311 results on '"Wright DL"'
Search Results
202. Photocurable hard and porous biomaterials from ROMP precursors cross-linked with diyl radicals.
- Author
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Enholm E, Joshi A, and Wright DL
- Subjects
- Biocompatible Materials chemistry, Gases chemistry, Nitrogen chemistry, Photolysis, Polymers chemistry, Porosity, Biocompatible Materials chemical synthesis, Imides chemistry, Polymers chemical synthesis
- Abstract
A combination of (ROMP) ring-opening metathesis polymerization and diradical (diyl) cross-linking provides a new access to hard biomaterials and potential artificial bone replacements. ROMP was used to construct soft and pliable linear polymers bearing photolabile diazene functions. After treatment with light, a nitrogen aerosol is released throughout the polymer to create desirable porosity, cross-linking, and hardening in a single step. Nonpolymeric mechanistic work supporting these studies was also examined.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
203. Recruiting healthcare professionals to rural areas.
- Author
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Philipp DL and Wright DL
- Subjects
- Humans, Medically Underserved Area, United States, Health Workforce, Personnel Selection organization & administration, Rural Population
- Abstract
Maintaining an adequate number of healthcare providers for the nation's most underserved populations is increasingly diffiicult. Rural medical services have issues that often complicate recruitment and retention of qualified medical professionals. This review of literature examines some of the issues unique to rural areas. Consideration of these issues during recruitment strategies may lead to increased recruitment and retention of healthcare professionals to ruraI areas.
- Published
- 2005
204. Furans, thiophenes and related heterocycles in drug discovery.
- Author
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Sperry JB and Wright DL
- Subjects
- Azoles chemical synthesis, Combinatorial Chemistry Techniques, Furans chemical synthesis, Heterocyclic Compounds chemical synthesis, Molecular Structure, Pharmaceutical Preparations chemistry, Thiophenes chemical synthesis, Drug Design, Furans chemistry, Heterocyclic Compounds chemistry, Pharmaceutical Preparations chemical synthesis, Thiophenes chemistry
- Abstract
The five-membered aromatic heterocycles containing oxygen and sulfur are key building blocks used in medicinal chemistry applications. Furans, thiophenes and related azole analogs constitute an important class of compounds that are readily available, stable and easily functionalized. In this review, the authors survey the recent literature and highlight the application of such compounds in the development of therapeutic agents. This review focuses on two major strategies involving these compounds. The first is the use of these rings as intact scaffolds within the final target compound, and the second is the use of these compounds as convenient and flexible synthons for non-aromatic structural moieties.
- Published
- 2005
205. Programming and reprogramming sequence timing following high and low contextual interference practice.
- Author
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Wright DL, Magnuson CE, and Black CB
- Subjects
- Humans, Reaction Time physiology, Task Performance and Analysis, Neurolinguistic Programming, Practice, Psychological, Psychomotor Performance physiology
- Abstract
Individuals practiced two unique discrete sequence production tasks that differed in their relative time profile in either a blocked or random practice schedule. Each participant was subsequently administered a "precuing" protocol to examine the cost of initially compiling or modifying the plan for an upcoming movement's relative timing. The findings indicated that, in general, random practice facilitated the programming of the required movement timing, and this was accomplished while exhibiting greater accuracy in movement production. Participants exposed to random practice exhibited the greatest motor programming benefit, when a modification to an already prepared movement timing profile was required. When movement timing was only partially constructed prior to the imperative signal, the individuals who were trained in blocked and random practice formats accrued a similar cost to complete the programming process. These data provide additional support for the recent claim of Immink & Wright (2001) that at least some of the benefit from experience in a random as opposed to blocked training context can be localized to superior development and implementation of the motor programming process before executing the movement.
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- 2005
- Full Text
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206. Growing your own: planting seeds for healthy rural hospitals.
- Author
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Philipp DL and Wright DL
- Subjects
- Humans, United States, Health Workforce, Hospitals, Rural organization & administration, Personnel Selection methods
- Abstract
Rural areas continually suffer from shortages of healthcare providers and healthcare professionals. Although research exists that addresses unique problems and opportunities associated with rural medical careers, little contributes to the development of providers from within the community. This article proposes a new approach to alleviating the shortage of rural healthcare professionals by looking toward the community's youth.
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- 2005
207. The gem-dialkyl effect in electron transfer reactions: rapid synthesis of seven-membered rings through an electrochemical annulation.
- Author
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Sperry JB and Wright DL
- Subjects
- Cyclization, Cycloheptanes chemistry, Electrochemistry, Cycloheptanes chemical synthesis, Diterpenes chemical synthesis, Furans chemistry
- Abstract
An electrochemical furan annulation strategy has been developed for the synthesis of seven-membered rings. Key to the success of the annulation is the placement of a gem-dialkyl group in the tether. Voltammetric studies indicate that this effect lowers the oxidation potential by approximately 110 mV.
- Published
- 2005
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208. Studies on the reactivity of CDDO, a promising new chemopreventive and chemotherapeutic agent: implications for a molecular mechanism of action.
- Author
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Couch RD, Browning RG, Honda T, Gribble GW, Wright DL, Sporn MB, and Anderson AC
- Subjects
- Dithiothreitol, Kinetics, Molecular Conformation, Molecular Structure, Nitric Oxide antagonists & inhibitors, Oleanolic Acid chemical synthesis, Oleanolic Acid pharmacology, Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet, Oleanolic Acid analogs & derivatives
- Abstract
CDDO, a semi-synthetic triterpenoid derived from oleanolic acid, has the potential to be used as a chemopreventive and chemotherapeutic agent. The structure of CDDO contains two alpha,beta-unsaturated carbonyl moieties, suggesting a mechanism of action involving a conjugate nucleophilic addition. Spectroscopic evaluation with thiol nucleophiles illustrates that an addition does indeed occur, but this addition is selective and reversible.
- Published
- 2005
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209. Progressive elimination of microinjected trehalose during mouse embryonic development.
- Author
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Eroglu A, Elliott G, Wright DL, Toner M, and Toth TL
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Survival, Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid, Electrochemistry, Embryo, Mammalian cytology, Embryo, Mammalian metabolism, Embryonic Development, Fertilization, Fertilization in Vitro, Glucose metabolism, Intracellular Membranes metabolism, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Microinjections, Oocytes drug effects, Oocytes physiology, Osmolar Concentration, Time Factors, Embryo, Mammalian physiology, Trehalose administration & dosage, Trehalose pharmacokinetics
- Abstract
Recently, sugars such as trehalose have been introduced into mammalian cells by overcoming the permeability barrier of cell membranes, and have provided improved tolerance against stresses associated with freezing and drying. However, the fate of the intracellular sugars has remained an open question. To address this issue, mouse oocytes were microinjected with 0.1 mol/l trehalose, and intracellular trehalose and glucose concentrations were determined during embryonic development using a high performance liquid chromatography and pulsed amperometric detection protocol. Trehalose was not detected in non-injected controls at any stage of development. In the microinjection group, the amount of intracellular trehalose progressively decreased as embryos developed. There was a corresponding increase in intracellular glucose concentration at the two-cell stage, suggesting cleavage of trehalose to two glucose molecules. In summary, this study presents a simple, highly sensitive protocol to determine intracellular sugars. The data reveal rapid elimination of microinjected trehalose during embryonic development. These findings have implications for designing osmolarity-optimized culture media for sugar-injected oocytes.
- Published
- 2005
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210. Learning to detect error in movement timing using physical and observational practice.
- Author
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Black CB, Wright DL, Magnuson CE, and Brueckner S
- Subjects
- Humans, Reproducibility of Results, United States, Motor Skills, Movement
- Abstract
Three experiments assessed the possibility that a physical practice participant's ability to render appropriate movement timing estimates may be hindered compared to those who merely observed. Results from these experiments revealed that observers and physical practice participants executed and estimated the overall durations of movement sequences similarly and more accurately than those who were not privy to any previous practice. This was true for a case in which (a) the execution demands for the physical practice participant were relatively high when multiple movement sequences were practiced with a consistent relative time structure but different overall durations (Experiment 1) and (b) the execution demands were relatively modest when only a single sequential motor task was learned (Experiment 2). Moreover, this general set of findings remained true for individuals who had previous experience with physical or observational practice, even when timing estimations were made during tests with no execution demands (Experiment 3). Thus, executing a movement sequence does not appear to interfere with the development of a learner's subjective evaluation of overall timing performance. Specifically, these data provided evidence that recognizing error in movement timing can be accomplished via observation, and, more generally, they add to the growing evidence supporting the claim that observational practice is a legitimate method facilitating the acquisition of sequential movement behaviors.
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- 2005
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211. Oxabicyclo[3.2.1]octane derivatives as highly reactive dienophiles: synthesis of bicyclo[5.n.0] systems.
- Author
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Pelphrey P, Jasinski J, Butcher RJ, and Wright DL
- Abstract
[reaction: see text] We have developed highly versatile, homochiral oxabicyclo[3.2.1]octadiene building blocks for the synthesis of natural products. We have found that these bridged alkenes undergo exceptionally facile Diels-Alder reactions and react faster than several well studied bicyclo[2.2.1]heptene dienophiles. The reaction proceeds with high levels of stereochemical control and in very good to excellent yields, providing access to bicyclo[5.4.0]undecane and bicyclo[5.3.0]decane systems. This reactivity is attributed to strain and homoconjugation effects.
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- 2005
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212. Altered specificity of Hint-W123Q supports a role for Hint inhibition by ASW in avian sex determination.
- Author
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Parks KP, Seidle H, Wright N, Sperry JB, Bieganowski P, Howitz K, Wright DL, and Brenner C
- Subjects
- Adenosine Monophosphate chemistry, Aniline Compounds chemistry, Animals, Avian Proteins, Birds, Chickens, Dimerization, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Evolution, Molecular, Expressed Sequence Tags, Female, Genes, Dominant, Glutamine chemistry, Hydrolysis, Karyotyping, Kinetics, Lysine chemistry, Male, Models, Chemical, Mutation, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Sex Determination Processes, Substrate Specificity, Carrier Proteins physiology, Hydrolases chemistry, Hydrolases genetics, Sex Chromosomes ultrastructure
- Abstract
Hint is a universally conserved, dimeric AMP-lysine hydrolase encoded on the avian Z chromosome. Tandemly repeated on the female-specific W chromosome, Asw encodes a potentially sex-determining, dominant-negative Hint dimerization partner whose substrate-interacting residues were specifically altered in evolution. To test the hypothesis that Gln127 of Asw is responsible for depression and/or alteration of Hint enzyme activity, a corresponding mutant was created in the chicken Hint homodimer, and a novel substrate was developed that links reversal of AMP-lysine modification to aminomethylcoumarin release. Strikingly, the Hint-W123Q substitution reduced k(cat)/K(m) for AMP-lysine hydrolysis 17-fold, while it increased specificity for AMP-para-nitroaniline hydrolysis by 160-fold. The resulting 2,700-fold switch in enzyme specificity suggests that Gln127 could be the dominant component of Asw dominant negativity in avian feminization.
- Published
- 2004
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213. New chiral building blocks from tetrabromocyclopropene and furan.
- Author
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Pelphrey PM, Abboud KA, and Wright DL
- Abstract
The cyclocondensation of tetrabromocyclopropene and furan leads directly to a halogenated oxabicyclo[3.2.1]octadiene derivative. Over the past several years, we have utilized these compounds as intermediates for natural product synthesis. Herein, we describe the preparation of nonracemic dibromoenone building blocks from the racemic cycloadduct. Conversion of the adduct to a mixture of tartrate-derived ketals followed by separation of the diastereomers and hydrolysis allows for the formation of novel chiral synthons with either absolute configuration., (Copyright 2004 American Chemical Society)
- Published
- 2004
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214. Use of sugars in cryopreserving human oocytes.
- Author
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Wright DL, Eroglu A, Toner M, and Toth TL
- Subjects
- Cell Survival, Cytoskeleton ultrastructure, Embryonic Development, Female, Fertilization in Vitro methods, Freezing, Humans, Oocytes metabolism, Pregnancy, Temperature, Treatment Outcome, Cryopreservation instrumentation, Cryopreservation methods, Cryoprotective Agents pharmacology, Oocytes cytology, Sucrose pharmacology
- Abstract
In the last 20 years, a worldwide effort to cryopreserve oocytes has resulted in 40 infants and approximately 50 ongoing pregnancies being reported. While the ability to freeze human embryos has become a standard of practice in assisted reproductive technologies, obtaining reliable techniques for oocyte cryopreservation has been more difficult. The unique properties of the mature oocyte, such as the meiotic stage with sensitive spindle structure as well as the large cell volume, are responsible for the limited success obtained to date. There have been two approaches to cryopreserving the oocyte: (i) slow freeze-rapid thaw, and (ii) vitrification protocols with rapid cooling-rapid warming. Both methods have incorporated sugars (sucrose) as a beneficial non-permeating extracellular cryoprotectant. Studies of organisms that survive extreme conditions of freezing/dehydration have demonstrated the ability to accumulate intracellular sugars to afford protection and survival. A novel technique using microinjection of sugars into the oocyte for cryopreservation has been developed as an alternative approach to external addition of sugars. Freezing the human oocyte has been a challenging goal; however, developing research and efforts will, in the near future, provide women with an important option for their reproductive health.
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- 2004
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215. Changes in the incidental context impacts search but not loading of the motor buffer.
- Author
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Magnuson CE, Wright DL, and Verwey WB
- Subjects
- Auditory Perception, Humans, Reaction Time, Retention, Psychology, Linguistics
- Abstract
During a retention test, a change in the nature of the incidental contextual information present during training can have a deleterious impact on response selection by not activating particular subsets of information in memory that help direct the retrieval process. The present experiment addressed whether a change in the incidental context also impacted the completion of processes associated with loading and searching the motor buffer during motor programming. A self-select paradigm was used to describe the planning and execution of one- and four-element sequences that consisted of short and long duration key-presses. During a test phase following training, changes in the incidental contextual information impeded the search of the motor buffer. However, loading specific timing information into the motor buffer was unaffected by shifts in contexts. These data support the contention that contextual information plays a fundamental role in a broad array of movement-planning operations that involve search and retrieval type activity., (Copyright 2004 The Experimental Psychology Society)
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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216. Random practice can facilitate the learning of tasks that have different relative time structures.
- Author
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Magnuson CE and Wright DL
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Humans, Psychomotor Performance, Texas, Learning, Task Performance and Analysis, Time and Motion Studies, User-Computer Interface
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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217. Electrooxidative coupling of furans and silyl enol ethers: application to the synthesis of annulated furans.
- Author
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Sperry JB, Whitehead CR, Ghiviriga I, Walczak RM, and Wright DL
- Abstract
The preparation of annulated furan systems as key synthetic intermediates through the application of a two-step annulation involving an electrochemical ring closure between a furan and a silyl enol ether has been studied. The reaction was shown to be quite general for the formation of six-membered rings in good yields and was tolerant of a variety of different functional groups. The ring closure was highly stereoselective, leading to the formation of cis-fused systems. Cyclic voltammetry and probe molecules were used to gain mechanistic insight into the reaction. These studies suggested that the key ring closure involved an initial oxidation of the silyl enol ether to a radical cation followed by a furan-terminated cyclization.
- Published
- 2004
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218. Long-term motor programming improvements occur via concatenation of movement sequences during random but not during blocked practice.
- Author
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Wright DL, Black CB, Immink MA, Brueckner S, and Magnuson C
- Subjects
- Acoustic Stimulation, Adult, Attention, Functional Laterality, Humans, Models, Psychological, Retention, Psychology, Motor Skills, Practice, Psychological, Psychomotor Performance, Reaction Time, Serial Learning
- Abstract
According to S. T. Klapp (1995, 1996), extensive practice serves to induce the concatenation of multiple-element responses. One benefit of the chunking process, argued Klapp, is more efficient execution of motor programming. The authors conducted the present study with 30 participants to investigate that proposition. The chunking process was found to be very transient following some practice regimes. Specifically, compared with exposure to random practice, extensive blocked practice resulted in only temporary movement sequence consolidation. The present results provide support for the claim that random practice not only leads to improvements in the completion of intratrial movement planning processes but also affects the structure of the memory developed during practice. Both components are important contributors to long-term improvements in movement preparation associated with a high contextual-interference practice condition.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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219. Effector-independent and effector-dependent learning in the discrete sequence production task.
- Author
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Verwey WB and Wright DL
- Subjects
- Adult, Color Perception, Female, Humans, Male, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Practice, Psychological, Probability Learning, Reaction Time, Set, Psychology, Attention, Functional Laterality, Psychomotor Performance, Serial Learning
- Abstract
This study examined whether skill in the discrete sequence production task involves, apart from the typical effector-independent component, an effector-dependent component. To that end, 12 participants practiced two 5-key sequences, each for 1,060 trials. One group practiced with three fingers of one hand, the other group with three fingers of two hands. In a subsequent test phase, participants in both groups executed the same sequences and two new sequences with the hand configuration they had used during practice, and with the hand configuration of the other group. The results provide support for an effector-dependent component in that both groups performed the practiced sequences faster with the hand configuration they had used during practice than with the hand configuration that was new to them. In addition, the unpracticed hand configuration performed the practiced sequences faster than the new sequence, which demonstrated the effector-independent component.
- Published
- 2004
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220. Bridged synthons from tetrabromocyclopropene: studies on the rearrangement of the primary Diels-Alder adduct with 2,5-dimethylfuran.
- Author
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Orugunty RS, Ghiviriga I, Abboud KA, Battiste MA, and Wright DL
- Abstract
The reaction of tetrabromocyclopropene and furan leads directly to 8-oxabicyclo[3.2.1]octadiene derivatives. It has been proposed that this involves an initial Diels-Alder reaction followed by rearrangement of the primary adduct. We have, for the first time, isolated a primary adduct and established through X-ray crystallographic analysis that the adduct is the product of an exo-selective addition. Kinetic studies suggest the intermediacy of charged intermediates during the rearrangement.
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- 2004
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221. Bicyclo[3.2.1]octane synthons from cyclopropenes: functionalization of cycloadducts by nucleophilic additions.
- Author
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Orugunty RS, Wright DL, Battiste MA, Helmich RJ, and Abboud K
- Abstract
It has been known for several decades that a highly functionalized family of tetrahalobicyclo[3.2.1]octadienes are readily available through the cycloaddition of furan or cyclopentadiene with either tetrachloro- or tetrabromocyclopropene. However, the application of these highly functionalized building blocks in synthesis has remained relatively unexplored in relation to their better-known counterparts derived through oxyallyl cation additions. As a first step toward utilizing these highly versatile intermediates in synthesis, a study of the addition of various nucleophiles to the halogenated nucleus has been conducted. It has been found that these halogenated systems are amenable to a wide range of functionalizations in high yields and with good selectivities.
- Published
- 2004
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222. Spinal deformity following selective dorsal rhizotomy.
- Author
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Spiegel DA, Loder RT, Alley KA, Rowley S, Gutknecht S, Smith-Wright DL, and Dunn ME
- Subjects
- Cerebral Palsy surgery, Female, Hip Joint physiopathology, Humans, Knee Joint physiopathology, Kyphosis etiology, Lordosis etiology, Male, Range of Motion, Articular, Retrospective Studies, Scoliosis etiology, Spondylolisthesis surgery, Rhizotomy adverse effects, Spinal Curvatures etiology
- Abstract
The authors performed a review of 79 patients treated by selective dorsal rhizotomy with laminoplasty, 78 of whom were ambulatory, to determine the prevalence of spinal deformities. The mean radiographic follow-up was 4.2 years, the mean clinical follow-up 5.8 years. Scoliosis (11 degrees -24 degrees ) was identified in 13 children, none of whom had a preexisting deformity. There were no significant differences between preoperative and follow-up thoracic kyphosis or lumbar lordosis, although there was a significant difference in lumbar lordosis between sitting and standing radiographs. No progressive or rigid hyperlordotic deformities were observed in the lumbar spine. Spondylolisthesis was identified in nine children (12%) (8/9 grade I), and one patient required an arthrodesis for pain. Spondylolisthesis was correlated with greater lumbar lordosis, stronger hip abductors, and increased popliteal femoral angles preoperatively, and with stronger hip flexors postoperatively. Back pain was identified in 4 of the 79 patients at last follow-up, 2 of whom had spondylolisthesis. As some cases of spondylolisthesis will remain asymptomatic, periodic radiographic follow-up is recommended.
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- 2004
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223. Gas-phase ion mobilities and structures of benzene cluster cations (C6H6)n+, n = 2-6.
- Author
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Rusyniak MJ, Ibrahim YM, Wright DL, Khanna SN, and El-Shall MS
- Abstract
Benzene clusters are generated by pulsed supersonic beam expansion, ionized by electron impact, mass-selected and then injected into a drift cell for ion mobility measurements in a helium buffer gas. The measured collision cross sections and theoretical calculations are used to determine the structures of the cluster cations (C(6)H(6))(n)(+) with n = 2-6. Density functional theory calculation, at an all-electron level and without any symmetry constraint, predicts that the dimer cation has two nearly degenerate ground state structures with the sandwich configuration more stable than the T-configuration by only 0.07 eV. The ion mobility experiment indicates that only one structure is observed for the mass-selected dimer cation at room temperature. The calculated cross section for the sandwich structure agrees very well (within 2.4%) with the experimental value. For the n = 3-6 clusters, the experiments suggest the presence of at least two structural isomers for each cluster. A Monte Carlo minimum-energy search technique using the 12-site OPLS potential for benzene is used to determine the structures of the lowest-energy isomers. The calculated cross sections for the two lowest-energy isomers of the n = 3-6 clusters agree well with the experimental results. The clusters' structures reveal two different growth patterns involving a sandwich dimer core or a pancake trimer stack core. The lowest-energy isomers of the n = 3-6 clusters incorporate the pancake trimer stack as the cluster's core. The trimer stack allows the charge to hop between two dimers, thus maximizing charge resonance interaction in the clusters. For larger clusters, the appearance of magic numbers at n = 14, 20, 24, 27, and 30 is consistent with the incorporation of a sandwich dimer cation within icosahedral, double icosahedral, and interpenetrating icosahedral structures. On the basis of the ion mobility results and the structural calculations, the parallel-stacked motif among charged aromatic-aromatic interactions is expected to play a major role in determining the structures of multi aromatic components. This conclusion may provide new insights for experimental and theoretical studies of molecular design and recognition involving aromatic systems.
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- 2003
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224. Patterns of safer sex practices among allied health students at historically black colleges and universities.
- Author
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Valentine PA, Wright DL, and Henley GL
- Subjects
- Adult, Condoms statistics & numerical data, Female, HIV Infections ethnology, HIV Infections prevention & control, HIV Infections transmission, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Male, Risk-Taking, Safe Sex psychology, Sex Factors, Black or African American psychology, Safe Sex ethnology, Students, Health Occupations psychology, Universities
- Abstract
With high human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and STD transmission rates among African American young adults, there is a need to study the patterns of risk behaviors among this group for effective HIV prevention strategies. Many studies point to the problem of what is termed the knowledge-behavior gap, as a contributing factor for high transmission rates. In this phenomenon, the risks for HIV transmission are known, yet this knowledge does not translate into safer sex practices. It is unclear if this phenomenon applies to all young adults. This study examined sexual behaviors, risks for HIV infection, condom use, and HIV testing practices among allied health students. A sample of 614 respondents voluntarily completed questionnaires. The respondents were from seven historically black colleges and universities and four predominantly African American physician assistant programs. The significant findings reflect that this sample of mature and informed allied health students engaged in safer sex practices. There was a higher rate of condom use among African Americans compared with other racial and ethnic groups and significant differences for gender, race, and antibody testing. The outcomes of the study have implications for using allied health students as role models in designing effective prevention programs on college campuses and in African American communities to address knowledge-behavior gap issues.
- Published
- 2003
225. Assessing probability of ancestry using simple sequence repeat profiles: applications to maize inbred lines and soybean varieties.
- Author
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Berry DA, Seltzer JD, Xie C, Wright DL, Jones ES, Sebastian S, and Smith JS
- Subjects
- Data Interpretation, Statistical, Inbreeding, Phylogeny, Minisatellite Repeats, Glycine max genetics, Zea mays genetics
- Abstract
Determining parentage is a fundamental problem in biology and in applications such as identifying pedigrees. Difficulties inferring parentage derive from extensive inbreeding within the population, whether natural or planned; using an insufficient number of hypervariable loci; and from allele mismatches caused by mutation or by laboratory errors that generate false exclusions. Many studies of parentage have been limited to comparisons of small numbers of specific parent-progeny triplets. There have been few large-scale surveys of candidates in which there is no prior knowledge of parentage. We present an algorithm that determines the probability of parentage in circumstances where there is no prior knowledge of pedigree and that is robust in the face of missing data and mistyped data. The focus is parentage of an inbred line having uncertain ancestry. The algorithm is a variation of a previously published hybrid-focused algorithm. We describe the algorithm and demonstrate its performance in determining parentage of 43 inbred varieties of soybean that have been profiled using 236 SSR loci and from seven inbred varieties of maize that were profiled using 70 SSR loci. We include simulations of additional levels of missing and mistyped data to show the algorithm's utility and flexibility.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
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226. A multi-component reaction (MCR) approach to the synthesis of highly diverse polymers with polypeptide-like features.
- Author
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Robotham CV, Baker C, Cuevas B, Abboud K, and Wright DL
- Subjects
- Catalysis, Molecular Structure, Combinatorial Chemistry Techniques, Peptides chemical synthesis, Peptides chemistry, Polymers chemical synthesis, Polymers chemistry
- Abstract
A new strategy for the combinatorial synthesis of new materials has been developed through the consecutive application of an Ugi 4CC reaction and a ring-opening metathesis polymerization (ROMP) reaction. Norbornenyl aldehydes and carboxylic acids could be used in the Ugi MCR to give highly diverse monomers that were converted to the corresponding polymers by exposure to the second-generation Grubbs' catalyst. These polymers have structural features reminiscent of polypeptides and the process could be extended to the preparation of chiral materials.
- Published
- 2003
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227. Synthesis of functionalized pyrans by domino metathesis reaction of oxabicyclo derivatives: dramatic effect of remote substituents on reactivity and selectivity.
- Author
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Usher LC, Estrella-Jimenez M, Ghiviriga I, and Wright DL
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
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228. Two-step electrochemical annulation for the assembly of polycyclic systems.
- Author
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Whitehead CR, Sessions EH, Ghiviriga I, and Wright DL
- Abstract
[reaction: see text] A two-step electrochemical annulation has been developed for the preparation of fused furans. The process involves an initial conjugate addition of a furyethyl cuprate and trapping of the enolate as the corresponding silyl enolether. The second step of the annulation involves the anodic coupling of the furan and the silyl enol ether to form a six-membered ring.
- Published
- 2002
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229. Osmometric behavior of mouse oocytes in the presence of different intracellular sugars.
- Author
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Bhowmick P, Eroglu A, Wright DL, Toner M, and Toth TL
- Subjects
- Animals, Carbohydrates administration & dosage, Cryoprotective Agents administration & dosage, Cryoprotective Agents metabolism, Female, Glucose administration & dosage, Glucose metabolism, In Vitro Techniques, Intracellular Fluid metabolism, Mice, Microinjections, Oligosaccharides administration & dosage, Oligosaccharides metabolism, Osmolar Concentration, Osmosis, Trehalose administration & dosage, Trehalose metabolism, Carbohydrate Metabolism, Cryopreservation methods, Oocytes metabolism
- Abstract
In order to successfully cryopreserve oocytes using low concentrations of intracellular sugars, it is important to characterize their osmotic response in the presence of these intracellular sugars. In the present study, murine (B6D2F1) oocytes were microinjected with 0.8M glucose, trehalose or stachyose solutions to achieve an intracellular concentration equivalent to 0.1M, and then exposed to hypertonic solutions of increasing strength by supplementing an isotonic solution with 0.2, 0.3, 0.5, and 0.7 M of trehalose. Analysis of volumetric response of microinjected oocytes showed that the oocytes behaved as ideal osmometers in the presence of intracellular sugars and satisfied the Boyle van't Hoff relationship. Extrapolation of the osmotically inactive fraction (V macro b) from the Boyle van't Hoff relationship yielded values of 0.188+/-0.028, 0.212+/-0.042, 0.197+/-0.044, and 0.211+/-0.042 for control, glucose, trehalose and stachyose-injected oocytes, respectively. The present data revealing osmometric behavior of mouse oocytes in the presence of different intracellular sugars are important for the optimization of cryopreservation protocols using sugars.
- Published
- 2002
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230. Silver-promoted reactions of bicyclo[3.2.1]octadiene derivatives.
- Author
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Orugunty RS, Wright DL, Battiste MA, and Abboud KA
- Abstract
[reaction: see text] Highly substituted bicyclo[3.2.1]octadiene building blocks are easily prepared from tetrachloro- or tetrabromocyclopropene through reaction with cyclic dienes. These polyhalogenated derivatives can serve as precursors to a variety of functionalized bridged bicyclic compounds. Herein, we report on the generation and reaction of electrophilic species with silver ion.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
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231. Assessing probability of ancestry using simple sequence repeat profiles: applications to maize hybrids and inbreds.
- Author
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Berry DA, Seltzer JD, Xie C, Wright DL, and Smith JS
- Subjects
- Algorithms, Breeding, Data Interpretation, Statistical, Hybridization, Genetic, Minisatellite Repeats, Phylogeny, Zea mays genetics
- Abstract
Determination of parentage is fundamental to the study of biology and to applications such as the identification of pedigrees. Limitations to studies of parentage have stemmed from the use of an insufficient number of hypervariable loci and mismatches of alleles that can be caused by mutation or by laboratory error and that can generate false exclusions. Furthermore, most studies of parentage have been limited to comparisons of small numbers of specific parent-progeny triplets thereby precluding large-scale surveys of candidates where there may be no prior knowledge of parentage. We present an algorithm that can determine probability of parentage in circumstances where there is no prior knowledge of pedigree and that is robust in the face of missing data or mistyped data. We present data from 54 maize hybrids and 586 maize inbreds that were profiled using 195 SSR loci including simulations of additional levels of missing and mistyped data to demonstrate the utility and flexibility of this algorithm.
- Published
- 2002
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232. Unusual influence of substituents on ring-opening metathesis reactions.
- Author
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Wright DL, Usher LC, and Estrella-Jimenez M
- Abstract
The ring-opening cross-metathesis of oxabicyclo[3.2.1]octene derivatives provides a convenient method for preparing differentially substituted 4-pyrones. The major competing reaction is the ring-opening metathesis polymerization of the bridged olefin. Studies on this reaction have shown that substituents on the bicyclic alkene can have a dramatic influence on the competing reactions. [reaction: see text]
- Published
- 2001
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233. Characterization of telomerase activity in the human oocyte and preimplantation embryo.
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Wright DL, Jones EL, Mayer JF, Oehninger S, Gibbons WE, and Lanzendorf SE
- Subjects
- Blastomeres, Embryonic and Fetal Development, Female, Humans, Molecular Diagnostic Techniques, Oocytes physiology, Predictive Value of Tests, Telomerase analysis, Blastocyst enzymology, Oocytes enzymology, Telomerase metabolism
- Abstract
Telomerase, a ribonucleoprotein, has been described as an essential component of highly proliferative cells as it stabilizes the telomeres and avoids cellular senescence. The objective of this study was to modify the polymerase chain reaction-based telomeric repeat amplification protocol to detect telomerase activity in the single cell and to characterize the activity expressed in the human oocyte through to the blastocyst stage embryo. A comparative evaluation of telomerase activity and developmental stage was conducted using discarded or donated human oocytes and embryos. Telomerase activity was detected in all developmental stages evaluated from immature oocytes through to blastocyst stage embryos. Immature oocytes and blastocysts had similar levels of telomerase activity; however, both groups had significantly (P < 0.05) higher activity than zygote through to pre-morula stage embryos. Seventy-five thawed zygotes were cultured to day 3, biopsied by removing 1-2 cells, and the biopsied embryos were cultured to blastocyst stage. There was no difference (P < 0.05) in telomerase activity between cells biopsied from embryos that reached the blastocyst stage and cells from those that arrested in growth. This study has shown that human oocytes through to blastocyst stage embryos express telomerase activity, but that the level of telomerase activity in biopsied blastomeres, of the day 3 cleavage stage embryo, is not predictive of embryonic growth potential.
- Published
- 2001
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234. Planning and executing simple movements: contributions of relative-time and overall-duration specification.
- Author
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Wright DL, Black C, Park JH, and Shea CH
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Learning physiology, Male, Models, Psychological, Practice, Psychological, Reaction Time, Motor Skills physiology, Movement physiology, Psychomotor Performance physiology, Transfer, Psychology physiology
- Abstract
In 3 experiments, the authors used a precuing protocol to examine the nature and cost of programming and the subsequent reprogramming of a movement's relative time and overall duration. Initial programming followed a fixed-order specification; knowledge of the necessary relative time was required before information regarding overall duration could be used in a manner that expedited response planning. In the case of reprogramming, however, when a modification had to be made in either the relative time or overall duration of the anticipated and already-prepared response, performers chose to completely reprogram the entire response. Complete reprogramming occurred even when the performer had correctly prepared the higher order relative-time component and only had to modify the overall duration of the movement. The data indicate that organizing movement timing before movement initiation is accomplished in a fundamentally different manner depending on whether the movement is being initially compiled or modified.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
235. Use of human gametes obtained from anonymous donors for the production of human embryonic stem cell lines.
- Author
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Lanzendorf SE, Boyd CA, Wright DL, Muasher S, Oehninger S, and Hodgen GD
- Subjects
- Alkaline Phosphatase metabolism, Blastocyst cytology, Cell Differentiation physiology, Chorionic Gonadotropin metabolism, Female, Glycosphingolipids metabolism, Humans, Immunologic Techniques, Lewis X Antigen metabolism, Male, Stage-Specific Embryonic Antigens, Telomerase metabolism, Cell Line metabolism, Embryo, Mammalian cytology, Oocyte Donation, Oocytes, Spermatozoa, Stem Cells cytology, Tissue Donors
- Abstract
Objective: To investigate the use of donated gametes for the production of human embryonic stem cell lines., Design: Basic research study., Setting: Assisted Reproductive Technology (ART) program at an academic institution., Patient(s): Consenting oocyte and sperm donors., Intervention(s): None., Main Outcome Measure(s): Oocytes were aspirated from oocyte donors (n = 12) and inseminated with frozen-thawed donor (n = 2) sperm followed by culture of embryos to day 5 or 6 in sequential media. The inner cell masses of expanded blastocysts were isolated using immunosurgery and cultured for 4-11 days on irradiated primary mouse embryonic fibroblasts (PMEFs). Viable cell colonies were passed every 7-10 days onto fresh PMEFs in the presence of leukemia inhibitory factor (0.1 microg/mL) and evaluated for appropriate cell surface markers., Result(s): Immunosurgery of 40 blastocysts resulted in the culture of 18 inner cell masses, which have produced three cell lines. One of these cell lines has been shown to stain positive for alkaline phosphatase and stage-specific embryonic antigen (SSEA)-4 and negative for SSEA-1, express telomerase activity, and produce hCG when allowed to differentiate., Conclusion(s): These findings demonstrate that the future production of human embryonic stem cell lines for therapeutic use is possible with the use of donated gametes. Many ethical issues were considered before the initiation of this study, and it was our goal to ensure that both oocyte and sperm donors understood the nature and purpose of the research before their participating in the study.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
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236. Consistent and variable practice conditions: effects on relative and absolute timing.
- Author
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Shea CH, Lai Q, Wright DL, Immink M, and Black C
- Subjects
- Computers, Generalization, Psychological, Humans, Random Allocation, Retention, Psychology physiology, Discrimination Learning physiology, Motor Skills physiology, Time Perception physiology
- Abstract
The authors conducted the present experiments to resolve the discrepancy between studies in which relative-timing learning has been found to be enhanced by consistent practice conditions and contextual interference experiments in which relative-timing learning has been found to be enhanced more by random practice than by blocked practice. There were 40 participants in Experiment 1 and 48 in Experiment 2. The results of Experiment 1 extended previous findings: The learning of the relative-timing pattern was systematically enhanced by the degree to which the practice conditions promoted movement consistency (constant > blocked > serial > random). Experiment 2 provided evidence that the discrepancy between the relative-timing effects in the 2 groups of studies was a product of the way in which relative-timing goals and feedback were presented. When the feedback was presented as segment times, random practice resulted in generally more stable relative-timing patterns during acquisition than blocked practice did. Thus, in both experiments, the learning of the relative-timing pattern was enhanced by more stable relative-timing conditions during acquisition. Absolute-timing learning, as indexed by the transfer tests, was enhanced by serial or random practice as compared with constant or blocked practice, and was relatively unaffected by feedback conditions directed at the relative-timing pattern. In terms of motor programming theory, those findings are taken as additional evidence for the disassociation of memories supporting generalized motor program (GMP) performance, as indexed by relative timing, and parameter performance, as indexed by absolute timing.
- Published
- 2001
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237. Bivariate Extension of the Quadrature Method of Moments for Modeling Simultaneous Coagulation and Sintering of Particle Populations.
- Author
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Wright DL, McGraw R, and Rosner DE
- Abstract
We extendthe application of moment methods to multivariate suspended particle population problems-those for which size alone is insufficient to specify the state of a particle in the population. Specifically, a bivariate extension of the quadrature method of moments (QMOM) (R. McGraw, Aerosol Sci. Technol. 27, 255 (1997)) is presented for efficiently modeling the dynamics of a population of inorganic nanoparticles undergoing simultaneous coagulation and particle sintering. Continuum regime calculations are presented for the Koch-Friedlander-Tandon-Rosner model, which includes coagulation by Brownian diffusion (evaluated for particle fractal dimensions, D(f), in the range 1.8-3) and simultaneous sintering of the resulting aggregates (P. Tandon and D. E. Rosner, J. Colloid Interface Sci. 213, 273 (1999)). For evaluation purposes, and to demonstrate the computational efficiency of the bivariate QMOM, benchmark calculations are carried out using a high-resolution discrete method to evolve the particle distribution function n(nu, a) for short to intermediate times (where nu and a are particle volume and surface area, respectively). Time evolution of a selected set of 36 low-order mixed moments is obtained by integration of the full bivariate distribution and compared with the corresponding moments obtained directly using two different extensions of the QMOM. With the more extensive treatment, errors of less than 1% are obtained over substantial aerosol evolution, while requiring only a few minutes (rather than days) of CPU time. Longer time QMOM simulations lend support to the earlier finding of a self-preserving limit for the dimensionless joint (nu, a) particle distribution function under simultaneous coagulation and sintering (Tandon and Rosner, 1999; D. E. Rosner and S. Yu, AIChE J., 47 (2001)). We demonstrate that, even in the bivariate case, it is possible to use the QMOM to rapidly model the approach to asymptotic behavior, allowing an immediate assessment of when previously established asymptotic results can be applied to dynamical situations of current/future interest. Copyright 2001 Academic Press.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
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238. Motor programming during practice conditions high and low in contextual interference.
- Author
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Immink MA and Wright DL
- Subjects
- Analysis of Variance, Humans, Models, Psychological, Motor Skills, Practice, Psychological, Retention, Psychology
- Abstract
Random practice has been reported to demand greater time for movement preparation during acquisition than blocked practice. The present study revealed that this could be attributed to a more complete engagement of the motor programming process during random practice. This cost, however, was localized to the motor programming subprocess that S. T. Klapp (1995) associated with organizing the internal structure of a movement chunk rather than an alternative subprocess responsible for organizing movement chunks into the correct serial order. The more thorough employment of motor programming during acquisition by random practice participants resulted in a more efficient use of this planning operation during retention, as well as more accurate movement reproduction. These data support the claim that practice conditions high in contextual interference support improvements in both movement preparation and memory strength.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
239. Manipulating generalized motor program difficulty during blocked and random practice does not affect parameter learning.
- Author
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Wright DL and Shea CH
- Subjects
- Analysis of Variance, Cognitive Science, Goals, Humans, Psychological Theory, Retention, Psychology, Time Factors, Memory, Motor Skills, Practice, Psychological
- Abstract
Blocked practice engenders more trial-to-trial response stability, which is thought to be crucial for developing the generalized motor program (GMP) but not parameter learning (Lai, Shea, Wulf, & Wright, 2000). It was hypothesized that reducing the difficulty of the GMP might permit additional cognitive resources to be allocated to learning the parameter requirements. However, GMP theory maintains the independence of the memories governing the GMP and parameters. This notion suggests that manipulating the difficulty of the GMP should have no effect on the blocked practice participant's ability to successfully specify the appropriate parameters. Participants learned a simple or complex relative timing pattern under either blocked or random practice conditions. Smaller GMP errors were exhibited for the simple relative timing patterns, but this was not associated with improvements in parameter specification following blocked practice. A clear advantage for parameter specification was evident in transfer following random practice. Taken together, these data support the theoretical separation of the GMP and parameter processes.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
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240. Reducing the saliency of intentional stimuli results in greater contextual-dependent performance.
- Author
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Kimbrough SK, Wright DL, and Shea CH
- Subjects
- Analysis of Variance, Discrimination, Psychological physiology, Humans, Association, Mental Recall physiology, Photic Stimulation
- Abstract
Wright and Shea (1991) described intentional stimuli as explicitly identified information necessary to successfully perform a task, whereas incidental stimuli are not explicitly identified as crucial to task performance but have the potential to become associated with particular responses because of their selective presence in the training environment. Shea and Wright (1995), using a speeded-choice RT task, indicated that manipulating the strength of association between incidental information and the responses, by changing the discriminability of incidental stimuli while fixing the strength of the association between the intentional stimuli and each response, had a significant impact on task performance. The present experiment further examined the role played by incidental stimuli when the strength of association between the intentional stimuli and the associated responses was reduced, by minimising stimulus-response compatibility. It was assumed that this latter manipulation would have a similar impact as increasing the strength of incidental stimuli-response relationships. That is, the relative contribution of the incidental stimuli would increase, resulting in an increase in context-dependent behaviour during tests in which the intentional and incidental stimuli activated different responses. The results were in agreement with this prediction and consistent with a model for contextual-dependent performance proposed by Shea and Wright (1995) as well as with the outshining hypothesis forwarded by Smith (1988, 1994).
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
241. Can observational practice facilitate error recognition and movement production?
- Author
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Black CB and Wright DL
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Motor Skills, Task Performance and Analysis
- Abstract
Two experiments are reported that examined the usefulness of observational learning for acquiring both error detection and movement production capabilities. In both experiments, individuals were assigned to a no-practice, physical-practice, or observational practice condition. Those assigned to a physical-practice condition acted as models for those assigned as observers. In both experiments, models were administered a random practice of three serial key-press tasks that had the same spatial pattern and same relative timing requirement but differed in the overall time goal. During the retention test, individuals provided estimates of their overall time after each trial. Data from these experiments revealed that error detection and overall time specification were similar following observation and physical practice. However, data from Experiment 2 indicated that physical practice offered an advantage beyond that afforded via observation, with regard to acquiring the appropriate relative time pattern. These data are discussed with respect to the role of observation for learning movement recognition and production processes.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
242. Reduced-frequency concurrent and terminal feedback: a test of the guidance hypothesis.
- Author
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Park JH, Shea CH, and Wright DL
- Subjects
- Humans, Random Allocation, Time Factors, Feedback, Learning physiology, Movement physiology, Periodicity
- Abstract
In 2 experiments, the authors manipulated the frequency of concurrent feedback to discern the effects on learning. In each experiment, participants (N = 48, Experiment 1; N = 36, Experiment 2) attempted to reproduce a criterion force-production waveform (5 s in duration) presented on the computer monitor. Consistent with the guidance hypothesis, the results of Experiment 1 indicated very strong guiding effects of concurrent feedback and strong dependence on the feedback, as indicated by participants' extremely poor performance upon feedback withdrawal in retention. As predicted by the guidance hypothesis, dependence on the feedback was reduced as a result of reducing the frequency of the concurrent feedback. The results of Experiment 2 indicated that one can enhance learning by providing concurrent and terminal feedback on 1 trial, with no feedback on the subsequent trial. In that way, the strong guiding effects of concurrent feedback could be realized and the beneficial effects of terminal feedback could also be achieved.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
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243. AHRA ultrasound management survey: clinical and operational practices.
- Author
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Bugg N and Wright DL
- Subjects
- Accreditation statistics & numerical data, Demography, Hospital Bed Capacity statistics & numerical data, Humans, Information Management statistics & numerical data, Marketing of Health Services statistics & numerical data, Patient Education as Topic statistics & numerical data, Personnel Staffing and Scheduling statistics & numerical data, Purchasing, Hospital statistics & numerical data, Referral and Consultation statistics & numerical data, Surveys and Questionnaires, Ultrasonography instrumentation, United States, Health Care Surveys, Radiology Department, Hospital organization & administration, Radiology Department, Hospital statistics & numerical data, Ultrasonography statistics & numerical data
- Published
- 2000
244. An imine addition/ring-closing metathesis approach to the spirocyclic core of halichlorine and pinnaic acid.
- Author
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Wright DL, Schulte II JP, and Page MA
- Subjects
- Alkaloids chemistry, Spiro Compounds chemistry, Alkaloids chemical synthesis, Biochemistry methods, Spiro Compounds chemical synthesis
- Abstract
[reaction: see text] An approach to the spirocyclic core of halichlorine and pinnaic acid has been designed around an imine allylation/ring-closing metathesis sequence. This sequence has been used to generate several azabicylo[n.5] model systems. A newly reported metathesis catalyst was show to be highly effective for cyclization of these systems.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
245. An assessment of the attention demands during random- and blocked-practice schedules.
- Author
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Li Y and Wright DL
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Models, Psychological, Attention, Cognition, Practice, Psychological, Psychomotor Performance
- Abstract
The reported study used the dual-task methodology to assess the attention demands associated with high and low contextual interference (CI) practice environments. Two specific issues were addressed. First, is there a difference in the attention demands during random and blocked schedules of practice? Second, what is the time course of any differential attention demands that emerge during random and blocked training? In order to address these questions two specific temporal loci were probed during practice: a pre-response interval and the inter-trial interval. It was assumed that the pre-response interval contained the reconstructive activity that is central to the reconstruction position. In contrast, the inter-trial interval has been interpreted in previous work to be the interval in which critical intra- and inter-item processing is performed during random practice. The data revealed a typical CI effect for the primary key-pressing task. Specifically, blocked-practice participants displayed superior performance during training but performed less well than the random-practice individuals at the time of retention. The poorer acquisition performance of the random-practice participants was associated with higher cognitive demand during both the pre-response and the inter-trial intervals than that of individuals assigned to blocked practice. The greater attention demands for random-practice individuals are discussed with respect to processes that might occur in both the pre-response and the inter-trial intervals.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
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246. Response effects due to bystander presence in CASI and paper-and-pencil surveys of drug use and alcohol use.
- Author
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Aquilino WS, Wright DL, and Supple AJ
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Alcohol Drinking psychology, Child, Computers, Confounding Factors, Epidemiologic, Female, Humans, Male, Marijuana Abuse psychology, Substance-Related Disorders diagnosis, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States, Data Collection methods, Family, Psychology, Adolescent, Substance-Related Disorders psychology
- Abstract
In this study we investigated the influence of bystanders on self-administered interviews asking about the use of alcohol and illicit drugs. Interview participants were adolescents and young adults living in urban and suburban areas of the United States. Participants were assigned randomly to either a computerized or a paper-and-pencil self-administered interview. Results show that the impact of bystanders during the interview varies according to the identity of the bystander, age of the person interviewed, and the mode of interview. When a parent was present during the interview, survey participants were less likely to report the use of alcohol and marijuana. The influence of parents was stronger for adolescents than for young adults. The use of computer-assisted self-administered interviewing, compared to interviews with paper-and-pencil forms, reduced the effects due to the presence of parents during the interview. The presence of siblings during the interview had a small, negative effect on reports of using alcohol or illicit drugs. Among married or cohabiting respondents, the presence of the husband, wife, or live-in partner had no influence on reports of alcohol use or drug use.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
247. Human embryos derived from in vitro and in vivo matured oocytes: analysis for chromosomal abnormalities and nuclear morphology.
- Author
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DeScisciolo C, Wright DL, Mayer JF, Gibbons W, Muasher SJ, and Lanzendorf SE
- Subjects
- Aneuploidy, Blastomeres classification, Blastomeres cytology, Blastomeres pathology, Embryo, Mammalian cytology, Female, Fertilization in Vitro adverse effects, Humans, In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence, Lymphocytes cytology, Metaphase, Mosaicism genetics, Oocytes cytology, Ovulation Induction, Prophase, Cell Nucleus pathology, Chromosome Aberrations, Embryo, Mammalian pathology, Oocytes growth & development, Oocytes pathology
- Abstract
Purpose: To determine whether embryos resulting from oocytes matured in vitro have a higher incidence of nuclear and/or genetic abnormalities compared to embryos resulting from oocytes matured in vivo., Methods: Fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis for chromosomes X, Y, and 18 was used to compare the rates of aneuploidy, mosaicism, and nuclear abnormalities in embryos derived from oocytes that were prophase I at aspiration (immature group) to that observed in embryos resulting from oocytes that were metaphase I or II at aspiration (mature group)., Results: Based on nuclear morphology, significantly more embryos in the mature group (23%) were classified as normal compared to embryos in the immature group (3%). No difference was found in the rate of aneuploidy or in the incidence of mosaicism involving these chromosomes., Conclusions: These findings suggest that few embryos derived from prophase I oocytes collected following ovarian stimulation are morphologically normal.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
248. Physical and observational practice afford unique learning opportunities.
- Author
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Shea CH, Wright DL, Wulf G, and Whitacre C
- Subjects
- Analysis of Variance, Computers, Humans, Observation, Random Allocation, Social Facilitation, Time Factors, Learning physiology, Motor Skills physiology
- Abstract
In 2 experiments, the authors studied the effectiveness of physical and observational practice on learning and the effect on learning of combining physical practice and observation, as compared with providing physical practice alone. In Experiment 1, retention and transfer performance of 30 university students after physical, observational, or no practice were contrasted. Consistent with findings from other studies, the retention results indicated that observational practice is inferior to physical practice. The transfer data indicated no differences between observation and physical practice groups. In Experiment 2, retention and transfer performance of 30 participants in physical and combined (alternating physical and observational) practice groups were contrasted. The retention results showed no differences between the combined and physical practice groups, but the combined group performed significantly better than the physical practice group on the transfer test. Those findings suggest that a combination of observation and physical practice permits unique opportunities for learning beyond those available via either practice regimen alone.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
249. Optimizing generalized motor program and parameter learning.
- Author
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Lai Q, Shea CH, Wulf G, and Wright DL
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Time Factors, Learning, Motor Skills
- Abstract
Two experiments examined generalized motor program (GMP) and parameter learning. Experiment 1 examined the effects of bandwidth knowledge of results (KR) about relative timing in constant and variable practice. The purpose was to determine if movement stability created by the bandwidth manipulation is associated with increased GMP learning and if bandwidth KR interacts with constant and variable practice. Participants were asked to depress four keys sequentially, using the same relative timing structure. Constant practice had one absolute timing requirement, whereas variable practice had three different absolute timing requirements. The results indicated that GMP learning was enhanced by constant practice (independent of the bandwidth KR condition) and by bandwidth KR, when variable practice was used. The findings suggest practice conditions (bandwidth KR, constant practice) that increase movement stability during practice enhance GMP learning. Parameter learning (during transfer), however, was enhanced by variable practice. Experiment 2 attempted to determine how constant and variable practice conditions could be combined to enhance both GMP and parameter learning. The results indicated that developing a stable GMP early in practice--by providing learners with constant practice early in practice--and refining parameter learning later in practice--by providing them with variable practice late in practice--were effective for both GMP and parameter learning. This suggests a hierarchy in the development of programmed actions with a stable GMP being a requisite for developing an effective and stable parameter rule.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
250. Studies on inducers of nerve growth factor: synthesis of the cyathin core.
- Author
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Wright DL, Whitehead CR, Sessions EH, Ghiviriga I, and Frey DA
- Subjects
- Anti-Bacterial Agents chemistry, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Benzofurans pharmacology, Diterpenes pharmacology, Nerve Growth Factor drug effects, Oxidation-Reduction, Spiro Compounds pharmacology, Anti-Bacterial Agents chemical synthesis, Nerve Growth Factor biosynthesis
- Abstract
[formula: see text] Compounds that induce the synthesis of nerve growth factor (NGF) are of interest as alternatives to the administration of the native peptide. We have initiated a program to study the NGF synthesis stimulating activity of the erinacine and scabronine diterpenes. Herein, we report an approach to the core cyathin system by sequential application of an oxidative coupling and [4 + 3] cycloaddition.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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