307 results on '"Ernest, J"'
Search Results
2. The effects of environmental and biological factors on the length of Atlantic Salmon age‐1+ parr in three Maine drainages
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Athena Ryan, John F. Kocik, Ernest J. Atkinson, and Nathan B. Furey
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Aquatic Science ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Published
- 2023
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3. Separation Process Principles: With Applications Using Process Simulators
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J. D. Seader, Ernest J. Henley, D. Keith Roper
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- 2020
4. The effects of environmental and biological factors on the length of Atlantic Salmon age‐1+ parr in three Maine drainages
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Ryan, Athena, primary, Kocik, John F., additional, Atkinson, Ernest J., additional, and Furey, Nathan B., additional
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- 2023
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5. The abundance and geographic distributions of two species of ticks in South Australia: Bundey Bore revisited
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Teo, Ernest J. M., primary, Bull, C. Michael, additional, Burzacott, Dale, additional, Zalucki, Myron P., additional, Furlong, Michael J., additional, Barker, Dayana, additional, and Barker, Stephen C., additional
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- 2023
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6. Separation Process Principles: With Applications Using Process Simulators
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J. D. Seader, Ernest J. Henley, D. Keith Roper
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- 2016
7. Bioaccumulation of Mercury and Radiocesium in Waterfowl Introduced to a Site with Legacy Contamination
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Leaphart, James C., primary, Abercrombie, Sarah A., additional, Borchert, Ernest J., additional, Bryan, Albert L., additional, and Beasley, James C., additional
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- 2022
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8. Progenitor cell therapy for acquired pediatric nervous system injury: Traumatic brain injury and acquired sensorineural hearing loss
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Linda S. Baumgartner, Michael E. Baumgartner, David Shook, Steven A. Messina, Michael D. Seidman, Ernest J. Moore, and James E. Baumgartner
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0301 basic medicine ,autologous stem cell transplantation ,bone marrow ,Hearing loss ,Traumatic brain injury ,Hearing Loss, Sensorineural ,Cell- and Tissue-Based Therapy ,Inflammation ,Bioinformatics ,clinical translation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Immune system ,Autologous stem-cell transplantation ,Brain Injuries, Traumatic ,medicine ,Humans ,Progenitor cell ,lcsh:QH573-671 ,Child ,lcsh:R5-920 ,business.industry ,lcsh:Cytology ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,progenitor cells ,medicine.disease ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Multipotent Stem Cell ,umbilical cord blood ,Bone marrow ,medicine.symptom ,business ,lcsh:Medicine (General) ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Developmental Biology ,Stem Cell Transplantation ,Perspectives - Abstract
While cell therapies hold remarkable promise for replacing injured cells and repairing damaged tissues, cell replacement is not the only means by which these therapies can achieve therapeutic effect. For example, recent publications show that treatment with varieties of adult, multipotent stem cells can improve outcomes in patients with neurological conditions such as traumatic brain injury and hearing loss without directly replacing damaged or lost cells. As the immune system plays a central role in injury response and tissue repair, we here suggest that multipotent stem cell therapies achieve therapeutic effect by altering the immune response to injury, thereby limiting damage due to inflammation and possibly promoting repair. These findings argue for a broader understanding of the mechanisms by which cell therapies can benefit patients., Injury to the central nervous system and ear lead to immediate neuron and hair cell loss (green), respectively. Neuron/hair cell loss continues over subsequent months, exacerbating neurological impairments. Recent studies indicate this could result from chronic inflammation and unresolved proinflammatory signals (red). Treatment with mesenchymal progenitor cells (blue) improves neuron/hair cell survival, potentially via anti‐inflammatory mechanisms.
- Published
- 2021
9. Trends in frequency and outcome of high-risk breast lesions at core needle biopsy in women recalled at biennial screening mammography, a multiinstitutional study
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Lucien E. M. Duijm, Paul N.M. Lohle, Vivianne C. G. Tjan-Heijnen, Bram Korte, Adri C. Voogd, Marianne J. H. Hooijen, Jacky D. Luiten, Ernest J. T. Luiten, Matthieu J. C. M. Rutten, Luc J. A. Strobbe, Menno L. Plaisier, Willem Vreuls, Epidemiologie, RS: GROW - R3 - Innovative Cancer Diagnostics & Therapy, Interne Geneeskunde, and MUMC+: MA Medische Oncologie (9)
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Core needle ,Cancer Research ,UPGRADE ,Lobular carcinoma ,0302 clinical medicine ,diagnostics ,Medicine ,Mass Screening ,INTRADUCTAL PAPILLOMAS ,Breast ,Cancer Therapy and Prevention ,Early Detection of Cancer ,Mastectomy ,Netherlands ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Screening mammography ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Incidence ,Middle Aged ,CONCORDANT ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,CARCINOMA IN-SITU ,Surgical excision ,Female ,Radiology ,SENSITIVITY ,Mammography ,high-risk lesions ,medicine.medical_specialty ,surgical excision ,Breast Neoplasms ,03 medical and health sciences ,Breast cancer ,VACUUM-ASSISTED BIOPSY ,Biopsy ,SURVEILLANCE ,MANAGEMENT ,Humans ,INSTITUTION ,Aged ,ATYPIA ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,risk-associated lesions ,Concomitant ,high‐risk lesions ,risk‐associated lesions ,mammographic screening ,Biopsy, Large-Core Needle ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Between January 1, 2011, and December 31, 2016, we studied the incidence, management and outcome of high‐risk breast lesions in a consecutive series of 376,519 screens of women who received biennial screening mammography. During the 6‐year period covered by the study, the proportion of women who underwent core needle biopsy (CNB) after recall remained fairly stable, ranging from 39.2% to 48.1% (mean: 44.2%, 5,212/11,783), whereas the proportion of high‐risk lesions at CNB (i.e., flat epithelial atypia, atypical ductal hyperplasia, lobular carcinoma in situ and papillary lesions) gradually increased from 3.2% (25/775) in 2011 to 9.5% (86/901) in 2016 (p, What's new? Screening mammography aims to catch breast cancer early to reduce associated morbidity and mortality. Women with suspect findings at mammography frequently are recalled for further testing with core needle biopsy (CNB). In this investigation, the proportion of high‐risk lesions detected at CNB was found to have tripled among women in the Netherlands who underwent mammographic screening between 2011 and 2016. This increase was accompanied by an increase in lesion excision rates. Of excised lesions, little more than 14% proved to be malignant at two‐year follow‐up. The remainder of lesions exhibited benign pathology, suggesting that many women underwent potentially unnecessary surgery.
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- 2019
10. Ownership, Use, and Exclusivity: The Kantian Approach
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Ernest J. Weinrib
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050502 law ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Contrast (statistics) ,Usability ,06 humanities and the arts ,0603 philosophy, ethics and religion ,Object (philosophy) ,Epistemology ,060302 philosophy ,Sociology ,business ,Law ,Reciprocal ,0505 law - Abstract
Ownership combines the owner's right to exclude others from the owned object and the owner's liberty to use that object. This article addresses the relationship between using and excluding, by presenting Grotius's and Kant's classic accounts of ownership. Grotius's approach treats use and exclusivity as separate notions, with the latter evolving out of the former. For Kant, in contrast, use and exclusivity are integrated aspects of ownership as a right within a regime of equal reciprocal freedom. This article offers a Kantian critique of Grotius's account of the original right to use, and then presents Kant's notion of usability as the basis for his integration of use and exclusivity.
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- 2018
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11. 3D Porous Liquid Crystal Elastomer Foams Supporting Long‐term Neuronal Cultures
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Elda Hegmann, Anna Story, Richard Cukelj, Jennifer McDonough, Yunxiang Gao, Senay Ustunel, Karene Diabre, Robert Clements, Taizo Mori, Ernest J. Freeman, and Marianne E. Prévôt
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Polymers and Plastics ,Retinoic acid ,Biocompatible Materials ,Tretinoin ,Liquid crystal elastomer ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Liquid crystal ,Cell density ,Materials Chemistry ,Porosity ,Cells, Cultured ,Cell Proliferation ,Neurons ,Tissue Scaffolds ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Liquid Crystals ,0104 chemical sciences ,Elastomers ,Biophysics ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
3D liquid crystal elastomer (3D-LCE) foams are used to support long-term neuronal cultures for over 60 days. Sequential imaging shows that cell density remains relatively constant throughout the culture period while the number of cells per observational area increases. In a subset of samples, retinoic acid is used to stimulate extensive neuritic outgrowth and maturation of proliferated neurons within the LCEs, inducing a threefold increase in length with cells displaying morphologies indicative of mature neurons. Designed LCEs' micro-channels have a similar diameter to endogenous parenchymal arterioles, ensuring that neurons throughout the construct have constant access to growth media during extended experiments. Here it is shown that 3D-LCEs provide a unique environment and simple method to longitudinally study spatial neuronal function, not possible in conventional culture environments, with simplistic integration into existing methodological pipelines.
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- 2020
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12. Ablating N-acetylaspartate prevents leukodystrophy in a Canavan disease model
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Jie Xu, Laird Miers, Fuzheng Guo, Shuo Li, Travis Burns, Peter Bannerman, Emily Mills Ko, David E Pleasure, Jennifer McDonough, and Ernest J. Freeman
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Central nervous system ,Leukodystrophy ,medicine.disease ,Canavan disease ,nervous system diseases ,Aspartoacylase ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,Neurology ,immune system diseases ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,N-acetylaspartate - Abstract
Canavan disease is caused by inactivating ASPA (aspartoacylase) mutations that prevent cleavage of N-acetyl-L-aspartate (NAA), resulting in marked elevations in central nervous system (CNS) NAA and progressively worsening leukodystrophy. We now report that ablating NAA synthesis by constitutive genetic disruption of Nat8l (N-acetyltransferase-8 like) permits normal CNS myelination and prevents leukodystrophy in a murine Canavan disease model.
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- 2015
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13. Multiattribute probabilistic prostate elastic registration (MAPPER): Application to fusion of ultrasound and magnetic resonance imaging
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B. Nicolas Bloch, Daniel Moses, Dean C. Barratt, Lee Ponsky, Rachel Sparks, Anant Madabhushi, and Ernest J. Feleppa
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Brachytherapy ,Image registration ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,General Medicine ,urologic and male genital diseases ,medicine.disease ,Prostate cancer ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Prostate ,Biopsy ,Medicine ,Radiology ,business ,Image-Guided Biopsy ,Fiducial marker - Abstract
Purpose: Transrectal ultrasound (TRUS)-guided needle biopsy is the current gold standard for prostate cancer diagnosis. However, up to 40% of prostate cancer lesions appears isoechoic on TRUS. Hence, TRUS-guided biopsy has a high false negative rate for prostate cancer diagnosis. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is better able to distinguish prostate cancer from benign tissue. However, MRI-guided biopsy requires special equipment and training and a longer procedure time. MRI-TRUS fusion, where MRI is acquired preoperatively and then aligned to TRUS, allows for advantages of both modalities to be leveraged during biopsy. MRI-TRUS-guided biopsy increases the yield of cancer positive biopsies. In this work, the authors present multiattribute probabilistic postate elastic registration (MAPPER) to align prostate MRI and TRUS imagery. Methods: MAPPER involves (1) segmenting the prostate on MRI, (2) calculating a multiattribute probabilistic map of prostate location on TRUS, and (3) maximizing overlap between the prostate segmentation on MRI and the multiattribute probabilistic map on TRUS, thereby driving registration of MRI onto TRUS. MAPPER represents a significant advancement over the current state-of-the-art as it requires no user interaction during the biopsy procedure by leveraging texture and spatial information to determine the prostate location on TRUS. Although MAPPER requires manual interaction tomore » segment the prostate on MRI, this step is performed prior to biopsy and will not substantially increase biopsy procedure time. Results: MAPPER was evaluated on 13 patient studies from two independent datasets—Dataset 1 has 6 studies acquired with a side-firing TRUS probe and a 1.5 T pelvic phased-array coil MRI; Dataset 2 has 7 studies acquired with a volumetric end-firing TRUS probe and a 3.0 T endorectal coil MRI. MAPPER has a root-mean-square error (RMSE) for expert selected fiducials of 3.36 ± 1.10 mm for Dataset 1 and 3.14 ± 0.75 mm for Dataset 2. State-of-the-art MRI-TRUS fusion methods report RMSE of 3.06–2.07 mm. Conclusions: MAPPER aligns MRI and TRUS imagery without manual intervention ensuring efficient, reproducible registration. MAPPER has a similar RMSE to state-of-the-art methods that require manual intervention.« less
- Published
- 2015
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14. Biocompatible, Biodegradable and Porous Liquid Crystal Elastomer Scaffolds for Spatial Cell Cultures
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Torsten Hegmann, Byung-Wook Park, Yunxiang Gao, Shuo Li, Gabrielle Beltrano, Benjamin G. Daum, Tory L. Stankovich, Cory J. Mahnen, Elda Hegmann, Jacob Snyder, Alek d Nielsen, LaShanda T. J. Korley, Ernest J. Freeman, Christopher Malcuit, Emily M. LaSpina, Robert Clements, Abdollah Neshat, Anshul Sharma, and Jennifer McDonough
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Materials science ,Polymers and Plastics ,Biocompatibility ,Scanning electron microscope ,Bioengineering ,Biodegradation ,Elastomer ,law.invention ,Biomaterials ,3D cell culture ,Optical microscope ,Cell culture ,law ,Materials Chemistry ,Composite material ,Porosity ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Here we report on the modular synthesis and characterization of biodegradable, controlled porous, liquid crystal elastomers (LCE) and their use as three-dimensional cell culture scaffolds. The elastomers were prepared by cross-linking of star block-co-polymers with pendant cholesterol units resulting in the formation of smectic-A LCEs as determined by polarized optical microscopy, DSC, and X-ray diffraction. Scanning electron microscopy revealed the porosity of the as-prepared biocompatible LCEs, making them suitable as 3D cell culture scaffolds. Biodegradability studies in physiological buffers at varying pH show that these scaffolds are intact for about 11 weeks after which degradation sets in at an exponential rate. Initial results from cell culture studies indicate that these smectic LCEs are compatible with growth, survival, and expansion of cultured neuroblastomas and myoblasts when grown on the LCEs for extended time periods (about a month). These preliminary cell studies focused on characterizing the elastomer-based scaffolds' biocompatibility and the successful 3D incorporation as well as growth of cells in 60 to 150-μm thick elastomer sheets.
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- 2014
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15. Ownership, Use, and Exclusivity: The Kantian Approach
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Weinrib, Ernest J., primary
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- 2018
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16. O2‐13‐04: Early Clinical Results and Preclinical Validation of the O‐Glcnacase (OGA) Inhibitor Mk‐8719 as a Novel Therapeutic for the Treatment of Tauopathies
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Jacob Marcus, Ruben Declercq, Mali Cosden, Cristian Salinas, John J. Renger, Mark Forman, Ernest J. McEachern, Sean M. Smith, Daniel Jonathan, David J. Vocadlo, Dawn Toolan, Fred Hess, Joseph Duffy, Wenping Li, Arie Struyk, Harold G. Selnick, Hostetler D. Eric, Michelle Pearson, Joel B. Schachter, Xiaohai Wang, and Darryle Schoepp
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0301 basic medicine ,Epidemiology ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,O-GlcNAcase ,03 medical and health sciences ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Cancer research ,Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Published
- 2016
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17. P4‐036: Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics to Support Clinical Studies of MK‐8719: an O‐Glcnacase Inhibitor for Progressive Supranuclear Palsy
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Punam Sandhu, Joseph L. Duffy, Maria S. Michener, Sean M. Smith, Joan D. Ellis, Mary J. Savage, Ernest J. McEachern, Chandni Valiathan, Brittany Walker, Jeanine E. Ballard, Arie Struyk, David J. Vocadlo, Junghoon Lee, Dawn Toolan, Thomas McAvoy, Daniel P. Dreyer, Nicole Trainor, and Jacob Marcus
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0301 basic medicine ,Epidemiology ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,O-GlcNAcase ,Pharmacology ,medicine.disease ,Progressive supranuclear palsy ,03 medical and health sciences ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,030104 developmental biology ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Pharmacokinetics ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,business - Published
- 2016
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18. Gender differences in sources of shopping enjoyment
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Lezanne Venter, Theuns G. Kotze, Ernest J. North, and Marilize Stols
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Marketing ,Entertainment ,Economics and Econometrics ,ComputingMilieux_THECOMPUTINGPROFESSION ,Gratification ,ComputerApplications_MISCELLANEOUS ,Shopping mall ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Advertising ,Psychology ,Metropolitan area ,Applied Psychology - Abstract
A steady stream of research over the past few decades has focused on store and shopping mall patronage and consumers' associated enjoyment of the shopping experience. Based on previous research, the sources of shopping enjoyment were identified as shopping to socialize, shopping for bargains, shopping for gratification, shopping for entertainment, shopping for others, shopping to browse, shopping for exercise and shopping for sensory stimulation. The objective of this study was to investigate gender differences in the sources of shopping enjoyment. Data were collected through self-administered questionnaires distributed at a large metropolitan shopping centre in the eastern suburbs of Pretoria. The findings indicate significant gender differences on all the sources of shopping enjoyment except ‘shopping for entertainment’. This study contributes to the current literature and provides valuable information to South African retailers, specifically with regard to marketing and promotional strategies aimed at male and female shoppers separately. Suggestions for future research are offered.
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- 2012
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19. An Investigation of Pre-Activity Cardiovascular Screening Procedures in Health/Fitness Facilities-Part II: Rationale for Low Adherence With National Standards
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Ernest J. Zuberbuehler, JoAnn M. Eickhoff-Shemek, and Judy B. Springer
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Standard of care ,business.industry ,Data Collection ,Qualitative interviews ,education ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Staffing ,Liability, Legal ,Fitness Centers ,Organizational Policy ,Attitude ,Nursing ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,Relevance (law) ,Medicine ,Moral responsibility ,Guideline Adherence ,Franchise ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Screening procedures ,Risk management - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to explore the rationale provided by program directors and general managers of health/fitness facilities for low adherence to nationally accepted standards related to pre-activity cardiovascular screening procedures (PACSPs) for members and clients of personal trainers. Qualitative interviews were conducted with the directors/managers in a Midwest region representing 76 facilities who indicated they did not conduct PACSPs for members and clients of personal trainers. Analysis of the rationale provided revealed 6 major clusters: (1) Purpose or need for screening; (2) time and staffing; (3) barrier to participation; (4) personal responsibility for health and actions; (5) legal issues; and (6) company or franchise policy that categorized the reasons for low adherence to PACSPs. These findings highlight the need to increase awareness of the relevance of PACSPs among health/fitness managers, staff members, and current exercise science students as well as engage those in risk management for informed dialogue for consistent application of the standard of care.
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- 2009
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20. Increased Fos expression among midbrain dopaminergic cell groups during birdsong tutoring
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D.A. Holtzman, Ernest J. Nordeen, and Kathy W. Nordeen
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Male ,Tyrosine 3-Monooxygenase ,Dopamine ,education ,Population ,Cell Count ,Substantia nigra ,Article ,Dopaminergic cell groups ,medicine ,Animals ,Learning ,Periaqueductal Gray ,Zebra finch ,Neurons ,Analysis of Variance ,education.field_of_study ,Communication ,Pars compacta ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Ventral Tegmental Area ,Dopaminergic ,Recognition, Psychology ,Immunohistochemistry ,Substantia Nigra ,Ventral tegmental area ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Acoustic Stimulation ,nervous system ,behavior and behavior mechanisms ,Female ,Vocal learning ,Finches ,Nerve Net ,Vocalization, Animal ,Psychology ,business ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-fos ,Neuroscience ,psychological phenomena and processes - Abstract
During avian vocal learning, birds memorize conspecific song patterns and then use auditory feedback to match their vocal output to this acquired template. Some models of song learning posit that during tutoring, conspecific visual, social, and/or auditory cues activate neuromodulatory systems that encourage acquisition of the tutor’s song and attach incentive value to that specific acoustic pattern. This hypothesis predicts that stimuli experienced during social tutoring activate cell populations capable of signaling reward. Using immunocytochemistry for the protein product of the immediate early gene c-Fos, we found that brief exposure of juvenile male zebra finches to a live familiar male tutor increased the density of Fos+ cells within two brain regions implicated in reward processing; the ventral tegmental area (VTA) and substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc). This activation of Fos appears to involve both dopaminergic and non-dopaminergic VTA/SNc neurons. Intriguingly, a familiar tutor was more effective than a novel tutor in stimulating Fos expression within these regions. In the periaqueductal gray (PAG), a dopamine-enriched cell population that has been implicated in emotional processing, Fos labeling also was increased after tutoring, with a familiar tutor once again being more effective than a novel conspecific. Since several neural regions implicated in song acquisition receive strong dopaminergic projections from these midbrain nuclei, their activation in conjunction with hearing the tutor’s song could help establish sensory representations that later guide motor sequence learning.
- Published
- 2009
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21. An Investigation of Pre-Activity Cardiovascular Screening Procedures in Health/Fitness Facilities-Part I: Is Adherence With National Standards Decreasing?
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JoAnn M. Eickhoff-Shemek, Judy B. Springer, and Ernest J. Zuberbuehler
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Male ,Response rate (survey) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Sports medicine ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Physical activity ,Guidelines as Topic ,Fitness Centers ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Family medicine ,Physical therapy ,Humans ,Mass Screening ,Medicine ,Female ,Guideline Adherence ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Screening procedures - Abstract
This investigation determined the number of health/fitness facilities within a Midwestern region conducting pre-activity cardiovascular screening procedures (PACSPs) consistent with American Heart Association/American College of Sports Medicine (AHA/ACSM) standards. Interviews were conducted with 123 commercial, community, corporate, and academic settings (84% response rate), with 40 (33%) facilities requiring members to complete a pre-activity screening device. Of those, 20 (50%) required physician clearance for "at-risk" members prior to physical activity participation. Personal training clients completed a pre-activity screening device at 50 (61%) facilities, with 32 (64%) requiring physician clearance for at-risk clients. The data were analyzed by setting, with corporate facilities having a significantly higher (P=.0049) adherence rate with AHA/ACSM standards than other facilities. Data were compared with previous studies and indicated a decrease in the number of facilities conducting PACSPs. Findings indicate that health/fitness personnel need to become aware of the relevance of conducting PACSPs.
- Published
- 2009
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22. Biological attributes of three introduced parasitoids as natural enemies of fruit flies, genusAnastrepha(Diptera: Tephritidae)
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Ernest J. Harris, Jorge Cancino, Lia Ruiz, and Pablo Montoya
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fungi ,Biological pest control ,Zoology ,Parasitism ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Fecundity ,Parasitoid ,Anastrepha ,Insect Science ,Tephritidae ,Botany ,Anastrepha ludens ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Braconidae - Abstract
The biological attributes of three introduced species of parasitoids which attack the fruit fly Anastrepha ludens were evaluated. Larvae and eggs of A. ludens were exposed to larval parasitoids Diachasmimorpha longicaudata and D. tryoni and the egg parasitoid Fopius arisanus. Parasitoid longevity and fecundity were determined using larvae and eggs of A. ludens. Likewise, the parasitism rates of these parasitoid species in infested host fruits were recorded. The intrinsic rate of increase for F. arisanus was 0.1019 followed by D. tryoni with a rate of 0.1641 and D. longicaudata with the highest rate of 0.2233. Although F. arisanus females had the highest levels of fecundity, only 50% of them remained alive until reproductive age. These results in combination with the longer generation time (in comparison with D. longicaudata and D. tryoni), can be considered as the most important factors explaining F. arisanus reduced rate of increase. However, we note that oviposition activity caused egg mortality which reduced Anastrepha egg hatch by ca. 20%. This result suggests that F. arisanus has a high potential as a natural enemy of A. ludens, in accordance with our research efforts to develop a new F. arisanus strain specialized for development in Anastrepha eggs. The results show that D. tryoni is not a good candidate for biological control of Anastrepha. Meanwhile, D. longicaudata continues to be the most important exotic parasitoid for suppression of Anastrepha fruit fly populations.
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- 2009
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23. Effects of Ultrasonic Exposure Parameters on Myocardial Lesions Induced by High-Intensity Focused Ultrasound
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Jeffrey A. Ketterling, Robert R. Sciacca, Robert Muratore, Ryo Otsuka, Shunichi Homma, Zhezhen Jin, Kana Fujikura, Ernest J. Feleppa, Andrew Kalisz, Charles Marboe, and Jie Wang
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,Pulse (signal processing) ,business.industry ,Cardiovascular Surgical Procedures ,Ultrasonic Therapy ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Confocal ,Pulse duration ,Heart ,High-intensity focused ultrasound ,Lesion ,Transducer ,Heart Injuries ,medicine ,Animals ,Cattle ,Ultrasonics ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Ultrasonic sensor ,Radiology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Ex vivo ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
Objective. This study evaluated variables relevant to creating myocardial lesions using high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU). Without an effective means of tracking heart motion, lesion formation in the moving ventricle can be accomplished by intermittent delivery of HIFU energy synchronized by electrocardiographic triggering. In anticipation of future clinical applications, multiple lesions were created by brief HIFU pulses in calf myocardial tissue ex vivo. Methods. Experiments used f-number 1.1 spherical cap HIFU transducers operating near 5 MHz with in situ spatial average intensities of 13 and 7.4 kW/cm 2 at corresponding depths of 10 and 25 mm in the tissue. The distance from the HIFU transducer to the tissue surface was measured with a 7.5-MHz A-mode transducer coaxial and confocal with the HIFU transducer. After exposures, fresh, unstained tissue was dissected to measure visible lesion length and width. Lesion dimensions were plotted as functions of pulse parameters, cardiac structure, tissue temperature, and focal depth. Results. Lesion size in ex vivo tissue depended strongly on the total exposure time but did not depend strongly on pulse duration. Lesion width depended strongly on the pulse-to-pulse interval, and lesion width and length depended strongly on the initial tissue temperature. Conclusions. High-intensity focused ultrasound creates well-demarcated lesions in ex vivo cardiac muscle without damaging intervening or distal tissue. These initial studies suggest that HIFU offers an effective, noninvasive method for ablating myocardial tissues to treat several important cardiac diseases.
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- 2006
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24. Environmental Governance Reconsidered: Challenges, Choices, and Opportunities - Edited by Robert Durant, Daniel Fiorino, and Rosemary O'Leary
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Ernest J. Yanarella
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Global and Planetary Change ,Environmental governance ,Political science ,Management - Published
- 2006
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25. Early detection of bone infection and differentiation from post-surgical inflammation using 2-deoxy-2-[18F]-fluoro-D-glucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) in an animal model
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Carl L. Nelson, Larry J. Suva, J. Roby Thomas, Ronald C. Walker, Mark S. Smeltzer, Sandra G. McLaren, Ernest J. Ferris, Laurie Jones-Jackson, Robert A. Skinner, Gary L. Purnell, Marisa H. Miceli, and Elias Anaissie
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Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Inflammation ,Context (language use) ,medicine.disease_cause ,Bone Infection ,Postoperative Complications ,Fluorodeoxyglucose F18 ,medicine ,Animals ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Osteomyelitis ,Staphylococcal Infections ,medicine.disease ,Disease Models, Animal ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Positron emission tomography ,Positron-Emission Tomography ,Rabbits ,Lymph ,medicine.symptom ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,Staphylococcus - Abstract
Diagnosing bone infection in the context of post-surgical inflammation is problematic since many of the early signs of infection are similar to normal post-surgical changes. We used a rabbit osteomyelitis model to evaluate the use of 2-deoxy-2-[18F]-fluoro-d-glucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) as a means of detecting post-operative infection in the context of post-surgical inflammation. Comparisons were made between infected and non-infected rabbits in which infection with Staphylococcus aureus was initiated at the time of surgery. Weekly PET scans were obtained 30 and 60 min after the introduction of FDG and analyzed based on standardized uptake values (SUV) at the surgical site and visual assessment of the presence or absence of infection. Concurrent X-rays were taken immediately prior to scanning. At 4 weeks post-operatively, animals were sacrificed for histologic and bacteriologic confirmation of infection. Uptake of FDG was evident in the bone of all rabbits on day 1 post-surgery, however, SUV comparisons from the surgical site could not be used to distinguish between the infected and uninfected groups until day 15. Visual analysis of FDG-PET scans revealed a significant difference (p
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- 2005
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26. Interlaboratory Comparison of Ultrasonic Backscatter Coefficient Measurements From 2 to 9 MHz
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Paul Lee, Gary R. Frank, Keith A. Wear, Ernest L. Madsen, Ernest J. Feleppa, Beom Soo Kim, William D. O'Brien, Jian R. Yuan, Balasundar Iyyavu Raju, Michael L. Oelze, Timothy A. Stiles, Francis Cheng, Christopher S. Hall, K. Kirk Shung, and Thaddeus Wilson
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Backscatter ,Acoustics ,Acrylic Resins ,1-Propanol ,Ultrasonic grating ,Speed of sound ,Humans ,Medicine ,Ultrasonics ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Ultrasonography ,Orders of magnitude (frequency) ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,Phantoms, Imaging ,business.industry ,Attenuation ,Ultrasound ,Water ,Equipment Design ,Agar ,Attenuation coefficient ,Graphite ,Ultrasonic sensor ,Glass ,Laboratories ,business ,Plastics - Abstract
Objective As are the attenuation coefficient and sound speed, the backscatter coefficient is a fundamental ultrasonic property that has been used to characterize many tissues. Unfortunately, there is currently far less standardization for the ultrasonic backscatter measurement than for the other two, as evidenced by a previous American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine (AIUM)-sponsored interlaboratory comparison of ultrasonic backscatter, attenuation, and speed measurements (J Ultrasound Med 1999; 18:615-631). To explore reasons for these disparities, the AIUM Endowment for Education and Research recently supported this second interlaboratory comparison, which extends the upper limit of the frequency range from 7 to 9 MHz. Methods Eleven laboratories were provided with standard test objects designed and manufactured at the University of Wisconsin (Madison, WI). Each laboratory was asked to perform ultrasonic measurements of sound speed, attenuation coefficients, and backscatter coefficients. Each laboratory was blinded to the values of the ultrasonic properties of the test objects at the time the measurements were performed. Results Eight of the 11 laboratories submitted results. The range of variation of absolute magnitude of backscatter coefficient measurements was about 2 orders of magnitude. If the results of 1 outlier laboratory are excluded, then the range is reduced to about 1 order of magnitude. Agreement regarding frequency dependence of backscatter was better than reported in the previous interlaboratory comparison. For example, when scatterers were small compared with the ultrasonic wavelength, experimental frequency-dependent backscatter coefficient data obtained by the participating laboratories were usually consistent with the expected Rayleigh scattering behavior (proportional to frequency to the fourth power). Conclusions Greater standardization of backscatter measurement methods is needed. Measurements of frequency dependence of backscatter are more consistent than measurements of absolute magnitude.
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- 2005
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27. FAMILY COURT COORDINATION OF HUMAN SERVICES, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON
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Stephen N. Tiktin and Ernest J. Mazorol
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Gerontology ,Political science ,Family court ,Public administration ,Law ,Human services - Abstract
This article describes an innovative program in Deschutes County, Oregon designed to coordinate services both within the court and within the community to assist families in the family court. One of the important features of this system is the employment of a family advocate to coordinate services to families.
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- 2005
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28. Song tutoring triggers CaMKII phosphorylation within a specialized portion of the avian basal ganglia
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Ernest J. Nordeen, Tryambak Deo Singh, and Kathy W. Nordeen
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Male ,animal structures ,education ,Biology ,Basal Ganglia ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Memory ,Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase ,Conditioning, Psychological ,Neuroplasticity ,Basal ganglia ,Animals ,Phosphorylation ,Neurons ,Neuronal Plasticity ,Kinase ,General Neuroscience ,biology.organism_classification ,Songbird ,Acoustic Stimulation ,nervous system ,Calcium-Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinases ,Forebrain ,behavior and behavior mechanisms ,Female ,Vocal learning ,Finches ,Vocalization, Animal ,Calcium-Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase Type 2 ,Motor learning ,Neuroscience ,psychological phenomena and processes - Abstract
In several songbird species, a specialized anterior forebrain pathway (AFP) that includes part of the avian basal ganglia has been implicated specifically in song learning. To further elucidate cellular mechanisms and circuitry involved in vocal learning, we used quantitative immunoblot analysis to determine if early song tutoring promotes within the AFP phosphorylation of calcium/calmodulin-dependent kinase II (CaMKII), a multifunctional kinase whose phosphorylation at threonine 286 is critical for many forms of neural plasticity and behavioral learning. We report that in young male zebra finches likely to have begun the process of song acquisition, brief tutoring by a familiar conspecific adult promotes a dramatic increase in levels of phosphorylated CaMKII (pCaMKII) in Area X, the striatal/pallidal component of the AFP. In contrast, pCaMKII levels in this region were not elevated if 1) the tutor did not sing, 2) the tutor sang but was visually isolated from the pupil, or 3) the tutor was an unfamiliar adult. In young males that had not previously heard any conspecific song, first exposure to a song tutor produced a more modest, but significant rise in pCaMKII levels. Young females (who do not develop song behavior) did not exhibit any effect of tutoring on pCaMKII levels in that portion of the basal ganglia that corresponds to Area X in males. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that Area X participates in encoding and/or attaching reward value to a representation of tutor song that is accessed later to guide motor learning.
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- 2005
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29. Developmental patterns of NMDAR expression within the song system do not recur during adult vocal plasticity in zebra finches
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Ernest J. Nordeen, Kathy W. Nordeen, Luisa L. Scott, and Tryambak Deo Singh
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Male ,animal structures ,Protein subunit ,Period (gene) ,Biology ,Receptors, N-Methyl-D-Aspartate ,Songbirds ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Neural Pathways ,Neuroplasticity ,Gene expression ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,Animals ,Juvenile ,Neuronal Plasticity ,General Neuroscience ,Age Factors ,Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental ,nervous system ,Expression (architecture) ,Forebrain ,behavior and behavior mechanisms ,NMDA receptor ,Vocalization, Animal ,Neuroscience ,psychological phenomena and processes - Abstract
All songbirds learn to sing during postnatal development but then display species differences in the capacity to learn song in adulthood. While the mechanisms that regulate avian vocal plasticity are not well characterized, one contributing factor may be the composition of N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors (NMDAR). Previous studies of an anterior forebrain pathway implicated in vocal plasticity revealed significant regulation of NMDAR subunit expression during the developmental sensitive period for song learning. Much less is known about the developmental regulation of NMDAR subunit expression in regions that participate more directly in motor aspects of song behavior. We show here that an increase in NR2A subunit mRNA and a decrease in NR2B subunit mRNA within the vocal motor pathway accompany song learning in zebra finches; however, manipulations that can alter the timing of song learning did not alter the course of these developmental changes. We also tested whether adult deafening, a treatment that provokes vocal change in songbirds that normally sing a stable song throughout adulthood, would render NMDAR subunit expression more similar to that observed developmentally. We report that NR2A and NR2B mRNA levels did not change within the anterior forebrain or vocal motor pathways after adult deafening, even after substantial changes in song structure. These results indicate that vocal plasticity does not require "juvenile patterns" of NMDAR gene expression in the avian song system.
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- 2004
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30. Use of Herbal Medicine by Elderly Hispanic and Non-Hispanic White Patients
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Betty J. Skipper, Ernest J. Dole, Robert L. Rhyne, Carla A. Zeilmann, Tieraona Low Dog, and Melvina McCabe
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Complementary Therapies ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Herbal Medicine ,Alternative medicine ,Ethnic group ,White People ,Interviews as Topic ,Health care ,medicine ,Humans ,Dementia ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Medicine use ,Socioeconomic status ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Chi-Square Distribution ,White (horse) ,Traditional medicine ,business.industry ,Hispanic or Latino ,medicine.disease ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Logistic Models ,Family medicine ,Multivariate Analysis ,Ambulatory ,Female ,Plant Preparations ,business - Abstract
Study Objectives. To determine the types and prevalence of herbal medicines used by Hispanic and non-Hispanic white individuals aged 65 years and older. Secondary objectives were to compare herbal medicine use according to ethnicity, sex, age, socioeconomic status, and education level, and to determine patients' beliefs about herbal medicines. Use of nonphysician health care providers such as acupuncturists and chiropractors also was assessed. Methods. Data for a cross-sectional, interviewer-administered survey were collected at the University of New Mexico Senior Health Center, an ambulatory health care clinic, in Albuquerque, New Mexico, from February 1996-January 1997. To participate in the study, patients had to be at least 65 years of age, established patients at the clinic, and live independently in a community dwelling. They were excluded if they had dementia, lived in an institution, or belonged to any ethnic group other than Hispanic or non-Hispanic white. Ethnicity was determined by asking the patients in which ethnic group they identified themselves. Results. A total of 186 patients were surveyed: 84 Hispanic (34 men, 50 women) and 102 non-Hispanic white (47 men, 55 women). Of the 186 patients, 91 (49%) admitted to having taken herbal medicines in the previous year. The most common were spearmint, chamomile, aloe vera, garlic, brook-mint, osha, lavender, ginger, ginseng, and camphor. Most of the patients who used herbal medicines were 65–74 years of age and took them primarily for health care maintenance or self-perceived problems. Conclusion. As approximately half of the elderly patients stated that they used herbal medicines, health care providers should be knowledgeable about herbal remedies and provide reliable information to their patients about them in a nonjudgmental manner.
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- 2003
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31. The fruit fly parasitoid Fopius arisanus: reproductive attributes of pre-released females and the use of added sugar as a potential food supplement in the field
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Ernest J. Harris, Roger I. Vargas, and Renato C. Bautista
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Rubiaceae ,biology ,Maple syrup ,media_common.quotation_subject ,fungi ,Hymenoptera ,Added sugar ,biology.organism_classification ,food.food ,Parasitoid ,food ,Animal science ,Insect Science ,Botany ,PEST analysis ,Reproduction ,Braconidae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,media_common - Abstract
Fopius (= Biosteres) arisanus (Sonan) (= Opius oophilus Fullaway) (Hymenoptera: Braconidae) is an egg-pupal parasitoid of tephritid fruit flies. Small scale releases of F. arisanus were undertaken in coffee, Coffea arabica L., on the island of Kauai, to evaluate its potential for suppression of fruit fly populations. In conjunction with field releases, assays were conducted to determine the quality of pre-released parasitoids. In addition, the suitability of various sugars as potential food supplements in the field was evaluated. Spermathecal dissection showed that >70% of a total 1.7 million females released in 1998 and 1999 were successfully mated. Moreover, a sperm rating of 2.5–2.6 indicated that the spermathecae of inseminated females were 50% full. There were 85-137 matured eggs (mean = 101.7 ± 11.5) in the ovaries of mated or virgin females. When honey was replaced with ripe coffee and water, ripe coffee, or water alone, 10 days after emergence, females remained alive for another 5.5, 5.4, and 4.9 days, respectively. There was corresponding deterioration in the ovaries of gravid females. Mean eggs of honey-deprived females declined from >100 to
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- 2001
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32. Summary, Conclusions, and the Future of External Partnerships
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Larry H. Dietz and Ernest J. Enchelmayer
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Summary conclusions ,Higher education ,business.industry ,Economics ,Public administration ,Public relations ,business ,Reflection (computer graphics) ,Organisation climate ,Speculation - Abstract
This chapter pulls together the main points of the preceding chapters, encouraging reflection and further speculation on the prospect of external partnerships.
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- 2001
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33. A characterization of (γ, i )‐trees
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Joël Puech, Christina M. Mynhardt, Odile Favaron, and Ernest J. Cockayne
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Combinatorics ,Discrete Mathematics and Combinatorics ,Geometry and Topology ,Characterization (mathematics) ,Mathematics - Published
- 2000
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34. The relationship between rates of HVc neuron addition and vocal plasticity in adult songbirds
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Luisa L. Scott, Ernest J. Nordeen, and Kathy W. Nordeen
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Auditory feedback ,animal structures ,biology ,General Neuroscience ,biology.organism_classification ,Songbird ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,Neural function ,behavior and behavior mechanisms ,medicine ,Neuron ,Neuroscience ,Nucleus - Abstract
In adulthood, songbird species vary considerably in the extent to which they rely on auditory feedback to maintain a stable song structure. The con- tinued recruitment of new neurons into vocal motor circuitry may contribute to this lack of resiliency in song behavior insofar as new neurons that are not privy to auditory instruction could eventually corrupt estab- lished neural function. In a first step to explore this possibility, we used a comparative approach to deter- mine if species differences in the rate of vocal change after deafening in adulthood correlate positively with the extent of HVc neuron addition. We confirmed pre- vious reports that deafening in adulthood changes syl- lable phonology much more rapidly in bengalese finches than in zebra finches. Using ( 3 H)thymidine autoradiog- raphy to identify neurons generated in adulthood, we found that the proportion of new neurons in the HVc one month after labeling was nearly twice as great in bengalese than in zebra finches. Moreover, among the subset of HVc vocal motor neurons that project to the robust nucleus of the archistriatum, the incidence of ( 3 H)thymidine-labeled neurons was nearly three times as great in bengalese than in zebra finches. This corre- lation between the proportion of newly added neurons and the rate of song deterioration supports the hypoth- esis that HVc neuron addition may disrupt stable adult song production if new neurons cannot be "trained" via auditory feedback. © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Neurobiol 43
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- 2000
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35. Morphometry ofMacaca mulatta forelimb. I. Shoulder and elbow muscles and segment inertial parameters
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Ernest J. Cheng and Stephen Scott
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Elbow ,Anatomy ,Moment of inertia ,Biology ,Muscle mass ,Tendon ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Forearm ,Linear regression ,medicine ,Radius of gyration ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Forelimb ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
The present study examined the morpho- metric properties of the forelimb, including the inertial properties of the body segments and the morphometric parameters of 21 muscles spanning the shoulder and/or elbow joints of six Macaca mulatta and three M. fascicu- laris. Five muscle parameters are presented: optimal fas- cicle length (L0 M ), tendon slack length (LS T ), physiological cross-sectional area (PCSA), pennation angle (a0), and muscle mass (m). Linear regressions indicate that muscle mass, and to a lesser extent PCSA, correlated with total body weight. Segment mass, center-of-mass, and the mo- ment of inertia of the upper arm, forearm, and hand are also presented. Our data indicate that for some segments, radius of gyration (r) predicts segment moment of inertia better than linear regressions based on total body weight. Key differences between the monkey and human forelimb are highlighted. J. Morphol. 245:206 -224, 2000. © 2000 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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- 2000
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36. Early sensory and hormonal experience modulate age-related changes in NR2B mRNA within a forebrain region controlling avian vocal learning
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Tryambak Deo Singh, Kathy W. Nordeen, Mark E. Basham, and Ernest J. Nordeen
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Messenger RNA ,animal structures ,musculoskeletal, neural, and ocular physiology ,General Neuroscience ,Period (gene) ,In situ hybridization ,Biology ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,nervous system ,Gene expression ,Forebrain ,behavior and behavior mechanisms ,NMDA receptor ,Vocal learning ,Zebra finch ,Neuroscience ,psychological phenomena and processes - Abstract
Male zebra finches are most apt to mimic songs heard between posthatch days (PHD) 35 and 65, and this vocal learning depends, in part, on the activation of N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors (NMDAR) within a discrete forebrain circuit that includes the lateral magnocellular nucleus of the anterior neostriatum (lMAN) and area X. Using in situ hybridization, we show that transcripts for both the constitutive NMDAR subunit NR1 and the modulatory subunit NR2B decrease abruptly in the lMAN between PHD20 and 40. This downregulation corresponds to the onset of song learning and a transition from slow to faster NMDAR currents in lMAN neurons. In area X, NR1 mRNA increases as NR2B mRNA decreases during song development. To understand how these changes in NMDAR mRNA might regulate song learning, we next investigated how manipulations that influence song development affect NMDAR mRNA expression. Early isolation from conspecific song (which delays closure of the sensitive period for song learning) selectively increases NR2B, but not NR1 mRNA, within lMAN at PHD60. In contrast, exposure to testosterone beginning at PHD20 (which impairs song development and hastens the developmental transition to faster NMDAR current kinetics within lMAN) accelerates the decline in NR2B mRNA in lMAN, again without affecting NR1 transcript levels. Neither manipulation significantly effects NR1 or NR2B mRNA levels in area X. Our data suggest that developmental changes in the expression of specific NMDAR subunits may regulate periods of neural and behavioral plasticity and that flexibility in the timing of these sensitive periods may be achieved through experience and/or hormone-dependent modulation of NMDAR gene expression.
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- 2000
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37. Beyond environmental moralism and policy incrementalism in the global sustainability debate: case studies and an alternative framework
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Horace A. Bartilow and Ernest J. Yanarella
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Sustainable community ,Sustainable development ,Economic growth ,Environmental Sustainability Index ,Incrementalism ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,Social sustainability ,Sustainability ,Sustainability science ,Economics ,Sustainability organizations ,Development ,Public administration - Abstract
Global strategies for sustainable development remain caught in an interplay between environmental moralism and policy incrementalism. The former is evidenced in the continuing proliferation of international sustainability declarations; the latter in the design of local programmes approaching sustainable development in scattered, piecemeal policies where the goal – sustainability – remains unclear or only loosely defined. This paper points to the problems and perils of the dual process, underscoring the risks of environmental moralism implicit in such practices and highlighting the costs of formulating sustainability programmes only vaguely attached to its core concept. It initially focuses on the effort to promote Local Agenda 21 (LA21) – one model of sustainable urban practice – among towns and communities throughout the world and then contrasts Local Agenda 21 with the Aalborg Charter, a competing model for urban sustainability. In order to explore the success to date in implementing Local Agenda 21, the paper offers an overview of four exemplary programmes of community sustainability. The final section presents a critical assessment of LA21's successes and failures judged against an alternative sustainability framework developed by the Center for Sustainable Cities and informing the Aalborg Charter. Copyright © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment
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- 2000
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38. Interlaboratory comparison of ultrasonic backscatter, attenuation, and speed measurements
- Author
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Keith A. Wear, Gary R. Frank, N. T. Sanghvi, Shyh-Hau Wang, Timothy J. Hall, Ernest L. Madsen, James G. Miller, K. Kirk Shung, Thaddeus Wilson, Oliver D. Kripfgans, B. S. Garra, James A. Zagzebski, J. B. Fowlkes, Karen A. Topp, William D. O'Brien, Tian Liu, A. V. Zaitsev, H. L. Miller, Ernest J. Feleppa, and Fang Dong
- Subjects
Backscatter ,Acrylic Resins ,Mineralogy ,1-Propanol ,Test object ,Ultrasonic backscatter ,Humans ,Medicine ,Ultrasonics ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Ultrasonography ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,Phantoms, Imaging ,business.industry ,Attenuation ,Water ,Equipment Design ,Frequency dependence ,Computational physics ,Agar ,Graphite ,Ultrasonic sensor ,Glass ,Laboratories ,business ,Plastics ,Order of magnitude - Abstract
In a study involving 10 different sites, independent results of measurements of ultrasonic properties on equivalent tissue-mimicking samples are reported and compared. The properties measured were propagation speed, attenuation coefficients, and backscatter coefficients. Reasonably good agreement exists for attenuation coefficients, but less satisfactory results were found for propagation speeds. As anticipated, agreement was not impressive in the case of backscatter coefficients. Results for four sites agreed rather well in both absolute values and frequency dependence, and results from other sites were lower by as much as an order of magnitude. The study is valuable for laboratories doing quantitative studies.
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- 1999
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39. In vitro B-mode ultrasonographic criteria for diagnosing axillary lymph node metastasis of breast cancer
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Junji Machi, Kazuo Shirouzu, Tomoaki Noritomi, Eugene Yanagihara, Robert H. Oishi, Shinji Uchida, Laurence J. McCarthy, Tsutomu Tateishi, Nancy L. Furumoto, and Ernest J. Feleppa
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Mammary gland ,Hilum (biology) ,Breast Neoplasms ,In Vitro Techniques ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Metastasis ,Breast cancer ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Lymph node ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,Ultrasonography ,Aged, 80 and over ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,business.industry ,Cancer ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Axilla ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Lymphatic Metastasis ,Female ,Lymph Nodes ,Radiology ,Lymph ,business - Abstract
Axillary lymph node status is an important factor for staging and treatment planning in breast cancer. Our study was performed in vitro on a node-by-node basis to evaluate the ability of B-mode ultrasonographic images to distinguish metastatic from nonmetastatic nodes. Immediately prior to histologic examination, individual dissected axillary nodes were scanned in a water bath using a 10 MHz B-mode ultrasonographic transducer. Four B-mode features (size, circularity, border demarcation, and internal echo) were evaluated for their ability to distinguish metastatic from nonmetastatic lymph nodes. Lymph node metastasis was indicated by (1) a large size (i.e., a length of the longest axis of 10 mm or greater); (2) a circular shape (i.e., the ratio of the shortest axis to the longest axis between 0.5 and 1.0); (3) a sharply demarcated border compared with surrounding fatty tissue; and (4) a hypoechoic internal echo, with obliteration of the fatty hilum. The sensitivity and specificity were compared for all combinations of features. We examined 84 histologically characterized axillary nodes from 27 breast cancer patients, including 64 nonmetastatic and 20 metastatic nodes. Of the criteria cited, circular shape was the best single feature for distinguishing metastatic from nonmetastatic nodes (sensitivity, 65%; specificity, 73%). The best combination of sensitivity (85%) and specificity (73%) was obtained using the criterion that a lymph node contained cancer when at least three positive features were present. The present in vitro study demonstrated that the sensitivity and specificity of B-mode ultrasonography for diagnosing lymph node metastasis were lower than 90%. Therefore, B-mode ultrasonography may not be an optimal noninvasive screening method for diagnosing axillary lymph node metastasis in breast cancer patients, particularly under in vivo clinical conditions.
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- 1999
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40. Developmental regulation of NMDA receptor 2B subunit mRNA and ifenprodil binding in the zebra finch anterior forebrain
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Tryambak Deo Singh, Kathy W. Nordeen, Farida Sohrabji, M. E. Basham, and Ernest J. Nordeen
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animal structures ,General Neuroscience ,Protein subunit ,Period (gene) ,In situ hybridization ,Biology ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,nervous system ,chemistry ,Forebrain ,behavior and behavior mechanisms ,Ifenprodil ,NMDA receptor ,Receptor ,Zebra finch ,Neuroscience - Abstract
In passerine songbirds, song learning often is restricted to an early sensitive period and re- quires the participation of several discrete regions within the anterior forebrain. Activation of N-methyl-D- aspartate (NMDA) receptors is implicated in song learn- ing and in one forebrain song region, the lateral mag- nocellular nucleus of the anterior neostriatum (lMAN), NMDA receptors decrease in density, their affinity for the antagonist MK-801 increases, and their currents decay more quickly as young male zebra finches lose the ability to imitate new song elements. These developmen- tal changes in NMDA receptor pharmacology and phys- iology suggest that the subunit composition of NMDA receptors changes developmentally. Here, we have used in situ hybridization and ( 3 H)ifenprodil receptor auto
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- 1999
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41. Effects of Structural Variations on the Cellular Response and Mechanical Properties of Biocompatible, Biodegradable, and Porous Smectic Liquid Crystal Elastomers
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Sharma, Anshul, primary, Mori, Taizo, additional, Mahnen, Cory J., additional, Everson, Heather R., additional, Leslie, Michelle T., additional, Nielsen, Alek d., additional, Lussier, Laurent, additional, Zhu, Chenhui, additional, Malcuit, Christopher, additional, Hegmann, Torsten, additional, McDonough, Jennifer A., additional, Freeman, Ernest J., additional, Korley, LaShanda T. J., additional, Clements, Robert J., additional, and Hegmann, Elda, additional
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- 2016
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42. Fibroblast growth factor-2 stimulates cell proliferation and decreases sexually dimorphic cell death in an avian song control nucleus
- Author
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Kathy W. Nordeen, Ernest J. Nordeen, and L. Voelkel
- Subjects
Programmed cell death ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Sexual differentiation ,biology ,Cell growth ,General Neuroscience ,Fibroblast growth factor ,Sexual dimorphism ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,nervous system ,Internal medicine ,Immunology ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Neuron ,Neuron death ,Neurotrophin - Abstract
The neural system controlling song in birds has proven a useful model for investigating how neuronal growth and survival are regulated by sexual differentiation. The present study focused on one song control area, the robust nucleus of the archistriatum (RA), and explored how sex differences in the proliferation of putative glia cells in this region influence sexually dimorphic cell survival. In zebra finches (Poephila guttata), RA neuron death is much greater in young females than in males, resulting in marked sex differences in RA neuron number. An earlier study indicated that just prior to this sexually dimorphic neuron death the proliferation of putative glia cells within the RA is significantly lower in females than in males and remains so throughout the peak of neuron death. This suggests that sex differences in glia (or glia-derived molecules) might regulate neuron survival during sexual differentiation of the RA. To determine whether increased cell proliferation within the RA favors increased cell survival, we infused the potent glia mitogen fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF-2) into the RA unilaterally in young females. We find that FGF-2 infusions increase RA cell proliferation and concurrently decrease the incidence of degenerating RA cells, results consistent with the hypothesis that glia exert neurotrophic effects on RA neurons during sexual differentiation.
- Published
- 1998
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43. Biology and rearing of the fruit fly parasitoid Biosteres arisanus: clues to insectary propagation
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Ernest J. Harris, Renato C. Bautista, and Pauline O. Lawrence
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Avian clutch size ,biology ,Host (biology) ,fungi ,Parasitism ,Zoology ,biology.organism_classification ,Parasitoid ,Dacus ,Insect Science ,Tephritidae ,Botany ,Bactrocera ,Braconidae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Aspects of Biosteres arisanus (Sonan) (= Opius oophilus Fullaway) (Hymenoptera: Braconidae) development on the oriental fruit fly. Bactrocera (= Dacus) dorsalis (Hendel), were investigated to facilitate mass production in the insectary. Life table statistics were generated for cohorts of B. arisanus females. Overlap in the emergence of fruit flies and parasitoids necessitated a procedure for segregation, preferably before adult eclosion. Rate of parasitization by B. arisanus increased with host clutch size reaching a plateau at 20: 1 host egg to female parasitoid ratio. Duration of the oviposition period influenced the level of host parasitization: host eggs were exposed to parasitoids for 24 h with minimal superparasitism. Females were highly productive within 3 weeks after emergence producing 40-70% females in the progeny. Adult males were shorter lived than females by 5 days. Based on a net reproductive rate (R 0 ) of > 16 daughters per female parent, a population increase of 10% was predicted each day. Handling procedures that could facilitate efficient production of parasitoids are discussed.
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- 1998
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44. A Quantitative lmmunoassay for the Measurement of Phospholamban Levels and Phosphorylation States: Measurement of Phospholamban Levels in Transgenic Mouse Hearts
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Ernest J. Mayer, Robert G. Johnson, and George M. Savage
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Mice, Knockout ,Genetically modified mouse ,Heterozygote ,Chemistry ,Myocardium ,General Neuroscience ,Blotting, Western ,Calcium-Binding Proteins ,Homozygote ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Mice, Transgenic ,Calcium-Transporting ATPases ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Cell biology ,Phospholamban ,Mice ,Gene Expression Regulation ,History and Philosophy of Science ,Animals ,Phosphorylation - Published
- 1998
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45. Anatomical and synaptic substrates for avian song learning
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Ernest J. Nordeen and Kathy W. Nordeen
- Subjects
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,nervous system ,biology ,General Neuroscience ,Sensitive periods ,Synaptogenesis ,NMDA receptor ,Developmental plasticity ,Vocal learning ,biology.organism_classification ,Neuroscience ,Songbird - Abstract
In songbirds, vocal learning occurs during periods of major cellular and synaptic change. This neural reorganization includes massive synaptogenesis associated with the addition of new neurons into the vocal motor pathway, as well as pruning of connections between song regions. These observations, coupled with behavioral evidence that song development requires NMDA receptor activation in specific song nuclei, suggest that experiences associated with vocal learning are encoded by activity driven, Hebbianlike processes of synaptic change akin to those implicated in many other forms of developmental plasticity and learning. In this review we discuss the hypothesis that develpmental and/or seasonal changes in NMDA receptor function and the availability of new synapses may modulate thresholds for plasticity and thereby define sensitive periods for vocal learning.
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- 1997
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46. Sexually dimorphic neuron addition to an avian song-control region is not accounted for by sex differences in cell death
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Kathy W. Nordeen, Ernest J. Nordeen, and M. J. Burek
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Sexual differentiation ,Cell division ,General Neuroscience ,Immunocytochemistry ,Estrogen receptor ,Biology ,Sexual dimorphism ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,nervous system ,Internal medicine ,behavior and behavior mechanisms ,medicine ,Neuron ,Neuroscience ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,Pyknosis ,Sex characteristics - Abstract
Only male zebra finches sing, and several brain regions implicated in song behavior exhibit marked sex differences in neuron number. In one region, the high vocal center (HVC), this dimorphism develops because the incorporation of new neurons is greater in males than in females during the first several weeks after hatching. Although estrogen (E2) exposure stimulates neuron addition in females, it is not known where (E2) acts, or to what extent sexual differentiation influences the production, specification, or survival of HVC neurons. In the present study we first reassessed sex and (E2)-induced differences in cell degeneration within the HVC using the TUNEL technique to identify cells undergoing DNA fragmentation indicative of apoptosis. HVC neuron number, as well as the density and number of TUNEL-labeled and pyknotic cells within the HVC were measured in normal 20- and 30-day-old males and females, and in 30-day-old females implanted with E2 on posthatch day 18. Although HVC neuron number was greater in males than in females, and was masculinized in E2 females, no group differences were evident in the absolute number of dying cells. These results indicate that sex differences in cell survival within the HVC do not entirely account for sexually dimorphic neuron addition to this region. Rather, sexual differentiation acts on some HVC neurons before they complete their migration and/or early differentiation. Although the migratory route of HVC neurons is not known, a large number of E2 receptor-containing cells (ER cells) reside just ventromedial to the HVC and adjacent to the proliferative ventricular zone. Next, we investigated whether these ER cells contribute to early-arising sex differences in HVC neuron addition. By combining [3H]thymidine autoradiography with immunocytochemistry for ERs, we first established that ER-expressing cells are not generated during posthatch sexually dimorphic HVC neuron addition, and thus are not young HVC neurons that transiently express ERs during their migration. Furthermore, in 25-day-old birds we found no sex difference in the density of pyknotic cells among this group of ER cells, suggesting that these cells do not promote the differential survival of HVC neuronal precursors migrating through this region. Rather, ER cells or other cell populations may establish sex differences in HVC neuron number by creating dimorphisms in cellular specification.
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- 1997
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47. Effect of insectary rearing on host preference and oviposition behavior of the fruit fly parasitoid Diachasmimorpha longicaudata
- Author
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Ernest J. Harris and Renato C. Bautista
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biology ,Host (biology) ,fungi ,food and beverages ,Parasitism ,biology.organism_classification ,Bactrocera dorsalis ,Parasitoid ,Horticulture ,Insect Science ,Tephritidae ,parasitic diseases ,Botany ,Carica ,Braconidae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Fruit tree - Abstract
Diachasmimorpha longicaudata (Ashmead) has been produced in the laboratory for > 160 generations on the larvae of oriental fruit fly, Bactrocera dorsalis (Hendel), the propagation hosts raised routinely on a semi-synthetic wheat diet formulation. Choice tests using modified stinging units were conducted in the laboratory to investigate whether insectary rearing had altered the host seeking and oviposition behavior of female parasitoids. Results showed that fruit fly larvae that developed in papaya, Carica papaya L. var. 'solo', were less preferred for oviposition than fruit fly larvae that developed on wheat diet when both were exposed concurrently to naive D. longicaudata females (= females without prior oviposition experience). The substrates (pureed papaya or wheat diet) in which treatment larvae were exposed to parasitoids did not affect oviposition preference of gravid D. longicaudata for wheat diet-reared fruit fly larvae. Our study demonstrated the possibility that rearing in an insectary system may have modified the parasitization behavior of female D. longicaudata.
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- 1997
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48. In vivo detection of carotid plaque thrombus by ultrasonic tissue characterization
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V Gahtan, K Shirouzu, T Noritomi, Bernard Sigel, Jeffrey R. Justin, V. Swami, and Ernest J. Feleppa
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Duplex ultrasonography ,Arteriosclerosis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Carotid endarterectomy ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,In vivo ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Carotid Artery Thrombosis ,cardiovascular diseases ,Thrombus ,Aged ,Ultrasonography ,Endarterectomy, Carotid ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,business.industry ,Ultrasound ,Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Small sample ,Tissue characterization ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,cardiovascular system ,Female ,Ultrasonic sensor ,Radiology ,business ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
The purpose of the study was to determine whether ultrasonic tissue characterization could detect carotid plaque thrombus in vivo. Patients undergoing carotid endarterectomy were examined preoperatively and the ultrasonic tissue characterization findings were compared to those of optical microscopy of the removed plaque specimens. Ten of 15 patients studied had plaque thrombus. Ultra-ultrasonic tissue characterization entailed an analysis of parameters obtained from the power spectrum of backscattered ultrasound signals. Data were obtained with a nominal 10 MHz sector scanning transducer with an effective bandwidth of 3 to 13 MHz. The parameters were the slope and intercept derived from the linear regression of the normalized spectrum and total power (log of the integrated power of the normalized spectrum over the effective bandwidth). The combined effect of the three parameters was determined by discriminant function analysis and showed a significant difference (P < 0.05) between nonthrombus and plaque thrombus in a small sample of patients with advance carotid atherosclerosis. These parameters applied singly could not provide such a distinction. Correct classification of carotid plaque thrombus using the multiple-parameter analysis revealed a sensitivity of 90%, specificity of 80%, and accuracy of 86.7%. This study demonstrates that analysis utilizing a combination of multiple spectral parameters was able to detect carotid plaque thrombus in vivo.
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- 1997
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49. Ultrasonic spectral-parameter imaging of the prostate
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Victor E. Reuter, Mary C. Shao, Ernest J. Feleppa, Neil E. Fleshner, William R. Fair, Tian Liu, and Andrew Kalisz
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Ultrasound ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Prostate cancer ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Prostate ,Biopsy ,Imaging technology ,Medicine ,Ultrasonic sensor ,Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Spectrum analysis ,business ,Software ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
Spectrum analysis of the radiofrequency echo signals obtained from ultrasonically scanning the prostate may provide information capable of distinguishing cancerous from noncancerous tissue. In American men, prostate cancer is the highest-incidence cancer and the second-highest cancer killer. It is diagnosed using ultrasonically guided biopsies, which are limited by the low sensitivity and specificity of the guidance method. Spectrum analysis of the echo signals uses information that is discarded by conventional ultrasound imaging technology. The inclusion of this information shows differences between the ultrasound-scattering properties of cancerous and noncancerous prostate tissues. Spectrum analysis of ultrasonic echoes provides parameter values that can be related to scattering properties of tissue and can be compared to database parameter value ranges associated with cancerous and noncancerous tissues. Images can be generated to display parameter values, scatterer properties, or most likely tissue type. Results to date suggest that these differences may be sufficient to improve biopsy guidance significantly and therefore to improve the efficacy of biopsy-based diagnosis of prostate cancer. © 1997 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Int J Imaging Syst Technol, 8, 11–25, 1997
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- 1997
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50. Industrial facility deactivation: A proactive approach for reducing costs and liabilities
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Joseph P. Lingle, Thomas A. Nowlan, Rickie G. Nesbit, and Ernest J. Kulik
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Engineering ,Environmental Engineering ,Program management ,business.industry ,ComputerApplications_COMPUTERSINOTHERSYSTEMS ,Pollution ,Consolidation (business) ,Project planning ,Risk analysis (engineering) ,Deliverable ,Operations management ,Industrial Facility ,business ,Waste Management and Disposal - Abstract
For both private corporations and military branches, downsizing and consolidation are becoming more commonplace. A range of environmental concerns must be addressed to effectively implement a consolidation program. A facility deactivation program can often become a minefield for an organization. Responsible personnel are typically inexperienced with the process, and this can lead to costly mistakes. This article provides insight into this topic based on experience gained with a multifacility program and related environmental issues. It emphasizes the importance of detailed, up-front, proactive project planning; a solid program management system; and accurate identification of project objectives and deliverables.
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- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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