3,280 research outputs found

    International education ‘here’ and ‘there’: geographies, materialities and differentiated mobilities within UK degrees

    Get PDF
    This paper explores how mobility is experienced differentially in international education, through a comparison of two ostensibly very distinct student groups. Both groups have non-UK citizenship and have studied, or are studying, for a British higher education degree–one in the UK, the other in Hong Kong. Through a dual focus on the materialities and mobilities within international higher education, we consider the extent to which physical mobility across borders is a defining feature of the experiences and outcomes of those engaging in international education. We argue that combining perspectives of mobilities and materialities challenges simplistic dichotomies of im/mobility amongst students and unsettles the boundaries between onshore and offshore international education. Our paper provides a more granular and nuanced understanding of the relationship between im/mobility, international higher education and social reproduction

    Increased burn healing time is associated with higher Vancouver Scar Scale score

    Get PDF
    Increased burn wound healing time has been shown to influence abnormal scarring. This study hypothesized that scar severity increases commensurate to the increase in time to healing (TTH) of the wound. Wound healing and scar data from burn patients treated by the Burn Service of Western Australia at Royal Perth Hospital were examined. The relationship between TTH and scar severity, as assessed by the modified Vancouver Scar Scale (mVSS), was modelled using regression analysis. Interaction terms evaluated the effect of surgery and total body surface area – burn (TBSA) on the main relationship. Maximum likelihood estimation was used to account for potential bias from missing independent variable data. The sample had a median age of 34 years, TTH of 24 days, TBSA of 3% and length of stay of five days, 70% were men and 71% had burn surgery. For each additional day of TTH, the mVSS score increased by 0.11 points (P ⩽ 0.001) per day in the first 21 days and 0.02 points per day thereafter (P = 0.004). The relationship remained stable in spite of TBSA or surgical intervention. Investigation of the effect of missing data revealed the primary model underestimated the strength of the association. An increase in TTH within 21 days of injury is associated with an increase in mVSS or reduced scar quality. The results confirm that efforts should be directed toward healing burn wounds as early as possible

    CRITICAL RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN CONSTITUENTS OF THE ANTIGEN-ADJUVANT EMULSION AFFECTING EXPERIMENTAL ALLERGIC ENCEPHALOMYELITIS IN A COMPLETELY SUSCEPTIBLE MOUSE GENOTYPE

    Get PDF
    The production of EAE in the fully susceptible BSVS mouse genotype has been found to be dependent on the ratio of proteolipid antigen and adjuvant mycobacterial concentration as used in the emulsion, of the Freund type. Disturbance of this ratio, by manipulation of either component, by diminution or increase, results in a decrease in the frequency by which EAE is produced. Simultaneous reduction of antigen and mycobacteria, so that the ratio remains unchanged, retains the full EAE-producing power of the emulsion. The limit of this has not been ascertained. Emulsifying agents have been found to restrict further the permissible limits of the antigen-mycobacterial ratio for full EAE production. Such effects of the emulsifier have been found to vary with the qualitative nature of the emulsifier. Aquaphor has been found to be less restrictive than falba. These phenomena, systematically analyzed here for the mouse, may have an application for other antigen-adjuvant systems and for other hosts

    Work hour congruence: The effect on job satisfaction and absenteeism

    Get PDF
    This study examines the effect of work hour congruence on employee job satisfaction and absenteeism using a large, longitudinal sample from the Canadian Workplace and Employee Survey (WES). An employee is said to have work hour congruence when they actually work the number of hours that they desire. Results indicate a difference between employees who desire more hours and those who desire fewer hours: employee desire for and receipt of more hours was related to positive changes in job satisfaction, while employee desire for and receipt of fewer hours was related to reduced absenteeism. In addition, the results suggest that employees respond to employers who at least try to meet their needs, those who desired more hours and received some, but not all of these additional hours showed a positive increase in job satisfaction. This study contributes to the literature by using of a precise measure of work hour preference and change, differentiating employees who desire fewer hours from those who desire more and examining both full and partial work hour congruence

    HSCO+^+ and DSCO+^+: a multi-technique approach in the laboratory for the spectroscopy of interstellar ions

    Full text link
    Protonated molecular species have been proven to be abundant in the interstellar gas. This class of molecules is also pivotal for the determination of important physical parameters for the ISM evolution (e.g. gas ionisation fraction) or as tracers of non-polar, hence not directly observable, species. The identification of these molecular species through radioastronomical observations is directly linked to a precise laboratory spectral characterisation. The goal of the present work is to extend the laboratory measurements of the pure rotational spectrum of the ground electronic state of protonated carbonyl sulfide (HSCO+^+) and its deuterium substituted isotopomer (DSCO+^+). At the same time, we show how implementing different laboratory techniques allows the determination of different spectroscopical properties of asymmetric-top protonated species. Three different high-resolution experiments were involved to detected for the first time the b−b-type rotational spectrum of HSCO+^+, and to extend, well into the sub-millimeter region, the a−a-type spectrum of the same molecular species and DSCO+^+. The electronic ground-state of both ions have been investigated in the 273-405 GHz frequency range, allowing the detection of 60 and 50 new rotational transitions for HSCO+^+ and DSCO+^+, respectively. The combination of our new measurements with the three rotational transitions previously observed in the microwave region permits the rest frequencies of the astronomically most relevant transitions to be predicted to better than 100 kHz for both HSCO+^+ and DSCO+^+ up to 500 GHz, equivalent to better than 60 m/s in terms of equivalent radial velocity. The present work illustrates the importance of using different laboratory techniques to spectroscopically characterise a protonated species at high frequency, and how a similar approach can be adopted when dealing with reactive species.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysic

    Efficient generation of mNeonGreen <i>Plasmodium falciparum</i> reporter lines enables quantitative fitness analysis

    Get PDF
    CRISPR editing has enabled the rapid creation of fluorescent Plasmodium transgenic lines, facilitating a deeper understanding of parasite biology. The impact of genetic perturbations such as gene disruption or the introduction of drug resistance alleles on parasite fitness is typically quantified in competitive growth assays between the query line and a wild type reference. Although fluorescent reporter lines offer a facile and frequently used method to measure relative growth, this approach is limited by the strain background of the existing reporter, which may not match the growth characteristics of the query strains, particularly if these are slower-growing field isolates. Here, we demonstrate an efficient CRISPR-based approach to generate fluorescently labelled parasite lines using mNeonGreen derived from the LanYFP protein in Branchiostoma lanceolatum, which is one of the brightest monomeric green fluorescent proteins identified. Using a positive-selection approach by insertion of an in-frame blasticidin S deaminase marker, we generated a Dd2 reporter line expressing mNeonGreen under the control of the pfpare (P. falciparum Prodrug Activation and Resistance Esterase) locus. We selected the pfpare locus as an integration site because it is highly conserved across P. falciparum strains, expressed throughout the intraerythrocytic cycle, not essential, and offers the potential for negative selection to further enrich for integrants. The mNeonGreen@pare line demonstrates strong fluorescence with a negligible fitness defect. In addition, the construct developed can serve as a tool to fluorescently tag other P. falciparum strains for in vitro experimentation

    Warfare in Late Neolithic\Early Chalcolithic Pisidia, southwestern Turkey. Climate induced social unrest in the late 7th millennium calBC

    Get PDF
    This paper proposes an association between climate forcing connected with the 8200 calBP ‘climate event’ and a postulated phase of internecine warfare and population collapse at Late Neolithic/Early Chalcolithic sites in Pisidia, southwestern Turkey. A summary of this evidence is provided and a hypothetical scenario considered in the context of contemporaneous developments in neighbouring regions
    • …
    corecore