Publications by authors named "Lassiter D"

Missing-link conditionals like "If bats have wings, Paris is in France" are generally felt to be unacceptable even though both clauses are true. According to the , this is explained by a conventional requirement of an inferential connection between conditional clauses. Bayesian theorists have denied the need for such a requirement, appealing instead to a requirement of discourse coherence that extends to all ways of connecting clauses.

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The knowledge-first approach is attractive and consistent with a wide variety of evidence. So is the opposing belief-first picture. I explain why the target article's criticisms of the latter fail, and argue that the outcome is a stalemate.

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During exercise, skeletal muscles release cytokines, peptides, and metabolites that exert autocrine, paracrine, or endocrine effects on glucose homeostasis. In this study, we investigated the effects of secreted protein acidic and rich in cysteine (SPARC), an exercise-responsive myokine, on glucose metabolism in human and mouse skeletal muscle. SPARC-knockout mice showed impaired systemic metabolism and reduced phosphorylation of AMPK and protein kinase B in skeletal muscle.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to identify genes regulated by AMPK in skeletal muscle, focusing on GDAP1, which is linked to mitochondrial function but not previously studied in this context.
  • AMPK activation was found to decrease GDAP1 expression, with levels being higher in type 2 diabetes patients and lower after exercise.
  • GDAP1 silencing in muscle cells led to increased mitochondrial protein levels and altered metabolism, suggesting its role in regulating metabolism and circadian genes in skeletal muscle.
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Adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase (AMPK) controls glucose and lipid metabolism and modulates inflammatory responses to maintain metabolic and inflammatory homeostasis during low cellular energy levels. The AMPK activator 5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide-1-β-4-ribofuranoside (AICAR) interferes with inflammatory pathways in skeletal muscle, but the mechanisms are undefined. We hypothesized that AMPK activation reduces cytokine mRNA levels by blocking transcription through one or several transcription factors.

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Aims/hypothesis: Insulin-mediated signals and AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK)-mediated signals are activated in response to physiological conditions that represent energy abundance and shortage, respectively. Focal adhesion kinase (FAK) is implicated in insulin signalling and cancer progression in various non-muscle cell types and plays a regulatory role during skeletal muscle differentiation. The role of FAK in skeletal muscle in relation to insulin stimulation or AMPK activation is unknown.

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Aims: Do biobanks enact policies and plans that allow them to anticipate and respond to potential challenges? If a biobank has one such policy or plan, is it likely to have more? Using survey data from 456 U.S. biobanks, we assess four possible indicators of such "forward-thinking.

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DNA methylation is altered by environmental factors. We hypothesized that DNA methylation is altered in skeletal muscle in response to either insulin or glucose exposure. We performed a genome-wide DNA methylation analysis in muscle from healthy men before and after insulin exposure.

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Background: Laws governing abortion provision are proliferating throughout the United States, yet little is known about how these laws affect providers. We investigated the experiences of abortion providers in North Carolina practicing under the 2011 Women's Right to Know Act, which mandates that women receive counseling with specific, state-prescribed information at least 24 hours prior to an abortion. We focus here on a subset of the data to examine one strategy by which providers worked to minimize moral conflicts generated by the counseling procedure.

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Much of the debate on conscience has addressed the ethics of refusal: the rights of providers to refuse to perform procedures to which they object and the interests of the patients who might be harmed by their refusals. But conscience can also be a positive force, grounding decision about offering care.

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Background: Before 2010, donor detection rate and donor conversion rate at our tertiary level care institution were low. To assess the effectiveness of the implemented organizational changes, an analysis of organizational indicators with the use of the DOPKI (Improving the Knowledge and Practices in Organ Donation) project was conducted.

Methods: Three groups of DOPKI indicators were used: indicators of the potential for deceased organ donation, indicators on areas for improvement in the deceased donation process, and indicators of program effectiveness.

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We determined the effects of "periodized nutrition" on skeletal muscle and whole body responses to a bout of prolonged exercise the following morning. Seven cyclists completed two trials receiving isoenergetic diets differing in the timing of ingestion: they consumed either 8 g/kg body mass (BM) of carbohydrate (CHO) before undertaking an evening session of high-intensity training (HIT) and slept without eating (FASTED), or consumed 4 g/kg BM of CHO before HIT, then 4 g/kg BM of CHO before sleeping (FED). The next morning subjects completed 2 h of cycling (120SS) while overnight fasted.

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The "new paradigm" unifying deductive and inductive reasoning in a Bayesian framework (Oaksford & Chater, 2007; Over, 2009) has been claimed to be falsified by results which show sharp differences between reasoning about necessity vs. plausibility (Heit & Rotello, 2010; Rips, 2001; Rotello & Heit, 2009). We provide a probabilistic model of reasoning with modal expressions such as "necessary" and "plausible" informed by recent work in formal semantics of natural language, and show that it predicts the possibility of non-linear response patterns which have been claimed to be problematic.

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The empirical literature on the ethical, legal, and social implications (ELSI) of biobanking has almost entirely relied on the perspectives of those outside of biobanks, such as the general public, researchers, and specimen contributors. Little attention has been paid to the perspectives and practices of those who operate biobanks. We conducted a study of U.

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Background/aims: Efforts to improve individual and population health increasingly rely on large-scale collections of human biological specimens and associated data. Such collections or 'biobanks' are hailed as valuable resources for facilitating translational biomedical research. However, biobanks also raise important ethical considerations, such as whether, how and why biobanks might engage with those who contributed specimens.

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Certain amino acids have been reported to influence carbohydrate metabolism and blood glucose clearance, as well as improve the glucose tolerance in animal models. We hypothesized that an amino acid mixture consisting of isoleucine and 4 additional amino acids would improve the glucose response of healthy overweight men and women to an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT). Twenty-two overweight healthy subjects completed 2 OGTTs after consuming 2 different test beverages.

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Carbohydrate-protein supplementation has been found to increase the rate of training adaptation when provided postresistance exercise. The present study compared the effects of a carbohydrate and protein supplement in the form of chocolate milk (CM), isocaloric carbohydrate (CHO), and placebo on training adaptations occurring over 4.5 weeks of aerobic exercise training.

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Intestinal resection is followed by structural and functional adaptation of the remnant, including motor adaptation. Since changes also occur in intestinal smooth muscle, our aim was to determine whether changes in motor function are related to changes in smooth muscle contractility. Eighteen dogs underwent transection alone (GPI, n=6), 50% distal resection (GP II, n = 6) and 50% distal resection with jejunocolostomy (GP III, n = 6).

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Background: Calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) is a 37-amino acid peptide localized to primary sensory afferent nerves in the rat stomach. The actions of CGRP in regulating antral neuroendocrine function were examined in vitro through the use of capsaicin, an agent capable of evoking neuropeptide release from peripheral sensory nerve endings. These results were compared with the effects of exogenous CGRP and CGRP antagonist, CGRP8-37.

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Actions of human calcitonin-gene related peptide (hCGRP) on acetylcholine (ACh) discharge and gastrin and somatostatin release from rat antral mucosal-submucosal fragments were examined in both dynamic perifusion experiments and short-term static incubation studies. The principal findings of the dynamic perifusion experiments were that hCGRP exerted a dual or biphasic effect on ACh discharge and gastrin release. Initial exposure of antral tissues to hCGRP (1 x 10(-8) M) resulted in stimulation of both ACh and gastrin release that was of brief duration.

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gamma-Aminobutyric acid, a neurotransmitter in the central nervous system, has been shown to be present in and synthesized and secreted by rodent and feline myenteric plexus neurons. The aims of the present studies were to measure gamma-aminobutyric acid concentrations and synthesis and to establish cellular localization and uptake of gamma-aminobutyric acid by immunocytochemistry and autoradiography, respectively, within mucosal and submucosal tissues of the rat antrum. Direct demonstration of [3H]gamma-aminobutyric acid release and the effects of exogenous gamma-aminobutyric acid and muscimol, a GABA alpha agonist, on [3H]acetylcholine release from antral mucosal/submucosal fragments were examined in perifusion experiments.

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Two thousand nine hundred and ninety-four reports of OSHA-reportable occupational injury or illness cases in 1984 from member companies of a national trade association of semiconductor manufacturing firms were analyzed. The 37 participating manufacturing facilities represented 16 companies employing over 95,000 persons, or approximately one-third of the U.S.

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Histamine released within walls of resistance blood vessels is suggested to mediate an active portion of baroreceptor-mediated neurogenic vasodilatation in skeletal muscle vasculature. Studies were undertaken to examine the possibility that histamine-mediated active vasodilatation could be effected, in part, by an inhibitory presynaptic action of histamine on vascular sympathetic varicosities. All experiments were conducted in constant-flow autoperfused rat hindquarters in which vasoconstrictor responses were evoked by sympathetic chain (L2-4) stimulation at varying frequencies or intraarterial norepinephrine (0.

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