525 research outputs found

    Dental Calculus: Combining Current Methods in the Study of Diet and Mouth Use Activities Among Neolithic and Early Bronze Age Hunter-Gatherers of the Cis-Baikal, Siberia

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    The utility of dental calculus as a proxy for diet and mouth use is explored for the Middle Holocene Cis-Baikal region of Central Siberia based on two methods: a macroscopic analysis of severity and a microscopic analysis of particles within deposits. The study area was inhabited by two culturally and biologically distinct cultures, the Early Neolithic (EN) Kitoi culture (8,000 to 7,000/6,800 cal B.P.) and the Late Neolithic-Early Bronze Age (LN-EBA) Isakovo-Serovo-Glaskovo (ISG) cultural complex (6,000/5,800 to 4,000 cal B.P.), separated by a period of cultural transition marked by a cessation in formal cemetery use. Data were collected from four cemetery sites, two dating to the EN and two dating to the LN-EBA. Nonparametric testing of calculus severity revealed that, for adult males and juveniles, lakeshore populations displayed greater affinity to each other than to their contemporaneous cultural counterpart populations living along riverine systems in the Angara River Valley. Trends within the EN cemetery Shamanka II contrasted to the other cemetery populations, with noticeably larger deposits in anterior quadrants and significant sexual distinctions. The proportion of protein to carbohydrates consumed is known to influence calculus formation, but both cultural groups lived on a diet based predominately on meat sources so dietary ratios alone do not adequately explain the differences distinguished. A complex multifactorial model involving microregional differences in resources/environment, foraging patterns, individual variation, and dental wear patterns provides at least a partial explanation for the results observed. A wide range of particles were recovered during the microscopic analysis of calculus, albeit in low concentrations. The low starch grain counts were consistent with a diet based predominately on meats but still provide some of the first direct evidence for plant consumption in the Cis-Baikal, including possible plant processing by cooking or grinding based on damage evident on the grains. Other particles recovered may provide evidence of mouth use activities or palaeoenvironmental influences. Together, the two components of this analysis offer strong evidence that dental calculus is a useful tool for reconstructing hunter-gatherer lifeways but also highlight the limitations of conducting this type of research on previously excavated and potentially contaminated material

    Money and Issue Voting in Missouri: 1990 - 1994

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    Powerpoint presentation concerning money and issues voting in the Missouri General Assembly from the years 1990 to 1994. Data is represented in text and tables

    Early-Life Exposures and Adult Cancer Risk: A Life Course Approach to Cancer Prevention

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    Background Despite emerging evidence indicating the potential importance of early-life exposures for adult cancer risk, there is limited research investigating cancer risk factors in early-life. The goals of this dissertation are to 1) elucidate whether maternal adiposity influences epigenetic processes in the offspring relevant to obesity and carcinogenesis and 2) inform primary cancer prevention strategies by addressing two modifiable, early-life risk factors: human papillomavirus (HPV) in males and unhealthy diet in postpartum teens. Methods Study 1: We evaluated the association of maternal pre-pregnancy body mass index (BMI) and gestational weight gain (GWG) with umbilical cord blood DNA methylation in a prospective study of 112 black and white mothers and infants, enrolled in Baltimore, MD, 2006-2007. Study 2: We identified predictors of HPV vaccination using electronic medical record data from 14,688 males aged 11-26 years in Maryland, 2012-2013. Study 3: We examined associations of perceived school and home food environments with dietary behaviors using baseline data from 853 postpartum teens enrolled in a weight-loss intervention study across 27 states, 2007-2009. Questionnaire items measuring perceived access to healthful items were used to categorize environments as “positive” or “negative”. Results Study 1: Maternal pre-pregnancy BMI and GWG were significantly associated with DNA methylation in several CpG sites within 17 candidate genes. A majority of these associations were sex-specific. Study 2: Approximately 15% of males initiated the HPV vaccine. Non-Hispanic black males (vs. non-Hispanic white) and publicly insured males (vs. private), were more likely to initiate the HPV vaccine, but less likely to receive subsequent doses. Frequent clinic visits (>3) were associated with increased uptake of all three doses. Study 3: A positive school environment was related to healthful eating behaviors such as fruit consumption. In contrast, a positive home environment was associated with frequent consumption of a wider variety of healthful items as well as infrequent consumption of unhealthful food and beverages. Conclusion Early-life is an important, yet understudied period with respect to cancer risk. A better understanding of early-life factors from both an etiologic and primary prevention perspective will help to inform interventions that may substantially impact current cancer prevention strategies

    The Effects Of Repeated Whole Body Warming On Sleep Architecture

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    Chronic low back pain (CLBP) is defined as chronic pain in the lower back for three or more consecutive months. Altered sleep architecture is often associated with CLBP and sleep deficiency with concurring side effects can augment pain, further disrupting sleep. The current study aimed to explore whole body heating as a potential therapy for CLBP. Subjects underwent seven consecutive evenings of heating, with completion of the protocol two hours prior to sleep latency onset. Pain was assessed via administration of the McGill Pain Questionnaire prior to the heating protocol (baseline), pre- and post heating on all experimental days and during a 48 hour and two week follow-up. Ability to perform specific tasks was assessed via the functional and symptoms scale, administered at baseline, prior to and following the seven day heating protocol, and during both the follow-up visits. A Sleep Profiler was used throughout the study to measure sleep architecture from the frontal cortex of the brain. A repeated measures ANOVA showed significant decreases in stage N1 sleep (p < 0.05) and increases in N3 sleep (p = 0.001) from baseline to post-treatment. Each subject’s pain perception decreased and allowed for greater functional ability. These findings suggest that seven consecutive evenings of whole body heating protocol altered sleep architecture through the increased amount of restorative stage N3 slow wave, decreased stage N1 sleep, and decreased pain perception. Only small decrements in pain were observed 48 hours and two weeks after the cessation of the intervention

    Bowhead and Gray Whale Distributions, Sighting Rates, and Habitat Associations in the Eastern Chukchi Sea, Summer and Fall 2009–15, with a Retrospective Comparison to 1982–91

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    We analyzed data from line-transect aerial surveys for marine mammals conducted in the eastern Chukchi Sea (67˚–72˚ N, 157˚–169˚ W) in July to October of 2009–15 to investigate bowhead and gray whale distributions, behaviors, sighting rates, and habitat selection preferences, the last of which allowed direct comparison with results from data collected in this area in 1982–91. Bowhead whales use the eastern Chukchi Sea primarily for migrating between the Beaufort Sea and the Bering Sea, while gray whales use the area to feed on locally abundant benthic amphipods and other prey. Bowhead whales were observed during all survey months and were distributed up to 300 km offshore west and southwest of Point Barrow, Alaska, but without a defined migratory corridor in either summer (July-August) or fall (September-October). Bowhead whale sighting rates (whales per km on effort) were highest in the shelf/trough (51–200 m North) depth zone in the northeastern Chukchi Sea in both summer and fall. This pattern was reflected in habitat selection ratios, which found bowhead whales in summer and fall selecting primarily shelf/trough habitat in the northeastern Chukchi Sea, with shelf habitat (36 – 50 m) being preferred secondarily. Gray whales were observed in all survey months and were distributed primarily within ~95 km of shore between Point Barrow and Icy Cape in the northeastern Chukchi Sea, and about 60–115 km southwest of Point Hope in the southern Chukchi Sea. In both summer and fall, gray whale sighting rates and habitat selection ratios were highest in the shelf/trough (51–200 m South) depth zone in the southern Chukchi Sea. In the northeastern part of the study area, gray whale sighting rates and habitat selection ratios both identified coastal habitat (≤ 35 m) as preferred habitat in summer and shelf/trough (51–200 m North) as preferred habitat in fall. Distribution and habitat associations of bowhead and gray whales remained similar over the 34-year time span with one exception: gray whale preference for shelf/trough habitat in the southern Chukchi Sea is now evident throughout summer and fall, whereas three decades ago gray whale preference for that area was limited to fall only.Nous avons analysé les données provenant de levés aériens par transects linéaires à l’égard de mammifères marins, levés effectués dans l’est de la mer des Tchouktches (67˚–72˚ N, 157˚–169˚ O) d’octobre à juillet 2009 à 2015 afin de prélever des données sur la répartition des baleines boréales et des baleines grises, sur leurs comportements, sur leurs taux d’observation et sur leurs préférences en matière d’habitat. Ce dernier élément nous a permis de faire des comparaisons directes avec les résultats de la collecte de données effectuée dans cette région entre 1982 et 1991. Les baleines boréales se servent principalement de l’est de la mer des Tchouktches pour migrer entre la mer de Beaufort et la mer de Béring, tandis que les baleines grises empruntent cette région pour se nourrir des amphipodes benthiques qui y abondent ainsi que d’autres proies. Des baleines boréales ont été observées pendant tous les mois visés par les levés, et celles-ci étaient réparties sur une distance allant jusqu’à 300 km au large, à l’ouest et au sud-ouest de Point Barrow, en Alaska, sans toutefois emprunter un couloir migratoire particulier à l’été (juillet et août) ou à l’automne (septembre et octobre). Les taux d’observation de baleines boréales (nombre de baleines par km à l’effort) étaient plus élevés dans la zone de profondeur de plateformes et de dépressions (de 51 à 200 m nord) faisant partie du nord-est de la mer des Tchouktches, tant à l’été qu’à l’automne. Cette tendance se reflète dans les rapports de sélection d’habitats, selon lesquels les baleines boréales choisissent principalement, l’été et l’automne, un habitat de plateformes et de dépressions dans le nord-est de la mer des Tchouktches, l’habitat des plateformes (de 36 à 50 m) constituant une préférence secondaire. Des baleines grises ont été observées pendant tous les mois visés par les levés. Elles se répartissaient principalement à l’intérieur de ~95 km de la côte, entre Point Barrow et Icy Cape, dans le nord-est de la mer des Tchouktches, et à environ 60 à 115 km au sud-ouest de Point Hope, dans le sud de la mer des Tchouktches. Tant à l’été qu’à l’automne, les taux d’observation et les rapports de sélection d’habitats des baleines grises étaient à leur point le plus élevé dans la zone de profondeur des plateformes et des dépressions (de 51 à 200 m sud) du sud de la mer des Tchouktches. Dans le secteur nord-est de la région visée par l’étude, les taux d’observation et les ratios de sélection d’habitats des baleines grises ont tous deux permis d’affirmer que l’habitat côtier (≤ 35 m) était l’habitat préféré pendant l’été, et que l’habitat des plateformes et des dépressions (de 51 à 200 m nord) était l’habitat préféré à l’automne. Les associations en matière de répartition et d’habitat des baleines boréales et des baleines grises sont demeurées semblables au cours de la période de 34 ans, à une exception près : la préférence de la baleine grise pour l’habitat des plateformes et des dépressions dans le sud de la mer des Tchouktches est maintenant évidente à l’été et à l’automne, tandis qu’il y a trois décennies, la préférence de la baleine grise pour cet habitat se limitait à l’automne

    Privacy and Research Information Management Systems

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    This is a post-print of an article whose final version has been published in The Serials Librarian, Taylor and Francis, 8 March 2021.This paper is a case study of privacy considerations in the adoption of a Research Information Management (RIM) System. RIM Systems collection, store, and link together metadata for research, service, grants, and teaching activity. Sometimes called Current Research Information Systems (CRIS) or Faculty Activity Reporting (FAR), these systems enable institutions to collect data from different internal systems and combine it with external information, providing a more holistic perspective on university activity. They provide a single, authoritative source of this data and allow for multiple stakeholders (i.e. faculty, administration, IT, HR, library, communications) to query, analyze, download, visualize, and share it. Oklahoma State University (OSU) recently adopted a RIM System, which is being implemented and supported by the OSU Libraries. A defining factor in the decision making process for product selection was how each system addressed issues around privacy. This case study will review some of the central data privacy considerations at play in the adoption of RIM Systems at both the institutional and individual level. This will include data sharing, ownership, retention, right to reuse data, data deletion obligations upon contract termination, user access to privacy policies, and user data controls. Questions to ask before adoption, key institutional players in discussions of privacy, and issues that may arise after adoption of a Research Information Management System will also be addressed.Librar

    Bowhead and Beluga Whale Distributions, Sighting Rates, and Habitat Associations in the Western Beaufort Sea in Summer and Fall 2009–16, with Comparison to 1982–91

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    We analyzed data from line-transect aerial surveys for marine mammals conducted in the western Beaufort Sea (shore to 72˚ N, 140˚–157˚ W) from July to October of 2009–16 to investigate the distribution, behaviors, sighting rates, and habitat use preferences of bowhead and beluga whales. The habitat use data allowed for direct comparison with data collected in the same area from 1982 to 1991. Both species are ice-adapted, migrating through leads in sea ice in spring, and are seasonal inhabitants of the western Beaufort Sea during summer and fall. From 2009 to 2016, bowheads were seen in all survey months, with the highest overall sighting rate (whales per km) in August. Bowhead sighting rates were highest in the whales’ preferred habitats: outer shelf habitat (51–200 m depth) in July and inner shelf-shallow habitat (≤ 20 m depth) in August, September, and October. Beluga whales were also seen in all survey months, with highest overall sighting rate in July. Beluga whales were overwhelmingly associated with continental slope habitat (201–2000 m depth) in all months. Bowhead distribution and depth preferences in summer months of 2009–16 differed from those observed in 1982–91, when bowheads were not seen during limited survey effort in July and preferred outer continental shelf habitat in August. These differences indicate that bowhead whale preference for shallow shelf habitat now occurs earlier in summer than it used to. Beluga distribution and depth preference remained similar between 1982–91 and 2009–16, with strong preference for continental slope during both periods. Differences in sea ice cover habitat association for both species are likely due more to the relative lack of sea ice in recent years compared to the earlier period than to shifts in habitat preference. Habitat partitioning between bowhead and beluga whales in the western Beaufort Sea remained evident except in July, when both species used continental slope habitat. In July – October 2009–16, the distribution, sighting rates, and behavior of both bowheads and belugas in the western Beaufort showed considerable interannual variation, which underscores the importance of annual sampling to accurate records of the complex western Beaufort Sea ecosystem.Nous avons analysé les données découlant de levés aériens de transects linéaires pour mammifères marins, levés effectués dans l’ouest de la mer de Beaufort (de la rive jusqu’à 72˚ N, et de 140˚ jusqu’à 157˚ O) de juillet à octobre 2009 à 2016. Ces levés avaient pour but d’étudier la distribution, les comportements, les taux d’observation ainsi que les préférences d’utilisation de l’habitat des baleines boréales et des bélugas. Les données relatives à l’utilisation de l’habitat ont permis d’établir des comparaisons directes avec les données recueillies dans le même secteur de 1982 à 1991. Ces deux espèces sont adaptées à la glace, migrent par des chenaux formés dans la glace de mer au printemps et sont des habitants saisonniers de l’ouest de la mer de Beaufort pendant l’été et l’automne. Entre 2009 et 2016, des baleines boréales ont été aperçues pendant tous les mois visés par les levés, le taux d’observation général le plus élevé (nombre de baleines par km) ayant été enregistré au mois d’août. Les taux d’observation des baleines boréales étaient les plus élevés dans les habitats préférés de ces baleines, soit l’habitat de la plateforme externe (de 51 m à 200 m de profondeur) en juillet et l’habitat de la plateforme interne peu profonde (≤ 20 m de profondeur) en août, en septembre et en octobre. Des bélugas ont également été aperçus pendant tous les mois visés par les levés, le taux d’observation général le plus élevé ayant été enregistré en juillet. Les bélugas étaient massivement associés à l’habitat de la pente continentale (de 201 m à 2 000 m de profondeur) pendant tous les mois. La distribution et les préférences de profondeur des baleines boréales pendant les mois d’été 2009 à 2016 différaient de celles observées de 1982 à 1991, lorsque les baleines boréales n’ont pas été aperçues dans le cadre des quelques levés qui ont été effectués en juillet et préféraient leur habitat de la plateforme continentale externe en août. Ces différences indiquent que la préférence des baleines boréales pour l’habitat de la plateforme peu profonde se manifeste maintenant plus tôt l’été qu’auparavant. De 1982 à 1991 et de 2009 à 2016, la distribution des bélugas et leur préférence de profondeur sont restées semblables, avec une préférence marquée pour la pente continentale pendant les deux périodes. Pour les deux espèces, les différences sur le plan de l’association de la couverture de glace marine sont vraisemblablement davantage attribuables au manque relatif de glace de mer ces dernières années comparativement à la période précédente plutôt qu’à une variation de la préférence de l’habitat. Dans l’ouest de la mer de Beaufort, la séparation de l’habitat entre les baleines boréales et les bélugas demeurait évidente, sauf en juillet, quand les deux espèces utilisaient l’habitat de la pente continentale. De juillet à octobre 2009 à 2016, la distribution, les taux d’observation et le comportement des baleines boréales et des bélugas dans l’ouest de la mer de Beaufort ont affiché une variation considérable d’une année à l’autre, ce qui fait ressortir l’importance de faire des échantillonnages annuels afin d’obtenir des données précises au sujet de l’écosystème complexe de l’ouest de la mer de Beaufort
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