138 research outputs found

    Allocation of attention in EFL learners' oral performance across multiple task repetitions

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    Task-based language learning and teaching research from both psycholinguistic and pedagogical perspectives shares a common theoretical background of learners’ attention, awareness, and perception (Levelt, 1989). The former has focused on learners’ prioritized attention to language aspects (e.g., fluency) in their oral performance. Furthermore, researchers have explored learners’ attention during strategic planning through emergent categorization, from retrospective data (e.g., Ortega, 2005). The latter has focused on learners’ uptake, based on incorporation from teachers’ corrective feedback (e.g., Mackey & Philp, 1998). The underpinning concept of incorporation via noticing a gap in Schmidt (1990) displays learners’ awareness of linguistic factors. The present study attempts to fill a gap in previous research by employing incorporation as a more reliable measure, of learners’ attention to linguistic factors, than retrospective data. Allocation of attention in four learners’ oral performance is qualitatively explored over five task repetitions by employing emergent categories of linguistic incorporation. This reveals what learners do during planning in their oral performance and how allocation of their attention changes across five task repetitions. This has long been a puzzle in quantitative analysis of such data. The students’ linguistic incorporation demonstrates their attention to different linguistic factors (e.g., semantic, syntactic), which are linked to a priori categories of fluency and complexity in their oral performance. This allocation of attention eventually changes over task iterations. The trajectories of fluency and complexity are also confirmed by supplemental examinations of data from 15 students. This suggests that individual learners prioritize their attention to a particular area (Foster & Skehan, 2013), and then broaden attention to other areas as more space becomes available for processing through repeated use (Bygate & Samuda, 2005). Besides this cognitive demand, the present study also reveals that learners’ attention may be affected by interlocutor familiarity, social, and cultural factors

    Recognition of 2′-hydroxyl groups by Escherichia coli ribonuclease HI

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    AbstractIn order to investigate the hydrogen-bonding interactions between Escherichia coli ribonuclease HI and the 2′-hydroxyl functions of the substrate, oligonucleotide duplexes containing 2′-amino-2′-deoxyuridine or 2′-fluoro-2′-deoxyuridine at a specific site were used, and their affinities for the enzyme were determined by kinetic analyses. The results indicate that the hydroxyl groups of the nucleoside 3′-adjacent to the cleaved phosphodiester linkage and the second nucleoside 5′ to the cleaved phosphodiester act as both a proton donor and an acceptor and as a proton acceptor, respectively, in the enzyme-substrate complex. A molecular model was constructed using the interactions derived from the results

    A novel nonsense mutation in a Japanese family with ataxia with oculomotor apraxia type 2 (AOA2)

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    We report a 67-year-old Japanese woman with ataxia with oculomotor apraxia type 2 (AOA2). She was born to consanguineous parents and showed a teenage onset, a slowly progressive cerebellar ataxia and sensory-motor neuropathy and an elevated level of serum alpha-fetoprotein (AFP). All of these clinical features were consistent with typical AOA2. She lacked oculomotor apraxia, as frequently observed in previously reported AOA2 patients. She was homozygous for a novel nonsense mutation, Glu385Ter (E385X), in the senataxin gene (SETX). To our knowledge, this is the fifth Japanese family with genetically confirmed AOA2. The mutations in SETX in Japanese AOA2 families are heterogeneous, except for M274I, which has been found in two unrelated families. More extensive screening by serum AFP followed by molecular genetic analysis of SETX in patients with Friedreich's ataxia-like phenotype may show that AOA2 is more common in Japan than previously thought. Journal of Human Genetics (2009) 54, 746-748; doi: 10.1038/jhg.2009.104; published online 6 November 2009ArticleJOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS. 54(12):746-748 (2009)journal articl

    Training cessation and subsequent retraining of a world-class female Olympic sailor after Tokyo 2020: A case study

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    Olympic sailing is a complex sport where sailors are required to predict and interpret weather conditions while facing high physical and physiological demands. While it is essential for sailors to develop physical and physiological capabilities toward major competition, monitoring training status following the competition is equally important to minimize the magnitude of detraining and facilitate retraining. Despite its long history in the modern Olympics, reports on world-class sailors' training status and performance characteristics across different periodization phases are currently lacking. This case study aimed to determine the influence of training cessation and subsequent retraining on performance parameters in a world-class female sailor. A 31-year old female sailor, seventh in the Women's Sailing 470 medal race in Tokyo 2020, completely stopped training for 4 weeks following the Olympics, and resumed low-intensity training for 3 weeks. Over these 7 weeks, 12.7 and 5.3% reductions were observed in 6 s peak cycling power output and jump height, respectively, with a 4.7% decrease in maximal aerobic power output. Seven weeks of training cessation-retraining period induced clear reductions in explosive power production capacities but less prominent decreases in aerobic capacity. The current findings are likely attributed to the sailor's training characteristics during the retraining period.This study was part of Functional Development Project for Resilient Athlete Support commissioned by Japan Sports Agency

    Roentgenographic Study of the Chest of the Aged: special reference to "senile lung" and the paraspinal line

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    The characteristics of the changes of "senile lung" and normal values of the width of the paraspinal shadows on the chest roentgenographs were studied among 235 subjects aged from 70 to 97 without frank chest diseases. The ratio of upper transverse diameter (at the level of posterior 6th rib) to lower transverse diameter (at the top of right hemidiaphragm) on the frontal radiographs was significantly higher over the age of 85 than under 84, only in the female subjects. However, a lack of differences could be found in males. Therefore, "senile lung" was considered to be characteristic of the aging process, only for women. The width of the paraspinal shadow over the age of 70 was estimated to be normal in up to 19.9mm, and the index divided by the distance of descending aorta was up to 0.61, obtained from the value of 99% confidence limits

    First isolation of oleate-dependent Enterococcus faecalis small-colony variants from the umbilical exudate of a paediatric patient with omphalitis

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    An oleate-dependent Enterococcus faecalis isolate representing small-colony variants (SCVs) was isolated from the umbilical exudate of a 31-month-old Japanese male patient in Nagano Children's Hospital, Azumino, Japan. The patient had been suffering from recurrent omphalitis since early infancy. The initial E. faecalis SCV isolate formed small colonies on sheep blood agar plates and tiny colonies on chocolate and modified Drigalski agar, although no visible growth was observed in HK-semi solid medium after 48 h incubation in ambient air. Moreover, the SCV isolate, the colonial morphology of which was reminiscent of Streptococcus species, could not be identified using the MicroScan WalkAway-40 and API 20 Strep systems, both of which yielded profile numbers that did not correspond to any bacterial species, probably as a result of insufficient growth of the isolate. The SCV isolate was subsequently identified as E. faecalis based on its morphological, cultural and biochemical properties, and this was confirmed by sequencing the 16S rRNA gene of the organism. Investigations revealed that the addition of oleate, an unsaturated fatty acid, enabled the isolate to grow on every medium with normal-sized colony morphology. Although it has long been known that long-chain fatty acids, especially unsaturated oleic acid, have a major inhibitory effect on the growth of a variety of microorganisms, including not only mycobacteria but also streptococci, this is, to the best of our knowledge, the first clinical isolation of an oleate-dependent E. faecalis SCV isolate. In addition, oleic acid might be considered to affect the cell membrane permeability of carbohydrates or antimicrobial agents such as beta-lactams.ArticleJOURNAL OF MEDICAL MICROBIOLOGY. 62:1883-1890 (2013)journal articl

    放送大学学士の効用 : 女子卒業者の調査より

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    日本教育社会学会第48回大会, 1996年10月(九州大学), Ⅱ-1部会 高等教育(2

    Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha mediates enhancement of gene expression of cerebroside sulfotransferase in several murine organs

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    Sulfatides, 3-O-sulfogalactosylceramides, are known to have multifunctional properties. These molecules are distributed in various tissues of mammals, where they are synthesized from galactosylceramides by sulfation at C3 of the galactosyl residue. Although this reaction is specifically catalyzed by cerebroside sulfotransferase (CST), the mechanisms underlying the transcriptional regulation of this enzyme are not understood. With respect to this issue, we previously found potential sequences of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR) response element on upstream regions of the mouse CST gene and presumed the possible regulation by the nuclear receptor PPAR alpha. To confirm this hypothesis, we treated wild-type and Ppara-null mice with the specific PPAR alpha agonist fenofibrate and examined the amounts of sulfatides and CST gene expression in various tissues. Fenofibrate treatment increased sulfatides and CST mRNA levels in the kidney, heart, liver, and small intestine in a PPAR alpha-dependent manner. However, these effects of fenofibrate were absent in the brain or colon. Fenofibrate treatment did not affect the mRNA level of arylsulfatase A, which is the key enzyme for catalyzing desulfation of sulfatides, in any of these six tissues. Analyses of the DNA-binding activity and conventional gene expression targets of PPAR alpha has demonstrated that fenofibrate treatment activated PPAR alpha in the kidney, heart, liver, and small intestine but did not affect the brain or colon. These findings suggest that PPAR alpha activation induces CST gene expression and enhances sulfatide synthesis in mice, which suggests that PPAR alpha is a possible transcriptional regulator for the mouse CST gene.ArticleGLYCOCONJUGATE JOURNAL. 30(6):553-560 (2013)journal articl
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