49 research outputs found

    Gorillas and Grandfathers: Baka hunter-gatherer conceptions of the forest and its protection, and the implementation of biocultural conservation through Extreme Citizen Science in the rainforests of Cameroon

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    South-eastern Cameroon is an area of high biocultural diversity, where gorillas, forest spirits, and people live side-by-side. Rapid degradation of this diversity is also a reality, a result of lying on a frontier of aggressive capitalist expansion and top-down conservation interventions. It is a zone of conflict where values, ontologies, priorities and identities clash, informing how the landscape is used and by whom. Whilst a range of actors work in managing these forests, some more sensitive to community needs and concerns than others, no one is genuinely engaging with forest communities to understand what conservation means to them and what their solutions are. Baka hunter-gatherers are at heart of this: forest managers do not consult the Baka and do not know how to engage with them. This problem-based thesis aims to transcend disciplinary boundaries to examine what values and conceptions are held by the Baka and other actors living in and managing the rainforest south of the Dja Biosphere Reserve in relation to the forest and its conservation, and presents the results of two projects which attempt to put biocultural conservation grounded in community values into practice. The work attempts this through firstly focusing on one Baka village – Kémà – endeavouring to understand the socio-ecological relationship between the Baka of Kémà and the forest through extensive ethnographic fieldwork. This subsequently grows into an exploration of what ‘protecting’ the forest means to such communities, and what conservation looks like through their eyes, relating this to concepts of biocultural conservation. Secondly, I expand this to those who manage the forest to gauge their values towards the forest and their vision of its conservation, comparing these to my findings in Kémà. And thirdly, building on biocultural approaches to conservation under the approach of ‘Extreme Citizen Science’, I describe and evaluate two participatory mapping and reporting projects I co-created alongside community members which demonstrate the possibility of building conservation initiatives led by communities themselves and founded upon such socio-ecological relationships and priorities as those that emerge throughout the thesis

    From venture idea to venture formation:The role of sensemaking, sensegiving and sense receiving

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    This article explores the sensemaking processes entrepreneurs use when transitioning between venture ideas and venture formation. Adopting a sensemaking/sensegiving approach and utilising an interpretivist methodology, we use sensemaking to analyse the entrepreneurial journey of four diverse entrepreneurs. In so doing, we make three contributions: first, we locate the early stages of the entrepreneurial context as a primary site where sensemaking occurs as entrepreneurs deal with the differences between expectations and reality. Second, we show how sensemaking occurs when entrepreneurs build a causal map of the problem they wish to address and how social exchanges are crucial as entrepreneurs then refine that idea with other sensegivers. Finally, we extend scholarly understanding through explaining the ways in which sensemaking, sensegiving and sense receiving contribute to the entrepreneurs' decision to act and create a new venture

    How can bottom-up citizen science restore public trust in environmental governance and sciences? Recommendations from three case studies

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    Citizen science is currently at the forefront of environmental scientific research and public policy for its potential to improve environmental governance, restore epistemic trust and help address some of the most stressing environmental challenges. Although citizen science is gaining increasing popularity, there is little empirical evidence to support these claims and demonstrate how bottom-up citizen science shapes public trust in environmental governance and science. In this paper we reflect on three grassroot environmental citizen science initiatives in Cameroon, Japan, and the UK to identify and present an instrumental framework which includes trustee attributes and conditions that influence how epistemic trust is shaped, and which should inform citizen science and other participatory practices. We explain that citizen science is an approach which enables political processes through the construction of well-informed techno-scientific arguments, which expose deficit assumptions about the public’s ability to participate in knowledge co-production process. To avoid repeating the failures of the past and risk amplifying issues of public distrust further, we provide suggestions built around key trustee attributes which can be incorporated in citizen science practices and we urge that environmental policy needs to create clear policy frameworks to enable the generation of actionable data, especially when such approaches are initiated and implemented as instrumental public participation methods

    Extreme citizen science: Lessons learned from initiatives around the globe

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    The participation of communities living in high conservation value areas is increasingly valued in conservation science and practice, potentially producing multiple positive impacts on both biodiversity and local people. Here, we discuss important steps for implementing a successful extreme citizen science project, based on four case studies from conservation projects with Pantaneiro fishers living in Brazilian Pantanal wetland, Baka hunter-gatherers and Fang farmers in lowland wet forest in Cameroon, Maasai pastoralists in Kenya, and Ju|'hoansi rangers living in the semiarid deserts of Namibia. We highlight the need for a high level of trust between the target communities and project developers, communities' right to choose the data they will be collecting, and researchers' openness to include new tools that were not initially planned. By following these steps, conservation scientists can effectively create bottom-up collaborations with those living on the frontlines of conservation through community-led extreme citizen science

    Revisiting in vivo staining with alizarin red S - a valuable approach to analyse zebrafish skeletal mineralization during development and regeneration

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    Background The correct evaluation of mineralization is fundamental for the study of skeletal development, maintenance, and regeneration. Current methods to visualize mineralized tissue in zebrafish rely on: 1) fixed specimens; 2) radiographic and μCT techniques, that are ultimately limited in resolution; or 3) vital stains with fluorochromes that are indistinguishable from the signal of green fluorescent protein (GFP)-labelled cells. Alizarin compounds, either in the form of alizarin red S (ARS) or alizarin complexone (ALC), have long been used to stain the mineralized skeleton in fixed specimens from all vertebrate groups. Recent works have used ARS vital staining in zebrafish and medaka, yet not based on consistent protocols. There is a fundamental concern on whether ARS vital staining, achieved by adding ARS to the water, can affect bone formation in juvenile and adult zebrafish, as ARS has been shown to inhibit skeletal growth and mineralization in mammals. Results Here we present a protocol for vital staining of mineralized structures in zebrafish with a low ARS concentration that does not affect bone mineralization, even after repetitive ARS staining events, as confirmed by careful imaging under fluorescent light. Early and late stages of bone development are equally unaffected by this vital staining protocol. From all tested concentrations, 0.01 % ARS yielded correct detection of bone calcium deposits without inducing additional stress to fish. Conclusions The proposed ARS vital staining protocol can be combined with GFP fluorescence associated with skeletal tissues and thus represents a powerful tool for in vivo monitoring of mineralized structures. We provide examples from wild type and transgenic GFP-expressing zebrafish, for endoskeletal development and dermal fin ray regeneration

    Segmentations of MRI images of the female pelvic floor: A study of inter- and intra-reader reliability

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    Purpose: To describe the inter- and intra-operator reliability of segmentations of female pelvic floor structures. Materials and Methods: Three segmentation specialists were asked to segment out the female pelvic structures in 20 MR datasets on three separate occasions. The STAPLE algorithm was used to compute inter- and intra-segmenter agreement of each organ in each dataset. STAPLE computed the sensitivity, specificity, and positive predictive values (PPV) for inter- and intra-segmenter repeatability. These parameters were analyzed using intra-class correlation analysis. Correlation of organ volume to PPV and sensitivity was also computed. Results: Mean PPV of the segmented organs ranged from 0.82 to 0.99, and sensitivity ranged from 33 to 96%. Intra-class correlation ranged from 0.07 to 0.98 across segmenters. Pearson correlation of volume to sensitivity were significant across organs, ranging from 0.54 to 0.91. Organs with significant correlation of PPV to volume were bladder (−0.69), levator ani (−0.68), and coccyx (−0.63). Conclusion: Undirected manual segmentation of the pelvic floor organs are adequate for locating the organs, but poor at defining structural boundaries. J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2011;33:684–691. © 2011 Wiley-Liss, Inc.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/83166/1/22478_ftp.pd

    Ethical considerations when conservation research involves people

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    Social science is becoming increasingly important in conservation, with more studies involving methodologies that collect data from and about people. Conservation science is a normative and applied discipline designed to support and inform management and practice. Poor research practice risks harming participants, researchers, and can leave negative legacies. Often, those at the forefront of field‐based research are early‐career researchers, many of whom enter their first research experience ill‐prepared for the ethical conundrums they may face. Here, we draw on our own experiences as early‐career researchers to illuminate how ethical challenges arise during conservation research that involves human participants. Specifically, we discuss ethical review procedures, conflicts of values, and power relations, and provide broad recommendations on how to navigate ethical challenges when they arise during research. We encourage greater engagement with ethical review processes and highlight the pressing need to develop ethical guidelines for conservation research that involves human participants.Output Status: Forthcoming/Available Onlin

    Harnessing the cytotoxic granule exocytosis to augment the efficacy of T-cell-engaging bispecific antibody therapy

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    T-cell-engaging bispecific antibody (T-BsAb, also known as BiTE) therapy has emerged as a powerful therapeutic modality against multiple myeloma. Given that T-BsAb therapy redirects endogenous T cells to eliminate tumor cells, reinvigorating dysfunctional T cells may be a potential approach to improve the efficacy of T-BsAb. While various immunostimulatory cytokines can potentiate effector T-cell functions, the optimal cytokine treatment for T-BsAb therapy is yet to be established, partly due to a concern of cytokine release syndrome driven by aberrant interferon (IFN)-γ production. Here, we functionally screen immunostimulatory cytokines to determine an ideal combination partner for T-BsAb therapy. This approach reveals IL-21 as a potential immunostimulatory cytokine with the ability to augment T-BsAb-mediated release of granzyme B and perforin, without increasing IFN-γ release. Transcriptome profiling and functional characterization strongly support that IL-21 selectively targets the cytotoxic granule exocytosis pathway, but not pro-inflammatory responses. Notably, IL-21 modulates multiple steps of cytotoxic effector functions including upregulation of co-activating CD226 receptor, increasing cytotoxic granules, and promoting cytotoxic granule delivery at the immunological synapse. Indeed, T-BsAb-mediated myeloma-killing is cytotoxic granule-dependent, and IL-21 priming significantly augments cytotoxic activities. Furthermore, in vivo IL-21 treatment induces cytotoxic effector reprogramming in bone marrow T cells, showing synergistic anti-myeloma effects in combination with T-BsAb therapy. Together, harnessing the cytotoxic granule exocytosis pathway by IL-21 may be a potential approach to achieve better responses by T-BsAb therapy

    Preconditioning-induced ischemic tolerance: a window into endogenous gearing for cerebroprotection

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    Ischemic tolerance defines transient resistance to lethal ischemia gained by a prior sublethal noxious stimulus (i.e., preconditioning). This adaptive response is thought to be an evolutionarily conserved defense mechanism, observed in a wide variety of species. Preconditioning confers ischemic tolerance if not in all, in most organ systems, including the heart, kidney, liver, and small intestine. Since the first landmark experimental demonstration of ischemic tolerance in the gerbil brain in early 1990's, basic scientific knowledge on the mechanisms of cerebral ischemic tolerance increased substantially. Various noxious stimuli can precondition the brain, presumably through a common mechanism, genomic reprogramming. Ischemic tolerance occurs in two temporally distinct windows. Early tolerance can be achieved within minutes, but wanes also rapidly, within hours. Delayed tolerance develops in hours and lasts for days. The main mechanism involved in early tolerance is adaptation of membrane receptors, whereas gene activation with subsequent de novo protein synthesis dominates delayed tolerance. Ischemic preconditioning is associated with robust cerebroprotection in animals. In humans, transient ischemic attacks may be the clinical correlate of preconditioning leading to ischemic tolerance. Mimicking the mechanisms of this unique endogenous protection process is therefore a potential strategy for stroke prevention. Perhaps new remedies for stroke are very close, right in our cells
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