7,411 research outputs found
Library project management in a collaborative web-based working environment
This paper discusses the emerging paradigm of project management performed in a web-based
working environment. It highlights how project management and its associated features are
strongly linked to fulfilling quality and value criteria for customers, and it examines how
collaborative working environments can greatly reduce the administrative burden of managing
large projects, especially and almost paradoxically, when resources are limited. Specifically, the
paper examines the application of a project management methodology (PRINCE2) together
with the use of a collaborative web-based working environment over a number of pilot projects
at Leeds University Library. It describes the pilot phase of a library management decision to
run a series of major Library projects using project management methodology, while
continuing to run other projects through the existing locally developed planning mechanisms
and describes the pitfalls of these latter alternatives, less sophisticated project management
tools, and describes the main issues that this change in practice has brought to light. It draws
preliminary conclusions about the effectiveness of this change in practice in one of the UKâs
largest academic libraries
Measuring the burden of treatment for chronic disease: implications of a scoping review of the literature
Background:
Although there has been growing research on the burden of treatment, the current state of evidence on measuring this concept is unknown. This scoping review aimed to provide an overview of the current state of knowledge as well as clear recommendations for future research, within the context of chronic disease.
Methods:
Four health-based databases, Scopus, CINAHL, Medline, and PsychInfo, were comprehensively searched for peer-reviewed articles published between the periods of 2000â2016. Titles and abstracts were independently read by two authors. All discrepancies between the authors were resolved by a third author. Data was extracted using a standardized proforma and a comparison analysis was used in order to explore the key treatment burden measures and categorize them into three groups.
Results:
Database searching identified 1458 potential papers. After removal of duplications, and irrelevant articles by title, 1102 abstracts remained. An additional 22 papers were added via snowball searching. In the end, 101 full papers were included in the review. A large number of the studies involved quantitative measures and conceptualizations of treatment burden (n = 64; 63.4%), and were conducted in North America (n = 49; 48.5%). There was significant variation in how the treatment burden experienced by those with chronic disease was operationalized and measured.
Conclusion:
Despite significant work, there is still much ground to cover to comprehensively measure treatment burden for chronic disease. Greater qualitative focus, more research with cultural and minority populations, a larger emphasis on longitudinal studies and the consideration of the potential effects of âidentityâ on treatment burden, should be considered
Assessment and learning outcomes: the evaluation of deep learning in an on-line course
Using an online learning environment, students from European countries collaborated and communicated to carry out problem based learning in occupational therapy. The effectiveness of this approach was evaluated by means of the final assessments and published learning outcomes. In particular, transcripts from peer-to-peer sessions of synchronous communication were analysed. The SOLO taxonomy was used and the development of deep learning was studied week by week. This allowed the quality of the course to be appraised and showed, to a certain extent, the impact of this online international course on the learning strategies of the students. Results indicate that deep learning can be supported by synchronous communication and online meetings between course participants.</p
Detection of small molecules with a flow immunosensor
We describe the development of an easy-to-use sensor with widespread applications for detecting small molecules. The flow immunosensor can analyze discrete samples in under one minute or continuously monitor a flowing stream for the presence of specific analytes. This detection system is extremely specific, and achieves a level of sensitivity which meets or exceeds the detection limits reported for rival assays. Because the system is also compact, transportable, and automated, it has the potential to impact diverse areas. For example, the flow immunosensor has successfully detected drugs of abuse and explosives, and may well address many of the needs of the environmental community with respect to continuous monitoring for pollutants. Efforts are underway to engineer a portable device in the field
Enzymatic functionalization of carbon-hydrogen bonds
The development of new catalytic methods to functionalize carbonâhydrogen (CâH) bonds
continues to progress at a rapid pace due to the significant economic and environmental benefits
of these transformations over traditional synthetic methods. In nature, enzymes catalyze regio- and
stereoselective CâH bond functionalization using transformations ranging from hydroxylation to
hydroalkylation under ambient reaction conditions. The efficiency of these enzymes relative to
analogous chemical processes has led to their increased use as biocatalysts in preparative and
industrial applications. Furthermore, unlike small molecule catalysts, enzymes can be systematically
optimized via directed evolution for a particular application and can be expressed in vivo to
augment the biosynthetic capability of living organisms. While a variety of technical challenges
must still be overcome for practical application of many enzymes for CâH bond functionalization,
continued research on natural enzymes and on novel artificial metalloenzymes will lead to improved
synthetic processes for efficient synthesis of complex molecules. In this critical review, we discuss the
most prevalent mechanistic strategies used by enzymes to functionalize non-acidic CâH bonds, the
application and evolution of these enzymes for chemical synthesis, and a number of potential
biosynthetic capabilities uniquely enabled by these powerful catalysts (110 references)
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Distribution of α7 Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor Subunit mRNA in the Developing Mouse.
Homomeric α7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) are abundantly expressed in the central and peripheral nervous system (CNS and PNS, respectively), and spinal cord. In addition, expression and functional responses have been reported in non-neuronal tissue. In the nervous system, α7 nAChR subunit expression appears early during embryonic development and is often transiently upregulated, but little is known about their prenatal expression outside of the nervous system. For understanding potential short-term and long-term effects of gestational nicotine exposure, it is important to know the temporal and spatial expression of α7 nAChRs throughout the body. To that end, we studied the expression of α7 nAChR subunit mRNA using highly sensitive isotopic in situ hybridization in embryonic and neonatal whole-body mouse sections starting at gestational day 13. The results revealed expression of α7 mRNA as early as embryonic day 13 in the PNS, including dorsal root ganglia, parasympathetic and sympathetic ganglia, with the strongest expression in the superior cervical ganglion, and low to moderate levels were detected in brain and spinal cord, respectively, which rapidly increased in intensity with embryonic age. In addition, robust α7 mRNA expression was detected in the adrenal medulla, and low to moderate expression in selected peripheral tissues during embryonic development, potentially related to cells derived from the neural crest. Little or no mRNA expression was detected in thymus or spleen, sites of immune cell maturation. The results suggest that prenatal nicotine exposure could potentially affect the nervous system with limited effects in non-neural tissues
Buried in the Red Dirt
Bringing together a rich and vivid array of analog and non-traditional sources, including colonial archives, newspaper reports, literature, and interviews, this book tells a story of life, death, and reproduction, during and since the British colonial period in Palestine. Available Open Access on Cambridge Core.
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