9,606 research outputs found
The protein antigens secreted in vivo by adult male Schistosoma mansoni
Adult schistosomes can be transferred surgically from donor C57BL/6 mice to the portal veins of naive recipients with complete success. This procedure bypasses larval development and the antibody response of the host is directed against, and can be used to identify, those antigens released only by viable, mature parasites. Serum collected from the recipient mice (WTS) was used in Western blotting studies to probe fractionated parasite protein. Twelve immunodominant proteins were identified, ranging in molecular weight from 14 to 208 kDa. The magnitude of the IgG response against each antigen could be divided into 2 categories, on the basis of optical densitometry of the blots. In addition, defined parasite fractions were probed with WTS by Western blotting, in order to determine the relative abundance and distribution of each antigen in schistosome tissue. To confirm and expand on these initial observations, oligospecific polyclonal antibody for each immunogen was affinity purified from Western blots; it was then used in immunocytochemistry to identify the sources of secretion for 8 of the 12 antigens, at the cellular level. From the results, it appeared that after the transfer of adult worms, the first antibodies detected were mostly directed against the gastrodermis. At later times additional reactivity was expressed against the tegumental membrane. These differences probably reflect the relative abundances of the gut and tegumental secretory products
CIVIC LIFE: Evidence Base for the Triennial Review
This document forms part of the Equality and Human Rights Commission triennial review and covers equalities in civic life. It examines equality in political participation, freedom of language and freedom of worship. The primary aim is to map the various dimensions of equality and inequality in participation in civic and political life. We explore and review equalities, good relations and human rights in relation to civic life, and where possible we examine some of the driving forces behind the differences that we observe
Using Reflexivity to Tame our Subjectivities, Identify our Positionalities, and Explore Our Identities
Presenters will discuss how to utilize reflexivity in an effort to assess the roles subjectivity, positionality, and identity play in qualitative and evaluation research. Presenters will discuss their experiences conducting qualitative and evaluation research as both graduate students and professor researchers. In addition, participants will analyze their subjectivities, positionalities, and identities while identifying reflexive practices that have been most effective
Funding Shortfall for Housing Vouchers Could Have Serious Health Consequences for Children
In the fourth brief in its Policy Action series, Children's HealthWatch finds that unaffordable housing endangers the health and development of young children. Due to a federal funding shortfall, state and local housing agencies will be forced to reduce or eliminate rental assitance to thousands of families starting this month. Voucher cuts will push more families into the ranks of the "hidden homeless" -- families that move frequently, crowd into apartments that are too small, or live doubled up with other households when they cannot find affordable housing. Children in hidden homeless families are at increased risk for poor health, nutrition, and growth, as well as developmental delays. Timely Congressional action to protect the Housing Choice Voucher Program will ensure that families have stable, affordable housing essential to children's health
Challenging Perceptions of Disability through Performance Poetry Methods: The "Seen but Seldom Heard" Project.
This paper considers performance poetry as a method to explore lived experiences
of disability. We discuss how poetic inquiry used within a participatory arts-based
research framework can enable young people to collectively question society’s
attitudes and actions towards disability. Poetry will be considered as a means to
develop a more accessible and effective arena in which young people with direct
experience of disability can be empowered to develop new skills that enable them
to tell their own stories. Discussion of how this can challenge audiences to critically reflect upon their own perceptions of disability will also be developed
Managing plagiarism in programming assignments with blended assessment and randomisation.
Plagiarism is a common concern for coursework in many situations, particularly where electronic solutions can be provided e.g. computer programs, and leads to unreliability of assessment. Written exams are often used to try to deal with this, and to increase reliability, but at the expense of validity. One solution, outlined in this paper, is to randomise the work that is set for students so that it is very unlikely that any two students will be working on exactly the same problem set. This also helps to address the issue of students trying to outsource their work by paying external people to complete their assignments for them. We examine the effectiveness of this approach and others (including blended assessment) by analysing the spread of similarity scores across four different introductory programming assignments to find the natural similarity i.e. the level of similarity that could reasonably occur without plagiarism. The results of the study indicate that divergent assessment (having more than one possible solution) as opposed to convergent assessment (only one solution) is the dominant factor in natural similarity. A key area for further work is to apply the analysis to a larger sample of programming assignments to better understand the impact of different features of the assignment design on natural similarity and hence the detection of plagiarism
Omnivorousness in sport: The importance of social capital and networks
There has been for some time a significant and growing body of research around the relationship between sport and social capital. Similarly, within sociology there has been a corpus of work that has acknowledged the emergence of the omnivore–univore relationship. Surprisingly, relatively few studies examining sport and social capital have taken the omnivore–univore framework as a basis for understanding the relationship between sport and social capital. This gap in the sociology of sport literature and knowledge is rectified by this study that takes not Putnam, Coleman or Bourdieu, but Lin’s social network approach to social capital. The implications of this article are that researchers investigating sport and social capital need to understand more about how social networks and places for sport work to create social capital and, in particular, influence participating in sporting activities. The results indicate that social networks both facilitate and constrain sports participation; whilst family and friendship networks are central in active lifestyles, those who are less active have limited networks
Report of the Beyond the MSSM Subgroup for the Tevatron Run II SUSY/Higgs Workshop
There are many low-energy models of supersymmetry breaking parameters which
are motivated by theoretical and experimental considerations. Here, we discuss
some of the lesser-known theories of low-energy supersymmetry, and outline
their phenomenological consequences. In some cases, these theories have more
gauge symmetry or particle content than the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard
Model. In other cases, the parameters of the Lagrangian are unusual compared to
commonly accepted norms (e.g., Wino LSP, heavy gluino LSP, light gluino, etc.).
The phenomenology of supersymmetry varies greatly between the different models.
Correspondingly, particular aspects of the detectors assume greater or lesser
importance. Detection of supersymmetry and the determination of all parameters
may well depend upon having the widest possible view of supersymmetry
phenomenology.Comment: 78 pages, 49 figures, to appear in the Proceedings of the Tevatron
Run II SUSY/Higgs Workshop. Editor: J. F. Gunion; BTMSSM Convenors: M.
Chertok, H. Dreiner, G. Landsberg, J. F. Gunion, J.D. Well
Correlates of Complete Childhood Vaccination in East African Countries.
Despite the benefits of childhood vaccinations, vaccination rates in low-income countries (LICs) vary widely. Increasing coverage of vaccines to 90% in the poorest countries over the next 10 years has been estimated to prevent 426 million cases of illness and avert nearly 6.4 million childhood deaths worldwide. Consequently, we sought to provide a comprehensive examination of contemporary vaccination patterns in East Africa and to identify common and country-specific barriers to complete childhood vaccination. Using data from the Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) for Burundi, Ethiopia, Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania, and Uganda, we looked at the prevalence of complete vaccination for polio, measles, Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) and DTwPHibHep (DTP) as recommended by the WHO among children ages 12 to 23 months. We conducted multivariable logistic regression within each country to estimate associations between complete vaccination status and health care access and sociodemographic variables using backwards stepwise regression. Vaccination varied significantly by country. In all countries, the majority of children received at least one dose of a WHO recommended vaccine; however, in Ethiopia, Tanzania, and Uganda less than 50% of children received a complete schedule of recommended vaccines. Being delivered in a public or private institution compared with being delivered at home was associated with increased odds of complete vaccination status. Sociodemographic covariates were not consistently associated with complete vaccination status across countries. Although no consistent set of predictors accounted for complete vaccination status, we observed differences based on region and the location of delivery. These differences point to the need to examine the historical, political, and economic context of each country in order to maximize vaccination coverage. Vaccination against these childhood diseases is a critical step towards reaching the Millennium Development Goal of reducing under-five mortality by two-thirds by 2015 and thus should be a global priority
Limits on WWgamma and WWZ Couplings from W Boson Pair Production
The results of a search for W boson pair production in pbar-p collisions at
sqrt{s}=1.8 TeV with subsequent decay to emu, ee, and mumu channels are
presented. Five candidate events are observed with an expected background of
3.1+-0.4 events for an integrated luminosity of approximately 97 pb^{-1}.
Limits on the anomalous couplings are obtained from a maximum likelihood fit of
the E_T spectra of the leptons in the candidate events. Assuming identical
WWgamma and WWZ couplings, the 95 % C.L. limits are -0.62<Delta_kappa<0.77
(lambda = 0) and -0.53<lambda<0.56 (Delta_kappa = 0) for a form factor scale
Lambda = 1.5 TeV.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure, submitted to Physical Review
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