97 research outputs found

    A native-visitor in Western Australia: an account of an insider-outsider

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    Purpose ā€“ This study aims to apply confirmatory personal introspection (CPI) to illuminate the experiences of the authors as partial native-visitors to Western Australia. The native-visitor is the tourist who is able to see beyond Urryā€™s shallow conception of the Tourist Gaze through their lengthy immersion as ā€œinsidersā€ in the destinationā€™s culture. In this paper, the experiences of two immigrants, the authors, to Western Australia illustrate the different perspectives of the Tourist Gaze 4.0. Design/methodology/approach ā€“ The paper uses CPI, as this is a more reliable method of uncovering a travelerā€™s experiences than subjective personal introspection because CPI uses additional data sources such as written historical records and photographs for confirming the researcherā€™s accounts. In this study, accounts of both authors alongside photographs are used to both confirm and contrast their individual experiences. Findings ā€“ The paper demonstrates the varied forms of the tourist gaze, with an emphasis on that of the native visitor. The findings illustrate how individualsā€™ both maintain aspects of their original cultural identity and adopt those of the new country after an extended time living in that country. This enables individuals to see attractions and destinations from an insider perspective. Practical implications ā€“ This study shows how even after an extended period of time living in a new country, visitors may not have the cultural confidence to behave as local residents at tourist attractions and destinations, which could limit their engagement and enjoyment of these experiences. Marketers should take this into account in designing and promoting tourist experiences to visitors. Originality/value ā€“ CPI provides a valuable means for illustrating the range of perspectives within the Tourist Gaze 4.0. The method enables individualsā€™ rich experiences to be uncovered but at the same time uses multiple data sources to provide additional rigour

    Optimized media and workflow for the expansion of human pluripotent stem cells as aggregates in suspension cultures

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    3D suspension culture enables scale-up of human pluripotent stem cell (hPSC) manufacturing. However, media and methods optimized for 2D adherent cultures can lead to low volumetric productivity and laborious workflow in suspension cultures. To overcome these limitations we developed fed-batch media based on either mTeSRTM1 (BSA-containing) or TeSRTM-E8TM (animal component-free) for hPSC expansion as aggregates in suspension cultures. Fed-batch feeding protocols are more efficient and cost-effective than batch media changes because only exhausted components are replenished. Optimization studies were performed using human embryonic (H7 and H9), and human induced pluripotent (WLS-1C and STiPS-M001) stem cell lines. Suspension cultures were fed daily using either 50% medium exchanges of standard 2D media, or fed-batch optimized media and protocols. hPSC aggregate diameter must be kept below 350 Ī¼m to maintain cell viability and phenotype. With observed growth rates, aggregates required passaging every 3 or 4 days into clumps of 5-10 cells with Gentle Cell Dissociation Reagent. Clumps were re-seeded into fresh test medium plus 10 Ī¼M Y-27632. Passaging and feeding cycles were repeated for at least 5 passages. Optimization was performed by iteratively modifying the feed solution to maintain consistent nutrient levels and maximal growth rate while maintaining cell quality. Control and optimized fed-batch formulations demonstrated between 1.4 and 1.8-fold expansion per day, \u3e90% viability, Oct4 and TRA-1-60 expression \u3e90%, in vitro trilineage differentiation, and normal karyotype (n=8 independent cultures). Suspension culture optimized mTeSRTM-3D or TeSRTM-E8TM3D fed-batch media enables the cost-effective production of hPSCs as aggregates with efficient workflow and high cell quality

    Optimized media and workflow for the expansion of human pluripotent stem cells as aggregates in suspension

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    3D suspension culture enables the efficient and cost-effective scale-up of human pluripotent stem cell (hPSCs) manufacturing. However, media optimized for 2D adherent cultures can lead to low volumetric productivity and inefficient workflow. To overcome these limitations we developed mTeSRTM3D, a defined medium based on mTeSRTM1, and novel protocols for fed-batch culture of hPSC aggregates. Human embryonic stem cell (hESC) lines (H1 or H9) or human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC) lines (WLS-1C or STiPS-M001) that were previously maintained in 2D mTeSRTM1 culture were seeded into multiple suspension culture vessels containing mTeSRTM3D Seed Medium plus 10 Ī¼M Y-27632 ROCK inhibitor. 3D cultures were maintained using either daily 50% mTeSRTM1 medium exchanges (control) or using a fed-batch protocol whereby the culture medium was supplemented daily with mTeSRTM3D Feed Medium. After 3 or 4 days in suspension culture, aggregates were harvested, dissociated into small clumps with Gentle Cell Dissociation Reagent (GCDR) or single cell suspensions enzymatically, and re-seeded in mTeSRTM3D Seed Medium plus 10 Ī¼M Y-27632. Passaging and feeding cycles were repeated for at least 5 passages. 3D cultures were assessed for growth, viability, hPSC marker expression, in vitro differentiation potential, and karyotype. In addition, media was analyzed for molar glucose to lactate yield to characterize metabolism. By day 4, aggregates cultured in mTeSRTM3D typically grew to a mean diameter of 350 Ī¼m, with a 5-fold increase in cell number. Using mTeSRTM3D up to 109 cells can be produced from a single plate within 2-3 weeks representing a greater than 500-fold expansion. hPSC cultures maintained in mTeSRTM3D differentiated into all 3 germ layers with high efficiency. The average volumetric productivities were 0.7, 3.1 and 6.9 (x105) viable cells / mL in 2D, daily 50% media exchange, and mTeSRTM3D cultures, respectively. Using the GCDR clump passaging protocol, mTeSRTM3D cultured hPSCs retained normal karyotypes. Culture performance was evaluated in shaker bottles, spinner flasks and bioreactors. Performance in each culture system was comparable confirming straightforward scale-up and wide applicability. Typical growth rates were on the order of 1.5-fold expansion per day. Metabolic activity as assessed by the moles lactate produced to glucose consumed was 1.7, consistent with a primarily glycolytic metabolism. Image analysis was performed to estimate aggregate size during growth. Adaptation times for cells moving from 2D to 3D aggregate culture varied with different cell lines; typically one passage in 3D was required before consistent expansion passage over passage was obtained. Additionally, protocols were developed for use on a HamiltonĀ® robotic platform for reproducible, matrix-free, high-throughput hPSC suspension culture at a small scale. mTeSRTM3D enables efficient scale-up and scale-down of hPSC cultures with greatly simplified workflow

    Do the Rewards Justify the Means? Measuring Trade-Offs Between Rewards and Ethical Behavior in the MACHIAVELLI Benchmark

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    Artificial agents have traditionally been trained to maximize reward, which may incentivize power-seeking and deception, analogous to how next-token prediction in language models (LMs) may incentivize toxicity. So do agents naturally learn to be Machiavellian? And how do we measure these behaviors in general-purpose models such as GPT-4? Towards answering these questions, we introduce MACHIAVELLI, a benchmark of 134 Choose-Your-Own-Adventure games containing over half a million rich, diverse scenarios that center on social decision-making. Scenario labeling is automated with LMs, which are more performant than human annotators. We mathematize dozens of harmful behaviors and use our annotations to evaluate agents' tendencies to be power-seeking, cause disutility, and commit ethical violations. We observe some tension between maximizing reward and behaving ethically. To improve this trade-off, we investigate LM-based methods to steer agents' towards less harmful behaviors. Our results show that agents can both act competently and morally, so concrete progress can currently be made in machine ethics--designing agents that are Pareto improvements in both safety and capabilities.Comment: ICML 2023 Oral; 31 pages, 5 figure

    Effect of a Web-Based Behavior Change Program on Weight Loss and Cardiovascular Risk Factors in Overweight and Obese Adults at High Risk of Developing Cardiovascular Disease: Randomized Controlled Trial.

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    Web-based programs are a potential medium for supporting weight loss because of their accessibility and wide reach. Research is warranted to determine the shorter- and longer-term effects of these programs in relation to weight loss and other health outcomes

    End-joining long nucleic acid polymers

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    Many experiments involving nucleic acids require the hybridization and ligation of multiple DNA or RNA molecules to form a compound molecule. When one of the constituents is single stranded, however, the efficiency of ligation can be very low and requires significant individually tailored optimization. Also, when the molecules involved are very long (>10 kb), the reaction efficiency typically reduces dramatically. Here, we present a simple procedure to efficiently and specifically end-join two different nucleic acids using the well-known biotinā€“streptavidin linkage. We introduce a two-step approach, in which we initially bind only one molecule to streptavidin (STV). The second molecule is added only after complete removal of the unbound STV. This primarily forms heterodimers and nearly completely suppresses formation of unwanted homodimers. We demonstrate that the joining efficiency is 50 Ā± 25% and is insensitive to molecule length (up to at least 20 kb). Furthermore, our method eliminates the requirement for specific complementary overhangs and can therefore be applied to both DNA and RNA. Demonstrated examples of the method include the efficient end-joining of DNA to single-stranded and double-stranded RNA, and the joining of two double-stranded RNA molecules. End-joining of long nucleic acids using this procedure may find applications in bionanotechnology and in single-molecule experiments

    Substance use disorders in women with anorexia nervosa

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    Objective: We examined prevalence of in women substance use disorders (SUID) with: (1) anorexia nervosa (AN) restricting type (RAN); (2) AN with purging only (PAN); (3) AN with binge eating only (BAN); and (4) lifetime AN and bulimia nervosa (ANBN). Secondary analyses examined SUD related to lifetime purging behavior and lifetime binge eating. Method: Participants (N = 731) were drawn from the international Price Foundation Genetic Studies. Results: The prevalence of SUD differed across AN subtypes, with more in the ANBN group reporting SUD than those in the RAN and PAN groups. individuals who purged were more likely to report substance use than those who did not purge. Prevalence of SUD differed across lifetime binge eating status. Discussion: SUD are common in AN and are associated with bulimic symptomatology. Results underscore the het-erogeneity in AN, highlighting the importance of screening for SUD across AN subtype

    Is season of birth related to disordered eating and personality in women with eating disorders?

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    We assessed the relation between season of birth and eating disorder symptoms and personality characteristics in a sample of 880 women with eating disorders and 580 controls from two Price Foundation Studies. Eating disorder symptoms were assessed using the Structured Interview of Anorexic and Bulimic Disorders and the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV. Personality traits were assessed using the Temperament and Character Inventory and the Frost Multidimensional Perfectionism Scale. Date of birth was obtained from a sociodemographic questionnaire. No significant differences were observed 1) in season of birth across eating disorder subtypes and controls; nor 2) for any clinical or personality variables and season of birth. We found no evidence of season of birth variation in eating disorders symptoms or personality traits. Contributing to previous conflicting findings, the present results do not support a season of birth hypothesis for eating disorders

    Force unfolding kinetics of RNA using optical tweezers. I. Effects of experimental variables on measured results

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    Experimental variables of optical tweezers instrumentation that affect RNA folding/unfolding kinetics were investigated. A model RNA hairpin, P5ab, was attached to two micron-sized beads through hybrid RNA/DNA handles; one bead was trapped by dual-beam lasers and the other was held by a micropipette. Several experimental variables were changed while measuring the unfolding/refolding kinetics, including handle lengths, trap stiffness, and modes of force applied to the molecule. In constant-force mode where the tension applied to the RNA was maintained through feedback control, the measured rate coefficients varied within 40% when the handle lengths were changed by 10 fold (1.1 to 10.2 Kbp); they increased by two- to three-fold when the trap stiffness was lowered to one third (from 0.1 to 0.035 pN/nm). In the passive mode, without feedback control and where the force applied to the RNA varied in response to the end-to-end distance change of the tether, the RNA hopped between a high-force folded-state and a low-force unfolded-state. In this mode, the rates increased up to two-fold with longer handles or softer traps. Overall, the measured rates remained with the same order-of-magnitude over the wide range of conditions studied. In the companion paper (1), we analyze how the measured kinetics parameters differ from the intrinsic molecular rates of the RNA, and thus how to obtain the molecular rates.Comment: PDF file, 30 pages, 7 figure

    Factors associated with recovery from anorexia nervosa: A population-based study

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    Previous studies of prognostic factors of anorexia nervosa (AN) course and recovery have followed clinical populations after treatment discharge. This retrospective study examined the association between prognostic factorsā€”eating disorder features, personality traits, and psychiatric comorbidityā€”and likelihood of recovery in a large sample of women with AN participating in a multi-site genetic study. The study included 680 women with AN. Recovery was defined as the offset of AN symptoms if the participant experienced at least one year without any eating disorder symptoms of low weight, dieting, binge eating, and inappropriate compensatory behaviors. Participants completed a structured interview about eating disorders features, psychiatric comorbidity, and self-report measures of personality. Survival analysis was applied to model time to recovery from AN. Cox regression models were used to fit associations between predictors and the probability of recovery. In the final model, likelihood of recovery was significantly predicted by the following prognostic factors: vomiting, impulsivity, and trait anxiety. Self-induced vomiting and greater trait anxiety were negative prognostic factors and predicted lower likelihood of recovery. Greater impulsivity was a positive prognostic factor and predicted greater likelihood of recovery. There was a significant interaction between impulsivity and time; the association between impulsivity and likelihood of recovery decreased as duration of AN increased. The anxiolytic function of some AN behaviors may impede recovery for individuals with greater trait anxiety
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