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Seven years passed since the discovery of lin−4’s unique properties and then, around the turn of the millennium, the research floodgates opened. This chapter tracks the nascent field of microRNA research, the frenetic race to discover and catalogue new microRNAs and find the organisms in which they were made. MicroRNAs held a prominent position in evolution, their number and diversity expanding at key transitions to more complex life, including for our own species, Homo sapiens. MicroRNAs, it would become clear, are the genome’s solution to how to control the natural fluctuations, randomness and noise in gene expression. The chapter also covers the pivotal experiments that laid the ground rules for how microRNAs work and revealed their effects on gene expression. Along the way, a selection of the scientific toolkit gets special attention, including some of the models used to find microRNAs and the technologies that would prove that microRNAs, despite their small size and limited number in genomes, controlled the vast majority of gene activity in our cells.
Operationalization guidance is needed to support health technology assessment (HTA) bodies considering implementing lifecycle HTA (LC-HTA) approaches. The 2022 Health Technology Assessment International (HTAi) Global Policy Forum (GPF) established a Task Force to develop a position paper on LC-HTA. In its first paper, the Task Force established a definition and framework for LC-HTA in order to tailor it to specific decision problems. This second paper focused on the provision of practical operational guidance to implement LC-HTA. Detailed descriptions of the three LC-HTA operational steps are provided (defining the decision problem, sequencing of HTA activities, and developing optimization criteria) and accompanied by worked examples and an operationalization checklist with 20 different questions for HTA bodies to consider when developing an LC-HTA approach. The questions were designed to be applicable across different types of HTA and scenarios, and require adaptation to local jurisdictions, remits, and context.
This chapter provides details of the molecular techniques in use to detect viral RNA and DNA, including PCR, NAAT, nested PCR, multiplex PCR, real time PCR, quantitative PCR, LAMP, TMA, microarrays, sequencing and point-of-care tests and their utility.
The rise of sequencing technologies has greatly contributed to our knowledge of the microbiota and its role in animal health and production. However, many members of the microbiota have historically been considered “unculturable.” Culturomics can be utilized to bring these fastidious microbes into cultivation and can be used in conjunction with culture-independent methods to study the microbiota in a more comprehensive manner. This review paper details culturomics’ role in revolutionizing human, swine, and bovine microbiota research and how its use has greatly increased the bacterial repertoire. Additionally, it describes how culturomics can be applied to develop microbiota-derived therapeutics, such as next-generation probiotics, and to study the role of the microbiota. Finally, this review provides potential methods and considerations for designing future culturomics studies.
Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) evolution has given rise to new variants: viruses with different sets of mutations, some of which have increased transmissibility and immune escape. Detecting and monitoring new variants was made possible by intensive, global genomic surveillance efforts, including sequencing over 1.2 million SARS-CoV-2 genomes in the first pandemic year. Crucial to these efforts was the Rapid Acceleration of Diagnostics (RADx®) Variant Task Force, which was established in 2021 to monitor variants and assess the efficacy of RADx technologies against new variants. Major accomplishments of the RADx Variant Task Force include the establishment of the ROSALIND Diagnostic Monitoring system to identify mutations, the creation of an extensive biobank of sequenced samples, laboratory testing of RADx technologies against new variants as they emerged, and epitope mapping to identify mutations likely to affect an assay’s performance. Key lessons learned include (1) the need for very early establishment of pathogen sequencing, analysis, and data sharing; (2) the importance of both in silico and wet laboratory assessment of diagnostic assays; and (3) the benefits of interdisciplinary collaboration of government, academia, and industry.
To date, ~1% of all bacteria that occur in environmental ecosystems such as soil, sedimentary rocks, and groundwater have been described. Comprehensive explanation of ecological interactions on a microscale level is thus almost impossible. The Dynamic Cultivation System (DCS) was developed in order to detect more microbial taxa than with common cultivation approaches, as well as previously undescribed bacterial species. The DCS is a quick and easy in situ method for the cultivation of numerous bacterial taxa in support of the description of microbial colonized ecosystems. To investigate the bacterial populations within a clay-maturation process after mining the raw material, the DCS was used to increase the microbial biomass for further molecular analysis. Two different methods were applied to extract the bacteria from the DCS and these were compared in terms of efficiency at detection of large numbers of different taxa and in terms of applicability to the detection of previously undescribed species in raw clays. A collection of different undescribed species was detected with sequencing. While direct picking of bacterial colonies leads to the detection of different genera, species mainly of the genus Arthobacter were proved in the phosphate-buffered saline-suspended biomass. Thus, a combination of the approaches mentioned above is recommended to increase the number of detectable species. The DCS will help to describe better the microbial content of ecosystems, especially soils that contain charged particles.
This chapter reviews recent developments that reflect a convergence of work in various branches of linguistics and psycholinguistics around the implications of the incremental sequencing of speech units for understanding grammar and the cognitive processing that underlies the production, comprehension, and interpretation of utterances. Notions from Functional Discourse Grammar are used to present a view of syntactic structure as arising from the incremental extension of holophrases, i.e., minimal utterances. By prioritizing the timecourse of language processing, the chapter interprets syntactic hierarchy as arising from chunk-and-pass operations supported by predictive processing. Spoken dialogue is identified as the primary arena for these processes, with grammaticality subordinated to situational appropriateness. Linguistic data are seen as protocols of joint action aimed at the incremental co-creation of meaning. All of these notions make essential reference to context as constantly active, prior to and during the utterance of the linguistic signal, and as a crucial component of the operations and processes that take place in verbal interaction.
Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) information has played a crucial role in the SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) pandemic by providing evidence about variants to inform public health policy. The purpose of this study was to assess the representativeness of sequenced cases compared with all COVID-19 cases in England, between March 2020 and August 2021, by demographic and socio-economic characteristics, to evaluate the representativeness and utility of these data in epidemiological analyses. To achieve this, polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-confirmed COVID-19 cases were extracted from the national laboratory system and linked with WGS data. During the study period, over 10% of COVID-19 cases in England had WGS data available for epidemiological analysis. With sequencing capacity increasing throughout the period, sequencing representativeness compared to all reported COVID-19 cases increased over time, allowing for valuable epidemiological analyses using demographic and socio-economic characteristics, particularly during periods with emerging novel SARS-CoV-2 variants. This study demonstrates the comprehensiveness of England’s sequencing throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, rapidly detecting variants of concern, and enabling representative epidemiological analyses to inform policy.
Physical time refers to five context-independent elements of time: tempo, duration, timing, sequencing, and stages. It makes two contributions. It refines the analysis of historical time by focusing on the rhytms in which it unfolds. It thus supplements the analysis of what changes in content by paying attention to how it changes in rhythm. It also refines causal analysis by treating the elements of physical time that produce distinct causal effects; these are frequently overlooked by linear notions of causality. CHA employs both physical time and historical time, and this distinguishes it from other methodologies. It configures these elements of time in distinct ways, which define the three strands of CHA: eventful, longue durée, and macro-causal analysis.
Text comprehension and picture comprehension can be synthesized into a common conceptual framework which differentiates between external and internal descriptive and depictive representations. Combining this framework with the human cognitive architecture including sensory registers, working memory, and long-term memory leads to an integrated model of text and picture comprehension. The model consists of a descriptive branch and a depictive branch of processing. It includes multiple sensory modalities. Due to a flexible combination of sensory modalities and representational formats, the model covers listening comprehension, reading comprehension, visual picture comprehension, and sound comprehension. The model considers text comprehension and picture comprehension to be different routes for constructing mental models and propositional representations with the help of prior knowledge. It allows us to explain the effects of coherence, text modality, split attention, text–picture contiguity, redundancy, sequencing, and the effects of different types of visualization.
Lakshmi Balachandran Nair, Libera Università Internazionale degli Studi Sociali Guido Carli, Italy,Michael Gibbert, Università della Svizzera Italiana, Switzerland,Bareerah Hafeez Hoorani, Radboud University Nijmegen, Institute for Management Research, The Netherlands
This chapter introduces the readers to case study research, with the help of historical and contemporary examples. We define case study research and briefly discuss the existing case study designs. Subsequently, we explain the main purpose of this book: To take case study research to the next level by discussing the combinations of different case study designs in the same study, which we call "sequencing case study designs." Furthermore, we discuss the building blocks of case study designs, the strengths/weaknesses of archetypical designs, the conundrum surrounding the crafting/relaying of theoretical contributions, some concrete examples of designs, and the differences/similarities amongst different paradigmatic camps in case study research. We end the chapter by briefly introducing the contents of the subsequent chapters.
Case study research is a versatile approach that allows for different data sources to be combined, with its main purpose being theory development. This book goes a step further by combining different case study research designs, informed by the authors' extensive teaching and research experience. It provides an accessible introduction to case study research, familiarizes readers with different archetypical and sequenced designs, and describes these designs and their components using both real and fictional examples. It provides thought-provoking exercises, and in doing so, prepares the reader to design their own case study in a way that suits the research objective. Written for an academic audience, this book is useful for students, their supervisors and professors, and ultimately any researcher who intends to use, or is already using, the case study approach.
This chapter introduces health recovery processes, recommending realistic engagements backed by appropriate conceptual tools. Direct experience supported by the literature warns against linear narratives, ready-made solutions and missions accomplished! The nature of stresses and shocks, and their influence on health systems is discussed. The politics of transition and its implications are highlighted. Situation analysis, debate, and proposed intervention as the main drivers of a sound recovery process are reviewed. A situation analysis covers patterns, trends, and resource levels across a disrupted healthcare landscape including appraisal of vulnerabilities and strengths. An informed, contextualised debate regarding political settlement, demography, economy, privatisation, and urbanisation is needed with all stakeholders. Supporting health recovery processes entails seizing opportunities, while containing harmful drives. Realistic strategies and effective measures must be negotiated with overambitious stakeholders. The chapter concludes with advice on designing, managing, and evaluating recovery-oriented interventions, and readings to deepen the study of health recovery processes.
So far, we have focused on DNA types in which one allele is from the father and one from the mother. However, three other sources of DNA come from only one parent, and all can be employed in forensic testing. One is mitochondrial DNA (from the mother in all her children), and the other two are STR sites on the Y chromosome (from the father in his sons) and STR sites on the X chromosome (from the mother in her sons). These DNA sources are lineage markers, since they can be traced back generations through our family trees. Lineage markers are valuable in missing person cases where DNA from the person of interest is not available. Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) has been used in historical cases, such as identifying soldiers killed in past conflicts. We will explore these and other examples in this chapter.
This chapter discusses the remedies that are available under WTO law. It explains that the preferred solution to a dispute is a mutually agreed solution. If this is not possible, and the defending party does not implement any adverse rulings, the defending party may offer compensation (in the form of equivalent trade concessions). The last and least desirable option is retaliation, or the suspension of concessions. The chapter explains the procedures for each of these possible remedies, with a particular focus on the arbitration under Article 22.6 of the DSU of the amount of retaliation proposed by the complaining party. The chapter also discusses the “sequencing” problem arising out of the deadlines to request the right to retaliate in the DSU. Finally, the chapter discusses the special rules governing disputes over subsidies and the role played by suggestions by the panel and Appellate Body on implementation.
Institutions are essentially temporal, in the sense that, definitionally, they endure. Setting aside the conventional understanding of a historical institutionalism, we focus on the interplay of institutions and temporality. The chapter begins with a conception of time that is complex and social, and identifies four concepts amenable to deeper exploration: duration, tempo, and “temporal location,” which itself involves distinct notions of sequencing and timing. Institutions shape and are shaped by all of these aspects of temporality. The chapter surveys a range of institution-theoretic analyses, combining them in myriad ways via more complex notions such as the power of the institutional status quo, institutional intercurrence, punctuated equilibrium, critical junctures, and path dependence. While temporal approaches offer limited leverage on institutional origins, they show great strength in accounting for dynamic persistence and change, especially insofar as they supply means of understanding the layering and corresponding multiplicity of institutions of distinct temporal profiles operating at any given moment in social life.
Bacillus pumilus SAFR-032, an endospore-forming bacterial strain, was investigated to determine its methylation pattern (methylome) change, compared to ground control, after direct exposure to space conditions onboard the International Space Station (ISS) for 1.5 years. The resulting ISS-flown and non-flown strains were sequenced using the Nanopore MinION and an in-house method and pipeline to identify methylated positions in the genome. Our analysis indicated genomic variants and m6A methylation increased in the ISS-flown SAFR-032. To complement the broader omics investigation and explore phenotypic changes, ISS-flown and non-flown strains were compared in a series of laboratory-based chamber experiments using an X-ray irradiation source (doses applied at 250, 500, 750, 1000 and 1250 Gy); results show a potentially higher survival fraction of ISS-flown DS2 at the two highest exposures. Taken together, results from this study document lasting changes to the genome by methylation, potentially triggered by conditions in spaceflight, with functional consequences for the resistance of bacteria to stressors expected on long-duration missions beyond low Earth orbit.
In this chapter, we discuss problems in the single-stage or parallel-units environment. The problem statement is presented in Section 4.1. Three types of models are presented in Section 4.2 (sequence-based), Section 4.3 (continuous time grid-based), and Section 4.4 (discrete time grid-based). In Section 4.5, we present how batching decisions can be handled, and in Section 4.6 we discuss how the three types of models can be extended to handle a new feature, namely, general shared resources. Finally, in Section 4.7 we present extensions on the modeling of general resource constraints using discrete modeling of time. Building upon the material in Chapter 3, we illustrate how some of the modeling techniques introduced for single-unit problems can be extended to account for multiple units. Our goal is to outline some general ideas that the reader can apply to a wider range of problems.We focus on (1) problem features that are new, compared to the ones in single-unit problems (i.e., batching decisions and general shared resources); and (2) new modeling techniques that are necessary to account for these features.
This chapter introduces scheduling in the simplest production environment, the single-unit environment. The statements of different problems are presented in Section 3.1. Two different types of MIP sequence-based models are presented in Section 3.2. Section 3.3 discusses models based on a continuous time grid, while Section 3.4 presents models based on a discrete time grid. A number of extensions are discussed in Section 3.5, and we close in Section 3.6 with some general remarks.
In this paper, an integrated mathematical model for the balancing and sequencing problems of a mixed-model assembly line (MMAL) is developed. The proposed model minimizes the total overload and idleness times. For the sake of reality, the impact of operator’s learning and fatigue issues on the optimization of the assembly line balancing and sequencing problems is considered. Furthermore, it is assumed that the Japanese mechanism is used in this assembly line to deal with the overload issue. With respect to the complexity level of the proposed model, a genetic algorithm is developed to solve the model. In order to set the parameters of the developed genetic algorithm, the well-known Taguchi method is used and the efficiency of this solution method is compared with the GAMS software using several test problems with different sizes. Finally, the sensitivity of the balancing and sequencing problems to the parameters such as station length, learning rate, and fatigue rate are analyzed and the impact of changing these parameters on the model is studied.