26 results match your criteria: "University of SheffieldSheffield[Affiliation]"
Objective: The Growth Hormone Research Society (GRS) convened a Workshop in 2017 to evaluate clinical endpoints, surrogate endpoints and biomarkers during GH treatment of children and adults and in patients with acromegaly.
Participants: GRS invited 34 international experts including clinicians, basic scientists, a regulatory scientist and physicians from the pharmaceutical industry.
Evidence: Current literature was reviewed and expert opinion was utilized to establish the state of the art and identify current gaps and unmet needs.
Front Psychol
September 2017
Department of Music, University of SheffieldSheffield, United Kingdom.
In this paper we explore early musical behaviors through the lenses of the recently emerged "4E" approach to mind, which sees cognitive processes as Embodied, Embedded, Enacted, and Extended. In doing so, we draw from a range of interdisciplinary research, engaging in critical and constructive discussions with both new findings and existing positions. In particular, we refer to observational research by French pedagogue and psychologist François Delalande, who examined infants' first "sound discoveries" and individuated three different musical "conducts" inspired by the "phases of the game" originally postulated by Piaget.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Microbiol
September 2017
Oxford Vaccine Group, Centre for Clinical Vaccinology and Tropical Medicine, Department of Paediatrics, and the Oxford National Institutes for Health Research Biomedical Research Centre, University of OxfordOxford, United Kingdom.
Current diagnostic tests for typhoid fever, the disease caused by Typhi, are poor. We aimed to identify serodiagnostic signatures of typhoid fever by assessing microarray signals to 4,445 . Typhi antigens in sera from 41 participants challenged with oral .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Neurosci
August 2017
Centre for Clinical Brain Sciences, UK Dementia Research Institute at the University of EdinburghEdinburgh, United Kingdom.
Despite a wealth of activity across the globe in the area of longitudinal population cohorts, surprisingly little information is available on the natural biomedical history of a number of age-related neurodegenerative diseases (ND), and the scope for intervention studies based on these cohorts is only just beginning to be explored. The Joint Programming Initiative on Neurodegenerative Disease Research (JPND) recently developed a novel funding mechanism to rapidly mobilize scientists to address these issues from a broad, international community perspective. Ten expert Working Groups, bringing together a diverse range of community members and covering a wide ND landscape [Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, frontotemporal degeneration, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), Lewy-body and vascular dementia] were formed to discuss and propose potential approaches to better exploiting and coordinating cohort studies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Microbiol
August 2017
The ithree Institute, University of Technology Sydney, SydneyNSW, Australia.
Front Physiol
August 2017
Academic Unit of Reproductive and Developmental Medicine, Department of Oncology and Metabolism, University of SheffieldSheffield, United Kingdom.
A major challenge in preventing preterm birth (PTB) is identifying women at greatest risk. This pilot study prospectively examined the differences in vaginal microbiota and metabolite profiles of women who delivered prematurely compared to their term counterparts in a cohort of asymptomatic (studied at 20-22, = 80; and 26-28 weeks, = 41) and symptomatic women (studied at 24-36 weeks, = 37). Using 16S rRNA sequencing, the vaginal microbiota from cervicovaginal fluid samples was characterized into five Community State Types (CST) dominated by spp.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
August 2017
Department of Medical and Surgical Sciences, University of BolognaBologna, Italy.
In occupational health interventions, there is a debate as to whether standardized or tailored measures should be used to identify which aspects of the psychosocial work environment should be targeted in order to improve employees' well-being. Using the Job Demands-Resources model, the main aim of the present study is to demonstrate how a mixed methods approach to conducting screening enables the identification of potential context-dependent demands and resources in the workplace, which should to be targeted by the intervention. Specifically, we used a mixed methods exploratory sequential research design.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Genet
July 2017
Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, University of SheffieldSheffield, United Kingdom.
Front Comput Neurosci
July 2017
Adaptive Behaviour Research Group, Department of Psychology, The University of SheffieldSheffield, United Kingdom.
The striatum is the primary input nucleus for the basal ganglia, and receives glutamatergic afferents from the cortex. Under the hypothesis that basal ganglia perform action selection, these cortical afferents encode potential "action requests." Previous studies have suggested the striatum may utilize a mutually inhibitory network of medium spiny neurons (MSNs) to filter these requests so that only those of high salience are selected.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Hum Neurosci
July 2017
Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, Tokyo University of Agriculture and TechnologyKoganei-shi, Japan.
Music perception involves complex brain functions. The relationship between music and brain such as cortical entrainment to periodic tune, periodic beat, and music have been well investigated. It has also been reported that the cerebral cortex responded more strongly to the periodic rhythm of unfamiliar music than to that of familiar music.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
July 2017
School of Psychology and Clinical Language Sciences, University of Reading MalaysiaIskandar Puteri, Malaysia.
Early childhood is a critical time for establishing food preferences and dietary habits. In order for appropriate advice to be available to parents and healthcare professionals it is essential for researchers to understand the ways in which children learn about foods. This review summarizes the literature relating to the role played by known developmental learning processes in the establishment of early eating behavior, food preferences and general knowledge about food, and identifies gaps in our knowledge that remain to be explored.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
July 2017
Acoustics Group, School of Architecture, University of SheffieldSheffield, United Kingdom.
Scientific research on how people perceive or experience and/or understand the acoustic environment as a whole (i.e., soundscape) is still in development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Genet
June 2017
Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, University of SheffieldSheffield, United Kingdom.
Recently, the geographical origins of Ashkenazic Jews (AJs) and their native language Yiddish were investigated by applying the Geographic Population Structure (GPS) to a cohort of exclusively Yiddish-speaking and multilingual AJs. GPS localized most AJs along major ancient trade routes in northeastern Turkey adjacent to primeval villages with names that resemble the word "Ashkenaz." These findings were compatible with the hypothesis of an Irano-Turko-Slavic origin for AJs and a Slavic origin for Yiddish and at odds with the Rhineland hypothesis advocating a Levantine origin for AJs and German origins for Yiddish.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
June 2017
Institute for Music Education, University of Music and Performing Arts GrazGraz, Austria.
Front Plant Sci
June 2017
Donald Danforth Plant Science Center, St. LouisMO, United States.
The geometries and topologies of leaves, flowers, roots, shoots, and their arrangements have fascinated plant biologists and mathematicians alike. As such, plant morphology is inherently mathematical in that it describes plant form and architecture with geometrical and topological techniques. Gaining an understanding of how to modify plant morphology, through molecular biology and breeding, aided by a mathematical perspective, is critical to improving agriculture, and the monitoring of ecosystems is vital to modeling a future with fewer natural resources.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Mol Neurosci
May 2017
Sheffield Institute for Translational Neuroscience (SITraN), Department of Neuroscience, University of SheffieldSheffield, UK.
Protein homeostasis (proteostasis), the correct balance between production and degradation of proteins, is essential for the health and survival of cells. Proteostasis requires an intricate network of protein quality control pathways (the proteostasis network) that work to prevent protein aggregation and maintain proteome health throughout the lifespan of the cell. Collapse of proteostasis has been implicated in the etiology of a number of neurodegenerative diseases, including amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), the most common adult onset motor neuron disorder.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Microbiol
April 2017
Department of Oral Biology, University at Buffalo, BuffaloNY, USA.
is a Gram-negative oral anaerobe associated with periodontitis. This bacterium is auxotrophic for the peptidoglycan amino sugar -acetylmuramic (MurNAc) and likely relies on scavenging peptidoglycan fragments (muropeptides) released by cohabiting bacteria during their cell wall recycling. Many Gram-negative bacteria utilize an inner membrane permease, AmpG, to transport peptidoglycan fragments into their cytoplasm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
September 2016
Department of Psychology, University of Sheffield Sheffield, UK.
This study examined in real time the role of sleep and daydreaming as potentiating states for subsequent dissociation in depersonalization/derealization disorder (DDD). Research and theory suggests that dissociation may be exacerbated and maintained by a labile sleep-wake cycle in which "dream-like" mentation intrudes into waking life and fuels dissociative symptoms. We explore and extend this idea by examining the state of daydreaming in dissociation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Cell Neurosci
August 2016
Department of Biology, University of KonstanzKonstanz, Germany; Zukunftskolleg, University of KonstanzKonstanz, Germany.
The Drosophila larva has a simple peripheral nervous system with a comparably small number of sensory neurons located externally at the head or internally along the pharynx to assess its chemical environment. It is assumed that larval taste coding occurs mainly via external organs (the dorsal, terminal, and ventral organ). However, the contribution of the internal pharyngeal sensory organs has not been explored.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Comput Neurosci
July 2016
Department of Biomedical Science, University of SheffieldSheffield, UK; State Key Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience and Learning, Beijing Normal UniversityBeijing, China.
Many diurnal photoreceptors encode vast real-world light changes effectively, but how this performance originates from photon sampling is unclear. A 4-module biophysically-realistic fly photoreceptor model, in which information capture is limited by the number of its sampling units (microvilli) and their photon-hit recovery time (refractoriness), can accurately simulate real recordings and their information content. However, sublinear summation in quantum bump production (quantum-gain-nonlinearity) may also cause adaptation by reducing the bump/photon gain when multiple photons hit the same microvillus simultaneously.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
April 2016
Centre for Performance Science, Royal College of Music London, UK.
What sets a great music performance apart? In this study, we addressed this question through an examination of value judgments in written criticism of recorded performance. One hundred reviews of recordings of Beethoven's piano sonatas, published in the Gramophone between 1934 and 2010, were analyzed through a three-step qualitative analysis that identified the valence (positive/negative) expressed by critics' statements and the evaluation criteria that underpinned their judgments. The outcome is a model of the main evaluation criteria used by professional critics: aesthetic properties, including intensity, coherence, and complexity, and achievement-related properties, including sureness, comprehension, and endeavor.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Neural Circuits
October 2016
Department of Biomedical Science, University of SheffieldSheffield, UK; National Key Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience and Learning, Beijing Normal UniversityBeijing, China.
Synaptic feedback from interneurons to photoreceptors can help to optimize visual information flow by balancing its allocation on retinal pathways under changing light conditions. But little is known about how this critical network operation is regulated dynamically. Here, we investigate this question by comparing signaling properties and performance of wild-type Drosophila R1-R6 photoreceptors to those of the hdc (JK910) mutant, which lacks the neurotransmitter histamine and therefore cannot transmit information to interneurons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Plant Sci
March 2016
Department of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology, University of Sheffield Sheffield, UK.
In the chlorophyll (Chl) biosynthesis pathway the formation of protochlorophyllide is catalyzed by Mg-protoporphyrin IX methyl ester (MgPME) cyclase. The Ycf54 protein was recently shown to form a complex with another component of the oxidative cyclase, Sll1214 (CycI), and partial inactivation of the ycf54 gene leads to Chl deficiency in cyanobacteria and plants. The exact function of the Ycf54 is not known, however, and further progress depends on construction and characterization of a mutant cyanobacterial strain with a fully inactivated ycf54 gene.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
February 2016
School of Psychology, University of Sussex Brighton, UK.
Estimates suggest that up to half of waking life is spent daydreaming; that is, engaged in thought that is independent of, and unrelated to, one's current task. Emerging research indicates that daydreams are predominately social suggesting that daydreams may serve socio-emotional functions. Here we explore the functional role of social daydreaming for socio-emotional adjustment during an important and stressful life transition (the transition to university) using experience-sampling with 103 participants over 28 days.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrobiology (Reading)
August 1998
Nitrogen Fixation Laboratory, John Innes CentreNorwich NR4 7UHUK.
A ferrous oxygenated form of cytochrome d is characteristic of all cytochrome bd-type oxidases so far examined, but its participation in enzyme turnover is unclear. It is relatively stable, occurs in aerated cell suspensions and predominates during enzyme preparation. In this study, diode-array reflectance spectrophotometry was used to assess the redox poise and oxygenation of cytochrome bd in vivo, in the aerobic diazotroph Azotobacter vinelandii.
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