162 research outputs found
Motor Performance After Four Kinds of Verbal Pretraining
Four groups of 20 Ss each were given 36 paired-associates trials on each of six random shapes. The four groups learned verbal responses which were, respectively, high in association value and formally distinct (HD), high in association value and formally similar (HS), low in association value and formally distinct (LD), and low in association value and formally similar (LS). An additional group (A) attended to motor task stimuli during 216 nonverbal pretraining trials, while a control group (I) learned medium association value distinct syllables to stimuli different from those which subsequently appeared in the motor task. Errors and correct responses were recorded. Subsequent to verbal or attention pretraining, all Ss were given 36 trials on a discriminative motor task provided by the Star Discrimeter. Errors and correct responses were recorded for each Star trial. A significant interaction on motor performance was found between the distinctiveness and association value variables, indicating that in some manner the association value of pretraining responses is an effective variable. Significant differences among experimental groups HD and HS, LD and LS, and between groups HD and I were taken as compatible with the postulation of a verbally mediated cue for the prediction of differential criterion performance after different kinds of verbal pretraining
The Association Value of Thirty Meaningful Words
Forty-one men and women undergraduates individually wrote down the verbal associations arising in relation to each of 30 three-letter meaningful words, with a time allowance of 1 min. per word. The association value of each word was defined as the mean number of acceptable words written in response to it. Two sets of words were then chosen from the list for subsequent use as response terms in a verbal-motor transfer experiment. One set, formally similar, was found to have a mean association value of 8.752. The other set, formally distinct, had a satisfactorily comparable mean association value of 8.792
The Relative Discriminability of Twelve Random Shapes
From twelve randomly derived visual shapes, six were to be chosen, if possible, which were mutually equally discriminable. The chosen six were subsequently to be used as stimuli in a verbal-motor transfer task. The two members of all possible pairs of the twelve shapes, including same pairs, were presented in succession by means of an automatic slide projector, the exposure time for each member being .25 sec. Same or different judgments made by 12 subjects after the presentation of each pair, were 98% correct, making useful differentiation among the 12 shapes impossible. Difficulty of discrimination was increased by presenting the pairs tachistoscopically with an exposure time of .01 sec per member. Seventy-two subjects made same or different judgments, as before. The total number of errors in judgment, each shape compared with every other, was taken as an index of discriminability. Six shapes were then chosen which approximated the goal of mutually equal discriminability
Prevalence of prehypertension and its relationship to risk factors for cardiovascular disease in Jamaica: Analysis from a cross-sectional survey
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Recent studies have documented an increased risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD) in persons with systolic blood pressures of 120ā139 mmHg and/or diastolic blood pressures of 80ā89 mmHg, classified as prehypertension in the Seventh Report of the Joint National Committee on Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure. In this paper we estimate the prevalence of prehypertension in Jamaica and evaluate the relationship between prehypertension and other risk factors for CVD.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>The study used data from participants in the Jamaica Lifestyle Survey conducted from 2000ā2001. A sample of 2012 persons, 15ā74 years old, completed an interviewer administered questionnaire and had anthropometric and blood pressure measurements performed by trained observers using standardized procedures. Fasting glucose and total cholesterol were measured using a capillary blood sample. Analysis yielded crude, and sex-specific prevalence estimates for prehypertension and other CVD risk factors. Odds ratios for associations of prehypertension with CVD risk factors were obtained using logistic regression.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The prevalence of prehypertension among Jamaicans was 30% (95% confidence interval [CI] 27%ā33%). Prehypertension was more common in males, 35% (CI 31%ā39%), than females, 25% (CI 22%ā28%). Almost 46% of participants were overweight; 19.7% were obese; 14.6% had hypercholesterolemia; 7.2% had diabetes mellitus and 17.8% smoked cigarettes. With the exception of cigarette smoking and low physical activity, all the CVD risk factors had significantly higher prevalence in the prehypertensive and hypertensive groups (p for trend < 0.001) compared to the normotensive group. Odds of obesity, overweight, high cholesterol and increased waist circumference were significantly higher among younger prehypertensive participants (15ā44 years-old) when compared to normotensive young participants, but not among those 45ā74 years-old. Among men, being prehypertensive increased the odds of having >/=3 CVD risk factors versus no risk factors almost three-fold (odds ratio [OR] 2.8 [CI 1.1ā7.2]) while among women the odds of >/=3 CVD risk factors was increased two-fold (OR 2.0 [CI 1.3ā3.8])</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Prehypertension occurs in 30% of Jamaicans and is associated with increased prevalence of other CVD risk factors. Health-care providers should recognize the increased CVD risk of prehypertension and should seek to identify and treat modifiable risk factors in these persons.</p
Recent Assembly of an Imprinted Domain from Non-Imprinted Components
Genomic imprinting, representing parent-specific expression of alleles at a locus, raises many questions about howāand especially whyāepigenetic silencing of mammalian genes evolved. We present the first in-depth study of how a human imprinted domain evolved, analyzing a domain containing several imprinted genes that are involved in human disease. Using comparisons of orthologous genes in humans, marsupials, and the platypus, we discovered that the Prader-Willi/Angelman syndrome region on human Chromosome 15q was assembled only recently (105ā180 million years ago). This imprinted domain arose after a region bearing UBE3A (Angelman syndrome) fused with an unlinked region bearing SNRPN (Prader-Willi syndrome), which had duplicated from the non-imprinted SNRPB/Bā². This region independently acquired several retroposed gene copies and arrays of small nucleolar RNAs from different parts of the genome. In their original configurations, SNRPN and UBE3A are expressed from both alleles, implying that acquisition of imprinting occurred after their rearrangement and required the evolution of a control locus. Thus, the evolution of imprinting in viviparous mammals is ongoing
Retrotransposon Silencing by DNA Methylation Can Drive Mammalian Genomic Imprinting
Among mammals, only eutherians and marsupials are viviparous and have genomic imprinting that leads to parent-of-origin-specific differential gene expression. We used comparative analysis to investigate the origin of genomic imprinting in mammals. PEG10 (paternally expressed 10) is a retrotransposon-derived imprinted gene that has an essential role for the formation of the placenta of the mouse. Here, we show that an orthologue of PEG10 exists in another therian mammal, the marsupial tammar wallaby (Macropus eugenii), but not in a prototherian mammal, the egg-laying platypus (Ornithorhynchus anatinus), suggesting its close relationship to the origin of placentation in therian mammals. We have discovered a hitherto missing link of the imprinting mechanism between eutherians and marsupials because tammar PEG10 is the first example of a differentially methylated region (DMR) associated with genomic imprinting in marsupials. Surprisingly, the marsupial DMR was strictly limited to the 5ā² region of PEG10, unlike the eutherian DMR, which covers the promoter regions of both PEG10 and the adjacent imprinted gene SGCE. These results not only demonstrate a common origin of the DMR-associated imprinting mechanism in therian mammals but provide the first demonstration that DMR-associated genomic imprinting in eutherians can originate from the repression of exogenous DNA sequences and/or retrotransposons by DNA methylation
Being user-oriented: convergences, divergences, and the potentials for systematic dialogue between disciplines and between researchers, designers, and providers
The challenge this panel addresses is drawn from intersecting literature reviews and critical commentaries focusing on: 1) user studies in multiple fields; and 2) the difficulties of bringing different disciplines and perspectives to bear on userāoriented research, design, and practice. 1
The challenge is that while we have made some progress in collaborative work, we have some distance to go to become userāoriented in interādisciplinary and interāperspective ways. The varieties of our approaches and solutions are, as some observers suggest, an increasing cacophony. One major difficulty is that most discussions are solutionāoriented, offering arguments of this sort āā if only we addressed users in this wayā¦ Each solution becomes yet another addition to the cacophony.
This panel implements a central approach documented for its utility by communication researchers and long used by communication mediators and negotiators āā that of focusing not on communication but rather on metaācommunication: communicating about communication. The intent in the context of this panel is to help us refocus attention from too frequent polarizations between alternative solutions to the possibility of coming to understand what is behind the alternatives and where they point to experientiallyābased convergences and divergences, both of which might potentially contribute to synergies.
The background project for this panel comes from a series of inādepth interviews with expert researchers, designers, and providers in three field groupings āā library and information science; human computer interaction/information technology; and communication and media studies. One set of interviews involved 5āhour focus groups with directors of academic and public libraries serving 44 colleges and universities in central Ohio; the second involved oneāonāone interviews averaging 50 minutes with 81 nationallyāinternationally known experts in the 3 fields, 25ā27 interviews per field. Using Dervin\u27s SenseāMaking Methodological approach to interviewing, the expert interviews of both kinds asked each interviewee: what he/she considered to be the big unanswered questions about users and what explained why the questions have not been answered; and, what he/she saw as hindering versus helping in attempts to communicate about users across disciplinary and perspective gaps. 2 The panel consists of six teams, two from each field. Prior to the panel presentation at ASIST, each team will have read the set of interviews and completed impressionistic essays of what patterns and themes they saw as emerging. At this stage, team members will purposively not homogenize their differences and most will write soloāauthored essays that will be placed on a webāsite accessible to ASIST members prior to the November meeting. In addition, at least one systematic analysis will be completed and available online. 3
At the ASIST panel, each team\u27s leader will present a brief and intentionally provocative impressionist account of what his/her team came to understand about our struggles communicating across fields and perspectives about users. Again, each team will purposively not homogenize its own differences in viewpoints, but rather highlight them as fodder for discussion. A major purpose will be to invite audience members to join the panel in discussion. At least 20 minutes will be left open for this purpose
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