283 research outputs found

    Evaluating Performance Persistence in US Open-End Mutual Funds

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    Performance persistence in US open-end mutual funds is a contentious issue. This paper examines the performance persistence by analyzing monthly returns of mutual funds under nine investment styles over the periods of January 1993 to December 2008. We find that there is some evidence to support the persistence of mutual fund performance. Albeit this, a zero-investment best-minus-worst strategy does outperform the market with a certain level of consistency

    Leadership and Race: How to Develop and Support Leadership that Contributes to Racial Justice

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    This report explores the ways in which our current thinking about leadership often contributes to producing and maintaining racialized dynamics, and identifies a set of core competencies associated with racial justice leadership. Recommendations are included for helping leadership programs develop and support leadership that furthers racial justice in organizations, communities, and the broader society

    Experimental analysis of 3D flow structures around a floating dike

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    Floating dikes have several advantages over spur dikes including less influence on riverine sediment transport, bed topography, and ecosystems, and a good adaptability to fluvial conditions. Despite these advantages, floating dikes have not been used in many river regulation schemes due to the limited understanding of the 3D flow structures around floating dikes. In this study, a series of experiments were conducted to investigate the 3D flow structures around floating dikes. Results show that, after installing a floating dike on one side of a flume, the surface water flow is deflected to the opposite side of the flume, and a backflow develops around the outer and downstream side of the dike, where both the vertical turbulent intensity and the absolute magnitude of the Reynolds stress are relatively large. Due to the blocking effect of the dike, the cross-sectional area decreases, causing an increase in velocities below and alongside the dike, as well as a decrease in velocities upstream of the dike. Increasing the submerged depth or length of the dike results in an increase in flow velocity adjacent to the dike, as well as an increase in the vertical or lateral scale of the backflow. On the contrary, increasing the dike thickness leads to a weakening or disappearance of the backflow, along with a decrease in the acceleration rate of flow adjacent to the dike

    BHDPC Is a Novel Neuroprotectant That Provides Anti-neuroinflammatory and Neuroprotective Effects by Inactivating NF-κB and Activating PKA/CREB.

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    Microglia-mediated neuroinflammatory responses are inevitable and important pathological processes in several kinds of disorder of the central nervous system (CNS). Therefore, alleviating activated microglia-induced inflammatory process might be a valuable therapeutic approach to neuroinflammation-related diseases. In the present study, we investigated BHDPC, a novel neuroprotectant discovered in our previous study that had anti-inflammatory effects under neuroinflammatory conditions. First, we found that BHDPC could inhibit neuroinflammatory responses and promote microglial M2 phenotype polarization in both lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-activated BV-2 microglia l cells. Furthermore, BHDPC provided protective actions against neuroinflammation-induced neurotoxicity in HT22 mouse hippocampal cells co-cultured with activated BV-2 microglia. Further experiments demonstrated that BHDPC could suppress LPS-induced activation of transcription factor nuclear factor kappa B (NF-κB) via interfering with the degradation of the inhibitor of kappa B (IκB) and phosphorylation of IκB, the IκB kinase (IKK). Moreover, we also found that BHDPC could induce phosphorylation of cAMP-dependent protein kinase A (PKA) and cAMP-response element-binding protein (CREB) in BV-2 microglial cells. Also, using the PKA-specific inhibitor, we found that BHDPC-induced CREB phosphorylation was dependent on PKA, which also contributed to BHDPC-mediated anti-inflammation and neuroprotection

    Do psychological factors predict caesarean delivery in Australia? A cohort study

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    Background: The proportion of babies delivered by Cesarean Section (CS) in Australia has almost doubled over the last 25 years. Factors known to contribute to CS such as higher maternal age, mothers being overweight or obese, or having had a previous CS do not completely account for the increased rate and it is clear that other influences exist. Our study used nationally-representative data from the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children (LSAC) to identify risk factors associated with CS, with a view to identifying previously unidentified influences. Methods: Data were from the birth cohort of LSAC, a long-term prospective study of approximately 5,000 children that includes richly-detailed data regarding maternal health and exposures during pregnancy. Logistic regression was used to examine the contribution of a wide range of pregnancy, birth and social factors to CS. Results: 28% of 4,862 mothers were delivered by CS. The nal adjusted analyses revealed that use of diabetes medication (OR=3.1, 95% CI=1.7-5.5, p<0.001) and maternal mental health problems during pregnancy (OR=1.3, CI=1.1-1.6, p=0.003) were associated with increased odds of CS. Young maternal age (OR=0.6, CI=0.5-0.7, p<0.001), having two or more children (OR=0.7, CI=0.6-0.9, p<0.001), and fathers having an unskilled occupation (OR=0.7, CI=0.6-1.0, p=0.036) were associated with reduced odds of CS. Conclusion: Our findings raise the prospect that screening and intervention programs for maternal mental health problems, and attention to diabetic control in pregnancy, might be beneficial in reducing CS rates and should be studied in appropriately-constructed prospective trials.This work was supported by a project grant from the Bupa Health Foundation. The paper uses unit record data from Growing Up in Australia, the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children (LSAC). The LSAC study is conducted in partnership between the Australian Government Department of Social Services (DSS, formerly the department of Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs), the Australian Institute of Family Studies (AIFS) and the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS

    Association between Self-Reported Prior Nights’ Sleep and Single-Task Gait in Healthy Young Adults: An Exploratory Study Using Machine Learning

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    Failure to obtain 7-9 hours of sleep has been associated with decreased gait speed in young adults. While Machine Learning (ML) has been used to identify sleep quality in young adults, there are no current studies that have used ML to identify prior night’s sleep in a sample of young adults. PURPOSE: To use ML to identify prior night’s sleep in healthy young adults using single-task walking gait. METHODS: Participants (n=126, age 24.3±4.0yrs; 65% female) completed a survey on their prior night’s sleep and performed a 2-minute walk around a 6m track. Gait data were collected using inertial sensors. Participants were split into 2 groups (\u3c7hs or \u3e9hs: poor sleepers; 7-9hs: good sleepers) and gait characteristics were used to classify participants into each group using ML models via a 10-fold cross validation. A post-hoc ANCOVA was used to assess gait differences. RESULTS: Using Random Forest Classifiers (RFC), top 9 features were extracted. Classification results suggest a 0.79 correlation between gait parameters and prior night’s sleep. The RFC models had a 65.03% mean classification accuracy rate. Top 0.3% of the models had 100% classification accuracy rate. The top 9 features were primarily characteristics that measured variance between lower limb movements. Post-hoc analyses suggest significantly greater variances between lower limb characteristics. CONCLUSION: Good sleepers had more asymmetrical gait patterns (faster gait speed, less trunk motion). Poor sleepers had trouble maintaining gait speed (increased variance in cadence, larger stride lengths, and less time spent in single leg support time). Although the mechanisms of these gait changes are unknown, these findings provide evidence that gait is different for individuals who not receive 7-9 hours of sleep the night before. As evidenced by the high correlation co-efficient of our classification models, gait may be a good way of identifying prior night’s sleep

    The Variant p.(Arg183Trp) in SPTLC2 Causes Late-Onset Hereditary Sensory Neuropathy

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    Hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy 1 (HSAN1) is an autosomal dominant disorder that can be caused by variants in SPTLC1 or SPTLC2, encoding subunits of serine palmitoyl-CoA transferase. Disease variants alter the enzyme's substrate specificity and lead to accumulation of neurotoxic 1-deoxysphingolipids. We describe two families with autosomal dominant HSAN1C caused by a new variant in SPTLC2, c.547C > T, p.(Arg183Trp). The variant changed a conserved amino acid and was not found in public variant databases. All patients had a relatively mild progressive distal sensory impairment, with onset after age 50. Small fibers were affected early, leading to abnormalities on quantitative sensory testing. Sural biopsy revealed a severe chronic axonal neuropathy with subtotal loss of myelinated axons, relatively preserved number of non-myelinated fibers and no signs for regeneration. Skin biopsy with PGP9.5 labeling showed lack of intraepidermal nerve endings early in the disease. Motor manifestations developed later in the disease course, but there was no evidence of autonomic involvement. Patients had elevated serum 1-deoxysphingolipids, and the variant protein produced elevated amounts of 1-deoxysphingolipids in vitro, which proved the pathogenicity of the variant. Our results expand the genetic spectrum of HSAN1C and provide further detail about the clinical characteristics. Sequencing of SPTLC2 should be considered in all patients presenting with mild late-onset sensory-predominant small or large fiber neuropathy.Peer reviewe
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