88 research outputs found
Worrying about leadership: Is it a liability or an advantage for leadership of women and men?
Worries about leadership (WAL) is a new construct tapping worries an individual may feel about possible negative consequences of accepting a leadership role. Three studies investigate how WAL is associated with men’s and women’s willingness for leadership and their perceived leadership potential rated by others. The first is a laboratory study on 328 participants, which shows that WAL is negatively associated with women’s willingness for leadership, while it is not related to that of men.
The second study, which is a field study with multilevel-nested data from 429 employees and 101 supervisors, reveals that male subordinates are more likely to receive a favorable judgment of leadership potential by their supervisors when their WAL increases, while female subordinates’ WAL is irrelevant to this judgment.
The final study, which is an experimental study on 122 supervisors, shows that supervisors view hypothetical male leadership candidates with high WAL as having higher warmth and lower competence (than those with low WAL), which both mediate the effect of WAL on judgments of their leadership potential made by the supervisors. Even though supervisors also view female candidates with high WAL as warmer, this does not evoke higher perceptions of leadership potential. Implications for increasing gender parity in leadership are discussed
Characterizing the optical nature of the blazar S5 1803+784 during its 2020 flare
We report the results from our study of the blazar S5 1803+784 carried out
using the quasi-simultaneous , , , and observations from May 2020
to July 2021 on 122 nights. Our observing campaign detected the historically
bright optical flare during MJD 59063.5MJD 59120.5. We also found the source
in its brightest (= 13.617) and faintest (= 15.888) states
till date. On 13 nights, covering both flaring and non-flaring periods, we
searched for the intraday variability using the power-enhanced test and the
nested ANOVA test. We found significant variability in 2 out of these 13
nights. However, no such variability was detected during the flaring period.
From the correlation analysis, we observed that the emission in all optical
bands were strongly correlated with a time lag of 0 days. To get
insights into its dominant emission mechanisms, we generated the optical
spectral energy distributions of the source on 79 nights and estimated the
spectral indices by fitting the simple power law. Spectral index varied from
1.392 to 1.911 and showed significant variations with time and band
magnitude. We have detected a mild bluer-when-brighter trend (BWB) during the
whole monitoring period while a much stronger BWB trend during the flare. We
also carried out a periodicity search using four different methods and found no
significant periodicity during our observation duration. Based on the analysis
during the flaring state of the source one can say that the emissions most
likely originate from the jet rather than the accretion disk.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures, 7 tables, accepted for publication in The
Astrophysical Journal (ApJ
Ex Vivo Drug Testing in Patient-derived Papillary Renal Cancer Cells Reveals EGFR and the BCL2 Family as Therapeutic Targets
BACKGROUND
Immune checkpoint inhibitors and antiangiogenic agents are used for first-line treatment of advanced papillary renal cell carcinoma (pRCC) but pRCC response rates to these therapies are low.
OBJECTIVE
To generate and characterise a functional ex vivo model to identify novel treatment options in advanced pRCC.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS
We established patient-derived cell cultures (PDCs) from seven pRCC samples from patients and characterised them via genomic analysis and drug profiling.
OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS AND STATISTICAL ANALYSIS
Comprehensive molecular characterisation in terms of copy number analysis and whole-exome sequencing confirmed the concordance of pRCC PDCs with the original tumours. We evaluated their sensitivity to novel drugs by generating drug scores for each PDC.
RESULTS AND LIMITATIONS
PDCs confirmed pRCC-specific copy number variations such as gains in chromosomes 7, 16, and 17. Whole-exome sequencing revealed that PDCs retained mutations in pRCC-specific driver genes. We performed drug screening with 526 novel and oncological compounds. Whereas exposure to conventional drugs showed low efficacy, the results highlighted EGFR and BCL2 family inhibition as the most effective targets in our pRCC PDCs.
CONCLUSIONS
High-throughput drug testing on newly established pRCC PDCs revealed that inhibition of EGFR and BCL2 family members could be a therapeutic strategy in pRCC.
PATIENT SUMMARY
We used a new approach to generate patient-derived cells from a specific type of kidney cancer. We showed that these cells have the same genetic background as the original tumour and can be used as models to study novel treatment options for this type of kidney cancer
Historical separation and present-day structure of common dolphinfish (Coryphaena hippurus) populations in the Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea
The common dolphinfish (Coryphaena hippurus) is an epipelagic, mid-trophic level, highly migratory species distributed throughout the
world’s tropical and subtropical oceans in waters greater than 20C. Life-history variables, migratory behaviour, and genetic markers have
been used to define major stocks in the central Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea. Here, we used the mitochondrial DNA gene NADH
subunit 1 (688 bp) to test for differences between population groups. A total of 103 haplotypes were detected among 203 fish. Gene diversities in samples were large and similar among populations (mean h ¼ 0.932; range 0.894–0.987), but nucleotide diversities varied widely among
samples (range p ¼ 0.004–0.034) and appear to reflect population histories. Principal component analysis revealed two large populations
groups, and the analysis of molecular variation and pairwise values of UST resolved population structure within these groups. Populations in
the eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean showed the largest amounts of divergence from one another (UCT ¼ 0.331). Adult movement and
biophysical barriers to larval dispersal may explain contemporary differences between stocks, but the divergent populations in the Mediterranean Sea are likely due to isolations by cold temperature barriers during Pleistocene glaciations. The geographically large stock
groupings require international cooperation in the harvest management and conservation of local dolphinfish populations
Report of the ICCAT GBYP international workshop on Atlantic bluefin tuna growth
In the last Atlantic bluefin tuna assessment, an age-length database coming from direct ageing
was presented for the first time. It was observed that otolith age estimates for fish younger than
8 years old had a smaller size at age compared to spine (first dorsal fin radius) age estimates.
This difference, although small, was enough to misallocate the year class. This misallocation
was solved when introducing a vector of bias corrected aged otoliths based on paired otolithspine samples. We have identified two possible causes for over-estimating age in the otolith agelength data: the current age adjustment criterion (to convert the bands counting into ages) and
a reading bias in age estimations from some laboratories. Otolith preparation and reading
protocols have been reviewed. The edge type and marginal increment analysis showed that the
formation of opaque zones would seem likely to occur primarily between December through to
June, contrary to what was thought until now, for which a new criterion for age adjustment has
been proposed
Correction: Atlantic Bluefin Tuna (Thunnus thynnus) Biometrics and Condition
Correction: Atlantic Bluefin Tuna (Thunnus thynnus) Biometrics and ConditionPostprint4,411
Spawning of bluefin tuna in the black sea: historical evidence, environmental constraints and population plasticity
<div><p>The lucrative and highly migratory Atlantic bluefin tuna, <em>Thunnus thynnus</em> (Linnaeus 1758<em>;</em> Scombridae), used to be distributed widely throughout the north Atlantic Ocean, Mediterranean Sea and Black Sea. Its migrations have supported sustainable fisheries and impacted local cultures since antiquity, but its biogeographic range has contracted since the 1950s. Most recently, the species disappeared from the Black Sea in the late 1980s and has not yet recovered. Reasons for the Black Sea disappearance, and the species-wide range contraction, are unclear. However bluefin tuna formerly foraged and possibly spawned in the Black Sea. Loss of a locally-reproducing population would represent a decline in population richness, and an increase in species vulnerability to perturbations such as exploitation and environmental change. Here we identify the main genetic and phenotypic adaptations that the population must have (had) in order to reproduce successfully in the specific hydrographic (estuarine) conditions of the Black Sea. By comparing hydrographic conditions in spawning areas of the three species of bluefin tunas, and applying a mechanistic model of egg buoyancy and sinking rate, we show that reproduction in the Black Sea must have required specific adaptations of egg buoyancy, fertilisation and development for reproductive success. Such adaptations by local populations of marine fish species spawning in estuarine areas are common as is evident from a meta-analysis of egg buoyancy data from 16 species of fish. We conclude that these adaptations would have been necessary for successful local reproduction by bluefin tuna in the Black Sea, and that a locally-adapted reproducing population may have disappeared. Recovery of bluefin tuna in the Black Sea, either for spawning or foraging, will occur fastest if any remaining locally adapted individuals are allowed to survive, and by conservation and recovery of depleted Mediterranean populations which could through time re-establish local Black Sea spawning and foraging.</p> </div
Atlantic Bluefin Tuna (Thunnus thynnus) Biometrics and Condition
The compiled data for this study represents the first Atlantic and Mediterranean-wide effort
to pool all available biometric data for Atlantic bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus) with the collaboration
of many countries and scientific groups. Biometric relationships were based on
an extensive sampling (over 140,000 fish sampled), covering most of the fishing areas for
this species in the North Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea. Sensitivity analyses
were carried out to evaluate the representativeness of sampling and explore the most adequate
procedure to fit the weight-length relationship (WLR). The selected model for the
WLRs by stock included standardized data series (common measurement types)
weighted by the inverse variability. There was little difference between annual stock-specific
round weight-straight fork length relationships, with an overall difference of 6% in
weight. The predicted weight by month was estimated as an additional component in the
exponent of the weight-length function. The analyses of monthly variations of fish condition
by stock, maturity state and geographic area reflect annual cycles of spawning and
feeding behavior. We update and improve upon the biometric relationships for bluefin currently
used by the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas, by
incorporating substantially larger datasets than ever previously compiled, providing complete
documentation of sources and employing robust statistical fitting.WLRs and other conversion factors estimated in this study differ from the ones used in previous bluefin
stock assessments.Postprint4,411
The Residual Stress Relaxation Behavior of Weldments During Cyclic Loading
Accurate measurement of residual stress is necessary to obtain reliable predictions of fatigue lifetime and enable estimation of time-to-facture for any given stress level. In this article, relaxation of welding residual stresses as a function of cyclic loading was documented on three common steels: AISI 1008, ASTM A572, and AISI 4142. Welded specimens were subjected to cyclic bending (R = 0.1) at different applied stresses, and the residual stress relaxation existing near the welds was measured as a function of cycles. The steels exhibited very different stress relaxation behaviors during cyclic loadings, which can be related to the differences in the microstructures of the specimens. A phenomenological model, which treats dislocation motion during cyclic loading as being analogous to creep of dislocations, is proposed for estimation of the residual stress relaxation
Molecular Identification of Atlantic Bluefin Tuna (Thunnus thynnus, Scombridae) Larvae and Development of a DNA Character-Based Identification Key for Mediterranean Scombrids
The Atlantic bluefin tuna, Thunnus thynnus, is a commercially important species that has been severely over-exploited in the recent past. Although the eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean stock is now showing signs of recovery, its current status remains very uncertain and as a consequence their recovery is dependent upon severe management informed by rigorous scientific research. Monitoring of early life history stages can inform decision makers about the health of the species based upon recruitment and survival rates. Misidentification of fish larvae and eggs can lead to inaccurate estimates of stock biomass and productivity which can trigger demands for increased quotas and unsound management conclusions. Herein we used a molecular approach employing mitochondrial and nuclear genes (CO1 and ITS1, respectively) to identify larvae (n = 188) collected from three spawning areas in the Mediterranean Sea by different institutions working with a regional fisheries management organization. Several techniques were used to analyze the genetic sequences (sequence alignments using search algorithms, neighbour joining trees, and a genetic character-based identification key) and an extensive comparison of the results is presented. During this process various inaccuracies in related publications and online databases were uncovered. Our results reveal important differences in the accuracy of the taxonomic identifications carried out by different ichthyoplanktologists following morphology- based methods. While less than half of larvae provided were bluefin tuna, other dominant taxa were bullet tuna (Auxis rochei), albacore (Thunnus alalunga) and little tunny (Euthynnus alletteratus). We advocate an expansion of expertise for a new generation of morphology-based taxonomists, increased dialogue between morphology-based and molecular taxonomists and increased scrutiny of public sequence databases.Versión del editor4,411
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