11 research outputs found

    Same-Sex Social Behavior in Meadow Voles: Multiple and Rapid Formation of Attachments

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    Adult meadow voles (Microtus pennsylvanicus) are solitary in the spring–summer reproductive season, but during winter months, females and males are socially tolerant and aggregate in groups. This behavioral difference is triggered by day length: female meadow voles housed in short, winterlike day lengths form same-sex partner preferences, whereas those housed in long, summer-like day lengths are less social. The present study demonstrates that same-sex social attachments in short day lengths are not exclusive; females formed concurrent attachments with more than one individual, and with non-kin as well as siblings. Partner preferences between females were established within one day of cohousing and did not intensify with greater durations of cohabitation. Males also formed same-sex social attachments, but unlike female affiliative behavior, male partner preferences were not significantly affected by day length. These data are discussed in the context of field behavior and the physiological mechanisms supporting social behavior in voles

    Embodied Discourses of Literacy in the Lives of Two Preservice Teachers

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    This study examines the emerging teacher literacy identities of Ian and A.J., two preservice teachers in a graduate teacher education program in the United States. Using a poststructural feminisms theoretical framework, the study illustrates the embodiment of literacy pedagogy discourses in relation to the literacy courses’ discourse of comprehensive literacy and the literacy biographical discourses of Ian and A.J. The results of this study indicate the need to deconstruct how the discourse of comprehensive literacy limits how we, as literacy teacher educators, position, hear and respond to our preservice teachers and suggests the need for differentiation in our teacher education literacy courses

    Preoperative Stereotactic Radiosurgery for Brain Metastases

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    Stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) is increasingly utilized to treat the resection cavity following resection of brain metastases and recent randomized trials have confirmed postoperative SRS as a standard of care. Postoperative SRS for resected brain metastases improves local control compared to observation, while also preserving neurocognitive function in comparison to whole brain radiation therapy (WBRT). However, even with surgery and SRS, rates of local recurrence at 1 year may be as high as 40%, especially for larger cavities, and there is also a known risk of leptomeningeal disease after surgery. Additional treatment strategies are needed to improve control while maintaining or decreasing the toxicity profile associated with treatment. Preoperative SRS is discussed here as one such approach. Preoperative SRS allows for contouring of an intact metastasis, as opposed to an irregularly shaped surgical cavity in the post-op setting. Delivering SRS prior to surgery may also allow for a “sterilizing” effect, with the potential to increase tumor control by decreasing intra-operative seeding of viable tumor cells beyond the treated cavity, and decreasing risk of leptomeningeal disease. Because there is no need to treat brain surrounding tumor in the preoperative setting, and since the majority of the high dose volume can then be resected at surgery, the rate of symptomatic radiation necrosis may also be reduced with preoperative SRS. In this mini review, we explore the potential benefits and risks of preoperative vs. postoperative SRS for brain metastases as well as the existing literature to date, including published outcomes with preoperative SRS

    Consequences of epistasis on growth in an erhualian Ă— white duroc pig cross

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    Epistasis describes an interaction between the effects of loci. We included epistasis in quantitative trait locus (QTL) mapping of growth at a series of ages in a cross of a Chinese pig breed, Erhualian, with a commercial line, White Duroc. Erhualian pigs have much lower growth rates than White Duroc. We improved a method for genomewide testing of epistasis and present a clear analysis workflow. We also suggest a new approach for interpreting epistasis results where significant additive and dominance effects of a locus in specific backgrounds are determined. In total, seventeen QTL were found and eleven showed epistasis. Loci on chromosomes 2, 3, 4 and 7 were highlighted as affecting growth at more than one age or forming an interaction network. Epistasis resulted in both the QTL on chromosomes 3 and 7 having effects in opposite directions. We believe it is the first time for the chromosome 7 locus that an allele from a Chinese breed has been found to decrease growth. The consequences of epistasis were diverse. Results were impacted by using growth rather than body weight as the phenotype and by correcting for an effect of mother. Epistasis made a considerable contribution to growth in this population and modelling epistasis was important for accurately determining QTL effects

    Impact of radiation dose distribution on nutritional supplementation needs in head and neck cancer radiotherapy: a voxel-based machine learning approach

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    ObjectivesTo investigate the relationship between nutritional supplementation and radiation dose to the pharyngeal constrictor muscles and larynx for head and neck (HN) cancer patients undergoing radiotherapy.MethodsWe retrospectively analyzed radiotherapy (RT) dose for 231 HN cancer patients, focusing on the pharyngeal constrictors and larynx. We defined nutritional supplementation as feeding tube utilization or >10% weight loss from baseline within 90 days after radiotherapy completion. Using deformable image registration (DIR), we mapped each patient’s anatomical structures to a reference coordinate system, and corresponding deformations were applied to dose matrices. Voxel doses were utilized as features for ridge logistic regression models, optimized through 5-fold cross-validation. Model performance was assessed with area under the curve of a receiver operating curve (AUC) and F1 score. We built and compared models using 1) pharyngeal constrictor voxels, 2) larynx voxels, 3) clinical factors and mean regional dose metrics, and 4) clinical factors and dose-volume histogram metrics. Test set AUCs were compared among the models, and feature importance was evaluated.ResultsDIR of the pharyngeal constrictors and larynx yielded mean Dice coefficients of 0.80 and 0.84, respectively. Pharyngeal constrictors voxels and larynx voxel models had AUC of 0.88 and 0.82, respectively. Voxel-based dose modeling identified the superior to middle regions of the pharyngeal constrictors and the superior region of larynx as most predictive of feeding tube use/weight loss. Univariate analysis found treatment setting, treatment laterality, chemotherapy, baseline dysphagia, weight, and socioeconomic status predictive of outcome. An aggregated model using mean doses of pharyngeal constrictors and larynx subregions had an AUC of 0.87 and the model using conventional DVH metrics had an AUC of 0.85 with p-value of 0.04. Feature importance calculations from the regional dose model indicated that mean doses to the superior-middle pharyngeal constrictor muscles followed by mean dose to the superior larynx were most predictive of nutritional supplementation.ConclusionsMachine learning modeling of voxel-level doses enables identification of subregions within organs that correlate with toxicity. For HN radiotherapy, doses to the superior-middle pharyngeal constrictors are most predictive of feeding tube use/weight loss followed by the doses to superior portion of the larynx
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