183 research outputs found

    GAMES IN CHAT WINDOW

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    A gaming system provides a game in a chat window. The system receives a request from a user to play a game in the chat window. The user may request for playing the game with one or more other participants of a chat. On receiving the request, the system provides the game in the chat window

    Elm Farm Organic Research Centre December 2006

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    The Organic Research Centre. Elm Farm Research Centre Bulletin with Technical Updates from The Organic Advisory Service is a regular publication from The Organic Research Centre. The current issue covers: Report from 2006 Cirencester Conference; Quest for more home produced organic food; in a world where bread matters; Improving wheat with plenty of parents; Unlocking the secrets of the ancient (cereal varieties); Brain food- a good read; Not to late to protect the future: The organic role; Bumper Oat yields- Tradis trials top ten tonnes; Multiage flocks- a viable solution to wheigh variability; Letters

    Investigating speech and language impairments in delirium: a preliminary case-control study

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    <div><p>Introduction</p><p>Language impairment is recognized as as part of the delirium syndrome, yet there is little neuropsychological research on the nature of this dysfunction. Here we hypothesized that patients with delirium show impairments in language formation, coherence and comprehension.</p><p>Methods</p><p>This was a case-control study in 45 hospitalized patients (aged 65–97 years) with delirium, dementia without delirium, or no cognitive impairment (N = 15 per group). DSM-5 criteria were used for delirium. Speech was elicited during (1) structured conversational questioning, and (2) the "Cookie Theft" picture description task. Language comprehension was assessed through standardized verbal and written commands. Interviews were audio-recorded and transcribed.</p><p>Results</p><p>Delirium and dementia groups scored lower on the conversational assessment than the control group (p<0.01, moderate effect sizes (r) of 0.48 and 0.51, resp.). In the Cookie Theft task, the average length of utterances (i.e. unit of speech), indicating language productivity and fluency, distinguished patients with delirium from those with dementia (p<0.01, r = 0.50) and no cognitive impairment (p<0.01, r = 0.55). Patients with delirium performed worse on written comprehension tests compared to cognitively unimpaired patients (p<0.01, r = 0.63), but not compared to the dementia group.</p><p>Conclusions</p><p>Production of spontaneous speech, word quantity, speech content and verbal and written language comprehension are impaired in delirious patients compared to cognitively unimpaired patients. Additionally, patients with delirium produced significantly less fluent speech than those with dementia. These findings have implications for how speech and language are evaluated in delirium assessments, and also for communication with patients with delirium. A study limitation was that the delirium group included patients with co-morbid dementia, which precludes drawing conclusions about the specific language profile of delirium.</p></div

    A participatory approach to variety trials for organic systems

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    A participatory research methodology was used to compare the performance of UK wheat varieties under organic conditions. Plots of three breadmaking winter wheat varieties (Hereward, Solstice and Xi19) and a mixture (1:1:1) of the varieties were grown at 19 UK farms in two seasons (2003/04 and 2004/05). Meas-urements were taken of growth habit, yield and grain quality. Grain yields in both seasons showed significant site by variety interactions, although the variation among sites was greater than among varieties in both instances. Wheat grown at Western sites was significantly shorter and higher-yielding than that grown at Eastern sites in 2003/04 but significantly taller in 2004/05. As with grain yield, greater variation among site than variety was found in the Hagberg Falling Number and protein concentra-tion results in both seasons. The results from the two years of trials illustrate the variability of organic systems and the difficulty in selecting a single variety suitable for organic farms

    Head-Up : co-designing novel neck orthosis for neck weakness in MND

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    Introduction : People with Motor Neurone Disease (MND) often develop weak neck muscles, leading to pain, restricted movement and problems with swallowing, breathing and communication. Ideally, a neck collar would help alleviate these. However, neck collars currently available are of limited use for people with MND and often rejected by patients. The same is true for patients with neck weakness due to other conditions. The Head-Up project is a 2 year study funded by the National Institute for Health Research's Invention for Innovation, or i4i, programme with a budget of £400k. Its principal aim is to develop a novel neck orthosis for neck weakness that supports whilst allowing freedom to move without negatively impacting quality of life. The research is a collaboration between clinicians, engineers, creative designers, patients and carer who will be working closely together is a co-design process. Manufacturers will be brought into this process at a later date. Ethical approval has been granted where necessary for all participatory elements. Methods The co-design process will inherently elicit subjective views. As such, prior to starting this workpackage, it was considered necessary to create a measure for this subjectivity and to give the design team a greater empathetic understanding of the inadequacies of current provision for this user group. This has been achieved by a combined clinical comfort assessment and engineering simulation. An engineering simulation of the head, neck and upper torso has been developed using Finite Element Analysis. This has been called the Neck Assessment Tool (NAT). Real body geometry was obtained via a 3D laser scan. The neck has been modelled without any structural integrity such that the head will drop without support. The body model has been meshed and constrained to represent this scenario. The geometry of different neck collar models were created in separate files and meshed. Individually they are imported into the body model, appropriate contact conditions applied and the model is processed. Each model tells the researchers where there is contact between body and collar and, relatively, the pressure of that contact. A clinical comfort assessment pilot study has been conducted using the design team members. This is based on location mapping from the McGill pain questionnaire and a Visual Analogue Scale. 5 different neck collars were identified based on common usage and distinct design differences. The members of the research team wore each collar for a day with recovery periods between. During each test period the participants recorded locations of pain/discomfort and perceptions of relative associated scales. They recorded other data relating to emotional reactions caused by the collars, impact on specific Activities of Daily Living (ADL's) and aesthetic considerations. Results The NAT has been conducted on 2 collars and the comfort assessment on 5, 2 of which are those tested in NAT. Comparisons between the comfort assessment and NAT demonstrate acceptable correlation, validating the simulation. The comfort assessment participant reporting forms have been refined and recruitment is under way to roll out to a wider population of health volunteers and use with MND volunteers to report about experiences of their specific collars as and when used. The design team reported significant differences in their perceptions of neck collars before and after the comfort assessment that will positively impact the co-design process. References 1. Ambrogio N et al, 'A Comparison of Three Types of Neck Support in Fibromyalgia Patients', Arthritis Care and Research (1998), v11, n5, pp 405-410 2. Bowen SJ, Chamberlain PM, 'Engaging the Ageing: Designing Artefacts to Provoke Dialogue', Designing Inclusive Futures (2008) Part I, 35-44, DOI: 10.1007/978-1-84800-211-1_4 3. Carlsson AM, 'Assessment of chronic pain. I. Aspects of the reliability and validity of the visual analogue scale', Pain (1983) v16, n1, pp 87–101 4. Escalante A, Lichtenstein MJ, Lawrence VA, Roberson M, Hazuda HP, ' Where does it hurt? Stability of recordings of pain location using the McGill Pain Map', The Journal of Rheumatology (1996) v23, n10, pp 1788-93 5. Huges TJR, 'The Finite Element Method: Linear Static and Dynamic Finite Element Analysis', Inform (2000), v682, n2, p 682, Publisher: Dover Publications, ISSN: 00457825, ISBN: 0486411818 6. Latimer N, Dixon S, Mcdermott C, Shaw P, McCarthy A, Tindale W, Heron N, 'Modelling the cost effectiveness of potential new neck collar for patients with motor neurone disease', http://www.sheffield.ac.uk/scharr/sections/heds/dps-2011 7. Miller RG et al, ' Practice Parameter update: The care of the patient with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: Multidisciplinary care, symptom management and cognitive/behavioural impairment(an evidence based review)', Neurology (2009), v73, pp 1218-1225 8. Motor Neurone Disease Association, 'Head Supports', www.mndassociation.org/documents.rm?id=28 9. Thumbikat P, Bailey C and Datta D, 'Orthoses for neck control', ACNR (2006) v6, pp 18-19 10. Qing Hang Zhanga, Ee Chon Teoa, Hong Wan Nga, Vee Sin Lee, 'Finite element analysis of moment-rotation relationships for human cervical spine', Journal of Biomechanics (2006), v39, n1, pp1 89–19

    Spatiotemporal regulation of liver development by the Wnt/β- catenin pathway

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    While the Wnt/β-catenin pathway plays a critical role in the maintenance of the zonation of ammonia metabolizing enzymes in the adult liver, the mechanisms responsible for inducing zonation in the embryo are not well understood. Herein we address the spatiotemporal role of the Wnt/β-catenin pathway in the development of zonation in embryonic mouse liver by conditional deletion of Apc and β-catenin at different stages of mouse liver development. In normal development, the ammonia metabolising enzymes carbamoylphosphate synthetase I (CPSI) and Glutamine synthetase (GS) begin to be expressed in separate hepatoblasts from E13.5 and E15.5 respectively and gradually increase in number thereafter. Restriction of GS expression occurs at E18 and becomes increasingly limited to the terminal perivenous hepatocytes postnatally. Expression of nuclear β-catenin coincides with the restriction of GS expression to the terminal perivenous hepatocytes. Conditional loss of Apc resulted in the expression of nuclear β-catenin throughout the developing liver and increased number of cells expressing GS. Conversely, conditional loss of β-catenin resulted in loss of GS expression. These data suggest that the Wnt pathway is critical to the development of zonation as well as maintaining the zonation in the adult liver

    Group cognitive stimulation therapy versus usual care for people with intellectual disabilities and dementia (CST-IDD) in the UK: protocol for a mixed-methods feasibility randomised controlled trial

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    INTRODUCTION: The prevalence of dementia is almost five times higher in people with intellectual disabilities compared with the general population. However, evidence-based treatments for this population are lacking, as most randomised controlled trials for dementia interventions have not included people with intellectual disabilities. Cognitive stimulation therapy (CST) has a robust evidence base in the general dementia population, consistently showing benefits to cognition, quality of life and being cost-effective. We are conducting a mixed-methods feasibility trial of group CST for people with intellectual disabilities and dementia, to determine if a future definitive randomised controlled trial is feasible. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: Fifty individuals with intellectual disabilities and dementia will be randomised to either the intervention arm (14 sessions of group CST plus treatment as usual) or the control arm (treatment as usual). Randomisation will occur after informed consent has been obtained and baseline assessments completed. Each arm will have 25 participants, with the intervention arm divided into five or more CST groups with three to five participants in each. The outcomes will be feasibility of recruitment, acceptability and adherence of the intervention, suitability of study outcome measures and feasibility of collecting resource use data. Quantitative and qualitative approaches, including semistructured interviews with group participants, carers and group facilitators, will be employed to assess these outcomes. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: This study has been approved by Essex REC (Ref: 21/EE/027) and the HRA ethical approval process through the Integrated Research Application System (IRAS ID: 306 756). We plan to publish the results in peer-reviewed journals and conferences as well as provide feedback to funders, sponsors and study participants. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ISRCTN88614460

    Evolutionary breeding of wheat for low input systems

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    Genetically diverse Composite Cross Populations (CCPs) may be useful in environmentally variable low-input systems as an alternative to pure varieties. They are formed by assembling seed stocks with diverse evolutionary origins, recombining these stocks by hybridisation, bulking the F1 progeny, and subsequent natural selection of the progeny in suc-cessive natural cropping environments. CCPs derived from either 10 high yielding parents (YCCPs), 12 high quality parents (QCCPs), or all 22 parents (YQCCPs), were grown at four sites (2 organic, 2 conventional) in the UK. The YCCPs out yielded the QCCPs, which had higher protein concentrations and Hagberg falling numbers. Although the CCPs performed within the range of the parents, they often performed better than the mean of the parents
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