832 research outputs found

    Flutuações diárias na associação de peixes da praia de areia de Porto Pim, ilha de Faial, Açores

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    Os peixes da praia de areia de Porto Pim, Açores foram amostrados através de arrastos de rede (chinchorro) a intervalos de três horas durante um período de 24 horas nos meses de Agosto, Setembro e Outubro de 1989. A associação de peixes era dominada, em cada um dos meses, por três a quatro espécies (90-97% dos indivíduos). A maioria das espécies estavam representadas por formas juvenis. A variação entre meses do padrão diário pode explicar-se primariamente pelas mudanças no padrão de abundância das espécies dominantes. Ao longo dos três meses as variações na estrutura da associação implicaram mudanças no padrão diário. Muitas das espécies tinham um padrão de abundância definido, primariamente por ser ou diurno ou nocturno. Encontrou-se também um padrão de maré na estrutura da associação de peixes caracterizado por uma maior diversidade na maré baixa.ABSTRACT: The shallow-water fish assemblage at Porto Pim, Azores was sampled with a beach seine at three hour intervals over 24 h periods in August, September and October 1989. The fish assemblage was dominated by three to four species in each month (90-97% of numbers). Most species were present as juveniles. The variation in diel patterns between months could primarily be explained by changes in the pattern of abundance of dominant species. Over the three months seasonal changes in the assemblage structure caused changes in the diel pattern. Many of the species present had a definite pattern to their abundance being either primarily diurnal or nocturnal. There was also a tidal pattern to the assemblage structure which had a higher diversity at low water

    Associações de peixes das zonas entre-marés da ilha do Faial, Açores

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    No presente artigo descrevemos as associações de peixes das poças do intertidal rochoso e do intertidal arenoso dos Açores. São treze as espécies que ocorrem nas poças do intertidal rochoso. Os blenídeos, com Parablennius sanguinolentus parvicornis, Coryphoblennius galerita e Lipophrys trigloides, constituem a família dominante de peixes residentes das poças do intertidal rochoso. A riqueza é maior no 3º trimestre, com 12 espécies, e menor no 1º trimestre com apenas oito espécies a ocorrerem nas poças. A diversidade é também superior no 3º trimestre. O pequeno grau de variação pode ser fundamentalmente atribuído à presença de espécies transientes e de juvenis que utilizam a costa durante as primeiras fases de desenvolvimento. São quinze as espécies que ocorrem na zona intertidal da praia arenosa de Porto Pim. A comunidade de peixes é aqui dominada por juvenis de espécies transientes. Não encontrámos espécies intertidais residentes. A riqueza e abundância são superiores no 3º e 4º trimestre devido ao recrutamento de juvenis, e à ocorrência de espécies migradoras e transientes.ABSTRACT: In the present paper we describe fish assemblages of rocky intertidal pools and intertidal areas of sandy beaches of the Azores. Blennies (Parablennius sanguinolentus parvicornis, Coryphoblennius galerita and Lipophrys trigloides) constitute the dominant resident fish family in the intertidal pools. Thirteen species were encountered in intertidal pools. Richness is higher in the 3rd quarter of the year with 12 species and lower in the 1st and 2nd quarters with 8 species occurring in the samples . Diversity is also higher in the 3rd quarter The small variation can mostly be attributed to transient species and juveniles using the shore as a nursery ground. Fifteen species occurred in the intertidal region of the protected shallow sandy beach of Porto Pim. This fish assemblage was dominated by juveniles of transient species. No resident species were present here. Richness and abundance were higher in 3rd and 4th quarters due to recruitment of juveniles, and the occurrence of migrant and transient species

    Factors influencing perception of effort (session rating of perceived exertion) during elite soccer training

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    Purpose: The aim of the current study was to identify the external-training-load markers that are most influential on session rating of perceived exertion (RPE) of training load (RPE-TL) during elite soccer training. Methods: Twenty-two elite players competing in the English Premier League were monitored. Training-load data (RPE and 10-Hz GPS integrated with a 100-Hz accelerometer) were collected during 1892 individual training sessions over an entire in-season competitive period. Expert knowledge and a collinearity r &lt; .5 were used initially to select the external training variables for the final analysis. A multivariate-adjusted within-subjects model was employed to quantify the correlations of RPE and RPE-TL (RPE × duration) with various measures of external training intensity and training load. Results: Total high-speed-running (HSR; &gt;14.4 km/h) distance and number of impacts and accelerations &gt;3 m/s2 remained in the final multivariate model (P &lt; .001). The adjusted correlations with RPE were r = .14, r = .09, and r = .25 for HSR, impacts, and accelerations, respectively. For RPE-TL, the correlations were r = .11, r = .45, and r = .37, respectively. Conclusions: The external-load measures that were found to be moderately predictive of RPE-TL in soccer training were HSR distance and the number of impacts and accelerations. These findings provide new evidence to support the use of RPE-TL as a global measure of training load in elite soccer. Furthermore, understanding the influence of characteristics affecting RPE-TL may help coaches and practitioners enhance training prescription and athlete monitoring.</p

    Informationの多変数解析への応用について

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    The Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM), at ca. 55.8 Ma, is one of the most studied instances of past greenhouse gas-induced global warming. As such, it provides a rich opportunity to examine the impact of such global change on local climates. The effects of increased continental and sea surface temperatures on local precipitation and humidity during the PETM remain poorly constrained and studies reveal complex, regional differences; whilst some localities appear to experience a net increase in humidity, others exhibit the opposite. Crucially, there are few records of hydrological change from tropical regions. Recent onshore drilling expeditions in Tanzania have yielded expanded sedimentary sections, deposited in a marine environment, that span much of the Late Cretaceous and Paleogene and show exceptionally good preservation of both calcareous microfossils and organic matter. The PETM interval has previously been constrained by both biostratigraphy and carbon isotopic records and spans ca. 7 m of section. Lipid distributions, including various terrestrial, marine and bacterial biomarkers and their hydrogen isotopic compositions, as well as mineralogy, were used to examine East African vegetation and hydrological responses to the global change occurring at the PETM. Although total organic carbon contents decrease, the concentrations of both higher plant (n-alkanes, n-alkanoic acids) and soil bacterial (glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraethers) biomarkers increase dramatically at the onset of the PETM negative carbon isotope excursion (CIE), suggesting an increased discharge of fluvial sedimentary organic matter. Similarly, mineralogical indicators of terrestrial input – including Ti/Al and Si/Al ratios, quartz contents and, notably, the proportion of kaolinite – also increase at the onset of the CIE. However, higher plant leaf wax n-alkanes (C27, C29 and C31) become more deuterium-enriched throughout the same interval, suggesting a more arid and/or hotter, rather than a more humid, environment. This evidence collectively suggests an East African early PETM climate characterised by overall hot and arid conditions punctuated by intense, perhaps seasonal, precipitation events. These data match observations from other locations at mid-latitudes, suggesting that the humid climate often suggested for the PETM was not globally widespread

    The mediating effect of task presentation on collaboration and children's acquisition of scientific reasoning

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    There has been considerable research concerning peer interaction and the acquisition of children's scientific reasoning. This study investigated differences in collaborative activity between pairs of children working around a computer with pairs of children working with physical apparatus and related any differences to the development of children's scientific reasoning. Children aged between 9 and 10 years old (48 boys and 48 girls) were placed into either same ability or mixed ability pairs according to their individual, pre-test performance on a scientific reasoning task. These pairs then worked on either a computer version or a physical version of Inhelder and Piaget's (1958) chemical combination task. Type of presentation was found to mediate the nature and type of collaborative activity. The mixed-ability pairs working around the computer talked proportionally more about the task and management of the task; had proportionally more transactive discussions and used the record more productively than children working with the physical apparatus. Type of presentation was also found to mediated children's learning. Children in same ability pairs who worked with the physical apparatus improved significantly more than same ability pairs who worked around the computer. These findings were partially predicted from a socio-cultural theory and show the importance of tools for mediating collaborative activity and collaborative learning

    White matter damage and cognitive impairment after traumatic brain injury

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    White matter disruption is an important determinant of cognitive impairment after brain injury, but conventional neuroimaging underestimates its extent. In contrast, diffusion tensor imaging provides a validated and sensitive way of identifying the impact of axonal injury. The relationship between cognitive impairment after traumatic brain injury and white matter damage is likely to be complex. We applied a flexible technique—tract-based spatial statistics—to explore whether damage to specific white matter tracts is associated with particular patterns of cognitive impairment. The commonly affected domains of memory, executive function and information processing speed were investigated in 28 patients in the post-acute / chronic phase following traumatic brain injury and in 26 age-matched controls. Analysis of fractional anisotropy and diffusivity maps revealed widespread differences in white matter integrity between the groups. Patients showed large areas of reduced fractional anisotropy, as well as increased mean and axial diffusivities, compared with controls, despite the small amounts of cortical and white matter damage visible on standard imaging. A stratified analysis based on the presence or absence of microbleeds (a marker of diffuse axonal injury) revealed diffusion tensor imaging to be more sensitive than gradient-echo imaging to white matter damage. The location of white matter abnormality predicted cognitive function to some extent. The structure of the fornices was correlated with associative learning and memory across both patient and control groups, whilst the structure of frontal lobe connections showed relationships with executive function that differed in the two groups. These results highlight the complexity of the relationships between white matter structure and cognition. Although widespread and, sometimes, chronic abnormalities of white matter are identifiable following traumatic brain injury, the impact of these changes on cognitive function is likely to depend on damage to key pathways that link nodes in the distributed brain networks supporting high-level cognitive functions

    The Health Literacy Questionnaire (HLQ) at the patient-clinician interface: a qualitative study of what patients and clinicians mean by their HLQ scores

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    BackgroundThe Health Literacy Questionnaire (HLQ) has nine scales that each measure an aspect of the multidimensional construct of health literacy. All scales have good psychometric properties. However, it is the interpretations of data within contexts that must be proven valid, not just the psychometric properties of a measurement instrument. The purpose of this study was to establish the extent of concordance and discordance between individual patient and clinician interpretations of HLQ data in the context of complex case management.MethodsSixteen patients with complex needs completed the HLQ and were interviewed to discuss the reasons for their answers. Also, the clinicians of each of these patients completed the HLQ about their patient, and were interviewed to discuss the reasons for their answers. Thematic analysis of HLQ scores and interview data determined the extent of concordance between patient and clinician HLQ responses, and the reasons for discordance.ResultsHighest concordance (80%) between patient and clinician item-response pairs was seen in Scale 1 and highest discordance (56%) was seen in Scale 6. Four themes were identified to explain discordance: 1) Technical or literal meaning of specific words; 2) Patients&rsquo; changing or evolving circumstances; 3) Different expectations and criteria for assigning HLQ scores; and 4) Different perspectives about a patient&rsquo;s reliance on healthcare providers.ConclusionThis study shows that the HLQ can act as an adjunct to clinical practice to help clinicians understand a patient&rsquo;s health literacy challenges and strengths early in a clinical encounter. Importantly, clinicians can use the HLQ to detect differences between their own perspectives about a patient&rsquo;s health literacy and the patient&rsquo;s perspective, and to initiate discussion to explore this. Provision of training to better detect these differences may assist clinicians to provide improved care.The outcomes of this study contribute to the growing body of international validation evidence about the use of the HLQ in different contexts. More specifically, this study has shown that the HLQ has measurement veracity at the patient and clinician level and may support clinicians to understand patients&rsquo; health literacy and enable a deeper engagement with healthcare services.<br /

    cIMPACT‐NOW update 7: advancing the molecular classification of ependymal tumors

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    Advances in our understanding of the biological basis and molecular characteristics of ependymal tumors since the latest iteration of the World Health Organization (WHO) classification of CNS tumors (2016) have prompted the cIMPACT‐NOW group to recommend a new classification. Separation of ependymal tumors by anatomic site is an important principle of the new classification and was prompted by methylome profiling data to indicate that molecular groups of ependymal tumors in the posterior fossa and supratentorial and spinal compartments are distinct. Common recurrent genetic or epigenetic alterations found in tumors belonging to the main molecular groups have been used to define tumor types at intracranial sites; C11orf95 and YAP1 fusion genes for supratentorial tumors and two types of posterior fossa ependymoma defined by methylation group, PFA and PFB. A recently described type of aggressive spinal ependymoma with MYCN amplification has also been included. Myxopapillary ependymoma and subependymoma have been retained as histopathologically defined tumor types, but the classification has dropped the distinction between classic and anaplastic ependymoma. While the cIMPACT‐NOW group considered that data to inform assignment of grade to molecularly defined ependymomas are insufficiently mature, it recommends assigning WHO grade 2 to myxopapillary ependymoma and allows grade 2 or grade 3 to be assigned to ependymomas not defined by molecular status.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/162791/2/bpa12866_am.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/162791/1/bpa12866.pd
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