2,195 research outputs found
Validation of the face-name pairs task in major depression: impaired recall but not recognition
Major depression can be associated with neurocognitive deficits which are believed in part to be related to medial temporal lobe pathology. The purpose of this study was to investigate this impairment using a hippocampal-dependent neuropsychological task. The face-name pairs task was used to assess associative memory functioning in 19 patients with major depression. When compared to age-sex-and-education matched controls, patients with depression showed impaired learning, delayed cued-recall, and delayed free-recall. However, they also showed preserved recognition of the verbal and nonverbal components of this task. Results indicate that the face-name pairs task is sensitive to neurocognitive deficits in major depression.Thisresearchwasfundedbya4-yearHealthResearch Board grant
Practicum placements: An innovative opportunity to foster new skills for future professionals in a cross-university collaboration in Western Australia
Murdoch University in order to share its collaborative approach to supporting future generations of library professionals organised its first group practicum project in 2017. The project targeted a group of library students from Curtin University with an interest in science fiction. Seven students were recruited for a practicum placement to create a collection development report with recommendations on the management of the libraryâs Science Fiction Collection. The practicum project was a success, as the students delivered an industry relevant report in an environment that resembles the dynamics of a team project. The Library experience was also successful due to the development of a partnership with Curtin Universityâs Placement Coordinator and the engagement of Murdoch Library team to support the student experience and the outcomes of this project.
In 2018, the Library decided to develop a new project in conjunction with Curtin University. This time, the Library collaborated with the Curtin University lecturers in creating a new project, from inception to completion, to consolidate the studentsâ knowledge and experience in information literacy. In 2018, five students carried out a project to create a Special Collections digital learning object and two other projects including the indexing of fanzines using Dublin Core Metadata Elements and a presentation to all Library staff.
The 2018 project proved to be another success for both universities and caught the attention of others in Western Australia. As a result, Murdoch decided to expand its partnership with Curtin University and engaged with other Universities to help them develop similar practicum experiences with the view of developing future partnerships for the benefit of the library and information industry.
This paper will explore Murdochâs approach to support the library industry in Western Australia through collaboration, engagement and partnerships. The paper will also focus on the lessons learnt and future collaborations following Murdochâs partnership model.
Keywords: group practicum placements, partnerships, university libraries, library and information skills, Library and Information students, engagement, special collections, workplace-based learning
Facing our future: Social media takeover, coexistence or resistance? The integration of social media and reference services
Academic libraries around the globe have adopted a range of digital technologies to deliver enquiry and reference services. The use of social media by university libraries to communicate with staff and students is now as pervasive as traditional online reference services, such as email. Some libraries use these services in conjunction with each other, but for others there appears to be no interrelation. Is social media the future for reference services or a passing fad?
This paper will examine the use of social media by academic libraries in the worldâs top 100 universities. This will include the integration of social media with reference services, satisfaction with the use of social media in comparison with other digital reference services, the need for a social media strategy (or not) and the factors determining whether social media is successful.
The authors will formulate the benefits of streamlining digital enquiry initiatives and services with the aim of providing the âone stop online shopâ
Eliminating ambiguities for quantum corrections to strings moving in
We apply a physical principle, previously used to eliminate ambiguities in
quantum corrections to the 2 dimensional kink, to the case of spinning strings
moving in , thought of as another kind of two
dimensional soliton. We find that this eliminates the ambiguities and selects
the result compatible with AdS/CFT, providing a solid foundation for one of the
previous calculations, which found agreement. The method can be applied to
other classical string "solitons".Comment: 18 pages, latex; references added, comments added at end of section
4, a few words changed; footnote added on page 1
EEG Source Imaging Indices of Cognitive Control Show Associations with Dopamine System Genes.
Cognitive or executive control is a critical mental ability, an important marker of mental illness, and among the most heritable of neurocognitive traits. Two candidate genes, catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) and DRD4, which both have a roles in the regulation of cortical dopamine, have been consistently associated with cognitive control. Here, we predicted that individuals with the COMT Met/Met allele would show improved response execution and inhibition as indexed by event-related potentials in a Go/NoGo task, while individuals with the DRD4 7-repeat allele would show impaired brain activity. We used independent component analysis (ICA) to separate brain source processes contributing to high-density EEG scalp signals recorded during the task. As expected, individuals with the DRD4 7-repeat polymorphism had reduced parietal P3 source and scalp responses to response (Go) compared to those without the 7-repeat. Contrary to our expectation, the COMT homozygous Met allele was associated with a smaller frontal P3 source and scalp response to response-inhibition (NoGo) stimuli, suggesting that while more dopamine in frontal cortical areas has advantages in some tasks, it may also compromise response inhibition function. An interaction effect emerged for P3 source responses to Go stimuli. These were reduced in those with both the 7-repeat DRD4 allele and either the COMT Val/Val or the Met/Met homozygous polymorphisms but not in those with the heterozygous Val/Met polymorphism. This epistatic interaction between DRD4 and COMT replicates findings that too little or too much dopamine impairs cognitive control. The anatomic and functional separated maximally independent cortical EEG sources proved more informative than scalp channel measures for genetic studies of brain function and thus better elucidate the complex mechanisms in psychiatric illness
Peritoneal Dialysis Catheters
In peritoneal dialysis, a well-functioning catheter is of great importance because a dysfunctional catheter may be associated with exit-site infection, peritonitis, reduced efficiency of dialysis, and overall quality of treatment, representing one of the main barriers to optimal use of peritoneal dialysis. This chapter reviews the literature on indications and contraindications for peritoneal dialysis, peritoneal dialysis catheter design and materials, the techniques of insertion, complications, and method of removal of dialysis catheters
Versatile ytterbium ion trap experiment for operation of scalable ion-trap chips with motional heating and transition-frequency measurements
We present the design and operation of an ytterbium ion trap experiment with a setup offering versatile optical access and 90 electrical interconnects that can host advanced surface and multilayer ion trap chips mounted on chip carriers. We operate a macroscopic ion trap compatible with this chip carrier design and characterize its performance, demonstrating secular frequencies >1 MHz, and trap and cool nearly all of the stable isotopes, including 171Yb+ ions, as well as ion crystals. For this particular trap we measure the motional heating rate â©nÌâȘ and observe an â©nÌâȘâ1/Ï2 behavior for different secular frequencies Ï. We also determine a spectral noise density SE(1âMHz)=3.6(9)Ă10-11 V2 m-2 Hz-1 at an ion electrode spacing of 310(10) ÎŒm. We describe the experimental setup for trapping and cooling Yb+ ions and provide frequency measurements of the 2S1/2â2P1/2 and 2D3/2â3D[3/2]1/2 transitions for the stable 170Yb+, 171Yb+, 172Yb+, 174Yb+, and 176Yb+ isotopes which are more precise than previously published work
Autophagic Turnover of Inactive 26S Proteasomes in Yeast Is Directed by the Ubiquitin Receptor Cue5 and the Hsp42 Chaperone
Highlights The yeast 26S proteasome is degraded by Atg8-mediated autophagy Nitrogen starvation and inactivation stimulate proteaphagy via distinct pathways Proteasome inhibition is accompanied by extensive ubiquitylation of the complex Proteaphagy engages the Cue5 autophagy receptor and the Hsp42 chaperone Summary
The autophagic clearance of 26S proteasomes (proteaphagy) is an important homeostatic mechanism within the ubiquitin system that modulates proteolytic capacity and eliminates damaged particles. Here, we define two proteaphagy routes in yeast that respond to either nitrogen starvation or particle inactivation. Whereas the core autophagic machineries required for Atg8 lipidation and vesiculation are essential for both routes, the upstream Atg1 kinase participates only in starvation-induced proteaphagy. Following inactivation, 26S proteasomes become extensively modified with ubiquitin. Although prior studies with Arabidopsis implicated RPN10 in tethering ubiquitylated proteasomes to ATG8 lining the autophagic membranes, yeast proteaphagy employs the evolutionarily distinct receptor Cue5, which simultaneously binds ubiquitin and Atg8. Proteaphagy of inactivated proteasomes also requires the oligomeric Hsp42 chaperone, suggesting that ubiquitylated proteasomes are directed by Hsp42 to insoluble protein deposit (IPOD)-type structures before encapsulation. Together, Cue5 and Hsp42 provide a quality control checkpoint in yeast directed at recycling dysfunctional 26S proteasomes
Kaluza-Klein gauge and minimal integrable extension of OSp(4|6)/(SO(1,3) x U(3)) sigma-model
Basing upon experience from performing double-dimensional reduction of the
D=11 supermembrane on AdS_4 x S^7 background to Type IIA superstring on AdS_4 x
CP^3 we introduce Kaluza-Klein (partial) kappa-symmetry gauge as a vanishing
condition of the contribution to the D=11 supervielbein components tangent to
D=10 space-time proportional to the differential of the coordinate
parametrizing compact 11-th space-time dimension, that is identified with the
supermembrane world-volume compact dimension. For AdS_4 x S^7 supermembrane
Kaluza-Klein gauge removes half Grassmann coordinates associated with 8
space-time supersymmetries, broken by the AdS_4 x CP^3 superbackground, by
imposing D=3 (anti-)Majorana condition on them. The consideration relies on the
realization of osp(4|8) isometry superalgebra of the AdS_4 x S^7
superbackground as D=3 N=8 superconformal algebra. Requiring further vanishing
of the D=10 dilaton leaves in the sector of broken supersymmetries just two
Grassmann coordinates organized into D=3 (anti-)Majorana spinor that defines
minimal SL(2,R)-covariant extension of the OSp(4|6)/(SO(1,3)x U(3))
sigma-model. Among 4 possibilities of such a minimal extension we consider in
detail one, that corresponds to picking out D=3 Majorana coordinate related to
broken Poincare supersymmetry, and show that the AdS_4 x CP^3 superstring
equations of motion in this partial kappa-symmetry gauge are integrable. Also
the relation between the OSp(4|6)/(SO(1,3) x U(3)) sigma-model and the AdS_4 x
CP^3 superstring is revisited.Comment: LaTeX, 22 pages; v2: minor improvements in the text, typos corrected,
references adde
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