3,044 research outputs found
Do the rat anterior thalamic nuclei contribute to behavioural flexibility?
The rodent anterior thalamic nuclei (ATN) are vital for spatial memory. A consideration of their extensive frontal connections suggests that these nuclei may also subserve non-spatial functions. The current experiments explored the importance of the ATN for different aspects of behavioural flexibility, including their contribution to tasks typically associated with frontal cortex. In Experiment 1, rats with ATN lesions were tested on a series of response and visual discriminations in an operant box and, subsequently, in a water tank. The tasks included assessments of reversal learning as well switches between each discrimination dimension. Results revealed a mild and transient deficit on the operant task that was not specific to any stage of the procedure. In the water tank, the lesion animals were impaired on the reversal of a spatial discrimination but did not differ from controls on any other measure. Experiment 2 examined the impact of ATN damage on a rodent analogue of the ‘Stroop’, which assesses response choice during stimulus conflict. The lesion animals successfully acquired this task and were able to use contextual information to disambiguate conflicting cue information. However, responding during the initial presentation of conflicting cue information was affected by the lesion. Taken together, these results suggest that the ATN are not required for aspects of behavioural flexibility (discrimination learning, reversals or high-order switches) typically associated with the rat medial prefrontal cortex. The results from Experiment 2 suggest that the non-spatial functions of the ATN may be more aligned with those of the anterior cingulate cortex
The Therapeutic Interview Process in Qualitative Research Studies
The purpose of this paper is to describe the systemic strategies used in marriage and family therapy relevant to interviews, via what we call the therapeutic interview process, that expand the meaning of a research study for both the counselor researcher and the participant(s). We outline the therapeutic interview process for conducting transformative - based interviews via similar strategies from a family systems perspective conceptualized by Charlés (2007). The central core of the interview process is the therapeutic conversation itself that involves the systemic whole. This therapeutic conversation is facilitated by debriefing interviews, whereby the counselor researcher is interviewed to promote reflexivit
Collateral projections innervate the mammillary bodies and retrosplenial cortex: A new category of hippocampal cells
To understand the hippocampus it is necessary to understand the subiculum. Unlike other hippocampal subfields, the subiculum projects to almost all distal hippocampal targets, highlighting its critical importance for external networks. The present studies, in male rats and mice, reveal a new category of dorsal subiculum neurons that innervate both the mammillary bodies and the retrosplenial cortex. These bifurcating neurons comprise almost half of the hippocampal cells that project to retrosplenial cortex. The termination of these numerous collateral projections was visualized within the medial mammillary nucleus and the granular retrosplenial cortex (area 29). These collateral projections included subiculum efferents that cross to the contralateral mammillary bodies. Within the granular retrosplenial cortex, the collateral projections form a particularly dense plexus in deep layer II and layer III. This retrosplenial termination site co-localized with markers for VGluT2 and neurotensin. While efferents from the hippocampal CA fields standardly collateralize, subiculum projections often have only one target site. Consequently, the many collateral projections involving the retrosplenial cortex and the mammillary bodies present a relatively unusual pattern for the subiculum, which presumably relates to how both targets have complementary roles in spatial processing. Furthermore, along with the anterior thalamic nuclei, the mammillary bodies and retrosplenial cortex are key members of a memory circuit, which is usually described as both starting and finishing in the hippocampus. The present findings reveal how the hippocampus simultaneously engages different parts of this circuit, so forcing an important revision of this networ
Effects of P-MAPA Immunomodulator on Toll-Like Receptors and p53: Potential Therapeutic Strategies for Infectious Diseases and Cancer
BACKGROUND: Compounds that can act as agonists for toll-like receptors (TLRs) may be promising candidates for the development of drugs against infectious diseases and cancer. The present study aimed to characterize the immunomodulatory effects of P-MAPA on TLRs in vitro and in vivo, as well as to investigate its potential as adjuvant therapy in infectious diseases and cancer. METHODS: For these purposes, the activity of P-MAPA on TLRs was assayed in vitro through NF-κB activation in HEK293 cells expressing a given TLR, and using an in vivo animal model for bladder cancer (BC). The antimicrobial activity of P-MAPA was tested against Mycobacterium tuberculosis (TB) in vitro in an MIC assay, and in vivo using an aerosol infection model of murine tuberculosis. Antitumor effects of P-MAPA were tested in an animal model with experimentally induced BC. Moxifloxacin (MXF) and Bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) were used as positive controls in the animal models. RESULTS: The results showed that P-MAPA, administered alone or in combination with MXF, induced significant responses in vivo against TB. In contrast, the compound did not show antimicrobial activity in vitro. P-MAPA showed a significant stimulatory effect on human TLR2 and TLR4 in vitro. In BC, TLR2, TLR4 and p53 protein levels were significantly higher in the P-MAPA group than in the BCG group. The most common histopathological changes in each group were papillary carcinoma in BC group, low-grade intraepithelial neoplasia in BCG group and simple hyperplasia in P-MAPA group. Concerning the toxicological analysis performed during BC treatment, P-MAPA did not show evidence for hepatotoxicity and nephrotoxicity. CONCLUSIONS: In conclusion, P-MAPA acted as TLR ligand in vitro and improved the immunological status in BC, increasing TLR2 and TLR4 protein levels. P-MAPA immunotherapy was more effective in restoring p53 and TLRs reactivities and showed significantly greater antitumor activity than BCG. The activation of TLRs and p53 may provide a hypothetical mechanism for the therapeutic effects in both cancer and infectious diseases. Taken together data obtained will encourage the further investigation of P-MAPA as a potential candidate for the treatment of cancer and infectious diseases
The syncytial Drosophila embryo as a mechanically excitable medium
Mitosis in the early syncytial Drosophila embryo is highly correlated in
space and time, as manifested in mitotic wavefronts that propagate across the
embryo. In this paper we investigate the idea that the embryo can be considered
a mechanically-excitable medium, and that mitotic wavefronts can be understood
as nonlinear wavefronts that propagate through this medium. We study the
wavefronts via both image analysis of confocal microscopy videos and
theoretical models. We find that the mitotic waves travel across the embryo at
a well-defined speed that decreases with replication cycle. We find two markers
of the wavefront in each cycle, corresponding to the onsets of metaphase and
anaphase. Each of these onsets is followed by displacements of the nuclei that
obey the same wavefront pattern. To understand the mitotic wavefronts
theoretically we analyze wavefront propagation in excitable media. We study two
classes of models, one with biochemical signaling and one with mechanical
signaling. We find that the dependence of wavefront speed on cycle number is
most naturally explained by mechanical signaling, and that the entire process
suggests a scenario in which biochemical and mechanical signaling are coupled
Interplay of Stellar and Gas-Phase Metallicities: Unveiling Insights for Stellar Feedback Modeling with Illustris, IllustrisTNG, and EAGLE
The metal content of galaxies provides a window into their formation in the
full context of the cosmic baryon cycle. In this study, we examine the
relationship between stellar mass and stellar metallicity ()
in the hydrodynamic simulations Illustris, TNG, and EAGLE to understand the
global properties of stellar metallicities within the feedback paradigm
employed by these simulations. Interestingly, we observe significant variations
in the overall normalization and redshift evolution of the
across the three simulations. However, all simulations consistently demonstrate
a tertiary dependence on the specific star formation rate (sSFR) of galaxies.
This finding parallels the relationship seen in both simulations and
observations between stellar mass, gas-phase metallicity, and some proxy of
galaxy gas content (e.g., SFR, gas fraction, atomic gas mass). Since we find
this correlation exists in all three simulations, each employing a sub-grid
treatment of the dense, star-forming interstellar medium (ISM) to simulate
smooth stellar feedback, we interpret this result as a fairly general feature
of simulations of this kind. Furthermore, with a toy analytic model, we propose
that the tertiary correlation in the stellar component is sensitive to the
extent of the ``burstiness'' of feedback within galaxies.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, Accepted to MNRA
Insomnia, Psychiatric Disorders and Suicidal Ideation in a National Representative Sample of Active Canadian Forces Members
Background Past research on the association between insomnia and suicidal ideation (SI) has produced mixed findings. The current study explored the relationship between insomnia, SI, and past-year mental health status among a large Canadian Forces (CF) sample. Method Data was obtained from the 2013 Canadian Forces Mental Health Survey (CFMHS), and included a large representative sample of Canadian Regular Forces personnel (N = 6700). A series of univariate logistic regressions were conducted to test individual associations between past-year mental health status, insomnia, and potential confounds and SI. Mental health status included three groups: 0, 1, or two or more probable diagnoses of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), major depressive disorder (MDD), generalized anxiety disorder (GAD), panic disorder (PD) and alcohol abuse/dependence. Stepwise multivariate logistic regression was used to assess the relationship between insomnia and SI with mental health status as a moderator. Results 40.8% of respondents reported experiencing insomnia. Both insomnia and number of mental health conditions incrementally increased the risk of SI. However, past-year mental health status was a significant moderator of this relationship, such that for CF personnel with either no (AOR = 1.61, 1.37–1.89) or only one past-year mental health condition (AOR = 1.39, 1.12–1.73), an incremental increase in insomnia was associated with an increased likelihood of SI. However, in personnel with two or more past-year mental health disorders, insomnia was no longer significantly associated with SI (AOR = 1.04, 0.81–1.33). Conclusions Insomnia significantly increased the odds of SI, but only among individuals with no or one mental health condition. Findings highlight the importance of assessing insomnia among CF members in order to further suicide prevention efforts
Acute Liver Failure (ALF) in Pregnancy: How Much Is Pregnancy Related?
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/163471/1/hep31144.pd
The minimal computational substrate of fluid intelligence
The quantification of cognitive powers rests on identifying a behavioural
task that depends on them. Such dependence cannot be assured, for the powers a
task invokes cannot be experimentally controlled or constrained a priori,
resulting in unknown vulnerability to failure of specificity and
generalisability. Evaluating a compact version of Raven's Advanced Progressive
Matrices (RAPM), a widely used clinical test of fluid intelligence, we show
that LaMa, a self-supervised artificial neural network trained solely on the
completion of partially masked images of natural environmental scenes, achieves
human-level test scores a prima vista, without any task-specific inductive bias
or training. Compared with cohorts of healthy and focally lesioned
participants, LaMa exhibits human-like variation with item difficulty, and
produces errors characteristic of right frontal lobe damage under degradation
of its ability to integrate global spatial patterns. LaMa's narrow training and
limited capacity -- comparable to the nervous system of the fruit fly --
suggest RAPM may be open to computationally simple solutions that need not
necessarily invoke abstract reasoning.Comment: 26 pages, 5 figure
- …