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2022 ◽  
pp. 239-284
Author(s):  
Barbara A. Williams ◽  
◽  
Michael J. Gidley ◽  

This chapter examines interactions of dietary fibre components of pig diets with GIT microbiota, emphasizing cereals and legumes fed to pigs. Carbohydrate composition of these feedstuffs are described, and their relationship to metabolic activity of the porcine intestinal microbiota and interactions with the host. Fermentable carbohydrates which act as substrates for microbial metabolism are described, followed by an assessment of cereals and legumes as potential modulators of intestinal microbiota. Past work focussed on purified extracts, but attention is now focussing on whole grains or their fractions such as brans, in terms of effects on microbial populations. Such studies are showing the positive consequences of mixtures of DF in the form of complex plant cellular structures, rather than single refined ingredients, to achieve beneficial health outcomes. Further work is also needed to define appropriate quantities and types of DF to achieve desired effects whilst minimising negative outcomes.


2022 ◽  
pp. 1868-1883
Author(s):  
Hitoshi Iwashita

This chapter aims to identify and investigate the transferability of Japanese management practices in Asia and the West. Through a review of existing literature regarding Japanese management practices in Asia and the West, it attempts to identity and further explain how Japanese management practices can be (non-)transferrable into different national contexts. In the past, work on Japanese management practices had mainly focused on their cost-effectiveness in the Western countries. In and after the 2000s, however, this focus on the Western contexts has been gradually shifting to Asia institutionally (i.e., local labour market and regulations) while becoming culturally closer to Japan (i.e., in terms of national culture, such as collectivism and hierarchy). This chapter therefore tries to establish whether or not Japanese management practices can be (non-)transferrable into Asian contexts; if so, why so? If not, why not?


2021 ◽  
pp. 026540752110617
Author(s):  
Jennifer A. Kam ◽  
Monica Cornejo ◽  
Roselia Mendez Murillo ◽  
Tamara D. Afifi

Given the stress that college students with Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) experience and their minoritized status, some colleges have offered allyship training that informs campus personnel of the unique experiences of DACA and DACA-ineligible students. Although such trainings are promising, limited research has explored what actions communicate allyship to undocumented college students, including those with DACA. We conducted semi-structured interviews with 40 DACA college students and identified six themes: (a) allyship as an action-oriented, lifelong learning process, (b) allyship through supportive communication, (c) allyship without judgment or abnormal treatment, (d) visible allyship through the creation of safe spaces, (e) allyship as advocacy, and (f) allyship without self-promotion. Academics and activists have conceptualized and critiqued allyship. Nevertheless, this study extends past work by considering how DACA college students view the communication of allyship, which is important if allyship is to be encouraged or challenged in higher education and elsewhere.


2021 ◽  
pp. 014616722110637
Author(s):  
Alexander G. Fulmer ◽  
Taly Reich

Creations can be fundamentally intended or unintended from their outset. Past work has focused on intentional creations, finding that people place a premium on effort. We examine the role of unintentionality in the inception of creations in six studies using a variety of stimuli ( N = 1,965), finding that people offer a premium to unintentional creations versus otherwise identical intentional creations. We demonstrate that the unintentionality involved in the inception of a creation results in greater downward counterfactual thought about how the unintentional creation may have never been created at all, and this in turn heightens perceptions that the creation was a product of fate, causing people to place a premium on such creations. We provide evidence for this causal pathway using a combination of mediation and moderation approaches. Further, we illuminate that this premium is not offered when a negative outcome is ascribed to an unintentional creation.


Atmosphere ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 5
Author(s):  
Bantwale D. Enyew ◽  
Ademe Mekonnen

This study revisited the association of African easterly waves (AEWs) to Atlantic tropical cyclone (TC) development using weather states (WSs) from the International Satellite Cloud Climatology Project, National Hurricane Center best track hurricane data (HURDAT2), and reanalysis products. The WS data are used as a proxy for two different types of deep convection. This study covers July–October 1984–2009. Statistical analysis based on HURDAT2 and objectively tracked AEWs has shown that a small fraction (~20%) of the AEWs that propagate from Africa serve as TC precursors. About 80% of the AEWs from the continent were non-developing. As in the past work, our study showed an important difference between developing and non-developing AEWs. Composites based on developing AEWs revealed well-organized large scale deep convection (one type, composed of mesoscale systems and thick anvil clouds) is tightly coupled to the AEW trough, while scattered, less well-organized deep convection (second type, isolated cumulonimbus and cumulus congestus clouds) dominated a large area downstream of the developing AEW trough. Developing AEWs propagate westwards while strengthening. In contrast, non-developing AEWs showed that the peak well-organized deep convection is located either behind (to the east of) or far ahead (to the west) of the AEW trough (peaks values are not in close proximity). Moreover, well-organized deep convections associated with non-developing AEWs were weaker than those associated with developing AEWs. The results indicated that convective activity ahead of the non-developing AEWs is weak. Positive relative humidity (RH) anomalies dominate the area around AEWs and downstream over the main TC development region. In contrast, negative RH dominated the main TC development region ahead of non-developing AEWs, suggesting an unfavorable environment downstream of the AEWs. The results also showed that developing AEWs maintained stronger features in the lower and middle troposphere, while non-developing AEWs exhibited weaker structures, in agreement with past work. (Supplemental information related to this paper is available at the journal’s website of this edition).


Author(s):  
Michalis Pachilakis ◽  
Panagiotis Papadopoulos ◽  
Nikolaos Laoutaris ◽  
Evangelos P. Markatos ◽  
Nicolas Kourtellis

The Real Time Bidding (RTB) protocol is by now more than a decade old. During this time, a handful of measurement papers have looked at bidding strategies, personal information flow, and cost of display advertising through RTB. In this paper, we present YourAdvalue, a privacy-preserving tool for displaying to end-users in a simple and intuitive manner their advertising value as seen through RTB. Using YourAdvalue, we measure desktop RTB prices in the wild, and compare them with desktop and mobile RTB prices reported by past work. We present how it estimates ad prices that are encrypted, and how it preserves user privacy while reporting results back to a data-server for analysis. We deployed our system, disseminated its browser extension, and collected data from 200 users, including 12000 ad impressions over 11 months. By analyzing this dataset, we show that desktop RTB prices have grown 4.6x over desktop RTB prices measured in 2013, and 3.8x over mobile RTB prices measured in 2015. We also study how user demographics associate with the intensity of RTB ecosystem tracking, leading to higher ad prices. We find that exchanging data between advertisers and/or data brokers through cookie-synchronization increases the median value of display ads by 19%. We also find that female and younger users are more targeted, suffering more tracking (via cookie synchronization) than male or elder users. As a result of this targeting in our dataset, the advertising value (i) of women is 2.4x higher than that of men, (ii) of 25-34 year-olds is 2.5x higher than that of 35-44 year-olds, (iii) is most expensive on weekends and early mornings.


2021 ◽  
pp. 0092055X2110634
Author(s):  
Monica Merrill

Sociology curricula often house a variety of “hot button” or contentious topics (e.g., race relations, crime and deviance, personal freedoms/choice, gender). While departments may be giving more attention to ensuring that these topics are included in their curriculum, here I argue that we also need to engage students in reflection about their gut reaction to these divisive topics. How students take in the material will affect their ability to successfully meet the learning outcomes throughout their program. This research was guided by past work categorizing student reactions into three categories: resistance, paralysis, and rage. Preliminary results are presented, and a fourth reaction, paralysis by proxy, is also proposed. Last is a discussion of how we as educators can integrate research on student reactions into course design/implementation, thus setting students up for success.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Hamoodh ◽  
S. Fotios

In subsidiary roads, lighting is installed to meet the needs of pedestrians after dark for safety and their feeling of safety. One aspect is the need to evaluate other people to inform the approach-or-avoid decision. To investigate how changes in lighting matter for this task, we first need to know where people tend to look. Much past work assumes the face is the critical target but this assumption has yet to be tested. A pilot study suggested ability to see the hands and face were significant cues, but did not enable their separate contributions to be identified. This paper describes a second experiment conducted to compare the effect of changes in face and hand concealment on evaluations of safety. The results suggest significant differences between levels of face concealment but smaller differences for changes in hand concealment. The findings from both experiments support the importance of the face for evaluating other pedestrians.


Author(s):  
Hindustan Abdul Ahad ◽  
Rahul Raghav Dasari ◽  
Chinthaginjala Haranath ◽  
Madana Gowthami ◽  
Naga Jyothi Varam ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

The point of present writing is gathering past work done on mucoadhesive bilayered tablets. Numerous specialists are getting pulled towards these systems to plan of examinations in the streamlining of medication conveyance frameworks as very few studies were advanced till date. Mucoadhesive system is simple to create, utilize, and easily accessible to evaluate the results. The authors made an adequate attempt to bring a platform on various polymers utilized in the advancement mucoadhesive bilayered tablets.


2021 ◽  
pp. 014616722110399
Author(s):  
Mattea Sim ◽  
Steven M. Almaraz ◽  
Kurt Hugenberg

Five experiments investigate the hypothesis that heavier weight individuals are denied mental agency (i.e., higher order cognitive and intentional capacities), but not experience (e.g., emotional and sensory capacities), relative to average weight individuals. Across studies, we find that as targets increase in weight, they are denied mental agency; however, target weight has no reliable influence on ascriptions of experience (Studies 1a–2b). Furthermore, the de-mentalization of heavier weight targets was associated with both disgust and beliefs about targets’ physical agency (Study 3). Finally, de-mentalization affected role assignments. Heavier weight targets were rated as helpful for roles requiring experiential but not mentally agentic faculties (Study 4). Heavier weight targets were also less likely than chance to be categorized into a career when it was described as requiring mental agency (versus experience; Study 5). These findings suggest novel insights into past work on weight stigma, wherein discrimination often occurs in domains requiring mental agency.


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