890 research outputs found
Is preview benefit from word n + 2 a common effect in reading Chinese? Evidence from eye movements
Although most studies of reading English (and other alphabetic languages) have indicated that readers do not obtain preview benefit from word n + 2, Yang, Wang, Xu, and Rayner (2009) reported evidence that Chinese readers obtain preview benefit from word n + 2. However, this effect may not be common in Chinese because the character prior to the target word in Yang et al.’s experiment was always a very high frequency function word. In the current experiment, we utilized a relatively low frequency word n + 1 to examine whether an n + 2 preview benefit effect would still exist and failed to find any preview benefit from word n + 2. These results are consistent with a recent study which indicated that foveal load modulates the perceptual span during Chinese reading (Yan, Kliegl, Shu, Pan, & Zhou, 2010). Implications of these results for models of eye movement control are discussed
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A health impact assessment of the UK soft drinks industry levy: a comparative risk assessment modelling study
Background
In March, 2016, the UK government proposed a tiered levy on sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs; high, moderate, and no tax for drinks with >8g, 5g to 8g, and <5g sugar per 100ml). We estimate the effect of possible industry responses to the levy on obesity, diabetes, and dental caries.
Methods
We modelled three possible industry responses: (1) reformulation to reduce sugar concentration, (2) increasing product price, and (3) changing the market share of high-, mid-, and low-sugar drinks. For each response, we defined a better and worse case health scenario. We developed a comparative risk assessment model to estimate the UK health impact of each scenario.
Findings
The best modelled scenario for health is SSB reformulation, resulting in 144,000 (95% uncertainty interval: 5,100 to 306,700) fewer adults and children with obesity in the UK, 19,000 (6,900 to 32,700) fewer incident cases of diabetes per year, and 269,000 (82,200 to 470,900) fewer decayed, missing, or filled teeth annually. Increasing the price of SSBs and changes to market share to increase the proportion of low-sugar drinks sold would also result in population health benefits, but to a lesser extent. The greatest benefit for obesity and oral health would be among individuals under 18 years, with people over 65 years experiencing the largest absolute decreases in diabetes incidence.
Interpretation
The health impact of the soft drink levy is dependent on its implementation by industry. There is uncertainty as to how industry will react and in the estimation of health outcomes. Health gains could be maximised by significant product reformulation with additional benefits possible if the levy is passed onto purchasers through raising the price of high- and mid-sugar drinks, and through activities to increase the market share of low-sugar products.RT and AK have previously done work on sugar-sweetened beverage taxes funded by the Union of European Soft Drinks Associations. MR is chair of Sustain and the Children's Food Campaign, which have campaigned for sugar drink taxes in the UK. MR is funded by the British Heart Foundation, grant number 006/PSS/CORE/2016/OXFORD. ADMB and OTM are members of the Faculty of Public Health, which has a position statement supporting sugary drink taxes. ADMB is funded by the Wellcome Trust, grant number 102730/Z/13/Z. OTM is a member of the UK Health Forum, which has also supported a UK sugar drinks tax. OTM is supported by a Wellcome Trust Clinical Doctoral Fellowship. SAJ was the independent Chair of the Department of Health Public Health Responsibility Deal Food Network from 2010 to 2015. SAJ is funded by the National Institute for Health Research Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care Oxford. The views expressed are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the National Health Service, National Institute for Health Research, or the Department of Health. PS is funded by the British Heart Foundation, grant number FS/15/34/31656. TB is funded the Health Research Council of New Zealand (16/443). AE declares no competing interests
Individual differences in newborn visual attention associate with temperament and behavioral difficulties in later childhood
Recently it was shown that individual differences in attention style in infants are
associated with childhood effortful control, surgency, and hyperactivity-inattention. Here we
investigated whether effortful control, surgency and behavioral problems in childhood can be
predicted even earlier, from individual differences in newborns’ average duration of gaze to
stimuli. Eighty newborns participated in visual preference and habituation studies. Parents
completed questionnaires at follow up (mean age = 7.5 years, SD = 1.0 year). Newborns’
average dwell time was negatively associated with childhood surgency (β = -.25, R2 = .04, p =
.02) and total behavioral difficulties (β = -.28, R2 = .05, p = .04) but not with effortful control (β
= .03, R2 = .001, p = .76). Individual differences in newborn visual attention significantly
associated with individual variation in childhood surgency and behavioral problems, showing
that some of the factors responsible for this variation are present at birth
SDRF2GRAPH – a visualization tool of a spreadsheet-based description of experimental processes
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>As larger datasets are produced with the development of genome-scale experimental techniques, it has become essential to explicitly describe the meta-data (information describing the data) generated by an experiment. The experimental process is a part of the meta-data required to interpret the produced data, and SDRF (Sample and Data Relationship Format) supports its description in a spreadsheet or tab-delimited file. This format was primarily developed to describe microarray studies in MAGE-tab, and it is being applied in a broader context in ISA-tab. While the format provides an explicit framework to describe experiments, increase of experimental steps makes it less obvious to understand the content of the SDRF files.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Here, we describe a new tool, SDRF2GRAPH, for displaying experimental steps described in an SDRF file as an investigation design graph, a directed acyclic graph representing experimental steps. A spreadsheet, in Microsoft Excel for example, which is used to edit and inspect the descriptions, can be directly input via a web-based interface without converting to tab-delimited text. This makes it much easier to organize large contents of SDRF described in multiple spreadsheets.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>SDRF2GRAPH is applicable for a wide range of SDRF files for not only microarray-based analysis but also other genome-scale technologies, such as next generation sequencers. Visualization of the Investigation Design Graph (IDG) structure leads to an easy understanding of the experimental process described in the SDRF files even if the experiment is complicated, and such visualization also encourages the creation of SDRF files by providing prompt visual feedback.</p
Expert opinion on detecting and treating depression in palliative care: A Delphi study
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>There is a dearth of data regarding the optimal method of detecting and treating depression in palliative care. This study applied the Delphi method to evaluate expert opinion on choice of screening tool, choice of antidepressant and choice of psychological therapy. The aim was to inform the development of best practice recommendations for the European Palliative Care Research Collaborative clinical practice guideline on managing depression in palliative care.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>18 members of an international, multi-professional expert group completed a structured questionnaire in two rounds, rating their agreement with proposed items on a scale from 0-10 and annotating with additional comments. The median and range were calculated to give a statistical average of the experts' ratings.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>There was contention regarding the benefits of screening, with 'routine informal asking' (median 8.5 (0-10)) rated more highly than formal screening tools such as the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (median 7.0 (1-10). Mirtazapine (median 9 (7-10) and citalopram (median 9 (5-10) were the considered the best choice of antidepressant and cognitive behavioural therapy (median 9.0 (3-10) the best choice of psychological therapy.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The range of expert ratings was broad, indicating discordance in the views of experts. Direct comparative data from randomised controlled trials are needed to strengthen the evidence-base and achieve clarity on how best to detect and treat depression in this setting.</p
Asymptomatic Plasmodium vivax infections induce robust IgG responses to multiple blood-stage proteins in a low-transmission region of western Thailand
BACKGROUND: Thailand is aiming to eliminate malaria by the year
2024. Plasmodium vivax has now become the dominant species
causing malaria within the country, and a high proportion of
infections are asymptomatic. A better understanding of antibody
dynamics to P. vivax antigens in a low-transmission setting,
where acquired immune responses are poorly characterized, will
be pivotal for developing new strategies for elimination, such
as improved surveillance methods and vaccines. The objective of
this study was to characterize total IgG antibody levels to 11
key P. vivax proteins in a village of western Thailand. METHODS:
Plasma samples from 546 volunteers enrolled in a cross-sectional
survey conducted in 2012 in Kanchanaburi Province were utilized.
Total IgG levels to 11 different proteins known or predicted to
be involved in reticulocyte binding or invasion (ARP, GAMA, P41,
P12, PVX_081550, and five members of the PvRBP family), as well
as the leading pre-erythrocytic vaccine candidate (CSP) were
measured using a multiplexed bead-based assay. Associations
between IgG levels and infection status, age, and spatial
location were explored. RESULTS: Individuals from a
low-transmission region of western Thailand reacted to all 11 P.
vivax recombinant proteins. Significantly greater IgG levels
were observed in the presence of a current P. vivax infection,
despite all infected individuals being asymptomatic. IgG levels
were also higher in adults (18 years and older) than in
children. For most of the proteins, higher IgG levels were
observed in individuals living closer to the Myanmar border and
further away from local health services. CONCLUSIONS: Robust IgG
responses were observed to most proteins and IgG levels
correlated with surrogates of exposure, suggesting these
antigens may serve as potential biomarkers of exposure,
immunity, or both
Enhanced warming over the global subtropical western boundary currents
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2011. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Nature Publishing Group for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Nature Climate Change 2 (2012): 161-166, doi:10.1038/nclimate1353.Subtropical western boundary currents are warm, fast flowing currents that
form on the western side of ocean basins. They carry warm tropical water to the
mid-latitudes and vent large amounts of heat and moisture to the atmosphere
along their paths, affecting atmospheric jet streams and mid-latitude storms, as
well as ocean carbon uptake. The possibility that these highly energetic and
nonlinear currents might change under greenhouse gas forcing has raised
significant concerns, but detecting such changes is challenging owing to limited
observations. Here, using reconstructed sea surface temperature datasets and
newly developed century-long ocean and atmosphere reanalysis products, we
find that the post-1900 surface ocean warming rate over the path of these
currents is two to three times faster than the global mean surface ocean warming
rate. The accelerated warming is associated with a synchronous poleward shift
and/or intensification of global subtropical western boundary currents in
conjunction with a systematic change in winds over both hemispheres. This enhanced warming may reduce ocean's ability to absorb anthropogenic carbon
dioxide over these regions. However, uncertainties in detection and attribution of
these warming trends remain, pointing to a need for a long-term monitoring
network of the global western boundary currents and their extensions.This work is supported by China National Key Basic Research Project
(2007CB411800) and National Natural Science Foundation Projects (40788002,
40921004). WC is supported by the Australian Climate Change Science program and
the Southeast Australia Climate Initiative. HN is supported in part by the Japanese
Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology through Grant-in-Aid
for Scientific Research on Innovative Areas #2205 and by the Japanese Ministry of
Environment through Global Environment Research Fund (S-5). MJM is supported by
NOAA’s Climate Program Office.2012-07-2
PfRH5: A Novel Reticulocyte-Binding Family Homolog of Plasmodium falciparum that Binds to the Erythrocyte, and an Investigation of Its Receptor
Multiple interactions between parasite ligands and their receptors on the human erythrocyte are a condition of successful Plasmodium falciparum invasion. The identification and characterization of these receptors presents a major challenge in the effort to understand the mechanism of invasion and to develop the means to prevent it. We describe here a novel member of the reticulocyte-binding family homolog (RH) of P. falciparum, PfRH5, and show that it binds to a previously unrecognized receptor on the RBC. PfRH5 is expressed as a 63 kDa protein and localized at the apical end of the invasive merozoite. We have expressed a fragment of PfRH5 which contains the RBC-binding domain and exhibits the same pattern of interactions with the RBC as the parent protein. Attachment is inhibited if the target cells are exposed to high concentrations of trypsin, but not to lower concentrations or to chymotrypsin or neuraminidase. We have determined the affinity, copy number and apparent molecular mass of the receptor protein. Thus, we have shown that PfRH5 is a novel erythrocyte-binding ligand and the identification and partial characterization of the new RBC receptor may indicate the existence of an unrecognized P. falciparum invasion pathwa
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