890 research outputs found

    Pedestrian information signs : a case study in accessible information for signalised crossings in Cape Town, South Africa

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    The primary focus of information design products is the communication of a specific message to the end user in a way that is clear, accessible and easy to understand. Appropriate design has the advantage of preventing poor user experiences and lost opportunities. A well designed information sign will also meet the needs of the general environment or population, rather than just the needs of a special-interest group. The true spirit of ?universal design? is recognised when a good design transcends the needs of a specific group and instead becomes a design which meets the requirements of all user groups. World class information signs will therefore allow for the convenience and safety of all users. Increased awareness of pedestrian and public transport user needs are translated into the implementation of advanced technological designs, instruments and facilities in urban environments. Audible, tactile pedestrian push button instruments are an example of this type of technological advances found at signalised intersections in recent years. With the implementation of such new or different technology, additional user information may minimise the safety risk created when signalised pedestrian crossings are misinterpreted or used inappropriately by road users. International precedents in this field indicate the benefit of providing additional user information in the form of pedestrian safety signs to compliment new or updated pedestrian bush button instruments. This papers describes a project commissioned by the City of Cape Town for the conceptualisation, design development and production of an accessible pedestrian information sign to be implemented at signalised pedestrian crossings in Cape Town. The objective of this project is to increase pedestrian and road user awareness and understanding of the way in which the pedestrian bush button instrument should be used.Paper presented at the 35th Annual Southern African Transport Conference 4-7 July 2016 "Transport ? a catalyst for socio-economic growth and development opportunities to improve quality of life", CSIR International Convention Centre, Pretoria, South Africa.The Minister of Transport, South AfricaTransportation Research Board of the US

    Ornithine Transcarbamylase Deficiency: If at First You Do Not Diagnose, Try and Try Again

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    Ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) deficiency is well known for its diagnosis in the neonatal period. Presentation often occurs after protein feeding and manifests as poor oral intake, vomiting, lethargy progressing to seizure, respiratory difficulty, and eventually coma. Presentation at adulthood is rare (and likely underdiagnosed); however, OTC deficiency can be life-threatening and requires prompt investigation and treatment. Reports and guidelines are scarce due to its rarity. Here, we present a 59-year-old woman with a past history of irritable bowel syndrome who underwent a reparative operation for rectal prolapse and enterocele. Her postoperative course was complicated by a bowel perforation (which was repaired), prolonged mechanical ventilation, tracheostomy, critical illness myopathy, protein-caloric malnutrition, and altered mental status. After standard therapy for delirium failed, further investigation showed hyperammonemia and increased urine orotic acid, ultimately leading to the diagnosis of OTC deficiency. This case highlights the importance of considering OTC deficiency in hospitalized adults, especially during the diagnostic evaluation for altered mental status

    Ultraconformable, Self‐Adhering Surface Electrodes for Measuring Electrical Signals in Plants

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    The electrical signals in plant's physiological processes are of great interest in biology, biohybrid robotics, and sensors for interfacing the living organisms with an electronic readout and control. This paper reports on the application of conformable, self-adhering surface electrodes for the measurement and bidirectional stimulation of electrical signals in plants. The inkjet-printed poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) polystyrene sulfonate based electrodes are <3 µm thick, light-weight, soft and flexible, and can be easily and non-invasively transferred onto plant's outer organs for surface potential recordings due to their realization on tattoo transfer paper. The devices prove to be extremely versatile for analyzing electrical signals in Dionaea muscipula, Arabidopsis thaliana, and Codariocalyx motorius and for stimulating mechanical responses in D. muscipula. A benefit over traditional electrodes is the van der Waals self-adherence of the thin electrodes, their intrinsic flexibility and adaptation also on small leaves while providing excellent readout. The same electrode allows long-term multicycle measurements over at least 10 days and, moreover, straightforward recordings on fast-moving organs such as snapping fly traps and endogenously oscillating leaflets. The results confirm that self-adhering soft organic electronics are particularly suitable for plant electrical signal analysis when easy-application, self-adaptation, and long-term performance are required in plant science, biohybrid robotics, and biohybrid sensors

    Learning from Behavioural Changes That Fail

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    Behavioural change techniques are currently used by many global organisations and public institutions. The amassing evidence base is used to answer practical and scientific questions regarding what cognitive, affective, and environment factors lead to successful behavioural change in the laboratory and in the field. In this piece we show that there is also value to examining interventions that inadvertently fail in achieving their desired behavioural change (e.g., backfiring effects). We identify the underlying causal pathways that characterise different types of failure, and show how a taxonomy of causal interactions that result in failure exposes new insights that can advance theory and practice

    A blood based 12-miRNA signature of Alzheimer disease patients

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    Background: Alzheimer disease (AD) is the most common form of dementia but the identification of reliable, early and non-invasive biomarkers remains a major challenge. We present a novel miRNA-based signature for detecting AD from blood samples. Results: We apply next-generation sequencing to miRNAs from blood samples of 48 AD patients and 22 unaffected controls, yielding a total of 140 unique mature miRNAs with significantly changed expression levels. Of these, 82 have higher and 58 have lower abundance in AD patient samples. We selected a panel of 12 miRNAs for an RT-qPCR analysis on a larger cohort of 202 samples, comprising not only AD patients and healthy controls but also patients with other CNS illnesses. These included mild cognitive impairment, which is assumed to represent a transitional period before the development of AD, as well as multiple sclerosis, Parkinson disease, major depression, bipolar disorder and schizophrenia. miRNA target enrichment analysis of the selected 12 miRNAs indicates an involvement of miRNAs in nervous system development, neuron projection, neuron projection development and neuron projection morphogenesis. Using this 12-miRNA signature, we differentiate between AD and controls with an accuracy of 93%, a specificity of 95% and a sensitivity of 92%. The differentiation of AD from other neurological diseases is possible with accuracies between 74% and 78%. The differentiation of the other CNS disorders from controls yields even higher accuracies. Conclusions: The data indicate that deregulated miRNAs in blood might be used as biomarkers in the diagnosis of AD or other neurological diseases

    Descripción de tres protocolos anestésicos fijos en cerdas sometidas a trasferencia embrionaria quirúrgica

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    La utilización del cerdo como modelo en investigación biomédica ha dado lugar a múltiples descripciones de protocolos anestésicos. El presente trabajo tiene por objeto socializar las dosis y drogas utilizadas en tres protocolos. Las tres cerdas anestesiadas, una por protocolo, son parte de la puesta a punto de la técnica de transferencia embrionaria quirúrgica. Protocolo 1: Medicación preanestésica: ketamina 15 mg/kg vía intramuscular, xilacina 3 mg/kg intramuscular. Inducción: midazolam 0,15 mg/kg vía EV. Mantenimiento: xilacina 0,6 mg/kg EV, y ketamina 3 mg/kg EV + dos refuerzos de ketamina 2 mg/kg EV. Protocolo 2: Medicación preanestésica: ketamina 15 mg/kg vía intramuscular, xilacina 3 mg/kg intramuscular. Inducción: midazolam 0,14 mg/kg vía endovenosa. Mantenimiento por vía endovenosa: Ketamina 1,5 mg/kg, Xilacina 0,6 mg/kg, Ketamina 2 mg/kg. Protocolo 3: Medicación preanestésica: ketamina 15 mg/kg vía intramuscular, xilacina 3 mg/kg intramuscular. Inducción: ketamina 5 mg/kg vía endovenosa. Mantenimiento por vía endovenosa: Xilacina 0,6 mg/kg, Ketamina 3 mg/kg, Ketamina 2 mg/kg, Ketamina 2 mg/kg. El planteo farmacológico del protocolo 3 requirió mayor frecuencia y dosis de drogas utilizada

    Search for right-handed W bosons in top quark decay

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    We present a measurement of the fraction f+ of right-handed W bosons produced in top quark decays, based on a candidate sample of ttˉt\bar{t} events in the lepton+jets decay mode. These data correspond to an integrated luminosity of 230pb^-1, collected by the DO detector at the Fermilab Tevatron ppˉp\bar{p} Collider at sqrt(s)=1.96 TeV. We use a constrained fit to reconstruct the kinematics of the ttˉt\bar{t} and decay products, which allows for the measurement of the leptonic decay angle θ\theta^* for each event. By comparing the cosθ\cos\theta^* distribution from the data with those for the expected background and signal for various values of f+, we find f+=0.00+-0.13(stat)+-0.07(syst). This measurement is consistent with the standard model prediction of f+=3.6x10^-4.Comment: Submitted to Physical Review D Rapid Communications 7 pages, 3 figure

    Measurement of Semileptonic Branching Fractions of B Mesons to Narrow D** States

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    Using the data accumulated in 2002-2004 with the DO detector in proton-antiproton collisions at the Fermilab Tevatron collider with centre-of-mass energy 1.96 TeV, the branching fractions of the decays B -> \bar{D}_1^0(2420) \mu^+ \nu_\mu X and B -> \bar{D}_2^{*0}(2460) \mu^+ \nu_\mu X and their ratio have been measured: BR(\bar{b}->B) \cdot BR(B-> \bar{D}_1^0 \mu^+ \nu_\mu X) \cdot BR(\bar{D}_1^0 -> D*- pi+) = (0.087+-0.007(stat)+-0.014(syst))%; BR(\bar{b}->B)\cdot BR(B->D_2^{*0} \mu^+ \nu_\mu X) \cdot BR(\bar{D}_2^{*0} -> D*- \pi^+) = (0.035+-0.007(stat)+-0.008(syst))%; and (BR(B -> \bar{D}_2^{*0} \mu^+ \nu_\mu X)BR(D2*0->D*- pi+)) / (BR(B -> \bar{D}_1^{0} \mu^+ \nu_\mu X)\cdot BR(\bar{D}_1^{0}->D*- \pi^+)) = 0.39+-0.09(stat)+-0.12(syst), where the charge conjugated states are always implied.Comment: submitted to Phys. Rev. Let

    Marathon-Induced Cardiac Strain as Model for the Evaluation of Diagnostic microRNAs for Acute Myocardial Infarction

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    Background: The current gold standard biomarker for myocardial infarction (MI), cardiac troponin (cTn), is recognized for its high sensitivity and organ specificity; however, it lacks diagnostic specificity. Numerous studies have introduced circulating microRNAs as potential biomarkers for MI. This study investigates the MI-specificity of these serum microRNAs by investigating myocardial stress/injury due to strenuous exercise. Methods: MicroRNA biomarkers were retrieved by comprehensive review of 109 publications on diagnostic serum microRNAs for MI. MicroRNA levels were first measured by next-generation sequencing in pooled sera from runners (n = 46) before and after conducting a full competitive marathon. Hereafter, reverse transcription quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) of 10 selected serum microRNAs in 210 marathon runners was performed (>10,000 qPCR measurements). Results: 27 potential diagnostic microRNA for MI were retrieved by the literature review. Eight microRNAs (miR-1-3p, miR-21-5p, miR-26a-5p, miR-122-5p, miR-133a-3p, miR-142-5p, miR-191-5p, miR-486-3p) showed positive correlations with cTnT in marathon runners, whereas two miRNAs (miR-134-5p and miR-499a-5p) showed no correlations. Upregulation of miR-133a-3p (p = 0.03) and miR-142-5p (p = 0.01) went along with elevated cTnT after marathon. Conclusion: Some MI-associated microRNAs (e.g., miR-133a-3p and miR-142-5p) have similar kinetics under strenuous exercise and MI as compared to cTnT, which suggests that their diagnostic specificity could be limited. In contrast, several MI-associated microRNAs (miR-26a-5p, miR-134-5p, miR-191-5p) showed different release behavior; hence, combining cTnT with these microRNAs within a multi-marker strategy may add diagnostic accuracy in MI
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