1,698 research outputs found

    A meta-analysis of the effectiveness of intelligent tutoring systems on college students' academic learning

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    © 2013 American Psychological Association.This meta-analysis synthesizes research on the effectiveness of intelligent tutoring systems (ITS) for college students. Thirty-five reports were found containing 39 studies assessing the effectiveness of 22 types of ITS in higher education settings. Most frequently studied were AutoTutor, Assessment and Learning in Knowledge Spaces, eXtended Tutor-Expert System, and Web Interface for Statistics Education. Major findings include (a) Overall, ITS had a moderate positive effect on college students' academic learning (g = .32 to g = .37); (b) ITS were less effective than human tutoring, but they outperformed all other instruction methods and learning activities, including traditional classroom instruction, reading printed text or computerized materials, computer-assisted instruction, laboratory or homework assignments, and no-treatment control; (c) ITS's effectiveness did not significantly differ by different ITS, subject domain, or the manner or degree of their involvement in instruction and learning; and (d) effectiveness in earlier studies appeared to be significantly greater than that in more recent studies. In addition, there is some evidence suggesting the importance of teachers and pedagogy in ITS-assisted learning

    Managed groundwater development for water-supply security in Sub-Saharan Africa: Investment priorities

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    In numerous countries of Sub-Saharan Africa the strategic agenda of the water-sector is undergoing substantial change because of demographic pressure, climate change and economic transformation. Two new policy questions are arising from the need to make better use of available groundwater storage to improve water-supply security:• What is the scope for promoting much increased groundwater use for irrigated agriculture, and how might the investment risks be reduced and sustainable outcomes ensured?• How can the demand to expand urban groundwater use, for both further supplementing municipal water-supply systems and for direct in situ water supply, be best channelled to maximise the benefits whilst minimising the risks?This ‘new agenda’ poses very different challenges from the long-standing requirement to provide rural water supplies of adequate coverage, reliability and quality (which, while still not yet fully addressed, is outside the scope of this paper). Balanced answers to these new questions are needed to provide a sound basis for appropriate investment policies on managed groundwater development and adequate institutional provisions for their implementation. They are discussed here from the standpoint of the GW-MATE experience in some World Bank-supported projects in eastern Africa during 2001-2010, together with a review of some developments in western Africa and insights from parts of Asia and Latin America

    V<sub>H</sub> replacement in rearranged immunoglobulin genes

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    Examples suggesting that all or part of the V&lt;sub&gt;H&lt;/sub&gt; segment of a rearranged V&lt;sub&gt;H&lt;/sub&gt;DJ&lt;sub&gt;H&lt;/sub&gt; may be replaced by all or part of another V&lt;sub&gt;H&lt;/sub&gt; have been appearing since the 1980s. Evidence has been presented of two rather different types of replacement. One of these has gained acceptance and has now been clearly demonstrated to occur. The other, proposed more recently, has not yet gained general acceptance because the same effect can be produced by polymerase chain reaction artefact. We review both types of replacement including a critical examination of evidence for the latter. The first type involves RAG proteins and recombination signal sequences (RSS) and occurs in immature B cells. The second was also thought to be brought about by RAG proteins and RSS. However, it has been reported in hypermutating cells which are not thought to express RAG proteins but in which activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID) has recently been shown to initiate homologous recombination. Re-examination of the published sequences reveals AID target sites in V&lt;sub&gt;H&lt;/sub&gt;-V&lt;sub&gt;H&lt;/sub&gt; junction regions and examples that resemble gene conversion

    FELINE ATRIAL NATRIURETIC PEPTIDE (ANP) HAS A SINGLE COPY GENE

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    O peptídeo natriurético atrial felino (PNA) é um hormônio sintetizado pelo miocárdio cardíaco atrial que, uma vez liberado na circulação, produz diurese, natriurese e vasodilatação periférica. Nós recentemente isolamos, sequenciamos e estabelemos a expressão cardíaca normal do PNA felino. No presente estudo, nós apresentamos o número de cópias gênicas do PNA em gatos. Foram extraídas amostras de DNA genômico do sangue periférico humano e felino, as quais foram purificadas e digeridas com as enzimas de restrição EcoRI, BamHI e HindIII, com posterior realização da técnica de Southern Blots. Primers para PCR, confeccionados para regiões de alta conservatividade entre espécies, foram utilizados para amplificação, clonagem e sequenciamento de um produto de 900 pares de bases, posteriormente utilizado como sonda de DNA. O gene do PNA felino possui uma única cópia gênica, a exemplo do PNA humano. Devido a sua similaridade, sondas de DNA felino puderam ser utilizadas para a hibridização de DNA genômico tanto do gato como do homem. Abstract Atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) is a hormone normally synthesized by the cardiac atrial myocardium that once released, produces diuresis, natriuresis and peripheral vasodilation. We have recently isolated, sequenced and assessed the normal cardiac expression of feline ANP. In this study, we report on the number of copies of the feline ANP gene, which could have an effect on future molecular biology studies of ANP gene expression in cat models of cardiovascular disease. Cat and human genomic DNA (gDNA) were extracted for Southern blotting from blood. The purified DNA was digested with the restriction enzymes EcoRI, BamHI and HindIII followed by agarose gel electrophoresis and blotting onto nytran membranes. A feline ANP cDNA probe of approximately 900 base pairs was used for hybridization of the membranes. The results of Southern blotting showed that both the feline and human genomes contain a single copy of the ANP gene

    Two-dimensional spatiotemporal monitoring of temperature in photothermal therapy using hybrid photoacoustic-ultrasound transmission tomography

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    Recently, we presented an add-on to a photoacoustic (PA) computed tomography imager that permits the simultaneous imaging of ultrasound (US) transmission parameters such as the speed of sound (SOS), without additional measurements or instruments. This method uses strong absorbers positioned outside the object in the path of light for producing laser-induced US to interrogate the object in a conventional PA imager. Here, we investigate the feasibility of using this approach, first with PA to pin-point the location of photothermal therapeutic agents and then with serial SOS tomograms to image and monitor the resulting local temperature changes when the agents are excited with continuous wave (CW) light. As the object we used an agar-based tissue-mimicking cylinder carrying beads embedded with different concentrations of gold nanospheres. PA and SOS tomograms were simultaneously acquired as the gold nanospheres were photothermally heated using a 532-nm CW laser. In a first approximation, using the relation between SOS of water and temperature, the SOS tomograms were converted into temperature maps. The experimental results were verified using simulations: Monte Carlo modeling of light propagation through a turbid medium and using the obtained absorbed energy densities in heat diffusion modeling for spatial temperature distributio
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