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This collection gathers thirteen contributions by a number of historians, friends, colleagues and/or students of Jinty’s, who were asked to pick their favourite article by her and say a few words about it for an event held in her memory on 15 January 2025 at King’s College London. We offer this collection in print now for a wider audience not so much because it has any claim to be exhaustive or authoritative, but because taken all together these pieces seemed to add up to a useful retrospective on Jinty’s work, its wider context, and its impact on the field over the decades. We hope that, for those who know her work well already, this may be an opportunity to remember some of her classic (and a few less classic) articles, while at the same time serving as an accessible introduction to her research for anyone who knew her without necessarily knowing about her field, as well as for a new and younger generation of readers.
Background: Although the history of the ketogenic diet dates back centuries, with the advancement of anti-seizure medications, the use of the diet for epilepsy declined. It was not until the early 1990s that there was a resurgence of the diet as an adjunct therapy to anti-seizure medication. In 1998, the Montreal Children’s Hospital introduced the ketogenic diet to a child with drug resistant epilepsy. Shortly after, a presentation of the ketogenic diet at hospital Grand Rounds met much skepticism. However, over time the diet has developed into a well-established treatment option for children with drug resistant epilepsy. Two hundred children have since utilized the diet at the Montreal Children’s Hospital. Methods: A review of patient files since the initiation of the program was undertaken. Data was extracted regarding adverse effects, common errors in both hospital and home setting, risks for unfavorable outcomes and parental concerns Results: The development of a rigorous protocol has reduced potential adverse effects, inadvertent complications from errors have improved and parent satisfaction enhanced. Conclusions: This poster will demonstrate how an interdisciplinary approach for a ketogenic diet protocol, involving an advanced Practice Nurse, nutritionist, neurologist and parent, resulted in improved care.
Background: Ocular point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) may be a clinically useful method to evaluate shunt dysfunction for children with hydrocephalus in the emergency department (ED). We assessed whether a change in optic nerve sheath diameter (ONSD) from prior asymptomatic baseline is associated with shunt failure. Methods: This prospective single center cohort study included asymptomatic shunted children (age 0-18 years). Baseline ocular POCUS was performed in the outpatient neurosurgery clinic; a second POCUS was performed if the patient subsequently presented to the ED with symptoms of shunt failure. Shunt failure was defined by intraoperative confirmation of inadequate CSF flow through the shunt within 96 hours from ED presentation. Results: The primary outcome of intra-operatively confirmed shunt failure occurred in 14/76 (18%) ED patient presentations. ΔONSD in patients with and without shunt failure was 0.89mm and 0.16mm respectively; the mean difference was 0.73mm (95%CI: 0.34-1.12), p=0.0012. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve was 0.86, with an optimal cutoff of ≥+0.4mm, corresponding to sensitivity of 0.93, specificity of 0.73, PPV of 0.43, NPV of 0.98. Conclusions: ΔONSD was strongly associated with shunt failure. We found ΔONSD of <+0.4 in symptomatic children with CSF shunts may identify a population that had low likelihood of true shunt failure.
We undertake a comprehensive investigation into the distribution of in situ stars within Milky Way-like galaxies, leveraging TNG50 simulations and comparing their predictions with data from the H3 survey. Our analysis reveals that 28% of galaxies demonstrate reasonable agreement with H3, while only 12% exhibit excellent alignment in their profiles, regardless of the specific spatial cut employed to define in situ stars. To uncover the underlying factors contributing to deviations between TNG50 and H3 distributions, we scrutinise correlation coefficients among internal drivers (e.g. virial radius, star formation rate [SFR]) and merger-related parameters (such as the effective mass-ratio, mean distance, average redshift, total number of mergers, average spin-ratio, and maximum spin alignment between merging galaxies). Notably, we identify significant correlations between deviations from observational data and key parameters such as the median slope of virial radius, mean SFR values, and the rate of SFR change across different redshift scans. Furthermore, positive correlations emerge between deviations from observational data and parameters related to galaxy mergers. We validate these correlations using the Random Forest Regression method. Our findings underscore the invaluable insights provided by the H3 survey in unravelling the cosmic history of galaxies akin to the Milky Way, thereby advancing our understanding of galactic evolution and shedding light on the formation and evolution of Milky Way-like galaxies in cosmological simulations.
Up-to-date certification of the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) and modified Rankin Scale (mRS) is often required for clinical trials, representing a significant burden on clinical investigators globally.
Aims:
This systematic review sought to determine if NIHSS or mRS training, re-training, certification or recertification led to improvements in the reliability or accuracy of ratings as well as other relevant user metrics (e.g., user confidence).
Results:
Among 4227 studies, 100 passed screening and were assessed for eligibility with full-text review; 23 met inclusion criteria. Among these 23 studies, 22 examined NIHSS training and/or certification, and only a single study included examined the effect of training on mRS performance. Ten of 23 included studies were conference abstracts. The study designs, interventions and outcome measurement of the included studies were heterogeneous. In the case of the NIHSS, two studies found increased accuracy after NIHSS training, and a third study showed statistically significant though clinically trivial decreases in error rate with training. The remaining 19 studies showed no benefit of NIHSS training as it relates to reliability or accuracy outcomes. The single included mRS study did not show the benefit of training.
Conclusion:
Although data are sparse with heterogeneous training protocols and outcomes, there is no compelling evidence to suggest benefit of healthcare professionals completing NIHSS or mRS training, certification or recertification. At the very least, recertification/re-training requirements should be reconsidered pending the provision of robust evidence.
The motion and deformation of a neutrally buoyant drop in a rectangular channel experiencing a pressure-driven flow at a low Reynolds number has been investigated both experimentally and numerically. A moving-frame boundary-integral algorithm was used to simulate the drop dynamics, with a focus on steady-state drop velocity and deformation. Results are presented for drops of varying undeformed diameters relative to channel height ($D/H$), drop-to-bulk viscosity ratio ($\lambda$), capillary number ($Ca$, ratio of deforming viscous forces to shape-preserving interfacial tension) and initial position in the channel in a parameter space larger than considered previously. The general trend shows that the drop steady-state velocity decreases with increasing drop diameter and viscosity ratio but increases with increasing $Ca$. An opposite trend is seen for drops with small viscosity ratio, however, where the steady-state velocity increases with increasing $D/H$ and can exceed the maximum background flow velocity. Experimental results verify theoretical predictions. A deformable drop with a size comparable to the channel height when placed off centre migrates towards the centreline and attains a steady state there. In general, a drop with a low viscosity ratio and high capillary number experiences faster cross-stream migration. With increasing aspect ratio, there is a competition between the effect of reduced wall interactions and lower maximum channel centreline velocity at fixed average velocity, with the former helping drops attain higher steady-state velocities at low aspect ratios, but the latter takes over at aspect ratios above approximately 1.5.
The problem of detecting emergent social structure in small groups is examined in terms of establishing a baseline or expected structure. The standard proposed here is equalitarianism; that is to say, every member is equally likely to interact with every other member. Using information theory, a formal statement of the equalitarian argument is possible. In addition to detecting a deviation by a single group, the structural tendency of several groups assigned to some experimental condition is discussed. This technique is designed for the preliminary analysis of structure; it deals only with the general character of the total structure.
The presence of an intraluminal thrombus in acutely symptomatic carotid stenosis is thought to represent a high-risk lesion for short-term stroke reccurrence though evidence on natural history and treatment is lacking, leading to equipoise and much variation in practice. The objective of this study was to map these variations in practice (medical management and timing of revascularization), determine the considerations that influence clinician decision-making in this condition and gather opinions that inform the development and design of future trials in the area.
Methods:
This was a mixed-methods study using both quantitative survey methods and qualitative interview-based methods. International perspectives were gathered by distributing a case-based survey via the “Practice Current” section of Neurology: Clinical Practice and interviewing international experts using established qualitative research methods.
Results:
The presence of an intraluminal thrombus significantly increased the likelihood of using a regimen containing anticoagulation agents (p < 0.001) in acutely symptomatic carotid stenosis in the case-based survey. Themes that emerged from qualitative interview analysis were therapeutic uncertainty regarding anticoagulation, decision to reimage, revascularization choices and future trial design and anticipated challenges.
Conclusion:
Results of this study demonstrate a preference for anticoagulation and delayed revascularization after reimaging to examine for clot resolution, though much equipoise remains. While there is interest from international experts in future trials, further study is needed to understand the natural history of this condition in order to inform trial design.
Introduction: Recurrent major depressive disorder (MDD) has been associated with cognitive impairment and hippocampus atrophy. Additionally, in older adults it is related to increased dementia risk, as well as being dementia’s prodromal syndrome.
Case Report: A 68-year-old female patient, with a history of MDD beginning in 2014, has been under the care of the Psychogeriatrics service at HC-UFMG. In 2015, she was 60-year-old and underwent her first MRI scan. At that time, the Medial Temporal Atrophy Score (MTA) was 2 and she had a treatment resistant depression (TRD). She began multimodal treatments, including ECT, achieving only partial remission. Since then, the patient had recurrences of depression without the remission of cognitive impairment. In 2021, her MTA Score was still 2 with TDR symptoms. Currently, she is on Venlafaxine 150mg, Mirtazapine 30mg, Lithium 300mg, Olanzapine 5mg, Clonazepam 0.25mg and maintenance ECT every 45 days. The patient remains with cognitive impairment that leads to disabilities but had not significantly progressed. On the other hand, the main impact in functionality is related to depressive symptoms, especially to the loss of interest and apathy.
Discussion: This case stands out due to the combination of hippocampal atrophy at a relatively young age and severe depression with cognitive impairment that has not progressed to dementia in 9 years. Severe depression can lead to significant cognitive deficits, as well as, hippocampus atrophy. While depression is related to hippocampus atrophy, it has not been related to TRD in a review study with Voxel-Based Morphometry. Conversely, Alzheimer’s Disease is related to MTA ≥2 scores, as well as depressive symptoms. MTA 2 in a person of 60 years of age is not considered normal. When combined with cognitive impairment, these findings are generally related to neurodegeneration. Since both MTA and cognitive deficits were relatively stable, the hypothesis of a cognitive impairment and hippocampus atrophy due to depression were more likely.
Conclusions: MDD leads to cognitive impairment in older adults, as well as hippocampus atrophy. Nevertheless, depression and age are important risk factors for dementia and, therefore, a progression to dementia due to a neurodegenerative disease is still possible.
From early on, infants show a preference for infant-directed speech (IDS) over adult-directed speech (ADS), and exposure to IDS has been correlated with language outcome measures such as vocabulary. The present multi-laboratory study explores this issue by investigating whether there is a link between early preference for IDS and later vocabulary size. Infants’ preference for IDS was tested as part of the ManyBabies 1 project, and follow-up CDI data were collected from a subsample of this dataset at 18 and 24 months. A total of 341 (18 months) and 327 (24 months) infants were tested across 21 laboratories. In neither preregistered analyses with North American and UK English, nor exploratory analyses with a larger sample did we find evidence for a relation between IDS preference and later vocabulary. We discuss implications of this finding in light of recent work suggesting that IDS preference measured in the laboratory has low test-retest reliability.
Neoclassical economics (NCE) theory and neoliberal economics practice together form one of the principal driving forces of environmental destruction and social injustice. We critically examine ten key hypotheses that form the foundations of NCE, and four other claims. Each fails to satisfy one or more of the basic requirements of scientific practice. Hence, NCE is fundamentally flawed, is irrational in the common meaning of the word, and should not be used as a guide for government policies. Because NCE is socially constructed, it can be replaced with an interdisciplinary conceptual framework that is compatible with ecological sustainability and social justice.
Technical summary
Neoclassical economics (NCE) is widely regarded as providing theoretical justification for neoliberal notions such as ‘governments should minimize regulation and spending, and hence leave major socioeconomic and environmental decisions to the market’. A large body of literature finds that NCE is largely responsible for environmental destruction and social inequality. As NCE is claimed to be a science and has appropriated terminology (without the content) from physics, we examine critically its basic hypotheses and four other claims from a viewpoint of natural scientists and an ecological economist, each a sustainability researcher. This paper defines NCE in two ways: as a theoretical structure for economics based on (1) the hypotheses of methodological individualism, methodological instrumentalism and methodological equilibration, and (2) the three hypotheses named above together with seven other common hypotheses of NCE. We find that each hypothesis and claim fails to satisfy one or more basic requirements of scientific practice such as empirical confirmation, underlying credible or empirical assumptions, consistency with Earth system science, and internal consistency. Sensitivity analysis is rare and ability to predict is lacking. Therefore, we recommend that neoclassical microeconomics be reformed and neoclassical macroeconomics be abandoned and replaced with a transdisciplinary field such as social ecological economics.
Social media summary
Conventional economics, a driver of environmental damage and social inequality, fails examination by sustainability scientists.
Researchers often aim to assess whether repeated measures of an exposure are associated with repeated measures of an outcome. A question of particular interest is how associations between exposures and outcomes may differ over time. In other words, researchers may seek the best form of a temporal model. While several models are possible, researchers often consider a few key models. For example, researchers may hypothesize that an exposure measured during a sensitive period may be associated with repeated measures of the outcome over time. Alternatively, they may hypothesize that the exposure measured immediately before the current time period may be most strongly associated with the outcome at the current time. Finally, they may hypothesize that all prior exposures are important. Many analytic methods cannot compare and evaluate these alternative temporal models, perhaps because they make the restrictive assumption that the associations between exposures and outcomes remains constant over time. Instead, we provide a tutorial describing four temporal models that allow the associations between repeated measures of exposures and outcomes to vary, and showing how to test which temporal model is best supported by the data. By finding the best temporal model, developmental psychopathology researchers can find optimal windows for intervention.
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a highly prevalent psychiatric condition that frequently originates in early development and is associated with a variety of functional impairments. Despite a large functional neuroimaging literature on ADHD, our understanding of the neural basis of this disorder remains limited, and existing primary studies on the topic include somewhat divergent results.
Objectives
The present meta-analysis aims to advance our understanding of the neural basis of ADHD by identifying the most statistically robust patterns of abnormal neural activation throughout the whole-brain in individuals diagnosed with ADHD compared to age-matched healthy controls.
Methods
We conducted a meta-analysis of task-based functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) activation studies of ADHD. This included, according to PRISMA guidelines, a comprehensive PubMed search and predetermined inclusion criteria as well as two independent coding teams who evaluated studies and included all task-based, whole-brain, fMRI activation studies that compared participants diagnosed with ADHD to age-matched healthy controls. We then performed multilevel kernel density analysis (MKDA) a well-established, whole-brain, voxelwise approach that quantitatively combines existing primary fMRI studies, with ensemble thresholding (p<0.05-0.0001) and multiple comparisons correction.
Results
Participants diagnosed with ADHD (N=1,550), relative to age-matched healthy controls (N=1,340), exhibited statistically significant (p<0.05-0.0001; FWE-corrected) patterns of abnormal activation in multiple brains of the cerebral cortex and basal ganglia across a variety of cognitive control tasks.
Conclusions
This study advances our understanding of the neural basis of ADHD and may aid in the development of new brain-based clinical interventions as well as diagnostic tools and treatment matching protocols for patients with ADHD. Future studies should also investigate the similarities and differences in neural signatures between ADHD and other highly comorbid psychiatric disorders.
The later career of British prehistorian Peggy Piggott, latterly Guido, is evaluated in this article, in a bid to further develop our understanding of women's participation in twentieth-century British archaeology. After WWII, when her husband Stuart Piggott was appointed to the Abercromby Chair in Edinburgh, she worked to assist his role. By the early 1950s, she had co-directed and published eight hillfort excavations, advancing our understanding of prehistoric architecture before the advent of radiocarbon dating. The authors consider Peggy Piggott's contribution as a fieldworker, promoting open-area excavation and influencing the next generation. We also consider her thinking, as an early advocate for continuity and Childe's diffusionism, in contrast to the invasionist views of Christopher Hawkes and Stuart Piggott. The authors reflect on the role her marriage played in enabling and restricting her career, her work in 1960s Italy, her expertise in ancient glass beads, and her activity in retirement.
This article examines the development, early operation and subsequent failure of the Tot-Kolowa Red Cross irrigation scheme in Kenya’s Kerio Valley. Initially conceived as a technical solution to address regional food insecurity, the scheme aimed to scale up food production through the implementation of a fixed pipe irrigation system and the provision of agricultural inputs for cash cropping. A series of unfolding circumstances, however, necessitated numerous modifications to the original design as the project became increasingly entangled with deep and complex histories of land use patterns, resource allocation and conflict. Failure to understand the complexity of these dynamics ultimately led to the project’s collapse as the region spiralled into a period of significant unrest. In tracing these events, we aim to foreground the lived realities of imposed development, including both positive and negative responses to the scheme’s participatory obligations and its wider impact on community resilience.
Particle trapping and manipulation have a wide range of applications in biotechnology and engineering. Recently, a flow-based, particle-trapping device called the Stokes trap was developed for trapping and control of small particles in the intersection of multiple branches in a microfluidic channel. This device can also be used to perform rheological experiments to determine the viscoelastic response of an emulsion or suspension. We show that besides these applications, the various flow modes produced by the Stokes trap are able to manipulate drop shapes and induce active mixing inside droplets. To this end, we analyse the dynamics of a droplet in a Stokes trap through boundary-integral simulations. We also explore the dynamic response of drop shape with respect to distinct external flow modes, which allows us to perform numerical experiments such as step strain and oscillatory extension. A linear controller is used to manipulate drop position, and the drop deformation is characterized by a spherical-harmonic decomposition. For small drop deformations, we observe a linear superposition of harmonics, which, surprisingly, seems to hold even for moderate deformations. This result indicates that such a device can be used for shape control of droplets. We also investigate how the different flow modes may be combined to induce mixing inside the droplets. The transient combination of modes produces an effective chaotic mixing, which is characterized by a mixing number. The mixing inside the droplet can be further enhanced for lower viscosity ratios and low, but non-zero capillary number and flow frequencies.
We characterised the soils and vegetation in 15 sets of four quadrats on and around mounds of Macrotermes annandalei (Isoptera, Macrotermitinae) on a plain of deep dystric clay over limestone in Deciduous Dipterocarp Forest in Northern Thailand. Termites have excavated the mounds from the deep calcareous substrate. The mound soils have darker subsoils, larger contents of clays and exchangeable cations, and higher pH values than the surrounding dystric clay loams. The thickets on the mounds are visually different from the surrounding Deciduous Dipterocarp Forest. They have few dipterocarps and are floristically similar to the regionally important Mixed Deciduous Forest. The clear visual differences are confirmed by floristic similarity, cluster, and canonical correspondence analyses for each of the tree, sapling and seedling size classes. The differences between the mound clays and surrounding red clay loams and the associations between soil and forest types are confirmed by ‘t tests’ and the significant correlations of the soil base status with the main floristic axis of the canonical correspondence analyses. Soil variability due to termites and other agents of pedoturbation can significantly contribute to short-range floristic and structural diversity in some dry tropical forests.
Bromide-containing impurities were found to decrease the thermal stability of quaternary alkyl ammonium-modified layered silicates. Improved purification procedures completely removed bromide and led to a 20°C to >100°C increase in organic modified layered silicate thermal stability. Using mass spectrometry and thermal and electrochemical analysis, N,N-dimethyl-N,N-dioctadecyl quaternary ammonium-modified montmorillonite and fluorinated synthetic mica were found to degrade primarily through elimination and nucleophilic attack by these anions. The nature of residual bromides was identified and quantified, and the efficiency of removing these anions was found to be solvent dependent; sequential extraction, first ethanol then tetrahydrofuran, gave the best results. This exhaustive extraction method represents a viable alternative to the use of expensive, more thermally stable oniumion treatments for layered silicates.
Reducing meat consumption is essential to curb further climate change and limit the catastrophic environmental degradation resulting from the current global food system. However, consumers in industrialised countries are hesitant to reduce their meat intake, often because they find plant-based foods less appealing. Despite the climate emergency, eating meat is still perceived as the norm, and recommended in most national dietary guidelines. To support the transition to more sustainable diets by providing insights for increasing the appeal of plant-based foods to mainstream consumers, this review presents recent research findings on how people think and communicate about meat-based and plant-based foods. The key findings we review include: (1) while vegans think about plant-based foods in terms of enjoyable eating experiences, omnivores think about plant-based foods in terms of health, vegan identity and other abstract information that does not motivate consumption in the moment. (2) Packages of ready-meals and social media posts on Instagram present plant-based foods with fewer references to enjoyable eating experiences than meat-based foods. (3) Presenting plant-based foods with language that references enjoyable eating experiences increases their appeal, especially for habitual meat eaters. This language includes words about sensory features of the food (e.g., crunchy, creamy), eating context (e.g. pub; with family) and immediate positive consequences of eating (e.g. comforting, delicious). In contrast, the term ‘vegan’ is strongly associated with negative stereotypes. Hence, rather than referring to being vegan, meat-free or healthy, the language used for plant-based foods should refer to sensory appeal, attractive eating situations and enjoyment.