Publications by authors named "R Cadet"

The Covid-19 pandemic has led millions of students worldwide to intensify their use of digital education. This massive change is not reflected by the scant scientific research on the effectiveness of methods relying on digital learning compared to other innovative and more popular methods involving face-to-face interactions. Here, we tested the effectiveness of computer-assisted instruction (CAI) in Science and Technology compared to inquiry-based learning (IBL), another modern method which, however, requires students to interact with each other in the classroom.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Rabies is a serious disease that needs quick and accurate diagnosis to prevent its spread, with the direct fluorescent antibody (DFA) test currently being the standard method for post-mortem diagnosis.
  • - The LN34 pan-lyssavirus real-time RT-PCR assay shows great promise for diagnosing rabies, offering high sensitivity and the ability to work with various tissue types, even those that are deteriorated.
  • - In a study involving nearly 3,000 samples across several regions, the LN34 assay proved to be highly reliable, outperforming the DFA test in certain cases, revealing its potential for enhancing rabies diagnostics and surveillance efforts.
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After its production in the testis, a spermatozoon has to undergo posttesticular maturation steps to become fully motile and fertile. The first step is epididymal maturation, during which immature spermatozoa are transformed into biochemically mature cells ready to proceed to the next step, capacitation, a physiological process occurring in the female genital tract. The biochemical transformations include modification of sperm lipid composition during epididymal transit, with significant changes in fatty acids, phospholipids, and sterols between the caput and the cauda epididymal spermatozoa.

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Gamete DNA integrity is one key parameter conditioning reproductive success as well as the quality of life for the offspring. In particular, damage to the male nucleus can have profound negative effects on the outcome of fertilization. Because of the absence of repair activity of the quiescent mature spermatozoa it is easily subjected to nuclear damage, of which oxidative damage is by far the most prominent.

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