1,883 research outputs found
Heart\u27s Content (Original writing).
Abstract Not Available. Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 37-01, page: 0070. Adviser: Alistair MacLeod. Thesis (M.A.)--University of Windsor (Canada), 1997
The Whole World in Their Hands
A North Carolina middle school didn\u27t have enough computers to give students reasonable access to the Internet, so administrators implemented a one-to-one iPod touch program. Now every student is connected
The Worldwide Market for Sex: A Review of International and Regional Legal Prohibitions Regarding Trafficking in Women
This essay considers whether international treaty law is a useful weapon in the battle against the global sex trade. The introduction to this essay surveys the extent of global sex trafficking. Part I of this essay discusses the international legal conventions that address the issue of trafficking in women. Part II of this essay assesses the effectiveness of these international instruments and considers why they have failed to and the world sex trade. In Part III, this essay describes the European and Inter-American human rights systems, focusing upon substantive law in the regional systems that might be relevant to the issue of prostitution. It then briefly examines the procedures through which this substantive law could be enforced
Science‐based interviewing: Information elicitation
This article describes an ethical and effective science‐based model of interviewing. An initial planning phase assists the investigative team in separating facts from inferences, decreases the likelihood of errors based on cognitive biases, and prompts careful preparation of the environment. The interview begins with an explanation of why the subject is being questioned. The interviewer then metaphorically hands the interview over to the subject, making him the talker and the interviewer the listener. The interviewer engages in active listening, soliciting as much information from the subject as possible by deploying tactics that enhance memory based on science, including elements of the cognitive interview. Cues to deception are found in the details of the story, rather than in signs of anxiety or nonverbal behaviours, and by deploying Strategic Use of Evidence. This model has been shown to increase cooperation, decrease resistance, and provoke useful information in real‐world criminal interviews
The Meaning of Quality in Kinship Foster Care: Caregiver, Child, and Worker Perspectives
Copyright 2002 Families International, Inc.Though principles, guidelines, and procedures for assessing the quality of foster care in kinship settings have
been introduced, research on the factors that mediate the quality and outcome of kinship care has been minimal.
To provide insight into these factors from the perspectives of kinship stakeholders, this article presents findings
from a qualitative study conducted with kinship caregivers, children living with relatives, and caseworkers
of children in kinship placements. Their views on quality care in kinship homes, including factors to consider in
the selection and evaluation of kinship placements and opinions of how kinship and nonkinship foster care differ,
make unique contributions to the development of standards and measures for kinship foster care assessment.
Findings confirm the salience of specific factors present in existing guidelines, build on existing
recommendations for the selection and evaluation of kinship homes, and highlight important policy and practice
issues for consideration with kinship families
Genetic Correction of Dystrophin Deficiency and Skeletal Muscle Remodeling in Adult MDX Mouse via Transplantation of Retroviral Producer Cells
Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is an X-linked, lethal
disease caused by mutations of the dystrophin gene. No
effective therapy is available, but dystrophin gene transfer
to skeletal muscle has been proposed as a treatment for
DMD. We have developed a strategy for efficient in vivo
gene transfer of dystrophin cDNA into regenerating skeletal
muscle. Retroviral producer cells, which release a vector
carrying the therapeutically active dystrophin minigene,
were mitotically inactivated and transplanted in adult
nude/
mdx
mice. Transplantation of 3
3
10
6
producer cells
in a single site of the tibialis anterior muscle resulted in the
transduction of between 5.5 and 18% total muscle fibers.
The same procedure proved also feasible in immunocompetent
mdx
mice under short-term pharmacological immunosuppression.
Minidystrophin expression was stable for up to
6 mo and led to
a
-sarcoglycan reexpression. Muscle stem
cells could be transduced in vivo using this procedure.
Transduced dystrophic skeletal muscle showed evidence of
active remodeling reminiscent of the genetic normalization
process which takes place in female DMD carriers. Overall,
these results demonstrate that retroviral-mediated dystrophin
gene transfer via transplantation of producer cells is a
valid approach towards the long-term goal of gene therapy
of DMD. (
J. Clin. Invest.
1997. 100:620–628
.
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