2,481 research outputs found

    White matter changes and confrontation naming in retired aging national football league athletes

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    Using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), we assessed the relationship of white matter integrity and performance on the Boston Naming Test (BNT) in a group of retired professional football players and a control group. We examined correlations between fractional anisotropy (FA) and mean diffusivity (MD) with BNT T-scores in an unbiased voxelwise analysis processed with tract-based spatial statistics (TBSS). We also analyzed the DTI data by grouping voxels together as white matter tracts and testing each tract's association with BNT T-scores. Significant voxelwise correlations between FA and BNT performance were only seen in the retired football players (p < 0.02). Two tracts had mean FA values that significantly correlated with BNT performance: forceps minor and forceps major. White matter integrity is important for distributed cognitive processes, and disruption correlates with diminished performance in athletes exposed to concussive and subconcussive brain injuries, but not in controls without such exposure

    Central European foreign exchange markets: a cross-spectral analysis of the 2007 financial crisis

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    This paper investigates co-movements between currency markets of Czech Republic, Poland, Hungary, Slovakia and the Euro in the year following the drying up of money markets in August 2007. The paper shows that assessing the degree of foreign currency co-movement by correlation can lead to concluding, erroneously, that financial contagion has not occurred. Using cross-spectral methods, the paper shows that defining contagion as changes in the structure of co-movements of asset prices encompasses more of the complex nature of exchange rate dynamics. What is shown is that, following August 2007, there is increased in the intensity of co-movements, but non-linearly. Focusing on the activities of a mix of banks and currency managers, it is suggested that changes in the structure of currency interaction present an unfavourable view of the contagion experienced by at least three of these currencies

    Class I Gap-formation in Highly-viscous Glass-ionomer Restorations: Delayed vs Immediate Polishing

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    This in vitro study evaluated the effects of delayed versus immediate polishing to permit maturation of interfacial gap-formation around highly viscous conventional glass-ionomer cement (HV-GIC) in Class I restorations, together with determining the associated mechanical properties. Cavity preparations were made on the occlusal surfaces of premolars. Three HV-GICs (Fuji IX GP, GlasIonomer FX-II and Ketac Molar) and one conventional glass-ionomer cement (C-GIC, Fuji II, as a control) were studied, with specimen subgroups (n=10) for each property measured. After polishing, either immediately (six minutes) after setting or after 24 hours storage, the restored teeth were sectioned in a mesiodistal direction through the center of the model Class I restorations. The presence or absence of interfacial-gaps was measured at 1000× magnification at 14 points (each 0.5-mm apart) along the cavity restoration interface (n=10; total points measured per group = 140). Marginal gaps were similarly measured in Teflon molds as swelling data, together with shear-bond-strength to enamel and dentin, flexural strength and moduli. For three HV-GICs and one C-GIC, significant differences (p<0.05) in gap-incidence were observed between polishing immediately and after one-day storage. In the former case, 80–100 gaps were found. In the latter case, only 9–21 gaps were observed. For all materials, their shear-bond-strengths, flexural strength and moduli increased significantly after 24-hour storage.</p

    Structure-based discovery of glycomimetic FmlH ligands as inhibitors of bacterial adhesion during urinary tract infection

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    Significance The emergence of multidrug-resistant bacteria, including uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC), makes the development of targeted antivirulence therapeutics a critical focus of research. During urinary tract infections (UTIs), UPEC uses chaperone–usher pathway pili tipped with an array of adhesins that recognize distinct receptors with sterochemical specificity to facilitate persistence in various tissues and habitats. We used an interdisciplinary approach driven by structural biology and synthetic glycoside chemistry to design and optimize glycomimetic inhibitors of the UPEC adhesin FmlH. These inhibitors competitively blocked FmlH in vitro, in in vivo mouse UTI models, and in ex vivo healthy human kidney tissue. This work demonstrates the utility of structure-driven drug design in the effort to develop antivirulence therapeutic compounds. </jats:p

    Farmers Markets and the Local Food System: The Case of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania

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    In order to examine and obtain a better understanding of the local food system within Adams County, Pennsylvania, this study explores the characteristics and perspectives of the customers and vendors at the farmers markets in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. Survey findings from the Gettysburg Farmers Market and the three Adams County Farmers Markets include customer demographic information, perspectives and shopping behavior as well as vendor product information, farm size and location and preference for market management. Introductory background information on the Farm Bill and the influence of agricultural practices on the environment, human health and nutrition and the relationship between farmers markets and the local economy are offered in order to emphasize the value of a well-managed local food system. Conclusions provide evidence that lower income and lower education levels are not sufficiently represented at all the markets and food stamp programs are being underutilized. This study suggests employing additional marketing to target underrepresented demographic groups, public transportation to potentially inaccessible market locations and increased advertisement and encouragement of food stamp programs at all markets in order to expand the customer base and increase access to healthy, local foods for less advantaged citizens. The results from this study are intended to offer evidence that will promote and facilitate market management, strengthen customer/vendor relationships and encourage better ties between the local community and local food systems at the farmers markets within Gettysburg in Adams County, Pennsylvania

    Class I Gap-formation in Highly-viscous Glass-ionomer Restorations: Delayed vs Immediate Polishing

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    This in vitro study evaluated the effects of delayed versus immediate polishing to permit maturation of interfacial gap-formation around highly viscous conventional glass-ionomer cement (HV-GIC) in Class I restorations, together with determining the associated mechanical properties. Cavity preparations were made on the occlusal surfaces of premolars. Three HV-GICs (Fuji IX GP, GlasIonomer FX-II and Ketac Molar) and one conventional glass-ionomer cement (C-GIC, Fuji II, as a control) were studied, with specimen subgroups (n=10) for each property measured. After polishing, either immediately (six minutes) after setting or after 24 hours storage, the restored teeth were sectioned in a mesiodistal direction through the center of the model Class I restorations. The presence or absence of interfacial-gaps was measured at 1000× magnification at 14 points (each 0.5-mm apart) along the cavity restoration interface (n=10; total points measured per group = 140). Marginal gaps were similarly measured in Teflon molds as swelling data, together with shear-bond-strength to enamel and dentin, flexural strength and moduli. For three HV-GICs and one C-GIC, significant differences (p<0.05) in gap-incidence were observed between polishing immediately and after one-day storage. In the former case, 80–100 gaps were found. In the latter case, only 9–21 gaps were observed. For all materials, their shear-bond-strengths, flexural strength and moduli increased significantly after 24-hour storage.</p

    ESDIS Standards Office (ESO): Requirements, Standards and Practices

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    The ESDIS Standards Office assists the ESDIS Project in formulating standards policy for NASA Earth Science Data Systems (ESDS), coordinates standards activities within ESDIS, and provides technical expertise and assistance with standards related tasks within the NASA Earth Science Data System Working Groups (ESDSWG). This poster summarizes information found on the earthdata.nasa.gov site that describes the ESO

    Report from the Passive Microwave Data Set Management Workshop

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    Passive microwave data sets are some of the most important data sets in the Earth Observing System Data and Information System (EOSDIS), providing data as far back as the early 1970s. The widespread use of passive microwave (PM) radiometer data has led to their collection and distribution over the years at several different Earth science data centers. The user community is often confused by this proliferation and the uneven spread of information about the data sets. In response to this situation, a Passive Microwave Data Set Management Workshop was held 17 ]19 May 2011 at the Global Hydrology Resource Center, sponsored by the NASA Earth Science Data and Information System (ESDIS) Project. The workshop attendees reviewed all primary (Level 1 ]3) PM data sets from NASA and non ]NASA sensors held by NASA Distributed Active Archive Centers (DAACs), as well as high ]value data sets from other NASA ]funded organizations. This report provides the key findings and recommendations from the workshop as well as detailed tabluations of the datasets considered

    Inference with interference between units in an fMRI experiment of motor inhibition

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    An experimental unit is an opportunity to randomly apply or withhold a treatment. There is interference between units if the application of the treatment to one unit may also affect other units. In cognitive neuroscience, a common form of experiment presents a sequence of stimuli or requests for cognitive activity at random to each experimental subject and measures biological aspects of brain activity that follow these requests. Each subject is then many experimental units, and interference between units within an experimental subject is likely, in part because the stimuli follow one another quickly and in part because human subjects learn or become experienced or primed or bored as the experiment proceeds. We use a recent fMRI experiment concerned with the inhibition of motor activity to illustrate and further develop recently proposed methodology for inference in the presence of interference. A simulation evaluates the power of competing procedures.Comment: Published by Journal of the American Statistical Association at http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/01621459.2012.655954 . R package cin (Causal Inference for Neuroscience) implementing the proposed method is freely available on CRAN at https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=ci

    Aspects of reproductive behavior in captive red pandas, Ailurus fulgens

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    Captive populations of red pandas (Ailurus fulgens) are barely replacing themselves and thus there is an immediate need for detailed study of the behaviors involved in reproduction in this species. This study dealt with two aspects of reproduction in red pandas, scent-marking during the breeding period, and maternal care and neonatal development in the nestbound stage. Data were collected at the Knoxville Zoological Park. Three male-female pairs were observed for the scent-marking study. Individuals of both sexes showed significant preferences for scent-marking particular locations, especially prominent points, in each enclosure. Males scent-marked more and in a different fashion than females, although female marking was greater in this study than in previous reports. Females were found to increase marking frequency during the breeding period. However, males were not observed to increase scent-marking, perhaps because outside of breeding male marking behavior was considerably frequent. Certain behavioral features were associated with scent-marking behavior. For example, the number of waddles (defined as each anogenital motion) was positively correlated with duration of scent-marking; and individuals of each sex preferentially sniffed marking areas of the other sex. A single female red panda and her cub were observed for the maternal care study. In addition, data on three females from the National Zoological Park, Washington, D.C., were analyzed in relation to nest attendance. All females were shown to significantly decrease the amount of time spent in the nest after their cubs\u27 first month of life. Temperature was shown to have no effect on nest attendance. Maternal grooming bouts remained at consistant, low levels through the cub\u27s nestbound stage and this may have facilitated cub defecation. Female-cub resting bouts were found to increase with cub age. In terms of nursing behavior, the amount of time the female spent in the nest had no significant effect on the duration of nursing; nursing periods were frequent and of short duration; and, no teat preference or milk facilitation behavior was exhibited by the cub. Calls between the female and cub seemed to function in establishing contact between the pair and were similar to those reported for raccoons (Procyon lotor). Play behavior was observed in two forms: solitary object play and mother-cub social play; however, both forms occured only in low frequencies. Similar to other carnivores, substantial increases in the rate of cub weight gain were achieved with milk supplements. Cub emergence was observed at 74 days of age. Lengthy maternal grooming bouts prevented the cub from leaving the nest prior to this. These results were discussed in relation to the problems generally inherent in captive studies and to the problems specific to this study. Scent-marking and maternal care were further discussed in relation to the solitary social structure and feeding strategy of the red panda. A solitary lifestyle seemed to effect scent-marking behavior in several ways; these included pathway-dominated marking patterns (also characteristic of species feeding on widely dispersed resources such as bamboo), sex-specific olfactory investigation, high frequency marking during breeding, and site-sharing between members of the opposite sex. These factors may enable the marks which are deployed to be more easily intercepted and interpreted; a primary concern for a solitary species such as the red panda. In conclusion, maternal care and neonatal development in red pandas may be effected by a solitary social system and a folivorous diet. Energetic constraints stemming from a low nutrient diet (bamboo), and a maternally based parental care system were hypothesized to influence slow growth rates in the cub; decreases in maternal nest attendance, and a low incidence of play behavior
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