220 research outputs found

    Honest Intentions, Problematic Results: Sexual Identity Therapy

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    Twenty-five years of Health & Place: citation classics, internationalism and interdisciplinarity

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    To mark 25 years of Health & Place Health & Place, we identify and appraise some key contributions to the journal over this period. We use citation data to identify ā€˜classicsā€™ from the journal's back catalogue. We also examine trends in the international reach and disciplinary homes of our authors. We show that there has been a near 7-fold increase in the number of published papers between the early and most recent years of the journal and that the journal's citation levels are amongst the top 2% of social science journals. Amongst the most cited papers, some clear themes are evident such as physical activity, diet/food, obesity and topics relating to greenspace. The profile of the journal's authors is becoming more internationally diverse, represents a broader range of disciplines, and increasingly demonstrating cross/interdisciplinary ways of working. Although Anglophone countries have led the way, there is an increasing number of contributions from elsewhere including emerging economies such as China. We conclude with some comments on likely future directions for the journal including enduring concerns such as greenspace, obesity, diet and unhealthy commodities (alcohol, tobacco, ultra-processed food) as well as more recent directions including planetary health, longitudinal and lifecourse analyses, and the opportunities (and challenges) of big data and machine learning. Whatever the thematic concerns of the papers over next 25 years, we will continue to welcome outstanding research that is concerned with the importance place makes to health

    Fabricating Three-Dimensional Polymeric Photonic Structures by Multi-Beam Interference Lithography

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    The fabrication of true three-dimensional (3D) microstructures both rapidly and economically over a large area with negligible defects is attractive for a wide range of applications. In particular, multi-beam interference lithography is one of the promising techniques that can mass-produce polymeric 3D photonic crystals defect-free over a large area. This review discusses the relationship between beam geometry and the symmetry of the interference patterns, the lithographic process, and various types of photoresist systems, including thick films of negative-tone and positive-tone photoresists, organic-inorganic hybrids, hydrogels, and holographic polymer-dispersed liquid crystals

    Highā€efficiency photovoltaic modules on a chip for millimeterā€scale energy harvesting

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    Photovoltaic modules at the millimeter scale are demonstrated in this work to power wirelessly interconnected millimeterā€scale sensor systems operating under lowā€flux conditions, enabling applications in the Internet of things and biological sensors. Module efficiency is found to be limited by perimeter recombination for individual cells and shunt leakage for the seriesā€connected module configuration. We utilize GaAs and AlGaAs junction barrier isolation between interconnected cells to dramatically reduce shunt leakage current. A photovoltaic module with eight seriesā€connected cells and total area of 1.27Ā mm2 demonstrates a power conversion efficiency of greater than 26% under lowā€flux nearā€infrared illumination (850Ā nm at 1Ā Ī¼W/mm2). The output voltage of the module is greater than 5Ā V, providing a voltage upā€conversion efficiency of more than 90%. We demonstrate direct photovoltaic charging of a 16ā€Ī¼Ah pair of thinā€film lithiumā€ion batteries under dim light conditions, enabling the perpetual operation of practical millimeterā€scale wirelessly interconnected systems.We demonstrate monolithic GaAs photovoltaic modules at the millimeter scale to efficiently power wirelessly interconnected millimeterā€scale sensor systems operating under lowā€flux conditions. Eight seriesā€connected cells are used to provide an operating voltage of 5Ā V for direct battery charging. Module power conversion efficiency greater than 26% is achieved under weak 850ā€nm nearā€infrared illumination and 90% voltage upā€conversion efficiency utilizing AIGaAs junction barrier isolation as a critical technique in reducing shunt leakage current.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/149283/1/pip3132_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/149283/2/pip3132.pd

    Multi-scalar influences on mortality change over time in 274 European cities

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    Understanding determinants of urban health is of growing importance. Factors at multiple scales intertwine to influence health in cities but, with the growing autonomy of some cities from their countries, city population health may be becoming more a matter for city-level rather than national-level policy and action. We assess the importance of city, country, and macroregional (Western and East-Central Europe) scales to mortality change over time for 274 cities (population 80 million) from 27 European countries. We then investigate whether mortality changes over time are related to changes in city-level affluence. Using Urban Audit data, all-age all-cause standardised mortality ratios (SMRs) for males and females were calculated at three time points (wave one 1999ā€“2002, wave two 2003ā€“2006, and wave three 2007ā€“2009) for each city. Multilevel regression was used to model the SMRs as a function of survey wave and city region gross domestic product (GDP) per 1000 capita. SMRs declined over time and the substantial East-West gap narrowed slightly. Variation at macroregion and country scales characterised SMRs for women in Western and East-Central European cities, and SMRs for men in East-Central European cities. Between-city variation was evident for male SMRs in Western Europe. Changes in city-region GDP per capita were not associated with changes in mortality over the study period. Our results show how geographical scales differentially impact urban mortality. We conclude that changes in urban health should be seen in both city and wider national and macroregional contexts

    Which urban land covers/uses are associated with residentsā€™ mortality? A cross-sectional, ecological, pan-European study of 233 cities

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    Objectives: The study aim was to determine whether the range and distribution of all, and proportions of specific, land covers/uses within European cities are associated with city-specific mortality rates. ā€‹Setting: 233 European cities within 24 countries. ā€‹Participants: Aggregated city-level all-cause and age-group standardised mortality ratio for males and females separately and Western or Eastern European Region. ā€‹Results: The proportion of specific land covers/uses within a city was related to mortality, displaying differences by macroregion and sex. The land covers/uses associated with lower standardised mortality ratio (SMR) for both Western and Eastern European cities were those characterised by ā€˜naturalā€™ green space, such as forests and semi-natural areas (Western Female coefficient: āˆ’18.3, 95%ā€‰CI āˆ’29.8 to āˆ’6.9). Dense housing was related to a higher SMR, most prominently in Western European cities (Western Female coefficient: 17.4, 95%ā€‰CI 9.6 to 25.2). ā€‹Conclusions: There is pressure to build on urban natural spaces, both for economic gain and because compact cities are regarded as more sustainable, yet here we offer evidence that doing so may detract from residentsā€™ health. Our study suggests that urban planners and developers need to regard retaining more wild and unstructured green space as important for healthy city systems

    Synergistic Ca^(2+) Responses by GĪ±_i- and GĪ±_q-coupled G-protein-coupled Receptors Require a Single PLCĪ² Isoform That Is Sensitive to Both GĪ²_Ī³ and GĪ±_q

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    Cross-talk between GĪ±_i- and GĪ±_q-linked G-protein-coupled receptors yields synergistic Ca^(2+) responses in a variety of cell types. Prior studies have shown that synergistic Ca^(2+) responses from macrophage G-protein-coupled receptors are primarily dependent on phospholipase CĪ²3 (PLCĪ²3), with a possible contribution of PLCĪ²2, whereas signaling through PLCĪ²4 interferes with synergy. We here show that synergy can be induced by the combination of GĪ²Ī³ and GĪ±q activation of a single PLCĪ² isoform. Synergy was absent in macrophages lacking both PLCĪ²2 and PLCĪ²3, but it was fully reconstituted following transduction with PLCĪ²3 alone. Mechanisms of PLCĪ²-mediated synergy were further explored in NIH-3T3 cells, which express little if any PLCĪ²2. RNAi-mediated knockdown of endogenous PLCĪ²s demonstrated that synergy in these cells was dependent on PLCĪ²3, but PLCĪ²1 and PLCĪ²4 did not contribute, and overexpression of either isoform inhibited Ca^(2+) synergy. When synergy was blocked by RNAi of endogenous PLCĪ²3, it could be reconstituted by expression of either human PLCĪ²3 or mouse PLCĪ²2. In contrast, it could not be reconstituted by human PLCĪ²3 with a mutation of the Y box, which disrupted activation by GĪ²Ī³, and it was only partially restored by human PLCĪ²3 with a mutation of the C terminus, which partly disrupted activation by GĪ±_q. Thus, both GĪ²Ī³ and GĪ±_q contribute to activation of PLCĪ²3 in cells for Ca^(2+) synergy. We conclude that Ca^(2+) synergy between GĪ±_i-coupled and GĪ±_q-coupled receptors requires the direct action of both GĪ²Ī³ and GĪ±q on PLCĪ² and is mediated primarily by PLCĪ²3, although PLCĪ²2 is also competent
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