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Effect Of Remote Vibrotactile Noise On Pinch Force Maintenance Ability And Brain Activity, Ying-Ling Tseng Aug 2013

Effect Of Remote Vibrotactile Noise On Pinch Force Maintenance Ability And Brain Activity, Ying-Ling Tseng

Theses and Dissertations

Noise has been used to enhance detection of signals thereby improving performance of nonlinear systems (referred to as "stochastic resonance"). In biological systems, the noise and signal integration may occur not only at the receptor level but also in the central nervous system, thereby allowing noise remotely applied from a signal to enhance the system's response to the signal. However, integration of tactile signal and noise within the central nervous system has not been demonstrated in humans. In addition, whether the enhanced detection of tactile signals with remote noise results in changes in motor behavior is unknown.

The objectives of …


Seasonality Of Conceptions Under Varying Conditions In A Rhesus Macaque Breeding Colony, Ryan Disney Patrick Dunk Aug 2013

Seasonality Of Conceptions Under Varying Conditions In A Rhesus Macaque Breeding Colony, Ryan Disney Patrick Dunk

Theses and Dissertations

Rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) are well documented as seasonal breeders. Despite this, little is known about what factors influence seasonal reproduction in rhesus. It has been proposed that rhesus are "relaxed income breeders" (Brockman and van Schaik, 2005), which means they respond to changes in photoperiod but endogenous cues can allow deviations from photoperiod-timed seasonality. This study presents the results of a natural experiment on the influence of different housing conditions (featuring different levels of environmental exposure) on the seasonal pattern of reproduction in rhesus. Once the number of attempts was controlled for, rhesus did not exhibit a seasonal distribution …


An Examination Of The Psychological Skills Profiles Of Oval Racers And Road Racers, Andrew Morgan Aug 2013

An Examination Of The Psychological Skills Profiles Of Oval Racers And Road Racers, Andrew Morgan

Theses and Dissertations

Introduction: Given the global popularity and far-reaching economics of auto racing, it is surprising how few studies have examined the sport generally and the psychological aspects of the sport specifically. Consistent with this general lack of research is the specific absence of studies examining the psychological skills needed to participate in the two main disciplines of auto racing, specifically oval and road racing. The purpose of the current study was to examine the use of psychological skills by athletes who participate in distinct sub-disciplines within the sport of auto racing, specifically oval racers and road racers. Methods: A total of …


Adhesion Molecule Regulation Of Regulatory T Cell Migration, Jessica Jean Loppnow Aug 2013

Adhesion Molecule Regulation Of Regulatory T Cell Migration, Jessica Jean Loppnow

Theses and Dissertations

Regulatory T (Treg) cells mediate tumor immune evasion by suppressing anti-tumor effector T cell responses in peripheral lymphoid tissues and within the tumor. While elevated Treg cell numbers have been shown to correlate with increased tumor growth, mechanisms that regulate their distribution within secondary lymphoid tissue and tumor tissue are not well understood. L-selectin, an adhesion molecule constitutively expressed on all classes of leukocytes, functions early in the adhesion cascade and regulates the migration of lymphocytes to lymph nodes through high endothelial venules. In addition, L-selectin can mediate migration of lymphocytes to sites of inflammation by binding to ligands present …


Fibrinogen-Conjugated Gold-Coated Magnetite Nanoparticles For Antiplatelet Therapy, Evan Schuerer Krystofiak Aug 2013

Fibrinogen-Conjugated Gold-Coated Magnetite Nanoparticles For Antiplatelet Therapy, Evan Schuerer Krystofiak

Theses and Dissertations

Ischemic stroke is the world's second leading cause of death and accounts for 2-4% of total worldwide healthcare costs. Ischemic stroke is caused by the occlusion of arteries responsible for supplying blood to the brain, which can result in disability or death. Arterial blood clots consist of aggregates of activated platelets wrapped in a mesh of fibrin. Tissue plasminogen activator, the only current FDA-approved treatment for ischemic stroke, functions by lysing fibrin in a blood clot. Unfortunately, tissue plasminogen activator significantly increases bleeding risks, which restricts its use. Alternatively, targeting and disrupting platelets within a clot could improve stroke outcome. …


Cell Surface Adhesins, Exopolysaccharides And The Por (Type Ix) Secretion System Of Flavobacterium Johnsoniae, Abhishek Shrivastava May 2013

Cell Surface Adhesins, Exopolysaccharides And The Por (Type Ix) Secretion System Of Flavobacterium Johnsoniae, Abhishek Shrivastava

Theses and Dissertations

Flavobacterium johnsoniae, a member of the phylum Bacteroidetes, crawls rapidly over surfaces. Cell movement is thought to result from the action of the gliding motor, composed of Gld proteins, on the cell-surface adhesin SprB. Cells lacking SprB are partially defective in motility. Transposon mutagenesis of an sprB mutant resulted in the identification of remA, which encodes a motility adhesin that is partially redundant with SprB. Cells lacking SprB and RemA had more severe motility defects than did cells lacking just SprB. RemA moves on the cell-surface with a speed of 1 to 2 micrometer per sec, similar to SprB. RemA …


Nearshore Benthic Oxygen Dynamics In Lake Michigan, Emily H. Tyner May 2013

Nearshore Benthic Oxygen Dynamics In Lake Michigan, Emily H. Tyner

Theses and Dissertations

The intense colonization of the Laurentian Great Lakes by dreissenid mussels has profoundly changed ecosystem processes, particularly benthic oxygen dynamics. Dissolved oxygen concentrations in mussel beds, sloughed Cladophora mats, and sediment indicate that hypoxia forms and disappears in some substrata (ephemeral Cladophora mats), while occurring consistently in others (depositional areas of sloughed Cladophora). Dissolved organic carbon concentrations are high (mean: 143 ± ± 28 ppm) in depositional Cladophora mats but lower (˂ 10 ppm) in most other environments. Field sampling and laboratory experiments suggest that under conditions of low water velocity and thick Cladophora cover, hypoxia may develop atop …


Changes In The Lake Michigan Trophic Structure: As Revealed By Stable C And N Isotopes, Benjamin Turschak May 2013

Changes In The Lake Michigan Trophic Structure: As Revealed By Stable C And N Isotopes, Benjamin Turschak

Theses and Dissertations

Food web structures which incorporate both slow (nearshore or detrital) and fast (pelagic) energy channels convey stability upon food web biota through asynchrony and multichannel trophic omnivory. Within the Lake Michigan food web, invasive dreissenid mussels have caused rapid changes to food web structure and energy flows. I used stable C and N isotopes and gut content analysis to determine how Lake Michigan food web structure and stability has changed in the past decade, coincident with the expansion of dreissenid mussels and a decrease in pelagic phytoplankton production. Fish and invertebrate samples collected near the port of Milwaukee, WI were …


Immediate Early Gene Expression In Medial Prefrontal Cortex And Hippocampus As A Function Of Aging, Megha Sehgal May 2013

Immediate Early Gene Expression In Medial Prefrontal Cortex And Hippocampus As A Function Of Aging, Megha Sehgal

Theses and Dissertations

Normal aging is accompanied by cognitive decline that differs from other aging-related pathological states like Alzheimer's disease. With an increasing proportion of the world population falling in an age group of 65 years and above, a preventive gerontological approach would improve the quality of life in the elderly. Especially important in this regard is the early detection of cognitive decline, so that appropriate measures can be taken to prevent development of cognitive deficits. Impairment in cognitive flexibility, the ability to modify a previously learnt behavior, is one such measure of impairment across species in aged animals. Previous work from our …


Quorum Sensing In Vibrios And Cross-Species Activation Of Bioluminescence Lux Genes By Vibrio Harveyi Luxr In An Arabinose-Inducible Escherichia Coli Expression System, Anne Marie Wannamaker May 2013

Quorum Sensing In Vibrios And Cross-Species Activation Of Bioluminescence Lux Genes By Vibrio Harveyi Luxr In An Arabinose-Inducible Escherichia Coli Expression System, Anne Marie Wannamaker

Theses and Dissertations

Bacterial bioluminescence is observed in over twenty known species, primarily in the family Vibrionaceae. However, only Vibrio fischeri and Vibrio harveyi bioluminescence expression mechanisms are well studied. In V. harveyi, expression of the lux operon is activated by the transcription factor LuxR (LuxRVH), resulting in bioluminescence. Homologs of LuxRVH in other Vibrio species have been shown to regulate transcription of a variety of genes. Three parallel quorum sensing pathways co-regulate the expression of LuxRVH. The first objective was to assess possible quorum sensing regulation of lux operon expression in V. cholerae, V. chagasii, …


The Role Of Nmda Receptors In Extinction Of Cocaine Self-Administration, Madalyn Hafenbreidel May 2013

The Role Of Nmda Receptors In Extinction Of Cocaine Self-Administration, Madalyn Hafenbreidel

Theses and Dissertations

Relapse is highly prevalent among recovering addicts, and can be triggered by associations made between the rewarding effects of the drug and cues, such as drug paraphernalia or contexts. Inhibiting these associations, through new extinction learning, could help reduce relapse rates. Extinction is formed in phases, like other types of memory. The memory first is acquired in short-term memory, then is consolidated into long-term storage from which it can be retrieved at a later time (Quirk & Mueller, 2008). NMDA receptors are necessary for extinction in other paradigms (Santini, Muller, & Quirk, 2001), and we previously found that blocking NMDA …


Towards The Use Of Time-Resolved X-Ray Crystallography In Mechanistic Studies Of Cytochrome C Nitrite Reductase From Shewanella Oneidensis, Matthew David Youngblut May 2013

Towards The Use Of Time-Resolved X-Ray Crystallography In Mechanistic Studies Of Cytochrome C Nitrite Reductase From Shewanella Oneidensis, Matthew David Youngblut

Theses and Dissertations

A high-yield expression and purification of Shewanella oneidensis cytochrome c nitrite reductase (ccNiR), and its characterization by a variety of methods, notably Laue crystallography, is reported. A key component of the expression system is an artificial ccNiR gene in which the N-terminal signal peptide from the highly expressed S. oneidensis protein "Small Tetra-heme c" replaces the wild-type signal peptide. This gene, inserted into the plasmid pHSG298 and expressed in S. oneidensis TSP-C strain, generated approximately 20 mg crude ccNiR/L culture, compared with 0.5-1 mg/L for untransformed cells. Purified ccNiR exhibited nitrite and hydroxylamine reductase activities comparable to those of E. …


An Integrative Investigation Of Sources, Fate, And Transport Of Bacteria In Milwaukee Coastal Beaches, Marcia R. Silva May 2013

An Integrative Investigation Of Sources, Fate, And Transport Of Bacteria In Milwaukee Coastal Beaches, Marcia R. Silva

Theses and Dissertations

Beach water quality criteria are determined by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and water quality advisories or closings are issued based on fecal indicator bacteria (FIB) at the beaches. Understanding of sources, fate and transport of FIB at a beach environment is of economic and social interest for public users, beach managers, policy makers and scientists. This is a complex problem and it is a multidisciplinary issue by nature. Scientists have generally taken a reductionist approach to tackle complex environmental issues. However, as alluded by Gallagher and Appenzeller (1999) and adopted by Boehm (2000), many complex systems are best interpreted …


The Effect Of Aerobic Fitness On Visuospatial Attention In Young Adults, Kelly Marie Kunowski May 2013

The Effect Of Aerobic Fitness On Visuospatial Attention In Young Adults, Kelly Marie Kunowski

Theses and Dissertations

The recently popular commercial brain- and visual-training programs have become a multimillion dollar industry with claims to enhance various cognitive functions. Although no empirical evidence directly supports the efficacy of these programs, sport expertise has been shown to influence cognition, lending indirect support for training efficacy. However, researchers investigating attention and sport expertise have not previously controlled for level of physical activity, which may also contribute to enhanced cognitive processes. Prior studies have shown strong correlations exist between physical fitness and cognition in both children and older adults. Yet, few studies have examined this relation in young adults, and no …


Behavior Change In Applied Sport Psychology: The Use Of Processes Of Change In Psychological Training For Athletes, William Vincent Massey May 2013

Behavior Change In Applied Sport Psychology: The Use Of Processes Of Change In Psychological Training For Athletes, William Vincent Massey

Theses and Dissertations

The results of previous research (e.g. Leffingwell, Rider, & Williams, 2001; Massey, Meyer, & Hatch, 2011; Zizzi & Perna, 2003) have led scholars to conclude that the Transtheoretical Model (TTM) may be an appropriate paradigm to study readiness to change in sport psychology settings. However, processes of change - a critical element to the TTM - have yet to be studied or measured in an athlete population. As such, the purpose of the current investigation was to initially develop and examine a measure of the processes of change for use in applied sport psychology settings. Informed by relevant literature, an …


Occupational Athletes: An Integrated Approach To Firefighting Performance, Stacy L. Gnacinski May 2013

Occupational Athletes: An Integrated Approach To Firefighting Performance, Stacy L. Gnacinski

Theses and Dissertations

Introduction: Over the past 20 years, the injury rates among firefighters have captured the interest of sport scientists. In order to prevent firefighter injuries, however, scholars must first gain a better understanding of firefighting performance (Smith, 2011). This has been a challenge, since to date sport scientists have focused primarily on the physical aspects of firefighting performance and have overlooked the multidimensional nature of firefighting performance (Gnacinski, Meyer, & Ebersole, in press). In the sport arena, sport scientists often use theoretical models to conceptualize the multiple demands experienced by an athlete. Guided by an integrated model of sport performance, the …


Prolonged Glucose Deprivation Sensitizes Snf1 To Negative Regulation By Pka To Delay Entry Into Quiescence, Leah Bernadette Doughty May 2013

Prolonged Glucose Deprivation Sensitizes Snf1 To Negative Regulation By Pka To Delay Entry Into Quiescence, Leah Bernadette Doughty

Theses and Dissertations

AMPK, the fuel gauge of the cell, and its upstream kinase, LKB1, have been implicated in cancer prevention and stress response associated with energy exhaustion. In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Snf1 is the ortholog of mammalian AMPK. In S. cerevisiae, Snf1 is activated by phosphorylation of its T–loop at Thr210, primarily by its upstream kinase Sak1, in absence of the preferred carbon source, glucose, or during some other stress responses. Cyclic AMP–dependent protein kinase A, PKA, is involved in nutrient signaling largely antagonistically to Snf1. Using yeast strains of the Sigma 1278b genetic background, which have a high basal level …


Discrimination Trials To Influence Self-Awareness, Kerin A. Weingarten May 2013

Discrimination Trials To Influence Self-Awareness, Kerin A. Weingarten

Theses and Dissertations

Humans often use terms and concepts that include self- as prefix in an effort to explain their behavior (e.g., self-awareness, self-control) (Goldiamond, 1959, 1962, 1965, 1966; Nisbett & Wilson, 1977). Although there are many ways to interpret such terms, they all seem to involve circumstances in which individuals' own prior behavior is discriminative for their subsequent behavior. Behavior under the discriminative control of other behavior may be a kind of self-report (Skinner, 1957). The concepts of self-awareness and self-report can be studied as a behavioral process, without mentalistic inference. In the present research, pigeons were trained in a compound, discrete-trial …


The Effect Of Exertion On Intra-Limb Joint Coordination Variability During Running Using A Waveform Analysis Approach, Lauren Benson May 2013

The Effect Of Exertion On Intra-Limb Joint Coordination Variability During Running Using A Waveform Analysis Approach, Lauren Benson

Theses and Dissertations

About half of all runners sustain a running-related injury in a given year. Less variable joint coordination patterns may be detrimental as stress endured by the same tissue, encountered over many running cycles, could lead to overuse running injuries. The effects of fatigue may contribute to runners' risk of injury by altering joint coordination variability. Since fatigue is task-dependent, it is practical to consider a level of fatigue typically experienced by runners. The purpose of this study was to examine the influence of running in an exerted state on lower extremity joint coordination variability, using Principal Components Analysis (PCA) and …


High-Throughput Approaches For The Assessment Of Factors Influencing Bioavailability Of Small Molecules In Pre-Clinical Drug Development, Megan Marie Mccallum May 2013

High-Throughput Approaches For The Assessment Of Factors Influencing Bioavailability Of Small Molecules In Pre-Clinical Drug Development, Megan Marie Mccallum

Theses and Dissertations

A bioactive molecule must pass many hurdles to be designated as a "good" pharmaceutical lead or hit compound. It should have a significant activity, selectivity, bioavailability, and metabolic half-life. Many factors have been identified that influence the free drug concentration or bioavailability of orally administered drugs in the earliest development stages. In vitro pre-clinical assays have been developed to measure these parameters. The small molecule properties that are investigated here include aqueous solubility, permeability, reactivity (electrophilicity), small molecule-protein binding, and displacement of protein-bound molecules (drug-drug interactions). The development of rapid and miniaturized assays to quantify these factors is presented herein. …


Methods In Metallomics, Proteomics, And Toxicology: Development And Applications Of Laser Ablation Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry And Native Sds-Page, William John Wobig May 2013

Methods In Metallomics, Proteomics, And Toxicology: Development And Applications Of Laser Ablation Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry And Native Sds-Page, William John Wobig

Theses and Dissertations

Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) is a bio-analytical method used to separate proteins in solution into an array of individual bands of proteins in a gel matrix. Current PAGE methods, however, have severe limitations in simultaneously maintaining a protein's native structure and association with transition metals while providing adequate resolution. Laser Ablation Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) provides a means to perform trace to ultra-trace level inorganic analysis of solid samples such as dried PAGE gels containing metallo-protein arrays. Current LA-ICP-MS methods involving the analysis of PAGE gels, however, have been limited in their effective use by inadequate limits of …


Analysis Of Genes Involved In Anaerobic Growth In Porphyromonas Gingivalis And Shewanella Oneidensis Mr-1, Dilini Sanjeevi Kumarasinghe May 2013

Analysis Of Genes Involved In Anaerobic Growth In Porphyromonas Gingivalis And Shewanella Oneidensis Mr-1, Dilini Sanjeevi Kumarasinghe

Theses and Dissertations

Porphyromonas gingivalis is an oral Gram-negative anaerobic bacterium implicated in periodontal disease, a polymicrobial inflammatory disease that is correlated with cardiovascular disease, diabetes and preterm birth. Therefore understanding the physiology and metabolism of P.gingivalis through genetic manipulation is important in identifying mechanisms to eliminate this pathogen. Although numerous genetic tools have been developed for the manipulation of other bacterial species, they either do not function in P.gingivalis or they have limitations. We modified a Mariner transposon pHimarEM1 system that was developed for Flavobacterium johnsoniae for mutagenesis of P. gingivalisWe introduced the P. gingivalis fimA promoter upstream of the transposase …


Identification Of Immunomodulatory Cells Induced By 670 Nm Light Therapy In An Animal Model Of Multiple Sclerosis, Erin Christine Koester May 2013

Identification Of Immunomodulatory Cells Induced By 670 Nm Light Therapy In An Animal Model Of Multiple Sclerosis, Erin Christine Koester

Theses and Dissertations

Multiple sclerosis is an autoimmune, demyelinating disease characterized by neurodegeneration and inflammation of the central nervous system. It affects approximately 250,000 people in the United States alone, with women being affected two times more than men. Experimental Autoimmune Encephalomyelitis (EAE) is the primary animal model of MS, sharing clinical signs and histopathology with MS. The current paradigm supports MS/EAE induction by myelin reactive CD4+ T cells that cross the blood brain barrier to induce an inflammatory response that leads to the destruction of the myelin sheath and eventual loss of axons. Recent data suggest that axonal loss and disease progression …


The Shifting Importance Of Competition And Facilitation Along Diversity, Environmental Severity, And Plant Ontogenetic Gradients, Alexandra Wright May 2013

The Shifting Importance Of Competition And Facilitation Along Diversity, Environmental Severity, And Plant Ontogenetic Gradients, Alexandra Wright

Theses and Dissertations

Ecological theory and empirical studies have focused heavily on the importance of competition in plant communities. Competition can help explain species coexistence, the maintenance of species diversity, and biological invasions. Competition for resources appears to be ubiquitous among coexisting organisms. This overwhelming focus on competition over the past one hundred years may have overshadowed the importance of positive interactions (facilitation). Growing near your neighbors involves competition for resources, but it also involves alteration of a shared microclimate. Neighboring plants have the capacity to increase shade, decrease air temperatures, increase humidity, and increase shallow soil moisture in their local environment. In …


Viral Hemorrhagic Septicemia Virus (Vhsv) Great Lakes Strain Ivb: Viral Detection, Mechanisms Of Infection, And Host-Virus Interactions In The Yellow Perch (Perca Flavescens), Wendy Joy Olson May 2013

Viral Hemorrhagic Septicemia Virus (Vhsv) Great Lakes Strain Ivb: Viral Detection, Mechanisms Of Infection, And Host-Virus Interactions In The Yellow Perch (Perca Flavescens), Wendy Joy Olson

Theses and Dissertations

Viral hemorrhagic septicemia virus (VHSV) is one of the most devastating and problematic viral fish diseases to plague the European aquaculture industry, and due to its pathogenicity, disease course, mortality rates, and wide host range, remains one of the most pathogenic viral diseases of finfish worldwide. A new freshwater strain of viral hemorrhagic septicemia virus IVb (VHSV-IVb) in the Great Lakes has been found capable of infecting a wide number of naive species, and has been associated with large fish kills in the Midwestern United States since its discovery in 2005. In this study, the yellow perch, Perca flavescence, one …


Investigation Of Web-Based Motivational Interviewing To Increase Physical Activity Participation Among Adults, Sasha Karnes May 2013

Investigation Of Web-Based Motivational Interviewing To Increase Physical Activity Participation Among Adults, Sasha Karnes

Theses and Dissertations

Interventions to enhance physical activity (PA) participation are needed given the high prevalence of under-activity and inactivity (CDC, 2001) and related occurrence of negative health consequences among the general adult population (Kung, Hoyert, Xu, & Murphy, 2008). Preliminary support for a therapeutic technique called Motivational Interviewing (MI) suggests promise for application to enhance PA participation (Burke, Arkowitz, & Menchola, 2003). Given the need for interventions to enhance PA and the preliminary support for MI as an intervention to increase PA, the aims of the current study were to: (a) determine if web-based MI is effective in enhancing PA participation, and …


Gene Expression Response In Early Developmental Stages Of Rainbow Trout Exposed To Ecologically Relevant Concentrations Of Malathion, Susan Miller Dec 2012

Gene Expression Response In Early Developmental Stages Of Rainbow Trout Exposed To Ecologically Relevant Concentrations Of Malathion, Susan Miller

Theses and Dissertations

Understanding the early life stage toxic effects of environmental organophosphate exposure on organism health is crucial to identifying biomarkers that can be used for preventative care. Malathion, a potent organophosphate, is one of the most widely used organophosphates in agriculture and pest eradication. Due to its widespread use, pesticide runoff into area bodies of water poses a great threat to aquatic life and human inhabitants. Acute exposure to high concentrations of malathion causes neurological abnormalities and can result in respiratory failure, muscle spasms, and mental confusion in humans.

In the present study, the effects of malathion are observed following acute, …


Hormonal And Morphological Aspects Of Growth And Sexual Maturation In Wild-Caught Male Vervet Monkeys (Chlorocebus Aethiops Pygerythrus), Tegan J. Gaetano Dec 2012

Hormonal And Morphological Aspects Of Growth And Sexual Maturation In Wild-Caught Male Vervet Monkeys (Chlorocebus Aethiops Pygerythrus), Tegan J. Gaetano

Theses and Dissertations

Knowledge of baseline changes in testosterone (T) and other androgens is central to both investigations of morphological, physiological, and behavioral correlates of inter-individual variation in the timing and shape of key events and transitions over the life course and questions of the evolution of species-specific schedules of maturation in primates. T represents an important determinant of spermatogenesis in male mammals and plays a central role in the expression of male sexual behavior and the development of secondary sex characteristics. This research integrates hormonal and morphometric methods to determine age-related changes in fecal testosterone (fT) metabolites and morphological markers of sexual …


A Systematic Framework For Radio Frequency Identification (Rfid) Hazard Mitigation In The Blood Transfusion Supply Chain From Donation To Distribution, Natalie Simone Rahming Dec 2012

A Systematic Framework For Radio Frequency Identification (Rfid) Hazard Mitigation In The Blood Transfusion Supply Chain From Donation To Distribution, Natalie Simone Rahming

Theses and Dissertations

The RFID Consortium is developing what will be the first FDA-approved use of radio frequency identification (RFID) technology to identify, track, manage, and monitor blood throughout the entire blood transfusion supply chain. The iTraceTM is an innovative technological system designed to optimize the procedures currently employed when tracing blood from the donor to the recipient. With all novel technologies it is essential to consider not only the advantages, but also the potential harms that may come about from using the system. The deployment of the iTraceTM consists of two phases: 1) Phase One - application of the iTraceTM from the …


Freshwater Phytoplankton Populations Detected Using High Pressure Liquid Chromatography (Hplc) Of Taxon-Specific Pigments, Lauren Jeanne Simmons Dec 2012

Freshwater Phytoplankton Populations Detected Using High Pressure Liquid Chromatography (Hplc) Of Taxon-Specific Pigments, Lauren Jeanne Simmons

Theses and Dissertations

Phytoplankton are key primary producers in aquatic ecosystems, and the principle food source for primary consumers. Individual phytoplankton species respond to different physical, chemical and biological parameters, so monitoring taxonomic composition of the phytoplankton community is a means to monitor changes in environmental conditions. Phytoplankton community changes have frequently been monitored by estimating biomass (using chlorophyll a, measured fluorometrically), and taxonomic data obtained from cell counts. While such methods are useful, they are time-consuming. I hypothesized that high pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) methods, which have been frequently used in marine systems, would allow separation and identification of key pigments. …