303 research outputs found
Brief Report: Theatre as Therapy for Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
The pilot investigation evaluated a theatrical intervention program, Social Emotional NeuroScience Endocrinology (SENSE) Theatre, designed to improve socioemotional functioning and reduce stress in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Eight children with ASD were paired with typically developing peers that served as expert models. Neuropsychological, biological (cortisol and oxytocin), and behavioral measures were assessed in a pretest–posttest design. The intervention was embedded in a full musical theatrical production. Participants showed some improvement in face identification and theory of mind skills. The intervention shows potential promise in improving the socioemotional functioning in children with ASD through the utilization of peers, video and behavioral modeling, and a community-based theatrical setting
A Light Stop with Flavor in Natural SUSY
The discovery of a SM-like Higgs boson near 125 GeV and the flavor texture of
the Standard Model motivate the investigation of supersymmetric quiver-like BSM
extensions. We study the properties of such a minimal class of models which
deals naturally with the SM parameters. Considering experimental bounds as well
as constraints from flavor physics and Electro-Weak Precision Data, we find the
following. In a self-contained minimal model - including the full dynamics of
the Higgs sector - top squarks below a TeV are in tension with b->s{\gamma}
constraints. Relaxing the assumption concerning the mass generation of the
heavy Higgses, we find that a stop not far from half a TeV is allowed. The
models have some unique properties, e.g. an enhancement of the h->
b\bar{b},\tau\bar{{\tau}} decays relative to the h->\gamma{\gamma} one, a
gluino about 3 times heavier than the stop, an inverted hierarchy of about 3-20
between the squarks of the first two generations and the stop, relatively light
Higgsino neutralino or stau NLSP, as well as heavy Higgses and a W' which may
be within reach of the LHC.Comment: LaTeX, 22 pages, 4 figures; V2: references adde
Postdictive Modulation of Visual Orientation
The present study investigated how visual orientation is modulated by subsequent orientation inputs. Observers were presented a near-vertical Gabor patch as a target, followed by a left- or right-tilted second Gabor patch as a distracter in the spatial vicinity of the target. The task of the observers was to judge whether the target was right- or left-tilted (Experiment 1) or whether the target was vertical or not (Supplementary experiment). The judgment was biased toward the orientation of the distracter (the postdictive modulation of visual orientation). The judgment bias peaked when the target and distracter were temporally separated by 100 ms, indicating a specific temporal mechanism for this phenomenon. However, when the visibility of the distracter was reduced via backward masking, the judgment bias disappeared. On the other hand, the low-visibility distracter could still cause a simultaneous orientation contrast, indicating that the distracter orientation is still processed in the visual system (Experiment 2). Our results suggest that the postdictive modulation of visual orientation stems from spatiotemporal integration of visual orientation on the basis of a slow feature matching process
Context, mechanisms and outcomes in end of life care for people with advanced dementia
yesBackground: The majority of people with dementia in the UK die in care homes. The quality of end of life care in
these environments is often suboptimal. The aim of the present study was to explore the context, mechanisms and
outcomes for providing good palliative care to people with advanced dementia residing in UK care homes from
the perspective of health and social care providers.
Method: The design of the study was qualitative which involved purposive sampling of health care professionals to
undertake interactive interviews within a realist framework. Interviews were completed between September 2012
and October 2013 and were thematically analysed and then conceptualised according to context, mechanisms and
outcomes. The settings were private care homes and services provided by the National Health Service including
memory clinics, mental health and commissioning services in London, United Kingdom. The participants included
14 health and social care professionals including health care assistants, care home managers, commissioners for
older adults’ services and nursing staff.
Results: Good palliative care for people with advanced dementia is underpinned by the prioritisation of
psychosocial and spiritual care, developing relationships with family carers, addressing physical needs including
symptom management and continuous, integrated care provided by a multidisciplinary team. Contextual factors
that detract from good end of life care included: an emphasis on financial efficiency over person-centred care; a
complex health and social care system, societal and family attitudes towards staff; staff training and experience,
governance and bureaucratisation; complexity of dementia; advance care planning and staff characteristics.
Mechanisms that influence the quality of end of life care include: level of health care professionals’ confidence,
family uncertainty about end of life care, resources for improving end of life care and supporting families, and
uncertainty about whether dementia specific palliative care is required.
Conclusions: Contextual factors regarding the care home environment may be obdurate and tend to negatively
impact on the quality of end of life dementia care. Local level mechanisms may be more amenable to
improvement. However, systemic changes to the care home environment are necessary to promote consistent,
equitable and sustainable high quality end of life dementia care across the UK care home secto
The Impact of Voluntary Counselling and Testing Services on Sexual Behaviour Change and HIV Incidence: Observations from a Cohort Study in Rural Tanzania.
It is widely assumed that voluntary counselling and testing (VCT) services contribute to HIV prevention by motivating clients to reduce sexual risk-taking. However, findings from sub-Saharan Africa have been mixed, particularly among HIV-negative persons. We explored associations between VCT use and changes in sexual risk behaviours and HIV incidence using data from a community HIV cohort study in northwest Tanzania. Data on VCT use, sexual behaviour and HIV status were available from three HIV serological surveillance rounds undertaken in 2003-4 (Sero4), 2006-7 (Sero5) and 2010 (Sero6). We used multinomial logistic regression to assess changes in sexual risk behaviours between rounds, and Poisson regression to estimate HIV incidence. The analyses included 3,613 participants attending Sero4 and Sero5 (3,474 HIV-negative and 139 HIV-positive at earlier round) and 2,998 attending Sero5 and Sero6 (2,858 HIV-negative and 140 HIV-positive at earlier round). Among HIV-negative individuals VCT use was associated with reductions in the number of sexual partners in the last year (aRR Seros 4-5: 1.42, 95% CI 1.07-1.88; aRR Seros 5-6: 1.68, 95% CI 1.25-2.26) and in the likelihood of having a non-cohabiting partner in the last year (aRR Seros 4-5: 1.57, 95% CI 1.10-2.25; aRR Seros 5-6: 1.48, 95% CI 1.07-2.04) or a high-risk partner in the last year (aRR Seros 5-6 1.57, 95% CI 1.06-2.31). However, VCT was also associated with stopping using condoms with non-cohabiting partners between Seros 4-5 (aRR 4.88, 95% CI 1.39-17.16). There were no statistically significant associations between VCT use and changes in HIV incidence, nor changes in sexual behaviour among HIV-positive individuals, possibly due to small sample sizes. We found moderate associations between VCT use and reductions in some sexual risk behaviours among HIV-negative participants, but no impacts among HIV-positive individuals in the context of low overall VCT uptake. Furthermore, there were no significant changes in HIV incidence associated with VCT use, although declining background incidence and small sample sizes may have prevented us from detecting this. The impact of VCT services will ultimately depend upon rates of uptake, with further research required to better understand processes of behaviour change following VCT use
Fibronectin matrix-mediated cohesion suppresses invasion of prostate cancer cells
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Invasion is an important early step in the metastatic cascade and is the primary cause of death of prostate cancer patients. In order to invade, cells must detach from the primary tumor. Cell-cell and cell-ECM interactions are important regulators of cohesion - a property previously demonstrated to mediate cell detachment and invasion. The studies reported here propose a novel role for α5β1 integrin - the principle mediator of fibronectin matrix assembly (FNMA) - as an invasion suppressor of prostate cancer cells.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Using a combination of biophysical and cell biological methods, and well-characterized prostate cancer cell lines of varying invasiveness, we explore the relationship between cohesion, invasiveness, and FNMA.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We show that cohesion is inversely proportional to invasive capacity. We also show that more invasive cells express lower levels of α5β1 integrin and lack the capacity for FNMA. Cells were generated to over-express either wild-type α5 integrin or an integrin in which the cytoplasmic domain of α5 was replaced with that of α2. The α2 construct does not promote FNMA. We show that only wild-type α5 integrin promotes aggregate compaction, increases cohesion, and reduces invasion of the more aggressive cells, and that these effects can be blocked by the 70-kDa fibronectin fragment.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>We propose that restoring capacity for FNMA in deficient cells can increase tumor intercellular cohesion to a point that significantly reduces cell detachment and subsequent invasion. In prostate cancer, this could be of therapeutic benefit by blocking an early key step in the metastatic cascade.</p
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