8,073 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
What Matters for Well-Being: Individual Perceptions of Quality of Life Before and After Important Life Events
In recent decades, what matters for individual quality of life (QoL) has
increasingly been the focus of empirical social science research. However, individuals
are rarely asked directly what is important for their quality of life as part of large-scale
surveys. The present analysis studies perceptions of what matters for QoL in a largescale
longitudinal dataset – the British Household Panel Survey – which includes
an open-ended question on QoL in three waves spanning ten years. We find that
concepts of QoL change over the life course and differ between men and women.We
hypothesize that changes in perceptions of QoL are related to important life events,
such as the birth of a first child and retirement. These life events constitute ’turning
points’ after which individuals often shift their priorities of what matters for their
QoL.We further explore whether such shifts in priorities are stable or disappear more
than five years after the life event
Recommended from our members
Panel data and open-ended questions: Understanding perceptions of quality of life
This paper describes the burgeoning interest in quality of life studies and suggests that as well as
expert definitions, we need to consider people’s own perceptions of what matters. Using openended
questions from the 1997 and 2002 waves of the British Household Panel Survey we
analyse both quantitatively and qualitatively how perceptions of quality of life differ for men and
women across the life course. Qualitative analysis reveals that key domains such as health, family
and finances often refer, not to self, but to others. Longitudinal analysis demonstrates that
people’s perceptions of quality of life change over time, particularly before and after important
life transitions. Thus our findings challenge overly individualistic and static conceptions of quality
of life and reveal quality of life as a process, not a fixed state
The Gut Microbiome in Neuromyelitis Optica.
Neuromyelitis optica (NMO) is a rare, disabling, sometimes fatal central nervous system inflammatory demyelinating disease that is associated with antibodies ("NMO IgG") that target the water channel protein aquaporin-4 (AQP4) expressed on astrocytes. There is considerable interest in identifying environmental triggers that may elicit production of NMO IgG by AQP4-reactive B cells. Although NMO is considered principally a humoral autoimmune disease, antibodies of NMO IgG are IgG1, a T-cell-dependent immunoglobulin subclass, indicating that AQP4-reactive T cells have a pivotal role in NMO pathogenesis. When AQP4-specific proliferative T cells were first identified in patients with NMO it was discovered that T cells recognizing the dominant AQP4 T-cell epitope exhibited a T helper 17 (Th17) phenotype and displayed cross-reactivity to a homologous peptide sequence within a protein of Clostridium perfringens, a commensal bacterium found in human gut flora. The initial analysis of gut microbiota in NMO demonstrated that, in comparison to healthy controls (HC) and patients with multiple sclerosis, the microbiome of NMO is distinct. Remarkably, C. perfringens was the second most significantly enriched taxon in NMO, and among bacteria identified at the species level, C. perfringens was the one most highly associated with NMO. Those discoveries, along with evidence that certain Clostridia in the gut can regulate the balance between regulatory T cells and Th17 cells, indicate that gut microbiota, and possibly C. perfringens itself, could participate in NMO pathogenesis. Collectively, the evidence linking microbiota to humoral and cellular immunity in NMO underscores the importance for further investigating this relationship
Care, laboratory beagles and affective utopia
A caring approach to knowledge production has been portrayed as epistemologically radical, ethically vital and as fostering continuous responsibility between researchers and research-subjects. This article examines these arguments through focusing on the ambivalent role of care within the first large-scale experimental beagle colony, a self-professed ‘beagle utopia’ at the University of California, Davis, (1951-1986). We argue that care was at the core of the beagle colony; the lived environment was re-shaped in response to animals ‘speaking back’ to researchers, and ‘love’ and ‘kindness’ were important considerations during staff recruitment. Ultimately, however, we show that care-relations were used to manufacture compliancy, preventing the predetermined ends of the experiment from being troubled. Rather than suggesting Davis would have been less ethically troubling, or more epistemologically radical, with ‘better’ care, however, we suggest the case troubles existing care theory and argue that greater attention needs to be paid to histories, contexts, and exclusions
A citizen science based survey method for estimating the density of urban carnivores
Globally there are many examples of synanthropic carnivores exploiting growth in urbanisation. As carnivores can come into conflict with humans and are potential vectors of zoonotic disease, assessing densities in suburban areas and identifying factors that influence them are necessary to aid management and mitigation. However, fragmented, privately owned land restricts the use of conventional carnivore surveying techniques in these areas, requiring development of novel methods. We present a method that combines questionnaire distribution to residents with field surveys and GIS, to determine relative density of two urban carnivores in England, Great Britain. We determined the density of: red fox (Vulpes vulpes) social groups in 14, approximately 1km2 suburban areas in 8 different towns and cities; and Eurasian badger (Meles meles) social groups in three suburban areas of one city. Average relative fox group density (FGD) was 3.72 km-2, which was double the estimates for cities with resident foxes in the 1980’s. Density was comparable to an alternative estimate derived from trapping and GPS-tracking, indicating the validity of the method. However, FGD did not correlate with a national dataset based on fox sightings, indicating unreliability of the national data to determine actual densities or to extrapolate a national population estimate. Using species-specific clustering units that reflect social organisation, the method was additionally applied to suburban badgers to derive relative badger group density (BGD) for one city (Brighton, 2.41 km-2). We demonstrate that citizen science approaches can effectively obtain data to assess suburban carnivore density, however publicly derived national data sets need to be locally validated before extrapolations can be undertaken. The method we present for assessing densities of foxes and badgers in British towns and cities is also adaptable to other urban carnivores elsewhere. However this transferability is contingent on species traits meeting particular criteria, and on resident responsiveness
Prognostic value of lymph node ratio and extramural vascular invasion on survival for patients undergoing curative colon cancer resection
There was no study funding. We are grateful to Tony Rafferty (Tailored Information for the People of Scotland, TIPs) for providing survival data.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Diagnosis of childhood tuberculosis and host RNA expression in Africa
Improved diagnostic tests for tuberculosis in children are needed. We hypothesized that transcriptional signatures of host blood could be used to distinguish tuberculosis from other diseases in African children who either were or were not infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV
An investigation of minimisation criteria
Minimisation can be used within treatment trials to ensure that prognostic factors are evenly distributed between treatment groups. The technique is relatively straightforward to apply but does require running tallies of patient recruitments to be made and some simple calculations to be performed prior to each allocation. As computing facilities have become more widely available, minimisation has become a more feasible option for many. Although the technique has increased in popularity, the mode of application is often poorly reported and the choice of input parameters not justified in any logical way
A Computation in a Cellular Automaton Collider Rule 110
A cellular automaton collider is a finite state machine build of rings of
one-dimensional cellular automata. We show how a computation can be performed
on the collider by exploiting interactions between gliders (particles,
localisations). The constructions proposed are based on universality of
elementary cellular automaton rule 110, cyclic tag systems, supercolliders, and
computing on rings.Comment: 39 pages, 32 figures, 3 table
- …
