935 resultados para dynamics of corruption
Resumo:
Motor inhibitory control plays a central role in adaptive behaviors during the entire lifespan. Inhibitory motor control refers to the ability to stop all (global) or a part (selective) of a planned or ongoing motor action. Although the neural processing underlying the global inhibitory control has received much attention from cognitive neuroscientists, brain modulations that occur during selective inhibitory motor control remain unknown. The aim of the present thesis is to investigate the spatio-temporal brain processes of selective inhibitory motor control in young and old adults using high-density electroencephalography. In the first part, we focus on early (preparatory period) spatio-temporal brain processes involved in selective and global inhibitory control in young (study I) and old adults (study II) using a modified Go/No-go task. In study I, we distinguished global from selective inhibition in the early attentional stage of inhibitory control and provided neurophysiological evidence in favor of the combination model. In study II, we showed an under-recruitment of neural resources associated with preservation of performance in old adults during selective inhibition, suggesting efficient cerebral and behavioral adaptations to environmental changes. In the second part, we investigate beta oscillations in the late (post-execution period) spatio-temporal brain processes of selective inhibition during a motor Switching task (i.e., tapping movement from bimanual to unimanual) in young (study III) and old adults (study IV). In study III, we identified concomitant beta synchronization related (i) to sensory reafference processes, which enabled the stabilization of the movement that was perturbed after switching, and (ii) to active inhibition processes that prevented movement of the stopping hand. In study IV, we demonstrated a larger beta synchronization in frontal and parietal regions in old adults compared to young adults, suggesting age-related brain modulations in active inhibition processes. Apart from contributing to a basic understanding of the electrocortical dynamics underlying inhibitory motor control, the findings of the present studies contribute to knowledge regarding the further establishment of specific trainings with aging. -- Le contrôle de l'inhibition motrice joue un rôle central dans les adaptations comportementales quel que soit l'âge. L'inhibition motrice se réfère à la capacité à arrêter entièrement (globale) ou en partie (sélective) une action motrice planifiée ou en cours. Bien que les processus neuronaux sous-jacents de l'inhibition globale aient suscité un grand intérêt auprès des neurosciences cognitives, les modulations cérébrales dans le contrôle de l'inhibition motrice sélective sont encore peu connues. Le but de cette thèse est d'étudier les processus cérébraux spatio-temporels du contrôle de l'inhibition motrice sélective chez les adultes jeunes et âgés en utilisant l'électroencéphalogramme à haute densité. Dans la première partie, nous comparons les processus cérébraux spatio-temporels précoces (préparation motrice) de l'inhibition sélective et globale chez des adultes jeunes (étude I) et âgés (étude II) en utilisant une tâche Go/No-go modifiée. Dans l'étude I, nous avons distingué l'inhibition globale et sélective au niveau des processus attentionnels précoces du contrôle de l'inhibition et nous avons apporté des preuves neurophysiologiques de l'existence d'un modèle de combinaison. Dans l'étude II, nous avons montré une sous-activation neuronale associée à un maintien de la performance dans l'inhibition sélective chez les adultes âgés, suggérant des adaptations cérébrales et comportementales aux contraintes environnementales. Dans la seconde partie, nous examinons les processus cérébraux spatio-temporels tardifs (post-exécution motrice) de l'inhibition sélective pendant une tâche de Switching (tapping bimanuel vers un tapping unimanuel) chez des adultes jeunes (étude III) et âgés (étude IV). Dans l'étude III, nous avons distingué des synchronisations beta liées (i) au traitement des réafférences sensorielles permettant de stabiliser le mouvement perturbé après le switching, et (ii) aux processus d'inhibition active afin d'empêcher les mouvements de la main arrêtée. Dans l'étude IV, cette synchronisation beta était plus forte dans les régions frontales et pariétales chez les âgés par rapport aux jeunes adultes suggérant des modulations cérébrales de l'inhibition active avec l'âge. Outre la contribution fondamentale sur la compréhension des dynamiques électrocorticales dans le contrôle de l'inhibition motrice, les résultats de ces études contribuent à développer les connaissances pour la mise en place de programmes d'entraînements adaptés aux personnes âgées.
Resumo:
Within the country of Brazil, Santa Catarina is a major shellfish producer. Detection of viral contamination is an important step to ensure production quality and consumer safety during this process. In this study, we used a depuration system and ultraviolet (UV) disinfection to eliminate viral pathogens from artificially infected oysters and analysed the results. Specifically, the oysters were contaminated with hepatitis A virus (HAV) or human adenovirus type 5 (HAdV5). After viral infection, the oysters were placed into a depuration tank and harvested after 48, 72 and 96 h. After sampling, various oyster tissues were dissected and homogenised and the viruses were eluted with alkaline conditions and precipitated with polyethylene glycol. The oyster samples were evaluated by cell culture methods, as well as polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and quantitative-PCR. Moreover, at the end of the depuration period, the disinfected seawater was collected and analysed by PCR. The molecular assays showed that the HAdV5 genome was present in all of the depuration time samples, while the HAV genome was undetectable after 72 h of depuration. However, viral viability tests (integrated cell culture-PCR and immunofluorescence assay) indicated that both viruses were inactivated with 96 h of seawater recirculation. In conclusion, after 96 h of UV treatment, the depuration system studied in this work purified oysters that were artificially contaminated with HAdV5 and HAV.
Resumo:
Genomic islands are DNA elements acquired by horizontal gene transfer that are common to a large number of bacterial genomes, which can contribute specific adaptive functions, e.g. virulence, metabolic capacities or antibiotic resistances. Some genomic islands are still self-transferable and display an intricate life-style, reminiscent of both bacteriophages and conjugative plasmids. Here we studied the dynamical process of genomic island excision and intracellular reintegration using the integrative and conjugative element ICEclc from Pseudomonas knackmussii B13 as model. By using self-transfer of ICEclc from strain B13 to Pseudomonas putida and Cupriavidus necator as recipients, we show that ICEclc can target a number of different tRNA(Gly) genes in a bacterial genome, but only those which carry the GCC anticodon. Two conditional traps were designed for ICEclc based on the attR sequence, and we could show that ICEclc will insert with different frequencies in such traps producing brightly fluorescent cells. Starting from clonal primary transconjugants we demonstrate that ICEclc is excising and reintegrating at detectable frequencies, even in the absence of recipient. Recombination site analysis provided evidence to explain the characteristics of a larger number of genomic island insertions observed in a variety of strains, including Bordetella petri, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Burkholderia.
Resumo:
Despite their limited proliferation capacity, regulatory T cells (T(regs)) constitute a population maintained over the entire lifetime of a human organism. The means by which T(regs) sustain a stable pool in vivo are controversial. Using a mathematical model, we address this issue by evaluating several biological scenarios of the origins and the proliferation capacity of two subsets of T(regs): precursor CD4(+)CD25(+)CD45RO(-) and mature CD4(+)CD25(+)CD45RO(+) cells. The lifelong dynamics of T(regs) are described by a set of ordinary differential equations, driven by a stochastic process representing the major immune reactions involving these cells. The model dynamics are validated using data from human donors of different ages. Analysis of the data led to the identification of two properties of the dynamics: (1) the equilibrium in the CD4(+)CD25(+)FoxP3(+)T(regs) population is maintained over both precursor and mature T(regs) pools together, and (2) the ratio between precursor and mature T(regs) is inverted in the early years of adulthood. Then, using the model, we identified three biologically relevant scenarios that have the above properties: (1) the unique source of mature T(regs) is the antigen-driven differentiation of precursors that acquire the mature profile in the periphery and the proliferation of T(regs) is essential for the development and the maintenance of the pool; there exist other sources of mature T(regs), such as (2) a homeostatic density-dependent regulation or (3) thymus- or effector-derived T(regs), and in both cases, antigen-induced proliferation is not necessary for the development of a stable pool of T(regs). This is the first time that a mathematical model built to describe the in vivo dynamics of regulatory T cells is validated using human data. The application of this model provides an invaluable tool in estimating the amount of regulatory T cells as a function of time in the blood of patients that received a solid organ transplant or are suffering from an autoimmune disease.
Resumo:
Fibrocytes are important for understanding the progression of many diseases because they are present in areas where pathogenic lesions are generated. However, the morphology of fibrocytes and their interactions with parasites are poorly understood. In this study, we examined the morphology of peripheral blood fibrocytes and their interactions with Leishmania (L.) amazonensis . Through ultrastructural analysis, we describe the details of fibrocyte morphology and how fibrocytes rapidly internaliseLeishmania promastigotes. The parasites differentiated into amastigotes after 2 h in phagolysosomes and the infection was completely resolved after 72 h. Early in the infection, we found increased nitric oxide production and large lysosomes with electron-dense material. These factors may regulate the proliferation and death of the parasites. Because fibrocytes are present at the infection site and are directly involved in developing cutaneous leishmaniasis, they are targets for effective, non-toxic cell-based therapies that control and treat leishmaniasis.
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The specificities of multinational corporations (MNCs) have to date not been a focus area of IS research. Extant literature mostly proposes IS configurations for specific types of MNCs, following a static and prescriptive approach. Our research seeks to explain the dynamics of global IS design. It suggests a new theoretical lens for studying global IS design by applying the structural adjustment paradigm from organizational change theories. Relying on archetype theory, we conduct a longitudinal case study to theorize the dynamics of IS adaptation. We find that global IS design emerges as an organizational adaptation process to balance interpretative schemes (i.e. the organization's values and beliefs) and structural arrangements (i.e. strategic, organizational, and IS configurations). The resulting insights can be used as a basis to further explore alternative global IS designs and movements between them.
Resumo:
Brazilian scientists have been contributing to the protozoology field for more than 100 years with important discoveries of new species such asTrypanosoma cruzi and Leishmania spp. In this work, we used a Brazilian thesis database (Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel) covering the period from 1987-2011 to identify researchers who contributed substantially to protozoology. We selected 248 advisors by filtering to obtain researchers who supervised at least 10 theses. Based on a computational analysis of the thesis databases, we found students who were supervised by these scientists. A computational procedure was developed to determine the advisors’ scientific ancestors using the Lattes Platform. These analyses provided a list of 1,997 researchers who were inspected through Lattes CV examination and allowed the identification of the pioneers of Brazilian protozoology. Moreover, we investigated the areas in which researchers who earned PhDs in protozoology are now working. We found that 68.4% of them are still in protozoology, while 16.7% have migrated to other fields. We observed that support for protozoology by national or international agencies is clearly correlated with the increase of scientists in the field. Finally, we described the academic genealogy of Brazilian protozoology by formalising the “forest” of Brazilian scientists involved in the study of protozoa and their vectors over the past century.
Resumo:
We present a detailed analytical and numerical study of the avalanche distributions of the continuous damage fiber bundle model CDFBM . Linearly elastic fibers undergo a series of partial failure events which give rise to a gradual degradation of their stiffness. We show that the model reproduces a wide range of mechanical behaviors. We find that macroscopic hardening and plastic responses are characterized by avalanche distributions, which exhibit an algebraic decay with exponents between 5/2 and 2 different from those observed in mean-field fiber bundle models. We also derive analytically the phase diagram of a family of CDFBM which covers a large variety of potential avalanche size distributions. Our results provide a unified view of the statistics of breaking avalanches in fiber bundle models
Resumo:
A new practical method to generate a subspace of active coordinates for quantum dynamics calculations is presented. These reduced coordinates are obtained as the normal modes of an analytical quadratic representation of the energy difference between excited and ground states within the complete active space self-consistent field method. At the Franck-Condon point, the largest negative eigenvalues of this Hessian correspond to the photoactive modes: those that reduce the energy difference and lead to the conical intersection; eigenvalues close to 0 correspond to bath modes, while modes with large positive eigenvalues are photoinactive vibrations, which increase the energy difference. The efficacy of quantum dynamics run in the subspace of the photoactive modes is illustrated with the photochemistry of benzene, where theoretical simulations are designed to assist optimal control experiments
Resumo:
Postsynaptic density-95/disks large/zonula occludens-1 (PDZ) domains are relatively small (80-120 residues) protein binding modules central in the organization of receptor clusters and in the association of cellular proteins. Their main function is to bind C-terminals of selected proteins that are recognized through specific amino acids in their carboxyl end. Binding is associated with a deformation of the PDZ native structure and is responsible for dynamical changes in regions not in direct contact with the target. We investigate how this deformation is related to the harmonic dynamics of the PDZ structure and show that one low-frequency collective normal mode, characterized by the concerted movements of different secondary structures, is involved in the binding process. Our results suggest that even minimal structural changes are responsible for communication between distant regions of the protein, in agreement with recent NMR experiments. Thus, PDZ domains are a very clear example of how collective normal modes are able to characterize the relation between function and dynamics of proteins, and to provide indications on the precursors of binding/unbinding events.
Resumo:
This chapter offers a case-study of diversity and diversity policies withinthe Mossos d’Esquadra, the police force of the Catalan autonomous communityin Spain. The case is described in a comprehensive way (includingpolicies in all relevant policy areas: recruitment, retention, and promotion)and at the same time analyzed with a new analytical framework (includingthe definition of diversity, the motivation for diversity within the organisation,and the facilitation of diversity within the organisation with policies).The goal of the chapter is twofold. First, offer a deeper understanding ofthe dynamics of diversity within this police force. Second, demonstrate theacademic potential of this new analytical framework.