114 research outputs found
Effectiveness of life skills training on the total behaviour of six individuals in a job preparation program
In the first week of a Job preparation Program
all twelve female members of the class were invited to be
part of a study to determine the effect of Life Skills
training on their behaviour over the twelve-week period of
the program. Six females volunteered and each was
interviewed four times during the Job preparation Program
and once after the program ended. The interviews focused
on three areas of skill deficiency addressed in Life Skills
lessons: their knowledge about themselves and attitude
towards themselves; their interpersonal relationships;
and their problem-solving ability. The participants'
comments over the sixteen-week period of the interviews
were used to decide if the total behaviour of the
participants, (i.e., what they did, thought, and felt)
changed so that each became more effective in satisfying
her needs.
The study suggested that the total behaviour of
three of the six women changed so that they became more
effective in satisfying their needs. The fourth female's
total behaviour changed in only two of the three areas
focused on in the interviews, and the total behaviour of
the fifth and sixth females showed no change
Incorporation of cobalt into ZnO nanoclusters
The structural, optical and magnetic properties of nanostructured ZnO films
co-doped with cobalt and aluminium have been studied. The nanocrystalline
films, with cluster sizes in range 50 - 100 nm, were deposited by pulsed laser
ablation in a mixed atmosphere of oxygen and helium. The nanocrystallites have
the wurtzite structure and are highly oriented with the c-axis perpendicular to
the substrate. Both optical and electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy
results show the substitutional incorporation of Co ions on the Zn site
inside the ZnO nanoclusters. The temperature dependence of the ESR spectra
follows Curie law corresponding to a paramagnetic material
دور التسويق الرقمي في إدارة الأزمات
هدفَ البحث إلى دراسة دور التسويق الرقمي في إدارة الأزمات, وذلك من خلال دراسة دور أبعاد التسويق الرقمي والمتمثلة: بالجذب, التواصل, المشاركة, التعلّم والاحتفاظ في إدارة الأزمات. واعتمدَ الباحث على المنهج الوصفي التحليلي كمنهج عام للبحث, حيثُ تمّ تصميم استبيان وتوزيعه على عينة قصدية (عددها 70, استردَ 64 استبيان صالح للتحليل الإحصائي) من المشروعات الصغيرة والمتوسطة في محافظة دمشق والتي تمارس جزءاً من أعمالها في البيئة الرقمية, واستخدمَ الباحث البرنامج الإحصائي Spss في إجراء التوصيف الإحصائي واختبار فرضيات البحث. وتوصل البحث إلى وجود تأثير معنوي ايجابي للتسويق الرقمي في إدارة الأزمات للمشروعات محل البحث, وكان ترتيب أبعاد التسويق الرقمي من حيث قوة التأثير في إدارة الأزمات للمشروعات محل البحث, وفق الترتيب الآتي: التواصل, الاحتفاظ, الجذب, المشاركة, التعلّم.
National Mesothelioma Virtual Bank: A standard based biospecimen and clinical data resource to enhance translational research
Background: Advances in translational research have led to the need for well characterized biospecimens for research. The National Mesothelioma Virtual Bank is an initiative which collects annotated datasets relevant to human mesothelioma to develop an enterprising biospecimen resource to fulfill researchers' need. Methods: The National Mesothelioma Virtual Bank architecture is based on three major components: (a) common data elements (based on College of American Pathologists protocol and National North American Association of Central Cancer Registries standards), (b) clinical and epidemiologic data annotation, and (c) data query tools. These tools work interoperably to standardize the entire process of annotation. The National Mesothelioma Virtual Bank tool is based upon the caTISSUE Clinical Annotation Engine, developed by the University of Pittsburgh in cooperation with the Cancer Biomedical Informatics Grid™ (caBIG™, see http://cabig.nci.nih.gov). This application provides a web-based system for annotating, importing and searching mesothelioma cases. The underlying information model is constructed utilizing Unified Modeling Language class diagrams, hierarchical relationships and Enterprise Architect software. Result: The database provides researchers real-time access to richly annotated specimens and integral information related to mesothelioma. The data disclosed is tightly regulated depending upon users' authorization and depending on the participating institute that is amenable to the local Institutional Review Board and regulation committee reviews. Conclusion: The National Mesothelioma Virtual Bank currently has over 600 annotated cases available for researchers that include paraffin embedded tissues, tissue microarrays, serum and genomic DNA. The National Mesothelioma Virtual Bank is a virtual biospecimen registry with robust translational biomedical informatics support to facilitate basic science, clinical, and translational research. Furthermore, it protects patient privacy by disclosing only de-identified datasets to assure that biospecimens can be made accessible to researchers. © 2008 Amin et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd
Ferromagnetic semiconductors
The current status and prospects of research on ferromagnetism in
semiconductors are reviewed. The question of the origin of ferromagnetism in
europium chalcogenides, chromium spinels and, particularly, in diluted magnetic
semiconductors is addressed. The nature of electronic states derived from 3d of
magnetic impurities is discussed in some details. Results of a quantitative
comparison between experimental and theoretical results, notably for Mn-based
III-V and II-VI compounds, are presented. This comparison demonstrates that the
current theory of the exchange interactions mediated by holes in the valence
band describes correctly the values of Curie temperatures T_C magnetic
anisotropy, domain structure, and magnetic circular dichroism. On this basis,
chemical trends are examined and show to lead to the prediction of
semiconductor systems with T_C that may exceed room temperature, an expectation
that are being confirmed by recent findings. Results for materials containing
magnetic ions other than Mn are also presented emphasizing that the double
exchange involving hoping through d states may operate in those systems.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures; special issue of Semicon. Sci. Technol. on
semiconductor spintronic
An informatics model for tissue banks – Lessons learned from the Cooperative Prostate Cancer Tissue Resource
BACKGROUND: Advances in molecular biology and growing requirements from biomarker validation studies have generated a need for tissue banks to provide quality-controlled tissue samples with standardized clinical annotation. The NCI Cooperative Prostate Cancer Tissue Resource (CPCTR) is a distributed tissue bank that comprises four academic centers and provides thousands of clinically annotated prostate cancer specimens to researchers. Here we describe the CPCTR information management system architecture, common data element (CDE) development, query interfaces, data curation, and quality control. METHODS: Data managers review the medical records to collect and continuously update information for the 145 clinical, pathological and inventorial CDEs that the Resource maintains for each case. An Access-based data entry tool provides de-identification and a standard communication mechanism between each group and a central CPCTR database. Standardized automated quality control audits have been implemented. Centrally, an Oracle database has web interfaces allowing multiple user-types, including the general public, to mine de-identified information from all of the sites with three levels of specificity and granularity as well as to request tissues through a formal letter of intent. RESULTS: Since July 2003, CPCTR has offered over 6,000 cases (38,000 blocks) of highly characterized prostate cancer biospecimens, including several tissue microarrays (TMA). The Resource developed a website with interfaces for the general public as well as researchers and internal members. These user groups have utilized the web-tools for public query of summary data on the cases that were available, to prepare requests, and to receive tissues. As of December 2005, the Resource received over 130 tissue requests, of which 45 have been reviewed, approved and filled. Additionally, the Resource implemented the TMA Data Exchange Specification in its TMA program and created a computer program for calculating PSA recurrence. CONCLUSION: Building a biorepository infrastructure that meets today's research needs involves time and input of many individuals from diverse disciplines. The CPCTR can provide large volumes of carefully annotated prostate tissue for research initiatives such as Specialized Programs of Research Excellence (SPOREs) and for biomarker validation studies and its experience can help development of collaborative, large scale, virtual tissue banks in other organ systems
Bridging consent: from toll bridges to lift bridges?
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The ability to share human biological samples, associated data and results across disease-specific and population-based human research biobanks is becoming increasingly important for research into disease development and translation. Although informed consent often does not anticipate such cross-domain sharing, it is important to examine its plausibility. The purpose of this study was to explore the feasibility of bridging consent between disease-specific and population-based research. Comparative analyses of 1) current ethical and legal frameworks governing consent and 2) informed consent models found in disease-specific and population-based research were conducted.</p> <p>Discussion</p> <p>Ethical and legal frameworks governing consent dissuade cross-domain data sharing. Paradoxically, analysis of consent models for disease-specific and population-based research reveals such a high degree of similarity that bridging consent could be possible if additional information regarding bridging was incorporated into consent forms. We submit that bridging of consent could be supported if current trends endorsing a new interpretation of consent are adopted. To illustrate this we sketch potential bridging consent scenarios.</p> <p>Summary</p> <p>A bridging consent, respectful of the spirit of initial consent, is feasible and would require only small changes to the content of consents currently being used. Under a bridging consent approach, the initial data and samples collection can serve an identified research project as well as contribute to the creation of a resource for a range of other projects.</p
Realizing the promise of population biobanks: a new model for translation
The promise of science lies in expectations of its benefits to societies and is matched by expectations of the realisation of the significant public investment in that science. In this paper, we undertake a methodological analysis of the science of biobanking and a sociological analysis of translational research in relation to biobanking. Part of global and local endeavours to translate raw biomedical evidence into practice, biobanks aim to provide a platform for generating new scientific knowledge to inform development of new policies, systems and interventions to enhance the public’s health. Effectively translating scientific knowledge into routine practice, however, involves more than good science. Although biobanks undoubtedly provide a fundamental resource for both clinical and public health practice, their potentiating ontology—that their outputs are perpetually a promise of scientific knowledge generation—renders translation rather less straightforward than drug discovery and treatment implementation. Biobanking science, therefore, provides a perfect counterpoint against which to test the bounds of translational research. We argue that translational research is a contextual and cumulative process: one that is necessarily dynamic and interactive and involves multiple actors. We propose a new multidimensional model of translational research which enables us to imagine a new paradigm: one that takes us from bench to bedside to backyard and beyond, that is, attentive to the social and political context of translational science, and is cognisant of all the players in that process be they researchers, health professionals, policy makers, industry representatives, members of the public or research participants, amongst others
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