4,620 research outputs found
Case Studies of the Attainment of Insight in Dream Sessions: Replication and Extension
To replicate and extend the Hill, Knox, et al. (2007) case study of a client who attained insight in one session of dream work, the authors examined two additional single-session cases: one in which a client gained insight and another in which a client did not. The observations across all three cases suggest that the two clients who acquired insight had positive attitudes toward dreams; were motivated and involved in session; and were nonresistant, trusting, and affectively present but not overwhelmed. The client who did not gain insight questioned the value of dreams and was resistant, untrusting, andf emotionally overwhelmed. Therapist adherence and competence using the dream model, ability to manage countertransference, and effective use of probes for insight distinguished the therapists whose clients gained insight from the therapist whose client did not
Polo like kinase 2 tumour suppressor and cancer biomarker: new perspectives on drug sensitivity/resistance in ovarian cancer
The polo-like kinase PLK2 has recently been identified as a potential theranostic marker in the management of chemotherapy sensitive cancers. The methylation status of the PLK2 CpG island varies with sensitivity to paclitaxel and platinum in ovarian cancer cell lines. Importantly, extrapolation of these in vitro data to the clinical setting confirms that the methylation status of the PLK2 CpG island predicts outcomes in patients treated with carboplatin and paclitaxel chemotherapy. A second cell cycle regulator, p57Kip2, is also subject to epigenetic silencing in carboplatin resistance in vitro and in vivo, emphasising that cell cycle regulators are important determinants of sensitivity to chemotherapeutic agents and providing insights into the phenomenon of collateral drug sensitivity in oncology. Understanding the mechanistic basis and identification of robust biomarkers to predict collateral sensitivity may inform optimal use of chemotherapy in patients receiving multiple lines of treatment
A Millikelvin Scanned Probe for Measurement of Nanostructures
We demonstrate a scanning force microscope, based upon a quartz tuning fork,
that operates below 100 mK and in magnetic fields up to 6 T. The microscope has
a conducting tip for electrical probing of nanostructures of interest, and it
incorporates a low noise cryogenic amplifier to measure both the vibrations of
the tuning fork and the electrical signals from the nanostructures. At
millikelvin temperatures the imaging resolution is below 1 um in a 22 um x 22
um range, and a coarse motion provides translations of a few mm. This scanned
probe is useful for high bandwidth measurement of many high impedance
nanostructures on a single sample. We show data locating an SET within an array
and measure its coulomb blockade with a sensitivity of 2.6 x 10^-5 e/Hz^1/2.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, submitted to RS
On the Change in Archivability of Websites Over Time
As web technologies evolve, web archivists work to keep up so that our
digital history is preserved. Recent advances in web technologies have
introduced client-side executed scripts that load data without a referential
identifier or that require user interaction (e.g., content loading when the
page has scrolled). These advances have made automating methods for capturing
web pages more difficult. Because of the evolving schemes of publishing web
pages along with the progressive capability of web preservation tools, the
archivability of pages on the web has varied over time. In this paper we show
that the archivability of a web page can be deduced from the type of page being
archived, which aligns with that page's accessibility in respect to dynamic
content. We show concrete examples of when these technologies were introduced
by referencing mementos of pages that have persisted through a long evolution
of available technologies. Identifying these reasons for the inability of these
web pages to be archived in the past in respect to accessibility serves as a
guide for ensuring that content that has longevity is published using good
practice methods that make it available for preservation.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, Theory and Practice of Digital Libraries (TPDL)
2013, Valletta, Malt
Short-term genome stability of serial Clostridium difficile ribotype 027 isolates in an experimental gut model and recurrent human disease
Copyright: © 2013 Eyre et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are creditedClostridium difficile whole genome sequencing has the potential to identify related isolates, even among otherwise indistinguishable strains, but interpretation depends on understanding genomic variation within isolates and individuals.Serial isolates from two scenarios were whole genome sequenced. Firstly, 62 isolates from 29 timepoints from three in vitro gut models, inoculated with a NAP1/027 strain. Secondly, 122 isolates from 44 patients (2–8 samples/patient) with mostly recurrent/on-going symptomatic NAP-1/027 C. difficile infection. Reference-based mapping was used to identify single nucleotide variants (SNVs).Across three gut model inductions, two with antibiotic treatment, total 137 days, only two new SNVs became established. Pre-existing minority SNVs became dominant in two models. Several SNVs were detected, only present in the minority of colonies at one/two timepoints. The median (inter-quartile range) [range] time between patients’ first and last samples was 60 (29.5–118.5) [0–561] days. Within-patient C. difficile evolution was 0.45 SNVs/called genome/year (95%CI 0.00–1.28) and within-host diversity was 0.28 SNVs/called genome (0.05–0.53). 26/28 gut model and patient SNVs were non-synonymous, affecting a range of gene targets.The consistency of whole genome sequencing data from gut model C. difficile isolates, and the high stability of genomic sequences in isolates from patients, supports the use of whole genome sequencing in detailed transmission investigations.Peer reviewe
The cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p57(Kip2) is epigenetically regulated in carboplatin resistance and results in collateral sensitivity to the CDK inhibitor seliciclib in ovarian cancer
Carboplatin remains a first-line agent in the management of epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC). Unfortunately, platinum-resistant disease ultimately occurs in most patients. Using a novel EOC cell line with acquired resistance to carboplatin: PEO1CarbR, genome-wide micro-array profiling identified the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p57(Kip2) as specifically downregulated in carboplatin resistance. Presently, we describe confirmation of these preliminary data with a variety of approaches
Binary Galaxies in the Local Supercluster and Its Neighborhood
We report a catalog of 509 pairs identified among 10403 nearby galaxies with
line-of-sight velocities V_LG < 3500 km/s.We selected binary systems in
accordance with two criteria (bounding and temporal), which require the
physical pair of galaxies to have negative total energy and its components to
be located inside the zero-velocity surface. We assume that individual galaxy
masses are proportional to their total K-band luminosities, M = L_K x 6M/L. The
catalog gives the magnitudes and morphological types of galaxies and also the
projected (orbital) masses and pair isolation indices. The component
line-of-sight velocity differences and projected distances of the binary
systems considered have power-law distributions with the median values of 35
km/s and 123 kpc, respectively. The median mass-to-K-band luminosity ratio is
equal to 11 M/L, and its uncertainty is mostly due to the errors of measured
velocities. Our sample of binary systems has a typical density contrast of d
ro/ro_c ~ 500 and a median crossing time of about 3.5 Gyr. We point out the
substantial fraction of binary systems consisting of late-type dwarf galaxies,
where the luminosities of both components are lower than that of the Small
Magellanic Cloud. The median projected distance for 41 such pairs is only 30
kpc, and the median difference of their line-of-sight velocities is equal to 14
km/s which is smaller than the typical error for radial-velocity (30 km/s).
This specific population of gas-rich dwarf binary galaxies such as I Zw 18 may
be at the stage immediately before merging of its components. Such objects,
which are usually lost in flux-limited (and not distance-limited) samples
deserve a thorough study in the HI radio line with high spatial and velocity
resolution.Comment: published in Astrophysical Bulletin, 2008, Vol. 63, No. 4, pp.
299-34
External and internal noise surveys of London primary schools
Internal and external noise surveys have been carried out around schools in London, UK, to provide information on typical levels and sources to which children are exposed while at school. Noise levels were measured outside 142 schools, in areas away from flightpaths into major airports. 86% of the schools surveyed were exposed to noise from road traffic, the average external noise level outside a school being 57 dB LAeq. Detailed internal noise surveys have been carried out in 140 classrooms in 16 schools, together with classroom observations. It was found that noise levels inside classrooms depend upon the activities in which the children are engaged, with a difference of 20 dB LAeq between the 'quietest' and 'noisiest' activities. The average background noise level in classrooms exceeds the level recommended in current standards. The number of children in the classroom was found to affect noise levels. External noise influenced internal noise levels only when children were engaged in the quietest classroom activities. The effects of the age of the school buildings and types of window upon internal noise were examined but results were inconclusive
Electron-beam propagation in a two-dimensional electron gas
A quantum mechanical model based on a Green's function approach has been used
to calculate the transmission probability of electrons traversing a
two-dimensional electron gas injected and detected via mode-selective quantum
point contacts. Two-dimensional scattering potentials, back-scattering, and
temperature effects were included in order to compare the calculated results
with experimentally observed interference patterns. The results yield detailed
information about the distribution, size, and the energetic height of the
scattering potentials.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Identification of blue high proper motion objects in the Tycho-2 and 2MASS catalogues using Virtual Observatory tools
With available Virtual Observatory tools, we looked for new bright blue high
proper motion objects in the entire sky: white dwarfs, hot subdwarfs, runaway
OB stars, and early-type stars in nearby young moving groups. We performed an
all-sky cross-match between the optical Tycho-2 and near-infrared 2MASS
catalogues with Aladin, and selected objects with proper motions >50mas/yr and
colours Vt-Ks<-0.5mag with TOPCAT. We also collected multi-wavelength
photometry, constructed the spectral energy distributions and estimated
effective temperatures from fits to atmospheric models with VOSA for the most
interesting targets. We assembled a sample of 32 bright blue high proper motion
objects, including ten sdO/B subdwarfs, nine DA white dwarfs, five young
early-type stars (two of which are runaway stars), two blue horizontal branch
stars, one star with poor information, and five objects reported for the first
time in this work. These last five objects have magnitudes Bt~11.0-11.6mag,
effective temperatures ~24,000-30,000K, and are located in the region of known
white dwarfs and hot subdwarfs in a reduced proper motion-colour diagram. We
confirmed the hot subdwarf nature of one of the new objects, Albus 5, with
public far-ultraviolet spectroscopic data obtained with FUSE.Comment: Published in Astronomy & Astrophysic
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