatellite loci and plastid sequences were obtained for a subset of them. Analysis of genetic structure and approximate Bayesian computations were performed. Species distribution modelling was used to explore the effects of past climatic fluctuations on the species range. Results Analysis of genetic diversity reveals high heterozygosity and allele diversity, with no geographical trend. Three genetic clusters are identified with extant gene pools derived from ancestral demes in glacial refugia. Siberian populations exhibit different plastid haplotypes, supporting an early divergence for the Asian gene pool. Demographic results based on genetic data are compatible with an admixture event explaining differentiation in Estonia and Romania and they are consistent with past climatic dynamics inferred through species distribution modelling. Current population differentiation does not follow isolation by distance model and is compatible with a model of isolation by colonization. Main conclusions The genetic differentiation observed today in C. calceolus preserves the signature of climatic fluctuations in the historical distribution range of the species. Our findings support the central role of clonal reproduction in the reducing loss of diversity through genetic drift. The dynamics of the clonal-sexual reproduction are responsible for the persistence of ancestral variation and stability during glacial periods and post-glacial expansion.Peer reviewe

    A blood-based metabolomics test to distinguish relapsing–remitting and secondary progressive multiple sclerosis: addressing practical considerations for clinical application

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    The transition from relapsing–remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) to secondary progressive MS (SPMS) represents a huge clinical challenge. We previously demonstrated that serum metabolomics could distinguish RRMS from SPMS with high diagnostic accuracy. As differing sample-handling protocols can affect the blood metabolite profile, it is vital to understand which factors may influence the accuracy of this metabolomics-based test in a clinical setting. Herein, we aim to further validate the high accuracy of this metabolomics test and to determine if this is maintained in a ‘real-life’ clinical environment. Blood from 31 RRMS and 28 SPMS patients was subjected to different sample-handling protocols representing variations encountered in clinics. The effect of freeze–thaw cycles (0 or 1) and time to erythrocyte removal (30, 120, or 240 min) on the accuracy of the test was investigated. For test development, samples from the optimised protocol (30 min standing time, 0 freeze–thaw) were used, resulting in high diagnostic accuracy (mean ± SD, 91.0 ± 3.0%). This test remained able to discriminate RRMS and SPMS samples that had experienced additional freeze–thaw, and increased standing times of 120 and 240 min with accuracies ranging from 85.5 to 88.0%, because the top discriminatory metabolite biomarkers from the optimised protocol remained discriminatory between RRMS and SPMS despite these sample-handling variations. In conclusion, while strict sample-handling is essential for the development of metabolomics-based blood tests, the results confirmed that the RRMS vs. SPMS test is resistant to sample-handling variations and can distinguish these two MS stages in the clinics

    Conformational Variability in Ground-State CFTR Lipoprotein Particle Cryo-EM Ensembles

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    Cystic fibrosis transmembrane regulator (CFTR) is a dynamic membrane protein belonging to the ABC transporter family. It is unusual within this family as it is an ion channel, as opposed to a transporter. Activation of CFTR requires ATP and phosphorylation by PKA, and dysregulation of CFTR mediated salt and water homeostasis can lead to cystic fibrosis. Recent advancements in structural biological methods have led to more than 10 published CFTR structures, and, so far, all of these structures of CFTR, determined by cryo-EM, have been limited to detergent-purified protein preparations. To visualize CFTR in an environment that more closely represents its native membranous environment, we utilized two different lipoprotein particle encapsulation techniques: one in which the ion channel is first purified and then reconstituted using the membrane scaffolding protein Saposin A and another that uses the solubilizing polymer Sokalan CP9 (DIBMA) to extract CFTR directly from membranes. Structures derived from these types of preparations may better correlate to their function, for instance, the single-channel measurements from membrane vesicles
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