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Articles 31 - 60 of 303

Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Testing The Effect Of Aquarium-Based Learning On Patron Acceptance Of Evolutionary Theory, Jamie Jensen, Ethan R. Tolman, Spencer G. Shumway, Liam S. Williams Jan 2021

Testing The Effect Of Aquarium-Based Learning On Patron Acceptance Of Evolutionary Theory, Jamie Jensen, Ethan R. Tolman, Spencer G. Shumway, Liam S. Williams

ScholarsArchive Data

This is data collected prior to and directly following an intervention at a public aquarium in Idaho surrounding the reconciliation of evolution with religious audiences.


Using Structural Equation Modeling To Model Compliance With Covid-19 Related Non-Pharmaceutical Interventions Amongst University Students In The United States, Spencer G. Shumway, Jonas D. Hopper, Ethan R. Tolman, Daniel G. Ferguson, Gabriella Hubble, David Patterson, Jamie Jensen Dec 2020

Using Structural Equation Modeling To Model Compliance With Covid-19 Related Non-Pharmaceutical Interventions Amongst University Students In The United States, Spencer G. Shumway, Jonas D. Hopper, Ethan R. Tolman, Daniel G. Ferguson, Gabriella Hubble, David Patterson, Jamie Jensen

ScholarsArchive Data

There are two data files. The "General Data" comes from a nationwide poll using Qualtrics polling software. The "Utah Data" comes from undergraduate biology students at UVU and BYU. The survey gathered demographic data and attitudes toward the COVID pandemic.


Classification Of Planetary Craters Using Outline-Based Morphometrics, Thomas J. Slezak, Jani Radebaugh, Eric H. Christiansen, Mark C. Belk Nov 2020

Classification Of Planetary Craters Using Outline-Based Morphometrics, Thomas J. Slezak, Jani Radebaugh, Eric H. Christiansen, Mark C. Belk

Faculty Publications

The morphologies of craters on planetary surfaces reveal clues about the geologic mechanisms by which they originate and subsequently evolve, as well as the materials and physical variables inherent to the environment in which they formed. We carried out a quantitative multivariate analysis of shape descriptors derived from the outlines of craters formed by volcanic processes on Mars, Io, and Earth and by impact cratering on the Moon using elliptic Fourier analysis (EFA) and the Zahn-Roskies (Z-R) shape function. Canonical variate analysis (CVA) was used to construct a statistical model of differences between the crater groups to classify …


Predators As Agents Of Selection And Diversification, Jerald B. Johnson, Mark C. Belk Oct 2020

Predators As Agents Of Selection And Diversification, Jerald B. Johnson, Mark C. Belk

Faculty Publications

Predation is ubiquitous in nature and can be an important component of both ecological and evolutionary interactions. One of the most striking features of predators is how often they cause evolutionary diversification in natural systems. Here, we review several ways that this can occur, exploring empirical evidence and suggesting promising areas for future work. We also introduce several papers recently accepted in Diversity that demonstrate just how important and varied predation can be as an agent of natural selection. We conclude that there is still much to be done in this field, especially in areas where multiple predator species prey …


Predictors Of Psychosocial And Physiological Distress In Colorectal Cancer Patients, Hyrum Eddington Jun 2020

Predictors Of Psychosocial And Physiological Distress In Colorectal Cancer Patients, Hyrum Eddington

Undergraduate Honors Theses

Distress among cancer patients has been broadly accepted as an important indicator of patient well-being. However, questions remain such as what patient characteristics are associated with high distress and whether patient-reported distress is correlated with distress biomarkers. To answer these questions, we performed a survey study of 238 colorectal patients in which we assessed patient-reported distress, possible contributors to that distress, and patient anxiety and depression. We also abstracted demographic and clinical information from patient charts and collected measures for salivary cortisol and sarcopenia. We conducted bivariate statistical analyses between patient demographics, clinical factors, and psychosocial measures with our three …


Morphometric Response Of Galaxias Maculatus (Jenyns) To Lake Colonization In Chile, Margaret Mercer, Peter C. Searle, Roberto Cifuentes, Evelyn Habit, Mark C. Belk May 2020

Morphometric Response Of Galaxias Maculatus (Jenyns) To Lake Colonization In Chile, Margaret Mercer, Peter C. Searle, Roberto Cifuentes, Evelyn Habit, Mark C. Belk

Faculty Publications

Body and head shape in fish responds to environmental factors such as water flow rate, food sources, and niche availability. However, the way in which fish respond to these environmental factors varies. In Central Chile, multiple river and lake systems along the coast provide an ideal study site to investigate these types of shape changes. We use geometric morphometrics to characterize shape differences in Galaxias maculatus (Jenyns) between river and lake populations. Lake fish converge on a shape with a more fusiform body, narrower head, and larger eyes, while river fish have a more robust body, rounder head, and smaller …


Life History Divergence In Livebearing Fishes In Response To Predation: Is There A Microevolution To Macroevolution Barrier?, Mark C. Belk, Spencer J. Ingley, Jerald B. Johnson May 2020

Life History Divergence In Livebearing Fishes In Response To Predation: Is There A Microevolution To Macroevolution Barrier?, Mark C. Belk, Spencer J. Ingley, Jerald B. Johnson

Faculty Publications

A central problem in evolutionary biology is to determine whether adaptive phenotypic variation within species (microevolution) ultimately gives rise to new species (macroevolution). Predation environment can select for trait divergence among populations within species. The implied hypothesis is that the selection resulting from predation environment that creates population divergence within species would continue across the speciation boundary such that patterns of divergence after speciation would be a magnified accumulation of the trait variation observed before speciation. In this paper, we test for congruence in the mechanisms of microevolution and macroevolution by comparing the patterns of life history divergence among three …


A Brief Overview Of Burst Suppression: Causes And Effects On Mortality In Critical Illness, Jake Hogan, Haoqi Sun, Hassan Aboul Nour, Stephen Piccolo, Jacob Crandall, Steven Peck, M Brandon Westover Mar 2020

A Brief Overview Of Burst Suppression: Causes And Effects On Mortality In Critical Illness, Jake Hogan, Haoqi Sun, Hassan Aboul Nour, Stephen Piccolo, Jacob Crandall, Steven Peck, M Brandon Westover

Undergraduate Honors Theses

This thesis examines the effects of brain inactivation (burst suppression) on mortality in mechanically ventilated ICU patients. Past research has associated burst suppression with increased mortality. However, the effects of burst suppression on ICU patients while taking into account the relative contributions of propofol (a sedative), and critical illness to mortality, and whether preventing burst suppression might reduce mortality, has not yet been quantified. This thesis explores this relationship, and the effect of critical illness and propofol infusion on burst suppression to understand what drives burst suppression.

To measure the relationship between burst suppression, critical illness, propofol infusion, and mortality, …


Does Negative Frequency-Dependent Selection Maintain Gonopodial Asymmetry In A Livebearing Fish?, Mary-Elise Johnson Mar 2020

Does Negative Frequency-Dependent Selection Maintain Gonopodial Asymmetry In A Livebearing Fish?, Mary-Elise Johnson

Undergraduate Honors Theses

How genetic variation is maintained in the face of strong natural selection is an important problem in evolutionary biology. Selection should erode genetic diversity, leading to more and more homogeneous populations. Yet in nature, we commonly see high degrees of genetic variation, even for traits that are important to fitness. Negative frequency-dependent selection, a balancing selective force that favors traits when they are rare but not when they are common, is a mechanism proposed to maintain polymorphisms in a population. However, there is little empirical data to demonstrate how negative frequency-dependent selection sustains variation. Xenophallus umbratilis is a bilaterally symmetrical …


Transformation Of The Dental Faculty To Promote Changes In Dental Educaiton, Clark A. Dana Aug 2019

Transformation Of The Dental Faculty To Promote Changes In Dental Educaiton, Clark A. Dana

Theses and Dissertations

This work introduces a series of papers developed to explore the case for change in dental education. Three issues facing dental education are (a) the challenging financial environment of higher education, making dental schools very expensive and tuition-intensive for universities to operate and producing high debt levels for students, which limits access to education and restricts career choices; (b) the profession's apparent loss of vision for taking care of the oral health needs of all components of society and the resultant potential for marginalization of dentistry as a specialized health care service available only to the affluent; and (c) the …


Adversarial Deep Neural Networks Effectively Remove Nonlinear Batch Effects From Gene-Expression Data, Jonathan Bryan Dayton Jul 2019

Adversarial Deep Neural Networks Effectively Remove Nonlinear Batch Effects From Gene-Expression Data, Jonathan Bryan Dayton

Theses and Dissertations

Gene-expression profiling enables researchers to quantify transcription levels in cells, thus providing insight into functional mechanisms of diseases and other biological processes. However, because of the high dimensionality of these data and the sensitivity of measuring equipment, expression data often contains unwanted confounding effects that can skew analysis. For example, collecting data in multiple runs causes nontrivial differences in the data (known as batch effects), known covariates that are not of interest to the study may have strong effects, and there may be large systemic effects when integrating multiple expression datasets. Additionally, many of these confounding effects represent higher-order interactions …


Mechanism Of Positive, Non-Additive Litter Decomposition, Na Yin Jul 2019

Mechanism Of Positive, Non-Additive Litter Decomposition, Na Yin

Theses and Dissertations

Litter decomposition is a fundamental ecosystem process. It is responsible for nutrient cycling and influences carbon (C) sequestration, and soil physical and chemical properties. In nature, litter is usually heterogeneous and may not decompose the way homogeneous litter does. For example, heterogeneous litter decomposition is frequently non-additive. This makes the rate of nutrient cycling as well as fluxes of C into and out of soil C pools impossible to predict. The most frequently proposed mechanisms for positive, non-additive decomposition include the supply of limiting mineral nutrients, the supply of available C (priming), and the improvement of micro-environmental conditions. However, all …


A Race Against Time: Deciphering Evolution And Describing New Species Of Threatened Tropical Stick Insects (Phasmatodea), Michael F. Whiting Jun 2019

A Race Against Time: Deciphering Evolution And Describing New Species Of Threatened Tropical Stick Insects (Phasmatodea), Michael F. Whiting

Journal of Undergraduate Research

Funding was received in 2016 to support mentored research into the phylogeny and evolution of stick insects. Specific goals include providing students with scientific design experience, field-based research experience, collections-based experience, molecular lab experience, bioinformatics experience, and experience in presentation at national meetings and publication in peer reviewed journals. One particular focus was to describe new stick insect species, but it became clear very quickly that the phylogeny portion of this work was essential before any new species could be described, so we concentrated our efforts on stick insect phylogeny. The following is a brief summary of accomplishments.


Byu Undergraduates Solving The Genetic Causes Of Alzheimer’S Disease, John Kauwe Jun 2019

Byu Undergraduates Solving The Genetic Causes Of Alzheimer’S Disease, John Kauwe

Journal of Undergraduate Research

Successful enrollment in and completion of graduate programs requires a constellation of skills. Students must be prepared to plan and execute experiments, present their findings both verbally and in manuscript form and interact effectively with senior scientists in the field of their choice. In this MEG I will mentor three undergraduate students (Sheradyn Hamilton, Kristen Cockriel, and Moroni Chalita) as they develop skills in study design, data analysis, manuscript preparation, presentation and networking while identifying genetic factors that protect individuals from Alzheimer’s disease.


T Cell Immunotherapy Of Infection Disease And Cancer, Scott Weber Jun 2019

T Cell Immunotherapy Of Infection Disease And Cancer, Scott Weber

Journal of Undergraduate Research

This project was focused on improving the immune response to infectious disease and cancer. We have engineered T cell receptors with 1000-fold increase in affinity and will characterize their value as diagnostics and therapeutics. In addition, we examined changes in T cell function due to the co-receptor CD5. We also examined how T cell responses to infection are dependent upon metabolic and epigenetic regulation.


Development Of Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction (Q-Pcr) Assays For The Detection And Identification Of Drug-Resistance Genes In Carbapenem-Resistant Enterobacteriaceae (Cre), Richard A. Robison, Ph.D. Jun 2019

Development Of Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction (Q-Pcr) Assays For The Detection And Identification Of Drug-Resistance Genes In Carbapenem-Resistant Enterobacteriaceae (Cre), Richard A. Robison, Ph.D.

Journal of Undergraduate Research

I. The Specific aims for the project were as follows:

  1. Develop q-PCR assays for the various carbapenem-resistance genes, such as KPC, IMP, VIM, and NDM-1, and then multiplex them into single assays that can be used to quickly characterize an isolate.


Increasing The Accuracy Of Molecular Biomarkers Via Evidence-Based Algorithm Selection, Stephen R. Piccolo Jun 2019

Increasing The Accuracy Of Molecular Biomarkers Via Evidence-Based Algorithm Selection, Stephen R. Piccolo

Journal of Undergraduate Research

In making medical decisions, physicians need observable criteria that they can use to make accurate diagnoses, determine optimal treatments, and estimate a patient’s prognosis. The promise of precision medicine is that molecular-level observations can more accurately predict such information than traditional observations. I worked with undergraduate students at Brigham Young University to develop ways to improve the accuracy of such predictions by optimizing computer algorithms to handle the complexity of large, molecular data sets.


Combating Obesity Through Gut Microbiome Targeted Bacteriophage Therapy, Gongze Zhao, Dr. Laura Bridgewater Jun 2019

Combating Obesity Through Gut Microbiome Targeted Bacteriophage Therapy, Gongze Zhao, Dr. Laura Bridgewater

Journal of Undergraduate Research

The human gut consists of approximately 1.5 kg of bacteria, and 50% of the biomass in our fecal matter is bacterial cells (Nicholson, 2005). Diet is a major factor in shaping the composition of the gut microbiota, (Zhang, 2010) which in turn influences the body by producing metabolites that enter the circulation through different pathways. In 2013, by using Koch’s postulates, scientists were able to demonstrate that the gram-negative opportunistic pathogen E. cloacae B29 can cause obesity and chronic inflammation in its host (Fei & Zhao, 2013). Bacteriophage (phage) are viruses that infect bacteria. Phages bind to their bacterial host …


Chemokine Receptor Ccbp2-V41a And Its Role In Inflammation And Alzheimer’S Disease, Allen Weinert, Scott Weber Jun 2019

Chemokine Receptor Ccbp2-V41a And Its Role In Inflammation And Alzheimer’S Disease, Allen Weinert, Scott Weber

Journal of Undergraduate Research

The leading cause of dementia in elderly patients is Alzheimer’s disease (AD), a degenerating and fatal neurodegenerative condition. AD is a proteopathic disease caused by extensive accumulation of amyloid beta plaques and neurofibrillary tangles. A recent genomewide association study analyzing 59 AD-associated cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples statistically associated chemokine receptor mutant CCBP2-V41A with increased CSF protein levels of the proinflammatory chemokine CCL2. CCBP2 is a known binding partner of CCL2. We hypothesized that CCBP2-V41A receptor alters CSF levels of CCL2 and that raised CCL2 levels alters immune cell function, resulting in amyloid beta deposition in the brain (Figure 1).


Determining The Role Of Cd5 In Regulatory T Cell Function, Charles Teames, Scott Weber Jun 2019

Determining The Role Of Cd5 In Regulatory T Cell Function, Charles Teames, Scott Weber

Journal of Undergraduate Research

Regulatory T cells (Tregs) inhibit the immune response and play a key role in preventing autoimmunity. Unfortunately, Tregs also often prevent an effective immunological response against cancer. CD5 is a T cell surface protein known to regulate the threshold for T cell activation. CD5 is known to influence Treg development, but it is unclear exactly how CD5 impacts the function of Tregs.

Past studies have indicated that mice lacking CD5, known as CD5 knockouts, produce more Tregs than wild type mice (1). It is thought that Tregs from these CD5 knockouts may be more effective in preventing T cells from …


Guided Evolution To Expand The Host Range In Phages, Jamison Walker, Sandra Hope Jun 2019

Guided Evolution To Expand The Host Range In Phages, Jamison Walker, Sandra Hope

Journal of Undergraduate Research

My project proposal included the use of Darwin’s theory of evolution by natural selection to determine if genetic mutations will arise in Bacteriophages that would allow them to infect related strains in a species of bacteria. Bacteriophages naturally have a target host range that they can infect. Within species of bacteria, the phage has tail receptors that allow it to infect specific strains. The other strains of the bacteria will be unaffected by the phage. In phage therapy, multiple phages with varied host ranges are chosen to combat this problem. Some phages are more effective than others in killing a …


Damselfies Of Vanuatu, Madison Lallatin, Seth Bybee Jun 2019

Damselfies Of Vanuatu, Madison Lallatin, Seth Bybee

Journal of Undergraduate Research

Vanuatu is a string of active volcanic islands in Micronesia near Fiji and Australia. The islands undergo regular submersion and emersion from the ocean, and the most recent emergence was 2 million years ago (Hamilton et al. 2010). As a result, all organisms on the islands of Vanuatu have migrated there, likely from other islands, within the past 2 million years. Fiji is one likely candidate for contributing species, being geographically close to Vanuatu and exhibiting similar species. Fourteen of us went to Vanuatu for 6 weeks on a study abroad led by Dr. Seth Bybee to collect and observe …


Tk1 As A Biomarker Of Chemosensitivity And Metastatic Potential In Breast Tumors, Eric Olsen, Kim O'Neill Jun 2019

Tk1 As A Biomarker Of Chemosensitivity And Metastatic Potential In Breast Tumors, Eric Olsen, Kim O'Neill

Journal of Undergraduate Research

Breast cancer is the most common form of cancer in women, accounting for 23% of total cancer cases and 14% of cancer deaths. Breast carcinoma is not a simple disease. It is comprised of many different biological forms with distinct phenotypes and prognoses. Hormone receptor expression, such as ER, PR, and HER2, along with more universal clinical manifestations like pathological stage, grade, and lymph node invasion are often used for patient prognosis. The heterogeneous nature of breast tumors makes prognosis and response to therapies difficult to determine, and further research is needed to classify breast tumors and their response to …


Could Tk1 Suppress The Immune System And Promote Tumor Development?, Joshua Keller, Roman Kovtun, Kim O'Neill Jun 2019

Could Tk1 Suppress The Immune System And Promote Tumor Development?, Joshua Keller, Roman Kovtun, Kim O'Neill

Journal of Undergraduate Research

Cancer is a widespread disease that affects millions of people worldwide and in many cases is difficult to treat. In order to find new and better treatment, it is important to understand how this disease progresses. Thymidine Kinase 1 (TK1) is a recognized biomarker that is upregulated in cancer cells compared to healthy tissue. Although this protein is normally found inside the cells (cytosol), it becomes upregulated on the surface of malignant cells. Moreover, recent research shows that TK1 expression is further upregulated in breast cancer tissues that undergo a transition from stationary (epithelial) cells to more mobile (mesenchymal) cells. …


Using Remote Video Systems To Measure Effectiveness Of Small Scale Mpas In Saipipi, Samoa, Calvin Quigley, Dr. Richard Gill Jun 2019

Using Remote Video Systems To Measure Effectiveness Of Small Scale Mpas In Saipipi, Samoa, Calvin Quigley, Dr. Richard Gill

Journal of Undergraduate Research

Coral reefs represent an invaluable natural, providing $30 billion dollars of fishing and recreational profits worldwide, and housing nearly a quarter of the oceans species [1, 2]. However, threats such as climate change, ocean acidification, coastal development and overharvesting have destroyed more than a fifth of the worlds coral reefs in recent decades[3]. One of the most common management plans that has been implemented to help protect and restore coral reefs is the establishment of marine protected areas (MPAs)[4]. MPAs have been proven to be effective in helping restore fish populations and coral cover, however the majority of MPAs are …


Quantifying Predictive Value Of Biological Data Types In Machine Learning Models Of Cancer Outcome, Samantha Jensen, Stephen Piccolo Jun 2019

Quantifying Predictive Value Of Biological Data Types In Machine Learning Models Of Cancer Outcome, Samantha Jensen, Stephen Piccolo

Journal of Undergraduate Research

Precision medicine is a growing movement toward utilizing molecular diagnostics to guide medical decisions. It is particularly useful when applied to cancer treatment, as knowing details about cancer stage, genetic pathology, and tumor type can inform life-saving decisions. Increasingly, physicians may use genetic, proteomic, epigenetic, and expression data to determine treatment strategy and even choose specific chemotherapy drugs1.


Effectiveness Of Hospital Disinfectants Against Clostridium Spores, Bejamin Ogilvie, Richard Robinson Jun 2019

Effectiveness Of Hospital Disinfectants Against Clostridium Spores, Bejamin Ogilvie, Richard Robinson

Journal of Undergraduate Research

Clostridium is a genus of anaerobic spore-forming bacteria notable for causing human infections. C. difficile has an especially high impact, affecting roughly 453,000 individuals in the U.S. in 2011 (1). C. tetani and C. perfringens infections occur much less frequently, although they remain clinically important. Disinfecting objects contaminated with Clostridium is challenging, as Clostridium spores are resistant to extreme temperature, desiccation, and most chemicals (2, 3). Clostridium is also frequently found within soil, making it a likely contaminant on almost any piece of medical equipment (3).

Currently, the U.S. EPA only requires sporicidal disinfectant efficacy tests against C. sporogenes, a …


Histone Post-Translational Modifications And Nucleosome Positioning: A New Layer In The Histone Code Hypothesis?, Andrew Earl, Dr. Steven Johnson Jun 2019

Histone Post-Translational Modifications And Nucleosome Positioning: A New Layer In The Histone Code Hypothesis?, Andrew Earl, Dr. Steven Johnson

Journal of Undergraduate Research

Nucleosomes are the fundamental unit of chromatin organization. They consist of an octamer of histone proteins (two of each H2A, H2B, H3, and H4) wrapped around by 147 base pairs of DNA. Their positioning and occupancy around important genetic elements such as enhancers and promoters are some of the most important means of epigenetic regulation: changes in expression of genes that reflect a change in something other than DNA sequence. For example, highly-expressed genes are generally associated with low nucleosome occupancy, whereas inactive genes are associated with high nucleosome occupancy. It has also been shown that the positioning of nucleosomes …


Cd5 Deficient Mice Exhibit Altered Cognitive Function In Behavioral Studies, Tyler Cox, Dr. Scott Weber Jun 2019

Cd5 Deficient Mice Exhibit Altered Cognitive Function In Behavioral Studies, Tyler Cox, Dr. Scott Weber

Journal of Undergraduate Research

The immune system plays a role in protecting and maintaining the central nervous system (CNS). 1Dysfunctions within the immune system can affect the CNS and it is associated with diseases such as Multiple Sclerosis, Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease. Having an imbalanced activation of immune cells within CNS results in cognitive impairments. CD5 is a protein on the surface of T cells and certain B cells that inhibits cellular activation and prevents immune cells from reacting too strongly to antigens and causing autoimmunity to our own tissues. Modulating CD5 and the immune system could affect the CNS and cognitive function. Observations …


Characterization Of Mutant Chemokine (C-C) Motif Receptor-Like 2 (Ccrl2) And Its Role In Inflammation And Alzheimer’S Disease, Meganne Ferrel, Dr. John S. K. Kauwe Jun 2019

Characterization Of Mutant Chemokine (C-C) Motif Receptor-Like 2 (Ccrl2) And Its Role In Inflammation And Alzheimer’S Disease, Meganne Ferrel, Dr. John S. K. Kauwe

Journal of Undergraduate Research

Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) is identified as a proteopathic disease that results from an extensive accumulation of amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles in the brain. Several researchers have discovered that cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) contains biomarkers for AD such as Amyloid-beta and tau. Neuritic plaques in AD are surrounded by activated microglia and astrocytes which can initiate complement and inflammation in the presence of amyloid-beta. Macrophage inflammatory protein chemokine (C-C motif) ligand 4 (CCL4) is a biomarker found in CSF. A high level of expression is associated with risk of developing AD. CCL4 is expressed in a subpopulation of reactive astrocytes and …