2,918 research outputs found
Empathic and Self-Regulatory Processes Governing Doping Behavior
Evidence associating doping behavior with Moral Disengagement (MD) has accumulated over recent years. However, to date,
research examining links between MD and doping has not considered key theoretically-grounded influences and outcomes of MD. As
such, there is a need for quantitative research in relevant populations that purposefully examines the explanatory pathways
through which MD is thought to operate. Towards this end, the current study examined a conceptually-grounded model of doping
behavior that incorporated empathy, doping self-regulatory efficacy (SRE), doping MD, anticipated guilt and self-reported
doping/doping susceptibility. Participants were specifically recruited to represent four key physical-activity contexts and consisted
of team- (n = 195) and individual- (n = 169) sport athletes and hardcore- (n = 125) and corporate- (n = 121) gym exercisers
representing both genders (nmale = 371; nfemale = 239); self-reported lifetime prevalence of doping across the sample was 13.6%.
Each participant completed questionnaires assessing the aforementioned variables. Structural equation modelling indicated strong
support for all study hypotheses. Specifically, we established: (a) empathy and doping SRE negatively predicted reported doping; (b)
the predictive effects of empathy and doping SRE on reported doping were mediated by doping MD and anticipated guilt; (c) doping
MD positively predicted reported doping; (d) the predictive effects of doping MD on reported doping were partially mediated by
anticipated guilt. Substituting self-reported doping for doping susceptibility, multisample analyses then demonstrated these
predictive effects were largely invariant between males and females and across the four physical-activity contexts represented.
These findings extend current knowledge on a number of levels, and in doing so aid our understanding of key psychosocial
processes that may govern doping behavior across key physical-activity contexts
The Incidence of Binocular Visual Impairment and Blindness in Children with Bilateral Retinoblastoma
Purpose: The study aimed to assess the incidence of and risk
factors leading to visual impairment and legal blindness in
children with retinoblastoma. Procedures: This is a singlecenter, retrospective case series of all patients with bilateral
retinoblastoma presenting from 2010 to 2014. Results: A total of 44 patients were included in the study. Visual impairment was present in 14 (38%) children, legal blindness was
present in 7 (19%) children. Bilateral macular tumors (BMT)
were associated with visual impairment (12 of 18 patients
with BMT, 2 of 19 patients without BMT, p = 0.0006) and legal
blindness (7 of 18 patients with BMT, 0 of 19 patients without
BMT, p = 0.003).The International Intraocular Retinoblastoma Classification (IIRC) of the better eye also predicted visual impairment (16% in IIRC Group A–C, 75% in IIRC Group
D, E, p = 0.004) and blindness (3% eye in IIRC Group A–C, 50%
in Group D, E, p = 0.005). Various non-Snellen visual acuity
measures were able to predict visual impairment in pre-verbal children, providing them with early assistance. Conclusions: The rates of visual impairment and blindness reported
in this paper can be used to counsel families regarding the
risk of binocular visual impairment. Early detection and support for visually impaired infants are essential as d
BSE infectivity survives burial for five years with only limited spread
© 2019, The Author(s). The carcasses of animals infected with bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), scrapie or chronic wasting disease (CWD) that remain in the environment (exposed or buried) may continue to act as reservoirs of infectivity. We conducted two experiments under near-field conditions to investigate the survival and dissemination of BSE infectivity after burial in a clay or sandy soil. BSE infectivity was either contained within a bovine skull or buried as an uncontained bolus of BSE-infected brain. Throughout the five-year period of the experiment, BSE infectivity was recovered in similar amounts from heads exhumed annually from both types of soil. Very low levels of infectivity were detected in the soil immediately surrounding the heads, but not in samples remote from them. Similarly, there was no evidence of significant lateral movement of infectivity from the buried bolus over 4 years although there was a little vertical movement in both directions. However, bioassay analysis of limited numbers of samples of rain water that had drained through the bolus clay lysimeter indicated that infectivity was present in filtrates. sPMCA analysis also detected low levels of PrP Sc in the filtrates up to 25 months following burial, raising the concern that leakage of infectivity into ground water could occur. We conclude that transmissible spongiform encephalopathy infectivity is likely to survive burial for long periods of time, but not to migrate far from the site of burial unless a vector or rain water drainage transports it. Risk assessments of contaminated sites should take these findings into account
"We also deserve help during the pandemic": The effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on foreign domestic workers in Hong Kong.
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic poses particular challenges for migrant workers around the world. This study explores the unique experiences of foreign domestic workers (FDWs) in Hong Kong, and how COVID-19 impacted their health and economic wellbeing. Interviews with FDWs (n = 15) and key informants (n = 3) were conducted between May and August 2020. FDWs reported a dual-country experience of the pandemic, where they expressed concerns about local transmission risks as well as worries about their family members in their home country. Changes to their current work situation included how their employers treated them, as well as their employment status. FDWs also cited blind spots in the Hong Kong policy response that also affected their experience of the pandemic, including a lack of support from the Hong Kong government. Additional support is needed to mitigate the particularly negative effects of the pandemic on FDWs
The first millikelvin cryocooler (mKCC): Design and performance
The design and performance of the first millikelvin cryocooler (mKCC) is presented. The mKCC is based upon a tandem Adiabatic Demagnetisation Refrigerator (ADR) that uses two single ADRs operated out of phase and connected to a common cold stage to provide continuous cooling. Development of this mKCC is part of an on-going research program to ultimately achieve sub-100 mK continuous cooling and builds upon our previous research, with each single ADR in the mKCC being a fast thermal response miniature ADR using a single crystal tungsten magnetoresistive heat switch as detailed in our 2015 publication [1]. With the mKCC operating from a 3.6 K bath temperature, the goal is to achieve continuous cooling at 250 mK (sub-100 mK is not possible without additional pre-cooling). The mKCC has dimensions of 120 × 56 × 228 mm and a mass of 4.67 kg. It can operate on very fast timescales – each superconducting magnet can be ramped to 2 Tesla in 30 s and the Chromium Potassium Alum pills have a measured sub-second thermal response, resulting in each miniature ADR being recycled in minutes. Unconventionally, the mKCC uses single crystal tungsten magnetoresistive heat switches.
We present the performance of the first version of the fully automated mKCC (from a 3.6 K bath temperature), which has been determined by undertaking a range of tests analysing the cool down from 3.6 K to the operating temperature, the baseline performance, the thermal stability at the continuous stage, the reliability and repeatability in performance and the cooling power at a range of operating temperatures. The base temperature has been measured to be 750 mK and we have demonstrated that the mKCC can be operated at any temperature between 750 mK and 3 K, with the program-controlled transition between operating temperatures taking approximately 60 s. The cooling power of the mKCC (in addition to parasitic load) has been measured at a range of temperatures between 800 mK and 3 K by applying a heat load to the continuous stage via a heater; the maximum cooling power at 800 mK is 6 µW, increasing to 32 µW at 1 K and 412 µW at 3 K. In addition we conducted a six-week continuous test during which each ADR undertook 5,498 5.5 min cycles with no significant variation in performance detected. To conclude, we compare the measured performance of the mKCC to the expected performance based on mathematical thermal modelling and the performance of the miniature ADR. Whilst the measured performance does not meet the expected performance in terms of base temperature or cooling power, we have identified the limiting factors and discuss them here
Sweet Syndrome due to Myelodysplastic Syndrome: Possible Therapeutic Role of Intravenous Immunoglobulin in Addition to Standard Treatment
We report an 82-year-old lady who developed sudden onset nodular and erythematous lesions and neutrophilia following an episode of urinary tract infection. Skin biopsy confirmed the diagnosis of Sweet syndrome. Response to the use of prednisolone alone was not satisfactory. The skin lesions however showed a sustained response to the regular use of intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) and prednisolone was slowly weaned off. Our case highlights the possible therapeutic role of IVIG in managing this condition
Intermittent control models of human standing: similarities and differences
Two architectures of intermittent control are compared and contrasted in the context of the single inverted pendulum model often used for describing standing in humans. The architectures are similar insofar as they use periods of open-loop control punctuated by switching events when crossing a switching surface to keep the system state trajectories close to trajectories leading to equilibrium. The architectures differ in two significant ways. Firstly, in one case, the open-loop control trajectory is generated by a system-matched hold, and in the other case, the open-loop control signal is zero. Secondly, prediction is used in one case but not the other. The former difference is examined in this paper. The zero control alternative leads to periodic oscillations associated with limit cycles; whereas the system-matched control alternative gives trajectories (including homoclinic orbits) which contain the equilibrium point and do not have oscillatory behaviour. Despite this difference in behaviour, it is further shown that behaviour can appear similar when either the system is perturbed by additive noise or the system-matched trajectory generation is perturbed. The purpose of the research is to come to a common approach for understanding the theoretical properties of the two alternatives with the twin aims of choosing which provides the best explanation of current experimental data (which may not, by itself, distinguish beween the two alternatives) and suggesting future experiments to distinguish between the two alternatives
Collective Animal Behavior from Bayesian Estimation and Probability Matching
Animals living in groups make movement decisions that depend, among other factors, on social interactions with other group members. Our present understanding of social rules in animal collectives is based on empirical fits to observations and we lack first-principles approaches that allow their derivation. Here we show that patterns of collective decisions can be derived from the basic ability of animals to make probabilistic estimations in the presence of uncertainty. We build a decision-making model with two stages: Bayesian estimation and probabilistic matching.
In the first stage, each animal makes a Bayesian estimation of which behavior is best to perform taking into account personal information about the environment and social information collected by observing the behaviors of other animals. In the probability matching stage, each animal chooses a behavior with a probability given by the Bayesian estimation that this behavior is the most appropriate one. This model derives very simple rules of interaction in animal collectives that depend only on two types of reliability parameters, one that each animal assigns to the other animals and another given by the quality of the non-social information. We test our model by obtaining theoretically a rich set of observed collective patterns of decisions in three-spined sticklebacks, Gasterosteus aculeatus, a shoaling fish species. The quantitative link shown between probabilistic estimation and collective rules of behavior allows a better contact with other fields such as foraging, mate selection, neurobiology and psychology, and gives predictions for experiments directly testing the relationship between estimation and collective behavior
Pedigree analysis of Czech Holstein calves with schistosoma reflexum
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Schistosoma reflexum (SR) is congenital syndrome briefly characterized by visceral eventration, severe dorsoflexion and ankylosis of the spine and arthrogryposis. A genetic etiology has been proposed, but conclusive evidence has not yet been provided.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Pedigree analysis was carried out in 29 cases of SR in Czech Holsteins and Holstein crosses. Genetic relationship was evaluated and inbreeding coefficients calculated. Pedigrees of 15 Czech Holsteins fathering non-SR affected calves were used for comparison.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Twenty-one cases occurred in one pedigree founded by three sires while three SR calves occurred in another pedigree with a common grandfather. The sex ratio between affected males and females was 11:6. Affected calves shared common ancestors different from those shared by the unaffected calves. The inbreeding coefficient in the SR affected calves was not increased compared to unaffected calves.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The findings are consistent with SR being inherited autosomal recessively. Further studies are however needed to confirm this and therefore a breeding trial is recommended where a suspected heterozygous sire is mated to closely related females.</p
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