906 resultados para display rules
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BACKGROUND: In adults, obesity-driven inflammation can lead to increased cardiovascular disease (CVD). However, information regarding childhood obesity and its inflammatory sequelae is less well defined. Serum amyloid-A (SAA) is an inflammatory molecule that rapidly associates with high-density lipoproteins (HDLs) and renders them dysfunctional. Therefore, SAA may be a useful biomarker to identify increased CVD potential in overweight and obese children.
METHODS: Young Hearts 2000 is a cross-sectional cohort study in which 92 children who were obese were matched for age and sex with 92 overweight and 92 lean children. HDL2 and HDL3 (HDL2&3) were isolated from plasma by a three-step rapid-ultracentrifugation procedure. SAA was measured in serum and HDL2&3 by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay procedure, and the activities of cholesterol ester transfer protein (CETP) and lecithin cholesteryl acyltransferase (LCAT) were measured by fluorimetric assays.
RESULTS: Trends across the groups indicated that SAA increased in serum and HDL2&3 as BMI increased, as did HDL2-CETP and HDL2-LCAT activities.
CONCLUSION: These results have provided evidence that overweight and obese children are exposed to an inflammatory milieu that impacts the antiatherogenic properties of HDL and that could increase CVD risk. This supports the concept that it is important to target childhood obesity to help minimize future cardiovascular events.
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This article considers the trajectory and effectiveness of policy, procedures and practice in the UK since the early 1990s in responding to young people who display problematic and harmful sexual behaviours. It draws on data from three publications in which research, policy and practice in the last 20 years have been reviewed. Key themes raised by Masson and Hackett are revisited including: denial and minimisation; terminology and categorisation; similarities with other young offenders; the child protection and youth justice systems; and assessment and interventions. The authors find that there is improvement in recognition of, and practice in response to, this group of young people, but good practice standards are inconsistently applied. With devolution of political powers, Scotland and Northern Ireland are now embarking on a more strategic response than England. The absence of a public debate and prioritising of primary prevention of child sexual abuse is noted.
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The original 1967 Richardson–Hough rules for predicting SN2 displacement viability in carbohydrate sulfonate derivatives with external nucleophiles have now been updated. Not only do the original rules still hold, but the newly updated rules rationalize why O-triflates (trifluoromethanesulfonate esters) frequently allow many seemingly “disallowed” pyranosidic nucleophilic substitutions to proceed. The new guidelines, which are based on three decades of experimental evidence, allow the feasibility of many pyranosidic O-triflate SN2 displacements to be gauged beforehand.
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The non disulphide-bridged peptides (NDBPs) of scorpion venoms are attracting increased interest due to their structural heterogeneity and broad spectrum of biological activities. Here, two novel peptides, named AcrAP1 and AcrAP2, have been identified in the lyophilised venom of the Arabian scorpion, Androctonus crassicauda, through “shotgun” molecular cloning of their biosynthetic precursor-encoding cDNAs. The respective mature peptides, predicted from these cloned cDNAs, were subsequently isolated from the same venom sample using reverse phase HPLC and their identities were confirmed by use of mass spectrometric techniques. Both were found to belong to a family of highly-conserved scorpion venom antimicrobial peptides - a finding confirmed through the biological investigation of synthetic replicates. Analogues of both peptides designed for enhanced cationicity, displayed enhanced potency and spectra of antimicrobial activity but, unlike the native peptides, these also displayed potent growth modulation effects on a range of human cancer cell lines. Thus natural peptide templates from venom peptidomes can provide the basis for rational analogue design to improve both biological potency and spectrum of action. The diversity of such templates from such natural sources undoubtedly provides the pharmaceutical industry with unique lead compounds for drug discovery.
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Rules for predicting anionic SN2 displacement viability in furanose and furanoside sulfonates are presented
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Combination rules proposed so far in the Dempster-Shafer theory of evidence, especially Dempster rule, rely on a basic assumption, that is, pieces of evidence being combined are considered to be on a par, i.e. play the same role. When a source of evidence is less reliable than another, it is possible to discount it and then a symmetric combination operation is still used. In the case of revision, the idea is to let prior knowledge of an agent be altered by some input information. The change problem is thus intrinsically asymmetric. Assuming the input information is reliable, it should be retained whilst the prior information should
be changed minimally to that effect. Although belief revision is already an important subfield of artificial intelligence, so far, it has been little addressed in evidence theory. In this paper, we define the notion of revision for the theory of evidence and propose several different revision rules, called the inner and outer
revisions, and a modified adaptive outer revision, which better corresponds to the idea of revision. Properties of these revision rules are also investigated.
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Social work has a central role in negotiating and supporting birth family contact following adoption from care. This paper argues that family display (Finch) offers a useful conceptual resource for understanding relationships in the adoptive kinship network as they are enacted through contact. It reports on an interpretative phenomenological analysis of adoptive parents' accounts of open adoption from care that revealed direct and indirect contact to be contexts in which they and birth relatives performed family display practices: communicating the meaning of their respective relationships with the adopted child and seeking recognition that this was a legitimate family relationship. The analysis explores how family display was performed, and the impact of validating or invalidating responses. It aims to illuminate these social and interpretive processes involved in adoptive kinship in order to inform social work support for contact. The findings suggest that successful contact may be promoted by helping adoptive and birth relatives validate the legitimacy of the other's kin connection with the child, and through arrangements that facilitate family-like interactions.
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Although Answer Set Programming (ASP) is a powerful framework for declarative problem solving, it cannot in an intuitive way handle situations in which some rules are uncertain, or in which it is more important to satisfy some constraints than others. Possibilistic ASP (PASP) is a natural extension of ASP in which certainty weights are associated with each rule. In this paper we contrast two different views on interpreting the weights attached to rules. Under the first view, weights reflect the certainty with which we can conclude the head of a rule when its body is satisfied. Under the second view, weights reflect the certainty that a given rule restricts the considered epistemic states of an agent in a valid way, i.e. it is the certainty that the rule itself is correct. The first view gives rise to a set of weighted answer sets, whereas the second view gives rise to a weighted set of classical answer sets.
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Clusters of text documents output by clustering algorithms are often hard to interpret. We describe motivating real-world scenarios that necessitate reconfigurability and high interpretability of clusters and outline the problem of generating clusterings with interpretable and reconfigurable cluster models. We develop two clustering algorithms toward the outlined goal of building interpretable and reconfigurable cluster models. They generate clusters with associated rules that are composed of conditions on word occurrences or nonoccurrences. The proposed approaches vary in the complexity of the format of the rules; RGC employs disjunctions and conjunctions in rule generation whereas RGC-D rules are simple disjunctions of conditions signifying presence of various words. In both the cases, each cluster is comprised of precisely the set of documents that satisfy the corresponding rule. Rules of the latter kind are easy to interpret, whereas the former leads to more accurate clustering. We show that our approaches outperform the unsupervised decision tree approach for rule-generating clustering and also an approach we provide for generating interpretable models for general clusterings, both by significant margins. We empirically show that the purity and f-measure losses to achieve interpretability can be as little as 3 and 5%, respectively using the algorithms presented herein.
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Many problems in artificial intelligence can be encoded as answer set programs (ASP) in which some rules are uncertain. ASP programs with incorrect rules may have erroneous conclusions, but due to the non-monotonic nature of ASP, omitting a correct rule may also lead to errors. To derive the most certain conclusions from an uncertain ASP program, we thus need to consider all situations in which some, none, or all of the least certain rules are omitted. This corresponds to treating some rules as optional and reasoning about which conclusions remain valid regardless of the inclusion of these optional rules. While a version of possibilistic ASP (PASP) based on this view has recently been introduced, no implementation is currently available. In this paper we propose a simulation of the main reasoning tasks in PASP using (disjunctive) ASP programs, allowing us to take advantage of state-of-the-art ASP solvers. Furthermore, we identify how several interesting AI problems can be naturally seen as special cases of the considered reasoning tasks, including cautious abductive reasoning and conformant planning. As such, the proposed simulation enables us to solve instances of the latter problem types that are more general than what current solvers can handle.
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Introduction: Many neuropeptides are similar in size, amino acid composition and charge to antimicrobial peptides. It is therefore possible that the nervous system employs neuropeptides as antimicrobial agents by delivering them rapidly and precisely to innervated sites such as the dental pulp. Objectives: The aim of this study was to determine whether the neuropeptides substance P (SP), neurokinin A (NKA), calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), neuropeptide Y (NPY) and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP), which we have previously shown to be present in dental pulp, displayed antimicrobial activity against the cariogenic bacterium Streptococcus mutans and the endodontic bacterium Enterococcus faecalis. Methods: Neuropeptides were purchased from Bachem and utilised in antibacterial assays using a previously described ultra sensitive radial diffusion method. Results: Antimicrobial activity was identified as clear zones around neuropeptide-containing wells. NPY was found to exhibit antimicrobial against both Streptococcus mutans and Enterococcus faecalis. SP and VIP were shown to exhibit antimicrobial activity against Streptococcus mutans only. The neuropeptides NKA and CGRP did not show antimicrobial activity against either micro-organism. Conclusion: This study is the first to describe an antimicrobial role for neuropeptides in pulp biology. The antimicrobial actions of neuropeptides contribute a novel aspect to pulpal defence against cariogenic and endodontic bacteria worthy of further investigation.
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Introduction: Human alpha defensins are a family of neutrophil-derived antimicrobial peptides also known as human neutrophil peptides (HNPs). The defensin family of peptides are characterised by six invariant cysteine residues forming three disulphide bridges. The formation of the correct disulphide pairs complicates the synthesis of full length human alpha defensin and limits its therapeutic potential as an antimicrobial peptide. Objectives: The aim of this study was to determine whether truncated alpha defensins displayed antimicrobial activity against a range of micro-organisms including oral pathogens. Methods: Engineered peptides were synthesised by solid-phase methods using standard Fmoc chemistry. Antibacterial assays were performed using a previously described ultra sensitive radial diffusion method. A total of five engineered defensin peptides and full length alpha defensin were tested for their sensitivity against eight micro-organisms, including Gram negative bacteria, Gram positive bacteria and fungal pathogens Results: Antimicrobial activity was identified as clear zones around peptide-containing wells. Zone diameters were used to calculate minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) for each peptide. There was considerable variability in the susceptibility of the micro-organisms to the truncated analogues. Bacillus subtilis and Enterococcus faecalis were sensitive to the majority of the engineered peptides whereas Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli and Candida albicans displayed resistance (defined as an MIC of greater than 250 ug/ml) to the truncated defensins. Of the five engineered peptides synthesised, the 2-aminobenzoic acid (Abz)-containing analogues based on the C-terminal sequence of alpha defensin displayed MIC values closest to that of the full length defensin in 5 out of 8 micro-organisms studied. Conclusion: This study demonstrates that truncated alpha defensins display variable antimicrobial activity against a range of micro-organisms, including oral pathogens. The generation of truncated defensins without disulphide bridges simplifies their synthesis and increases their therapeutic potential.