3,719 research outputs found
Talking With Patients: How Hospitals Use Bilingual Clinicians and Staff to Care for Patients With Language Needs
Presents survey findings on bilingual clinicians, staff, interpreters, and volunteers providing language services; training and assessment; hospital policies; and their impact. Recommends explicit policies, robust assessments, and proactive approaches
First-principles study of symmetry lowering in relaxed BaTiO3/SrTiO3 superlattices
The crystal structure and local spontaneous polarization of
(BaTiO3)m/(SrTiO3)n superlattices is calculated using a first-principles
density functional theory method. The in-plane lattice constant is 1% larger
than the SrTiO3 substrate to imitate the relaxed superlattice structure and the
symmetry is lowered to monoclinic space group Cm which allows polarization to
develop along the [110] and [001] directions. The polarization component in the
[110] direction is found to develop only in the SrTiO3 layers and falls to zero
in the BaTiO3 layers, whereas the polarization in the [001] direction is
approximately uniform throughout the superlattice. These findings are
consistent with recent experimental data and first-principles results for
epitaxially strained BT and ST.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
How Do Fairness Definitions Fare? Examining Public Attitudes Towards Algorithmic Definitions of Fairness
What is the best way to define algorithmic fairness? While many definitions
of fairness have been proposed in the computer science literature, there is no
clear agreement over a particular definition. In this work, we investigate
ordinary people's perceptions of three of these fairness definitions. Across
two online experiments, we test which definitions people perceive to be the
fairest in the context of loan decisions, and whether fairness perceptions
change with the addition of sensitive information (i.e., race of the loan
applicants). Overall, one definition (calibrated fairness) tends to be more
preferred than the others, and the results also provide support for the
principle of affirmative action.Comment: To appear at AI Ethics and Society (AIES) 201
Enhancement of Recombinant Protein Production in Transgenic Nicotiana benthamiana Plant Cell Suspension Cultures with Co-Cultivation of Agrobacterium Containing Silencing Suppressors.
We have previously demonstrated that the inducible plant viral vector (CMViva) in transgenic plant cell cultures can significantly improve the productivity of extracellular functional recombinant human alpha-1-antiryspin (rAAT) compared with either a common plant constitutive promoter (Cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) 35S) or a chemically inducible promoter (estrogen receptor-based XVE) system. For a transgenic plant host system, however, viral or transgene-induced post-transcriptional gene silencing (PTGS) has been identified as a host response mechanism that may dramatically reduce the expression of a foreign gene. Previous studies have suggested that viral gene silencing suppressors encoded by a virus can block or interfere with the pathways of transgene-induced PTGS in plant cells. In this study, the capability of nine different viral gene silencing suppressors were evaluated for improving the production of rAAT protein in transgenic plant cell cultures (CMViva, XVE or 35S system) using an Agrobacterium-mediated transient expression co-cultivation process in which transgenic plant cells and recombinant Agrobacterium carrying the viral gene silencing suppressor were grown together in suspension cultures. Through the co-cultivation process, the impacts of gene silencing suppressors on the rAAT production were elucidated, and promising gene silencing suppressors were identified. Furthermore, the combinations of gene silencing suppressors were optimized using design of experiments methodology. The results have shown that in transgenic CMViva cell cultures, the functional rAAT as a percentage of total soluble protein is increased 5.7 fold with the expression of P19, and 17.2 fold with the co-expression of CP, P19 and P24
Comparing the Relapse Rate Between Medication Assisted-only Treatment and Medication-Assisted Treatment with an Osteopathic Manipulative Treatment Regimen in Patients with Musculoskeletal Pain
Since the opioid crisis first began in 1991, opioid-related overdoses in the United States have continued to increase dramatically, killing nearly 47,000 people in 2018, and making it one of the most pressing issues in healthcare. The most reported reason for misuse of pain relievers was to relieve physical pain. The increase in opioid abuse has also led to an increase in patients seeking medication-assisted treatment (MAT).
Osteopathic manipulative treatment (OMT) has been shown to have efficacy in relieving both chronic and acute pain. No current studies have investigated the use of OMT as an adjunct treatment to MAT for patients with musculoskeletal pain and opioid dependence
The Non-Coding RNA Ontology : a comprehensive resource for the unification of non-coding RNA biology
In recent years, sequencing technologies have enabled the identification of a wide range of non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs). Unfortunately, annotation and integration of ncRNA data has lagged behind their identification. Given the large quantity of information being obtained in this area, there emerges an urgent need to integrate what is being discovered by a broad range of relevant communities. To this end, the Non-Coding RNA Ontology (NCRO) is being developed to provide a systematically structured and precisely defined controlled vocabulary for the domain of ncRNAs, thereby facilitating the discovery, curation, analysis, exchange, and reasoning of data about structures of ncRNAs, their molecular and cellular functions, and their impacts upon phenotypes. The goal of NCRO is to serve as a common resource for annotations of diverse research in a way that will significantly enhance integrative and
comparative analysis of the myriad resources currently housed in disparate sources. It is our belief that the NCRO ontology can perform an important role in the comprehensive unification of ncRNA biology and, indeed, fill a critical gap in both the Open Biological and Biomedical Ontologies (OBO) Library and the National Center for Biomedical Ontology (NCBO) BioPortal. Our initial focus is on the ontological representation of small regulatory ncRNAs, which we see as the first step in providing a resource for the annotation of data about all forms of ncRNAs. The NCRO ontology
is free and open to all users
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