2,086 research outputs found

    Harvest Health: Chronic Disease Self-Management Program for Older African-Americans

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    UT4 EVALUATING WILLINGNESS TO PAY THRESHOLDS FOR A DEMENTIA CAREGIVING INTERVENTION

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    Building an Institute to Translate Research into Practice: A Facilitation Model

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    Are computers effective lie detectors? A Meta-analysis of linguistic cues to deception

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    This meta-analysis investigates linguistic cues to deception and whether these cues can be detected with computer programs. We integrated operational definitions for 79 cues from 44 studies where software had been used to identify linguistic deception cues. These cues were allocated to six research questions. As expected, the meta-analyses demonstrated that, relative to truth-tellers, liars experienced greater cognitive load, expressed more negative emotions, distanced themselves more from events, expressed fewer sensory-perceptual words, and referred less often to cognitive processes. However, liars were not more uncertain than truth-tellers. These effects were moderated by event type, involvement, emotional valence, intensity of interaction, motivation, and other moderators. Although the overall effect size was small theory-driven predictions for certain cues received support. These findings not only further our knowledge about the usefulness of linguistic cues to detect deception with computers in applied settings but also elucidate the relationship between language and deception

    Increasing the Net Charge and Decreasing the Hydrophobicity of Bovine Carbonic Anhydrase Decreases the Rate of Denaturation with Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate

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    AbstractThis study compares the rate of denaturation with sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) of the individual rungs of protein charge ladders generated by acylation of the lysine ε−NH3+ groups of bovine carbonic anhydrase II (BCA). Each acylation decreases the number of positively charged groups, increases the net negative charge, and increases the hydrophobic surface area of BCA. This study reports the kinetics of denaturation in solutions containing SDS of the protein charge ladders generated with acetic and hexanoic anhydrides; plotting these rates of denaturation as a function of the number of modifications yields a U-shaped curve. The proteins with an intermediate number of modifications are the most stable to denaturation by SDS. There are four competing interactions—two resulting from the change in electrostatics and two resulting from the change in exposed hydrophobic surface area—that determine how a modification affects the stability of a rung of a charge ladder of BCA to denaturation with SDS. A model based on assumptions about how these interactions affect the folded and transition states has been developed and fits the experimental results. Modeling indicates that for each additional acylation, the magnitude of the change in the activation energy of denaturation (ΔΔG‡) due to changes in the electrostatics is much larger than the change in ΔΔG‡ due to changes in the hydrophobicity, but the intermolecular and intramolecular electrostatic effects are opposite in sign. At the high numbers of acylations, hydrophobic interactions cause the hexanoyl-modified BCA to denature nearly three orders of magnitude more rapidly than the acetyl-modified BCA

    Technique to ‘Map' Chromosomal Mosaicism at the Blastocyst Stage

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    The purpose of this study was to identify a technique that allows for comprehensive chromosome screening (CCS) of individual cells within human blastocysts along with the approximation of their location in the trophectoderm relative to the inner cell mass (ICM). This proof-of-concept study will allow for a greater understanding of chromosomal mosaicism at the blastocyst stage and the mechanisms by which mosaicism arises. One blastocyst was held by a holding pipette and the ICM was removed. While still being held, the blastocyst was further biopsied into quadrants. To separate the individual cells from the biopsied sections, the sections were placed in calcium/magnesium-free medium with serum for 20 min. A holding pipette was used to aspirate the sections until individual cells were isolated. Individual cells from each section were placed into PCR tubes and prepped for aCGH. A total of 18 cells were used for analysis, of which 15 (83.3%) amplified and provided a result and 3 (16.7%) did not. Fifteen cells were isolated from the trophectoderm; 13 (86.7%) provided an aCGH result, while 2 (13.3%) did not amplify. Twelve cells were euploid (46,XY), while 1 was complex abnormal (44,XY), presenting with monosomy 7, 10, 11, 13, and 19, and trisomy 14, 15, and 21. A total of 3 cells were isolated from the ICM; 2 were euploid (46,XY) and 1 did not amplify. Here, we expand on a previously published technique which disassociates biopsied sections of the blastocyst into individual cells. Since the blastocyst sections were biopsied in regard to the position of the ICM, it was possible to reconstruct a virtual image of the blastocyst while presenting each cell's individual CCS results

    How new technology is addressed by researchers in educational studies: approaches from high-performing universities in China and the UK

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    There is a crisis of expectation in relation to educational technology. This is sometimes interpreted as a failure of academic researchers to disseminate their work to educational practitioners. However, another interpretation dwells on the lack of vision characterising such research. Because teachers often encounter research most intensely during their own pre-service and in-service education, we review academic research here through a snapshot of output from 10 leading university Education departments sampled in the UK and China. Empirical papers with a central interest in new technology were scarce, representing around 10% of the sample. Research was strongly situated in 'classroom' contexts although, as critics have suggested, with limited attention to the wider ecology of those places and with teachers being the focal interest as much as students. An 'outcomes' research orientation was less common than an interest in process. Although this was approached with different methodologies in China and the UK. Discussion addresses the challenge of effective and authoritative dissemination and constraints arising from the political economy of research itself

    Formación política y constitucional del estado de Israel

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    Atp7a determines a hierarchy of copper metabolism essential for notochord development

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    SummaryThe critical developmental and genetic requirements of copper metabolism during embryogenesis are unknown. Utilizing a chemical genetic screen in zebrafish, we identified small molecules that perturb copper homeostasis. Our findings reveal a role for copper in notochord formation and demonstrate a hierarchy of copper metabolism within the embryo. To elucidate these observations, we interrogated a genetic screen for embryos phenocopied by copper deficiency, identifying calamity, a mutant defective in the zebrafish ortholog of the Menkes disease gene (atp7a). Copper metabolism in calamity is restored by human ATP7A, and transplantation experiments reveal that atp7a functions cell autonomously, findings with important therapeutic implications. The gene dosage of atp7a determines the sensitivity to copper deprivation, revealing that the observed developmental hierarchy of copper metabolism is informed by specific genetic factors. Our data provide insight into the developmental pathophysiology of copper metabolism and suggest that suboptimal copper metabolism may contribute to birth defects
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