252 research outputs found

    Global Precipitation Measurement Mission Products and Services at the NASA GES DISC

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    This article describes NASA/JAXA Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) mission products and services at the NASA Goddard Earth Sciences (GES) Data and Information Services Center (DISC). Built on the success of the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM), the next-generation GPM mission consists of new precipitation measurement instruments and a constellation of international research and operational satellites to provide improved measurements of precipitation globally. To facilitate data access, research, applications, and scientific discovery, the GES DISC has developed a variety of data services for GPM. This article is intended to guide users in choosing GPM datasets and services at the GES DISC

    Designing new musical technologies for wellbeing – exploring the needs and preferences of those living with dementia

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    Background Music has been found to provide numerous health and wellbeing benefits for people living with dementia. It is also quite open in terms of the forms of engagement it affords, offering numerous different ways to listen, play and create. Although technology has the potential to reduce barriers that people with dementia face when attempting to engage with music, little has been designed with them in mind. This study seeks to understand: i) the needs, rewards, and barriers that people with dementia and their carers face when engaging with music in their daily lives, and ii) how any specifically designed future musical interfaces will look and react. Method A survey using a mixture of qualitative and quantitative questions was distributed online to people living with mild cognitive impairment or dementia and to those that provide care for them. Questions asked about motivations and contexts for engagement, barriers and enabling factors, the comparative importance of various musical activities, and the technologies people living with dementia currently use and why. Result The main tools for listening include smartphone apps, radio, virtual assistants, and YouTube. Most participants listen to music on multiple devices, with its ease of use, accessibility, and convenience for their current listening environment frequently influencing their choice. They also presented a wide range of motivations for engaging with music, but a majority of participants agreed that “feeling like myself” is their most important motivator. Most participants thought it was very important for devices to offer choice. It should also have a simple way for them to turn it off or switch to a safe song if they hear a distressing song or it experiences signal loss. Conclusion The findings highlight that people living with dementia have diverse individual motivations for music, and they want it to perform different functions at different times (e.g. sometimes aiding in their relaxation and sometimes connecting them with others). The findings point to fruitful future directions for technology development: i) ready-to-use tools that can adapt to changing interests, and ii) tools that make it easy to access choice and variety while safeguarding against distress from unwanted or unexpected events

    Designing new musical technologies for wellbeing – exploring the needs and preferences of those living with dementia

    Get PDF
    Background Music has been found to provide numerous health and wellbeing benefits for people living with dementia. It is also quite open in terms of the forms of engagement it affords, offering numerous different ways to listen, play and create. Although technology has the potential to reduce barriers that people with dementia face when attempting to engage with music, little has been designed with them in mind. This study seeks to understand: i) the needs, rewards, and barriers that people with dementia and their carers face when engaging with music in their daily lives, and ii) how any specifically designed future musical interfaces will look and react. Method A survey using a mixture of qualitative and quantitative questions was distributed online to people living with mild cognitive impairment or dementia and to those that provide care for them. Questions asked about motivations and contexts for engagement, barriers and enabling factors, the comparative importance of various musical activities, and the technologies people living with dementia currently use and why. Result The main tools for listening include smartphone apps, radio, virtual assistants, and YouTube. Most participants listen to music on multiple devices, with its ease of use, accessibility, and convenience for their current listening environment frequently influencing their choice. They also presented a wide range of motivations for engaging with music, but a majority of participants agreed that “feeling like myself” is their most important motivator. Most participants thought it was very important for devices to offer choice. It should also have a simple way for them to turn it off or switch to a safe song if they hear a distressing song or it experiences signal loss. Conclusion The findings highlight that people living with dementia have diverse individual motivations for music, and they want it to perform different functions at different times (e.g. sometimes aiding in their relaxation and sometimes connecting them with others). The findings point to fruitful future directions for technology development: i) ready-to-use tools that can adapt to changing interests, and ii) tools that make it easy to access choice and variety while safeguarding against distress from unwanted or unexpected events

    Artery tertiary lymphoid organs control aorta immunity and protect against atherosclerosis via vascular smooth muscle cell lymphotoxin ÎČ receptors

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    Tertiary lymphoid organs (TLOs) emerge during nonresolving peripheral inflammation, but their impact on disease progression remains unknown. We have found in aged Apoe−/− mice that artery TLOs (ATLOs) controlled highly territorialized aorta T cell responses. ATLOs promoted T cell recruitment, primed CD4+ T cells, generated CD4+, CD8+, T regulatory (Treg) effector and central memory cells, converted naive CD4+ T cells into induced Treg cells, and presented antigen by an unusual set of dendritic cells and B cells. Meanwhile, vascular smooth muscle cell lymphotoxin ÎČ receptors (VSMC-LTÎČRs) protected against atherosclerosis by maintaining structure, cellularity, and size of ATLOs though VSMC-LTÎČRs did not affect secondary lymphoid organs: Atherosclerosis was markedly exacerbated in Apoe−/−Ltbr−/− and to a similar extent in aged Apoe−/−Ltbrfl/flTagln-cre mice. These data support the conclusion that the immune system employs ATLOs to organize aorta T cell homeostasis during aging and that VSMC-LTÎČRs participate in atherosclerosis protection via ATLOs

    T cells are dominant population in human abdominal aortic aneurysms and their infiltration in the perivascular tissue correlates with disease severity

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    Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm (AAA) is a major cause of cardiovascular mortality. Adverse changes in vascular phenotype act in concert with chronic inflammation to promote AAA progression. Perivascular adipose tissue (PVAT) helps maintain vascular homeostasis but when inflamed and dysfunctional, can also promote vascular pathology. Previous studies suggested that PVAT may be an important site of vascular inflammation in AAA; however, a detailed assessment of leukocyte populations in human AAA, their anatomic location in the vessel wall and correlation to AAA size remain undefined. Accordingly, we performed in depth immunophenotyping of cells infiltrating the pathologically altered perivascular tissue (PVT) and vessel wall in AAA samples at the site of maximal dilatation (n=51 patients). Flow cytometry revealed that T cells, rather than macrophages, are the major leukocyte subset in AAA and that their greatest accumulations occur in PVT. Both CD4+ and CD8+ T cell populations are highly activated in both compartments, with CD4+ T cells displaying the highest activation status within the AAA wall. Finally, we observed a positive relationship between T cell infiltration in PVT and AAA wall. Interestingly, only PVT T cell infiltration was strongly related to tertiles of AAA size. In summary, this study highlights an important role for PVT as a reservoir of T lymphocytes and potentially as a key site in modulating the underlying inflammation in AAA

    Supporting Hydrometeorological Research and Applications with Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) Products and Services

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    Precipitation is an important dataset in hydrometeorological research and applications such as flood modeling, drought monitoring, etc. On February 27, 2014, the NASA Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) mission was launched to provide the next-generation global observations of rain and snow (http:pmm.nasa.govGPM). The GPM mission consists of an international network of satellites in which a GPM Core Observatory satellite carries both active and passive microwave instruments to measure precipitation and serve as a reference standard, to unify precipitation measurements from a constellation of other research and operational satellites. The NASA Goddard Earth Sciences (GES) Data and Information Services Center (DISC) hosts and distributes GPM data. The GES DISC is home to the data archive for the GPM predecessor, the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM). GPM products currently available include the following:1. Level-1 GPM Microwave Imager (GMI) and partner radiometer products2. Goddard Profiling Algorithm (GPROF) GMI and partner products (Level-2 and Level-3)3. GPM dual-frequency precipitation radar and their combined products (Level-2 and Level-3)4. Integrated Multi-satellitE Retrievals for GPM (IMERG) products (early, late, and final run)GPM data can be accessed through a number of data services (e.g., Simple Subset Wizard, OPeNDAP, WMS, WCS, ftp, etc.). A newly released Unified User Interface or UUI is a single interface to provide users seamless access to data, information and services. For example, a search for precipitation products will not only return TRMM and GPM products, but also other global precipitation products such as MERRA (Modern Era Retrospective-Analysis for Research and Applications), GLDAS (Global Land Data Assimilation Systems), etc.New features and capabilities have been recently added in GIOVANNI to allow exploring and inter-comparing GPM IMERG (Integrated Multi-satelliE Retrievals for GPM) half-hourly and monthly precipitation products as well as other precipitation products such as TRMM, MERRA, NLDAS, GLDAS, etc. GIOVANNI is a web-based tool developed by the GES DISC, to visualize and analyze Earth science data without having to download data and software. During the GPM era, the GES DISC will continue to develop and provide data services for supporting applications. We will update and enhance existing TRMM applications (Current Conditions, the USDA Crop Explorer, etc.) with higher spatial resolution IMERG products. In this presentation, we will present GPM data products and services with examples

    Influence of supramolecular forces on the linear viscoelasticity of gluten

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    Stress relaxation behavior of hydrated gluten networks was investigated by means of rheometry combined with ÎŒ-computed tomography (ÎŒ-CT) imaging. Stress relaxation behavior was followed over a wide temperature range (0–70 °C). Modulation of intermolecular bonds was achieved with urea or ascorbic acid in an effort to elucidate the presiding intermolecular interactions over gluten network relaxation. Master curves of viscoelasticity were constructed, and relaxation spectra were computed revealing three relaxation regimes for all samples. Relaxation commences with a well-defined short-time regime where Rouse-like modes dominate, followed by a power law region displaying continuous relaxation concluding in a terminal zone. In the latter zone, poroelastic relaxation due to water migration in the nanoporous structure of the network also contributes to the stress relief in the material. Hydrogen bonding between adjacent protein chains was identified as the determinant force that influences the relaxation of the networks. Changes in intermolecular interactions also resulted in changes in microstructure of the material that was also linked to the relaxation behavior of the networks

    Distribution of lipids in the grain of wheat (cv Hereward) determined by lipidomic analysis of milling and pearling fractions

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    Lipidomic analyses of milling and pearling fractions from wheat grain were carried out to determine differences in composition which could relate to the spatial distribution of lipids in the grain. Free fatty acids and triacylglycerols were major components in all fractions, but the relative contents of polar lipids varied, particularly lysophosphatidyl choline and digalactosyldiglyceride, which were enriched in flour fractions. By contrast, minor phospholipids were enriched in bran and offal fractions. The most abundant fatty acids in the analysed acyl lipids were C16:0 and C18:2 and their combinations, including C36:4 and C34:2. Phospholipids and galactolipids have been reported to have beneficial properties for bread making, while free fatty acids and triacylglycerols are considered detrimental. The subtle differences in the compositions of fractions determined in the present study could therefore underpin the production of flour fractions with optimised compositions for different end uses

    Evidence-based guidelines for treating bipolar disorder: revised third edition recommendations from the British Association for Psychopharmacology

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    The British Association for Psychopharmacology guidelines specify the scope and targets of treatment for bipolar disorder. The third version is based explicitly on the available evidence and presented, like previous Clinical Practice Guidelines, as recommendations to aid clinical decision making for practitioners: it may also serve as a source of information for patients and carers, and assist audit. The recommendations are presented together with a more detailed review of the corresponding evidence. A consensus meeting, involving experts in bipolar disorder and its treatment, reviewed key areas and considered the strength of evidence and clinical implications. The guidelines were drawn up after extensive feedback from these participants. The best evidence from randomized controlled trials and, where available, observational studies employing quasi-experimental designs was used to evaluate treatment options. The strength of recommendations has been described using the GRADE approach. The guidelines cover the diagnosis of bipolar disorder, clinical management, and strategies for the use of medicines in short-term treatment of episodes, relapse prevention and stopping treatment.The use of medication is integrated with a coherent approach to psychoeducation and behaviour change
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