3,479 research outputs found
A pilot qualitative investigation of stakeholdersâ experiences and opinions of equine insect bite hypersensitivity in England
Equine insect bite hypersensitivity (IBH), commonly known as sweet itch or summer eczema, is a frustrating recurrent skin disease in the equine industry involving an immune reaction to the bites of Culicoides spp. midges. To investigate the impact of IBH in the field, an exploratory pilot study was conducted with equine stakeholders in one region of central England. Nine semi-structured, face-to-face interviews were conducted with horse owners and an equine veterinarian. The aim was to gain an understanding of experiences with IBH, and to gauge opinions on the value of the various management strategies horse owners use to control IBH. Awareness of IBH was generally high, particularly in those individuals who had previous experience with the condition. Those with previous experience of IBH commented on the significant effect on daily routines, and the associated cost implications. Most participants supported an integrated approach to hypersensitivity management, and this most commonly involved a combination of physical barriers and chemical repellents, but sometimes included feed supplementation. Overall, attitudes towards IBH suggested that the condition is a notable welfare and economic concern for stakeholders, but veterinary involvement tended to only be in more severe cases. Further research is required in the future to improve understanding, management and potential treatment of this condition
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The Search Image Hypothesis in Animal behavior: Its Relevance to Analyzing Vision at the Complexity Level
We show how a concept from animal behavior, the visual search hypothesis, is relevant to complexity considerations in computational vision. In particular we show that this hypothesis is an indication of the validity of the bounded/unbounded visual search distinction proposed by Tsotsos. Specifically we show bounded visual search corresponds to a broad range of naturally occurring, target driven problems in which attention alters the search behavior of animals
Enhancing Perception of Complex Sculptural Forms using Interactive Real-time Ray tracing
This paper looks at experiments into using real-time ray tracing to significantly enhance shape perception of complex three-dimensional digitally created structures. The author is a computational artist whose artistic practice explores the creation of intricate organic three-dimensional forms using simulation of morphogenesis. The generated forms are often extremely detailed, comprising tens of millions of cellular primitives. This often makes depth perception of the resulting structures difficult. His practice has explored various techniques to create presentable artefacts from the data, including high resolution prints, animated videos, stereoscopic installations, 3D printing and virtual reality.
The author uses ray tracing techniques to turn the 3D data created from his morphogenetic simulations into visible artefacts. This is typically a time-consuming process, taking from seconds to minutes to create a single frame. The latest generation of graphics processing units offer dedicated hardware to accelerate ray tracing calculations. This potentially allows the generation of ray traced images, including self-shadowed complex structures and multiple levels of transparency, from new viewpoints at frame rates capable of real-time interaction. The author presents the results of his experiments using this technology with the aim of providing significantly enhanced perception of his generated three-dimensional structures by allowing user-initiated interaction to generate novel views, and utilizing depth cues such as stereopsis, depth from motion and defocus blurring.
The intention is for these techniques to be usable to present new exhibitable works in a gallery context
Picoheterotroph (Bacteria and Archaea) biomass distribution in the global ocean
We compiled a database of 39 766 data points consisting of flow cytometric and microscopical measurements of picoheterotroph abundance, including both Bacteria and Archaea. After gridding with 1° spacing, the database covers 1.3% of the ocean surface. There are data covering all ocean basins and depths except the Southern Hemisphere below 350m or from April until June. The average picoheterotroph biomass is 3.9 ± 3.6 ”g Cl-1 with a 20-fold decrease between the surface and the deep sea. We estimate a total ocean inventory of about 1.3 à 1029 picoheterotroph cells. Surprisingly, the abundance in the coastal regions is the same as at the same depths in the open ocean. Using an average of published open ocean measurements for the conversion from abundance to carbon biomass of 9.1 fg cell-1, we calculate a picoheterotroph carbon inventory of about 1.2 Pg C. The main source of uncertainty in this inventory is the conversion factor from abundance to biomass. Picoheterotroph biomass is ? 2 times higher in the tropics than in the polar oceans
The influence of hospital ward design on resilience to heat waves: An exploration using distributed lag models
Distributed lag models (DLMs) to predict future internal temperatures have been developed using the hourly weather data and the internal temperatures recorded in eleven spaces on two UK National Health Service (NHS) hospital sites. The ward spaces were in five buildings of very different type and age. In all the DLMs, the best prediction of internal temperature was obtained using three exogenous drivers, previous internal temperature, external temperature and solar radiation. DLMs were sensitive to the buildingsâ differences in orientation, thermal mass and shading and were validated by comparing the predictions with the internal temperatures recorded in the summer of 2012. The results were encouraging, with both modelled and recorded data showing good correlation. To understand the resilience of the spaces to heat waves, the DLMs were fed with weather data recorded during the hot summer of 2006. The Nightingale wards and traditional masonry wards showed remarkable resilience to the hot weather. In contrast, light-weight modular buildings were predicted to overheat dangerously. By recording internal temperatures for a short period, DLMs might be created that can forecast future temperatures in many other types of naturally ventilated or mixed-mode buildings as a means of assessing overheating ris
Regularizing threshold priors with sparse response patterns in Bayesian factor analysis with categorical indicators
Using instruments comprising ordered responses to items are ubiquitous for
studying many constructs of interest. However, using such an item response
format may lead to items with response categories infrequently endorsed or
unendorsed completely. In maximum likelihood estimation, this results in
non-existing estimates for thresholds. This work focuses on a Bayesian
estimation approach to counter this issue. The issue changes from the existence
of an estimate to how to effectively construct threshold priors. The proposed
prior specification reconceptualizes the threshold prior as prior on the
probability of each response category. A metric that is easier to manipulate
while maintaining the necessary ordering constraints on the thresholds. The
resulting induced-prior is more communicable, and we demonstrate comparable
statistical efficiency that existing threshold priors. Evidence is provided
using a simulated data set, a Monte Carlo simulation study, and an example
multi-group item-factor model analysis. All analyses demonstrate how at least a
relatively informative threshold prior is necessary to avoid inefficient
posterior sampling and increase confidence in the coverage rates of posterior
credible intervals
Evidence-informed health policy: are we beginning to get there at last
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited
An antibody raised against a pathogenic serpin variant induces mutant-like behaviour in the wild-type protein
A monoclonal antibody (mAb) that binds to a transient intermediate may act as a catalyst for the corresponding reaction; here we show this principle can extend on a macro molecular scale to the induction of mutant-like oligomerization in a wild-type protein. Using the common pathogenic E342K (Z) variant of α1-antitrypsin as antigen-whose native state is susceptible to the formation of a proto-oligomeric intermediate-we have produced a mAb (5E3) that increases the rate of oligomerization of the wild-type (M) variant. Employing ELISA, gel shift, thermal stability and FRET time-course experiments, we show that mAb5E3 does not bind to the native state of α1-antitrypsin, but recognizes a cryptic epitope in the vicinity of the post-helix A loop and strand 4C that is revealed upon transition to the polymerization intermediate, and which persists in the ensuing oligomer. This epitope is not shared by loop-inserted monomeric conformations. We show the increased amenity to polymerization by either the pathogenic E342K mutation or the binding of mAb5E3 occurs without affecting the energetic barrier to polymerization. As mAb5E3 also does not alter the relative stability of the monomer to intermediate, it acts in a manner similar to the E342K mutant, by facilitating the conformational interchange between these two states
Can positivity be counterproductive when suffering domestic abuse?: a narrative review
Positive Psychology has been criticized for making people feel pressured to remain positive irrespective of circumstances. This narrative review specifically investigates the relationship between positive attitudes and denial in the context of domestic abuse, in order to examine whether there is research evidence to support the critique on the adverse upshots of positivity. The search yielded 29 studies. Overall the literature suggests that misdirected or overgeneralized positivity exacerbates harm and abuse: an optimistic bias can put victims in danger; empathy, hope, acceptance and resilience are associated with refraining to leave abusive relationships; and forgiveness increases the likelihood of further transgressions. We therefore argue that scholars and practitioners need demonstrate care in promoting positivity, since it can be detrimental within a toxic context
Identifying trends in the use of domestic appliances from household electricity consumption measurements
Results are presented from a monitoring study of the electricity consumption of a sample of UK domestic buildings. Five-minutely average
whole house power consumption was recorded for 72 dwellings at five sites over a 2-year monitoring period. The mean annual electricity
consumption for the households increased significantly by 4.5% (t = 1.9; p < 0.05, one-tailed) from the first to the second year of monitoring. New
techniques are developed which estimate the electricity consumption of different appliance groups, based on analysis of the five-minutely
monitored data. The overall increase in electricity consumption is attributed to a 10.2% increase in the consumption of âstandbyâ appliances (such
as televisions and consumer electronics) and a 4.7% increase in the consumption of âactiveâ appliance (such as lighting, kettles and electric
showers). The consumption of different energy user groups (low, medium and high) is also investigated and low and high users are identified as
contributing to the overall increase in consumption. The need for further investigation, such as quantitative and qualitative studies, to improve
understanding in domestic electricity consumption is discussed
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