191 research outputs found
Feed the monster : impact and technical evaluation
Motivated to ensure Syrian children have an opportunity to learn to read Arabic and continue their lifelong learning process, the Norwegian government funded the EduApp4Syria competition. The competition developed an open-source smartphone application to build foundational literacy skills in Arabic and improve psychosocial well-being for Syrian refugee children. This detailed project summary and evaluation provides insight into key findings in terms of both qualitative and quantitative measurement. Overall, the mobile application game resulted in positive learning outcomes across all age groups and genders. Absolute gains were greater in learning of foundational literacy (letters and syllables), and less with reading fluency
Antura and the letters : impact and technical evaluation
Many Syrian children, living as refugees in Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan, and Iraq; or in transit camps in countries like Greece and Italy, have endured multiple traumas and high levels of stress affecting their ability to learn. All Children Reading: A Grand Challenge for Development (ACR GCD), Digital Learning for Development (DL4D), and the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) Office of Innovation, supported an evaluation of two mobile apps developed for this literacy project, and assessed the effects on literacy learning and psychosocial outcomes. The game apps introduce children to the basics of Arabic literacy showing positive learning outcomes across all age groups and genders
Evaluation of carrier ampholyte-based capillary electrophoresis for separation of
Carrier ampholyte-based capillary electrophoresis (CABCE) has recently been introduced as an alternative to CE (CZE) in the classical buffers. In this study, isoelectric BGEs were obtained by fractionation of Servalyt pH 4-9 carrier ampholytes to cuts of typical width of 0.2 pH unit. CABCE feasibility was examined on a series of insect oostatic peptides, i.e. proline-rich di- to decapeptides, and phosphinic pseudopeptides - tetrapeptide mimetics synthesized as a mixture of four diastereomers having the -P(O)(OH)-CH2- moiety embedded into the peptide backbone. With identical selectivity, the separation efficiency of CABCE proved to be as good as classical CE for the insect oostatic peptides and better for diastereomers of the phosphinic pseudopeptides. In addition, despite the numerous species present in the narrow pH cuts of carrier ampholytes, CABCE seems to be free of system zones that could hamper the analysis. Peak symmetry was good for moderately to low mobile peptides, whereas some peak distortion due to electromigration dispersion, was observed for short peptides of rather high mobility
Heterotrimeric Go protein links Wnt-Frizzled signaling with ankyrins to regulate the neuronal microtubule cytoskeleton.
Drosophila neuromuscular junctions (NMJs) represent a powerful model system with which to study glutamatergic synapse formation and remodeling. Several proteins have been implicated in these processes, including components of canonical Wingless (Drosophila Wnt1) signaling and the giant isoforms of the membrane-cytoskeleton linker Ankyrin 2, but possible interconnections and cooperation between these proteins were unknown. Here, we demonstrate that the heterotrimeric G protein Go functions as a transducer of Wingless-Frizzled 2 signaling in the synapse. We identify Ankyrin 2 as a target of Go signaling required for NMJ formation. Moreover, the Go-ankyrin interaction is conserved in the mammalian neurite outgrowth pathway. Without ankyrins, a major switch in the Go-induced neuronal cytoskeleton program is observed, from microtubule-dependent neurite outgrowth to actin-dependent lamellopodial induction. These findings describe a novel mechanism regulating the microtubule cytoskeleton in the nervous system. Our work in Drosophila and mammalian cells suggests that this mechanism might be generally applicable in nervous system development and function
On-Surface Synthesis and Characterization of a High-Spin Aza-[5]-Triangulene
Triangulenes are open-shell triangular graphene flakes with total spin
increasing with their size. In the last years, on-surface-synthesis strategies
have permitted fabricating and engineering triangulenes of various sizes and
structures with atomic precision. However, direct proof of the increasing total
spin with their size remains elusive. In this work, we report the combined
in-solution and on-surface synthesis of a large nitrogen-doped triangulene
(aza-[5]-triangulene) and the detection of its high spin ground state on a
Au(111) surface. Bond-resolved scanning tunneling microscopy images uncovered
radical states distributed along the zigzag edges, which were detected as weak
zero-bias resonances in scanning tunneling spectra. These spectral features
reveal the partial Kondo screening of a high spin state. Through a combination
of several simulation tools, we find that the observed distribution of radical
states is explained by a quintet ground state (S = 2), instead of the expected
quartet state (S = 3/2), confirming the positively charged state of the
molecule on the surface. We further provide a qualitative description of the
change of (anti)aromaticity introduced by N-substitution, and its role in the
charge stabilization on a surface, resulting in a S = 2 aza-[5]-triangulene on
Au(111).Comment: 8 pages with 4 figure
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Improved imputation quality of low-frequency and rare variants in European samples using the ‘Genome of The Netherlands'
Although genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified many common variants associated with complex traits, low-frequency and rare variants have not been interrogated in a comprehensive manner. Imputation from dense reference panels, such as the 1000 Genomes Project (1000G), enables testing of ungenotyped variants for association. Here we present the results of imputation using a large, new population-specific panel: the Genome of The Netherlands (GoNL). We benchmarked the performance of the 1000G and GoNL reference sets by comparing imputation genotypes with ‘true' genotypes typed on ImmunoChip in three European populations (Dutch, British, and Italian). GoNL showed significant improvement in the imputation quality for rare variants (MAF 0.05–0.5%) compared with 1000G. In Dutch samples, the mean observed Pearson correlation, r2, increased from 0.61 to 0.71. We also saw improved imputation accuracy for other European populations (in the British samples, r2 improved from 0.58 to 0.65, and in the Italians from 0.43 to 0.47). A combined reference set comprising 1000G and GoNL improved the imputation of rare variants even further. The Italian samples benefitted the most from this combined reference (the mean r2 increased from 0.47 to 0.50). We conclude that the creation of a large population-specific reference is advantageous for imputing rare variants and that a combined reference panel across multiple populations yields the best imputation results
The Genome of the Netherlands:design, and project goals
Within the Netherlands a national network of biobanks has been established (Biobanking and Biomolecular Research Infrastructure-Netherlands (BBMRI-NL)) as a national node of the European BBMRI. One of the aims of BBMRI-NL is to enrich biobanks with different types of molecular and phenotype data. Here, we describe the Genome of the Netherlands (GoNL), one of the projects within BBMRI-NL. GoNL is a whole-genome-sequencing project in a representative sample consisting of 250 trio-families from all provinces in the Netherlands, which aims to characterize DNA sequence variation in the Dutch population. The parent-offspring trios include adult individuals ranging in age from 19 to 87 years (mean = 53 years; SD = 16 years) from birth cohorts 1910-1994. Sequencing was done on blood-derived DNA from uncultured cells and accomplished coverage was 14-15x. The family-based design represents a unique resource to assess the frequency of regional variants, accurately reconstruct haplotypes by family-based phasing, characterize short indels and complex structural variants, and establish the rate of de novo mutational events. GoNL will also serve as a reference panel for imputation in the available genome-wide association studies in Dutch and other cohorts to refine association signals and uncover population-specific variants. GoNL will create a catalog of human genetic variation in this sample that is uniquely characterized with respect to micro-geographic location and a wide range of phenotypes. The resource will be made available to the research and medical community to guide the interpretation of sequencing projects. The present paper summarizes the global characteristics of the project.</p
Clinical trial to evaluate the performance of a flexible self-adherent absorbent dressing coated with a soft silicone layer compared to a standard wound dressing after orthopedic or spinal surgery: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
A high-quality human reference panel reveals the complexity and distribution of genomic structural variants
Structural variation (SV) represents a major source of differences between individual human genomes and has been linked to disease phenotypes. However, the majority of studies provide neither a global view of the full spectrum of these variants nor integrate them into reference panels of genetic variation. Here, we analyse whole genome sequencing data of 769 individuals from 250 Dutch families, and provide a haplotype-resolved map of 1.9 million genome variants across 9 different variant classes, including novel forms of complex indels, and retrotransposition-mediated insertions of mobile elements and processed RNAs. A large proportion are previously under reported variants sized between 21 and 100 bp. We detect 4 megabases of novel sequence, encoding 11 new transcripts. Finally, we show 191 known, trait-associated SNPs to be in strong linkage disequilibrium with SVs and demonstrate that our panel facilitates accurate imputation of SVs in unrelated individuals
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