977 research outputs found
Automatic annotation of bioinformatics workflows with biomedical ontologies
Legacy scientific workflows, and the services within them, often present
scarce and unstructured (i.e. textual) descriptions. This makes it difficult to
find, share and reuse them, thus dramatically reducing their value to the
community. This paper presents an approach to annotating workflows and their
subcomponents with ontology terms, in an attempt to describe these artifacts in
a structured way. Despite a dearth of even textual descriptions, we
automatically annotated 530 myExperiment bioinformatics-related workflows,
including more than 2600 workflow-associated services, with relevant
ontological terms. Quantitative evaluation of the Information Content of these
terms suggests that, in cases where annotation was possible at all, the
annotation quality was comparable to manually curated bioinformatics resources.Comment: 6th International Symposium on Leveraging Applications (ISoLA 2014
conference), 15 pages, 4 figure
Legal Resolution of Denial of Access to Medical Technology
The legal issues involved in technology application are inextricably interwoven with the medical issues. This Comment will first discuss the general principles of the scientific method and then contrast their application to pharmacologic therapy with their application to technologic treatments. Bone marrow transplantation will then be analyzed in depth, illustrating the medical issues that third-party payers consider in coverage decisions. Continuing with the model of bone marrow transplantation, this Comment will conclude with an analysis of legal solutions to the denial of access to medical technology
Legal Resolution of Denial of Access to Medical Technology
The legal issues involved in technology application are inextricably interwoven with the medical issues. This Comment will first discuss the general principles of the scientific method and then contrast their application to pharmacologic therapy with their application to technologic treatments. Bone marrow transplantation will then be analyzed in depth, illustrating the medical issues that third-party payers consider in coverage decisions. Continuing with the model of bone marrow transplantation, this Comment will conclude with an analysis of legal solutions to the denial of access to medical technology
Neural correlates of the behavioral-autonomic interaction response to potentially threatening stimuli
Subjective assessment of emotional valence is typically associated with both brain
activity and autonomic arousal. Accurately assessing emotional salience is particularly
important when perceiving threat. We sought to characterize the neural correlates of the
interaction between behavioral and autonomic responses to potentially threatening visual
and auditory stimuli. Twenty-five healthy male subjects underwent fMRI scanning whilst
skin conductance responses (SCR) were recorded. One hundred and eighty pictures,
sentences, and sounds were assessed as “harmless” or “threatening.” Individuals’
stimulus-locked, phasic SCRs and trial-by-trial behavioral assessments were entered as
regressors into a flexible factorial design to establish their separate autonomic and
behavioral neural correlates, and convolved to examine psycho-autonomic interaction
(PAI) effects. Across all stimuli, “threatening,” compared with “harmless” behavioral
assessments were associated with mainly frontal and precuneus activation with specific
within-modality activations including bilateral parahippocampal gyri (pictures), bilateral
anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and frontal pole (sentences), and right Heschl’s gyrus
and bilateral temporal gyri (sounds). Across stimulus modalities SCRs were associated
with activation of parieto-occipito-thalamic regions, an activation pattern which was largely
replicated within-modality. In contrast, PAI analyses revealed modality-specific activations
including right fusiform/parahippocampal gyrus (pictures), right insula (sentences), and
mid-cingulate gyrus (sounds). Phasic SCR activity was positively correlated with an
individual’s propensity to assess stimuli as “threatening.” SCRs may modulate cognitive
assessments on a “harmless–threatening” dimension, thereby modulating affective tone
and hence behavior
FAIR data point: a FAIR-oriented approach for metadata publication
Metadata, data about other digital objects, play an important role in FAIR with a direct relation to all FAIR principles. In this paper we present and discuss the FAIR Data Point (FDP), a software architecture aiming to define a common approach to publish semantically-rich and machine-actionable metadata according to the FAIR principles. We present the core components and features of the FDP, its approach to metadata provision, the criteria to evaluate whether an application adheres to the FDP specifications and the service to register, index and allow users to search for metadata content of available FDPs.Molecular Technology and Informatics for Personalised Medicine and Healt
Bioscientific data processing and modeling
Computer Systems, Imagery and Medi
Gaussian process manifold interpolation for probabilistic atrial activation maps and uncertain conduction velocity
In patients with atrial fibrillation, local activation time (LAT) maps are routinely used for characterizing patient pathophysiology. The gradient of LAT maps can be used to calculate conduction velocity (CV), which directly relates to material conductivity and may provide an important measure of atrial substrate properties. Including uncertainty in CV calculations would help with interpreting the reliability of these measurements. Here, we build upon a recent insight into reduced-rank Gaussian processes (GPs) to perform probabilistic interpolation of uncertain LAT directly on human atrial manifolds. Our Gaussian process manifold interpolation (GPMI) method accounts for the topology of the atrium, and allows for calculation of statistics for predicted CV. We demonstrate our method on two clinical cases, and perform validation against a simulated ground truth. CV uncertainty depends on data density, wave propagation direction and CV magnitude. GPMI is suitable for probabilistic interpolation of other uncertain quantities on non-Euclidean manifolds.
This article is part of the theme issue ‘Uncertainty quantification in cardiac and cardiovascular modelling and simulation’
The state of tranquility: Subjective perception is shaped by contextual modulation of auditory connectivity
In this study, we investigated brain mechanisms for the generation of subjective experience from objective sensory inputs. Our experimental construct was subjective tranquility. Tranquility is a mental state more likely to occur in the presence of objective sensory inputs that arise from natural features in the environment. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging to examine the neural response to scenes that were visually distinct (beach images vs. freeway images) and experienced as tranquil (beach) or non-tranquil (freeway). Both sets of scenes had the same auditory component because waves breaking on a beach and vehicles moving on a freeway can produce similar auditory spectral and temporal characteristics, perceived as a constant roar. Compared with scenes experienced as non-tranquil, we found that subjectively tranquil scenes were associated with significantly greater effective connectivity between the auditory cortex and medial prefrontal cortex, a region implicated in the evaluation of mental states. Similarly enhanced connectivity was also observed between the auditory cortex and posterior cingulate gyrus, temporoparietal cortex and thalamus. These findings demonstrate that visual context can modulate connectivity of the auditory cortex with regions implicated in the generation of subjective states. Importantly, this effect arises under conditions of identical auditory input. Hence, the same sound may be associated with different percepts reflecting varying connectivity between the auditory cortex and other brain regions. This suggests that subjective experience is more closely linked to the connectivity state of the auditory cortex than to its basic sensory inputs
Sun exposure behaviour, seasonal vitamin D deficiency, and relationship to bone health in adolescents
YesContext: Vitamin D is essential for bone health in adolescence, where there is rapid bone mineral
content accrual. As cutaneous sun-exposure provides vitamin D, there is no recommended oral intake
for UK adolescents.
Objective: Assess seasonal vitamin D status and its contributors in white Caucasian adolescents, and
examine bone health in those found deficient.
Design: Prospective cohort study.
Setting: Six schools in Greater Manchester, UK.
Participants: 131 adolescents, 12–15 years.
Intervention(s): Seasonal assessment of circulating 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25OHD), personal sunexposure
and dietary vitamin D. Adolescents deficient (25OHD <10 ng/mL/25 nmol/L) in ≥one
season underwent dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (lumbar spine, femoral neck), with bone mineral
apparent density (BMAD) correction for size, and peripheral quantitative computed tomography
(distal radius) for volumetric (v)BMD.
Main Outcome Measure: Serum 25OHD; BMD.
Results: Mean 25OHD was highest in September: 24.1 (SD 6.9) ng/mL and lowest in January: 15.5
(5.9) ng/mL. Over the year, 16% were deficient in ≥one season and 79% insufficient (25OHD <20
ng/mL/50 nmol/L) including 28% in September. Dietary vitamin D was low year-round while
personal sun-exposure was seasonal and predominantly across the school week. Holidays accounted
for 17% variation in peak 25OHD (p<0.001). Nineteen adolescents underwent bone assessment,
which showed low femoral neck BMAD versus matched reference data (p=0.0002), 3 with Z≤ -2.0
distal radius trabecular vBMD.
Conclusions: Sun-exposure levels failed to provide adequate vitamin D, ~one-quarter adolescents
insufficient even at summer-peak. Seasonal vitamin D deficiency was prevalent and those affected
had low BMD. Recommendations on vitamin D acquisition are indicated in this age-group.The Bupa Foundation (Grant number TBF-M10-017)
Genome-wide analysis of the H3K27me3 epigenome and transcriptome in brassica rapa
Background
Genome-wide maps of histone modifications have been obtained for several plant species. However, most studies focus on model systems and do not enforce FAIR data management principles. Here we study the H3K27me3 epigenome and associated transcriptome of Brassica rapa, an important vegetable cultivated worldwide.
Findings
We performed H3K27me3 chromatin immunoprecipitation followed by high-throughput sequencing and transcriptomic analysis by 3′-end RNA sequencing from B. rapa leaves and inflorescences. To analyze these data we developed a Reproducible Epigenomic Analysis pipeline using Galaxy and Jupyter, packaged into Docker images to facilitate transparency and reuse. We found that H3K27me3 covers roughly one-third of all B. rapa protein-coding genes and its presence correlates with low transcript levels. The comparative analysis between leaves and inflorescences suggested that the expression of various floral regulatory genes during development depends on H3K27me3. To demonstrate the importance of H3K27me3 for B. rapa development, we characterized a mutant line deficient in the H3K27 methyltransferase activity. We found that braA.clf mutant plants presented pleiotropic alterations, e.g., curly leaves due to increased expression and reduced H3K27me3 levels at AGAMOUS-like loci.
Conclusions
We characterized the epigenetic mark H3K27me3 at genome-wide levels and provide genetic evidence for its relevance in B. rapa development. Our work reveals the epigenomic landscape of H3K27me3 in B. rapa and provides novel genomics datasets and bioinformatics analytical resources. We anticipate that this work will lead the way to further epigenomic studies in the complex genome of Brassica crops
- …