1,042 research outputs found

    ON THE ROLE OF VIRUSES IN THE EVOLUTION OF IMMUNE RESPONSES

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    Mutual influences of viruses on the immune system and vice versa which lead to a biological balance are considered, with clinical and/or experimental findings. Numbers and turnover of immune cells can be correlated with numbers and growth rate of viruses; certain viruses apparently have adapted to systemic or local immune effector mechanisms. The biological balance of viruses and immune system guarentees overall protection of both host and parasite. It alos may lead to conditions where immune protective mechanisms causes cell and tissue damage leading to disease. Immunologically mediated disease may be influenced by immune regulation via HLA antigen and may therefore explain HLA-disease associations. Finally, the different specificities of antibodies vs. T Cells and the differing kinetics of their immunological memory are outlined and correlated with immune escape, immune protection and the resulting possible evolutionary pressures on viruse

    Subclinical psychosis syndromes in the general population: results from a large-scale epidemiological survey among residents of the canton of Zurich, Switzerland

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    Aims. Prevalence and covariates of subclinical psychosis have gained increased interest in the context of early identification and treatment of persons at risk for psychosis. Methods. We analysed 9829 adults representative of the general population within the canton of Zurich, Switzerland. Two psychosis syndromes, derived from the SCL-90-R, were applied: 'schizotypal signs' and 'schizophrenia nuclear symptoms'. Results. Only a few subjects (13.2%) reported no schizotypal signs. While 33.2% of subjects indicated mild signs, only a small proportion (3.7%) reported severe signs. A very common outcome was no 'schizophrenia nuclear symptoms' (70.6%). Although 13.5% of the participants reported mild symptoms, severe nuclear symptoms were very rare (0.5%). Because these two syndromes were only moderately correlated (r = 0.43), we were able to establish sufficiently distinct symptom clusters. Schizotypal signs were more closely connected to distress than was schizophrenia nuclear symptoms, even though their distribution types were similar. Both syndromes were associated with several covariates, such as alcohol and tobacco use, being unmarried, low education level, psychopathological distress and low subjective well-being. Conclusions. Subclinical psychosis symptoms are quite frequent in the general population but, for the most part, are not very pronounced. In particular, our data support the notion of a continuous Wald distribution of psychotic symptoms in the general population. Our findings have enabled us to confirm the usefulness of these syndromes as previously assessed in other independent community samples. Both can appropriately be associated with well-known risk factors of schizophrenia

    Lack of associations between female hormone levels and visuospatial working memory, divided attention and cognitive bias across two consecutive menstrual cycles

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    Background: Interpretation of observational studies on associations between prefrontal cognitive functioning and hormone levels across the female menstrual cycle is complicated due to small sample sizes and poor replicability. Methods: This observational multisite study comprised data of n = 88 menstruating women from Hannover, Germany, and Zurich, Switzerland, assessed during a first cycle and n = 68 re-assessed during a second cycle to rule out practice effects and false-positive chance findings. We assessed visuospatial working memory, attention, cognitive bias and hormone levels at four consecutive time-points across both cycles. In addition to inter-individual differences we examined intra-individual change over time (i.e., within-subject effects). Results: Estrogen, progesterone and testosterone did not relate to inter-individual differences in cognitive functioning. There was a significant negative association between intra-individual change in progesterone and change in working memory from pre-ovulatory to mid-luteal phase during the first cycle, but that association did not replicate in the second cycle. Intra-individual change in testosterone related negatively to change in cognitive bias from menstrual to pre-ovulatory as well as from pre-ovulatory to mid-luteal phase in the first cycle, but these associations did not replicate in the second cycle. Conclusions: There is no consistent association between women’s hormone levels, in particular estrogen and progesterone, and attention, working memory and cognitive bias. That is, anecdotal findings observed during the first cycle did not replicate in the second cycle, suggesting that these are false-positives attributable to random variation and systematic biases such as practice effects. Due to methodological limitations, positive findings in the published literature must be interpreted with reservation

    Optimal transport on wireless networks

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    We present a study of the application of a variant of a recently introduced heuristic algorithm for the optimization of transport routes on complex networks to the problem of finding the optimal routes of communication between nodes on wireless networks. Our algorithm iteratively balances network traffic by minimizing the maximum node betweenness on the network. The variant we consider specifically accounts for the broadcast restrictions imposed by wireless communication by using a different betweenness measure. We compare the performance of our algorithm to two other known algorithms and find that our algorithm achieves the highest transport capacity both for minimum node degree geometric networks, which are directed geometric networks that model wireless communication networks, and for configuration model networks that are uncorrelated scale-free networks.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure

    Injectivity of sections of convex harmonic mappings and convolution theorems

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    In the article the authors consider the class H0{\mathcal H}_0 of sense-preserving harmonic functions f=h+g‾f=h+\overline{g} defined in the unit disk ∣z∣<1|z|<1 and normalized so that h(0)=0=h′(0)−1h(0)=0=h'(0)-1 and g(0)=0=g′(0)g(0)=0=g'(0), where hh and gg are analytic in the unit disk. In the first part of the article we present two classes PH0(α)\mathcal{P}_H^0(\alpha) and GH0(β)\mathcal{G}_H^0(\beta) of functions from H0{\mathcal H}_0 and show that if f∈PH0(α)f\in \mathcal{P}_H^0(\alpha) and F∈GH0(β)F\in\mathcal{G}_H^0(\beta), then the harmonic convolution is a univalent and close-to-convex harmonic function in the unit disk provided certain conditions for parameters α\alpha and β\beta are satisfied. In the second part we study the harmonic sections (partial sums) sn,n(f)(z)=sn(h)(z)+sn(g)(z)‾, s_{n, n}(f)(z)=s_n(h)(z)+\overline{s_n(g)(z)}, where f=h+g‾∈H0f=h+\overline{g}\in {\mathcal H}_0, sn(h)s_n(h) and sn(g)s_n(g) denote the nn-th partial sums of hh and gg, respectively. We prove, among others, that if f=h+g‾∈H0f=h+\overline{g}\in{\mathcal H}_0 is a univalent harmonic convex mapping, then sn,n(f)s_{n, n}(f) is univalent and close-to-convex in the disk ∣z∣<1/4|z|< 1/4 for n≥2n\geq 2, and sn,n(f)s_{n, n}(f) is also convex in the disk ∣z∣<1/4|z|< 1/4 for n≥2n\geq2 and n≠3n\neq 3. Moreover, we show that the section s3,3(f)s_{3,3}(f) of f∈CH0f\in {\mathcal C}_H^0 is not convex in the disk ∣z∣<1/4|z|<1/4 but is shown to be convex in a smaller disk.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures; To appear in Czechoslovak Mathematical Journa
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