1,484 research outputs found
The Stellar Structures around Disk Galaxies
We present a brief summary of our current results on the stellar distribution
and population gradients of the resolved stars in the surroundings of ~50
nearby disk galaxies, observed with space- (Hubble & Spitzer) and ground-based
telescopes (Subaru, VLT, BTA, Palomar, CFHT & INT). We examine the radial
(in-plane) and vertical (extraplanar) distributions of resolved stars as a
function of stellar age and metallicity by tracking changes in the
color-magnitude diagram of face-on and edge-on galaxies. Our data show, that
the scale length and height of a stellar population increases with age, with
the oldest detected stellar populations identified at a large galactocentric
radius or extraplanar height, out to typically a few kpc. In the most massive
of the studied galaxies there is evidence for a break in number density and
color gradients of evolved stars, which plausibly correspond to the thick disk
and halo components of the galaxies. The ratio of intermediate-age to old stars
in the outermost fields correlate with the gas fraction, while relative sizes
of the thick-to-thin disks anticorrelate with galactic circular velocity.Comment: To appear in the proceedings for the IAUS 241 'Stellar Populations as
Building Blocks of Galaxies' held in La Palma, Spain, December 10-16 200
Strategies for analyzing highly enriched IP-chip datasets
BACKGROUND: Chromatin immunoprecipitation on tiling arrays (ChIP-chip) has been employed to examine features such as protein binding and histone modifications on a genome-wide scale in a variety of cell types. Array data from the latter studies typically have a high proportion of enriched probes whose signals vary considerably (due to heterogeneity in the cell population), and this makes their normalization and downstream analysis difficult. RESULTS: Here we present strategies for analyzing such experiments, focusing our discussion on the analysis of Bromodeoxyruridine (BrdU) immunoprecipitation on tiling array (BrdU-IP-chip) datasets. BrdU-IP-chip experiments map large, recently replicated genomic regions and have similar characteristics to histone modification/location data. To prepare such data for downstream analysis we employ a dynamic programming algorithm that identifies a set of putative unenriched probes, which we use for both within-array and between-array normalization. We also introduce a second dynamic programming algorithm that incorporates a priori knowledge to identify and quantify positive signals in these datasets. CONCLUSION: Highly enriched IP-chip datasets are often difficult to analyze with traditional array normalization and analysis strategies. Here we present and test a set of analytical tools for their normalization and quantification that allows for accurate identification and analysis of enriched regions
El Rey de España en Bayona : Escena en un solo acto / Escrita por un buen español, en Murcia
CCPB000205728-XRuiz Lasala. Benito Monfort, 766Encabezamiento tomado de la segunda parte de la obr
Natural history of a visceral leishmaniasis outbreak in highland Ethiopia
In May 2005, visceral leishmaniasis (VL) was recognized for the first time in Libo Kemken, Ethiopia, a highland region where only few cases had been reported before. We analyzed records of VL patients treated from May 25, 2005 to December 13, 2007 by the only VL treatment center in the area, maintained by Médecins Sans Frontières-Ethiopia, Operational Center Barcelona-Athens. The median age was 18 years; 77.6% were male. The overall case fatality rate was 4%, but adults 45 years or older were five times as likely to die as 5-29 year olds. Other factors associated with increased mortality included HIV infection, edema, severe malnutrition, pneumonia, tuberculosis, and vomiting. The VL epidemic expanded rapidly over a several-year period, culminating in an epidemic peak in the last third of 2005, spread over two districts, and transformed into a sustained endemic situation by 2007
SO(p,q)-Higgs bundles and Higher Teichmuller components
Some connected components of a moduli space are mundane in the sense that they are distinguished only by obvious topological invariants or have no special characteristics. Others are more alluring and unusual either because they are not detected by primary invariants, or because they have special geometric significance, or both. In this paper we describe new examples of such 'exotic' components in moduli spaces of of SO(p, q)-Higgs bundles on closed Riemann surfaces or, equivalently, moduli spaces of surface group representations into the Lie group SO(p, q). Furthermore, we discuss how these exotic components are related to the notion of positive Anosov representations recently developed by Guichard and Wienhard. We also provide a complete count of the connected components of these moduli spaces (except for SO(2, q), with q >= 4)
Fkh1 and Fkh2 bind multiple chromosomal elements in the S. cerevisiae genome with distinct specificities and cell cycle dynamics
Forkhead box (FOX) transcription factors regulate a wide variety of cellular functions in higher eukaryotes, including cell cycle control and developmental regulation. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Forkhead proteins Fkh1 and Fkh2 perform analogous functions, regulating genes involved in cell cycle control, while also regulating mating-type silencing and switching involved in gamete development. Recently, we revealed a novel role for Fkh1 and Fkh2 in the regulation of replication origin initiation timing, which, like donor preference in mating-type switching, appears to involve long-range chromosomal interactions, suggesting roles for Fkh1 and Fkh2 in chromatin architecture and organization. To elucidate how Fkh1 and Fkh2 regulate their target DNA elements and potentially regulate the spatial organization of the genome, we undertook a genome-wide analysis of Fkh1 and Fkh2 chromatin binding by ChIP-chip using tiling DNA microarrays. Our results confirm and extend previous findings showing that Fkh1 and Fkh2 control the expression of cell cycle-regulated genes. In addition, the data reveal hundreds of novel loci that bind Fkh1 only and exhibit a distinct chromatin structure from loci that bind both Fkh1 and Fkh2. The findings also show that Fkh1 plays the predominant role in the regulation of a subset of replication origins that initiate replication early, and that Fkh1/2 binding to these loci is cell cycle-regulated. Finally, we demonstrate that Fkh1 and Fkh2 bind proximally to a variety of genetic elements, including centromeres and Pol III-transcribed snoRNAs and tRNAs, greatly expanding their potential repertoire of functional targets, consistent with their recently suggested role in mediating the spatial organization of the genome
What motivates community mental and behavioral health organizations to participate in LGBTQ+ cultural competency trainings?
LGBTQ+ populations show elevated rates of poor mental health and substance use relative to their heterosexual and cisgender counterparts but often experience stigma and marginalization when seeking mental health care. Mental and behavioral health organizations and therapists recognize a need for LGBTQ+ cultural competency training opportunities and are interested in participating in these trainings. Professional organizations and state licensing bodies should consider policies that require accredited graduate programs and continuing education opportunities to include LGBTQ+ training and competencies.The constantly evolving language, understanding, and cultural context regarding the mental health of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and other sexual and gender diverse individuals (LGBTQ+) require mental health providers to obtain LGBTQ+ cultural competency training to be affirmative and effective with this population. Unfortunately, many providers are not obtaining this ongoing training and mental health disparities continue to plague LGBTQ+ populations. Guided by the Consolidation Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR), we conducted eight focus groups with community mental and behavioral health organization (MBHO) administrators (e.g., directors, clinical supervisors) and therapists to explore what factors facilitated or inhibited their adoption and implementation of a multicomponent LGBTQ+ cultural competency training program that required administrator and therapist participation in multiple learning sessions over several months (i.e., workshop, clinical consultation, and organizational technical assistance). Results from template analysis supported CFIR-aligned themes, including characteristics of individuals, inner setting, outer setting, and process, and two additional codes—marketing and other/previous training opportunities—emerged from the focus group data. Findings suggest that therapists are motivated to engage in such a program because they want to feel more efficacious, and administrators see the benefits of LGBTQ+ training programs for their clientele and marketing. Barriers to adoption and implementation include cost and personnel resistance, although participants believed these barriers were surmountable. Emphasizing therapist efficacy, clientele need, and benefits for marketing mental and behavioral health services could motivate MBHOs’ and therapists’ adoption and implementation of LGBTQ+ cultural competency training.This work was supported by the University of Maryland Prevention Research Center cooperative agreement no. U48DP006382 from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Any interpretations and opinions expressed herein are solely those of the authors and may not reflect those of the CDC
An Instanton Toolbox for F-Theory Model Building
Several dimensionful parameters needed for model building can be engineered
in a certain class of SU(5) F-theory GUTs by adding extra singlet fields which
are localized along pairwise intersections of D7-branes. The values of these
parameters, however, depend on dynamics external to the GUT which causes the
singlets to acquire suitable masses or expectation values. In this note, we
demonstrate that D3-instantons which wrap the same 4-cycle as one of the
intersecting D7's can provide precisely the needed dynamics to generate several
important scales, including the supersymmetry-breaking scale and the
right-handed neutrino mass. Furthermore, these instantons seem unable to
directly generate the \mu term suggesting that, at least in this class of
models, it should perhaps be tied to one of the other scales in the problem.
More specifically, we study the simple system consisting of a pair of D7-branes
wrapping del Pezzo surfaces which intersect along a curve of genus 0
or 1 and classify all instanton configurations which can potentially contribute
to the superpotential. This allows one to formulate topological conditions
which must be imposed on \Sigma for various model-building applications. Along
the way, we also observe that the construction of arXiv:0808.1286 which
engineers a linear superpotential in fact realizes an O'Raifeartaigh model at
the KK scale whose 1-loop Coleman-Weinberg potential generically leads to a
metastable, long-lived SUSY-breaking vacuum.Comment: 18 pages, 2 figures; v2: updated to reflect corrections in v2 of
0808.128
Professional Expectations of Provider LGBTQ Competence: Where We Are and Where We Need to Go
Introduction: Mental and behavioral health professional organizations use their governing documents to set expectations of provider competence in working with LGBTQ+ clients.
Method: The codes of ethics and training program accreditation guidelines of nine mental and behavioral health disciplines (n=16) were analyzed using template analysis.
Results: Coding resulted in fives themes: mission and values, direct practice, clinician education, culturally competent professional development, and advocacy. Expectations for provider competency vary greatly across disciplines.
Conclusion: Having a mental and behavioral health workforce that is uniformly competent in meeting the unique needs of LGBTQ populations is key for supporting the mental and behavioral health of LGBTQ persons.This work was supported by the University of Maryland Prevention Research Center cooperative agreement from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (grant U48DP006382). N.D.W. also acknowledges support from the Southern Regional Education Board and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Health Policy Research Scholars Program. J.N.F. also acknowledges support from the Maryland Population Research Center, by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (grant P2CHD041041). This work does not expressly represent the views of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Institutes of Health, or the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
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