399 research outputs found

    Organization Support as a Moderator in Coping with the Threat of Professional Obsolescence

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    This study examines how IT professionals cope with the threat of professional obsolescence and how organizations may playa role in helping IT professionals cope with this threat. In answering these questions, this study draws on theories ofoccupational stress, specifically the theory of conservation of resources (Hobfoll 2002; Hobfoll et al. 1993), to relate thethreat of professional obsolescence with IT professionals’ coping behaviors. This study extends the theory of conservation ofresources by proposing organizational updating climate as a proximal contextual moderating factor in how IT professionalscope with the threat of professional obsolescence. The results obtained from a large sample of IT professionals show that ITprofessionals are more likely to cope by directly rather than indirectly updating their IT competencies in relation to the threatof professional obsolescence. Organization updating climate supports IT professionals’ coping by providing a supportiveenvironment to undertake both direct as well as indirect updating. By contrast, direct updating is preferred over indirectupdating in organizations where there is lower updating support. We conclude this study with a discussion of the results andtheir implications for research and practice

    Classification of lower extremity movement patterns based on visual assessment: reliability and correlation with 2-dimensional video analysis

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    CONTEXT: Abnormal movement patterns have been implicated in lower extremity injury. Reliable, valid, and easily implemented assessment methods are needed to examine existing musculoskeletal disorders and investigate predictive factors for lower extremity injury. OBJECTIVE: To determine the reliability of experienced and novice testers in making visual assessments of lower extremity movement patterns and to characterize the construct validity of the visual assessments. DESIGN: Cross-sectional study. SETTING: University athletic department and research laboratory. PATIENTS OR OTHER PARTICIPANTS: Convenience sample of 30 undergraduate and graduate students who regularly participate in athletics (age = 19.3 ± 4.5 years). Testers were 2 experienced physical therapists and 1 novice postdoctoral fellow (nonclinician). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): We took videos of 30 athletes performing the single-legged squat. Three testers observed the videos on 2 occasions and classified the lower extremity movement as dynamic valgus, no change, or dynamic varus. The classification was based on the estimated change in frontal-plane projection angle (FPPA) of the knee from single-legged stance to maximum single-legged squat depth. The actual FPPA change was measured quantitatively. We used percentage agreement and weighted Îș to examine tester reliability and to determine construct validity of the visual assessment. RESULTS: The Îș values for intratester and intertester reliability ranged from 0.75 to 0.90, indicating substantial to excellent reliability. Percentage agreement between the visual assessment and the quantitative FPPA change category was 90%, with a Îș value of 0.85. CONCLUSIONS: Visual assessments were made reliably by experienced and novice testers. Additionally, movement-pattern categories based on visual assessments were in excellent agreement with objective methods to measure FPPA change. Therefore, visual assessments can be used in the clinic to assess movement patterns associated with musculoskeletal disorders and in large epidemiologic studies to assess the association between lower extremity movement patterns and musculoskeletal injury

    Giant Appendiceal Leiomyosarcoma: A Rare and Unusual Tumour

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    Appendiceal tumours are uncommon but may be present in 0.9–1.4% of all appendicectomy specimens. While carcinoid tumours and adenocarcinomas comprise the majority of appendiceal tumours, rarely, lymphomas or sarcomas may also present in the appendix. Appendiceal leiomyosarcomas are rare, and to date, only a handful of cases have been reported. The current paper presents a case of giant appendiceal leiomyosarcoma followed by a review of the literature

    SUSTAINABLE IT-SPECIFIC HUMAN CAPITAL: COPING WITH THE THREAT OF PROFESSIONAL OBSOLESCENCE

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    This study contributes to research examining how IT professionals cope with the threat of professional obsolescence. In answering this question, this study draws on theories of occupational stress, specifically the theory of conservation of resources (Hobfoll 2002; Hobfoll and Freedy 1993), to relate the threat of professional obsolescence with IT professionals’ coping behaviors. This study extends the theory of conservation of resources in several directions such as theorizing and testing the job mobility intentions of turnover and turnaway as consequences; and by proposing organizational updating climate as a proximal contextual moderating factor. The results obtained from a large sample of IT professionals are both consistent with and contrary to theorized relationships. We also uncover several new findings pertaining to the role played by organization updating climate and its potential limit in supporting updating activities of IT professionals. We conclude this study with a discussion of the results and propose future research directions

    Dissociation of Detection and Discrimination of Pure Tones following Bilateral Lesions of Auditory Cortex

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    It is well known that damage to the peripheral auditory system causes deficits in tone detection as well as pitch and loudness perception across a wide range of frequencies. However, the extent to which to which the auditory cortex plays a critical role in these basic aspects of spectral processing, especially with regard to speech, music, and environmental sound perception, remains unclear. Recent experiments indicate that primary auditory cortex is necessary for the normally-high perceptual acuity exhibited by humans in pure-tone frequency discrimination. The present study assessed whether the auditory cortex plays a similar role in the intensity domain and contrasted its contribution to sensory versus discriminative aspects of intensity processing. We measured intensity thresholds for pure-tone detection and pure-tone loudness discrimination in a population of healthy adults and a middle-aged man with complete or near-complete lesions of the auditory cortex bilaterally. Detection thresholds in his left and right ears were 16 and 7 dB HL, respectively, within clinically-defined normal limits. In contrast, the intensity threshold for monaural loudness discrimination at 1 kHz was 6.5±2.1 dB in the left ear and 6.5±1.9 dB in the right ear at 40 dB sensation level, well above the means of the control population (left ear: 1.6±0.22 dB; right ear: 1.7±0.19 dB). The results indicate that auditory cortex lowers just-noticeable differences for loudness discrimination by approximately 5 dB but is not necessary for tone detection in quiet. Previous human and Old-world monkey experiments employing lesion-effect, neurophysiology, and neuroimaging methods to investigate the role of auditory cortex in intensity processing are reviewed.United States. National Institutes of Health (DC03328)United States. National Institutes of Health (DC006353)United States. National Institutes of Health (DC00117)United States. National Institutes of Health (T32-DC00038

    Divergent effects of DNMT3A and TET2 mutations on hematopoietic progenitor cell fitness

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    The DNA methylation regulators DNMT3A and TET2 are recurrently mutated in hematological disorders. Despite possessing antagonistic biochemical activities, loss-of-function murine models show overlapping phenotypes in terms of increased hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) fitness. Here, we directly compared the effects of these mutations on hematopoietic progenitor function and disease initiation. In contrast to Dnmt3a-null HSCs, which possess limitless self-renewal in vivo, Tet2-null HSCs unexpectedly exhaust at the same rate as control HSCs in serial transplantation assays despite an initial increase in self-renewal. Moreover, loss of Tet2 more acutely sensitizes hematopoietic cells to the addition of a common co-operating mutation (Flt

    Abasic and oxidized ribonucleotides embedded in DNA are processed by human APE1 and not by RNase H2

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    Ribonucleoside 5'-monophosphates (rNMPs) are the most common non-standard nucleotides found in DNA of eukaryotic cells, with over 100 million rNMPs transiently incorporated in the mammalian genome per cell cycle. Human ribonuclease (RNase) H2 is the principal enzyme able to cleave rNMPs in DNA. Whether RNase H2 may process abasic or oxidized rNMPs incorporated in DNA is unknown. The base excision repair (BER) pathway is mainly responsible for repairing oxidized and abasic sites into DNA. Here we show that human RNase H2 is unable to process an abasic rNMP (rAP site) or a ribose 8oxoG (r8oxoG) site embedded in DNA. On the contrary, we found that recombinant purified human apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease-1 (APE1) and APE1 from human cell extracts efficiently process an rAP site in DNA and have weak endoribonuclease and 3'-exonuclease activities on r8oxoG substrate. Using biochemical assays, our results provide evidence of a human enzyme able to recognize and process abasic and oxidized ribonucleotides embedded in DNA
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