294 research outputs found

    Cognitive ability, parental socioeconomic position and internalising and externalising problems in adolescence: Findings from two European cohort studies

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    We investigated whether cognitive ability (CA) may be a moderator of the relationship of parental socioeconomic position (SEP) with internalising and externalising problems in adolescents. We used data from two longitudinal cohort studies; the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC) and the Tracking Adolescents’ Individual Lives Survey (TRAILS). Indicators of SEP were mother’s education and household income. CA was estimated with IQ scores, derived from the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children. Internalising and externalising problems were measured with the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire in ALSPAC and with the Child Behavior Checklist in TRAILS. Logistic regression analyses were used to estimate the relative index of inequality (RII) for each outcome; the RII provides the odds ratio comparing the most to least deprived for each measure of SEP. In fully adjusted models an association of mother’s education with externalising problems was observed [ALSPAC RII 1.42 (95%CI: 1.01–1.99); TRAILS RII 2.21 (95%CI: 1.37–3.54)], and of household income with internalising and externalising problems [pooled ALSPAC & TRAILS internalising RII 1.30 (95%CI: 0.99–1.71); pooled ALSPAC & TRAILS externalising RII 1.38 (95%CI: 1.03–1.84)]. No consistent associations were observed between mother’s education and internalising problems. Results of stratified analyses and interaction-terms showed no evidence that CA moderated the association of SEP with internalising or externalising problems

    Bistability and Bacterial Infections

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    Bacterial infections occur when the natural host defenses are overwhelmed by invading bacteria. The main component of the host defense is impaired when neutrophil count or function is too low, putting the host at great risk of developing an acute infection. In people with intact immune systems, neutrophil count increases during bacterial infection. However, there are two important clinical cases in which they remain constant: a) in patients with neutropenic-associated conditions, such as those undergoing chemotherapy at the nadir (the minimum clinically observable neutrophil level); b) in ex vivo examination of the patient's neutrophil bactericidal activity. Here we study bacterial population dynamics under fixed neutrophil levels by mathematical modelling. We show that under reasonable biological assumptions, there are only two possible scenarios: 1) Bacterial behavior is monostable: it always converges to a stable equilibrium of bacterial concentration which only depends, in a gradual manner, on the neutrophil level (and not on the initial bacterial level). We call such a behavior type I dynamics. 2) The bacterial dynamics is bistable for some range of neutrophil levels. We call such a behavior type II dynamics. In the bistable case (type II), one equilibrium corresponds to a healthy state whereas the other corresponds to a fulminant bacterial infection. We demonstrate that published data of in vitro Staphylococcus epidermidis bactericidal experiments are inconsistent with both the type I dynamics and the commonly used linear model and are consistent with type II dynamics. We argue that type II dynamics is a plausible mechanism for the development of a fulminant infection

    Effect of the Size of Clods Contained Covering Soil on the Seedling Emergence of Rice Plant Sown under Upland Field Condition

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    æ°ŽçšČèŸČ林23ć·ă‚’ç”šă„ăŠ, èŠ†ćœŸăźćœŸćĄŠăźć€§ăă•ăŒ, äčŸç”°ă«æ·±æ’­ă(èŠ†ćœŸ7cm)ă•ă‚ŒăŸć€‹äœ“ăźć‡ș芜ăȘらびにćčŒè‹—è«žć™šćź˜ăźé•·ă•ă«ćŠăŒă™ćœ±éŸżă«ă€ă„ăŠ, èŠ†ćœŸăŒ3cmăźć ŽćˆăšæŻ”èŒƒă—ăȘăŒă‚‰æ€œèšŽă—ăŸă€‚äčŸç”°ă«æ’­çšźă•ă‚ŒăŸçšźć­ăŒć€§ăă„ćœŸćĄŠă§èŠ†ćœŸă•ă‚Œă‚‹ăš, èŠ†ćœŸăŒ3cmăźć Žćˆă«ăŻéž˜è‘‰ăźäŒžé•·ăŒæŠ‘ćˆ¶ă•ă‚Œă‚‹ă€‚ă—ă‹ă—, äžćźŒć…šè‘‰ăŻă»ăšă‚“ă©ăźć€‹äœ“ă§3cmä»„äžŠă«äŒžé•·ă™ă‚‹ă€‚ăŸăŸć€§ćœŸćĄŠăźé–“éš™ăŒć°ćœŸćĄŠă§ć……è¶łă•ă‚ŒăŸć ŽćˆăŻ, éž˜è‘‰ăŠă‚ˆăłäžćźŒć…šè‘‰ăšă‚‚ă«, ć€§ćœŸćĄŠă ă‘ăźć Žćˆă‚ˆă‚Šă‚‚é•·ăăȘă‚‹ă€‚ăăźç”æžœ, すăčおたćŒșたć‡șèŠœçŽ‡ăŻ, æ’­çšźćŸŒ12æ—„ç›źă«ăŻ90%ä»„äžŠă«é”ă™ă‚‹ă€‚èŠ†ćœŸăŒ7cmた栎搈には, èŠ†ćœŸăźćœŸćĄŠăŒć€§ăăăŠă‚‚, éž˜è‘‰ăŠă‚ˆăłäžćźŒć…šè‘‰ăŻèŠ†ćœŸăŒ3cmăźć Žćˆă‚ˆă‚Šă‚‚è‘—ă—ăé•·ăăȘă‚‹ă€‚ăăźç”æžœ, 珏1æœŹè‘‰ăŒäžćźŒć…šè‘‰ă‹ă‚‰æŠœć‡șă™ă‚‹äœçœźăŒé«˜ă‚ă‚‰ă‚Œă‚‹ă€‚ă—ă‹ă—, éž˜è‘‰ăŠă‚ˆăłäžćźŒć…šè‘‰ăźäŒžé•·ăźăżă«ă‚ˆăŁăŠăŻć‡șèŠœă™ă‚‹ă“ăšăŻă§ăăš, ć‡șèŠœă™ă‚‹ăŸă‚ă«ăŻ, 珏2節間および第1æœŹè‘‰ăŒäŒžé•·ă—ăȘければăȘらăȘă„ă€‚èŠ†ćœŸăźćœŸćĄŠăŒć€§ăă„ć Žćˆă«ăŻ, 珏2çŻ€é–“ăźäŒžé•·ăŒæŠ‘ćˆ¶ă•ă‚Œă‚‹ă€‚ăšćŒæ™‚ă«, ć‡șèŠœăŸă§ăźé–“ă«ćčŒèŠœăźäŒžé•·ă‚’ćŠšă’ă‚‹ćœŸćĄŠăźæ•°ă‚‚ć€šăăȘるぼで, ć‡șèŠœçŽ‡ăŻè‘—ă—ăäœŽäž‹ă™ă‚‹ă€‚ă—ă‹ă—, ć€§ćœŸćĄŠăźé–“éš™ăŒć°ă•ă„ćœŸćĄŠă«ă‚ˆăŁăŠć……è¶łă•ă‚Œă‚‹ăš, 珏2çŻ€é–“ăŒè‘—ă—ăé•·ăăȘり, 珏1æœŹè‘‰ă‚’ăŠă—ă‚ă’ă‚‹ă€‚ăăźç”æžœ, ć‡șèŠœçŽ‡ăŻć˜äž€ćœŸćĄŠăźć Žćˆă«æŻ”ăčăŠè‘—ă—ăé«˜ăŸă‚‹ă€‚ä»„äžŠăźç”æžœăšćœŸćŁŒäž­ăžăźć…‰ăźäŸ”ć…„é‡ăšăźé–ąäż‚ă«ă€ă„ăŠ, è‹„ćčČè€ƒćŻŸă—ăŸă€‚ / This experiment was carried out to clarify the effects of size of clods in covering soil on the emergence and the elongation of rice seedling sown under upland field condition in pot (10cm×10cm×12cm) culture. Variety used was Norin No. 23. Seeds were covered with 3cm and 7cm depth of soil. In the case of 3cm in depth of seeding, if seeds were covered with larger clods, the elongation of coleoptile was inhibited, but the profile elongated longer than 3cm. When gaps between larger clods were filled with smaller clods, the length of coleoptile and profile became longer. Consequently, the emergence percentage of all plots reached more than 90% the 12th day after seeding. In the case of 7cm in depth of seeding, if seeds were covered with larger clods, coleoptile or profile elongated to 3 to 4cm in length, but the elongation of second internode was inhibited. As a result, the emergence percentage decreased significantly. When gaps between larger clods were filled with smaller clods, however, the length of second internode increased and first leaf was pushed up through the soil by second internode. Consequently, the emergence percentage increased significantly

    European Project on Osteoarthritis (EPOSA): methodological challenges in harmonization of existing data from five European population-based cohorts on aging

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    BackgroundThe European Project on OSteoArthritis (EPOSA), here presented for the first time, is a collaborative study involving five European cohort studies on aging. This project focuses on the personal and societal burden and its determinants of osteoarthritis (OA). The aim of the current report is to describe the purpose of the project, the post harmonization of the cross-national data and methodological challenges related to the harmonization process MethodsThe study includes data from cohort studies in five European countries (Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain and the United Kingdom) on older community-dwelling persons aged ? 59 years. The study design and main characteristics of the five cohort studies are described. Post harmonization algorithms are developed by finding a "common denominator" to merge the datasets and weights are calculated to adjust for differences in age and sex distribution across the datasets. ResultsA harmonized database was developed, consisting of merged data from all participating countries. In total, 10107 persons are included in the harmonized dataset with a mean age of 72.8 years (SD 6.1). The female/male ratio is 53.3/46.7%. Some variables were difficult to harmonize due to differences in wording and categories, differences in classifications and absence of data in some countries. The post harmonization algorithms are described in detail in harmonization guidelines attached to this paper. ConclusionsThere was little evidence of agreement on the use of several core data collection instruments, in particular on the measurement of OA. The heterogeneity of OA definitions hampers comparing prevalence rates of OA, but other research questions can be investigated using high quality harmonized data. By publishing the harmonization guidelines, insight is given into (the interpretation of) all post harmonized data of the EPOSA study. <br/

    Trends in socioeconomic inequalities in smoking prevalence, consumption, initiation, and cessation between 2001 and 2008 in the Netherlands. Findings from a national population survey

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Widening of socioeconomic status (SES) inequalities in smoking prevalence has occurred in several Western countries from the mid 1970’s onwards. However, little is known about a widening of SES inequalities in smoking consumption, initiation and cessation.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Repeated cross-sectional population surveys from 2001 to 2008 (n ≈ 18,000 per year) were used to examine changes in smoking prevalence, smoking consumption (number of cigarettes per day), initiation ratios (ratio of ever smokers to all respondents), and quit ratios (ratio of former smokers to ever smokers) in the Netherlands. Education level and income level were used as indicators of SES and results were reported separately for men and women.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Lower educated respondents were significantly more likely to be smokers, smoked more cigarettes per day, had higher initiation ratios, and had lower quit ratios than higher educated respondents. Income inequalities were smaller than educational inequalities and were not all significant, but were in the same direction as educational inequalities. Among women, educational inequalities widened significantly between 2001 and 2008 for smoking prevalence, smoking initiation, and smoking cessation. Among low educated women, smoking prevalence remained stable between 2001 and 2008 because both the initiation and quit ratio increased significantly. Among moderate and high educated women, smoking prevalence decreased significantly because initiation ratios remained constant, while quit ratios increased significantly. Among men, educational inequalities widened significantly between 2001 and 2008 for smoking consumption only.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>While inequalities in smoking prevalence were stable among Dutch men, they increased among women, due to widening inequalities in both smoking cessation and initiation. Both components should be addressed in equity-oriented tobacco control policies.</p

    A reexamination of information theory-based methods for DNA-binding site identification

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Searching for transcription factor binding sites in genome sequences is still an open problem in bioinformatics. Despite substantial progress, search methods based on information theory remain a standard in the field, even though the full validity of their underlying assumptions has only been tested in artificial settings. Here we use newly available data on transcription factors from different bacterial genomes to make a more thorough assessment of information theory-based search methods.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Our results reveal that conventional benchmarking against artificial sequence data leads frequently to overestimation of search efficiency. In addition, we find that sequence information by itself is often inadequate and therefore must be complemented by other cues, such as curvature, in real genomes. Furthermore, results on skewed genomes show that methods integrating skew information, such as <it>Relative Entropy</it>, are not effective because their assumptions may not hold in real genomes. The evidence suggests that binding sites tend to evolve towards genomic skew, rather than against it, and to maintain their information content through increased conservation. Based on these results, we identify several misconceptions on information theory as applied to binding sites, such as negative entropy, and we propose a revised paradigm to explain the observed results.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>We conclude that, among information theory-based methods, the most unassuming search methods perform, on average, better than any other alternatives, since heuristic corrections to these methods are prone to fail when working on real data. A reexamination of information content in binding sites reveals that information content is a compound measure of search and binding affinity requirements, a fact that has important repercussions for our understanding of binding site evolution.</p

    Current Advances in Internet of Underground Things

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    The latest developments in Internet of Underground Things are covered in this chapter. First, the IOUT Architecture is discussed followed by the explanation of the challenges being faced in this paradigm. Moreover, a comprehensive coverage of the different IOUT components is presented that includes communications, sensing, and system integration with the cloud. An in-depth coverage of the applications of the IOUT in various disciplines is also surveyed. These applications include areas such as decision agriculture, pipeline monitoring, border control, and oil wells

    Differential family and peer environmental factors are related to severity and comorbidity in childresn with ADHD

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    Contains fulltext : 70260.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Behavioral genetic studies imply that salient environmental influences operate within families, making siblings in a family different rather than similar. This study is the first one to examine differential sibling experiences (as measured with the Sibling Inventory of Differential Experience) and its effect on behavioral outcomes within ADHD families. Subjects were 45 Dutch ADHD probands and their unaffected siblings (n = 45) aged 10-18 years. ADHD probands and their unaffected siblings reported differences in sibling interaction, parental treatment, and peer characteristics. These nonshared environmental influences were related to both the severity of ADHD symptoms as well as to comorbid problem behaviors. These findings suggest that environmental influences that operate within ADHD families appear relevant to the severity of problem behaviors of ADHD children and their siblings

    Recent advances in understanding hypertension development in sub-Saharan Africa

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    Consistent reports indicate that hypertension is a particularly common finding in black populations. Hypertension occurs at younger ages and is often more severe in terms of blood pressure levels and organ damage than in whites, resulting in a higher incidence of cardiovascular disease and mortality. This review provides an outline of recent advances in the pathophysiological understanding of blood pressure elevation and the consequences thereof in black populations in Africa. This is set against the backdrop of populations undergoing demanding and rapid demographic transition, where infection with the Human Immunodeficiency Virus predominates, and where under and over-nutrition coexist. Collectively, recent findings from Africa illustrate an increased lifetime risk to hypertension from foetal life onwards. From young ages black populations display early endothelial dysfunction, increased vascular tone and reactivity, microvascular structural adaptions, as well as increased aortic stiffness resulting in elevated central and brachial blood pressures during the day and night, when compared to whites. Together with knowledge on the contributions of sympathetic activation and abnormal renal sodium handling, these pathophysiological adaptations result in subclinical and clinical organ damage at younger ages. This overall enhanced understanding on the determinants of blood pressure elevation in blacks encourages (a) novel approaches to assess and manage hypertension in Africa better, (b) further scientific discovery to develop more effective prevention and treatment strategies, and (c) policymakers and health advocates to collectively contribute in creating health-promoting environments in Africa

    Soil pH mediates the balance between stochastic and deterministic assembly of bacteria

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    Little is known about the factors affecting the relative influences of stochastic and deterministic processes that govern the assembly of microbial communities in successional soils. Here, we conducted a meta-analysis of bacterial communities using six different successional soil datasets distributed across different regions. Different relationships between pH and successional age across these datasets allowed us to separate the influences of successional age (i.e., time) from soil pH. We found that extreme acidic or alkaline pH conditions lead to assembly of phylogenetically more clustered bacterial communities through deterministic processes, whereas pH conditions close to neutral lead to phylogenetically less clustered bacterial communities with more stochasticity. We suggest that the influence of pH, rather than successional age, is the main driving force in producing trends in phylogenetic assembly of bacteria, and that pH also influences the relative balance of stochastic and deterministic processes along successional soils. Given that pH had a much stronger association with community assembly than did successional age, we evaluated whether the inferred influence of pH was maintained when studying globally distributed samples collected without regard for successional age. This dataset confirmed the strong influence of pH, suggesting that the influence of soil pH on community assembly processes occurs globally. Extreme pH conditions likely exert more stringent limits on survival and fitness, imposing strong selective pressures through ecological and evolutionary time. Taken together, these findings suggest that the degree to which stochastic vs. deterministic processes shape soil bacterial community assembly is a consequence of soil pH rather than successional age
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