491 research outputs found

    Ecology and display behaviour of breeding Eurasian woodcock Scolopax rusticola

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    In Britain, the Eurasian woodcock Scolopax rusticola occurs as both a common winter migrant and a resident breeding species. A national Breeding Woodcock Survey, conducted in 2003, provided the first accurate assessment of Britain’s resident population size. Here, data from a second national Breeding Woodcock Survey are presented, providing the first opportunity to assess changes in abundance. I estimated Britain’s Breeding population to be 55,241 males (95% CL: 41,806–69,004), representing a 29% decline in ten years. Abundance was correlated with the availability of large, well-connected and heterogenous areas of woodland and populations have retracted towards more heavily wooded landscapes. Woodcock site occupancy increases with the availability of certain woodland types, notably birch, and with increasing distance from urban areas. The 2003 and 2013 Breeding Woodcock Surveys used counts of displaying male woodcock to estimate abundance across a stratified sample of randomly selected sites. Chapters 4 to 7 seek to improve the current understanding of this unique display, known as roding, which underpins national surveys in Britain and elsewhere in Europe. To do this, GPS loggers were used to track the movements of male woodcock during their roding flights. Male woodcock covered roding grounds that were larger in size than most previous estimates, with mean daily roding grounds measuring between 1.11 and 1.29 km2 depending on the technique employed. Roding activity was reduced if dry periods preceded roding surveys, and temperature, cloud and moon phase could all influence the timing of display. The woodcock’s roding display is targeted towards open space within woodlands and woodland edges, and woodcock showed a preference for permanent clearings during display. These findings are discussed in terms of their potential influence on the interpretation of existing roding survey data and their implications for future assessments of population size and trend

    A protocol for co-creating research project lay summaries with stakeholders:Guideline development for Canada's AGE-WELL Network

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    Background Funding bodies increasingly require researchers to write lay summaries to communicate projects’ real-world relevance to the public in an accessible way. However, research proposals and findings are generally not easily readable or understandable by non-specialist readers. Many researchers find writing lay summaries difficult because they typically write for fellow subject specialists or academics rather than the general public or a non-specialist audience. The primary objective of our project is to develop guidelines for researchers in Canada’s AGE-WELL Network of Centres of Excellence, and ultimately various other disciplines, sectors, and institutions, to co-create lay summaries of research projects with stakeholders. To begin, we produced a protocol for co-creating a lay summary based on workshops we organized and facilitated for an AGE-WELL researcher. This paper presents the lay summary co-creation protocol that AGE-WELL researchers will be invited to use. Methods Eligible participants in this project will be 24 AgeTech project researchers who are funded by the AGE-WELL network in its Core Research Program 2020. If they agree to participate in this project, we will invite them to use our protocol to co-produce a lay summary of their respective projects with stakeholders. The protocol comprises six steps: Investigate principles of writing a good lay summary, identify the target readership, identify stakeholders to collaborate with, recruit the identified stakeholders to work on a lay summary, prepare for workshop sessions, and execute the sessions. To help participants through the process, we will provide them with a guide to developing an accessible, readable research lay summary, help them make decisions, and host, and facilitate if needed, their lay summary co-creation workshops. Discussion Public-facing research outputs, including lay summaries, are increasingly important knowledge translation strategies to promote the impact of research on real-world issues. To produce lay summaries that include information that will interest a non-specialist readership and that are written in accessible language, stakeholder engagement is key. Furthermore, both researchers and stakeholders benefit by participating in the co-creation process. We hope the protocol helps researchers collaborate with stakeholders effectively to co-produce lay summaries that meet the needs of both the public and project funders

    Precision medicine and lymphoma

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    Cancer Research UK (15968 awarded to J.F., 22742 awarded to J.O.) and Bloodwise program grant [15002] through the Precision Medicine for Aggressive Lymphoma (PMAL) consortium. E.A.K. is in receipt of fellowship funding from The Medical College of Saint Bartholomew’s Hospital Trust. J.F. declares grants from Epizyme and personal fees from Roche, Gilead, Janssen and Epizyme

    Doing gender locally: The importance of ‘place’ in understanding marginalised masculinities and young men’s transitions to ‘safe’ and successful futures

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    Observable anxieties have been developing about the position of boys and young men in contemporary society in recent years. This is expressed as a crisis of masculinity, in which place is often implicitly implicated, but is rarely considered for its role in the shaping of young men’s practices, trajectories and aspirations. Drawing on research conducted with young people who accessed a range of social care support services, this article argues that transition means different things for young men in different locales and that local definitions of masculinity are required to better understand young men’s lives and the opportunities available to them. The authors argue that home life, street life, individual neighbourhoods, regions and nations all shaped the young men’s identities and the practices they (and the staff working with them) drew on in order to create successful futures and ‘safe’ forms of masculinity. It is suggested that this place-based approach has the potential to re-shape the ‘crisis’ discourse surrounding masculinity and the anxieties associated with young men

    Long Intergenic Noncoding RNAs Mediate the Human Chondrocyte Inflammatory Response and Are Differentially Expressed in Osteoarthritis Cartilage

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    Objective To identify long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs), including long intergenic noncoding RNAs (lincRNAs), antisense RNAs, and pseudogenes, associated with the inflammatory response in human primary osteoarthritis (OA) chondrocytes and to explore their expression and function in OA. Methods OA cartilage was obtained from patients with hip or knee OA following joint replacement surgery. Non-OA cartilage was obtained from postmortem donors and patients with fracture of the neck of the femur. Primary OA chondrocytes were isolated by collagenase digestion. LncRNA expression analysis was performed by RNA sequencing (RNAseq) and quantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction. Modulation of lncRNA chondrocyte expression was achieved using LNA longRNA GapmeRs (Exiqon). Cytokine production was measured with Luminex. Results RNAseq identified 983 lncRNAs in primary human hip OA chondrocytes, 183 of which had not previously been identified. Following interleukin-1β (IL-1β) stimulation, we identified 125 lincRNAs that were differentially expressed. The lincRNA p50-associated cyclooxygenase 2-extragenic RNA (PACER) and 2 novel chondrocyte inflammation-associated lincRNAs (CILinc01 and CILinc02) were differentially expressed in both knee and hip OA cartilage compared to non-OA cartilage. In primary OA chondrocytes, these lincRNAs were rapidly and transiently induced in response to multiple proinflammatory cytokines. Knockdown of CILinc01 and CILinc02 expression in human chondrocytes significantly enhanced the IL-1-stimulated secretion of proinflammatory cytokines. Conclusion The inflammatory response in human OA chondrocytes is associated with widespread changes in the profile of lncRNAs, including PACER, CILinc01, and CILinc02. Differential expression of CILinc01 and CIinc02 in hip and knee OA cartilage, and their role in modulating cytokine production during the chondrocyte inflammatory response, suggest that they may play an important role in mediating inflammation-driven cartilage degeneration in OA

    Learning through social spaces: migrant women and lifelong learning in post-colonial London

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    This article shows how migrant women engage in learning through social spaces. It argues that such spaces are little recognised, and that there are multiple ways in which migrant women construct and negotiate their informal learning through socialising with other women in different informal modes. Additionally, the article shows how learning is shaped by the socio-political, geographical and multicultural context of living in London, outlining ways in which gendered and racialised identities shape, construct and constrain participation in lifelong learning. The article shows that one way in which migrant women resist (post)colonial constructions of difference is by engaging in informal and non-formal lifelong learning, arguing that the benefits are (at least) two-fold. The women develop skills (including language skills) but also use their informal learning to develop what is referred to in this article as 'relational capital'. The article concludes that informal lifelong learning developed through social spaces can enhance a sense of belonging for migrant women

    Governance of policing and cultural codes: interpreting and responding to policy directives

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    In terms of governance, British policing seems to arise from a history of local traditions influenced more recently by centralist managerial demands. A creeping process of privatisation has led social scientists to argue that patterns of governance in British policing are changing in several directions. This has included the way police officers not only are challenged, but also challenge these changing modes of governance in terms of ethical codes of behaviour. There is evidence that police officers, as meaningful actors, have made attempts to diverge from these strictures and have forged their own ways, via their cultural knowledge and practices, to ‘do policing’, rather than relying upon codes of practice or rules and regulations

    Genomic profiling reveals spatial intra-tumor heterogeneity in follicular lymphoma

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    We are indebted to the patients for donating tumor specimens as part of this study. The authors thank the Centre de Ressources Biologiques (CRB)-Santé of Rennes (BB-0033-00056) for patient samples, Queen Mary University of London Genome Centre for Illumina Miseq sequencing, and the support by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Centre at Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust and King’s College London for Illumina Hiseq sequencing. The views expressed are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the NHS, the NIHR, or the Department of Health. This work was supported by grants from the Kay Kendall Leukaemia Fund (KKL 757 awarded to J.O.), Cancer Research UK (22742 awarded to J.O., 15968 awarded to J.F., Clinical Research Fellowship awarded to S.A.), Bloodwise through funding of the Precision Medicine for Aggressive Lymphoma (PMAL) consortium, Centre for Genomic Health, Queen Mary University of London, Carte d’Identité des Tumeurs (CIT), Ligue National contre le Cancer, Pôle de biologie hospital universitaire de Rennes, CRB-Santé of Rennes (BB-0033-00056), and CeVi/Carnot program
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