1,331 research outputs found

    Landslide sites and areas of landslide susceptibility in the towns of Wells and Ogunquit, Maine

    Get PDF
    Maine Geological Survey Open-File Report 09-38.https://digitalmaine.com/mgs_maps/2809/thumbnail.jp

    Landslide sites and areas of landslide susceptibility in the town of Kennebunkport, Maine

    Get PDF
    Maine Geological Survey Open-File Report 09-29.https://digitalmaine.com/mgs_maps/2820/thumbnail.jp

    Landslide sites and areas of landslide susceptibility in the town of York, Maine

    Get PDF
    Maine Geological Survey Open-File Report 09-39.https://digitalmaine.com/mgs_maps/2742/thumbnail.jp

    Gait Analysis of Teenagers and Young Adults Diagnosed with Autism & Severe Verbal Communication Disorders

    Get PDF
    Both movement differences and disorders are common within autism spectrum disorders (ASD). These differences have wide and heterogeneous variability among different ages and sub-groups all diagnosed with ASD. Gait was studied in a more homogeneously identified group of nine teenagers and young adults who scored as ā€œsevereā€ in both measures of verbal communication and overall rating of Autism on the Childhood Autism Rating Scales (CARS). The ASD individuals were compared to a group of typically developing university undergraduates of similar ages. All participants walked a distance of 6-meters across a GAITRite (GR) electronic walkway for six trials. The ASD and comparison groups differed widely on many spatiotemporal aspects of gait including: step and stride length, foot positioning, cadence, velocity, step time, gait cycle time, swing time, stance time, and single and double support time. Moreover, the two groups differed in the percentage of the total gait cycle in each of these phases. The qualitative rating of ā€œBody Useā€ on the CARS also indicated severe levels of unusual body movement for all of the ASD participants. These findings demonstrate that older teens and young adults with ā€œsevereā€ forms of Verbal Communication Impairments and Autism differ widely in their gait from typically developing individuals. The differences found in the current investigation are far more pronounced compared to previous findings with younger and/or less severely involved individuals diagnosed with ASD as compared to typically developing controls. As such, these data may be a useful anchor-point in understanding the trajectory of development of gait specifically and motor functions generally.

    Two-Legged Hopping in Autism Spectrum Disorders

    Get PDF
    Sensory processing deficits are common within autism spectrum disorders (ASD). Deficits have a heterogeneous dispersion across the spectrum and multimodal processing tasks are thought to magnify integration difficulties. Two-legged hopping in place in sync with an auditory cue (2.3, 3.0 Hz) was studied in a group of six individuals with expressive language impaired ASD (ELI-ASD) and an age-matched control group. Vertical ground reaction force data were collected and discrete Fourier transforms were utilized to determine dominant hopping cadence. Effective leg stiffness was computed through a mass-spring model representation. The ELI-ASD group were unsuccessful in matching their hopping cadence (2.21 Ā± 0.30 hopsĀ·sāˆ’1, 2.35 Ā± 0.41 hopsĀ·sāˆ’1) to either auditory cue with greater deviations at the 3.0 Hz cue. In contrast, the control group was able to match hopping cadence (2.35 Ā± 0.06 hopsĀ·sāˆ’1, 3.02 Ā± 0.10 hopsĀ·sāˆ’1) to either cue via an adjustment of effective leg stiffness. The ELI-ASD group demonstrated a varied response with an interquartile range (IQR) in excess of 0.5 hopsĀ·sāˆ’1 as compared to the control group with an IQR \u3c 0.03 hopsĀ·sāˆ’1. Several sensorimotor mechanisms could explain the inability of participants with ELI-ASD to modulate motor output to match an external auditory cue. These results suggest that a multimodal gross motor task can (1) discriminate performance among a group of individuals with severe autism, and (2) could be a useful quantitative tool for evaluating motor performance in individuals with ASD individuals

    Fossilized skin reveals coevolution with feathers and metabolism in feathered dinosaurs and early birds

    Get PDF
    Feathers are remarkable evolutionary innovations that are associated with complex adaptations of the skin in modern birds. Fossilised feathers in non-avian dinosaurs and basal birds provide insights into feather evolution, but how associated integumentary adaptations evolved is unclear. Here we report the discovery of fossil skin, preserved with remarkable nanoscale fidelity, in three non-avian maniraptoran dinosaurs andĀ a basal bird from the Cretaceous Jehol biota (China). The skin comprises patches of desquamating epidermal corneocytes that preserve aĀ cytoskeletal array of helically coiled Ī±-keratin tonofibrils. This structure confirms that basal birds and non-avian dinosaurs shed small epidermal flakes as in modern mammals and birds, but structural differences imply that these Cretaceous taxa had lower body heat production than modern birds. Feathered epidermis acquired many, but not all, anatomically modern attributes close to the base of the Maniraptora by the Middle Jurassic

    No Latex Starch Utilization in Euphorbia esula

    Full text link

    APOE Īµ4 and exercise interact in a sex-specific manner to modulate dementia risk factors

    Get PDF
    Abstract Introduction: Apolipoprotein E (APOE) Īµ4 is the strongest genetic risk factor for Alzheimer\u27s disease and related dementias (ADRDs), affecting many different pathways that lead to cognitive decline. Exercise is one of the most widely proposed prevention and intervention strategies to mitigate risk and symptomology of ADRDs. Importantly, exercise and APOE Īµ4 affect similar processes in the body and brain. While both APOE Īµ4 and exercise have been studied extensively, their interactive effects are not well understood. Methods: To address this, male and female APOE Īµ3/Īµ3, APOE Īµ3/Īµ4, and APOE Īµ4/Īµ4 mice ran voluntarily from wean (1 month) to midlife (12 months). Longitudinal and cross-sectional phenotyping were performed on the periphery and the brain, assessing markers of risk for dementia such as weight, body composition, circulating cholesterol composition, murine daily activities, energy expenditure, and cortical and hippocampal transcriptional profiling. Results: Data revealed chronic running decreased age-dependent weight gain, lean and fat mass, and serum low-density lipoprotein concentration dependent on APOE genotype. Additionally, murine daily activities and energy expenditure were significantly influenced by an interaction between APOE genotype and running in both sexes. Transcriptional profiling of the cortex and hippocampus predicted that APOE genotype and running interact to affect numerous biological processes including vascular integrity, synaptic/neuronal health, cell motility, and mitochondrial metabolism, in a sex-specific manner. Discussion: These data in humanized mouse models provide compelling evidence that APOE genotype should be considered for population-based strategies that incorporate exercise to prevent ADRDs and other APOE-relevant diseases
    • ā€¦
    corecore