448 research outputs found
(Cultural) Taxation Without Representation? How educational Developer Can Broker Discourse on Black Faculty Lives in the #BlackLivesMatter Era
Predominantly White institutions (PWIs) in creative class cities offer contradictory experiences for Black faculty, who engage in invisible additional labor in response to racial aggressions, termed cultural taxation (CT). With an understanding that equity-minded faculty development is an essential space in which to respond to this reality, our study employed a phenomenological focus group design to investigate how Black faculty at a research-intensive PWI located in a creative class city buffeted by racial tensions navigated their service and community experiences. While finding their work meaningful, the participants shared experiences of the multifaceted nature of CT, their stress from teaching about race, and the burdens of providing extra support to the next generation of scholars of color. Participants viewed the campus and community as interconnected and CT as a wage they were willing to pay. At the same time, participants regretted the lack of recognition for this work in the academy. We proffer recommendations for developers and centers for teaching and learning that endeavor to support Black faculty and faculty from other marginalized identities
A knowledge-guided active model method of skull segmentation on T1-weighted MR images
Skull is the anatomic landmark for patient set up of head radiation therapy. Skull is generally segmented from CT images because CT provides better definition of skull than MR imaging. In the mean time, radiation therapy is planned on MR images for soft tissue information. This study utilized a knowledge-guided active model (KAM) method to segmented skull on MR images in order to enable radiation therapy planning with MR images as the primary planning dataset. KAM utilized age-specific skull mesh models that segmented from CT images using a conditional region growing algorithm. Skull models were transformed to given MR images using an affine registration algorithm based on normalized mutual information. The transformed mesh models actively located skull boundaries by minimizing their total energy. The preliminary validation was performed on MR and CT images from five patients. The KAM segmented skulls were compared with those segmented from CT images. The average image similarity (kappa index) was 0.57. The initial validation showed that it was promising to segment skulls directly on MR images using KAM
Discrete structure of ultrathin dielectric films and their surface optical properties
The boundary problem of linear classical optics about the interaction of
electromagnetic radiation with a thin dielectric film has been solved under
explicit consideration of its discrete structure. The main attention has been
paid to the investigation of the near-zone optical response of dielectrics. The
laws of reflection and refraction for discrete structures in the case of a
regular atomic distribution are studied and the structure of evanescent
harmonics induced by an external plane wave near the surface is investigated in
details. It is shown by means of analytical and numerical calculations that due
to the existence of the evanescent harmonics the laws of reflection and
refraction at the distances from the surface less than two interatomic
distances are principally different from the Fresnel laws. From the practical
point of view the results of this work might be useful for the near-field
optical microscopy of ultrahigh resolution.Comment: 25 pages, 16 figures, LaTeX2.09, to be published in Phys.Rev.
The clustering of galaxies at z~0.5 in the SDSS-III Data Release 9 BOSS-CMASS sample: a test for the LCDM cosmology
We present results on the clustering of 282,068 galaxies in the Baryon
Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS) sample of massive galaxies with
redshifts 0.4<z<0.7 which is part of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey III project.
Our results cover a large range of scales from ~0.5 to ~90 Mpc/h. We compare
these estimates with the expectations of the flat LCDM cosmological model with
parameters compatible with WMAP7 data. We use the MultiDark cosmological
simulation together with a simple halo abundance matching technique, to
estimate galaxy correlation functions, power spectra, abundance of subhaloes
and galaxy biases. We find that the LCDM model gives a reasonable description
to the observed correlation functions at z~0.5, which is a remarkably good
agreement considering that the model, once matched to the observed abundance of
BOSS galaxies, does not have any free parameters. However, we find a deviation
(>~10%) in the correlation functions for scales less than ~1 Mpc/h and ~10-40
Mpc/h. A more realistic abundance matching model and better statistics from
upcoming observations are needed to clarify the situation. We also estimate
that about 12% of the "galaxies" in the abundance-matched sample are satellites
inhabiting central haloes with mass M>~1e14 M_sun/h. Using the MultiDark
simulation we also study the real space halo bias b(r) of the matched catalogue
finding that b=2.00+/-0.07 at large scales, consistent with the one obtained
using the measured BOSS projected correlation function. Furthermore, the linear
large-scale bias depends on the number density n of the abundance-matched
sample as b=-0.048-(0.594+/-0.02)*log(n/(h/Mpc)^3). Extrapolating these results
to BAO scales we measure a scale-dependent damping of the acoustic signal
produced by non-linear evolution that leads to ~2-4% dips at ~3 sigma level for
wavenumbers k>~0.1 h/Mpc in the linear large-scale bias.Comment: Replaced to match published version. Typos corrected; 25 pages, 17
figures, 9 tables. To appear in MNRAS. Correlation functions (projected and
redshift-space) and correlation matrices of CMASS presented in Appendix B.
Correlation and covariance data for the combined CMASS sample can be
downloaded from http://www.sdss3.org/science/boss_publications.ph
Automated ventricular systems segmentation in brain CT images by combining low-level segmentation and high-level template matching
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Accurate analysis of CT brain scans is vital for diagnosis and treatment of Traumatic Brain Injuries (TBI). Automatic processing of these CT brain scans could speed up the decision making process, lower the cost of healthcare, and reduce the chance of human error. In this paper, we focus on automatic processing of CT brain images to segment and identify the ventricular systems. The segmentation of ventricles provides quantitative measures on the changes of ventricles in the brain that form vital diagnosis information.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>First all CT slices are aligned by detecting the ideal midlines in all images. The initial estimation of the ideal midline of the brain is found based on skull symmetry and then the initial estimate is further refined using detected anatomical features. Then a two-step method is used for ventricle segmentation. First a low-level segmentation on each pixel is applied on the CT images. For this step, both Iterated Conditional Mode (ICM) and Maximum A Posteriori Spatial Probability (MASP) are evaluated and compared. The second step applies template matching algorithm to identify objects in the initial low-level segmentation as ventricles. Experiments for ventricle segmentation are conducted using a relatively large CT dataset containing mild and severe TBI cases.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Experiments show that the acceptable rate of the ideal midline detection is over 95%. Two measurements are defined to evaluate ventricle recognition results. The first measure is a sensitivity-like measure and the second is a false positive-like measure. For the first measurement, the rate is 100% indicating that all ventricles are identified in all slices. The false positives-like measurement is 8.59%. We also point out the similarities and differences between ICM and MASP algorithms through both mathematically relationships and segmentation results on CT images.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The experiments show the reliability of the proposed algorithms. The novelty of the proposed method lies in its incorporation of anatomical features for ideal midline detection and the two-step ventricle segmentation method. Our method offers the following improvements over existing approaches: accurate detection of the ideal midline and accurate recognition of ventricles using both anatomical features and spatial templates derived from Magnetic Resonance Images.</p
Intra-Organ Variation in Age-Related Mutation Accumulation in the Mouse
Using a transgenic mouse model harboring chromosomally integrated lacZ mutational target genes, we previously demonstrated that mutations accumulate with age much more rapidly in the small intestine than in the brain. Here it is shown that in the small intestine point mutations preferentially accumulate in epithelial cells of the mucosa scraped off the underlying serosa. The mucosal cells are the differentiated villus cells that have undergone multiple cell divisions. A smaller age-related increase, also involving genome rearrangements, was observed in the serosa, which consists mainly of the remaining crypts and non-dividing smooth muscle cells. In the brain we observed an accumulation of only point mutations in no other areas than hypothalamus and hippocampus. To directly test for cell division as the determining factor in the generation of point mutations we compared mutation induction between mitotically active and quiescent embryonic fibroblasts from the same lacZ mice, treated with either UV (a point mutagen) or hydrogen peroxide (a clastogen). The results indicate that while point mutations are highly replication-dependent, genome rearrangements are as easily induced in non-dividing cells as in mitotically active ones. This strongly suggests that the point mutations found to have accumulated in the mucosal part of the small intestine are the consequence of replication errors. The same is likely true for point mutations accumulating in hippocampus and hypothalamus of the brain since neurogenesis in these two areas continues throughout life. The observed intra-organ variation in mutation susceptibility as well as the variation in replication dependency of different types of mutations indicates the need to not only extend observations made on whole organs to their sub-structures but also take the type of mutations and mitotic activity of the cells into consideration. This should help elucidating the impact of genome instability and its consequences on aging and disease
Resolve and eco: the halo mass-dependent shape of galaxy stellar and baryonic mass functions
In this work, we present galaxy stellar and baryonic (stars plus cold gas) mass functions (SMF and BMF) and their halo mass dependence for two volume-limited data sets. The first, RESOLVE-B, coincides with the Stripe 82 footprint and is extremely complete down to baryonic mass Mbary ∼ 10^9.1 M⊙, probing the gas-rich dwarf regime below Mbary ∼ 10^10 M⊙. The second, ECO, covers a ~40× larger volume (containing RESOLVE-A) and is complete to Mbary ~10^9.4 M⊙. To construct the SMF and BMF we implement a new “cross-bin sampling” technique with Monte Carlo sampling from the full likelihood distributions of stellar or baryonic mass. Our SMFs exhibit the “plateau” feature starting below Mstar ~10^10 M⊙ that has been described in prior work. However, the BMF fills in this feature and rises as a straight power law below ~10^10 M⊙, as gas-dominated galaxies become the majority of the population. Nonetheless, the low-mass slope of the BMF is not as steep as that of the theoretical dark matter halo MF. Moreover, we assign group halo masses by abundance matching, finding that the SMF and BMF separated into four physically motivated halo mass regimes reveal complex structure underlying the simple shape of the overall MFs. In particular, the satellite MFs are depressed below the central galaxy MF “humps” in groups with mass < 10^13.5 M⊙ yet rise steeply in clusters. Our results suggest that satellite destruction and/or stripping are active from the point of nascent group formation. We show that the key role of groups in shaping MFs enables reconstruction of a given survey’s SMF or BMF based on its group halo mass distribution
CD34+/M-cadherin+ Bone Marrow Progenitor Cells Promote Arteriogenesis in Ischemic Hindlimbs of ApoE−/− Mice
BACKGROUND: Cell-based therapy shows promise in treating peripheral arterial disease (PAD); however, the optimal cell type and long-term efficacy are unknown. In this study, we identified a novel subpopulation of adult progenitor cells positive for CD34 and M-cadherin (CD34⁺/M-cad⁺ BMCs) in mouse and human bone marrow. We also examined the long-lasting therapeutic efficacy of mouse CD34⁺/M-cad⁺ BMCs in restoring blood flow and promoting vascularization in an atherosclerotic mouse model of PAD. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Colony-forming cell assays and flow cytometry analysis showed that CD34⁺/M-cad⁺ BMCs have hematopoietic progenitor properties. When delivered intra-arterially into the ischemic hindlimbs of ApoE⁻/⁻ mice, CD34⁺/M-cad⁺ BMCs alleviated ischemia and significantly improved blood flow compared with CD34⁺/M-cad⁻ BMCs, CD34⁻/M-cad⁺ BMCs, or unselected BMCs. Significantly more arterioles were seen in CD34⁺/M-cad⁺ cell-treated limbs than in any other treatment group 60 days after cell therapy. Furthermore, histologic assessment and morphometric analyses of hindlimbs treated with GFP⁺ CD34⁺/M-cad⁺ cells showed that injected cells incorporated into solid tissue structures at 21 days. Confocal microscopic examination of GFP⁺ CD34⁺/M-cad⁺ cell-treated ischemic legs followed by immunostaining indicated the vascular differentiation of CD34⁺/M-cad⁺ progenitor cells. A cytokine antibody array revealed that CD34⁺/M-cad⁺ cell-conditioned medium contained higher levels of cytokines in a unique pattern, including bFGF, CRG-2, EGF, Flt-3 ligand, IGF-1, SDF-1, and VEGFR-3, than did CD34⁺/M-cad⁻ cell-conditioned medium. The proangiogenic cytokines secreted by CD34⁺/M-cad⁺ cells induced oxygen- and nutrient-depleted endothelial cell sprouting significantly better than CD34⁺/M-cad⁻ cells during hypoxia. CONCLUSION: CD34⁺/M-cad⁺ BMCs represent a new progenitor cell type that effectively alleviates hindlimb ischemia in ApoE⁻/⁻ mice by consistently improving blood flow and promoting arteriogenesis. Additionally, CD34⁺/M-cad⁺ BMCs contribute to microvascular remodeling by differentiating into vascular cells and releasing proangiogenic cytokines and growth factors
Angular Momentum of Early- and Late-type Galaxies: Nature or Nurture?
We investigate the origin, the shape, the scatter, and the cosmic evolution
in the observed relationship between specific angular momentum and
the stellar mass in early-type (ETGs) and late-type galaxies (LTGs).
Specifically, we exploit the observed star-formation efficiency and chemical
abundance to infer the fraction f_\rm inf of baryons that infall toward the
central regions of galaxies where star formation can occur. We find f_\rm
inf\approx 1 for LTGs and for ETGs with an uncertainty of about
dex, consistent with a biased collapse. By comparing with the locally
observed vs. relations for LTGs and ETGs we estimate the
fraction of the initial specific angular momentum associated to the
infalling gas that is retained in the stellar component: for LTGs we find
, in line with the classic disc formation
picture; for ETGs we infer , that can be
traced back to a evolution via dry mergers. We also show that the
observed scatter in the vs. relation for both galaxy
types is mainly contributed by the intrinsic dispersion in the spin parameters
of the host dark matter halo. The biased collapse plus mergers scenario implies
that the specific angular momentum in the stellar components of ETG progenitors
at is already close to the local values, in pleasing agreement with
observations. All in all, we argue such a behavior to be imprinted by nature
and not nurtured substantially by the environment
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