4,095 research outputs found

    Age Related Changes in Cerebrovascular Reactivity and Its Relationship to Global Brain Structure

    Get PDF
    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This study was funded by Alzheimerā€™s Research UK (ARUK) and the Aberdeen Biomedical Imaging Centre, University of Aberdeen. GDW, ADM and CS are part of the SINASPE collaboration (Scottish Imaging Network - A Platform for Scientific Excellence www.SINAPSE.ac.uk). The authors thank Gordon Buchan, Baljit Jagpal, Nichola Crouch, Beverly Maclennan and Katrina Klaasen for their help with running the experiment and Dawn Younie and Teresa Morris for their help with recruitment and scheduling. We also thank the residents of Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire, and further afield, for their generous participation.Peer reviewedPublisher PD

    Omega Oracle: forecasting estuarine carbonate weather

    Get PDF
    There are serious concerns about ecological, social, and economic impacts in the Pacific Northwest due to Ocean Acidification (OA). We built a system to predict aragonite saturation state (Ī©) of seawater in Netarts Bay, Oregon based on large scale forcing parameters. An artificial neural network ā€“ trained against a continuous, multiyear monitoring record of carbonate chemistry ā€“ learns a regression estimate of Ī© based on seasonality, tides, and wind conditions. This approach is agnostic to the details of the underlying chemical and biological processes offering a distinct modelling perspective. The result is a conceptually simpler and more strictly empirical parameterization and a model that is flexible in application due to dependence on only easily obtainable parameters. Forecast validation by a cross validation method indicates good prediction performance, particularly for the high frequency content of the Ī© time series, over periods of stable wind forecasting. Our forecast model demonstrates that the complex temporal dynamics of carbonate chemistry within an estuary can emerge from forcing operating on longer timescales. This further elucidates the management and commercial value of this model; experimental work with calcifiers suggests the details of these high frequency chemical dynamics are critical to the magnitude of stress imposed. Lastly, these forecasts, deployed as a web application, can facilitate OA mitigation strategies by providing aquaculturists with real-time predictions for consideration in operational decisions. Numerous sites, including on the Salish Sea, are poised to soon have viable training data for application of this method. Broader deployment promises to enable comparison between sites and expansion of direct aquaculture and management applications. Expansion to other sites is expected to require altered explanatory variables but this exercise may itself yield insight. Relatedly, we note the potential of this approach to help constrain timescales and sources (natural and anthropogenic) of contributions to physiological OA stress

    Field emission from single-, double-, and multi-walled carbon nanotubes chemically attached to silicon

    Get PDF
    The chemical attachment and field emission (FE) properties of single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs), double-walled carbon nanotubes (DWCNTs), and multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) chemically attached to a silicon substrate have been investigated. A high density of CNTs was revealed by atomic force microscopy imaging with orientation varying with CNT type. Raman spectroscopy was used to confirm the CNT type and diameter on the surfaces. The field emission properties of the surfaces were studied and both current-voltage and Fowler-Nordheim plots were obtained. The SWCNTs exhibited superior FE characteristics with a turn-on voltage (Eto) of 1.28 V Ī¼māˆ’1 and electric field enhancement factor (Ī²) of 5587. The DWCNT surface showed an Eto of 1.91 V Ī¼māˆ’1 and a Ī² of 4748, whereas the MWCNT surface exhibited an Eto of 2.79 V Ī¼māˆ’1 and a Ī² of 3069. The emission stability of each CNT type was investigated and it was found that SWCNTs produced the most stable emission. The differences between the FE characteristics and stability are explained in terms of the CNT diameter, vertical alignment, and crystallinity. The findings suggest that strength of substrate adhesion and CNT crystallinity play a major role in FE stability. Comparisons to other FE studies are made and the potential for device application is discussed

    Fuzzy approximate entropy analysis of resting state fMRI signal complexity across the adult life span

    Get PDF
    Acknowledgment The authors would like to acknowledge the work of the International Consortium for Brain Mapping (ICBM) fMRI community in creating the resting state database and making it publicly available within the framework of the 1000 Functional Connectomes project (https://www.nitrc.org/projects/fcon_1000/). M.O. Sokunbi was supported by an MRC grant G1100629.Peer reviewedPreprin

    Obsessive-compulsive disorder and the DST

    Full text link
    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/25954/1/0000020.pd

    Menstrual fluctuation in the symptoms of panic anxiety

    Full text link
    Ten women with DSM-III-defined panic attacks (five with and five without agoraphobia) had symptom severity rated daily, weekly, and retrospectively through one full menstrual cycle. Substantial fluctuations in retrospective ratings of severity were observed, with the premenstrual week being rated as most severe. Daily and weekly ratings showed much smaller fluctuations in the predicted direction. Possible reasons for this outcome are considered.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/27149/1/0000143.pd

    Simple phobia: Evidence for heterogeneity

    Full text link
    Although simple phobia is a residual category in DSM-III, clinical experience suggests at least four subtypes of this group. To test the validity of the subtypes, the authors compared patients with one of four simple phobias subtypes (n: ANIMAL-INSECT = 25, BLOOD-INJURY = 9, SITUATIONAL = 46, CHOKING-VOMIT = 8). Significant sex differences were observed; all animal and insect phobics and seven of eight choking-vomit phobics were female, while the other two groups showed approximately equal numbers of males and females. Mean age of onset was significantly older for situational phobics than animal-insect or blood-injury phobics; choking-vomit probands were intermediate. Frequency of situational phobias differed significantly among relatives of the four proband groups, with highest frequency being found among situational probands. Thus, these clinical and epidemiological variables support the separation of simple phobia into at least these four diagnostic groups.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/27973/1/0000405.pd

    Interaction between integrin Ī±5 and PDE4D regulates endothelial inflammatory signalling

    Get PDF
    Atherosclerosis is primarily a disease of lipid metabolism and inflammation; however, it is also closely associated with endothelial extracellular matrix (ECM) remodelling, with fibronectin accumulating in the lamininā€“collagen basement membrane. To investigate how fibronectin modulates inflammation in arteries, we replaced the cytoplasmic tail of the fibronectin receptor integrin Ī±5 with that of the collagen/laminin receptor integrin Ī±2. This chimaera suppressed inflammatory signalling in endothelial cells on fibronectin and in knock-in mice. Fibronectin promoted inflammation by suppressing anti-inflammatory cAMP. cAMP was activated through endothelial prostacyclin secretion; however, this was ECM-independent. Instead, cells on fibronectin suppressed cAMP via enhanced phosphodiesterase (PDE) activity, through direct binding of integrin Ī±5 to phosphodiesterase-4D5 (PDE4D5), which induced PP2A-dependent dephosphorylation of PDE4D5 on the inhibitory site Ser651. In vivo knockdown of PDE4D5 inhibited inflammation at athero-prone sites. These data elucidate a molecular mechanism linking ECM remodelling and inflammation, thereby identifying a new class of therapeutic targets.United States. National Institutes of Health (5R01HL75092)National Science Foundation (U.S.). Materials Research Science and Engineering Centers (Program) (MR/J007412/1

    Endocrine and physiological changes during "spontaneous" panic attacks

    Full text link
    Eight patients with DSM-III-defined panic attacks were compared to four normal subjects on hormonal and physiological variables measured at six predetermined times through 24 hr and also during nine "spontaneous" attacks. Levels at predetermined times were not different, other than a reduction of urinary unconjugated epinephrine in patients. Plasma prolactin was elevated at the peak of most of the attacks and correlated with attack severity. Plasma cortisol and growth hormone, and heart rate, were elevated during some attacks, and plasma norepinephrine showed small increases. Significant plasma epinephrine and MHPG changes were not observed.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/26943/1/0000509.pd
    • ā€¦
    corecore