4,627 research outputs found
Quantitative pharmacologic MRI: Mapping the cerebral blood volume response to cocaine in dopamine transporter knockout mice
The use of pharmacologic MRI (phMRI) in mouse models of brain disorders allows noninvasive in vivo
assessment of drug-modulated local cerebral blood volume changes (ĪCBV) as one correlate of neuronal and
neurovascular activities. In this report, we employed CBV-weighted phMRI to compare cocaine-modulated
neuronal activity in dopamine transporter (DAT) knockout (KO) and wild-typemice. Cocaine acts to block the dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin transporters (DAT, NET, and SERT) that clear their respective
neurotransmitters from the synapses, helping to terminate cognate neurotransmission. Cocaine consistently reduced CBV, with a similar pattern of regional ĪCBV in brain structures involved inmediating reward in both
DAT genotypes. The largest effects (ā20% to ā30% ĪCBV) were seen in the nucleus accumbens and several cortical regions. Decreasing response amplitudes to cocaine were noted in more posterior components of the
cortico-mesolimbic circuit. DAT KO mice had significantly attenuated ĪCBV amplitudes, shortened times to peak response, and reduced response duration in most regions. This study demonstrates that DAT knockout
does not abolish the phMRI responses to cocaine, suggesting that adaptations to loss of DAT and/or retained
cocaine activity in other monoamine neurotransmitter systems underlie these responses in DAT KO mice
Is There a Role for Benefit-Cost Analysis in Environmental, Health, and Safety Regulation?
Benefit-cost analysis has a potentially important role to play in helping inform regulatory decision-making, although it should not be the sole basis for such decision-making. This paper offers eight principles on the appropriate use of benefit-cost analysis.Environment, Health and Safety, Regulatory Reform
Benefit-Cost Analysis in Environmental, Health, and Safety Regulation: A Statement of Principles
Benefit-cost analysis can play a very important role in legislative and regulatory policy debates on improving the environment, health, and safety. It can help illustrate the tradeoffs that are inherent in public policymaking as well as make those tradeoffs more transparent. It can also help agencies set regulatory priorities. Benefit-cost analysis should be used to help decisionmakers reach a decision. Contrary to the views of some, benefit-cost analysis is neither necessary nor sufficient for designing sensible public policy. If properly done, it can be very helpful to agencies in the decisionmaking process. Decisionmakers should not be precluded from considering the economic benefits and costs of different policies in the development of regulations. Laws that prohibit costs or other factors from being considered in administrative decisionmaking are inimical to good public policy. Currently, several of the most important regulatory statutes have been interpreted to imply such prohibitions. Benefit-cost analysis should be required for all major regulatory decisions, but agency heads should not be bound by a strict benefit-cost test. Instead, they should be required to consider available benefit-cost analyses and to justify the reasons for their decision in the event that the expected costs of a regulation far exceed the expected benefits. Agencies should be encouraged to use economic analysis to help set regulatory priorities. Economic analyses prepared in support of particularly important decisions should be subjected to peer review both inside and outside government. Benefits and costs of proposed major regulations should be quantified wherever possible. Best estimates should be presented along with a description of the uncertainties. Not all benefits or costs can be easily quantified, much less translated into dollar terms. Nevertheless, even qualitative descriptions of the pros and cons associated with a contemplated action can be helpful. Care should be taken to ensure that quantitative factors do not dominate important qualitative factors in decisionmaking. The Office of Management and Budget, or some other coordinating agency, should establish guidelines that agencies should follow in conducting benefit-cost analyses. Those guidelines should specify default values for the discount rate and certain types of benefits and costs, such as the value of a small reduction in mortality risk. In addition, agencies should present their results using a standard format, which summarizes the key results and highlights major uncertainties.
Resonant Photoemission in f-Electron Systems: Pu and Gd
Resonant photoemission in the Pu 5f and Pu 6p states is compared to that in the Gd 4f and Gd 5p states. Spectral simulations, based upon an atomic model with angular momentum coupling, are compared to the Gd and Pu results. Additional spectroscopic measurements of Pu, including core level photoemission and x-ray absorption, are also presented
WISE/NEOWISE observations of Active Bodies in the Main Belt
We report results based on mid-infrared photometry of 5 active main belt
objects (AMBOs) detected by the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE)
spacecraft. Four of these bodies, P/2010 R2 (La Sagra), 133P/Elst-Pizarro,
(596) Scheila, and 176P/LINEAR, showed no signs of activity at the time of the
observations, allowing the WISE detections to place firm constraints on their
diameters and albedos. Geometric albedos were in the range of a few percent,
and on the order of other measured comet nuclei. P/2010 A2 was observed on
April 2-3, 2010, three months after its peak activity. Photometry of the coma
at 12 and 22 {\mu}m combined with ground-based visible-wavelength measurements
provides constraints on the dust particle mass distribution (PMD), dlogn/dlogm,
yielding power-law slope values of {\alpha} = -0.5 +/- 0.1. This PMD is
considerably more shallow than that found for other comets, in particular
inbound particle fluence during the Stardust encounter of comet 81P/Wild 2. It
is similar to the PMD seen for 9P/Tempel 1 in the immediate aftermath of the
Deep Impact experiment. Upper limits for CO2 & CO production are also provided
for each AMBO and compared with revised production numbers for WISE
observations of 103P/Hartley 2.Comment: 32 Pages, including 5 Figure
PTF10fqs: A Luminous Red Nova in the Spiral Galaxy Messier 99
The Palomar Transient Factory (PTF) is systematically charting the optical
transient and variable sky. A primary science driver of PTF is building a
complete inventory of transients in the local Universe (distance less than 200
Mpc). Here, we report the discovery of PTF10fqs, a transient in the luminosity
"gap" between novae and supernovae. Located on a spiral arm of Messier 99, PTF
10fqs has a peak luminosity of Mr = -12.3, red color (g-r = 1.0) and is slowly
evolving (decayed by 1 mag in 68 days). It has a spectrum dominated by
intermediate-width H (930 km/s) and narrow calcium emission lines. The
explosion signature (the light curve and spectra) is overall similar to thatof
M85OT2006-1, SN2008S, and NGC300OT. The origin of these events is shrouded in
mystery and controversy (and in some cases, in dust). PTF10fqs shows some
evidence of a broad feature (around 8600A) that may suggest very large
velocities (10,000 km/s) in this explosion. Ongoing surveys can be expected to
find a few such events per year. Sensitive spectroscopy, infrared monitoring
and statistics (e.g. disk versus bulge) will eventually make it possible for
astronomers to unravel the nature of these mysterious explosions.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figures, Replaced with published versio
Effect of Thiamine Status on Probability of Lake Ontario Chinook Salmon Spawning in the Upper or Lower Sections of Salmon River, New York
Consumption of thiaminaseācontaining forage fishes reduces egg and muscle thiamine content and impairs the spawning migration of Cayuga Lake (New York) rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss. Because some Chinook salmon O. tshawytscha from Lake Ontario have been shown to produce eggs low in thiamine, we examined the relationship between the migration of Chinook salmon and the thiamine content of their eggs spawned in the lower and upper sections of the Salmon River, a major tributary to Lake Ontario, in 2003ā2006. Eggs from the upper section of the river were collected from 79 salmon returning to the state hatchery 25 river kilometers from the mouth. Eggs from 25 salmon in the lower section were collected from redds or females angled on redds approximately 1ā3 km from the mouth. For all years combined, we found the mean thiamine concentration in eggs spawned in the lower section to be significantly lower than that for eggs spawned in the upper section; however, the annual differences in thiamine content of eggs between the upper and lower sections were significant only in 2003 and 2006. Binary logistic regression showed that the odds of spawning in the upper section was increased by 96% (95% confidence interval, 21ā217%) for every nanomole of increase in the thiamine content of eggs. Therefore, the migratory achievement of Chinook salmon was significantly dependent on their thiamine status.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/142217/1/nafm0895.pd
Ursinus College Alumni Journal, August 1963
The President writes ā¢ The uses and limitations of words ā¢ Commencement 1963 ā¢ 3,032 pledge 192,568 ā¢ Loyalty Fund committee reorganized ā¢ Joseph J. Lynch, college steward ā¢ A description of the new dining hall ā¢ Chemistry changes ā¢ NSF grants for bio profs ā¢ Teaching awards ā¢ Pilot project: Physics chemistry mathematics ā¢ The not-so-ugly American ā¢ Best track season in Ursinus history ā¢ Double your dollars ā¢ Things are looking up ā¢ Preliminary thoughts on wills ā¢ Reading, writing, and Mazurkiewicz ā¢ The augmented Roman alphabet ā¢ Edwin C. Myers, \u2764 and Frederic W. Yocum, Jr. \u2764 ā¢ Eugene J. Bradford, \u2736 ā¢ Robert A. Petersen, \u2760 ā¢ Sue Harman, \u2765 ā¢ Results of the 1963 Loyalty Fund campaign ā¢ The leaders ā¢ Contributors to the 1963 Loyalty Fund ā¢ Ursinus alumni at Methacton High School ā¢ Class notes ā¢ Weddings ā¢ Births ā¢ Necrology ā¢ Our role as alumnihttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/alumnijournal/1077/thumbnail.jp
Estimating species relative abundances from museum records
Funding: C.F., U.B. and D.J.R. acknowledge COST Action āEuropean Soil-Biology Data Warehouse for Soil Protectionā (EUdaphobase), CA18237, supported by COST (European Cooperation in Science and Technology). AEM thanks the Leverhulme Trust (RPG-2019-401). D.B.B. was supported by an NSF Postdoc Research Fellowship in Biology (NSF 000733206), S.M.R. was supported by an NSERC Discovery Grant Author Contributions, A.V.S. was supported by NSF 1755336, C.S.M was supported by NSF 1398620 and N.J.G was supported by NSF 2019470.1. Dated, geo-referenced museum specimens are a rich data source for reconstructing species' distribution and abundance patterns. However, museum records are potentially biased towards over-representation of rare species, and it is unclear whether museum records can be used to estimate relative abundance in the field. 2. We assembled 17 coupled field and museum datasets to quantitatively compare relative abundance estimates with the Dirichlet distribution. Collectively, these datasets comprise 73,039 museum records and 1,405,316 field observations of 2,240 species. 3. Although museum records of rare species overestimated relative abundance by 1-fold to over 100-fold (median studyĀ =Ā 9.0), the relative abundance of species estimated from museum occurrence records was strongly correlated with relative abundance estimated from standardized field surveys (r2 range of 0.10-0.91, median studyĀ =Ā 0.43). 4. These analyses provide a justification for estimating species relative abundance with carefully curated museum occurrence records, which may allow for the detection of temporal or spatial shifts in the rank ordering of common and rare species.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
What do antenatal care providers understand and do about oral health care during pregnancy: a cross-sectional survey in New South Wales, Australia
BACKGROUND: There is mounting evidence to support the lack of awareness among pregnant women about health consequences and long term risks associated with poor oral hygiene during pregnancy. A recognised and important point of influence is their interaction with health professionals, particularly when receiving Antenatal Care. However, there is limited evidence about the perceptions of ANC providers in Australia toward the provision of perinatal oral healthcare.Ā This study was undertaken to explore the knowledge, attitudes and practices of Antenatal Care (ANC) providers in New South Wales (NSW), Australia providing perinatal oral healthcare and to identify barriers to and predictors of their practices in this area. METHODS: A cross sectional survey was undertaken of ANC providers (general practitioners, obstetricians/gynaecologists and midwives) practising in NSW, Australia. Participants were recruited through their professional organisations via email, postal mail, and networking at conferences. The survey addressed the domains of knowledge, attitude, barriers and practices towards oral healthcare, along with demographics. Data was entered into SPSS software and analysed using descriptive and inferential statistics. RESULTS: A total of 393 surveys (17.6% response rate) were completed comprising 124 general practitioners, 74 obstetricians/gynaecologists and 195 midwives. The results showed limited knowledge among ANC providers regarding the impact of poor maternal oral health on pregnancy/infant outcomes. Most (99%) participants agreed that maternal oral health was important yet few were discussing the importance of oral health or advising women to visit a dentist (16.4ā21.5%). Further, less than a third felt they had the skills to provide oral health advice during pregnancy. ANC providers who were more knowledgeable about maternal oral health, had training and information in this area and greater experience, were more likely to engage in practices addressing the oral health of pregnant women. CONCLUSION: The findings suggest that ANC providers in NSW are not focussing on oral health with pregnant women. ANC providers seem willing to discuss oral health if they have appropriate education/training and information in this area. Further research at a national level is required to confirm whether these findings are similar in all Australian states
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