210 research outputs found
CONSTITUTION OF THE STATE OF GEORGIA A Resolution: Amend the Constitution of Georgia so as to Protect Lottery Funds so That They May Be Reserved Only for the HOPE Scholarship Program and Other Tuition Grants, Scholarships or Loans to Enable Citizens of This State to Attend Colleges and Universities Within This State, for Voluntary Pre-Kindergarten, and for Educational Shortfall Reserves; Provide for Submission of This Amendment for Ratification or Rejection; and for Other Purposes
The resolutions were proposed to amend the Georgia Constitution to restrict the use of lottery proceeds to fund core areas, including the HOPE Scholarship Program; other college and university tuition grants, scholarships, and loans; pre-kindergarten programs; and the state educational shortfall reserve. The resolutions would have removed language from the Georgia Constitution that allows these funds to be used to provide training on the use of computers and electronic instructional materials to K-12 teachers, technical institute personnel, and university professors and instructors. The resolutions also would have removed language permitting lottery funds to be used for capital projects at educational facilities. Under the current Georgia Constitution, both are areas in which funding is permitted once the core areas, as listed above, have been fully funded
CONSTITUTION OF THE STATE OF GEORGIA A Resolution: Amend the Constitution of Georgia so as to Protect Lottery Funds so That They May Be Reserved Only for the HOPE Scholarship Program and Other Tuition Grants, Scholarships or Loans to Enable Citizens of This State to Attend Colleges and Universities Within This State, for Voluntary Pre-Kindergarten, and for Educational Shortfall Reserves; Provide for Submission of This Amendment for Ratification or Rejection; and for Other Purposes
The resolutions were proposed to amend the Georgia Constitution to restrict the use of lottery proceeds to fund core areas, including the HOPE Scholarship Program; other college and university tuition grants, scholarships, and loans; pre-kindergarten programs; and the state educational shortfall reserve. The resolutions would have removed language from the Georgia Constitution that allows these funds to be used to provide training on the use of computers and electronic instructional materials to K-12 teachers, technical institute personnel, and university professors and instructors. The resolutions also would have removed language permitting lottery funds to be used for capital projects at educational facilities. Under the current Georgia Constitution, both are areas in which funding is permitted once the core areas, as listed above, have been fully funded
Protective influenza-specific CD8 T cell responses require interactions with dendritic cells in the lungs
Influenza infections induce a rapid, but transient, dendritic cell (DC) migration from the lungs to the lymph nodes (LNs) that is followed by substantial recruitment of DCs into the lungs without subsequent migration to the LNs. Given that peripheral DCs are primarily thought to be involved in the initiation of adaptive immunity after migration into lymphoid tissues, what role these newly lung-recruited DCs play in influenza virus immunity is unclear. In this study, we demonstrate that loss of non-LN migratory pulmonary DC subsets increases mortality, sustains higher viral titers, and impairs pulmonary CD8 T cell responses. Reconstitution of the lungs with pulmonary plasmacytoid DCs, CD8α+ DCs, or interstitial DCs restores CD8 T cell responses in a cell contact–, major histocompatability complex I–, and influenza peptide–dependent manner. Thus, after their initial activation in the LN, protective influenza-specific CD8 T cell responses require additional antigen-dependent interactions, specifically with DCs in the lungs
Rigorous performance assessment of the algorithms for resolving motor unit action potential superpositions
It is necessary to decompose the intra-muscular EMG signal to extract motor unit action potential (MUAP) waveforms and firing times. Some algorithms were proposed in the literature to resolve superimposed MUAPs, including Peel-Off (PO), branch and bound (BB), genetic algorithm (GA), and particle swarm optimization (PSO). This study aimed to compare these algorithms in terms of overall accuracy and running time. Two sets of two-to-five MUAP templates (set1: a wide range of energies, and set2: a high degree of similarity) were used. Such templates were time-shifted, and white Gaussian noise was added. A total of 1000 superpositions were simulated for each template and were resolved using PO (also, POI: interpolated PO), BB, GA, and PSO algorithms. The generalized estimating equation was used to identify which method significantly outperformed, while the overall rank product was used for overall ranking. The rankings were PSO, BB, GA, PO, and POI in the first, and BB, PSO, GA, PO, POI in the second set. The overall ranking was BB, PSO, GA, PO, and POI in the entire dataset. Although the BB algorithm is generally fast, there are cases where the BB algorithm is too slow and it is thus not suitable for real-time applications.This work was supported by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness - Spain (DPI2017-83989-R).Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
Quantile Regression
Quantile regression as introduced by Koenker and Bassett seeks to extend ideas of quantiles to the estimation of conditional quantile functions--models in which quantiles of the conditional distribution of the response variable are expressed as functions of observed covariates
An Accurate and Real-time Method for Resolving Superimposed Action Potentials in MultiUnit Recordings
Objective: Spike sorting of muscular and neural recordings requires separating action potentials that overlap in time (superimposed action potentials (APs)). We propose a new algorithm for resolving superimposed action potentials, and we test it on intramuscular EMG (iEMG) and intracortical recordings. Methods: Discrete-time shifts of the involved APs are first selected based on a heuristic extension of the peel-off algorithm. Then, the time shifts that provide the minimal residual Euclidean norm are identified (Discrete Brute force Correlation (DBC)). The optimal continuous-time shifts are then estimated (High-Resolution BC (HRBC)). In Fusion HRBC (FHRBC), two other cost functions are used. A parallel implementation of the DBC and HRBC algorithms was developed. The performance of the algorithms was assessed on 11,000 simulated iEMG and 14,000 neural recording superpositions, including two to eight APs, and eight experimental iEMG signals containing four to eleven active motor units. The performance of the proposed algorithms was compared with that of the Branch-and-Bound (BB) algorithm using the Rank-Product (RP) method in terms of accuracy and efficiency. Results: The average accuracy of the DBC, HRBC and FHRBC methods on the entire simulated datasets was 92.16\ub117.70, 93.65\ub116.89, and 94.90\ub115.15 (%). The DBC algorithm outperformed the other algorithms based on the RP method. The average accuracy and running time of the DBC algorithm on 10.5 ms superimposed spikes of the experimental signals were 92.1\ub121.7 (%) and 2.3\ub115.3 (ms). Conclusion and Significance: The proposed algorithm is promising for real-time neural decoding, a central problem in neural and muscular decoding and interfacing
Automatic Hip Fracture Identification and Functional Subclassification with Deep Learning
Purpose: Hip fractures are a common cause of morbidity and mortality.
Automatic identification and classification of hip fractures using deep
learning may improve outcomes by reducing diagnostic errors and decreasing time
to operation. Methods: Hip and pelvic radiographs from 1118 studies were
reviewed and 3034 hips were labeled via bounding boxes and classified as
normal, displaced femoral neck fracture, nondisplaced femoral neck fracture,
intertrochanteric fracture, previous ORIF, or previous arthroplasty. A deep
learning-based object detection model was trained to automate the placement of
the bounding boxes. A Densely Connected Convolutional Neural Network (DenseNet)
was trained on a subset of the bounding box images, and its performance
evaluated on a held out test set and by comparison on a 100-image subset to two
groups of human observers: fellowship-trained radiologists and orthopaedists,
and senior residents in emergency medicine, radiology, and orthopaedics.
Results: The binary accuracy for fracture of our model was 93.8% (95% CI,
91.3-95.8%), with sensitivity of 92.7% (95% CI, 88.7-95.6%), and specificity
95.0% (95% CI, 91.5-97.3%). Multiclass classification accuracy was 90.4% (95%
CI, 87.4-92.9%). When compared to human observers, our model achieved at least
expert-level classification under all conditions. Additionally, when the model
was used as an aid, human performance improved, with aided resident performance
approximating unaided fellowship-trained expert performance. Conclusions: Our
deep learning model identified and classified hip fractures with at least
expert-level accuracy, and when used as an aid improved human performance, with
aided resident performance approximating that of unaided fellowship-trained
attendings.Comment: Presented at Orthopaedic Research Society, Austin, TX, Feb 2, 2019,
currently in submission for publicatio
IL-15 trans-presentation by pulmonary dendritic cells promotes effector CD8 T cell survival during influenza virus infection
We have recently demonstrated that peripheral CD8 T cells require two separate activation hits to accumulate to high numbers in the lungs after influenza virus infection: a primary interaction with mature, antigen-bearing dendritic cells (DCs) in the lymph node, and a second, previously unrecognized interaction with MHC I–viral antigen–bearing pulmonary DCs in the lungs. We demonstrate that in the absence of lung-resident DC subsets, virus-specific CD8 T cells undergo significantly increased levels of apoptosis in the lungs; however, reconstitution with pulmonary plasmacytoid DCs and CD8α+ DCs promotes increased T cell survival and accumulation in the lungs. Further, our results show that the absence of DCs after influenza virus infection results in significantly reduced levels of IL-15 in the lungs and that pulmonary DC–mediated rescue of virus-specific CD8 T cell responses in the lungs requires trans-presentation of IL-15 via DC-expressed IL-15Rα. This study demonstrates a key, novel requirement for DC trans-presented IL-15 in promoting effector CD8 T cell survival in the respiratory tract after virus infection, and suggests that this trans-presentation could be an important target for the development of unique antiviral therapies and more effective vaccine strategies
A Social Model for Health Promotion for an Aging Population: Initial Evidence on the Experience Corps Model
This report evaluates whether a program for older volunteers, designed for both generativity and health promotion, leads to short-term improvements in multiple behavioral risk factors and positive effects on intermediary risk factors for disability and other morbidities. The Experience Corps® places older volunteers in public elementary schools in roles designed to meet schools\u27 needs and increase the social, physical, and cognitive activity of the volunteers. This article reports on a pilot randomized trial in Baltimore, Maryland. The 128 volunteers were 60-86 years old; 95% were African American. At follow-up of 4-8 months, physical activity, strength, people one could turn to for help, and cognitive activity increased significantly, and walking speed decreased significantly less, in participants compared to controls. In this pilot trial, physical, cognitive, and social activity increased, suggesting the potential for the Experience Corps to improve health for an aging population and simultaneously improve educational outcomes for children
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