1,174 research outputs found

    Community Clinical Pastoral Training -- A Success for Ecumenism in Shreveport

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    A review of the seven years\u27 activity of the Shreveport Medical Society\u27s committee of Medicine & Religion which lead to the formation of the Clinical Pastoral Training Program, is presented by the co-chairmen of the committee

    PENGARUH LATIHAN PIRAMID SET DAN SUPER SET PADA STATUS BODY MASS INDEKS TERHADAP PENURUNAN LEMAK DAN PENAMBAHAN MASSA OTOT

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    ABSTRACT THE INFLUENCE OF PYRAMID SET AND SUPER SET TRAINING MODELS IN BODY MASS INDES (BMI) STATUS ON THE REDUCTION OF BODY FAT AND ADDITION OF MUSCLE MASS The purpose of this study was to determine the differences in the effect of the exercise model that is Piramid set T and Super Set on members who have ideal and not ideal BMI levels on Body Fat and hipertrofi muchel. Experimental method with 2x2 factorial design. The sample of this research is 20 people, 10 men and 8 women. The sampling technique uses a random assignment sampling technique on UKM IBAFF UPI members in Bandung. Data collection in this study used Karada Scan Body Composition. Data analysis using SPSS version 21 with hypothesis testing through Two Way Anova. The results of the analysis and calculation of the data revealed that the weight training exercise model affected the reduction in fat loss body, the interaction between the training model and BMI ideal and BMI not Ideal of the exercise towards the reduction in body fat, the Super set model was better used than the piramid set training model in the BMI Ideal group for the reduction body fat and both weight training models have a similar or equal effect on decreasing body fat in the BMI not ideal group. The conclusion of this study is that the pyramid set model is better used for the BMI ideal group, whereas for the BMI not ideal group can use both of these exercise models to reduce body fat percentage. key words: Weight Training Exercise Model, Piramid set, Super Set, Body Fat, mass Muscel, Body Mass Index

    Who\u27ll Be the Next Onel : To Cry Over You

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    https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mmb-vp/5976/thumbnail.jp

    A Decentralized Authorization and Security Framework for Distributed Research Workflows

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    Research challenges such as climate change and the search for habitable planets increasingly use academic and commercial computing resources distributed across different institutions and physical sites. Furthermore, such analyses often require a level of automation that precludes direct human interaction, and securing these workflows involves adherence to security policies across institutions. In this paper, we present a decentralized authorization and security framework that enables researchers to utilize resources across different sites while allowing service providers to maintain autonomy over their secrets and authorization policies. We describe this framework as part of the Tapis platform, a web-based, hosted API used by researchers from multiple institutions, and we measure the performance of various authorization and security queries, including cross-site queries. We conclude with two use case studies -- a project at the University of Hawaii to study climate change and the NASA NEID telescope project that searches the galaxy for exoplanets.Comment: 10 pages. Short version of this paper to be published on COMPSAC 2023 proceeding

    An improved process for the fabrication and surface treatment of custom-made titanium cranioplasty implants informed by surface analysis

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    Cranioplasty implants are routinely fabricated from commercially pure titanium plates by maxillofacial prosthetists. The differing fabrication protocols adopted by prosthetists working at different hospital sites gives rise to considerable variations in surface topography and composition of cranioplasty implants, with residues from the fabrication processes having been found to become incorporated into the surface of the implant. There is a growing recognition among maxillofacial prosthetists of the need to standardise these protocols to ensure quality and consistency of practice within the profession. In an effort to identify and eliminate the source of the inclusions associated with one such fabrication protocol, the present study examined the surfaces of samples subjected to each of the manufacturing steps involved. Surface and elemental analysis techniques identified the main constituent of the surface inclusions to be silicon from the glass beads used to texture the surface of the implant during fabrication. Subsequent analysis of samples prepared according to a revised protocol resulted in a more homogeneous titanium dioxide surface as evidenced by the reduction in area occupied by surface inclusions (from 8.51% ± 2.60% to 0.93% ± 0.62%). These findings may inform the development of improved protocols for the fabrication of titanium cranioplasty plates

    Skin Scan Digital Dermoscopy Skin Cancer Training Software

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    Computational Infrastructure and Informatics Poster SessionSkin Scan digital dermoscopy skin cancer detection software, developed by Rolla's S&A in collaboration with Missouri S&T, can now detect critical features of early melanoma. There is also a need for diagnostic help for the other 95+% of skin cancers. The need for diagnostic improvement in screening for skin cancers may be greatest for those nurse practitioners who now see the majority of elderly patients in some underserved areas. Underserved clinical arenas with a greater than average incidence of skin cancer and a significant number of nurse practitioners include both civilian and military clinics in the rural Midwest, where S&A is located. This innovative software is a timely development designed to solve problems every healthcare consumer has encountered: too long a wait to get specialty care, uncertainty about the diagnosis when one does get the care, and too much overall expenditure in providing the care. Our ongoing research includes a completed Phase II project in melanoma detection and a Phase I study for basal cell carcinoma, submitted December, 2009. The BASAL features for basal cell carcinoma (Blue-gray ovoids, Arborizing telangiectasia, Semitranslucency, Atraumatic ulceration, and Leaf-like structures/dirt trails), described by Stoecker and Stolz, Archives Dermatology 2008, will be programmed during Phase I of the new proposal and incorporated in our early detection system. Additional work during Phase I will allow acquisition of more clinical and dermoscopy images, will allow training of the first nurse practitioner, and will allow development of a hierarchical neural network for diagnosis of basal cell carcinoma

    Metabolic Changes Precede the Development of Pulmonary Hypertension in the Monocrotaline Exposed Rat Lung.

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    There is increasing interest in the potential for metabolic profiling to evaluate the progression of pulmonary hypertension (PH). However, a detailed analysis of the metabolic changes in lungs at the early stage of PH, characterized by increased pulmonary artery pressure but prior to the development of right ventricle hypertrophy and failure, is lacking in a preclinical animal model of PH. Thus, we undertook a study using rats 14 days after exposure to monocrotaline (MCT), to determine whether we could identify early stage metabolic changes prior to the manifestation of developed PH. We observed changes in multiple pathways associated with the development of PH, including activated glycolysis, increased markers of proliferation, disruptions in carnitine homeostasis, increased inflammatory and fibrosis biomarkers, and a reduction in glutathione biosynthesis. Further, our global metabolic profile data compare favorably with prior work carried out in humans with PH. We conclude that despite the MCT-model not recapitulating all the structural changes associated with humans with advanced PH, including endothelial cell proliferation and the formation of plexiform lesions, it is very similar at a metabolic level. Thus, we suggest that despite its limitations it can still serve as a useful preclinical model for the study of PH

    ACADEMIC DISHONESTY IN TRADITIONAL AND ONLINE CLASSROOMS: DOES THE “MEDIA EQUATION” HOLD TRUE?

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    Limited empirical research exists regarding the prevalence of academic dishonesty in the online classroom. This limited evidence supports the notion that factors contributing to academic dishonesty in the traditional classroom also apply to online courses. The purpose of this study is to explore the relationship between factors known to contribute to academic dishonesty in traditional courses with undergraduate students’ perceptions of cheating in online courses. 1068 undergraduates enrolled in online courses completed a survey exploring factors known to contribute to academic dishonesty in face-to-face classes and their perception of their peers’ level of cheating in online courses. Researchers employed bivariate correlations and multiple regression on data obtained from these students. Results suggest factors known to contribute to academic dishonesty in face-to-face classes have little influence in online courses, and results suggest that future research needs to consider whether students who engage in online learning have different ideas about what constitutes cheating

    A kinematic algorithm to identify gait events during running at different speeds and with different footstrike types

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    Although a number of algorithms exist for estimating ground contact events (GCEs) from kinematic data during running, they are typically only applicable to heelstrike running, or have only been evaluated at a single running speed. The purpose of this study was to investigate the accuracy of four kinematics-based algorithms to estimate GCEs over a range of running speeds and footstrike types. Subjects ran over a force platform at a range of speeds; kinetic and kinematic data was captured at 1000 Hz, and kinematic data was downsampled to 250 Hz. A windowing process initially identified reduced time windows containing touchdown and toe-off. Algorithms based on acceleration and jerk signals of the foot markers were used to estimate touchdown (2 algorithms), toe-off (2 algorithms), and ground contact time (GCT) (4 algorithms), and compared to synchronous ‘gold standard’ force platform data. An algorithm utilising the vertical acceleration peak of either the heel or first metatarsal marker (whichever appeared first) for touchdown, and the vertical jerk peak of the hallux marker for toe-off, resulted in the lowest offsets (+3.1 ms, 95% Confidence Interval (CI): -11.8 to +18.1 ms; and +2.1 ms, CI: -8.1 to +12.2 ms respectively). This method also resulted in the smallest offset in GCT (-1.1 ms, CI: -18.6 to +16.4 ms). Offsets in GCE and GCT estimates from all algorithms were typically negatively correlated to running speed, with offsets decreasing as speed increased. Assessing GCEs and GCT using this method may be useful when a force platform is unavailable or impractical
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