4,383 research outputs found
Clonality, recombination, and hybridization in the plumbing-inhabiting human pathogen Fusarium keratoplasticum inferred from multilocus sequence typing
Sammanfattning/AbstractHelene Erös och Jennie Karlsson (2013). Action programs as tool for learning.Specialpedagogprogrammet 90hp Skolutveckling och ledarskap Lärande och samhälle, Malmö högskolaProblemområde: Skolverket (2012) presenterade nyligen de senaste resultaten från PIRLS och TIMMS. De visade att Sveriges elever i årskurs 4 hade försämrats inom läsning och i matematik hade de lägre resultat än andra EU/OECD länder. Detta är alarmerande och måste tas på allvar. Sämre resultat leder på sikt till att fler och fler åtgärdsprogram behöver utfärdas. Det är viktigt att åtgärdsprogrammen fungerar som redskap för att motverka de negativa utvecklingstrenderna.Syfte: Syftet med vår undersökning var att undersöka åtgärdsprogram som verktyg för lärande. Med hjälp av våra frågeställningar belyste vi åtgärdsprogram ur flera perspektiv. De var blanketternas utformning och innehåll, synen på lärande i åtgärderna och hur lärare arbetar med åtgärdsprogram i undervisningen. Teoretisk ram: I arbetet utgick vi från två teorier om lärande, kognitiv konstruktivism och social konstruktivism. Vi använde även teori utifrån det sociokulturella perspektivet. Tidigare forskning kring åtgärdsprogram och riktlinjer från lagar, läroplaner och allmänna råd bildade en bakgrund.Metod: Vi valde att göra en kvalitativ innehållsanalys av åtgärdsprogram och halvstrukturerade intervjuer med fyra lärare från två kommuner.Resultat med analys: Våra resultat visar att begrepp i åtgärdsprogrammen som styrkor eller organisation, grupp och individ tolkas olika av lärare. Målen är överlag svåra för eleven att uppnå inom en rimlig tid och det är vanligt att målformuleringarna är otydliga. Åtgärderna ligger mycket på individnivå och omfattas mest av färdighetsträning. Föräldrars och elevers delaktighet vid utformningen av åtgärdsprogrammen varierar. I intervjuerna framkommer att lärarna ser elevernas svårigheter som något utöver och utanför den ordinarie undervisningen. Lärarna förlägger åtgärderna under eget arbete i eller utanför klassrummet och ibland till och med innan eller efter skoltid. Konklusion: Formuleringarna av mål och åtgärder varierar beroende på vem som skriver. För att åtgärdsprogram ska fungera som verktyg för lärande måste pedagogerna först förstå begreppen i åtgärdsprogrammen. De måste även ha kunskaper om var eleverna befinner sig i sin utveckling och framförallt vart de är på väg så att mål och åtgärder blir kortsiktiga, konkreta och mätbara. Blanketternas utformning och ordval kan förvilla pedagogerna och bidra till feltolkningar. Detta är ett område som vi inte hittat någon forskning kring. Utifrån ett sociokulturellt perspektiv drar vi slutsatsen att fler åtgärder bör ligga på gruppnivå där dialogen blir ett viktigt redskap.Implementering: Specialpedagogens roll blir att föra en regelbunden dialog med lärarna ute på skolorna om åtgärdsprogrammens begrepp och vad som ska ingå i programmen. En annan uppgift för specialpedagogen blir att få lärarna att använda sig av gruppen och få arbetet med åtgärdsprogrammen integrerat i den ordinarie undervisningen. Får vi till detta blir åtgärdsprogrammen fungerande verktyg för lärande. Våra resultat stämmer med tidigare forskning kring formuleringen av innehållet i åtgärdsprogrammen. Implikationerna gäller därför både för oss specifikt men även i vidare mening
The relationship between galaxy and dark matter halo size from z ∼ 3 to the present
We explore empirical constraints on the statistical relationship between the radial size of galaxies and the radius of their host dark matter haloes from z similar to 0.1-3 using the Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) and Cosmic Assembly Near Infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey (CANDELS) surveys. We map dark matter halo mass to galaxy stellar mass using relationships from abundance matching, applied to the Bolshoi-Planck dissipationless N-body simulation. We define SRHR equivalent to r(e)/R-h as the ratio of galaxy radius to halo virial radius, and SRHR lambda equivalent to r(e)/(lambda R-h) as the ratio of galaxy radius to halo spin parameter times halo radius. At z similar to 0.1, we find an average value of SRHR similar or equal to 0.018 and SRHR. similar or equal to 0.5 with very little dependence on stellar mass. Stellar radius-halo radius (SRHR) and SRHR lambda have a weak dependence on cosmic time since z similar to 3. SRHR shows a mild decrease over cosmic time for low-mass galaxies, but increases slightly or does not evolve formoremassive galaxies. We find hints that at high redshift (z similar to 2-3), SRHR. is lower for more massive galaxies, while it shows no significant dependence on stellar mass at z less than or similar to 0.5. We find that for both the GAMA and CANDELS samples, at all redshifts from z similar to 0.1-3, the observed conditional size distribution in stellar mass bins is remarkably similar to the conditional distribution of lambda R-h. We discuss the physical interpretation and implications of these results
Is telomere length socially patterned? Evidence from the West of Scotland Twenty-07 study
Lower socioeconomic status (SES) is strongly associated with an increased risk of morbidity and premature mortality, but it is not known if the same is true for telomere length, a marker often used to assess biological ageing. The West of Scotland Twenty-07 Study was used to investigate this and consists of three cohorts aged approximately 35 (N = 775), 55 (N = 866) and 75 years (N = 544) at the time of telomere length measurement. Four sets of measurements of SES were investigated: those collected contemporaneously with telomere length assessment, educational markers, SES in childhood and SES over the preceding twenty years. We found mixed evidence for an association between SES and telomere length. In 35-year-olds, many of the education and childhood SES measures were associated with telomere length, i.e. those in poorer circumstances had shorter telomeres, as was intergenerational social mobility, but not accumulated disadvantage. A crude estimate showed that, at the same chronological age, social renters, for example, were nine years (biologically) older than home owners. No consistent associations were apparent in those aged 55 or 75. There is evidence of an association between SES and telomere length, but only in younger adults and most strongly using education and childhood SES measures. These results may reflect that childhood is a sensitive period for telomere attrition. The cohort differences are possibly the result of survival bias suppressing the SES-telomere association; cohort effects with regard different experiences of SES; or telomere possibly being a less effective marker of biological ageing at older ages
Homological Localisation of Model Categories
One of the most useful methods for studying the stable homotopy category is localising at some spectrum E. For an arbitrary stable model category we introduce a candidate
for the E–localisation of this model category. We study the properties of this new construction and relate it to some well–known categories
Quantum fluctuations can promote or inhibit glass formation
The very nature of glass is somewhat mysterious: while relaxation times in
glasses are of sufficient magnitude that large-scale motion on the atomic level
is essentially as slow as it is in the crystalline state, the structure of
glass appears barely different than that of the liquid that produced it.
Quantum mechanical systems ranging from electron liquids to superfluid helium
appear to form glasses, but as yet no unifying framework exists connecting
classical and quantum regimes of vitrification. Here we develop new insights
from theory and simulation into the quantum glass transition that surprisingly
reveal distinct regions where quantum fluctuations can either promote or
inhibit glass formation.Comment: Accepted for publication in Nature Physics. 22 pages, 3 figures, 1
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Low rate of rhesus immunization from rh- incompatible blood transfusions during liver and heart transplant surgery
Transfusion of one unit or more of Rh-positive red blood cells normally causes circulating anti-D antibody to appear 2-6 months later in 80-95% of Rh persons. We asked whether transplant immunosuppression with cyclosporine and corticosteroids affects Rh immuniza¬tion. Nineteen Rh" liver, heart, and heart-lung transplant recipients received 3—153 (median: 10) units of Rh+ RBCs at surgery and were tested for anti-D >2 months later. Three patients developed anti-D at 11—15 days; one may have had an unusually rapid primary immune response and two were secondary to previous exposure by pregnancy. None of the other 16 patients had anti-D when tested 2.5-51 months later (13 patients, >11.5 months). This low rate of Rhesus immunization in association with cyclosporine immunosuppression allows greater flexibility in meeting the transfusion needs of Rh- liver and heart transplant patients. Caution is still advised in young females and in patients who may have been previously exposed to Rh+ RBCs by transfusion or by pregnancy prior to the availability of perinatal Rh immune globulin twenty years ago. Other humoral immune responses to some vaccines or infectious agents may also be impaired in transplant patients© 1989 by The Williams and Wilkins Co
Rationing tests for drug-resistant tuberculosis - who are we prepared to miss?
BACKGROUND: Early identification of patients with drug-resistant tuberculosis (DR-TB) increases the likelihood of treatment success and interrupts transmission. Resource-constrained settings use risk profiling to ration the use of drug susceptibility testing (DST). Nevertheless, no studies have yet quantified how many patients with DR-TB this strategy will miss. METHODS: A total of 1,545 subjects, who presented to Lima health centres with possible TB symptoms, completed a clinic-epidemiological questionnaire and provided sputum samples for TB culture and DST. The proportion of drug resistance in this population was calculated and the data was analysed to demonstrate the effect of rationing tests to patients with multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB) risk factors on the number of tests needed and corresponding proportion of missed patients with DR-TB. RESULTS: Overall, 147/1,545 (9.5%) subjects had culture-positive TB, of which 32 (21.8%) had DR-TB (MDR, 13.6%; isoniazid mono-resistant, 7.5%; rifampicin mono-resistant, 0.7%). A total of 553 subjects (35.8%) reported one or more MDR-TB risk factors; of these, 506 (91.5%; 95% CI, 88.9-93.7%) did not have TB, 32/553 (5.8%; 95% CI, 3.4-8.1%) had drug-susceptible TB, and only 15/553 (2.7%; 95% CI, 1.5-4.4%) had DR-TB. Rationing DST to those with an MDR-TB risk factor would have missed more than half of the DR-TB population (17/32, 53.2%; 95% CI, 34.7-70.9). CONCLUSIONS: Rationing DST based on known MDR-TB risk factors misses an unacceptable proportion of patients with drug-resistance in settings with ongoing DR-TB transmission. Investment in diagnostic services to allow universal DST for people with presumptive TB should be a high priority
A Prospective Longitudinal Study of the Clinical Outcomes from Cryptococcal Meningitis following Treatment Induction with 800 mg Oral Fluconazole in Blantyre, Malawi
Introduction: Cryptococcal meningitis is the most common neurological infection in HIV infected patients in Sub Saharan Africa, where gold standard treatment with intravenous amphotericin B and 5 flucytosine is often unavailable or difficult to administer. Fluconazole monotherapy is frequently recommended in national guidelines but is a fungistatic drug compromised by uncertainty over optimal dosing and a paucity of clinical end-point outcome data.
Methods: From July 2010 until March 2011, HIV infected adults with a first episode of cryptococcal meningitis were
recruited at Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital, Blantyre, Malawi. Patients were treated with oral fluconazole monotherapy 800 mg daily, as per national guidelines. ART was started at 4 weeks. Outcomes and factors associated with treatment failure were assessed 4, 10 and 52 weeks after fluconazole initiation.
Results: Sixty patients were recruited. 26/60 (43%) died by 4 weeks. 35/60 (58.0%) and 43/56 (77%) died or failed treatment by 10 or 52 weeks respectively. Reduced consciousness (Glasgow Coma Score ,14 of 15), moderate/severe neurological disability (modified Rankin Score .3 of 5) and confusion (Abbreviated Mental Test Score ,8 of 10) were all common at baseline and associated with death or treatment failure. ART prior to recruitment was not associated with better outcomes.
Conclusions: Mortality and treatment failure from cryptococcal meningitis following initiation of treatment with 800 mg oral fluconazole is unacceptably high. To improve outcomes, there is an urgent need for better therapeutic strategies and point-of-care diagnostics, allowing earlier diagnosis before development of neurological deficit
Effect of arsenic-phosphorus interaction on arsenic-induced oxidative stress in chickpea plants
Arsenic-induced oxidative stress in chickpea was investigated under glasshouse conditions in response to application of arsenic and phosphorus. Three levels of arsenic (0, 30 and 60 mg kg−1) and four levels of P (50, 100, 200, and 400 mg kg−1) were applied to soil-grown plants. Increasing levels of both arsenic and P significantly increased arsenic concentrations in the plants. Shoot growth was reduced with increased arsenic supply regardless of applied P levels. Applied arsenic induced oxidative stress in the plants, and the concentrations of H2O2 and lipid peroxidation were increased. Activity of superoxide dismutase (SOD) and concentrations of non-enzymatic antioxidants decreased in these plants, but activities of catalase (CAT) and ascorbate peroxidase (APX) were significantly increased under arsenic phytotoxicity. Increased supply of P decreased activities of CAT and APX, and decreased concentrations of non-enzymatic antioxidants, but the high-P plants had lowered lipid peroxidation. It can be concluded that P increased uptake of arsenic from the soil, probably by making it more available, but although plant growth was inhibited by arsenic the P may have partially protected the membranes from arsenic-induced oxidative stress
Anthropometric indices of Gambian children after one or three annual rounds of mass drug administration with azithromycin for trachoma control.
BACKGROUND: Mass drug administration (MDA) with azithromycin, carried out for the control of blinding trachoma, has been linked to reduced mortality in children. While the mechanism behind this reduction is unclear, it may be due, in part, to improved nutritional status via a potential reduction in the community burden of infectious disease. To determine whether MDA with azithromycin improves anthropometric indices at the community level, we measured the heights and weights of children aged 1 to 4 years in communities where one (single MDA arm) or three annual rounds (annual MDA arm) of azithromycin had been distributed. METHODS: Data collection took place three years after treatment in the single MDA arm and one year after the final round of treatment in the annual MDA arm. Mean height-for-age, weight-for-age and weight-for-height z scores were compared between treatment arms. RESULTS: No significant differences in mean height-for-age, weight-for-age or weight-for-height z scores were found between the annual MDA and single MDA arms, nor was there a significant reduction in prevalence of stunting, wasting or underweight between arms. CONCLUSIONS: Our data do not provide evidence that community MDA with azithromycin improved anthropometric outcomes of children in The Gambia. This may suggest reductions in mortality associated with azithromycin MDA are due to a mechanism other than improved nutritional status
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