408 research outputs found

    Toward resilient humanitarian cooperation: examining the performance of horizontal cooperation among humanitarian organizations using an agent-based modeling (ABM) approach

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    This article proposes a multi-agent simulation model to examine how different operational environments and incentive mechanisms affect the collective performance of complex humanitarian response systems. Using the UN Humanitarian Response Depot (UNHRD) system as an example, a stylized model of one service provider, two member organizations and multiple humanitarian crises is developed to illustrate the changing uses of four alternative relief goods sourcing options, namely: i) own storage for own items ii) UN storage for own items iii) stock-swaps and iv) white stock uses. Under the plausible assumption that the past success of sourcing options influences member organizations' future resource allocation, the model indicates that the additional buffer stock capacity offered by horizontal cooperation induces undesirable system dependency: while it gives member organizations more flexibility to meet highly stochastic demands under uncertainty, it also encourage them to store less of their own relief goods as a result. This tendency was particularly notable under a flexible budgeting regime, highlighting the further need to understand and evaluate the details of the decision-making heuristics of individual member organizations

    Effects of dexamethasone on renal and systemic acid-base metabolism

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    Effects of dexamethasone on renal and systemic acid-base metabolism. We carried out long-term balance studies in adrenalectomized (ADX) dogs to evaluate the effects of small amounts of a glucocorticoid steroid with minimal mineralocorticoid potency (dexamethasone; DEX) on renal and systemic acid-base metabolism under conditions of constant mineralocorticoid replacement and both normal and increased systemic acid loads. We investigated the effects of low and high dosages of dexamethasone (0.2 mg/day [normal-DEX] vs. 0.8 mg/day [high-DEX]) before and during hydrochloric acid feeding (5 mmol/kg/day) in paired studies on ADX dogs (N = 7) maintained on constant mineralocorticoid replacement (deoxycorticosterone, corticosterone, aldosterone). Prior to hydrochloric acid feeding, no differences in plasma acid-base composition were observed between the two dosages despite greater endogenous acid production with the higher dosage of DEX, evidenced by greater rates of both net acid excretion (NAE) and the excretion of urinary anions other than chloride, bicarbonate, and phosphate (urine anion gap). During hydrochloric acid feeding, mean plasma bicarbonate (PHCO3) decreased from 21.2 ± 0.4 to 13.7 ± 0.5 (normal-DEX) and from 21.1 ± 0.4 to 15.8 ± 0.4 mEq/liter (high-DEX). The difference in the decrements in PHCO3 between groups was significant (P < 0.05). With continued hydrochloric acid feeding in both groups, increasing the DEX dosage from 0.2 to 0.8 mg/day in the normal-DEX group resulted in a. significant increase in NAE (ΣΔNAE, +161 mEq, P < 0.02) and in PHCO3 (+3.6 ± 0.5 mEq/liter, P < 0.01) to steady-state levels by day 10, which were values not significantly different from those in high-DEX. The DEX dose-related increase in NAE was greater than the corresponding increase in endogenous acid production estimated from the change in urine anion gap, and was due largely to an increase in ammonium excretion, which, because urine pH did not decrease, could not be attributed to increased intraluminal trapping of ammonia as a result of more acidic tubular fluid. These studies indicate that the severity of hydrochloric acid-induced metabolic acidosis in mineralocorticoid-replete ADX dogs can be mitigated by increasing the dosage of exogenous glucocorticoid and suggest that this acidosis mitigating effect is mediated in part by the increased NAE associated with the stimulation of renal ammonia production. These studies further indicate that the rate of production of fixed acids of metabolism increases with an increased dosage of exogenous glucocorticoid, but that this acidosis-producing effect is more than offset by independent stimulation of renal net acid excretion, such that metabolic acidosis is prevented (basal condition) or if present (hydrochloric acid feeding) is significantly ameliorated.Effets de la dexamĂ©thasone sur le mĂ©tabolisme acido-basique rĂ©nal et systĂ©mique. Les Ă©tudes de bilan qui sont rapportĂ©es ont Ă©tĂ© rĂ©alisĂ©es chez des chiens surrĂ©nalectomisĂ©s (ADX) pour Ă©valuer les effets de faibles quantitĂ©s d'un stĂ©roĂŻde glucocorticoĂŻde, ayant une activitĂ© minĂ©ralocorticoĂŻde faible (dexamĂ©thasone; DEX), sur le mĂ©tabolisme acido-basique rĂ©nal et systĂ©mique dans des conditions de traitement substitutif permanent de minĂ©ralocorticoĂŻdes et de charge acide soit normale soit Ă©levĂ©e. Nous avons Ă©tudiĂ© les effets de doses de dexamĂ©thasone (0,2 mg/jour; normale-DEX) ou 0,8 mg/jour (Ă©levĂ©e-DEX) avant et pendant l'administration d'acide chlorhydrique Ă  raison de 5 mmol/kg/jour dans des Ă©tudes appariĂ©es chez des chiens ADX (N = 7) recevant un traitement substitutif par les minĂ©ralocorticoĂŻdes (deoxycorticosterone acetate, corticosterone, aldosterone). Avant l'administration d'acide chlorhydrique, il n'y avait pas de diffĂ©rence dans la composition acido-basique du plasma selon les doses de DEX malgrĂ© l'augmentation de production endogĂšne d'acide sous l'effet de la dose la plus Ă©levĂ©e de DEX, augmentation traduite par une Ă©lĂ©vation de l'Ă©tat stationnaire d'excrĂ©tion nette d'acide (NAE) et de la somme des dĂ©bits d'excrĂ©tion des anions urinaires autres que le chlore, le bicarbonate et le phosphate (trou anionique urinaire). Au cours de l'administration d'acide chlorhydrique la concentration plasmatique moyenne de bicarbonate (PHCO3) a diminuĂ© de 21,2 ± 0,4 Ă  13,7 ± 0,5 (normale-DEX) et de 21,1 ± 0,4 Ă  15,8 ± 0,4 mEq/litre (Ă©levĂ©e-DEX). La diffĂ©rence des diminutions de bicarbonate Ă©tait significative (P < 0,05). Au cours de l'administration prolongĂ©e d'acide chlorhydrique aux deux groupes l'augmentation de la dose de DEX de 0,2 Ă  0,8 mg/jour dans le groupe normale-DEX a eu pour rĂ©sultat une augmentation significative de NAE (ΣΔNAE, +161 mEq, P < 0,02) et de PHCO3 (+ 3,6 ± 0,5 mEq/litre, P < 0,01), jusqu'Ă  de nouveaux Ă©tats stationnaires, le jour 10, non sigmficativement diffĂ©rents de ceux observĂ©s dans le groupe Ă©levĂ©e-DEX. L'augmentation de NAE dĂ©pendant de la dose de DEX a Ă©tĂ© plus grande que l'augmentation correspondante de la production endogĂšne d'acide estimĂ©e Ă  partir de la modification du trou anionique urinaire, elle Ă©tait principalement due Ă  une augmentation de l'excrĂ©tion d'ammonium qui, du fait que le pH de l'urine n'a pas diminuĂ©, ne peut pas ĂȘtre attribuĂ©e Ă  une augmentation de la captation intraluminale d'ammonia. Ces rĂ©sultats indiquent que la sĂ©vĂ©ritĂ© de l'acidose mĂ©tabolique dĂ©terminĂ©e par acide chlorhydrique chez les chiens ADX recevant des minĂ©ralocorticoĂŻdes peut ĂȘtre attĂ©nuĂ©e par l'augmentation de la dose de glucocorticoĂŻdes exogĂšnes et suggĂšre que cet effet d'attĂ©nuation a pour mĂ©diateur partiel l'augmentation de NAE associĂ©e Ă  la stimulation de la production rĂ©nale d'ammonia. Ces rĂ©sultats indiquent, de plus, que le dĂ©bit de production des acides fixes augmente en mĂȘme temps que la dose de glucocorticoĂŻdes exogĂšnes mais que cet effet de production d'acidose est plus que compensĂ© par la stimulation indĂ©pendante de l'excrĂ©tion rĂ©nale nette d'acide, de telle sorte que l'acidose mĂ©tabolique est empĂȘchĂ©e (conditions basales) ou significativement amĂ©liorĂ©e au cours de l'administration acide chlorhydrique

    Lack of coupling of D-2 receptors to adenylate cyclase in GH-3 cells exposed to epidermal growth factor. Possible role of a differential expression of Gi protein subtypes.

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    Exposure of GH-3 cells to epidermal growth factor for 4 consecutive days induced the expression of both D-2(415) and D-2(444) dopamine-receptor isoforms. Epidermal growth factor also promoted a remarkable increase in the content of Gi3 protein, which is responsible for receptor-induced activation of potassium channels in GH-3 cells. D-2 receptors in this model apparently activate a specific transducing pathway, leading to opening of potassium channels and inhibition of prolactin release by cAMP-independent mechanisms. This is shown by: 1) the selective D-2 agonist quinpirole, while inactive on vasoactive intestinal peptide-induced prolactin release, strongly inhibited the hormone secretion induced by neurotensin; 2) quinpirole, up to 100 microM, did not inhibit cAMP production evoked by vasoactive intestinal peptide both in intact cells and in broken cell membrane preparations; and 3) quinpirole and other D-2 agonists strongly potentiated Rb+ efflux when measured in a nominally calcium-free reaction solution containing 100 mM potassium (voltage-dependent component), but did not modify Rb+ efflux if measured in a reaction solution containing 1 mM calcium and 5 mM potassium (calcium-activated, cAMP-dependent component)

    Growth traits and carcass weights of purebred Brahman and F1 Brahman x Bos taurus bulls raised and fattened semi-intensively on improved savannah

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    To explore differences in growth traits, carcass weights and dressings percentages under improved, savannah-rearing conditions, five breed groups (purebred Brahman, PUREBREDS; F1 Angus, F1ANG; F1 Chianina, F1CHIA; F1 Romosinuano, F1ROMO; and F1 Simmental, F1SIM) of 10 contemporaneous bull calves each, were raised and fattened semi-intensively as a whole grazing lot. Data were analyzed for variance-covariance, using initial liveweight at each growth period, as a covariate. Adjusted daily gains (ADG) from birth to weaning for F1ANG, F1CHIA and F1ROMO outweighed (&gt; 77g/d; P&lt;.05) that of PUREBREDS. From weaning time up to 18m of age, F1ROMO and F1SIM outweighed PUREBREDS in ADG (&gt; 62g/d; P&lt;.05). F1 bulls were heavier than PUREBREDS at weaning and 18m, showing, espectively, differences of 20.4kg (11.5%; P=.10) and 20.6kg (9.5%; P=.0001). From 18m up to initiation of the fattening period (FATINITIATION, circa 23m of age), PUREBREDS and F1ANG surpassed in ADG (&gt; 80g/d; P&lt;.05) the remaining groups. Nevertheless, breed groups did not vary significantly (P&gt;.05) in FATINITIATION weights, fattening rates, and time of feeding. At the endpoint used herein, PUREBREDS and F1 bulls did not differ in slaughter age, carcass weight or dressing percentage (P&gt; .05). Under improved savannah feeding and management conditions, as described for this particular operation, crossbreeding allows product diversification of traditional Brahman cow-calf production systems by raising and/or fattening F1 young (&lt;28m of age) slaughter bulls

    Assessing the ecological status of Mediterranean coastal lagoons using macroinvertebrates. Comparison of the most commonly used methods

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    Benthic communities were studied twice (autumn and spring) in three Mediterranean coastal lagoons located in Greece (Logarou) and Italy (Cesine and Grado-Marano). The species composition and distribution, the community diversity, the species richness, the dominant taxa and their ecological identity, the benthic trophic and biomass size structure were investigated in these lagoons and the the results were correlated with environmental variables.The overall similarity based on species composition and abundance among lagoons was low due to differences in dominant environmental factors, whereas variations of community diversity and species richness were mainly related to the degree of marine influence, reflecting the natural structure. The benthic classification indices AMBI, M-AMBI, BENTIX, BO2A, ISD and ISS were applied to assess the ecological status of the lagoons studied. Results showed that the biotic indices AMBI, M-AMBI, BENTIX, and BO2A are not adequately efficient due to the natural dominance of tolerant and opportunistic species and the correlation of species diversity to natural stress. ISD and ISS on the other hand, based on size distribution frequencies and on size spectra sensitivity respectively, had a good discrimination power between impacted and unimpacted sites. Results indicate that alternatively to the species sensitivity, other traits of the communities as the biomass or size structure could be more robust, sensitive and effective in assessing the ecological quality in lagoons

    Dynamics of trimming the content of face representations for categorization in the brain

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    To understand visual cognition, it is imperative to determine when, how and with what information the human brain categorizes the visual input. Visual categorization consistently involves at least an early and a late stage: the occipito-temporal N170 event related potential related to stimulus encoding and the parietal P300 involved in perceptual decisions. Here we sought to understand how the brain globally transforms its representations of face categories from their early encoding to the later decision stage over the 400 ms time window encompassing the N170 and P300 brain events. We applied classification image techniques to the behavioral and electroencephalographic data of three observers who categorized seven facial expressions of emotion and report two main findings: (1) Over the 400 ms time course, processing of facial features initially spreads bilaterally across the left and right occipito-temporal regions to dynamically converge onto the centro-parietal region; (2) Concurrently, information processing gradually shifts from encoding common face features across all spatial scales (e.g. the eyes) to representing only the finer scales of the diagnostic features that are richer in useful information for behavior (e.g. the wide opened eyes in 'fear'; the detailed mouth in 'happy'). Our findings suggest that the brain refines its diagnostic representations of visual categories over the first 400 ms of processing by trimming a thorough encoding of features over the N170, to leave only the detailed information important for perceptual decisions over the P300

    Evaluando el progreso de la eficiencia con tecnología en una cadena de hoteles española

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    This paper analyzes the changes in the total factor productivity index of a Spanish hotel chain in the period from 2007 to 2010 with the purpose of identifying efficiency patterns for the chain in a period of financial crisis. The data envelopment analysis (DEA) Malmquist productivity index was used to estimate productivity change in 38 hotels of the AC chain. Results reveal AC hotels’ efficiency trends and, therefore, their competitiveness in the recession period; they also show the changes experienced in these hotels’ total productivity and its components: technological and efficiency changes. Positive efficiency changes were due to positive technical efficiency rather than technological efficiency. The recession period certainly influenced the performance of AC Hotels, which focused on organizational changes rather than investing in technology.Este artigo analisa as mudanças no fator total de produtividade de uma cadeia de hotĂ©is na Espanha, no perĂ­odo de 2007-2010, com o propĂłsito de identificar os padrĂ”es da cadeia em um perĂ­odo de crise financeira. O Ă­ndice data envelopment analysis (DEA) Malmquist de produtividade foi usado para estimar a mudança da produtividade nos 38 hotĂ©is da AC Cadeia de HotĂ©is. Os resultados revelaram as tendĂȘncias de eficiĂȘncia e competitividade da AC HotĂ©is em um perĂ­odo de recessĂŁo, bem como as mudanças vivenciadas na produtividade total e, consequentemente, em seus componentes de eficiĂȘncia e tecnolĂłgicos. O perĂ­odo de recessĂŁo influenciou, sem dĂșvida, o comportamento da AC HotĂ©is, que buscou mais mudanças organizacionais do que tecnolĂłgicas.Este artĂ­culo analiza los cambios del Ă­ndice de productividad del factor total de una cadena de hoteles españoles en el periodo de 2007 hasta 2010, con el propĂłsito de identificar patrones de eficiencia para la cadena en un periodo de crisis financiera. El Ă­ndice de productividad data envelopment analysis (DEA) Malmquist fue utilizado para estimar el cambio de productividad en 38 hoteles de la cadena AC. Los resultados revelan las tendencias de la eficiencia de los hoteles AC y, por lo tanto, su competitividad en el periodo de recisiĂłn; ellos tambiĂ©n demuestran los cambios experimentados en la productividad total de eses hoteles y sus componentes: cambios de eficiencia y tecnolĂłgicos. Cambios de eficiencia positivos se debieron mĂĄs bien a eficiencias tĂ©cnicas positivas que a eficiencias tecnolĂłgicas. El periodo de recesiĂłn ciertamente ha influenciado los Hoteles AC, que enfocaron mĂĄs en los cambios organizacionales que en invirtiendo en tecnologĂ­a

    The `Parahippocampal Place Area' Responds Selectively to High Spatial Frequencies

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    Defining the exact mechanisms by which the brain processes visual objects and scenes remains an unresolved challenge. Valuable clues to this process have emerged from the demonstration that clusters of neurons (“modules”) in inferior temporal cortex apparently respond selectively to specific categories of visual stimuli, such as places/scenes. However, the higher-order “category-selective” response could also reflect specific lower-level spatial factors. Here we tested this idea in multiple functional MRI experiments, in humans and macaque monkeys, by systematically manipulating the spatial content of geometrical shapes and natural images. These tests revealed that visual spatial discontinuities (as reflected by an increased response to high spatial frequencies) selectively activate a well-known place-selective region of visual cortex (the “parahippocampal place area”) in humans. In macaques, we demonstrate a homologous cortical area, and show that it also responds selectively to higher spatial frequencies. The parahippocampal place area may use such information for detecting object borders and scene details during spatial perception and navigation.National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (NIH Grant R01 MH6752)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (grant R01 EY017081)Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical ImagingNational Center for Research Resources (U.S.)Mind Research Institut

    Circulating Angiopoietins-1 and -2, Angiopoietin Receptor Tie-2 and Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor-A as Biomarkers of Acute Myocardial Infarction: a Prospective Nested Case-Control Study

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Angiogenesis is up-regulated in myocardial ischemia. However, limited data exist assessing the value of circulating angiogenic biomarkers in predicting future incidence of acute myocardial infarction (AMI). Our aim was to examine the association between circulating levels of markers of angiogenesis with risk of incident acute myocardial infarction (AMI) in men and women.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We performed a case-control study (nested within a large cohort of persons receiving care within Kaiser Permanente of Northern California) including 695 AMI cases and 690 controls individually matched on age, gender and race/ethnicity.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Median [inter-quartile range] serum concentrations of vascular endothelial growth factor-A (VEGF-A; 260 [252] vs. 235 [224] pg/mL; p = 0.01) and angiopoietin-2 (Ang-2; 1.18 [0.66] vs. 1.05 [0.58] ng/mL; p < 0.0001) were significantly higher in AMI cases than in controls. By contrast, endothelium-specific receptor tyrosine kinase (Tie-2; 14.2 [3.7] vs. 14.0 [3.1] ng/mL; p = 0.07) and angiopoietin-1 levels (Ang-1; 33.1 [13.6] vs. 32.5 [12.7] ng/mL; p = 0.52) did not differ significantly by case-control status. After adjustment for educational attainment, hypertension, diabetes, smoking, alcohol consumption, body mass index, LDL-C, HDL-C, triglycerides and C-reactive protein, each increment of 1 unit of Ang-2 as a Z score was associated with 1.17-fold (95 percent confidence interval, 1.02 to 1.35) increased odds of AMI, and the upper quartile of Ang-2, relative to the lowest quartile, was associated with 1.63-fold (95 percent confidence interval, 1.09 to 2.45) increased odds of AMI.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Our data support a role of Ang-2 as a biomarker of incident AMI independent of traditional risk factors.</p
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