186 research outputs found
Overweight and Obesity in Young and Middle Age and Early Retirement: The ARIC Study
The objective of this study was to examine associations between weight status in young and middle age and early retirement in African-American and white men and women. Data were from the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) study. Analyses were restricted to participants aged 45â55 years at baseline (n = 6, 483). Associations between weight status at age 25 and ages 45â55 and age at early retirement (prior to age 65) over 9 years of follow-up were examined using proportional hazard regression analyses in models stratified by race and gender. Models were adjusted for education, household income, health insurance status, occupation, occupational physical activity, marital status, smoking, and field center. Between 18.7 and 21.6% of African-American and white men and women reported retiring prior to age 65. Although not always statistically significant, overweight and obesity were associated with early retirement in all but white women. Overweight (BMI â„ 25 kg/m2) at age 25 was significantly associated with early retirement in African-American women (hazard ratio (95% confidence interval): 1.62 (1.17â2.23)) and white men (1.32 (1.12â1.57)). There was also a trend between overweight at age 25 and early retirement in African-American men (1.43 (0.99â2.07)). Obesity (BMI â„ 30 kg/m2) in middle age was significantly associated with early retirement in white men only (1.32 (1.03â1.69)). Furthermore, overweight at age 25 and obesity at ages 45â55 were associated with early retirement for health reasons among African-American and white men and women. In conclusion, analyses of the economic impact of obesity may need to consider its effects on early retirement
The OSI Model and the Seven Chakras of Hinduism: A Comparative Analysis
Abstract The Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) The OSI Model The Open Systems Interconnections (OSI) Basic Reference Model was designed in 1977 by the International Organization for Standardization, a group also referred to as the ISO. The reference model is part one of the two part OSI project that was developed by the ISO. The second part was a large collection of protocols, defining the underlying works of a system ISO was attempting to create (ITU, 1994, Zimmerman, 1980. The system was designed to be a collective effort of industry to align everyone with -common network standardsâ and to -provide multi-vendor interoperabilityâ (OSI, 2013, p. 1). The second part of the universal protocol definitions was found to be too complicated for mass implementation and was outclassed by the current protocol system we use today, the TCP/IP protocol (OSI, 2013). The first part of ISO's OSI project, the Seven Layer OSI Model is still used today as a multi reference model for services and networking protocols such as TCP/IP, ATM, Ethernet, and UDP (Data Network Resource, 2013
Binaral Rivalry in the Presence of Visual Perceptual and Semantic Influences
When two different odorants are presented simultaneously to the two nostrils, we experience alternations in olfactory
percepts, a phenomenon called binaral rivalry. Little is known about the nature of such alternations. Here we investigate this
issue by subjecting unstable and stable olfactory percepts to the influences of visual perceptual or semantic cues as
participants engage in simultaneous samplings of either two different odorants (binaral) or a single odorant and water
(mononaral), one to each nostril. We show that alternations of olfactory percepts in the binaral setting persist in the
presence of visual perceptual and semantic modulations. We also show that perceptual cues have a stronger effect than
semantic cues in the binaral case, whereas their effects are comparable in the mononaral setting. Our findings provide
evidence that an inherent, stimulus-driven process underlies binaral rivalry despite its general susceptibility to top-down
influences
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Vitamin D-responsive SGPP2 variants associated with lung cell expression and lung function
Background: Vitamin D is associated with lung health in epidemiologic studies, but mechanisms mediating observed associations are poorly understood. This study explores mechanisms for an effect of vitamin D in lung through an in vivo gene expression study, an expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) analysis in lung tissue, and a population-based cohort study of sequence variants. Methods: Microarray analysis investigated the association of gene expression in small airway epithelial cells with serum 25(OH)D in adult non-smokers. Sequence variants in candidate genes identified by the microarray were investigated in a lung tissue eQTL database, and also in relation to cross-sectional pulmonary function in the Health, Aging, and Body Composition (Health ABC) study, stratified by race, with replication in the Framingham Heart Study (FHS). Results: 13 candidate genes had significant differences in expression by serum 25(OH)D (nominal p < 0.05), and a genome-wide significant eQTL association was detected for SGPP2. In Health ABC, SGPP2 SNPs were associated with FEV1 in both European- and African-Americans, and the gene-level association was replicated in European-American FHS participants. SNPs in 5 additional candidate genes (DAPK1, FSTL1, KAL1, KCNS3, and RSAD2) were associated with FEV1 in Health ABC participants. Conclusions: SGPP2, a sphingosine-1-phosphate phosphatase, is a novel vitamin D-responsive gene associated with lung function. The identified associations will need to be followed up in further studies
A Review of Head-Worn Display Research at NASA Langley Research Center
NASA Langley has conducted research in the area of helmet-mounted/head-worn displays over the past 30 years. Initially, NASA Langley's research focused on military applications, but recently it has conducted a line of research in the area of head-worn displays for commercial and business aircraft. This work has revolved around numerous simulation experiments as well as flight tests to develop technology and data for industry and regulatory guidance. The paper summarizes the results of NASA's helmet-mounted/head-worn display research. Of note, the work tracks progress in wearable collimated optics, head tracking, latency reduction, and weight. The research lends credence that a small, sunglasses-type form factor of the head-worn display would be acceptable to commercial pilots, and this goal is now becoming technologically feasible. The research further suggests that a head-worn display may serve as an "equivalent" Head-Up Display (HUD) with safety, operational, and cost benefits. "HUD equivalence" appears to be the economic avenue by which head-worn displays can become main-stream on the commercial and business aircraft flight deck. If this happens, NASA's research suggests that additional operational benefits using the unique capabilities of the head-worn display can open up new operational paradigms
A Systematic Mapping Approach of 16q12.2/FTO and BMI in More Than 20,000 African Americans Narrows in on the Underlying Functional Variation: Results from the Population Architecture using Genomics and Epidemiology (PAGE) Study
Genetic variants in intron 1 of the fat mass- and obesity-associated (FTO) gene have been consistently associated with body mass index (BMI) in Europeans. However, follow-up studies in African Americans (AA) have shown no support for some of the most consistently BMI-associated FTO index single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). This is most likely explained by different race-specific linkage disequilibrium (LD) patterns and lower correlation overall in AA, which provides the opportunity to fine-map this region and narrow in on the functional variant. To comprehensively explore the 16q12.2/FTO locus and to search for second independent signals in the broader region, we fine-mapped a 646-kb region, encompassing the large FTO gene and the flanking gene RPGRIP1L by investigating a total of 3,756 variants (1,529 genotyped and 2,227 imputed variants) in 20,488 AAs across five studies. We observed associations between BMI and variants in the known FTO intron 1 locus: the SNP with the most significant p-value, rs56137030 (8.3Ă10-6) had not been highlighted in previous studies. While rs56137030was correlated at r2>0.5 with 103 SNPs in Europeans (including the GWAS index SNPs), this number was reduced to 28 SNPs in AA. Among rs56137030 and the 28 correlated SNPs, six were located within candidate intronic regulatory elements, including rs1421085, for which we predicted allele-specific binding affinity for the transcription factor CUX1, which has recently been implicated in the regulation of FTO. We did not find strong evidence for a second independent signal in the broader region. In summary, this large fine-mapping study in AA has substantially reduced the number of common alleles that are likely to be functional candidates of the known FTO locus. Importantly our study demonstrated that comprehensive fine-mapping in AA provides a powerful approach to narrow in on the functional candidate(s) underlying the initial GWAS findings in European populations
Genome-Wide Interactions with Dairy Intake for Body Mass Index in Adults of European Descent
Scope: Body weight responds variably to the intake of dairy foods. Genetic variation may contribute to interâindividual variability in associations between body weight and dairy consumption.
Methods and results: A genomeâwide interaction study to discover genetic variants that account for variation in BMI in the context of lowâfat, highâfat and total dairy intake in crossâsectional analysis was conducted. Data from nine discovery studies (up to 25 513 European descent individuals) were metaâanalyzed. Twentyâsix genetic variants reached the selected significance threshold (pâinteraction \u3c10â7), and six independent variants (LINC01512ârs7751666, PALM2/AKAP2ârs914359, ACTA2ârs1388, PPP1R12Aârs7961195, LINC00333ârs9635058, AC098847.1ârs1791355) were evaluated metaâanalytically for replication of interaction in up to 17 675 individuals. Variant rs9635058 (128 kb 3â of LINC00333) was replicated (pâinteraction = 0.004). In the discovery cohorts, rs9635058 interacted with dairy (pâinteraction = 7.36 Ă 10â8) such that each serving of lowâfat dairy was associated with 0.225 kg mâ2 lower BMI per each additional copy of the effect allele (A). A second genetic variant (ACTA2ârs1388) approached interaction replication significance for lowâfat dairy exposure.
Conclusion: Body weight responses to dairy intake may be modified by genotype, in that greater dairy intake may protect a genetic subgroup from higher body weight
Pan-Cancer Analysis of lncRNA Regulation Supports Their Targeting of Cancer Genes in Each Tumor Context
Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) are commonly dys-regulated in tumors, but only a handful are known toplay pathophysiological roles in cancer. We inferredlncRNAs that dysregulate cancer pathways, onco-genes, and tumor suppressors (cancer genes) bymodeling their effects on the activity of transcriptionfactors, RNA-binding proteins, and microRNAs in5,185 TCGA tumors and 1,019 ENCODE assays.Our predictions included hundreds of candidateonco- and tumor-suppressor lncRNAs (cancerlncRNAs) whose somatic alterations account for thedysregulation of dozens of cancer genes and path-ways in each of 14 tumor contexts. To demonstrateproof of concept, we showed that perturbations tar-geting OIP5-AS1 (an inferred tumor suppressor) andTUG1 and WT1-AS (inferred onco-lncRNAs) dysre-gulated cancer genes and altered proliferation ofbreast and gynecologic cancer cells. Our analysis in-dicates that, although most lncRNAs are dysregu-lated in a tumor-specific manner, some, includingOIP5-AS1, TUG1, NEAT1, MEG3, and TSIX, synergis-tically dysregulate cancer pathways in multiple tumorcontexts
Genomic, Pathway Network, and Immunologic Features Distinguishing Squamous Carcinomas
This integrated, multiplatform PanCancer Atlas study co-mapped and identified distinguishing
molecular features of squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs) from five sites associated with smokin
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