6 research outputs found

    Relationships Between Diet, Exercise and Learning in the Regular Science Classroom Setting

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    The purpose of this study is to examine how diet and exercise relate to student achievement and learning in the regular classroom setting. Research questions include whether or not there is a positive correlation between the amount/type of exercise a student receives per week and learning, as well as relationships between their diet and learning in the classroom. Forty high school honors biology students were surveyed as to their dietary and exercise habits. This data was compared to their individual average test grades as a measure of learnin

    Relationships Between Diet, Exercise and Learning in the Regular Science Classroom Setting

    Get PDF
    The purpose of this study is to examine how diet and exercise relate to student achievement and learning in the regular classroom setting. Research questions include whether or not there is a positive correlation between the amount/type of exercise a student receives per week and learning, as well as relationships between their diet and learning in the classroom. Forty high school honors biology students were surveyed as to their dietary and exercise habits. This data was compared to their individual average test grades as a measure of learnin

    Single Cell Genomics Reveals Viruses Consumed by Marine Protists

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    12 pages, 4 figures, 1 table, supplementary material https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmicb.2020.524828/full#supplementary-material.-- The datasets generated for this study can be found in the OSF https://osf.io/7pm3u/, doi: 10.17605/OSF.IO/7PM3U. Protist SAG assemblies are available through NCBI Bioproject PRJNA655200The predominant model of the role of viruses in the marine trophic web is that of the “viral shunt,” where viral infection funnels a substantial fraction of the microbial primary and secondary production back to the pool of dissolved organic matter. Here, we analyzed the composition of non-eukaryotic DNA associated with individual cells of small, planktonic protists in the Gulf of Maine (GoM) and the Mediterranean Sea. We found viral DNA associated with a substantial fraction cells from the GoM (51%) and the Mediterranean Sea (35%). While Mediterranean SAGs contained a larger proportion of cells containing bacterial sequences (49%), a smaller fraction of cells contained bacterial sequences in the GoM (19%). In GoM cells, nearly identical bacteriophage and ssDNA virus sequences where found across diverse lineages of protists, suggesting many of these viruses are non-infective. The fraction of cells containing viral DNA varied among protistan lineages and reached 100% in Picozoa and Choanozoa. These two groups also contained significantly higher numbers of viral sequences than other identified taxa. We consider mechanisms that may explain the presence of viral DNA in protistan cells and conclude that protistan predation on free viral particles contributed to the observed patterns. These findings confirm prior experiments with protistan isolates and indicate that the viral shunt is complemented by a viral link in the marine microbial food web. This link may constitute a sink of viral particles in the ocean and has implications for the flow of carbon through the microbial food webThis work was supported by the NSF awards OCE-0623288, OCE-1335810, and OIA-1826734 to RS as well as by the projects INTERACTOMICS (CTM2015-69936-P, MINECO/FEDER, Spain) and MicroEcoSystems (Research Council of Norway 240904, Norway) to RLWith the funding support of the ‘Severo Ochoa Centre of Excellence’ accreditation (CEX2019-000928-S), of the Spanish Research Agency (AEI)Peer reviewe

    A Bibliography of Dissertations Related to Illinois History, 1996-2011

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