511 research outputs found

    An analysis of the environmental pressure exerted by the eucalyptus-based Kraft pulp industry in Thailand

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    The study reported here focuses on the environmental pressure exerted by large-scale eucalyptus-based kraft pulp industry in Thailand. The objective of this study was to identify the most important sources of greenhouse gases, acidifying and eutrophying compounds and tropospheric ozone precursors, human toxicity compounds and solid waste associated with the kraft pulp industry. To this end, we performed an environmental systems analysis of the kraft pulp industry system in which we distinguished between two subsystems: the eucalyptus forestry subsystem and the kraft pulp production subsystem. The results indicate that the environmental pressure is caused by the kraft pulp production subsystem rather than by the eucalyptus forestry one. The chemical recovery unit was found to be the most important source of carbon dioxide (CO2) and sulfur dioxide (SO2) and responsible for more than one-half of the emissions of greenhouse gases and acidifying compounds from eucalyptus-based kraft pulp production in Thailand. Biomass combustion in the energy gene ration unit is an important source of nitrogen oxide (NOx) and carbon monoxide (CO) which in turn are responsible for over 50% of the emissions of tropospheric ozone precursors. About 73% of the eutrophication is caused by biological aerobic wastewater treatment emitting phosphorus (P). With respect to the eucalyptus forestry, only fertilizer use in eucalyptus plantations is a relevant source of pollution through the emission of nitrous oxide (N2O) and phosphate (PO4 3-)

    Insights in the Efficacy of Computer-tailored Nutrition Education

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    Saturated fat intake is an important risk factor for cardiovascular diseases, one of the main burdens of disease worldwide. Therefore it is important to use population-wide health promotion efforts to target this risk behavior. Computer-tailored nutrition education has been found to be a very promising health education strategy that can be applied in population health promotion. However, several questions remained unanswered on why, where and for whom computer-tailored (nutrition) education is effective. In this thesis, those questions are addressed to get more insight in the efficacy of computertailored nutrition education aimed at the reduction of saturated fat intake. This introductory chapter provides a general background and rationale for the studies presented in this thesis

    Automated Feedback Can Improve Hypothesis Quality

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    Stating a hypothesis is one of the central processes in inquiry learning, and often forms the starting point of the inquiry process. We designed, implemented, and evaluated an automated parsing and feedback system that informed students about the quality of hypotheses they had created in an online tool, the hypothesis scratchpad. In two pilot studies in different domains (“supply and demand” from economics and “electrical circuits” from physics) we determined the parser's accuracy by comparing its judgments with those of human experts. A satisfactory to high accuracy was reached. In the main study (in the “electrical circuits” domain), students were assigned to one of two conditions: no feedback (control) and automated feedback. We found that the subset of students in the experimental condition who asked for automated feedback on their hypotheses were much more likely to create a syntactically correct hypothesis than students in either condition who did not ask for feedback

    Impact hotspots of reduced nutrient discharge shift across the globe with population and dietary changes

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    This is the final version. Available from Nature Research via the DOI in this recordReducing nutrient discharge from wastewater is essential to mitigating aquatic eutrophication; however, energy- and chemicals-intensive nutrient removal processes, accompanied with the emissions of airborne contaminants, can create other, unexpected, environmental consequences. Implementing mitigation strategies requires a complete understanding of the effects of nutrient control practices, given spatial and temporal variations. Here we simulate the environmental impacts of reducing nutrient discharge from domestic wastewater in 173 countries during 1990–2050. We find that improvements in wastewater infrastructure achieve a large-scale decline in nutrient input to surface waters, but this is causing detrimental effects on the atmosphere and the broader environment. Population size and dietary protein intake have the most significant effects over all the impacts arising from reduction of wastewater nutrients. Wastewater-related impact hotspots are also shifting from Asia to Africa, suggesting a need for interventions in such countries, mostly with growing populations, rising dietary intake, rapid urbanisation, and inadequate sanitation.Beijing Nova ProgramBeijing Talents FoundationNational Natural Science Foundation of ChinaYouth Innovation Promotion Association of the Chinese Academy of SciencesK. C. Wong Education Foundatio

    Measuring Patient-Reported Outcomes Adaptively: Multidimensionality Matters!

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    As there is currently a marked increase in the use of both unidimensional (UCAT) and multidimensional computerized adaptive testing (MCAT) in psychological and health measurement, the main aim of the present study is to assess the incremental value of using MCAT rather than separate UCATs for each dimension. Simulations are based on empirical data that could be considered typical for health measurement: a large number of dimensions (4), strong correlations among dimensions (.77-.87), and polytomously scored response data. Both variable- (SE <.316, SE <.387) and fixed-length conditions (total test length of 12, 20, or 32 items) are studied. The item parameters and variance–covariance matrix Φ are estimated with the multidimensional graded response model (GRM). Outcome variables include computerized adaptive test (CAT) length, root mean square error (RMSE), and bias. Both simulated and empirical latent trait distributions are used to sample vectors of true scores. MCATs were generally more efficient (in terms of test length) and more accurate (in terms of RMSE) than their UCAT counterparts. Absolute average bias was highest for variable-length UCATs with termination rule SE <.387. Test length of variable-length MCATs was on average 20% to 25% shorter than test length across separate UCATs. This study showed that there are clear advantages of using MCAT rather than UCAT in a setting typical for health measurement

    Presence of innate lymphoid cells in allogeneic hematopoietic grafts correlates with reduced graft-versus-host disease.

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    BACKGROUND Allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) can be devastating when graft-versus-host disease (GvHD) develops. GvHD is characterized by mucosal inflammation due to breaching of epithelial barriers. Innate lymphoid cells (ILCs) are immune modulatory cells that are important in the maintenance of epithelial barriers, via their production of interleukin (IL)-22 and their T cell suppressive properties. After chemo- and radiotherapy, ILCs are depleted, and recovery after remission-induction therapy and after allogeneic HCT is slow and incomplete in a significant number of patients, which is associated with an increased risk to develop acute GvHD. OBJECTIVE To investigate whether the presence of mature ILCs within G-CSF-mobilized HCT grafts is correlated with the development of acute GvHD after allogeneic HCT. STUDY DESIGN We analyzed ILCs in a cohort of 36 patients who received allogeneic HCT for a hematologic malignancy, by flow-cytometric immune-phenotyping of prospectively collected, cryopreserved peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) and donor-derived HCT grafts collected for the same patients. Biased analysis, with ILCs defined as CD3-lineage-CD45+CD127+CD161+ lymphocytes, was performed using FlowJo version 10 software. Unbiased analysis was done using FlowSOM, which uses a self-organizing map (SOM) with a minimal spanning tree (MST) to define and visualize different clusters present in the samples. RESULTS Remission-induction therapy significantly depleted ILCs from the blood, and patients who had a relatively low percentage of ILCs before allogeneic HCT were significantly more prone to develop acute GvHD, confirming previous findings in a separate cohort. Allogeneic HCT grafts, which were all obtained from the blood of G-CSF-mobilized healthy donors, contained ILCs at a frequency very similar to the peripheral blood of healthy individuals. The ILC subset composition was also comparable to that of the blood of healthy individuals, with the exception of NKp44+ ILC3s, which were significantly more abundant in HCT grafts. The relative ILC content of the graft tended to correlate with ILC reconstitution after allogeneic HCT, suggesting that peripheral expansion of transplanted mature ILCs may contribute to early ILC reconstitution after allogeneic HCT. Patients who received a relatively ILC-poor HCT graft had a significantly increased risk to develop acute GvHD, compared with patients who received relatively ILC-rich allogeneic HCT grafts. Unbiased phenotypic analysis with the FlowSOM algorithm confirmed that allogeneic HCT grafts of patients who developed acute GvHD contained a lower frequency of ILCs that clustered in NKp44+ ILC3 signature groups. CONCLUSION The presence of ILCs in allogeneic HCT grafts is associated with a reduced risk to develop acute GvHD. These data suggest that enhancement of ILC reconstitution of ILC3s in particular, for example via adoptive transfer of ILCs, may prevent acute GvHD and has the potential to improve outcome of allogeneic HCT recipients

    Antagonist Functional Selectivity: 5-HT2A Serotonin Receptor Antagonists Differentially Regulate 5-HT2A Receptor Protein Level In Vivo

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    Dysregulation of the 5-HT2A receptor is implicated in both the etiology and treatment of schizophrenia. Although the essential role of 5-HT2A receptors in atypical antipsychotic drug actions is widely accepted, the contribution of 5-HT2A down-regulation to their efficacy is not known. We hypothesized that down-regulation of cortical 5-HT2A receptors contributes to the therapeutic action of atypical antipsychotic drugs. To test this hypothesis, we assessed the effect of chronically administered antipsychotics (clozapine, olanzapine, and haloperidol) and several 5-HT2A antagonists [ketanserin, altanserin, α-(2,3-dimethoxyphenyl)-1-[2-(4-fluorophenylethyl)]-4-piperidinemethanol (M100907), α-phenyl-1-(2-phenylethyl)-4-piperidinemethano ({"type":"entrez-nucleotide","attrs":{"text":"M11939","term_id":"169356","term_text":"M11939"}}M11939), 4-[(2Z)-3-{[2-(dimethylamino)ethoxy]amino}-3-(2-fluorophenyl)prop-2-en-1-ylidene]cyclohexa-2,5-dien-1-one (SR46349B), and pimavanserin], on the phencyclidine (PCP)-induced hyperlocomotor response and cortical 5-HT2A receptor levels in C57BL/6J mice. Clozapine and olanzapine, but not haloperidol, induced receptor down-regulation and attenuated PCP-induced locomotor responses. Of the selective 5-HT2A antagonists tested, only ketanserin caused significant receptor protein down-regulation, whereas SR46349B up-regulated 5-HT2A receptors and potentiated PCP-hyperlocomotion; the other 5-HT2A receptor antagonists were without effect. The significance of these findings with respect to atypical antipsychotic drug action is discussed

    Infection with Pythium flevoense in a harbour porpoise (Phocoena phocoena) as a novel cause of dermatitis in marine mammals

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    The oomycete Pythium flevoense was diagnosed as the cause of dermatitis in a young adult female harbour porpoise (Phocoena phocoena) that had been trapped in a pound net in a temperate saltwater environment. Disease from Pythium sp. infection-pythiosis-is infrequently diagnosed in humans, horses, dogs, cattle, and few other mammalian species. Pythiosis is typically associated with exposure to tropical or subtropical freshwater conditions, and typically caused by Pythium insidiosum. However, until now, pythiosis has been reported in neither marine mammals nor temperate saltwater conditions, and P. flevoense is not known as a cause of pythiosis in mammals. This porpoise developed generalised dermatitis despite treatment and euthanasia was necessary. Histopathological evaluation revealed a chronic active erosive dermatitis, with intralesional hyphae morphologically consistent with a Pythium sp. PCR analysis and sequencing of affected skin matched Pythium flevoense with a 100% similarity to the reference strain. Additional diagnostics excluded other pathogens. Based on this case report, P. flevoense needs to be considered as a mammalian pathogen. Furthermore, harbour porpoises and possibly other marine mammals may be at risk of infection with P. flevoense, and pythiosis should be included in the differential diagnosis of dermatitis in marine mammals.</p

    Lumbar spine segmentation in MR images: a dataset and a public benchmark

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    This paper presents a large publicly available multi-center lumbar spine magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) dataset with reference segmentations of vertebrae, intervertebral discs (IVDs), and spinal canal. The dataset includes 447 sagittal T1 and T2 MRI series from 218 patients with a history of low back pain. It was collected from four different hospitals and was divided into a training (179 patients) and validation (39 patients) set. An iterative data annotation approach was used by training a segmentation algorithm on a small part of the dataset, enabling semi-automatic segmentation of the remaining images. The algorithm provided an initial segmentation, which was subsequently reviewed, manually corrected, and added to the training data. We provide reference performance values for this baseline algorithm and nnU-Net, which performed comparably. We set up a continuous segmentation challenge to allow for a fair comparison of different segmentation algorithms. This study may encourage wider collaboration in the field of spine segmentation, and improve the diagnostic value of lumbar spine MRI
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