166 results match your criteria: "Ashland University[Affiliation]"
Sci Total Environ
October 2014
Occupational Knowledge International, San Francisco, CA, USA. Electronic address:
Blood lead levels have decreased following the removal of lead from gasoline in most of the world. However, numerous recent studies provide evidence that elevated blood lead levels persist in many low and middle-income countries around the world at much higher prevalence than in the more developed countries. One potential source of lead exposure that has not been widely investigated is the leaching of lead from artisanal aluminum cookware, which is commonly used in the developing world.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRes Dev Disabil
November 2014
Department of Inclusive Services and Exceptional Learners, Ashland University, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, United States. Electronic address:
The barriers that people with disabilities face around the world are not only inherent in the limitations resulting from the disability itself, but, more importantly, these barriers rest with the societal technologies of exclusion. A multiple regression analysis was conducted to examine the statistical relationship between the national level of development, the level of democratization, and the level of education of a country's population on one hand, and expressed concern for people with disabilities on another hand. The results reveal that a greater worry for the well-being of people with disabilities is correlated with a high level of country development, a decreased value of political stability and absence of violence, a decreased level of government effectiveness, and a greater level of law enforcement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Transcult Nurs
May 2015
Ashland University, Mansfield, OH, USA.
Addressing the health care needs of a 21st-century nation that is experiencing increased diversity and disparity will require new models of educating future providers. The cultural competence and confidence model was the guiding framework in a study evaluating the influence of cultural educational offerings on the transcultural self-efficacy (TSE) perceptions in baccalaureate nursing students. The Transcultural Self-Efficacy Tool was used to measure perceived TSE in a pretest (N = 260), posttest (N = 236) study over an academic year.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Undergrad Neurosci Educ
April 2014
Psychology Department, Ashland University, Ashland, OH 44805.
Gallup and Beckstead's (1988) commentary in the American Psychologist reported an assessment of college student's attitudes toward animal research. Among many findings, one main conclusion reached by the authors was that the participants in their study were generally concerned about the welfare of animals used in research, but that they also appreciated and valued the need for animal experimentation. Given the declining support for animal research from the general population over the past few decades, the present study administered the same questionnaire to a contemporary sample of university students to determine whether any patterns would emerge in a current sample's responses to these items.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
November 2014
Department of Psychology, Ashland University, Ashland, Ohio, United States of America.
According to much research, the Own Group Bias (OGB) in face memory occurs as a consequence of social categorization - ingroup members are more likely than outgroup members to be encoded as individuals and remembered well. The current work is an examination of the role of anticipated future interaction in the OGB. We conducted two studies showing that anticipated interaction influences group-based face memory.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBacteriophage
January 2014
Department of Biology/Toxicology; Ashland University; Ashland, OH USA.
Designing lab exercises for introductory biology classes requires balancing the need for students to obtain results with a desire to provide unpredictable outcomes to better approximate actual research. Bacteriophage are particularly well suited for this as many species are well-understood but, with their hosts, represent a relatively complex interacting system. I have designed a seven week series of lab exercises that allow students to select bacteriophage resistant mutant hosts, isolate and sequence the corresponding receptor gene to identify the specific bacterial mutation from a large number of potential mutations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Environ Contam Toxicol
February 2014
Department of Biology/Toxicology, Ashland University, Ashland, OH, 44805, USA,
Mixture toxicity for each of four ethyl α-halogenated acetates with each of three α-halogenated acetonitriles (xANs) was assessed. Inhibition of bioluminescence in Vibrio fischeri was measured after 15, 30, and 45 min of exposure. Concentration-response curves were developed for each chemical at each exposure duration and used to develop predicted concentration-response curves for the dose-addition and independence models of combined effect.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAppl Nurs Res
November 2013
Ashland University Dwight Schar College of Nursing and Health Sciences, Mansfield, OH, USA, 44906. Electronic address:
Disaster preparedness is more complex for persons with chronic illness, who may require specific planning to address unique needs. Research suggests that advance preparation and evacuation during a disaster leads to better health outcomes. Individuals access, and rely on, health information via online sources.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExp Eye Res
November 2013
Department of Biology, Ashland University, 401 College Avenue, Ashland, OH 44805, USA. Electronic address:
Alpha crystallins are small heat shock proteins essential to normal ocular lens function. They also help maintain homeostasis in many non-ocular vertebrate tissues and their expression levels change in multiple diseases of the nervous and cardiovascular system and during cancer. The specific roles that α-crystallins may play in eye development are unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Med Genet A
September 2013
Ashland University, Seattle, Washington, USA.
J Couns Psychol
July 2013
Counseling and Health Services, University of Massachusetts.
This study tested a theoretical model of one mediator and 4 moderators of the relationships between 2 masculinity variables (Traditional Masculinity Ideology and Gender Role Conflict) and Attitudes Toward Seeking Professional Psychological Services (Attitudes). Self-stigma was the hypothesized mediator, and the hypothesized moderators were (a) Depression, (b) General Self-efficacy, (c) Precontemplation, and (d) Barriers to Help-seeking. A sample of 654 men responded to an online survey of 9 questionnaires.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrends Microbiol
May 2013
Department of Biology, Ashland University, 401 College Avenue, Ashland, OH 44805, USA.
Bacteriophages are viruses of bacteria that are used for controlling bacterial food-borne pathogens and have been proposed for more extensive usage in infection control. Protists are now recognised to harbour viruses and virus-like particles. We propose that investigation of their prevalence in parasites be intensified.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Psychosoc Nurs Ment Health Serv
April 2013
Ashland University, Mansfield, OH, USA.
The first major attempts to categorize psychiatric disorders in the United States occurred in the mid-1800s, when census data were collected that included "insanity" and "idiocy" of household members. In Europe, Florence Nightingale promoted the use of non-fatal disease classification for morbidity and treatment in 1860. By the late 1800s, Kraepelin categorized disorders, and his sixth edition of the Compendium der Psychiatrie was widely adopted by both Europeans and Americans.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Psychosoc Nurs Ment Health Serv
April 2013
Ashland University, Mansfield, OH, USA.
Scheduled for publication in May 2013, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, fifth edition (DSM-5), will guide clinical diagnoses, treatment plans, medication choices and protocols, insurance reimbursements, and research agendas throughout the United States. It will also serve as a reference manual for clinicians around the world. This primary diagnostic source used by psychiatric and mental health providers is undergoing significant change in organization and content relative to the previous edition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Vis
September 2013
Department of Biology, Ashland University, Ashland, OH 44805, USA.
Purpose: The roles that crystallin proteins play during lens development are not well understood. Similarities in the adult crystallin composition of mammalian and zebrafish lenses have made the latter a valuable model for examining lens function. In this study, we describe the changing zebrafish lens proteome during development to identify ontogenetic shifts in crystallin expression that may provide insights into age-specific functions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Ecol
February 2013
Department of Chemistry, Ashland University, Ashland, OH 44805, USA.
Gallic acid has been reported to be responsible for the invasive success of nonnative genotypes of Phragmites australis in North America. We have been unable to confirm previous reports of persistent high concentrations of gallic acid in the rhizosphere of invasive P. australis, and of high concentrations of gallic acid and gallotannins in P.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
July 2012
Department of Biology, Ashland University, Ashland, Ohio, United States of America.
Small heat shock proteins (sHsps) maintain cellular homeostasis by preventing stress and disease-induced protein aggregation. While it is known that hydrophobicity impacts the ability of sHsps to bind aggregation-prone denaturing proteins, the complex quaternary structure of globular sHsps has made understanding the significance of specific changes in hydrophobicity difficult. Here we used recombinant protein of the lenticular sHsp α A-crystallin from six teleost fishes environmentally adapted to temperatures ranging from -2°C to 40°C to identify correlations between physiological temperature, protein stability and chaperone-like activity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Appl Microbiol
April 2016
Department of Biology, Ashland University, Ashland, Ohio, USA.
Although people taking different approaches in the field of nanotechnology may target different size ranges, broadly, nanotechnology has the goal of creating structures in the 1-100 nm size range. This is the same size range that bacteriophages synthesize capsids. Bacteriophages also have the desirable property of self-fabrication or self-assembly--much of capsid structural assembly information is a function of the capsid proteins themselves rather than requiring other proteins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFToxicology
February 2012
Department of Biology/Toxicology, Ashland University, Ashland, OH 44805, USA.
In mixture toxicity, concentration-effect data are often used to generate conclusions on combined effect. While models of combined effect are available for such assessments, proper fitting of the data is critical to obtaining accurate conclusions. In this study an asymmetry parameter (s) was evaluated for data-fitting and compared with our previous approach.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFScientifica (Cairo)
November 2013
Department of Biology, Ashland University, 401 College Avenue, Ashland, OH 44805, USA.
Life forms can be roughly differentiated into those that are microscopic versus those that are not as well as those that are multicellular and those that, instead, are unicellular. Cellular organisms seem generally able to host viruses, and this propensity carries over to those that are both microscopic and less than truly multicellular. These viruses of microorganisms, or VoMs, in fact exist as the world's most abundant somewhat autonomous genetic entities and include the viruses of domain Bacteria (bacteriophages), the viruses of domain Archaea (archaeal viruses), the viruses of protists, the viruses of microscopic fungi such as yeasts (mycoviruses), and even the viruses of other viruses (satellite viruses).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPercept Mot Skills
October 2011
Department of Sport Sciences, Ashland University, 245 RSSC, Ashland, OH 44805, USA.
Older adults may be susceptible to injury during high-intensity resistance exercise. It has been suggested that it may be more protective to predict one-repetition maximum (1-RM) than to measure it because of the high intensity associated with 1-RM testing, but it may be necessary to measure 1-RM for functional, diagnostic, or clinical purposes. The method of using the OMNI Resistance Exercise Scale (OMNI-RES) was examined as a guide for hexagenarian adults in estimating 1-RM.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Res Bull
January 2012
Department of Biology/Toxicology, 401 College Avenue, Ashland University, Ashland, OH 44805, USA.
Neuregulin-1 (NRG1) is a trophic and differentiation factor that signals through ErbB receptor tyrosine kinases to regulate nervous system development. Previous studies have demonstrated that NRG1 affects plasticity at glutamatergic synapses in principal glutamatergic neurons of the hippocampus and frontal cortex; however, immunohistochemical and genetic analyses strongly suggest these effects are indirect and mediated via ErbB4 receptors on GABAergic interneurons. Here, we used cultured cerebellar granule cells (CGCs) that express ErbB4 to analyze the cell-autonomous effects of NRG1 stimulation on glutamatergic function.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Soc Psychol
July 2011
Ashland University, Department of Psychology, 156 Schar College of Education, 401 College Ave., Ashland, OH 44805, USA.
Individuals with an unrestricted sociosexual orientation (SO) are less committed to their romantic relationships and more likely to engage in infidelity. Furthermore, commitment is negatively associated with tendencies to cheat. However, no previous research has examined the possible mediating role of commitment in the relationship between SO and infidelity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Gen Psychol
June 2011
Ashland University, Ashland, OH 44805, USA.
Directed forgetting (DF) occurs when stimuli presented during the study phase are followed by "forget" and "remember" cues. On a subsequent memory test, poor memory is observed for stimuli followed by the forget cues, compared to stimuli followed by the remember cues. Although DF is most commonly observed with verbal tasks, the present study extended intentional forgetting research for nonverbal stimuli and examined whether faces were susceptible to DF.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Environ Contam Toxicol
November 2011
Department of Biology/Toxicology, Ashland University, OH 44805, USA.
Four ethyl α-halogenated acetates were tested in (1) sham and (2) nonsham combinations and (3) with a nonreactive nonpolar narcotic. Ethyl iodoacetate (EIAC), ethyl bromoacetate (EBAC), ethyl chloroacetate (ECAC), and ethyl fluoroacetate (EFAC), each considered to be an SN2-H-polar soft electrophile, were selected for testing based on their differences in electro(nucleo)philic reactivity and time-dependent toxicity (TDT). Agent reactivity was assessed using the model nucleophile glutathione, with EIAC and EBAC showing rapid reactivity, ECAC being less reactive, and EFAC lacking reactivity at ≤250 mM.
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