8,576 research outputs found
On Resilient Behaviors in Computational Systems and Environments
The present article introduces a reference framework for discussing
resilience of computational systems. Rather than a property that may or may not
be exhibited by a system, resilience is interpreted here as the emerging result
of a dynamic process. Said process represents the dynamic interplay between the
behaviors exercised by a system and those of the environment it is set to
operate in. As a result of this interpretation, coherent definitions of several
aspects of resilience can be derived and proposed, including elasticity, change
tolerance, and antifragility. Definitions are also provided for measures of the
risk of unresilience as well as for the optimal match of a given resilient
design with respect to the current environmental conditions. Finally, a
resilience strategy based on our model is exemplified through a simple
scenario.Comment: The final publication is available at Springer via
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s40860-015-0002-6 The paper considerably extends
the results of two conference papers that are available at http://ow.ly/KWfkj
and http://ow.ly/KWfgO. Text and formalism in those papers has been used or
adapted in the herewith submitted pape
National child measurement programme: detailed analysis of the 2007/08 national dataset
This report presents detailed secondary analyses to further our understanding of the epidemiology of child height, weight and Body Mass Index (BMI) across England. It attempts to explain some of the findings presented in the NHS Information Centre for Health and Social Care 2007/08 NCMP report.
The report provides analysis of PCT participation levels and investigates data quality issues in the collection of the 2007/08 NCMP dataset. Data on prevalence of underweight, healthy weight, overweight and obesity are analysed, comparing the 2007/08 data to the 2006/07, and the 1990 baseline.
Analyses by deprivation and ethnic group are also included. The report further examines how the distribution of BMI differs by age and sex of the child sample population, and investigates changes since the 1990 baseline. It looks at the association between obesity prevalence and characteristics of the individual children and the PCTs in which they were measured using regression analysis
Influence of Nitrogen Availability on Aminotransferases in Lemna minor L
Protein contents and glutamate: glyoxylate, serine: glyoxylate, alanine: glyoxylate and glutamate: pyruvate aminotransferase activities per gram fresh weight declined sharply when Lemna minor L., previously grown on nitrate medium, was starved of nitrogen. Nitrogen replenishment after 5 d caused complete recovery of these parameters with higher values in ammonium-fed than nitrate-fed plants 7 d after transfer of plants from nitrogen-free medium. Glutamate: glyoxylate and alanine: glyoxylate aminotransferase specific activities (based on total extracted protein) showed little change with nitrogen availability. Serine: glyoxylate aminotransferase increased slowly during nitrogen starvation and decreased following nitrogen replenishment whether with ammonium or nitrate. After 1 d of nitrogen starvation the specific activity of glutamate: pyruvate aminotransferase declined; it increased following nitrogen replenishment and ammonium gave rise to agreater activity than nitrate. The results are discussed in relation to the differences in stability of the various enzymes relative to the overall protein turnover rat
The mitochondrial Na+/Ca2+ exchanger upregulates glucose dependent Ca2+ signalling linked to insulin secretion.
Mitochondria mediate dual metabolic and Ca(2+) shuttling activities. While the former is required for Ca(2+) signalling linked to insulin secretion, the role of the latter in β cell function has not been well understood, primarily because the molecular identity of the mitochondrial Ca(2+) transporters were elusive and the selectivity of their inhibitors was questionable. This study focuses on NCLX, the recently discovered mitochondrial Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger that is linked to Ca(2+) signalling in MIN6 and primary β cells. Suppression either of NCLX expression, using a siRNA construct (siNCLX) or of its activity, by a dominant negative construct (dnNCLX), enhanced mitochondrial Ca(2+) influx and blocked efflux induced by glucose or by cell depolarization. In addition, NCLX regulated basal, but not glucose-dependent changes, in metabolic rate, mitochondrial membrane potential and mitochondrial resting Ca(2+). Importantly, NCLX controlled the rate and amplitude of cytosolic Ca(2+) changes induced by depolarization or high glucose, indicating that NCLX is a critical and rate limiting component in the cross talk between mitochondrial and plasma membrane Ca(2+) signalling. Finally, knockdown of NCLX expression was followed by a delay in glucose-dependent insulin secretion. These findings suggest that the mitochondrial Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger, NCLX, shapes glucose-dependent mitochondrial and cytosolic Ca(2+) signals thereby regulating the temporal pattern of insulin secretion in β cells
Role of microRNAs in the age-associated decline of pancreatic beta cell function in rat islets
This is a freely-available open access publication. Please cite the published version which is available via the DOI link in this record.AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Ageing can lead to reduced insulin sensitivity and loss of pancreatic beta cell function, predisposing individuals to the development of diabetes. The aim of this study was to assess the contribution of microRNAs (miRNAs) to age-associated beta cell dysfunction. METHODS: The global mRNA and miRNA profiles of 3- and 12-month-old rat islets were collected by microarray. The functional impact of age-associated differences in miRNA expression was investigated by mimicking the observed changes in primary beta cells from young animals. RESULTS: Beta cells from 12-month-old rats retained normal insulin content and secretion, but failed to proliferate in response to mitotic stimuli. The islets of these animals displayed modifications at the level of several miRNAs, including upregulation of miR-34a, miR-124a and miR-383, and downregulation of miR-130b and miR-181a. Computational analysis of the transcriptomic modifications observed in the islets of 12-month-old rats revealed that the differentially expressed genes were enriched for miR-34a and miR-181a targets. Indeed, the induction of miR-34a and reduction of miR-181a in the islets of young animals mimicked the impaired beta cell proliferation observed in old animals. mRNA coding for alpha-type platelet-derived growth factor receptor, which is critical for compensatory beta cell mass expansion, is directly inhibited by miR34a and is likely to be at least partly responsible for the effects of this miRNA. CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: Changes in the level of specific miRNAs that occur during ageing affect the proliferative capacity of beta cells. This might reduce their ability to expand under conditions of increased insulin demand, favouring the development of type 2 diabetes.Swiss National Science FoundationFondation Francophone pour la Recherche sur le DiabèteWellcome Trust Senior Investigator AwardMRC Programme GrantRoyal Society Wolfson Research Merit AwardWellcome Trust project gran
The Effects of Negative Legacies on the Adjustment of Parentally Bereaved Children and Adolescents
This is a report of a qualitative analysis of a sample of bereaved families in which one parent died and in which children scored in the clinical range on the Child Behavior Check List. The purpose of this analysis was to learn more about the lives of these children. They were considered to be at risk of developing emotional and behavioral problems associated with the death. We discovered that many of these “high risk” children had a continuing bond with the deceased that was primarily negative and troubling for them in contrast to a comparison group of children not at risk from the same study. Five types of legacies, not mutually exclusive, were identified: health related, role related, personal qualities, legacy of blame, and an emotional legacy. Coping behavior on the part of the surviving parent seemed to make a difference in whether or not a legacy was experienced as negative
Pathways to economic well-being among teenage mothers in Great Britain
The present study examines pathways to independence from social welfare among 738 teenage mothers, participants of the 1970 British Cohort Study, who were followed up at age 30 years. Using a longitudinal design, a pathway model is tested, examining linkages between family social background, cognitive ability, school motivation, and individual investments in education, as well as work- and family-related roles. The most important factors associated with financial independence by age 30 are continued attachment to the labor market as well as a stable relationship with a partner (not necessarily the father of the child). Pathways to financial independence, in turn, are predicted through own cognitive resources, school motivation, and family cohesion. Implications of findings for policy making are discussed.© 2010 Hogrefe Publishing
Health economic assessment tools (HEAT) for walking and for cycling
Physical inactivity is a significant public health
problem in most regions of the world, which
is unlikely to be solved by classical health
promotion approaches alone. The promotion
of active transport (cycling and walking) for
everyday physical activity is a win-win approach;
it not only promotes health but can also lead
to positive environmental effects, especially
if cycling and walking replace short car trips.
Cycling and walking can also be more readily
integrated into people’s busy schedules than,
for example, leisure-time exercise. These forms
of physical activity are also more practicable for
groups of the population for which sport is either
not feasible because of physical limitations or is
not an accessible leisure activity for economic,
social or cultural reasons. There is a large
potential for active travel in European urban
transport, as many trips are short and would
be amenable to being undertaken on foot or
by bicycle. This, however, requires effective
partnerships with the transport and urban
planning sectors, whose policies are key driving
forces in providing appropriate conditions for
such behavioural changes to take place. This has
been recognized by a number of international
policy frameworks, such as the Action Plan for
implementation of the European Strategy for the
Prevention and Control of Noncommunicable
Diseases 2012–2016, adopted by the WHO
Regional Committee for Europe (1). The strategy
identifies the promotion of active mobility as
one of the supporting interventions endorsed
by WHO Member States to address this highpriority
topic in the European Region, as do other
international policy frameworks such as the
Toronto Charter for Physical Activity launched
in May 2010 as a global call for action (2)
Evaluation of Amino Acid Composition as a Geochronometer in Buried Soils on Mount Kenya, East Africa
A sequence of surface and buried paleosols from the slopes of Mount Kenya, East Africa, has been identified and dated by radiocarbon and amino acid dating techniques in order to elucidate the Quaternary history of the area. Buried paleosols vary in radiocarbon age from 900 to > 40,000 yrs BP. They have developed in glacial and periglacial deposits of variable texture, consisting of a high percentage of clasts of phonolite, basalt and syenite. All but two paleosols are located in the Afroalpine zone (above 3200 m). D/L ratios of amino acids in Ab horizons were determined in order to establish their reliability for relative age dating. Alanine, aspartic acid, glutamic acid, leucine, valine, and phenylalanine were routinely analyzed. Aspartic acid, as in other cases, proved reliable yielding remarkably consistent results, with higher ratios corresponding to increasing age. Other acids analyzed showed distinct trends, although not as convincing as aspartic acid. In most cases, the aspartic acid ratio/ age relationships were supported by radiocarbon dates. D/L ratios of aspartic acid varied from approximately 0.07 for modern samples, to approximately 0.45 in samples > 40,000 years old.On a identifié et daté, au radiocarbone et à l'aide de techniques de datations à l'acide aminé, des paléosols enfouis et de surface afin de comprendre l'évolution quaternaire de la région. Les datations au radiocarbone des paléosols enfouis varient de 900 à plus de 40 000 BP. Les sols se sont développés dans des dépôts glaciaires et périglaciaires de différentes textures, constitués de fragments de roches détritiques, de phonolite, de basalte et de syénite. Tous les paléosols, sauf deux, sont situés dans la zone afroalpine (au-dessus de 3200 m). On a déterminé par racémisation les rapports D/L des acides aminés dans les horizons Ab en vue d'évaluer leur fiabilité pour la datation des âges relatifs. On a fait l'analyse de l'alaline, de l'acide aspartique, de l'acide glutamique, de la leucine, de la valine et du phénylalaline. L'acide aspartique, comme dans d'autres cas, a donné des résultats particulièrement satisfaisants, les quotients plus élevés correspondant aux âges les plus anciens. D'autres acides montraient des tendances bien distinctes, mais moins convaincantes que dans le cas de l'acide aspartique. Ainsi, dans la plupart des cas, les relations quotients/âges de l'acide aspartique étaient corroborées par les datations au radiocarbone. Les rapports D/L de l'acide aspartique variaient d'environ 0,07 pour les échantillons modernes à environ 0,45 pour les échantillons de plus de 40 000 ans.Eine Série von an der Oberflâche Negenden und begrabenen Palàobôden von den Hàngen des Mount Kenya, Ost-Afrika, wurde mittels Radiokarbon- und Aminosâuredatierungs-techniken identifiziert und datiert, um die Geschichte dieses Gebiets im Quaternàr zu erhellen. Das durch Radiokarbon bestimmte Alter der begrabenen Palàobôden variiert von 900 bis > 40,000 Jahren v.u.Z. Dièse Bôden haben sich in glazialen und periglazialen Ablagerungen verschiedener Beschaffenheit entwickelt, welche zu einem hohen Prozentsatz aus Trùmmern von Phonolith, Basait und Syenit bestehen. AuBer zweien befinden sich aile Palàobôden in der afroalpinen Zone (oberhalb 3200 m). Die D/L Anteile der Aminosâuren in den Ab-Horizonten wurden bestimmt, um ihre Verlâpiichkeit bei der relativen Altersbestimmung festzustellen. Alamin, aspartische Sàure, Glutamin-Sàure, Leuzin, Valin und Phenylalanin wurden laufend analysiert. Wie in anderen Fallen erwies sich die aspartische Sàure als verlàpiich, indem sie bemerkenswert bestàndige Ergebnisse ergab, bei denen die hôheren Quotienten dem hôheren Alter entsprachen. Andere analysierte Sàuren zeigten ausgepràgte Trends, wenn auch nicht so ùberzeugend wie die aspartische Sàure. In den meisten Fallen wurden die Beziehungen Quotient/Alter der aspartischen Sàure durch Radiokarbondatierungen gestùtzt. Die D/L Anteile der aspartischen Sàure variierten von ungefâhr 0.07 fur moderne Proben bis ungefâhr 0.45 in Proben, die > 40,000 Jahre ait sind
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