1,045 research outputs found
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Non-maternal infant care among the Efe and Lese of Zaire : how much and by whom.
This study examined infant caretaking practices among the Efe (Pygmies) and Lese, who inhabit the Ituri Forest in northeastern Zaire. The data presented here, collected as part of a larger study of child development among these people, focus on two related questions. First, to what extent are infants\u27 mothers their primary caretakers during their first months of life? And second, who are the other individuals responsible for infants\u27 care? Ten Efe and nine Lese infants were observed longitudinally. Naturalistic observations were made when infants were 3, 7, and 18 weeks old, using an event sequence format with the infant as the focal subject. The behavioral scoring system noted the occurrence of, or any changes in, the ongoing behavior of infant or caretaker, as well as caretaker identity, in each one-minute interval. Four measures of infants\u27 contacts with caretakers were derived: percentage of intervals infants were in physical contact with various caretakers; the rate at which infants were transferred among caretakers; the mean length, in intervals, of caretaking bouts; and the mean number of individuals who held the infant in an observation period. Descriptive data and comparisons of caretaking by mothers and other caretakers are presented. Analyses examine non-maternal caretakers\u27 age, gender, familial relationship to the infant, and the reproductive status of adult female caretakers. Data reveal that Efe and Lese caretaking practices include extensive participation by non-maternal caretakers. Efe infants spent more than 50%, and Lese infants almost 40% of the time with caretakers other than their mothers, and were passed to these caretakers more often than to their mothers. Infants spent little time out of physical contact with a caretaker. Effects of group membership and infant age on contributions by various classes of caretakers are presented. The findings are discussed with respect to models of mother-infant contact during the first months of life. Models such as the continuous care and contact or the bonding model, which place narrow and rigid constraints on the range of acceptable human caretaking practices are challenged, and a more culturally sensitive strategic model is proposed
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Newborn behavior and maternal and infant biomedical factors among the Efe and Lese of Zaire.
Thesis (M.S.
The Prograde Orbit of Exoplanet TrES-2b
We monitored the Doppler shift of the G0V star TrES-2 throughout a transit of
its giant planet. The anomalous Doppler shift due to stellar rotation (the
Rossiter-McLaughlin effect) is discernible in the data, with a signal-to-noise
ratio of 2.9, even though the star is a slow rotator. By modeling this effect
we find that the planet's trajectory across the face of the star is tilted by
-9 +/- 12 degrees relative to the projected stellar equator. With 98%
confidence, the orbit is prograde.Comment: ApJ, in press [15 pages
Securing the legacy of TESS through the care and maintenance of TESS planet ephemerides
Much of the science from the exoplanets detected by the TESS mission relies
on precisely predicted transit times that are needed for many follow-up
characterization studies. We investigate ephemeris deterioration for simulated
TESS planets and find that the ephemerides of 81% of those will have expired
(i.e. 1 mid-transit time uncertainties greater than 30 minutes) one
year after their TESS observations. We verify these results using a sample of
TESS planet candidates as well. In particular, of the simulated planets that
would be recommended as JWST targets by Kempton et al. (2018), 80% will
have mid-transit time uncertainties 30 minutes by the earliest time JWST
would observe them. This rapid deterioration is driven primarily by the
relatively short time baseline of TESS observations. We describe strategies for
maintaining TESS ephemerides fresh through follow-up transit observations. We
find that the longer the baseline between the TESS and the follow-up
observations, the longer the ephemerides stay fresh, and that 51% of simulated
primary mission TESS planets will require space-based observations. The
recently-approved extension to the TESS mission will rescue the ephemerides of
most (though not all) primary mission planets, but the benefits of these new
observations can only be reaped two years after the primary mission
observations. Moreover, the ephemerides of most primary mission TESS planets
(as well as those newly discovered during the extended mission) will again have
expired by the time future facilities such as the ELTs, Ariel and the possible
LUVOIR/OST missions come online, unless maintenance follow-up observations are
obtained.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures, accepted to AJ; main changes are cross-checking
results against the sample of real TOIs, and addressing the impact of the
TESS extended missio
MRC2014: Extensions to the MRC format header for electron cryo-microscopy and tomography
Open Access funded by Medical Research CouncilThe MRC binary file format is widely used in the three-dimensional electron microscopy field for storing image and volume data. Files contain a header which describes the kind of data held, together with other important metadata. In response to advances in electron microscopy techniques, a number of variants to the file format have emerged which contain useful additional data, but which limit interoperability between different software packages. Following extensive discussions, the authors, who represent leading software packages in the field, propose a set of extensions to the MRC format standard designed to accommodate these variants, while restoring interoperability. The MRC format is equivalent to the map format used in the CCP4 suite for macromolecular crystallography, and the proposal also maintains interoperability with crystallography software. This Technical Note describes the proposed extensions, and serves as a reference for the standard.We thank Chris Booth and Steffen Meyer from Gatan Inc. for
clarifying the format definition used by Digital Micrograph.
Acknowledgement for support from National Institute of Health,
USA includes: NIGMS grant P41GM103310 (AC and SD), NIBIB
grant 5R01-EB005027 (DM), and R01GM080139 (SJL). RH and
MW would like to thank the UK Medical Research Council for the
award of Partnership Grant MR/J000825/1 to support the establishment
of CCP-EM. RH and JS are also supported by MRC grant
U105184322
Open Education and the emancipation of academic labour
I have previously argued that open education is a liberal project with a focus on the freedom of things rather than the freedom of people (Winn, Joss. 2012. âOpen Education: From the Freedom of Things to the Freedom of People.â In Towards Teaching in Public: Reshaping the Modern University, edited by Michael Neary, Howard Stevenson, and Les Bell, 133â 147. London:
Continuum). Furthermore, I have argued that despite an implicit critique of private property with its emphasis on âthe commonsâ, the literature on open education offers no corresponding critique of academic labour (Neary, Mike, and Joss Winn. 2012. âOpen Education: Common(s), Commonism and the New Common Wealth.â Ephemera: Theory & Politics in Organization 12 (4):
406â422). In this paper, I develop my critical position that an emancipatory form of education must work towards the emancipation of teachers and students from labour, the dynamic, social, creative source of value in capitalism. In making this argument, I first establish the fundamental characteristics of academic labour. I then offer a âform-analyticâ critique of open access, followed by a corresponding critique of its legal form. Finally, I critically discuss the potential of âopen cooperativesâ as a transitional organisational form for the production of knowledge through which social relations become âtransparent in their simplicityâ (Marx, Karl. 1976. Capital, Vol. 1. London: Penguin Classics, 172)
The Radio Variability of the Gravitational Lens PMN J1838-3427
We present the results of a radio variability study of the gravitational lens
PMN J1838-3427. Our motivation was to determine the Hubble constant by
measuring the time delay between variations of the two quasar images. We
monitored the system for 4 months (approximately 5 times longer than the
expected delay) using the Australia Telescope Compact Array at 9 GHz. Although
both images were variable on a time scale of a few days, no correlated
intrinsic variability could be identified, and therefore no time delay could be
measured. Notably, the fractional variation of the fainter image (8%) was
greater than that of the brighter image (4%), whereas lensed images of a point
source would have the same fractional variation. This effect can be explained,
at least in part, as the refractive scintillation of both images due to the
turbulent interstellar medium of the Galaxy.Comment: To appear in AJ (8 pages, including 4 figures
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