6 research outputs found

    Development and Validation Test of a Mule Deer Habitat Rule

    Get PDF
    A mathematical description of Rocky Mountain mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus hemionus) habitat was developed and subjected to validation testing using correlation and multiple regression statistical techniques. Data were collected on a central Utah study area, which was divided into mountain and desert regions. Data on deer utilization and several habitat components from 86 study plots visited in 1976 were used to develop a habitat rule. Data from 46 study plots visited in 1977 were used to test the accuracy of the rule. Deer utilization was determined from pellet group counts on 20 0.001 ha pellet plots at each study plot. The regression model accounted for 53 and 43 percent of the respective variation in pellet group density in mountain and desert habitats observed in 1976. However, the same model explained only 8 and 0.02 percent, respectively, of the observed variation in the 1977 validation test data. Reliability and applicability of statistical habitat models and importance of validation of results are discussed

    Factors for Differential Outcome Across Cancers in Clinical Molecule-Targeted Fluorescence Imaging

    No full text
    Clinical imaging performance using a fluorescent antibody was compared across 3 cancers to elucidate physical and biologic factors contributing to differential translation of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) expression to macroscopic fluorescence in tumors. Methods: Thirty-one patients with high-grade glioma (HGG, n = 5), head-and-neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC, n = 23), or lung adenocarcinoma (LAC, n = 3) were systemically infused with 50 mg of panitumumab-IRDye800 1-3 d before surgery. Intraoperative open-field fluorescent images of the surgical field were acquired, with imaging device settings and operating room lighting conditions being tested on tissue-mimicking phantoms. Fluorescence contrast and margin size were measured on resected specimen surfaces. Antibody distribution and EGFR immunoreactivity were characterized in macroscopic and microscopic histologic structures. The integrity of the blood-brain barrier was examined via tight junction protein (Claudin-5) expression with immunohistochemistry. Stepwise multivariate linear regression of biologic variables was performed to identify independent predictors of panitumumab-IRDye800 concentration in tissue. Results: Optimally acquired at the lowest gain for tumor detection with ambient light, intraoperative fluorescence imaging enhanced tissue-size dependent tumor contrast by 5.2-fold, 3.4-fold, and 1.4-fold in HGG, HNSCC, and LAC, respectively. Tissue surface fluorescence target-to-background ratio correlated with margin size and identified 78%-97% of at-risk resection margins ex vivo. In 4-μm-thick tissue sections, fluorescence detected tumor with 0.85-0.89 areas under the receiver-operating-characteristic curves. Preferential breakdown of blood-brain barrier in HGG improved tumor specificity of intratumoral antibody distribution relative to that of EGFR (96% vs. 80%) despite its reduced concentration (3.9 ng/mg of tissue) compared with HNSCC (8.1 ng/mg) and LAC (6.3 ng/mg). Cellular EGFR expression, tumor cell density, plasma antibody concentration, and delivery barrier were independently associated with local intratumoral panitumumab-IRDye800 concentration, with 0.62 goodness of fit of prediction. Conclusion: In multicancer clinical imaging of a receptor-ligand-based molecular probe, plasma antibody concentration, delivery barrier, and intratumoral EGFR expression driven by cellular biomarker expression and tumor cell density led to heterogeneous intratumoral antibody accumulation and spatial distribution whereas tumor size, resection margin, and intraoperative imaging settings substantially influenced macroscopic tumor contrast

    Overview of the impact of psychopathy and other problematic personality constructs in the workplace

    No full text

    WTO must ban harmful fisheries subsidies

    Get PDF
    Sustainably managed wild fisheries support food and nutritional security, livelihoods, and cultures (1). Harmful fisheries subsidies—government payments that incentivize overcapacity and lead to overfishing—undermine these benefits yet are increasing globally (2). World Trade Organization (WTO) members have a unique opportunity at their ministerial meeting in November to reach an agreement that eliminates harmful subsidies (3). We—a group of scientists spanning 46 countries and 6 continents—urge the WTO to make this commitment..
    corecore