281 research outputs found
A participatory inquiry of Japanese name use, language learning, and identity development
Although having language learners adopt second language (L2) personal names for use in the classroom is common in both U.S. K-12 FL teaching and in ESL for children and adults in many countries, the research literature, particularly for non-English FLs, is very small. This study endeavored to illustrate the opinions of FL learners of Japanese in a residential immersion program in the Midwest U.S. about their program’s use of L2 names, using participatory methodology. Volunteer students worked in small teams to conduct narrowly-focused interview research projects in Japanese and present findings to their peers. The project leader conducted reflective interviews with all student researchers and later reanalyzed the data, using a modified grounded theory framework based on that of Charmaz (2001). Interview data shows that learners in this program frequently develop new personalities attached to their L2 names, and that these personalities include a range of positive qualities, including improved confidence, assertiveness, talkativeness, and extraversion. Students also feel that names help create an immersion atmosphere and that they facilitate speaking in Japanese, and nearly all students enjoy having L2 names. Participatory methodology also facilitated meaningful experiential learning and language proficiency development for the student researchers, and seems to have uncovered a sense of common purpose among program participants and shared feelings of belonging in the program. Suggestions are made about the applicability of this research to mainstream L2 classrooms
Correlates of Adherence to an Adolescent Weight Management Program: A Secondary Data Analysis
The aim of this study was to determine the relationship between HRQOL and
adherence to an adolescent weight management program and identify variables predictive of increased adherence which are critical to motivating engagement in weight
management. This study was a non-experimental, retrospective secondary analysis from
aggregate data collected as part of the REWARD Teens program, a weight management
program for overweight and obese adolescents. Data from 37 subjects were included in
this study. Subject adherence to the program was the primary outcome variable. There
was no significant relationship between baseline adolescent or parent-proxy sub-scale or total HRQOL scores with program adherence. A significant positive relationship for
improved adherence was found only when change in BMI (p=.023), change of parent-proxy total PedsQL (p=.014), and change in child total PedsQL (p=.007) were present in
the regression model. Body mass index and changes in both parent-proxy and child total
HRQOL significantly affected attendance. Our findings suggest that baseline HRQOL
does not affect program adherence. However, we identified a potentially novel interplay
between variables predictive of program adherence. Future studies should focus on
elucidating the mechanism by which these factors gained significance in the relationship
with adherence when combined, perhaps as mediators or moderators, in order to identify
interactions which may function as barriers or facilitators to adherence
Exploring Point of Sale Strategies for Improving Seafood Retailing: The Case of the Australian Oyster Industry
The commodification of many food products, combined with increasing market share of supermarkets, has increased the importance of point of sale (POS) strategies in speciality food retailers such as fishmongers. The purpose of this study is to develop strategies to improve the retailing of seafood in fishmongers, specifically oysters, a species which is currently underutilised; as although they are eaten by many consumers, purchase frequency is low. A literature review identifies the key drivers and barriers to oyster consumption and the information consumers want at the POS. Based on these findings, a retailing strategy for oysters is developed and tested in two consumer focus groups. Based on focus group results, revisions are recommended to the retail strategy, importantly including a change in collateral from a production focus to a consumption focus. This study makes a clear contribution to theory and practice by bringing together the existing literature on drivers and barriers and consumer information requirements about oysters to develop and test practical retail strategy concepts
The Population Affected by the Syndemic of COVID-19 and Poverty is More Likely to be Hospitalized with SARS-CoV-2 Pneumonia
Background
Lockdown measures to control COVID-19 have exacerbated the poverty epidemic. We hypothesized that the synergistic interaction of COVID-19 and poverty epidemics favors the development of more severe forms of COVID-19 in the population living in poverty. To test this hypothesis, we assessed whether an ecological association exists between the geographic distribution of hospitalized patients with SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia and markers of poverty in the city of Louisville, KY.
Methods
Using the geomasked home addresses of hospitalized patients with SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia in the city of Louisville, a kernel density heatmap was created. Kuldorff’s spatial scan statistic was used to calculate areas of increased risk for SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia hospitalization. Heat maps were created for census tract–level demographics according to income, age, race, and ethnicity to assess whether an ecological association exists with the spatial distribution of SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia hospitalization.
Results
Four areas of increased risk of hospitalization due to SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia were identified in the western and central sections of the city, with relative risks (RRs) ranging from 2.3 to 3.2 (p
Conclusions
Residents from low-income areas are almost three times more likely to develop SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia requiring hospitalization. Current efforts to decrease the number of COVID-19 hospitalizations through vaccination of populations at risk should be concentrated in city areas with a low-income level population
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Recombinant Listeria promotes tumor rejection by CD8+ T cell-dependent remodeling of the tumor microenvironment.
Agents that remodel the tumor microenvironment (TME), prime functional tumor-specific T cells, and block inhibitory signaling pathways are essential components of effective immunotherapy. We are evaluating live-attenuated, double-deleted Listeria monocytogenes expressing tumor antigens (LADD-Ag) in the clinic. Here we show in numerous mouse models that while treatment with nonrecombinant LADD induced some changes in the TME, no antitumor efficacy was observed, even when combined with immune checkpoint blockade. In contrast, LADD-Ag promoted tumor rejection by priming tumor-specific KLRG1+PD1loCD62L- CD8+ T cells. These IFNγ-producing effector CD8+ T cells infiltrated the tumor and converted the tumor from an immunosuppressive to an inflamed microenvironment that was characterized by a decrease in regulatory T cells (Treg) levels, a proinflammatory cytokine milieu, and the shift of M2 macrophages to an inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS)+CD206- M1 phenotype. Remarkably, these LADD-Ag-induced tumor-specific T cells persisted for more than 2 months after primary tumor challenge and rapidly controlled secondary tumor challenge. Our results indicate that the striking antitumor efficacy observed in mice with LADD-based immunotherapy stems from TME remodeling which is a direct consequence of eliciting potent, systemic tumor-specific CD8+ T cells
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A Potent and Effective Suicidal Listeria Vaccine Platform.
Live-attenuated Listeria monocytogenes has shown encouraging potential as an immunotherapy platform in preclinical and clinical settings. However, additional safety measures will enable application across malignant and infectious diseases. Here, we describe a new vaccine platform, termed Lm-RIID (L. monocytogenes recombinase-induced intracellular death), that induces the deletion of genes required for bacterial viability yet maintains potent T cell responses to encoded antigens. Lm-RIID grows normally in broth but commits suicide inside host cells by inducing Cre recombinase and deleting essential genes flanked by loxP sites, resulting in a self-limiting infection even in immunocompromised mice. Lm-RIID vaccination of mice induces potent CD8+ T cells and protects against virulent challenges, similar to live L. monocytogenes vaccines. When combined with α-PD-1, Lm-RIID is as effective as live-attenuated L. monocytogenes in a therapeutic tumor model. This impressive efficacy, together with the increased clearance rate, makes Lm-RIID ideal for prophylactic immunization against diseases that require T cells for protection
Audiovisual time perception is spatially specific
Our sensory systems face a daily barrage of auditory and visual signals whose arrival times form a wide range of audiovisual asynchronies. These temporal relationships constitute an important metric for the nervous system when surmising which signals originate from common external events. Internal consistency is known to be aided by sensory adaptation: repeated exposure to consistent asynchrony brings perceived arrival times closer to simultaneity. However, given the diverse nature of our audiovisual environment, functionally useful adaptation would need to be constrained to signals that were generated together. In the current study, we investigate the role of two potential constraining factors: spatial and contextual correspondence. By employing an experimental design that allows independent control of both factors, we show that observers are able to simultaneously adapt to two opposing temporal relationships, provided they are segregated in space. No such recalibration was observed when spatial segregation was replaced by contextual stimulus features (in this case, pitch and spatial frequency). These effects provide support for dedicated asynchrony mechanisms that interact with spatially selective mechanisms early in visual and auditory sensory pathways
Hydrogenation of Organic Matter as a Terminal Electron Sink Sustains High CO2:CH4 Production Ratios During Anaerobic Decomposition
Once inorganic electron acceptors are depleted, organic matter in anoxic environments decomposes by hydrolysis, fermentation, and methanogenesis, requiring syntrophic interactions between microorganisms to achieve energetic favorability. In this classic anaerobic food chain, methanogenesis represents the terminal electron accepting (TEA) process, ultimately producing equimolar CO2 and CH4 for each molecule of organic matter degraded. However, CO2:CH4 production in Sphagnum-derived, mineral-poor, cellulosic peat often substantially exceeds this 1:1 ratio, even in the absence of measureable inorganic TEAs. Since the oxidation state of C in both cellulose-derived organic matter and acetate is 0, and CO2 has an oxidation state of +4, if CH4 (oxidation state -4) is not produced in equal ratio, then some other compound(s) must balance CO2 production by receiving 4 electrons. Here we present evidence for ubiquitous hydrogenation of diverse unsaturated compounds that appear to serve as organic TEAs in peat, thereby providing the necessary electron balance to sustain CO2:CH4 \u3e1. While organic electron acceptors have previously been proposed to drive microbial respiration of organic matter through the reversible reduction of quinone moieties, the hydrogenation mechanism that we propose, by contrast, reduces C-C double bonds in organic matter thereby serving as 1) a terminal electron sink, 2) a mechanism for degrading complex unsaturated organic molecules, 3) a potential mechanism to regenerate electron-accepting quinones, and, in some cases, 4) a means to alleviate the toxicity of unsaturated aromatic acids. This mechanism for CO2 generation without concomitant CH4 production has the potential to regulate the global warming potential of peatlands by elevating CO2:CH4 production ratios
Latent variable models for gene–environment interactions in longitudinal studies with multiple correlated exposures
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/110870/1/sim6401.pd
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