8,788 research outputs found

    Who killed Gladys Werlich? A Medical-Legal Moral Dilemma

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    A catch-free stock assessment model with application to goliath grouper (Epinephelus itajara) off southern Florida

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    Many modern stock assessment methods provide the machinery for determining the status of a stock in relation to certain reference points and for estimating how quickly a stock can be rebuilt. However, these methods typically require catch data, which are not always available. We introduce a model-based framework for estimating reference points, stock status, and recovery times in situations where catch data and other measures of absolute abundance are unavailable. The specif ic estimator developed is essentially an age-structured production model recast in terms relative to pre-exploitation levels. A Bayesian estimation scheme is adopted to allow the incorporation of pertinent auxiliary information such as might be obtained from meta-analyses of similar stocks or anecdotal observations. The approach is applied to the population of goliath grouper (Epinephelus itajara) off southern Florida, for which there are three indices of relative abundance but no reliable catch data. The results confirm anecdotal accounts of a marked decline in abundance during the 1980s followed by a substantial increase after the harvest of goliath grouper was banned in 1990. The ban appears to have reduced fishing pressure to between 10% and 50% of the levels observed during the 1980s. Nevertheless, the predicted fishing mortality rate under the ban appears to remain substantial, perhaps owing to illegal harvest and depth-related release mortality. As a result, the base model predicts that there is less than a 40% chance that the spawning biomass will recover to a level that would produce a 50% spawning potential ratio

    Shocks, groups, and networks in Bukidnon, Philippines:

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    "This study examines the role of groups and networks in helping poor Filipinos manage their exposure to risks and cope with shocks. It brings together two strands of literature that examine how social capital affects economic variables and investigate the processes by which social capital formation, participation in networks and groups, and trusting behavior comes about. Using a longitudinal study from a province in Northern Mindanao, Philippines, the authors find that households belong to a number of formal and informal groups and networks, but participation differs according to household characteristics. Households belonging to the lower asset quartiles belong to fewer groups, and households with more human and physical capital have larger social networks. Furthermore, wealthier households are more likely to take part in productive groups while membership in civic and religious groups is not limited by economic status. Migrant networks play an important risk-smoothing role via remittances sent by migrant daughters." authors' abstractSocial networks, Groups, Social capital, Poverty, Participation, Gender,

    The influence of serial carbohydrate mouth rinsing on power output during a cycle sprint

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    The objective of the study was to investigate the influence of serial administration of a carbohydrate (CHO) mouth rinse on performance, metabolic and perceptual responses during a cycle sprint. Twelve physically active males (mean (± SD) age: 23.1 (3.0) years, height: 1.83 (0.07) m, body mass (BM): 86.3 (13.5) kg) completed the following mouth rinse trials in a randomized, counterbalanced, double-blind fashion; 1. 8 x 5 second rinses with a 25 ml CHO (6% w/v maltodextrin) solution, 2. 8 x 5 second rinses with a 25 ml placebo (PLA) solution. Following mouth rinse administration, participants completed a 30 second sprint on a cycle ergometer against a 0.075 g·kg-1 BM resistance. Eight participants achieved a greater peak power output (PPO) in the CHO trial, resulting in a significantly greater PPO compared with PLA (13.51 ± 2.19 vs. 13.20 ± 2. 14 W·kg-1, p < 0.05). Magnitude inference analysis reported a likely benefit (81% likelihood) of the CHO mouth rinse on PPO. In the CHO trial, mean power output (MPO) showed a trend for being greater in the first 5 seconds of the sprint and lower for the remainder of the sprint compared with the PLA trial (p > 0.05). No significant between-trials difference was reported for fatigue index, perceived exertion, arousal and nausea levels, or blood lactate and glucose concentrations. Serial administration of a CHO mouth rinse may significantly improve PPO during a cycle sprint. This improvement appears confined to the first 5 seconds of the sprint, and may come at a greater relative cost for the remainder of the sprint

    A study of chromosome numbers and spermatogenesis of Peromyscus leucopus noveboracensis

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    Thesis (M.A.)--University of Kansas, Zoology, 1929

    Perception Of Visual Speed While Moving

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    During self-motion, the world normally appears stationary. In part, this may be due to reductions in visual motion signals during self-motion. In 8 experiments, the authors used magnitude estimation to characterize changes in visual speed perception as a result of biomechanical self-motion alone (treadmill walking), physical translation alone (passive transport), and both biomechanical self-motion and physical translation together (walking). Their results show that each factor alone produces subtractive reductions in visual speed but that subtraction is greatest with both factors together, approximating the sum of the 2 separately. The similarity of results for biomechanical and passive self-motion support H. B. Barlow\u27s (1990) inhibition theory of sensory correlation as a mechanism for implementing H. Wallach\u27s (1987) compensation for self-motion. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2013 APA, all rights reserved)(journal abstract

    The color fastness of wool and of rayon gabardine to light, heat, and dry cleaning

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    Typescript, etc.Digitized by Kansas State University Librarie

    An officer and a lady

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    Recipe for citizenship: Professionalization and power in World War I dietetics

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    This dissertation is an analysis of the professionalization tactics of white, native-born, Protestant, middle-class women who served with the U.S. armed forces as dietitians during World War I. Through the overlapping rubrics of maternalism, citizenship, and professionalism, I examine the ways in which dominant race, class, and gender ideologies inflected their quest for professionalization. I specifically examine the way hospital dietitians infused their expertise with rhetoric of race betterment and national security to acquire distinct status and authority in relation to other female medical/health practitioners. In this study, I locate the ideological origins of Public Law 36, 80 th Congress, establishing the U.S. Women\u27s Medical Specialist Corps, within the cultural sensibilities of American antebellum evangelical health reform movements. Public Law 80-36 (April 16, 1947) authorized Regular Army commissions for dietitians, physical therapists, and occupational therapists. I contend that dietetics, a central force in the rise of the home economics movement, also served as an important portal for women\u27s access to higher education in science and medicine. Finally, I hold that military service was critical to the professionalization of women\u27s labor and claims to citizenship in early twentieth century America. In other words, military service allowed native-born, Protestant, middle- and upper-class, white American women to mobilize, network, and expand the scope of their work, as well as leaven their access to professional resources and political power

    Regulation of Granuloma Formation in Mouse Models of Tuberculosis

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    Tuberculosis is a major cause of mortality worldwide. Elucidation of the host resistance against Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection and the pathogenesis of tuberculosis is a priority. The host response to M. tuberculosis in the lungs includes the formation of granulomas, focal accumulations of mononuclear cells coming together to fight infection. The signals required for the migration of cells into the lungs and those required for the formation of granulomas have not been well defined. In this thesis, we will describe the advances we have made in understanding chemokine expression and cell migration to the lungs in response to M. tuberculosis. We have determined that Tumor Necrosis Factor (TNF) partially controls cell migration by modulating chemokine expression by macrophages in vitro and CD11b+ cells in vivo. In addition, we have taken the subset of chemokines that are affected by TNF and addressed their functions in vivo through knockout and neutralization models. Specifically, we have used an aerosol model of tuberculosis in the mouse to address the roles of CXCL9 (MIG), CXCL10 (IP-10), chemokine receptor-5 (CCR5) and chemokine receptor-2 (CCR2). In our studies, there was no apparent, strong phenotype in mice without functional CXCL9 or CXCL10. CCR5-/- mice had altered pathology and increased inflammation in response to M. tuberculosis infection, but they were able to control the infection. The CCR5 -/- mice may be hyper-responsive due to higher antigen load in the lymph nodes in conjunction with increased dendritic cell migration and more primed lymphocytes. CCR2-/- mice had a clear defect in macrophage migration and a delay in T cell migration, and the course of the disease was governed by the initial dose. Specifically, when a low dose aerosol infection route was used, CCR2-/- mice were able to control infection with the reduced number of cells migrating into the lungs; however with a higher dose, the mice succumbed to infection. Our findings are relevant to understanding the immune response and granuloma formation during aerosol M. tuberculosis infection, and will contribute to an appreciation of the potential effects of anti-inflammatory or anti-chemokine therapies on infections
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