383 research outputs found
The impact of school nutritional campaigns on OFSP adoption and food security among smallholder farming households in Tigray region, Ethiopia.
In Ethiopia, the International Potato Center (CIP) and regional partners piloted a 2-year project that promoted production and consumption of vitamin A-rich OFSP as part of diversified diets. The project adopted school-based nutritional campaigns wherein school gardens and school feeding were piloted in 11 schools between 2011 to 2013. The schools served centres for the dissemination of planting material (vines) and transfer of information on benefits of OFSP and its production practices to parents
Recommended from our members
Data on eye movements in people with glaucoma and peers with normal vision.
Eye movements of glaucoma patients have been shown to differ from age-similar control groups when performing everyday tasks, such as reading (Burton et al., 2012; Smith et al., 2014) [1], [2], visual search (Smith et al., 2012) [3], face recognition (Glen et al., 2013) [4], driving, and viewing static images (Smith et al., 2012) [5]. Described here is the dataset from a recent publication in which we compared the eye-movements of 44 glaucoma patients and 32 age-similar controls, while they watched a series of short video clips taken from television programs (Crabb et al., 2018) [6]. Gaze was recorded at 1000 Hz using a remote eye-tracker. We also provide demographic information and results from a clinical examination of vision for each participant
Recommended from our members
Does Glaucoma Alter Eye Movements When Viewing Images of Natural Scenes? A Between-Eye Study
Purpose: To investigate whether glaucoma produces measurable changes in eye movements.
Methods: Fifteen glaucoma patients with asymmetric vision loss (difference in mean deviation [MD] > 6 dB between eyes) were asked to monocularly view 120 images of natural scenes, presented sequentially on a computer monitor. Each image was viewed twice—once each with the better and worse eye. Patients' eye movements were recorded with an Eyelink 1000 eye-tracker. Eye-movement parameters were computed and compared within participants (better eye versus worse eye). These parameters included a novel measure: saccadic reversal rate (SRR), as well as more traditional metrics such as saccade amplitude, fixation counts, fixation duration, and spread of fixation locations (bivariate contour ellipse area [BCEA]). In addition, the associations of these parameters with clinical measures of vision were investigated.
Results: In the worse eye, saccade amplitude
(P=0.012;−13%) and BCEA (P=0.005;−16%) were smaller, while SRR was greater (P=0.018;+16%). There was a significant correlation between the intereye difference in BCEA, and differences in MD values (Spearman′s r=0.65;P=0.01), while differences in SRR were associated with differences in visual acuity (Spearman′s r=0.64;P=0.01
). Furthermore, between-eye differences in BCEA were a significant predictor of between-eye differences in MD: for every 1-dB difference in MD, BCEA reduced by 6.2% (95% confidence interval, 1.6%–10.3%).
Conclusions: Eye movements are altered by visual field loss, and these changes are related to changes in clinical measures. Eye movements recorded while passively viewing images could potentially be used as biomarkers for visual field damage
Recommended from our members
Using eye movements to detect visual field loss: a pragmatic assessment using simulated scotoma.
Glaucoma is a leading cause of irreversible sight-loss and has been shown to affect natural eye-movements. These changes may provide a cheap and easy-to-obtain biomarker for improving disease detection. Here, we investigated whether these changes are large enough to be clinically useful. We used a gaze-contingent simulated visual field (VF) loss paradigm, in which participants experienced a variable magnitude of simulated VF loss based on longitudinal data from a real glaucoma patient (thereby controlling for other variables, such as age and general health). Fifty-five young participants with healthy vision were asked to view two short videos and three pictures, either with: (1) no VF loss, (2) moderate VF loss, or (3) advanced VF loss. Eye-movements were recorded using a remote eye tracker. Key eye-movement parameters were computed, including saccade amplitude, the spread of saccade endpoints (bivariate contour ellipse area), location of saccade landing positions, and similarity of fixations locations among participants (quantified using kernel density estimation). The simulated VF loss caused some statistically significant effects in the eye movement parameters. Yet, these effects were not capable of consistently identifying simulated VF loss, despite it being of a magnitude likely easily detectable by standard automated perimetry
Inertial effects in B{\"u}ttiker-Landauer Motor and Refrigerator at the Overdamped Limit
We investigate the energetics of a Brownian motor driven by position
dependent temperature, commonly known as the B{\"u}ttiker-Landauer motor.
Overdamped models (M=0) predict that the motor can attain Carnot efficiency.
However, the overdamped limit (), contradicts the previous prediction
due to the kinetic energy contribution to the heat transfer. Using molecular
dynamics simulation and numerical solution of the inertial Langevin equation,
we confirm that the motor can never achieve Carnot efficiency and verify that
the heat flow via kinetic energy diverges as in the overdamped
limit. The reciprocal process of the motor, namely the B{\"u}ttiker-Landauer
refrigerator is also examined. In this case, the overdamped approach succeeds
in predicting the heat transfer only when there is no temperature gradient. Its
found that the Onsager symmetry between the motor and refrigerator does not
suffer from the singular behavior of the kinetic energy contribution.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figure
Direct observation of active material concentration gradients and crystallinity breakdown in LiFePO4 electrodes during charge/discharge cycling of lithium batteries
The phase changes that occur during discharge of an electrode comprised of LiFePO4, carbon, and PTFE binder have been studied in lithium half cells by using X-ray diffraction measurements in reflection geometry. Differences in the state of charge between the front and the back of LiFePO4 electrodes have been visualized. By modifying the X-ray incident angle the depth of penetration of the X-ray beam into the electrode was altered, allowing for the examination of any concentration gradients that were present within the electrode. At high rates of discharge the electrode side facing the current collector underwent limited lithium insertion while the electrode as a whole underwent greater than 50% of discharge. This behavior is consistent with depletion at high rate of the lithium content of the electrolyte contained in the electrode pores. Increases in the diffraction peak widths indicated a breakdown of crystallinity within the active material during cycling even during the relatively short duration of these experiments, which can also be linked to cycling at high rate
Recommended from our members
Assessing the virulence of Cryptococcus neoformans causing meningitis in HIV infected and uninfected patients in Vietnam.
We previously observed a substantial burden of cryptococcal meningitis in Vietnam atypically arising in individuals who are uninfected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). This disease was associated with a single genotype of Cryptococcus neoformans (sequence type [ST]5), which was significantly less common in HIV-infected individuals. Aiming to compare the phenotypic characteristics of ST5 and non-ST5 C. neoformans, we selected 30 representative Vietnamese isolates and compared their in vitro pathogenic potential and in vivo virulence. ST5 and non-ST5 organisms exhibited comparable characteristics with respect to in vitro virulence markers including melanin production, replication at 37°C, and growth in cerebrospinal fluid. However, the ST5 isolates had significantly increased variability in cellular and capsular sizing compared with non-ST5 organisms (P < .001). Counterintuitively, mice infected with ST5 isolates had significantly longer survival with lower fungal burdens at day 7 than non-ST5 isolates. Notably, ST5 isolates induced significantly greater initial inflammatory responses than non-ST5 strains, measured by TNF-α concentrations (P < .001). Despite being generally less virulent in the mouse model, we hypothesize that the significant within strain variation seen in ST5 isolates in the tested phenotypes may represent an evolutionary advantage enabling adaptation to novel niches including apparently immunocompetent human hosts
Countdown to 2015: Ethiopia's progress towards reduction in under-five mortality: 2014 country case study
On September 13, 2013 the Federal Ministry of Health (FMoH) of Ethiopia and UNICEF
announced that Ethiopia has successfully reduced the under-five mortality rate by two
thirds between 1990 and 2012, which is the target for achieving Millennium Development
Goal-4. In 1990, the under-five mortality rate in Ethiopia was one of the highest in the
world at 205/1,000 live births. However, by 2012, this rate had declined to 68/1,000 live
births with an average annual rate of decline of 5.0%. This exceeded the 4.3% annual rate
of decline needed to reach MDG4 and was significantly higher than the decline rates
observed in many sub-Saharan African countries and even other low and middle-income
countries. In an effort to understand the story behind Ethiopia’s remarkable achievement
of MDG-4, EPHI has conducted this in-depth Case Study which is supported by Countdown
to 2015. The findings are believed to generate valuable lessons and guidance for other
low-income countries in their quest for accelerating health improvements and reducing
child deaths
Genetic intensification: Africa RISING science, innovations and technologies with scaling potential from the Ethiopian Highlands
United States Agency for International Developmen
- …