230 research outputs found
An experimental study of melting wave behavior
Suspension of flat plate in parallel heated air stream - ablation and melting wave behavio
Identifying aspects of temporal orientation in students’ moral reflections
History education comprises moral issues and moral aspects, often perceived as an important and meaning-making foundation that makes learning relevant and interesting. The interrelationship between time layers fuels historical
interpretations and facilitates perceptions of moral issues. This article focuses on a study investigating how secondary school students express inter-temporal relationships in encounters with a morally challenging historical event, which for the participants would have been a moral dilemma. Using historical consciousness as the theoretical framework, a matrix linking two prominent theoretical models
– Jörn Rüsen’s (2004) types of narratives and Ann Chinnery’s (2013) strands of
historical consciousness – was developed to analyse and categorize secondary
school students’ expressions of temporal orientation. To carry out the research, 15-year-old Finnish and Swedish students read an excerpt from Christopher
Browning’s (2017) book Ordinary Men: Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final Solution in Poland (originally published in 1992). The students answered and
discussed open-ended questions regarding the relevance of the text to their lives and others’ lives, and the applicability of this historical situation to Europe now
and in the future. Using this empirical material, the analysis provides a tentative overarching depiction of students’ expressions of temporal orientation, and reports on findings of how temporal orientations relate to moral reflection
Identifying aspects of temporal orientation in students’ moral reflections
History education comprises moral issues and moral aspects, often perceived
as an important and meaning-making foundation that makes learning relevant
and interesting. The interrelationship between time layers fuels historical
interpretations and facilitates perceptions of moral issues. This article focuses
on a study investigating how secondary school students express inter-temporal
relationships in encounters with a morally challenging historical event, which for
the participants would have been a moral dilemma. Using historical consciousness
as the theoretical framework, a matrix linking two prominent theoretical models
– Jörn Rüsen’s (2004) types of narratives and Ann Chinnery’s (2013) strands of
historical consciousness – was developed to analyse and categorize secondary
school students’ expressions of temporal orientation. To carry out the research,
15-year-old Finnish and Swedish students read an excerpt from Christopher
Browning’s (2017) book Ordinary Men: Reserve Police Battalion 101 and the Final
Solution in Poland (originally published in 1992). The students answered and
discussed open-ended questions regarding the relevance of the text to their lives and others’ lives, and the applicability of this historical situation to Europe now
and in the future. Using this empirical material, the analysis provides a tentative
overarching depiction of students’ expressions of temporal orientation, and reports on findings of how temporal orientations relate to moral reflection
Effects of ageing on pro-arrhythmic ventricular phenotypes in incrementally paced murine Pgc1β-/- hearts
A range of chronic clinical conditions accompany cardiomyocyte energetic dysfunction and constitute independent risk factors for cardiac arrhythmia. We investigated pro-arrhythmic and arrhythmic phenotypes in energetically deficient C57BL mice with genetic ablation of the mitochondrial promoter peroxisome proliferator activated receptor-γ coactivator-1β (Pgc-1β), a known model of ventricular arrhythmia. Pro-arrhythmic and cellular action potential (AP) characteristics were compared in intact Langendorff-perfused hearts from young (12-16 week) and aged (>52 week), WT and Pgc-1β-/- mice. Simultaneous electrocardiographic and intracellular microelectrode recordings were made through successive trains of 100 regular stimuli at progressively incremented heart rates. Aged Pgc-1β-/- hearts displayed an increased incidence of arrhythmia compared to other groups. Young and aged Pgc-1β-/- hearts showed higher incidences of alternans in both AP activation (maximum AP upshoot velocity (dV/dt)max and latency), recovery (action potential duration (APD90) and resting membrane potential (RMP)) characteristics compared to WT hearts. This was particularly apparent at lower pacing frequencies. These findings accompanied reduced (dV/dt)max and increased AP latency values in the Pgc-1β-/- hearts. APs observed prior to termination of the protocol showed lower (dV/dt)max and longer AP latencies, but indistinguishable APD90 and RMPs in arrhythmic compared to non-arrhythmic hearts. APD restitution analysis showed that Pgc-1β-/- and WT hearts showed similar limiting gradients. However, Pgc-1β-/- hearts had shortened plateau AP wavelengths, particularly in aged Pgc-1β-/- hearts. Pgc-1β-/- hearts therefore show pro-arrhythmic instabilities attributable to altered AP conduction and activation rather than recovery characteristics.We acknowledge the financial support from the Medical Research Council (MR/M001288/1); the Wellcome Trust (105727/Z/14/Z); the British Heart Foundation (PG/14/79/31102 and PG/15/12/31280), Sudden arrhythmic death syndrome (SADS) UK; The McVeigh Benefaction and by the Fundamental Research Grant Scheme (FRGS/2/2014/SKK01/PERDANA/02/1), Ministry of Education, Malaysia
Transcriptional profiles of genes related to electrophysiological function in Scn5a+/− murine hearts
The Scn5a gene encodes the major pore-forming Nav1.5 (α) subunit, of the voltage-gated Na+ channel in cardiomyocytes. The key role of Nav1.5 in action potential initiation and propagation in both atria and ventricles predisposes organisms lacking Scn5a or carrying Scn5a mutations to cardiac arrhythmogenesis. Loss-of-function Nav1.5 genetic abnormalities account for many cases of the human arrhythmic disorder Brugada syndrome (BrS) and related conduction disorders. A murine model with a heterozygous Scn5a deletion recapitulates many electrophysiological phenotypes of BrS. This study examines the relationships between its Scn5a+/− genotype, resulting transcriptional changes, and the consequent phenotypic presentations of BrS. Of 62 selected protein-coding genes related to cardiomyocyte electrophysiological or homeostatic function, concentrations of mRNA transcribed from 15 differed significantly from wild type (WT). Despite halving apparent ventricular Scn5a transcription heterozygous deletion did not significantly downregulate its atrial expression, raising possibilities of atria-specific feedback mechanisms. Most of the remaining 14 genes whose expression differed significantly between WT and Scn5a+/− animals involved Ca2+ homeostasis specifically in atrial tissue, with no overlap with any ventricular changes. All statistically significant changes in expression were upregulations in the atria and downregulations in the ventricles. This investigation demonstrates the value of future experiments exploring for and clarifying links between transcriptional control of Scn5a and of genes whose protein products coordinate Ca2+ regulation and examining their possible roles in BrS
Transcriptional profiles of genes related to electrophysiological function in Scn5a+/- murine hearts.
The Scn5a gene encodes the major pore-forming Nav 1.5 (α) subunit, of the voltage-gated Na+ channel in cardiomyocytes. The key role of Nav 1.5 in action potential initiation and propagation in both atria and ventricles predisposes organisms lacking Scn5a or carrying Scn5a mutations to cardiac arrhythmogenesis. Loss-of-function Nav 1.5 genetic abnormalities account for many cases of the human arrhythmic disorder Brugada syndrome (BrS) and related conduction disorders. A murine model with a heterozygous Scn5a deletion recapitulates many electrophysiological phenotypes of BrS. This study examines the relationships between its Scn5a+/- genotype, resulting transcriptional changes, and the consequent phenotypic presentations of BrS. Of 62 selected protein-coding genes related to cardiomyocyte electrophysiological or homeostatic function, concentrations of mRNA transcribed from 15 differed significantly from wild type (WT). Despite halving apparent ventricular Scn5a transcription heterozygous deletion did not significantly downregulate its atrial expression, raising possibilities of atria-specific feedback mechanisms. Most of the remaining 14 genes whose expression differed significantly between WT and Scn5a+/- animals involved Ca2+ homeostasis specifically in atrial tissue, with no overlap with any ventricular changes. All statistically significant changes in expression were upregulations in the atria and downregulations in the ventricles. This investigation demonstrates the value of future experiments exploring for and clarifying links between transcriptional control of Scn5a and of genes whose protein products coordinate Ca2+ regulation and examining their possible roles in BrS
The Web of Human Sexual Contacts
Many ``real-world'' networks are clearly defined while most ``social''
networks are to some extent subjective. Indeed, the accuracy of
empirically-determined social networks is a question of some concern because
individuals may have distinct perceptions of what constitutes a social link.
One unambiguous type of connection is sexual contact. Here we analyze data on
the sexual behavior of a random sample of individuals, and find that the
cumulative distributions of the number of sexual partners during the twelve
months prior to the survey decays as a power law with similar exponents for females and males. The scale-free nature of the web of human
sexual contacts suggests that strategic interventions aimed at preventing the
spread of sexually-transmitted diseases may be the most efficient approach.Comment: 7 pages with 2 eps figures. Latex file. For more details or for
downloading the PDF file of the published article see
http://polymer.bu.edu/~amaral/WebofContacts.html . For more results on teh
structure of complex networks see http://polymer.bu.edu/~amaral/Networks.htm
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Molecular basis of arrhythmic substrate in ageing murine peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ co-activator deficient hearts modelling mitochondrial dysfunction.
INTRODUCTION: Ageing and chronic metabolic disorders are associated with mitochondrial dysfunction and cardiac pro-arrhythmic phenotypes which were recently attributed to slowed atrial and ventricular action potential (AP) conduction in peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ co-activator deficient (Pgc-1β-/-) mice. METHODS: We compared expression levels of voltage-gated Na+ channel (NaV1.5) and gap junction channels, Connexins 40 and 43 (Cx40 and Cx43) in the hearts of young and old, and wild-type (WT) and Pgc-1β-/- mice. This employed Western blotting (WB) for NaV1.5, Cx40 and Cx43 in atrial/ventricular tissue lysates, and immunofluorescence (IF) from Cx43 was explored in tissue sections. Results were analysed using two-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) for independent/interacting effects of age and genotype. RESULTS: In atria, increased age and Pgc-1β-/- genotype each independently decreased both Cx40 and Cx43 expression without interacting effects. In IF experiments, both age and Pgc-1β deletion independently reduced Cx43 expression. In ventricles, age and genotype exerted interacting effects in WB studies of NaV1.5 expression. Young Pgc-1β-/- then showed greater NaV1.5 expression than young WT ventricles. However, neither age nor Pgc-1β deletion affected Cx43 expression, independently or through interacting effects in both WB and IF studies. CONCLUSION: Similar pro-arrhythmic atrial/ventricular phenotypes arise in aged/Pgc-1β-/- from differing contributions of altered protein expression and functional effects that may arise from multiple acute mechanisms
Effects of trace levels of nitrous oxide on psychomotor performance.
Twenty-four male student volunteers were exposed to 50 ppm of nitrous oxide or air in an exposure chamber for 4 h in two experimental sessions. The subjects completed a battery of psychomotor tests during the final 40 min of the exposure sessions. Nitrous oxide, at this low concentration, did not produce any statistically significant changes in performance
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