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We present the Evolutionary Map of the Universe (EMU) survey conducted with the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP). EMU aims to deliver the touchstone radio atlas of the southern hemisphere. We introduce EMU and review its science drivers and key science goals, updated and tailored to the current ASKAP five-year survey plan. The development of the survey strategy and planned sky coverage is presented, along with the operational aspects of the survey and associated data analysis, together with a selection of diagnostics demonstrating the imaging quality and data characteristics. We give a general description of the value-added data pipeline and data products before concluding with a discussion of links to other surveys and projects and an outline of EMU’s legacy value.
Objectives/Goals: Obtaining reliable clinical research professional (CRP) employment data within and across Clinical and Translational Science Awards (CTSA) institutions is an ongoing challenge. We describe an intra-institutional approach implemented to generate routine and accurate CRP data reports to monitor and evaluate CRP career progression and assist in formation of an institutional CRP network. Methods/Study Population: A research job family with 47 job series including human, animal, and laboratory research positions was implemented at Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU). However, CRP job satisfaction surveys and evaluations could not be confidently interpreted due to the confounding animal and laboratory research positions. Led by VCU Clinical and Translational Science Awards Workforce Development a cross-functional team was formed to isolate specific CRP positions. The team included CRP front-line staff and managers partnering with VCU Human Resource Information Systems. Identified were 39 unique CRP positions across 13 distinct job series. This identification provides CRP new hire and job specific data for evaluation and tracking as well as the ability for CRP directed communications. Results/Anticipated Results: Initial and monthly HR data reports were used to develop an institutional CRP list-serv for 325–350 allowing for targeted CRP communications within a decentralized environment. Bimonthly HR data reports identify university new hires and internal transfers into any of the 39 unique jobs within 0 – 12 days of hire. Twelve unique data points are provided (name, email, current position hire date, job code, job title, working title, department, division, supervisor’s name, job title, email, and job code) allowing for tracking and analysis of retention rates, career progression, and lateral movement among other outcomes. Collaboration led by VCU Clinical and Translational Science Awards Workforce Development team provides the representative CRP staff, managers, and institutional leadership with a renewed confidence interpreting CRP employment data. Discussion/Significance of Impact: The team science approach to identify and develop routine and real-time reporting of CRP job specific data provides a rich source of information. The information is used to evaluate CRP job satisfaction and factors contributing to CRP retention, engage in future mixed-methods research, and support the formation of an institutional CRP network.
In low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), children and families face a multitude of risk factors for mental health and well-being. These risks are even further exacerbated in humanitarian emergencies. However, access to effective mental health services in such settings is severely limited, leading to a large mental health treatment gap. Middle childhood (5–12 years) is a crucial period for human development during which symptoms of emotional distress often emerge, with one in three mental disorders developing prior to age 14. However, there is little evidence of effective psychological interventions for children in this developmental stage, and suitable for implementation within LMICs and humanitarian emergencies. We conducted this evidence review to inform the development of a new intervention package based on existing best practice for this age group, drawing insights from both global and LMIC resources. Our review synthesizes the findings of 52 intervention studies from LMICs and humanitarian settings; 53 existing systematic reviews and meta-analyses covering both LMICs and high-income countries, and 15 technical guidelines. Overall, there is limited high-quality evidence from which to draw recommendations for this age group; however, some promising intervention approaches were identified for children experiencing externalizing and internalizing symptoms, traumatic stress and a combination of difficulties. Several effective interventions utilize cognitive-behavioral techniques for children, in either group or individual format, and incorporate caregiver skills training into treatment, although the findings are mixed. Most evaluated interventions use specialists as delivery agents and are lengthy, which poses challenges for scale-up in settings where financial and human resources are scarce. These findings will inform the development of new psychological interventions for children in this age group with emotional and behavioral difficulties.
Significant gaps exist in representation of diverse populations in central-line assessment education and tools. We review some of these gaps and provide some real-world guidance on how to assess central line sites in patients of all skin tones.
OBJECTIVES/GOALS: The CDC-funded Program to Alleviate National Disparities in Ethnic and Minority Immunizations in the Community intersects two national networks that transform building trust in communities: Cooperative Extension Systems and Clinical and Translational Science Awardees, with the goal of reducing vaccine hesitancy and increasing vaccine uptake. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: PANDEMIC included North Central Florida; Greater Sacramento, California; Bronx, New York; St. Louis and the Ozarks, Missouri; rural Kentucky; and Minnesota. Our 10 Promising Practices (PPs) focus on the equitable distribution of COVID-19 vaccines and health information, with two detailing collaborative efforts to better achieve health equity: PP3) Bringing Services and Vaccines to People Where They Are & PP5) Creating Coalitions with Trusted Neighborhood Partners. CHWs and Extension Educators, trusted community members, work together to deliver culturally/linguistically diverse health messages in plain language in areas of high vaccine hesitancy and bring vaccines to people where they are. All outreach activities are tracked and categorized by PP affiliation. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: From November 2021 – August 2023, PANDEMIC has administered nearly 11,000 COVID-19 vaccines at over 2,500 outreach events. At events, Community Health Workers (CHWs) listen to community members to assess vaccine perceptions and health needs/concerns. We adapt messaging and outreach initiatives to promote vaccination through data analyses that help us understand perceptions. Responses are calculated for the populations of focus (PoF)–Latino/Hispanic, African American/Black, American Indian/Alaskan Native, Asian, Native Hawaiian/Other Pacific Islander) compared to others (Non-Latino/Hispanic White or unspecified race). Over 16,000 surveys were collected from November 2021 – August 2023 with 60% coming from the PoF. Key differences in perceptions will be shown along with other cross-site metrics. DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE: PANDEMIC offers an innovative model for collaboration among CTSAs and Cooperative Extension Systems to better understand community perceptions and support vaccination efforts and overall health promotion in communities of greatest need, with a focus on racial and ethnic minority communities and underinsured/uninsured populations.
To investigate the symptoms of SARS-CoV-2 infection, their dynamics and their discriminatory power for the disease using longitudinally, prospectively collected information reported at the time of their occurrence. We have analysed data from a large phase 3 clinical UK COVID-19 vaccine trial. The alpha variant was the predominant strain. Participants were assessed for SARS-CoV-2 infection via nasal/throat PCR at recruitment, vaccination appointments, and when symptomatic. Statistical techniques were implemented to infer estimates representative of the UK population, accounting for multiple symptomatic episodes associated with one individual. An optimal diagnostic model for SARS-CoV-2 infection was derived. The 4-month prevalence of SARS-CoV-2 was 2.1%; increasing to 19.4% (16.0%–22.7%) in participants reporting loss of appetite and 31.9% (27.1%–36.8%) in those with anosmia/ageusia. The model identified anosmia and/or ageusia, fever, congestion, and cough to be significantly associated with SARS-CoV-2 infection. Symptoms’ dynamics were vastly different in the two groups; after a slow start peaking later and lasting longer in PCR+ participants, whilst exhibiting a consistent decline in PCR- participants, with, on average, fewer than 3 days of symptoms reported. Anosmia/ageusia peaked late in confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection (day 12), indicating a low discrimination power for early disease diagnosis.
Birthweight has been associated with diabetes in a reverse J-shape (highest risk at low birthweight and moderately high risk at high birthweight) and inversely associated with hypertension in adulthood with inconsistent evidence for cardiovascular disease. There is a lack of population-based studies examining the incidence of cardiometabolic outcomes in young adults born with low and high birthweights. To evaluate the association between birthweight and diabetes, hypertension, and ischemic heart disease (IHD) in young adulthood, we conducted a retrospective cohort study of 874,904 singletons born in Ontario, Canada, from 1994 to 2002, identified from population-based health administrative data. Separate Cox regression models examined birthweight in association with diabetes, hypertension, and IHD adjusting for confounders. Among adults 18–26 years, the diabetes incidence rate was 18.15 per 100,000 person-years, hypertension was 15.80 per 100,000 person-years, and IHD was 1.85 per 100,000 person-years. Adjusted hazard ratios (AHR) for the hazard of diabetes with low (<2500g) and high (>4000g), compared with normal (2500–4000g) birthweight, were 1.46 (95% CI 1.28, 1.68) and 1.09 (0.99, 1.21), respectively. AHR for hypertension with low and high birthweight were 1.34 (1.15, 1.56) and 0.86 (0.77, 0.97), respectively. AHR for IHD with low and high birthweight were 1.28 (0.80, 2.05) and 0.97 (0.71, 1.33), respectively. Overall, birthweight was associated with diabetes in young adults in a reverse J-shape and inversely with hypertension. There was insufficient evidence of an association with IHD. Further evidence is needed to understand the causal mechanisms between birthweight and cardiometabolic diseases in young adults.
Attention is the backbone of cognitive systems and is requisite for many cognitive processes vital to everyday functioning, including memory, problem solving, and the cognitive control of behavior. Attention is commonly impaired following traumatic brain injury and is a critical focus of rehabilitation efforts. The development of reliable methods to assess rehabilitation-related changes are paramount. The Attention Network Test (ANT) has been used previously to identify 3 independent, yet interactive attention networks—alerting, orienting, and executive control (EC). We examined the behavioral and neurophysiological robustness and temporal stability of these networks across multiple sessions to assess the ANT’s potential utility as an effective measure of change during attention rehabilitative interventions.
Participants and Methods:
15 healthy young adults completed 4 sessions of the ANT (1 session/7-day period). ANT networks were assessed within the task by contrasting opposing stimulus conditions: cued vs. non-cued trials probed alerting, valid vs. invalid spatial cues probed orienting, and congruent vs. incongruent targets probed EC. Differences in median correct-trial reaction times (RTs) and error rates (ERs) between the condition pairs were assessed to determine attention network scores; robustness of networks effects, as determined by one-sample t-tests at each session, against a mean of 0, determining the presence of significant network effects at each session. Sixty-four-channel electroencephalography (EEG) data were acquired concurrently and processed using Matlab to create condition-related event-related potentials (ERPs)—particularly the cue- and probe-related P1, N1, and P3 deflection amplitudes, measured by using signed-area calculation in regions of interest (ROIs) determined by observation of spherical-spline voltages. This enabled us to examine the robustness of cue- and probe-attention-network ERPs.
Results:
All three attention networks showed robust effects. However, only the EC RT and ER network scores remained significantly robust [t(14)s>13.9,ps<.001] across all sessions, indicating that EC is robust in the face of repeated exposure. Session 1 showed the greatest EC-RT robustness effect which became smaller during the subsequent sessions per ANOVAs on Session x Congruency [F(3,42)=10.21,p<.0001], reflecting persistence despite practice effects. RT robustness of the other networks varied across sessions. Alerting and EC ERs were similarly robust across all 4 sessions, but were more variable for the orienting network. ERP results: The cue-locked P1-orienting (valid vs. invalid) was generally larger to valid- than invalid-cues, but the robustness across sessions was variable (significant in only sessions 1 and 4 [t(14)s>2.13,ps<.04], as reflected in a significant main effect of session [p=.0042]. Next, target-locked EC P3s were generally smaller to congruent than incongruent targets [F(1,14)=9.40,p=.0084], showing robust effects only in sessions 3 and 4 [ps<.005].
Conclusions:
The EC network RT and ER scores were consistently robust across all sessions, suggesting that this network may be less vulnerable to practice effects across session than the other networks and may be the most reliable probe of attentional rehabilitation. ERP measures were more variable across attention networks with respect to robustness. Behavioral measures of EC-network may be most reliable for assessing progress related to attentional-rehabilitation efforts.
In contrast to high-volume medicines prescribed by general practitioners, low-volume highly specialized medicines have not been supported by national quality use of medicine (QUM) programs in Australia. The first area addressed has focused on optimizing use of biological disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (bDMARDs).
Methods
The program was designed, developed and implemented in partnership with nine consortium member organizations and four affiliate organizations representing consumer and clinical audiences, program development expertize and implementation capability. The common agenda for the collective impact approach was to achieve better health outcomes for people with inflammatory arthritis, inflammatory bowel disease and plaque psoriasis. Multidisciplinary expert working groups reviewed formative QUM research and agreed on objectives, audiences, messages and interventions. Interventions were selected based on identified barriers, enablers and behavioral drivers, informed by the Theoretical Domains Framework. Interventions were co-designed and tested with end-users. Marketing and promotion activity supported implementation of all interventions through consortium channels and networks. Evaluation includes process, impact and outcome measures, and a realist evaluation of the academic detailing.
Results
Program objectives were to optimize: (i) first-line therapy before bDMARD use; (ii) first-choice bDMARDs; (iii) biosimilar prescribing and dispensing; (iv) bDMARD dosage; (v) glucocorticoid and analgesic use. Over 60 interventions supporting key messages for each objective were developed for audiences: consumers; rheumatologists, gastroenterologists, dermatologists; pharmacists; drug and therapeutic committees. Interventions implemented between September 2020 and September 2022 included: consumer decision aids, action plans, fact sheets, lived experience videos; living guidelines and evidence summaries; guidance/position statements for hospitals, podcasts, webinars, online learning; prescribing feedback reports; and academic detailing. Uptake of interventions has largely met targets and surveys have demonstrated shifts in specialist and consumer knowledge and behavior in line with key messages and objectives. Realist and outcome evaluation is ongoing.
Conclusions
Our experience demonstrates the value of a consortium of stakeholder organizations, with different expertise and interests but agreed goals and roles, working together to progress the quality use of highly specialized drugs.
Examining the role of arts and culture in regional Australia often focuses on economic aspects within the creative industries. However, this perspective tends to disregard the value of unconventional practices and fails to recognise the influence of regional ecological settings and the well-being advantages experienced by amateur and hobbyist musicians who explore ubiquitous methods of music creation. This article presents the results of a survey conducted among practitioners in regional Australia, exploring their utilisation of creative technology ecosystems. This project marks the first independent, evidence-based study of experimental electronic music practices in regional Australia and how local and digital resource ecosystems support those activities. Spanning the years 2021 and 2022, the study involved interviewing 11 participants from many Australian states. In this article, we share the study’s findings, outlining the diverse range of experimental electronic music practices taking place across regional Australia and how practitioners navigate the opportunities and challenges presented by their local context.
Performance validity (PVTs) and symptom validity tests (SVTs) are necessary components of neuropsychological testing to identify suboptimal performances and response bias that may impact diagnosis and treatment. The current study examined the clinical and functional characteristics of veterans who failed PVTs and the relationship between PVT and SVT failures.
Method:
Five hundred and sixteen post-9/11 veterans participated in clinical interviews, neuropsychological testing, and several validity measures.
Results:
Veterans who failed 2+ PVTs performed significantly worse than veterans who failed one PVT in verbal memory (Cohen’s d = .60–.69), processing speed (Cohen’s d = .68), working memory (Cohen’s d = .98), and visual memory (Cohen’s d = .88–1.10). Individuals with 2+ PVT failures had greater posttraumatic stress (PTS; β = 0.16; p = .0002), and worse self-reported depression (β = 0.17; p = .0001), anxiety (β = 0.15; p = .0007), sleep (β = 0.10; p = .0233), and functional outcomes (β = 0.15; p = .0009) compared to veterans who passed PVTs. 7.8% veterans failed the SVT (Validity-10; ≥19 cutoff); Multiple PVT failures were significantly associated with Validity-10 failure at the ≥19 and ≥23 cutoffs (p’s < .0012). The Validity-10 had moderate correspondence in predicting 2+ PVTs failures (AUC = 0.83; 95% CI = 0.76, 0.91).
Conclusion:
PVT failures are associated with psychiatric factors, but not traumatic brain injury (TBI). PVT failures predict SVT failure and vice versa. Standard care should include SVTs and PVTs in all clinical assessments, not just neuropsychological assessments, particularly in clinically complex populations.
Female fertility is a complex trait with age-specific changes in spontaneous dizygotic (DZ) twinning and fertility. To elucidate factors regulating female fertility and infertility, we conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) on mothers of spontaneous DZ twins (MoDZT) versus controls (3273 cases, 24,009 controls). This is a follow-up study to the Australia/New Zealand (ANZ) component of that previously reported (Mbarek et al., 2016), with a sample size almost twice that of the entire discovery sample meta-analysed in the previous article (and five times the ANZ contribution to that), resulting from newly available additional genotyping and representing a significant increase in power. We compare analyses with and without male controls and show unequivocally that it is better to include male controls who have been screened for recent family history, than to use only female controls. Results from the SNP based GWAS identified four genomewide significant signals, including one novel region, ZFPM1 (Zinc Finger Protein, FOG Family Member 1), on chromosome 16. Previous signals near FSHB (Follicle Stimulating Hormone beta subunit) and SMAD3 (SMAD Family Member 3) were also replicated (Mbarek et al., 2016). We also ran the GWAS with a dominance model that identified a further locus ADRB2 on chr 5. These results have been contributed to the International Twinning Genetics Consortium for inclusion in the next GWAS meta-analysis (Mbarek et al., in press).
Feminist and queer methodologies emphasize the creation of research through relational spaces of betweenness, particularly between researchers and those who participate (Haraway, 1988; Stanley and Wise, 1993; Rose, 1995; Collins, 1990/ 2000; Nash, 2010). These spaces are negotiated through not only research practices and processes created by the researcher/ s, but also by the ways in which interactions play out in research spaces (Rose, 1993, 1995). Attending to this relationality foregrounds the complexity of power relations in the research process; where positionalities and their effects are taken seriously but where assumptions about hierarchical power relations are continually troubled. Power is then seen as diffuse, circulatory, and productive of effects, rather than as something straightforwardly held by some in a hierarchical relationship with others (Bondi, 1990; Browne and Nash, 2010; Kelly and Gurr, 2019). Research participants can be in positions of disproportionate social, cultural, or economic power and privilege in relation to the researcher, and this can influence the research process and outcomes in important ways (for example see feminist research with ‘elites’: Puwar, 2001; Glass and Cook, 2020). This conceptualization of the nature of research spaces emphasizes practices and relationalities with the caution that research spaces should be understood as interactional and negotiated spaces, or in other words, as relational. They are formed via the research priorities and processes created by the researcher/ s with imagined audiences, and through the interactions that play out across the lifetime of a research project. Relationality is operationalized in undertaking geographical research in order that we might ask questions about the possibilities and limitations of communicating or empathizing across difference and engaging the ‘other’ (Nash, 2010; Rose, 1993, 1995; 1997).
In the contemporary moment, heteroactivism associated anti-gender ideologies are increasing in many parts of the world (Correa et al, 2018; Nash and Browne, 2017, 2020). It is therefore vital for feminist and queer geographers to interrogate how hard-won sexual and gender rights, including same-sex marriage, abortion, and trans rights, are being challenged and contested across different geographical contexts (Browne et al, 2018; Browne and Nash, 2019; Nash and Browne, 2020). In this chapter, we focus on research that engages with those who see the heterosexual family as the pinnacle of society and who believe that marriage should only occur between biological men and women and/ or that families should be based on a heterosexual union.
Terracing is found widely in the Mediterranean and in other hilly and mountainous regions of the world. Yet while archaeological attention to these ‘mundane’ landscape features has grown, they remain understudied, particularly in Northern Europe. Here, the authors present a multidisciplinary study of terraces in the Breamish Valley, Northumberland. The results date their construction to the Early to Middle Bronze Age, when they were built by cutting back the hillside, stone clearance and wall construction. Environmental evidence points to their use for cereal cultivation. The authors suggest that the construction and use of these terraces formed part of an Early to Middle Bronze Age agricultural intensification, which may have been both demographically and culturally driven.
M“ odernism” – an academic term used especially since the 1960s to denote avantgarde Western art forms of the early twentieth-century – has been used within Anglophone literary studies to refer especially to formally-innovative texts written between around 1910 and 1930. Recently “new modernism studies” has challenged this narrow focus, broadening the concept to include works of a range of styles which consciously respond to the conditions of late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century modernity. Their subjects include the nature and role of art as part of this modernity; consciousness and agency; physical health and degeneration; the relationship of ethics to science, new technologies, and mass production; new supra-national political and cultural movements; and new understandings of religion, race, class, gender, and species. All of these subjects inflect the period’s “zoophilia” (the term is from 1894), as manifest in movements including vegetarianism (developing out of a strong Victorian tradition), anti-vivisectionism (which reached a peak in the Edwardian period), and anti-hunting sentiment (which reached a peak between the Wars).
Delimiting the investigations of this chapter to “vegan” authors of the long modernist period, even allowing the term to operate retroactively from 1944, would have left no canonical authors at all, while narrowing by vegetarian writers would have left only a well-trodden few. Rather, this chapter considers how a range of writers – almost none of them vegetarians, but all manifesting elements of a vegan consciousness as broadly conceived – have explored the category of the human in relation to the treatment of nonhuman animals. Veganism is, after all, a human and ethical phenomenon, and with this focus the chapter aims to complement the considerable body of work that has already been done on modernist literary representations of nonhuman animals (notably by critics including Margot Norris and Carrie Rohman). It does so by concentrating on those human characteristics – especially the imagination – which may conduce towards veganism.
This chapter is further delimited by a focus on slaughter and hunting. By considering both we gain a binocular vision of how modernist writers have considered humanity through the lenses of the most violent aspects of its relationships with animals: slaughter relating to human practice since the agricultural revolution, hunting pre-dating it. Thomas Hardy’s 1895 Jude the Obscure and William Golding’s 1954 Lord of the Flies introduce these topics respectively and between them mark the outer boundaries of the period of my concern.
Early in the COVID-19 pandemic, the World Health Organization stressed the importance of daily clinical assessments of infected patients, yet current approaches frequently consider cross-sectional timepoints, cumulative summary measures, or time-to-event analyses. Statistical methods are available that make use of the rich information content of longitudinal assessments. We demonstrate the use of a multistate transition model to assess the dynamic nature of COVID-19-associated critical illness using daily evaluations of COVID-19 patients from 9 academic hospitals. We describe the accessibility and utility of methods that consider the clinical trajectory of critically ill COVID-19 patients.
The potential antidepressant properties of probiotics have been suggested, but their influence on the emotional processes that may underlie this effect is unclear.
Methods
Depressed volunteers (n = 71) were recruited into a randomised double-blind, placebo-controlled study to explore the effects of a daily, 4-week intake of a multispecies probiotic or placebo on emotional processing and cognition. Mood, anxiety, positive and negative affect, sleep, salivary cortisol and serum C-reactive peptide (CRP) were assessed before and after supplementation.
Results
Compared with placebo, probiotic intake increased accuracy at identifying faces expressing all emotions (+12%, p < 0.05, total n = 51) and vigilance to neutral faces (mean difference between groups = 12.28 ms ± 6.1, p < 0.05, total n = 51). Probiotic supplementation also reduced reward learning (−9%, p < 0.05, total n = 51), and interference word recall on the auditory verbal learning task (−18%, p < 0.05, total n = 50), but did not affect other aspects of cognitive performance. Although actigraphy revealed a significant group × night-time activity interaction, follow up analysis was not significant (p = 0.094). Supplementation did not alter salivary cortisol or circulating CRP concentrations. Probiotic intake significantly reduced (−50% from baseline, p < 0.05, n = 35) depression scores on the Patient Health Questionnaire-9, but these did not correlate with the changes in emotional processing.
Conclusions
The impartiality to positive and negative emotional stimuli or reward after probiotic supplementation have not been observed with conventional antidepressant therapies. Further studies are required to elucidate the significance of these changes with regard to the mood-improving action of the current probiotic.
We present the data and initial results from the first pilot survey of the Evolutionary Map of the Universe (EMU), observed at 944 MHz with the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) telescope. The survey covers $270 \,\mathrm{deg}^2$ of an area covered by the Dark Energy Survey, reaching a depth of 25–30 $\mu\mathrm{Jy\ beam}^{-1}$ rms at a spatial resolution of $\sim$11–18 arcsec, resulting in a catalogue of $\sim$220 000 sources, of which $\sim$180 000 are single-component sources. Here we present the catalogue of single-component sources, together with (where available) optical and infrared cross-identifications, classifications, and redshifts. This survey explores a new region of parameter space compared to previous surveys. Specifically, the EMU Pilot Survey has a high density of sources, and also a high sensitivity to low surface brightness emission. These properties result in the detection of types of sources that were rarely seen in or absent from previous surveys. We present some of these new results here.