TY - JOUR A1 - de Zeeuw, Dick A1 - Akizawa, Tadao A1 - Agarwal, Rajiv A1 - Audhya, Paul A1 - Bakris, George L. A1 - Chin, Melanie A1 - Krauth, Melissa A1 - Lambers Heerspink, Hiddo J. A1 - Meyer, Colin J. A1 - McMurray, John J. A1 - Parving, Hans-Henrik A1 - Pergola, Pablo E. A1 - Remuzzi, Giuseppe A1 - Toto, Robert D. A1 - Vaziri, Nosratola D. A1 - Wanner, Christoph A1 - Warnock, David G. A1 - Wittes, Janet A1 - Chertow, Glenn M. T1 - Rationale and Trial Design of Bardoxolone Methyl Evaluation in Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease and Type 2 Diabetes: The Occurrence of Renal Events (BEACON) JF - American Journal of Nephrology N2 - Background: Chronic kidney disease (CKD) associated with type 2 diabetes mellitus constitutes a global epidemic complicated by considerable renal and cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, despite the provision of inhibitors of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS). Bardoxolone methyl, a synthetic triterpenoid that reduces oxidative stress and inflammation through Nrf2 activation and inhibition of NF-κB was previously shown to increase estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) in patients with CKD associated with type 2 diabetes mellitus. To date, no antioxidant or anti-inflammatory therapy has proved successful at slowing the progression of CKD. Methods: Herein, we describe the design of Bardoxolone Methyl Evaluation in Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease and Type 2 Diabetes: the Occurrence of Renal Events (BEACON) trial, a multinational, multicenter, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled Phase 3 trial designed to determine whether long-term administration of bardoxolone methyl (on a background of standard therapy, including RAAS inhibitors) safely reduces renal and cardiac morbidity and mortality. Results: The primary composite endpoint is time-to-first occurrence of either end-stage renal disease or cardiovascular death. Secondary endpoints include the change in eGFR and time to occurrence of cardiovascular events. Conclusion: BEACON will be the first event-driven trial to evaluate the effect of an oral antioxidant and anti-inflammatory drug in advanced CKD. KW - clinical trial KW - diabetes mellitus KW - glomerular filtration rate KW - trial design KW - bardoxolone methyl KW - Nrf2 KW - end-stage renal disease KW - cardiovascular death KW - chronic kidney disease Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-196832 SN - 0250-8095 SN - 1421-9670 N1 - This publication is with permission of the rights owner freely accessible due to an Alliance licence and a national licence (funded by the DFG, German Research Foundation) respectively. VL - 37 IS - 3 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kühn, Heike A1 - Schön, Franz A1 - Edelmann, Karola A1 - Brill, Stefan A1 - Müller, Joachim T1 - The Development of Lateralization Abilities in Children with Bilateral Cochlear Implants JF - ORL N2 - Objectives: The purpose of this study was to investigate the development of lateralization skills in children who received bilateral cochlear implants (CIs) in sequential operations. Methods: The lateralization skills of 9 children with a mean age of 4.1 years at the first surgery and 5.5 years at the second surgery were assessed at 3 time intervals. Children were assessed with a 3-loudspeaker setup (front, left and right) at 0.9 years (interval I) and 1.6 years (interval II) after the second implantation, and after 5.3 years of bilateral implant use (interval III) with a 9-loudspeaker setup in the frontal horizontal plane between -90° and 90° azimuth. Results: With bilateral implants, a significant decrease in lateralization error was noted between test interval I (45.0°) and II (23.3°), with a subsequent significant decrease at test interval III (4.7°). Unilateral performance with the CI did not improve significantly between the first 2 intervals; however, there was a bias of responses towards the unilateral side by test interval III. Conclusions: The lateralization abilities of children with bilateral CIs develop in a relatively short period of time (1-2 years) after the second implant. Children appear to be able to acquire binaural skills after bilateral cochlear implantation. KW - localization KW - bilateral cochlear implant KW - children KW - MED-EL cochlear implant KW - lateralization Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-196375 SN - 0301-1569 SN - 1423-0275 N1 - This publication is with permission of the rights owner freely accessible due to an Alliance licence and a national licence (funded by the DFG, German Research Foundation) respectively. VL - 75 IS - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Heinrich, T. A1 - Nanda, I. A1 - Rehn, M. A1 - Zollner, U. A1 - Frieauff, E. A1 - Wirbelauer, J. A1 - Grimm, T. A1 - Schmid, M. T1 - Live-Born Trisomy 22: Patient Report and Review JF - Molecular Syndromology N2 - Trisomy 22 is a common trisomy in spontaneous abortions. In contrast, live-born trisomy 22 is rarely seen due to severe organ malformations associated with this condition. Here, we report on a male infant with complete, non-mosaic trisomy 22 born at 35 + 5 weeks via caesarean section. Peripheral blood lymphocytes and fibroblasts showed an additional chromosome 22 in all metaphases analyzed (47,XY,+22). In addition, array CGH confirmed complete trisomy 22. The patient’s clinical features included dolichocephalus, hypertelorism, flattened nasal bridge, dysplastic ears with preauricular sinuses and tags, medial cleft palate, anal atresia, and coronary hypospadias with scrotum bipartitum. Essential treatment was implemented in close coordination with the parents. The child died 29 days after birth due to respiratory insufficiency and deterioration of renal function. Our patient’s history complements other reports illustrating that children with complete trisomy 22 may survive until birth and beyond. KW - chromosomal abnormality KW - live-born KW - non-mosaic KW - trisomy 22 Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-196535 SN - 1661-8769 SN - 1661-8777 N1 - This publication is with permission of the rights owner freely accessible due to an Alliance licence and a national licence (funded by the DFG, German Research Foundation) respectively. VL - 3 IS - 6 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Matthies, Cordula A1 - Brill, Stefan A1 - Kaga, Kimitaka A1 - Morita, Akio A1 - Kumakawa, Kozo A1 - Skarzynski, Henryk A1 - Claassen, Andre A1 - Hui, Yau A1 - Chiong, Charlotte A1 - Müller, Joachim A1 - Behr, Robert T1 - Auditory Brainstem Implantation Improves Speech Recognition in Neurofibromatosis Type II Patients JF - ORL N2 - This prospective study aimed to determine speech understanding in neurofibromatosis type II (NF2) patients following implantation of a MED-EL COMBI 40+ auditory brainstem implant (ABI). Patients (n = 32) were enrolled postsurgically. Nonauditory side effects were evaluated at fitting and audiological performance was determined using the Sound Effects Recognition Test (SERT), Monosyllable-Trochee-Polysyllable (MTP) test and open-set sentence tests. Subjective benefits were determined by questionnaire. ABI activation was documented in 27 patients, 2 patients were too ill for testing and 3 patients were without any auditory perception. SERT and MTP outcomes under auditory-only conditions improved significantly between first fitting and 12-month follow-up. Open-set sentence recognition improved from 5% at first fitting to 37% after 12 months. The number of active electrodes had no significant effect on performance. All questionnaire respondents were ‘satisfied' to ‘very satisfied' with their ABI. An ABI is an effective treatment option in NF2 patients with the potential to provide open-set speech recognition and subjective benefits. To our knowledge, the data presented herein is exceptional in terms of the open-set speech perception achieved in NF2 patients. KW - acoustic neuroma KW - auditory brainstem implant KW - nonauditory side effects KW - open-set sentence recognition KW - subjective benefits KW - vestibular schwannoma Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-196383 SN - 0301-1569 SN - 1423-0275 N1 - This publication is with permission of the rights owner freely accessible due to an Alliance licence and a national licence (funded by the DFG, German Research Foundation) respectively. VL - 75 IS - 5 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Weber, Christoph A1 - Gräf, Stephan T1 - Eine halb so schlimme Täuschung JF - JURA - Juristische Ausbildung N2 - Kein Abstract verfügbar. KW - Examensklausur Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-195484 SN - 1612-7021 SN - 0170-1452 N1 - Dieser Beitrag ist mit Zustimmung des Rechteinhabers aufgrund einer (DFG-geförderten) Allianz- bzw. Nationallizenz frei zugänglich. VL - 36 IS - 1 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Pfister, Roland A1 - Schwarz, Katharina A. A1 - Janczyk, Markus A1 - Dale, Rick A1 - Freeman, Jonathan B. T1 - Good things peak in pairs: a note on the bimodality coefficient JF - Frontiers in Psychology N2 - A commentary on Assessing bimodality to detect the presence of a dual cognitive process by Freeman, J. B., and Dale, R. (2013). Behav. Res. Methods 45, 83–97. doi: 10.3758/s13428-012-0225-x KW - distribution analysis KW - bimodality Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-190413 SN - 1664-1078 VL - 4 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Foerster, Anna A1 - Pfister, Roland A1 - Schmidts, Constantin A1 - Dignath, David A1 - Kunde, Wilfried T1 - Honesty saves time (and justifications) JF - Frontiers in Psychology N2 - A commentary on Honesty requires time (and lack of justifications) by Shalvi, S., Eldar, O., and Bereby-Meyer, Y. (2012). Psychol. Sci. 23, 1264–1270. doi: 10.1177/0956797612443835 KW - honesty Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-190451 SN - 1664-1078 VL - 4 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Meule, Adrian A1 - Vögele, Claus T1 - The psychology of eating JF - Frontiers in Psychology N2 - No abstract available. Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-190460 SN - 1664-1078 VL - 4 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Meule, Adrian T1 - Impulsivity and overeating: a closer look at the subscales of the Barratt Impulsiveness Scale JF - Frontiers in Psychology N2 - No abstract available. KW - Impulsivity KW - Overeating Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-190497 SN - 1664-1078 VL - 4 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kress, Michaela A1 - Hüttenhofer, Alexander A1 - Landry, Marc A1 - Kuner, Rohini A1 - Favereaux, Alexandre A1 - Greenberg, David A1 - Bednarik, Josef A1 - Heppenstall, Paul A1 - Kronenberg, Florian A1 - Malcangio, Marzia A1 - Rittner, Heike A1 - Üçeyler, Nurcan A1 - Trajanoski, Zlatko A1 - Mouritzen, Peter A1 - Birklein, Frank A1 - Sommer, Claudia A1 - Soreq, Hermona T1 - microRNAs in nociceptive circuits as predictors of future clinical applications JF - Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience N2 - Neuro-immune alterations in the peripheral and central nervous system play a role in the pathophysiology of chronic pain, and non-coding RNAs – and microRNAs (miRNAs) in particular – regulate both immune and neuronal processes. Specifically, miRNAs control macromolecular complexes in neurons, glia and immune cells and regulate signals used for neuro-immune communication in the pain pathway. Therefore, miRNAs may be hypothesized as critically important master switches modulating chronic pain. In particular, understanding the concerted function of miRNA in the regulation of nociception and endogenous analgesia and defining the importance of miRNAs in the circuitries and cognitive, emotional and behavioral components involved in pain is expected to shed new light on the enigmatic pathophysiology of neuropathic pain, migraine and complex regional pain syndrome. Specific miRNAs may evolve as new druggable molecular targets for pain prevention and relief. Furthermore, predisposing miRNA expression patterns and inter-individual variations and polymorphisms in miRNAs and/or their binding sites may serve as biomarkers for pain and help to predict individual risks for certain types of pain and responsiveness to analgesic drugs. miRNA-based diagnostics are expected to develop into hands-on tools that allow better patient stratification, improved mechanism-based treatment, and targeted prevention strategies for high risk individuals. KW - chronic pain KW - biomarker KW - polymorphism KW - miRNA-based diagnostics KW - miRNA expression patterns KW - miRNA polymorphisms KW - antagomir KW - miRNA-based analgesic Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-154597 VL - 6 IS - 33 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hurtienne, Jörn T1 - Inter-coder reliability of categorising force-dynamic events in human-technology interaction N2 - Two studies are reported that investigate how readily accessible and applicable ten force-dynamic categories are to novices in describing short episodes of human-technology interaction (Study 1) and that establish a measure of inter-coder reliability when re-classifying these episodes into force-dynamic categories (Study 2). The results of the first study show that people can easily and confidently relate their experiences with technology to the definitions of force-dynamic events (e.g. “The driver released the handbrake” as an example of restraint removal). The results of the second study show moderate agreement between four expert coders across all ten force-dynamic categories (Cohen’s kappa = .59) when re-classifying these episodes. Agreement values for single force-dynamic categories ranged between ‘fair’ and ‘almost perfect’, i.e. between kappa = .30 and .95. Agreement with the originally intended classifications of study 1 was higher than the pure inter-coder reliabilities. Single coders achieved an average kappa of .71, indicating substantial agreement. Using more than one coder increased kappas to almost perfect: up to .87 for four coders. A qualitative analysis of the predicted versus the observed number of category confusions revealed that about half of the category disagreement could be predicted from strong overlaps in the definitions of force-dynamic categories. From the quantitative and qualitative results, guidelines are derived to aid the better training of coders in order to increase inter-coder reliability. KW - inter-coder reliability KW - force dynamics KW - image schemas KW - humantechnology interaction Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-194127 SN - 2197-2796 SN - 2197-2788 N1 - This publication is with permission of the rights owner freely accessible due to an Alliance licence and a national licence (funded by the DFG, German Research Foundation) respectively. VL - 1 IS - 1 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Gedalin, Michael A1 - Dröge, Wolfgang T1 - Ion dynamics in quasi-perpendicular collisionless interplanetary shocks: a case study JF - Frontiers in Physics N2 - Interplanetary shocks are believed to play an important role in the acceleration of charged particles in the heliosphere. While the acceleration to high energies proceeds via the diffusive mechanism at the scales exceeding by far the shock width, the initial stage (injection) should occur at the shock itself. Numerical tracing of ions is done in a model quasi-perpendicular shock front with a typical interplanetary shock parameters (Mach number, upstream ion temperature). The analysis of the distribution of the transmitted solar wind is used to adjust the cross-shock potential which is not directly measured. It is found that, for typical upstream ion temperatures, acceleration of the ions from the tail of the solar wind distribution is unlikely. Pickup ions with a shell distribution are found to be effectively energized and may be injected into further diffusive acceleration regime. Pre-accelerated ions are efficiently upscaled in energies. A part of these ions is returned to the upstream region where they can further be diffusively accelerated. KW - collisionless shocks KW - particle acceleration KW - non-linear waves KW - ion dynamics KW - heliospheric shocks Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-189407 SN - 2296-424X VL - 1 ER - TY - INPR A1 - Weithmann, Sabrina A1 - Klug, Stefan T1 - Integrative Sustainable Concepts for Individual Mobility in Asia - A Qualitative Analysis of Carsharing and Taxi Services in Singapore N2 - Singapore has a unique and proactive approach towards managing the national transport system. This article explores the integrative approach of carsharing into the overall transport system from an individual sustainable mobility perspective. The authors argue that for Singapore, taxi services are the strongest competitor for the establishment of free-floating carsharing systems. Low taxi fares and a high distribution rate provide easy access for consumers and show great advantages in correspondence with the prevalent transport measures. Furthermore, the Singaporean government considers taxi services as part of public transport that helps bridging public transportation gaps in door-to-door travel. The article draws on literature review and expert interviews to evaluate the current market conditions and analyse the pros and cons of carsharing systems and taxi services as integrated part of the public transport system. The authors conclude by stating that from a sustainable perspective, the goal is to replace private car ownership. Provision of multi modal choices and therefore co-existence of different individual transport opportunities is indispensable. KW - transport KW - mobility KW - Singapore KW - taxi KW - carsharing KW - sustainability Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-145982 ER - TY - THES A1 - Onyenali, Rowland T1 - The Trilogy of Parables in Mt 21:28-22:14 from a Matthean Perspective T1 - Die Gleichnistrilogie im Mt 21,28-22,14 im Kontext des Mt-Evangeliums N2 - The parables of Jesus have undergone different transmutations in the long history of their transmission. The events surrounding his death and resurrection as well as the new situations his followers were confronted with after these events, led to the parables being given new accentuation according to the needs of the reflecting community. This is evident in Matthew's treatment of the parable trilogy of Mt 21:28-22:14. The work tries to show how Matthew has used the dominical parables and sayings found in his tradition to serve the needs of his community, especially in her struggles with the official Jewish leaders of his time. Through these parables, which he presented as a three-pronged attack against the Jewish leaders, he shows his community as the true Israel, called to produce the fruits of righteousness. N2 - Die Gleichnisse Jesu haben verschiedene Wandlungen in der langen Geschichte ihrer Überlieferung unterzogen. Die Ereignisse rund um seinen Tod und seine Auferstehung sowie die neuen Situationen, mit denen seine Jünger nach diesen Ereignissen konfrontiert wurden, führte dazu, dass die Gleichnisse neue Akzentuierung bekammen. Dies ist evident von der Gleichnistrilogie im Matthäus Mt 21,28-22,14. Die Arbeit versucht zu zeigen, wie Matthäus die Jesuanische Gleichnisse und Sprüche, die er in seiner Tradition gefunden hat verwendet, um die Bedürfnisse seiner Gemeinde zu dienen, besonders in den Ausseinandersetzungen mit den jüdischen Autoritäten seiner Zeit. Durch diesen Gleichnissen, die er als einen dreifachen Angriff gegen den jüdischen Autoritäten umdeutet, zeigt er seine Gemeinde als das wahre Israel, aufgerufen, um die Früchte der Gerechtigkeit zu bringen. KW - Matthäusevangelium 21 KW - 28-22 KW - 14 KW - Matthew KW - Parables KW - Jewish leaders Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-74971 ER - TY - THES A1 - Shiban, Youssef T1 - Attenuating Renewal following Exposure Therapy : Mechanisms of Exposure in Multiple Contexts and its Influence on the Renewal of Fear: Studies in Virtual Reality T1 - Abmilderung von Renewal Effekten nach Expositionstherapie N2 - „Renewal“ bezeichnet das Wiederauftreten von Angst nach erfolgreicher Expositionstherapie in Folge einer erneuten Konfrontation mit dem phobischen Stimulus in einem neuen, sich vom Expositionskontext unterscheidenden Kontext. Bouton (1994) zufolge deutet diese Angstrückkehr durch einen Kontextwechsel darauf hin, dass die Angst nicht gelöscht wurde. Stattdessen wurde während der Expositionssitzung eine neue Assoziation gelernt, die das gefürchtete Objekt mit „keiner Angst“, also den konditionierten Reiz (conditioned stimulus, CS) mit „keinem unkonditionierten Reiz“ (no unconditioned stimulus, no US), verbindet. Bouton argumentiert weiter, dass diese Assoziation kontextabhängig ist, wodurch Effekte wie Angst-Renewal erklärt werden können. Da in einem neuen Kontext die CS-no US-Assoziation nicht aktiviert wird, wird die Angst auch nicht gehemmt. Die Kontextabhängigkeit der CS-no US-Assoziation wurde in mehreren Studien belegt (Balooch & Neumann, 2011; Siavash Bandarian Balooch, Neumann, & Boschen, 2012; Culver, Stoyanova, & Craske, 2011; Kim & Richardson, 2009; Neumann & Kitlertsirivatana, 2010). Aktuell konzentriert sich die Forschung zur Therapie von Angststörungen auf die Frage, wie Angst reduziert und gleichzeitig ein Rückfall verhindert werden kann. Hierzu werden verschiedene Expositionsprotokolle untersucht, wie zum Beispiel (1) Exposition in mehreren Kontexten (multiple contexts exposure, MCE), um Renewal zu reduzieren (z.B. Balooch & Neumann, 2011); (2) verlängerte Exposition (prolonged exposure, PE), um die hemmende Assoziation während des Extinktionslernes zu stärken (z.B. Thomas, Vurbic, & Novak, 2009) und (3) Rekonsolidierungs-Updates (reconsolidation update, RU), die den Rekonsolidierungsprozess durch eine kurze Exposition des CS+ vor der eigentlichen Exposition aktualisieren sollen (Schiller et al., 2010). Bisher liegen jedoch nur sehr wenige Studien vor, die diese neuen Expositionsprotokolle an klinischen Stichproben untersucht haben, und - soweit bekannt - keine Studie, welche die Wirkmechanismen dieser Protokolle an einer klinischen Stichprobe erforscht. Die vorliegende Dissertation hat drei Ziele. Das erste Ziel besteht darin zu prüfen, ob Expositionstherapie in multiplen Kontexten die Wahrscheinlichkeit von Renewal reduziert. Das zweite Ziel ist die Untersuchung der Mechanismen, die dem Effekt der Exposition in multiplen Kontexten zugrunde liegen und das dritte ist den Kontext im Zusammenhang mit Konditionierung und Extinktion zu konzeptualisieren. Insgesamt wurden drei Studien durchgeführt. Die erste Studie untersuchte den Effekt von Exposition in multiplen Kontexten auf Renewal, die zweite und dritte Studie die Wirkmechanismen von MCE. In der ersten Studie wurden spinnenphobische Probanden (N = 30) viermal mit einer virtuellen Spinne konfrontiert. Die Expositionstrials wurden entweder in einem gleichbleibenden Kontext oder in vier verschiedenen Kontexten durchgeführt. Am Ende der Sitzung absolvierten alle Teilnehmer einen virtuellen Renewaltest, bei dem die virtuelle Spinne in einem neuen Kontext gezeigt wurde, und einen in vivo Verhaltensvermeidungstest (behavioral avoidance test, BAT) mit einer echten Spinne. Die Ergebnisse zeigten, dass Probanden, welche die vier Expositionstrials in unterschiedlichen Kontexten erfuhren, weniger Angst, sowohl im virtuellen Renewaltest als auch im BAT, erlebten. In dieser Studie konnte die Wirksamkeit von MCE für die Reduktion von Renewal erfolgreich nachgewiesen werden. Studie 2 (N = 35) untersuchte die Wirkmechanismen von MCE in einem differentiellen Konditionierungsparadigma. Die Extinktion wurde in multiplen Kontexten durchgeführt. Hierbei war das Ziel, eine ähnliche Verminderung von Renewal wie in Studie 1 nachzuweisen. Der Extinktion folgten zwei Tests, mit dem Ziel mögliche hemmende Effekte des Kontexts, die während der Extinktionsphase erworben wurden, aufzudecken. Bezüglich des Effektes von MCE wurden drei Hypothesen aufgestellt: (1) Der Extinktionskontext wird mit der Exposition assoziiert, fungiert folglich während der Extinktion als Sicherheitssignal und konkurriert daher mit dem Sicherheitslernen des CS. Dies führt zu einem verminderten Extinktionseffekt auf den CS, wenn die Extinktion nur in einem Kontext durchgeführt wird. (2) Die Elemente im Extinktionskontext (z.B. Raumfarbe, Möbel) stehen im Zusammenhang mit der CS-no US-Assoziation und erinnern daher an die Extinktion, was zu einer größeren Angsthemmung führt, wenn sie während eines Tests gezeigt werden. (3) Nach der emotionalen Prozesstheorie (emotional process theory; Bouton, 1994; Foa et al., 1996) bestimmen die Therapieprozessfaktoren die Stärke des Renewals. Beispielsweise korrelieren initiale Angstaktivierung, Aktivierung in und zwischen den Sitzungen mit der Stärke des Renewals. Jedoch waren in dieser Studie keine Unterschiede zwischen den Gruppen im Renewaltest zu beobachten, weswegen die Ergebnisse der zwei Nachtests nicht zu interpretieren sind. Das Ziel von Studie 3 (N = 61) war es, das Konzept des Kontexts im Rahmen von Konditionierung und Exposition zu definieren. In Studie 3 wurde das Auftreten der Generalisierungsabnahme (generalization decrement) genutzt, bei der eine konditionierte Reaktion infolge eines Kontextwechsels nur reduziert auftritt. Auf diesem Weg kann Kontextähnlichkeit quantifiziert werden. Nach einer Akquisitonsphase in einem Kontext wurden die Teilnehmer in einem von drei verschiedenen Kontexten getestet. Zwei dieser Kontexte unterschieden sich nur in einer Dimension (Anordnung der Objekte vs. Objekteigenschaften). Die dritte Gruppe wurde im Akquisitonskontext getestet und diente als Kontrollgruppe. Es fanden sich jedoch keine Unteschiede zwischen den Gruppen in den Testphasen. Eine mögliche Erklärung ist die Neuartigkeit des Testkontextes. Teilnehmer, die nach der Extinktion einem neuen Kontext ausgesetzt waren, erwarteten in einem anderen Kontext eine zweite Extinktionsphase und zeigten daher mehr statt weniger Angst als erwartet. N2 - Renewal of fear is one form of relapse that occurs after successful therapy, resulting from an encounter with a feared object in a context different from the context of the exposure therapy. According to Bouton (1994), the return of fear, provoked by context change, indicates that the fear was not erased in the first place. More importantly, the return of fear indicates that during the exposure session a new association was learned that connected the feared object with “no fear”; yet, as Bouton further argues, this association is context dependent. Such dependence could explain effects like renewal. In a new context, the therapeutic association will not be expressed and thus will no longer inhibit the fear. The assumption that an association is context dependent has been tested and showed robust results (Balooch & Neumann, 2011; Siavash Bandarian Balooch, Neumann, & Boschen, 2012; Culver, Stoyanova, & Craske, 2011; Kim & Richardson, 2009; Neumann & Kitlertsirivatana, 2010). Research for the treatment of anxiety disorders, aiming to reduce fear and, more importantly, prevent relapse, is flourishing. There are several exposure protocols currently under investigation: multiple contexts exposure (MCE), which aims at reducing the return of fear due to renewal (e.g., Balooch & Neumann, 2011); prolonged exposure (PE), which aims at strengthening the inhibitory association during the extinction learning (e.g., Thomas, Vurbic, & Novak, 2009); and reconsolidation update (RU), which aims at “updating” the reconsolidation process by briefly exposing the CS+ before the actual extinction takes place (Schiller et al., 2010). So far, however, few clinical studies conducted on humans have investigated these novel treatment protocols, and as far as I know none has investigated the mechanisms of action behind these protocols with a human clinical sample. The present thesis has three main goals. The first is to demonstrate that exposure therapy in multiple contexts reduces the likelihood of renewal. The second is to examine the mechanisms contributing to the effect of MCE and the third is to shed light on the concept of context in the framework of the conditioning and extinction paradigm. To this end, three studies were conducted. The first study investigated the effect of MCE on renewal, the second and third studies examined working mechanisms of MCE. In the first study thirty spider-phobic participants were exposed four times to a virtual spider. The exposure trials were conducted either in one single context or in four different contexts. Finally, all participants completed both a virtual renewal test, with the virtual spider presented in a novel virtual context, and an in vivo behavioral avoidance test with a real spider. This study successfully demonstrated the efficacy of MCE on reducing renewal. Study 2 investigated the working mechanisms behind MCE by utilizing a differential conditioning paradigm and conducting the extinction in multiple contexts, targeting similar renewal attenuation as achieved in study 1. This was followed by two tests that attempted to reveal extinction-relevant associations like ones causing context inhibitory effects. This study had three main hypotheses: (1) The extinction context is associated with the exposure, and thus operates as a safety signal at some point during the extinction; it will therefore compete with the safety learning of the CS, leading to a decreased extinction effect on the CS if the extinction is conducted in only one context. (2) The elements (e.g., room color, furniture) of the extinction context are connected to the therapeutic association and therefore should serve as reminders of the extinction, causing a stronger fear inhibition when presented during a test. (3) Therapy process factors, according to emotional processing theory, determine the renewal effect (e.g., initial fear activation, and within-session and between-session activation are correlated with the strength of renewal). In this study, however, no differences between the groups at the renewal phase were observed, presumably because the extinction was too strong to enable a renewal of fear at the test phase conducted immediately following the extinction. This hence rendered the two inhibitory tests useless. Study 3 aimed at defining the concept of context in the conditioning and exposure framework. Study 3 utilized the phenomenon known as generalization decrement, whereby a conditioned response is reduced due to change in the environment. This allowed context similarity to be quantified. After an acquisition phase in one context, participants were tested in one of three contexts, two of which differed in only one dimension (configuration of objects vs. features). The third group was tested in the same context and served as control group. The goal was to show that both configuration and features play an important role in the definition of context. There was, however, no significant statistical difference between the groups at the test phases, likely because of context novelty effects (participants exposed to a new context following extinction in another context expected a second extinction phase, and thus demonstrated greater fear than expected in all three groups). KW - Angst KW - Konditionierung KW - Virtuelle Realität KW - multiple context exposure therapy Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-76673 ER - TY - THES A1 - Reuß, Heiko T1 - The interplay of unconscious processing and cognitive control T1 - Das Zusammenspiel unbewusster Verarbeitung und kognitiver Kontrolle N2 - The aim of this study was both to investigate the influence of cognitive control on unconscious processing, and to investigate the influence of unconscious processing on cognitive control. At first, different mechanisms and accounts to explain unconscious priming are presented. Here, perceptual and motor processes, as well as stimulus-response learning, semantic categorization, and the action trigger account as theories to explain motor priming are discussed. Then, the issue of the potential limits of unconscious processing is presented. Findings that indicate that active current intentions and expertise modulate unconscious processing are illustrated. Subsequently, results that imply an influence of unconsciously presented stimuli that goes beyond motor processes are discussed, with a special focus on inhibition processes, orienting of attention, task set activation, and conflict adaptation. Then I present the results of my own empirical work. Experiment 1 shows that the effective processing of unconsciously presented stimuli depends on expertise, even when potentially confounding difference between the expert and novice groups are controlled. The results of Experiments 2 and 3 indicate that the intention to use particular stimuli is a crucial factor for the effectiveness of these stimuli when they are presented unconsciously. Additionally, these findings show that shifts of attention can be triggered by centrally presented masked arrow cues. Experiments 4 and 5 broaden these results to cue stimuli that are not inherently associated with a spatial meaning. The finding corroborate that typically endogenously controlled shifts of attention can also be induced by unconscious stimuli. Experiments 6 and 7 demonstrate that even a central cognitive control process like task set activation is not contingent on conscious awareness, but can in contrast be triggered through unconscious stimulation. Finally, these results are integrated and I discuss how the concept of cognitive control and the limits of unconscious processing may have to be reconsidered. Furthermore, potential future research possibilities in this field are presented. N2 - Das Ziel dieser Arbeit war es, sowohl den Einfluss von kognitiver Kontrolle auf unbewusste Verarbeitung, als auch den Einfluss unbewusster Verarbeitung auf kognitive Kontrolle zu untersuchen. Zunächst werden verschiedene Mechanismen und Ansätze zur Erklärung unbewusster Bahnung vorgestellt. Dabei werden perzeptuelle Prozesse sowie motorische Prozesse beleuchtet und mit Reiz-Reaktions-Verbindungen, semantischer Kategorisierung und dem Ansatz handlungsdeterminierender Reizerwartungen drei verschiedene Ansätze zur Erklärung motorischer Bahnung besprochen. Danach wird die Problematik der Grenzen unbewusster Verarbeitung dargestellt. Es werden Befunde vorgestellt, die Hinweise auf den Einfluss von aktiven Aufgabeneinstellungen sowie von Expertise auf unbewusste Verarbeitung geben. Als nächstes werden Ergebnisse besprochen, die einen über motorische Prozesse hinausgehenden Einfluss unbewusster Reize nahelegen. Dabei wird insbesondere auf den Einfluss auf Hemmprozesse, Aufmerksamkeitsausrichtung, die Aktivierung von Aufgabeneinstellungen und Konfliktadaptation eingegangen. Dann werden die Ergebnisse eigener empirischer Arbeiten vorgestellt. In Experiment 1 wurde gezeigt, dass die effektive Verarbeitung unbewusster Reize von Expertise abhängt, auch wenn sonstige Unterschiede zwischen Experten- und Novizen-Gruppen kontrolliert sind. Die Ergebnisse von Experiment 2 und 3 zeigten, dass die Absicht, bestimmte Reize zu nutzen, ein entscheidender Faktor dabei ist, ob diese Reize auch unbewusst einen Effekt entfalten können. Zudem wurde hier gezeigt, dass Aufmerksamkeitsverschiebungen durch zentral präsentierte, maskierte Pfeile ausgelöst werden können. Die Experimente 4 und 5 erweiterten diesen Befund auf Hinweisreize, die keine inhärente räumliche Bedeutung haben. Hier konnte bestätigt werden, dass eigentlich endogen gesteuerte Aufmerksamkeitsverschiebungen durch unbewusste Reize induziert werden können. Die Experimente 6 und 7 zeigten, dass selbst ein zentraler kognitiver Kontrollprozess wie die Aktivierung verschiedener Aufgabeneinstellungen nicht bewusstseinspflichtig ist, sondern im Gegenteil durch unbewusste Stimulation in Gang gesetzt werden kann. Letztendlich werden diese Ergebnisse zueinander in Beziehung gesetzt. Es wird diskutiert, inwiefern das Konzept kognitiver Kontrolle und die Grenzen unbewusster Verarbeitung neu betrachtet werden müssen. Außerdem werden mögliche zukünftige Forschungsfelder in diesem Bereich aufgezeigt. KW - Bewusstsein KW - unconscious processing KW - cognitive control KW - Kognitiver Prozess KW - Allgemeine Psychologie Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-76950 ER - TY - THES A1 - Lehrieder, Frank T1 - Performance Evaluation and Optimization of Content Distribution using Overlay Networks T1 - Leistungsbewertung und Optimierung von Overlay Netzwerken zum Verteilen großer Datenmengen N2 - The work presents a performance evaluation and optimization of so-called overlay networks for content distribution in the Internet. Chapter 1 describes the importance which have such networks in today's Internet, for example, for the transmission of video content. The focus of this work is on overlay networks based on the peer-to-peer principle. These are characterized by the fact that users who download content, also contribute to the distribution process by sharing parts of the data to other users. This enables efficient content distribution because each user not only consumes resources in the system, but also provides its own resources. Chapter 2 of the monograph contains a detailed description of the functionality of today's most popular overlay network BitTorrent. It explains the various components and their interaction. This is followed by an illustration of why such overlay networks for Internet service providers (ISPs) are problematic. The reason lies in the large amount of inter-ISP traffic that is produced by these overlay networks. Since this inter-ISP traffic leads to high costs for ISPs, they try to reduce it by improved mechanisms for overlay networks. One optimization approach is the use of topology awareness within the overlay networks. It provides users of the overlay networks with information about the underlying physical network topology. This allows them to avoid inter-ISP traffic by exchanging data preferrentially with other users that are connected to the same ISP. Another approach to save inter-ISP traffic is caching. In this case the ISP provides additional computers in its network, called caches, which store copies of popular content. The users of this ISP can then obtain such content from the cache. This prevents that the content must be retrieved from locations outside of the ISP's network, and saves costly inter-ISP traffic in this way. In the third chapter of the thesis, the results of a comprehensive measurement study of overlay networks, which can be found in today's Internet, are presented. After a short description of the measurement methodology, the results of the measurements are described. These results contain data on a variety of characteristics of current P2P overlay networks in the Internet. These include the popularity of content, i.e., how many users are interested in specific content, the evolution of the popularity and the size of the files. The distribution of users within the Internet is investigated in detail. Special attention is given to the number of users that exchange a particular file within the same ISP. On the basis of these measurement results, an estimation of the traffic savings that can achieved by topology awareness is derived. This new estimation is of scientific and practical importance, since it is not limited to individual ISPs and files, but considers the whole Internet and the total amount of data exchanged in overlay networks. Finally, the characteristics of regional content are considered, in which the popularity is limited to certain parts of the Internet. This is for example the case of videos in German, Italian or French language. Chapter 4 of the thesis is devoted to the optimization of overlay networks for content distribution through caching. It presents a deterministic flow model that describes the influence of caches. On the basis of this model, it derives an estimate of the inter-ISP traffic that is generated by an overlay network, and which part can be saved by caches. The results show that the influence of the cache depends on the structure of the overlay networks, and that caches can also lead to an increase in inter-ISP traffic under certain circumstances. The described model is thus an important tool for ISPs to decide for which overlay networks caches are useful and to dimension them. Chapter 5 summarizes the content of the work and emphasizes the importance of the findings. In addition, it explains how the findings can be applied to the optimization of future overlay networks. Special attention is given to the growing importance of video-on-demand and real-time video transmissions. N2 - Die Arbeit beschäftigt sich mit der Leistungsbewertung und Optimierung von sogenannten Overlay-Netzwerken zum Verteilen von großen Datenmengen im Internet. Im Kapitel 1 der Arbeit wird die große Bedeutung erläutert, die solche Netzwerke im heutigen Internet haben, beispielsweise für die Übertragung von Video-Inhalten. Im Fokus der Arbeit liegen Overlay-Netzwerke, die auf dem Peer-to-peer Prinzip basieren. Diese zeichnen sich dadurch aus, dass Nutzer, die Inhalte herunterladen, auch gleichzeitig an dem Verteilprozess teilnehmen, indem sie Teile der Daten an andere Nutzer weitergeben. Dies ermöglicht eine effiziente Verteilung der Daten, weil jeder Nutzer nicht nur Ressourcen im System belegt, sondern auch eigene Ressourcen einbringt. Kapitel 2 der Arbeit enthält eine detaillierte Beschreibung der Funktionsweise des heute populärsten Overlay-Netzwerks BitTorrent. Es werden die einzelnen Komponenten erläutert und deren Zusammenspiel erklärt. Darauf folgt eine Darstellung, warum solche Overlay-Netzwerke für Internet-Anbieter (Internet service provider, ISP) problematisch sind. Der Grund dafür liegt in der großen Menge an Inter-ISP Verkehr, den diese Overlays erzeugen. Da solcher Inter-ISP Verkehr zu hohen Kosten für ISPs führt, versuchen diese den Inter-ISP Verkehr zu reduzieren, indem sie die Mechanismen der Overlay-Netzwerke optimieren. Ein Ansatz zur Optimierung ist die Verwendung von Topologiebewusstsein innerhalb der Overlay-Netzwerke. Dabei erhalten die Nutzer der Overlay-Netzwerke Informationen über die zugrunde liegende, physikalische Netzwerktopologie. Diese ermöglichen es ihnen, Inter-ISP Verkehr zu vermeiden, indem sie Daten bevorzugt mit anderen Nutzern austauschen, die mit dem gleichen ISP verbunden sind. Ein weiterer Ansatz, um Inter-ISP Verkehr einzusparen, ist Caching. Dabei stellt der ISP zusätzliche Rechner, sogenannte Caches, in seinem Netzwerk zur Verfügung, die Kopien populärer Inhalte zwischenspeichern. Die Nutzer dieses ISP können solche Inhalte nun von den Caches beziehen. Dies verhindert, dass populäre Inhalte mehrfach von außerhalb des betrachteten ISPs bezogen werden müssen, und spart so kostenintensiven Inter-ISP Verkehr ein. Im dritten Kapitel der Arbeit werden Ergebnisse einer umfassenden Messung von Overlay-Netzwerken vorgestellt, wie sie heute im Internet anzutreffen sind. Nach einer kurzen Darstellung der bei der Messung verwendeten Methodik werden die Resultate der Messungen beschrieben. Diese Ergebnisse enthalten Daten über eine Vielzahl von Eigenschaften von heutigen P2P-basierten Overlay-Netzwerken im Internet. Dazu zählen die Popularität von Inhalten, d.h., wie viele Nutzer an bestimmten Inhalten interessiert sind, die zeitliche Entwicklung der Popularität und die Größe der Daten. Im Detail wird auch die Verteilung der Nutzer über das Internet analysiert. Ein besonderes Augenmerk liegt dabei auf der Anzahl der Nutzer, die gleichzeitig und im Netz desselben ISP eine bestimmte Datei tauschen. Auf der Basis dieser Messergebnisse wird eine Abschätzung durchgeführt, welches Einsparpotential die Optimierung von Overlay-Netzwerken durch Topologiebewusstsein bietet. Diese neuartige Abschätzung ist von wissenschaftlicher und praktischer Bedeutung, da sie sich nicht auf einzelne ISPs und Dateien beschränkt, sondern des gesamte Internet und die Menge aller in Overlay-Netzwerken verfügbaren Dateien umfasst. Schließlich werden die Besonderheiten von regionalen Inhalten betrachtet, bei denen sich die Popularität auf bestimmte Teile des Internets beschränkt. Dies ist beispielsweise bei Videos in deutscher, italienischer oder französischer Sprache der Fall. Kapitel 4 der Arbeit widmet sich der Optimierung von Overlay-Netzwerken zum Verteilen großer Datenmengen durch Caching. Es wird ein deterministisches Flussmodel entwickelt, das den Einfluss von Caches beschreibt. Auf der Basis dieses Modells leitet er eine Abschätzung des Inter-ISP Verkehrs ab, der von einem Overlay-Netzwerk erzeugt wird, und welcher Teil davon durch Caches eingespart werden kann. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass der Einfluss von Caches von der Struktur der Overlay-Netzwerke abhängt und dass Caches unter bestimmten Umständen auch zu einem erhöhten Inter-ISP Verkehr führen können. Das beschriebene Modell ist somit ein wichtiges Hilfsmittel für ISPs um zu entscheiden, für welche Overlay-Netzwerke Caches sinnvoll sind, und um diese anschließend richtig zu dimensionieren. Kapitel 5 fasst den Inhalt der Arbeit zusammen und stellt die Bedeutung der gewonnenen Erkenntnisse heraus. Abschließend wird erläutert, in welcher Weise die in der Arbeit beschriebenen Ergebnisse wichtige Grundlagen für die Optimierung von zukünftigen Overlay-Netzwerken darstellen werden. Dabei wird besonders auf die wachsende Bedeutung von Video-On-Demand und Echt-Zeit Video-Übertragungen eingegangen. T3 - Würzburger Beiträge zur Leistungsbewertung Verteilter Systeme - 01/13 KW - Leistungsbewertung KW - Verteiltes System KW - Overlay-Netz KW - Overlay Netzwerke KW - Overlay networks Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-76018 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schreier, Peter A1 - Binns, Colin A1 - Högger, Petra A1 - Wu, Dayong T1 - It began with citrus N2 - First Editorial of Open Access Journal "Nutrition and Medicine (NUME)" published by Würzburg University Press: http://nume.de KW - Ernährung KW - Medizin KW - Citrus KW - Geschichte KW - nutrition KW - medicine KW - citrus KW - history Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-74918 ER - TY - THES A1 - Solanki, Narendra T1 - Novelty choice in Drosophila melanogaster T1 - Neuigkeitseffekt im Mustersehen von Drosophila melanogaster N2 - This study explores novelty choice, a behavioral paradigm for the investigation of visual pattern recognition and learning of the fly Drosophila melanogaster in the flight simulator. Pattern recognition in novelty choice differs significantly from pattern recognition studied by heat conditioning, although both paradigms use the same test. Out of the four pattern parameters that the flies can learn in heat conditioning, novelty choice can be shown for height (horizontal bars differing in height), size and vertical compactness but not for oblique bars oriented at +/- 45°. Upright and inverted Ts [differing in their centers of gravity (CsOG) by 13°] that have been extensively used for heat conditioning experiments, do not elicit novelty choice. In contrast, horizontal bars differing in their CsOG by 13° do elicit novelty choice; so do the Ts after increasing their CsOG difference from 13° to 23°. This indicates that in the Ts the heights of the CsOG are not the only pattern parameters that matter for the novelty choice behavior. The novelty choice and heat conditioning paradigms are further differentiated using the gene rutabaga (rut) coding for a type 1 adenylyl cyclase. This protein had been shown to be involved in memory formation in the heat conditioning paradigm. Novelty choice is not affected by mutations in the rut gene. This is in line with the finding that dopamine, which in olfactory learning is known to regulate Rutabaga via the dopamine receptor Dumb in the mushroom bodies, is dispensable for novelty choice. It is concluded that in novelty choice the Rut cAMP pathway is not involved. Novelty choice requires short term working memory, as has been described in spatial orientation during locomotion. The protein S6KII that has been shown to be involved in visual orientation memory in walking flies is found here to be also required for novelty choice. As in heat conditioning the central complex plays a major role in novelty choice. The S6KII mutant phenotype for height can be rescued in some subsets of the ring neurons of the ellipsoid body. In addition the finding that the ellipsoid body mutants ebo678 and eboKS263 also show a mutant phenotype for height confirm the importance of ellipsoid body for height novelty choice. Interestingly some neurons in the F1 layer of the fan-shaped body are necessary for height novelty choice. Furthermore, different novelty choice phenotypes for different pattern parameters are found with and without mushroom bodies. Mushroom bodies are required in novelty choice for size but they are dispensable for height and vertical compactness. This special circuit requirement for the size parameter in novelty choice is found using various means of interference with mushroom body function during development or adulthood. N2 - Diese Studie untersucht Novelty Choice, ein Verhaltens-Paradigma für die Untersuchung der visuellen Mustererkennung und des Lernens der Fliege Drosophila melanogaster im Flugsimulator. Mustererkennung in Novelty Choice unterscheidet sich deutlich von Mustererkennung durch heat conditioning, obwohl beide Paradigmen den gleichen Test verwenden. Von den vier Muster-Parametern, die die Fliegen im heat conditioning für die Musterunterscheidung lernen kann, lernt sie in Novelty Choice nur die Höhe (horizontale Balken in unterschiedlicher Höhe), Größe und vertikale Kompaktheit, nicht dagegen die schrägen Balken im Winkel von +/- 45°. Aufrechte und umgekehrte Ts [hinsichtlich ihrer Schwerpunkte (CsOG) um 13° voneinander verschieden], die bisher weitgehend für heat conditioning Experimente verwendet werden, lösen kein Novelty Choice aus. Im Gegensatz dazu reagiert die Fliege auf horizontale Balken, die sich in ihren CsOG um 13° unterscheiden, mit Novelty Choice. Auch die Ts lösen Novelty Choice aus, wenn ihre CsOG-Differenzen von 13° auf 23° erhöht wird. Dies deutet darauf hin, dass in den Ts die Höhen der CsOG nicht die einzigen relevanten Musterparameter für Novelty Choice Verhalten sind. Die Novelty Choice und heat conditioning Paradigmen unterscheiden sich darüber hinaus in der Rolle des Gens rutabaga (rut), das eine Typ-1-Adenylylcyclase codiert. Für dieses Protein wurde gezeigt, dass es bei der Gedächtnisbildung in der heat conditioning beteiligt ist. Novelty Choice wird nicht durch Mutationen im Gen rut beeinflusst. Dies steht im Einklang mit der Erkenntnis, dass Dopamin, das bei olfaktorischem Lernen bekanntermaßen Rutabaga über den Dopamin-Rezeptor Dumb in den Pilzkörpern reguliert, entbehrlich für die Novelty Choice ist. Die Schlussfolgerung ist, dass der Rut cAMP Signalweg bei der Novelty Choice nicht beteiligt ist. Novelty choice erfordert kurzfristigen Arbeitsgedächtnisspeicher, wie in der räumlichen Orientierung während der Fortbewegung beschrieben wurde. Das Protein S6KII, für welches gezeigt wurde, dass es am visuellen Orientierungsgedächtnis laufender Fliegen beteiligt ist, wird hier als ebenso notwendig für Novelty Choice entdeckt. Wie in heat conditioning spielt der Zentralkomplex eine wichtige Rolle in Novelty Choice. Der S6KII Mutantenphänotyp für Höhe kann in einigen Untergruppen der Ring-Neuronen des Ellipsoidkörpers gerettet werden. Weiterhin kann festgestellt werden, dass die Ellipsoidkörper-Mutanten ebo678 und eboKS263, welche ebenfalls einen Mutantenphänotyp für Höhe zeigen, die Bedeutung des Ellipsoidkörpers für die Novelty Choice hinsichtlich des Höheparameters bestätigen. Interessanterweise sind einige Neuronen in der F1-Schicht des Fächerförmigen Körpers notwendig für Novelty Choice (für Höhe). Darüber hinaus werden mit und ohne Pilzkörper unterschiedliche Phänotypen für verschiedene Musterparameter bei Novelty Choice gefunden. Die Pilzkörper sind in der Novelty Choice für Größe erforderlich, aber für Höhe und vertikale Kompaktheit sind sie entbehrlich. Diese spezielle Schaltungsvoraussetzung für den Größenparameter in Novelty Choice wird unter Verwendung verschiedener Mittel der Interferenz mit Pilzkörperfunktionen während der Entwicklung oder im Erwachsenenalter gefunden. KW - Taufliege KW - Drosophila melanogaster KW - Mustererkennung KW - Sehen KW - Lernen Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-103219 N1 - Dieses Dokument wurde aus Datenschutzgründen - ohne inhaltliche Änderungen - erneut veröffentlicht. Die ursprüngliche Veröffentlichung war am: 06.08.2013 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ojha, Animesh K. A1 - Forster, Stefan A1 - Kumar, Sumeet A1 - Vats, Siddharth A1 - Negi, Segeeta A1 - Fischer, Ingo T1 - Synthesis of well-dispersed silver nanorods of different aspect ratios and their antimicrobial properties against gram positive and negative bacterial strains JF - Journal of Nanobiotechnology N2 - In the present contribution, we describe the synthesis of highly dispersed silver nanorods (NRs) of different aspect ratios using a chemical route. The shape and size of the synthesized NRs were characterized by Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) and UV-visible spectroscopy. Longitudinal and transverse absorptions bands confirm the rod type structure. The experimentally recorded UV-visible spectra of NRs solutions were fitted by using an expression of the extinction coefficient for rod like nano structures under the dipole approximation. Simulated and experimentally observed UV-visible spectra were compared to determine the aspect ratios (R) of NRs. The average values of R for NR1, NR2 and NR3 solutions are estimated to be 3.0 +/- 0.1, 1.8 +/- 0.1 and 1.2 +/- 0.1, respectively. These values are in good agreement with those obtained by TEM micrographs. The silver NRs of known aspect ratios are used to study antimicrobial activities against B. subtilis (gram positive) and E. coli (gram negative) microbes. We observed that the NRs of intermediate aspect ratio (R = 1.8) have greater antimicrobial effect against both, B. subtilis (gram positive) and E. coli (gram negative). The NRs of aspect ratio, R = 3.0 has better antimicrobial activities against gram positive than on the gram negative. KW - silver KW - nano rods KW - TEM KW - antimicrobial activities KW - nanowire formation KW - gold nanoparticles KW - Raman-scattering KW - nanostructures KW - particles Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-122837 SN - 1477-3155 VL - 11 IS - 42 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Vainio, Rami A1 - Valtonen, Eino A1 - Heber, Bernd A1 - Malandraki, Olga E. A1 - Papaioannou, Athanasios A1 - Klein, Karl-Ludwig A1 - Afanasiev, Alexander A1 - Agueda, Neus A1 - Aurass, Henry A1 - Battarbee, Markus A1 - Braune, Stephan A1 - Dröge, Wolfgang A1 - Ganse, Urs A1 - Hamadache, Clarisse A1 - Heynderickx, Daniel A1 - Huttunen-Heikinmaa, Kalle A1 - Kiener, Jürgen A1 - Kilian, Patrick A1 - Kopp, Andreas A1 - Kouloumvakos, Athanasios A1 - Maisala, Sami A1 - Mishev, Alexander A1 - Miteva, Rosita A1 - Nindos, Alexander A1 - Oittinen, Tero A1 - Raukunen, Osku A1 - Riihonen, Esa A1 - Rodriguez-Gasen, Rosa A1 - Saloniemi, Oskari A1 - Sanahuja, Blai A1 - Scherer, Renate A1 - Spanier, Felix A1 - Tatischeff, Vincent A1 - Tziotziou, Kostas A1 - Usoskin, Ilya G. A1 - Vilmer, Nicole T1 - The first SEPServer event catalogue similar to ~68-MeV solar proton events observed at 1 AU in 1996-2010 JF - Journal of Space Weather and Space Climate N2 - SEPServer is a three-year collaborative project funded by the seventh framework programme (FP7-SPACE) of the European Union. The objective of the project is to provide access to state-of-the-art observations and analysis tools for the scientific community on solar energetic particle (SEP) events and related electromagnetic (EM) emissions. The project will eventually lead to better understanding of the particle acceleration and transport processes at the Sun and in the inner heliosphere. These processes lead to SEP events that form one of the key elements of space weather. In this paper we present the first results from the systematic analysis work performed on the following datasets: SOHO/ERNE, SOHO/EPHIN, ACE/EPAM, Wind/WAVES and GOES X-rays. A catalogue of SEP events at 1 AU, with complete coverage over solar cycle 23, based on high-energy (similar to 68-MeV) protons from SOHO/ERNE and electron recordings of the events by SOHO/EPHIN and ACE/EPAM are presented. A total of 115 energetic particle events have been identified and analysed using velocity dispersion analysis (VDA) for protons and time-shifting analysis (TSA) for electrons and protons in order to infer the SEP release times at the Sun. EM observations during the times of the SEP event onset have been gathered and compared to the release time estimates of particles. Data from those events that occurred during the European day-time, i.e., those that also have observations from ground-based observatories included in SEPServer, are listed and a preliminary analysis of their associations is presented. We find that VDA results for protons can be a useful tool for the analysis of proton release times, but if the derived proton path length is out of a range of 1 AU < s less than or similar to 3 AU, the result of the analysis may be compromised, as indicated by the anti-correlation of the derived path length and release time delay from the associated X-ray flare. The average path length derived from VDA is about 1.9 times the nominal length of the spiral magnetic field line. This implies that the path length of first-arriving MeV to deka-MeV protons is affected by interplanetary scattering. TSA of near-relativistic electrons results in a release time that shows significant scatter with respect to the EM emissions but with a trend of being delayed more with increasing distance between the flare and the nominal footpoint of the Earth-connected field line. KW - radio emissions (dynamic) KW - projects KW - advanced composition explorer KW - wind spacecraft KW - stereo mission KW - alpha monitor KW - electron KW - plasma KW - radio KW - spectrometer KW - heliosphere KW - instrument KW - radiation KW - flares Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-122847 SN - 2115-7251 VL - 3 IS - A12 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Zadeh-Khorasani, Maryam A1 - Nolte, Thomas A1 - Mueller, Thomas D. A1 - Pechlivanis, Markos A1 - Rueff, Franziska A1 - Wollenberg, Andreas A1 - Fricker, Gert A1 - Wolf, Eckhard A1 - Siebeck, Matthias A1 - Gropp, Roswitha T1 - NOD-scid IL2R \(\gamma^{null}\) mice engrafted with human peripheral blood mononuclear cells as a model to test therapeutics targeting human signaling pathways JF - Journal of Translational Medicine N2 - Background: Animal models of human inflammatory diseases have limited predictive quality for human clinical trials for various reasons including species specific activation mechanisms and the immunological background of the animals which markedly differs from the genetically heterogeneous and often aged patient population. Objective: Development of an animal model allowing for testing therapeutics targeting pathways involved in the development of Atopic Dermatitis (AD) with better translatability to the patient. Methods: NOD-scid IL2R \(\gamma^{null}\) mice engrafted with human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (hPBMC) derived from patients suffering from AD and healthy volunteers were treated with IL-4 and the antagonistic IL-4 variant R121/Y124D (Pitrakinra). Levels of human (h) IgE, amount of B-, T- and plasma-cells and ratio of CD4 : CD8 positive cells served as read out for induction and inhibition of cell proliferation and hIgE secretion. Results were compared to in vitro analysis. Results: hIgE secretion was induced by IL-4 and inhibited by the IL-4 antagonist Pitrakinra in vivo when formulated with methylcellulose. B-cells proliferated in response to IL-4 in vivo; the effect was abrogated by Pitrakinra. IL-4 shifted CD4 : CD8 ratios in vitro and in vivo when hPBMC derived from healthy volunteers were used. Pitrakinra reversed the effect. Human PBMC derived from patients with AD remained inert and engrafted mice reflected the individual responses observed in vitro. Conclusion: NOD-scid IL2R \(\gamma^{null}\) mice engrafted with human PBMC reflect the immunological history of the donors and provide a complementary tool to in vitro studies. Thus, studies in this model might provide data with better translatability from bench to bedside. KW - atopic dermatitis KW - T-cells KW - rheumatoid arthritis KW - human interleukin-4 KW - TGN1412 KW - oxazolone colitis KW - cytokine release KW - expression KW - antagonists KW - responses Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-122960 SN - 1479-5876 VL - 11 IS - 4 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Meuche, Ivonne A1 - Brusa, Oscar A1 - Linsenmair, K. Eduard A1 - Keller, Alexander A1 - Pröhl, Heike T1 - Only distance matters - non-choosy females in a poison frog population JF - Frontiers in Zoology N2 - Background: Females have often been shown to exhibit preferences for certain male traits. However, little is known about behavioural rules females use when searching for mates in their natural habitat. We investigated mate sampling tactics and related costs in the territorial strawberry poison frog (Oophaga pumilio) possessing a lek-like mating system, where both sequential and simultaneous sampling might occur. We continuously monitored the sampling pattern and behaviour of females during the complete period between two successive matings. Results: We found no evidence that females compared males by visiting them. Instead females mated with the closest calling male irrespective of his acoustic and physical traits, and territory size. Playback experiments in the natural home ranges of receptive females revealed that tested females preferred the nearest speaker and did not discriminate between low and high call rates or dominant frequencies. Conclusions: Our results suggest that females of O. pumilio prefer the closest calling male in the studied population. We hypothesize that the sampling tactic in this population is affected by 1) a strongly female biased sex ratio and 2) a low variance in traits of available males due to strong male-male competition, preventing low quality males from defending a territory and mating. KW - operational sex ratio KW - sequential mate choice KW - gray tree frogs KW - treefrogs hyla-gratiosa KW - male mating success KW - Bocas-del-Toro KW - dendrobates pumilio KW - oophaga pumilio KW - pied flycatchers KW - sampling behavior Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-122617 SN - 1742-9994 VL - 10 IS - 29 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Müller, Sara A1 - Windhof, Indra M. A1 - Maximov, Vladimir A1 - Jurkowski, Tomasz A1 - Jeltsch, Albert A1 - Förstner, Konrad U. A1 - Sharma, Cynthia M. A1 - Gräf, Ralph A1 - Nellen, Wolfgang T1 - Target recognition, RNA methylation activity and transcriptional regulation of the Dictyostelium discoideum Dnmt2-homologue (DnmA) JF - Nucleic Acids Research N2 - Although the DNA methyltransferase 2 family is highly conserved during evolution and recent reports suggested a dual specificity with stronger activity on transfer RNA (tRNA) than DNA substrates, the biological function is still obscure. We show that the Dictyostelium discoideum Dnmt2-homologue DnmA is an active tRNA methyltransferase that modifies C38 in \(tRNA^{Asp(GUC)}\) in vitro and in vivo. By an ultraviolet-crosslinking and immunoprecipitation approach, we identified further DnmA targets. This revealed specific tRNA fragments bound by the enzyme and identified \(tRNA^{Glu(CUC/UUC)}\) and \(tRNA^{Gly(GCC)}\) as new but weaker substrates for both human Dnmt2 and DnmA in vitro but apparently not in vivo. Dnmt2 enzymes form transient covalent complexes with their substrates. The dynamics of complex formation and complex resolution reflect methylation efficiency in vitro. Quantitative PCR analyses revealed alterations in dnmA expression during development, cell cycle and in response to temperature stress. However, dnmA expression only partially correlated with tRNA methylation in vivo. Strikingly, dnmA expression in the laboratory strain AX2 was significantly lower than in the NC4 parent strain. As expression levels and binding of DnmA to a target in vivo are apparently not necessarily accompanied by methylation, we propose an additional biological function of DnmA apart from methylation. KW - DNA methylferase homolog KW - drospophila KW - TRNA(ASP) KW - mechanism KW - binding Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-123149 SN - 1362-4962 VL - 41 IS - 18 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Dörhöfer, Lena A1 - Lammert, Alexander A1 - Krane, Vera A1 - Gorski, Mathias A1 - Banas, Bernhard A1 - Wanner, Christoph A1 - Krämer, Bernhard K. A1 - Heid, Iris M. A1 - Böger, Carsten A. T1 - Study design of DIACORE (DIAbetes COhoRtE) - a cohort study of patients with diabetes mellitus type 2 JF - BMC Medical Genetics N2 - Background: Diabetes mellitus type 2 (DM2) is highly associated with increased risk for chronic kidney disease (CKD), end stage renal disease (ESRD) and cardiovascular morbidity. Epidemiological and genetic studies generate hypotheses for innovative strategies in DM2 management by unravelling novel mechanisms of diabetes complications, which is essential for future intervention trials. We have thus initiated the DIAbetes COhoRtE study (DIACORE). Methods: DIACORE is a prospective cohort study aiming to recruit 6000 patients of self-reported Caucasian ethnicity with prevalent DM2 for at least 10 years of follow-up. Study visits are performed in University-based recruiting clinics in Germany using standard operating procedures. All prevalent DM2 patients in outpatient clinics surrounding the recruiting centers are invited to participate. At baseline and at each 2-year follow-up examination, patients are subjected to a core phenotyping protocol. This includes a standardized online questionnaire and physical examination to determine incident micro-and macrovascular DM2 complications, malignancy and hospitalization, with a primary focus on renal events. Confirmatory outcome information is requested from patient records. Blood samples are obtained for a centrally analyzed standard laboratory panel and for biobanking of aliquots of serum, plasma, urine, mRNA and DNA for future scientific use. A subset of the cohort is subjected to extended phenotyping, e. g. sleep apnea screening, skin autofluorescence measurement, non-mydriatic retinal photography and non-invasive determination of arterial stiffness. Discussion: DIACORE will enable the prospective evaluation of factors involved in DM2 complication pathogenesis using high-throughput technologies in biosamples and genetic epidemiological studies. KW - chronic kidney-disease KW - stage renal-disease KW - glomerular-filtration-rate KW - genome-wide association KW - blood-glucose control KW - genetics KW - serum creatinine KW - cardiovascular disease KW - replacement therapy KW - United States KW - risk factors KW - diabetes mellitus type 2 KW - diabetic nephropathy KW - end stage renal disease KW - cardiovascular morbidity KW - diabetes complications KW - epidemiology Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-122040 SN - 1471-2350 VL - 14 IS - 25 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ljunggren, Osten A1 - Barrett, Annabel A1 - Stoykov, Ivaylo A1 - Langdahl, Bente L. A1 - Lems, Willem F. A1 - Walsh, J. Bernard A1 - Fahrleitner-Pammer, Astrid A1 - Rajzbaum, Gerald A1 - Jakob, Franz A1 - Karras, Dimitrios A1 - Marin, Fernando T1 - Effective osteoporosis treatment with teriparatide is associated with enhanced quality of life in postmenopausal women with osteoporosis: the European Forsteo Observational Study JF - BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders N2 - Background: To describe changes in health-related quality of life (HRQoL) of postmenopausal women with osteoporosis treated with teriparatide for up to 18 months and followed-up for a further 18 months, and to assess the influence of recent prior and incident fractures. Methods: The European Forsteo Observational Study (EFOS) is an observational, prospective, multinational study measuring HRQoL using the EQ-5D. The primary objective was to assess changes in HRQoL during 36 months in the whole study population. A secondary post-hoc analysis examined fracture impact on HRQoL in four subgroups classified based on recent prior fracture 12 months before baseline and incident clinical fractures during the study. Changes from baseline were analysed using a repeated measures model. Results: Of the 1581 patients, 48.4% had a recent prior fracture and 15.6% of these patients had an incident fracture during follow-up. 10.9% of the 816 patients with no recent prior fracture had an incident fracture. Baseline mean EQ-VAS scores were similar across the subgroups. In the total study cohort (n = 1581), HRQoL (EQ-VAS and EQ-5D index scores) improved significantly from baseline to 18 months and this improvement was maintained over the 18-month post-teriparatide period. Improvements were seen across all five EQ-5D domains during teriparatide treatment that were maintained after teriparatide was discontinued. Subjects with incident clinical fractures had significantly less improvement in EQ-VAS than those without incident fractures. Recent prior fracture did not influence the change in EQ-VAS during treatment. Conclusions: EFOS is the first longitudinal study in women with severe postmenopausal osteoporosis in the real world setting to show a substantial improvement in HRQoL during teriparatide treatment that was sustained during subsequent treatment with other medications. The increase in HRQoL was lower in the subgroups with incident fracture but was not influenced by recent prior fracture. The results should be interpreted in the context of the design of an observational study. KW - fracture KW - osteoporosis KW - quality of life KW - teriparatide KW - EQ-5D KW - database KW - alendronate KW - persistence KW - metaanalysis KW - prevalent fractures KW - bone-mineral density KW - vertebral fractures KW - back pain KW - impact KW - responsiveness Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-122057 SN - 1471-2474 VL - 14 IS - 251 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wimmer, Matthias D. A1 - Randau, Thomas M. A1 - Deml, Moritz C. A1 - Ascherl, Rudolf A1 - Forst, Raimund A1 - Gravius, Nadine A1 - Wirtz, Dieter A1 - Gravius, Sascha T1 - Impaction grafting in the femur in cementless modular revision total hip arthroplasty: a descriptive outcome analysis of 243 cases with the MRP-TITAN revision implant JF - BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders N2 - Background: We present a descriptive and retrospective analysis of revision total hip arthroplasties (THA) using the MRP-TITAN stem (Peter Brehm, Weisendorf, GER) with distal diaphyseal fixation and metaphyseal defect augmentation. Our hypothesis was that the metaphyseal defect augmentation (Impaction Bone Grafting) improves the stem survival. Methods: We retrospectively analyzed the aggregated and anonymized data of 243 femoral stem revisions. 68 patients with 70 implants (28.8%) received an allograft augmentation for metaphyseal defects; 165 patients with 173 implants (71.2%) did not, and served as controls. The mean follow-up was 4.4 +/- 1.8 years (range, 2.1-9.6 years). There were no significant differences (p > 0.05) between the study and control group regarding age, body mass index (BMI), femoral defects (types I-III as described by Paprosky), and preoperative Harris Hip Score (HHS). Postoperative clinical function was evaluated using the HHS. Postoperative radiologic examination evaluated implant stability, axial implant migration, signs of implant loosening, periprosthetic radiolucencies, as well as bone regeneration and resorption. Results: There were comparable rates of intraoperative and postoperative complications in the study and control groups (p > 0.05). Clinical function, expressed as the increase in the postoperative HHS over the preoperative score, showed significantly greater improvement in the group with Impaction Bone Grafting (35.6 +/- 14.3 vs. 30.8 +/- 15.8; p <= 0.05). The study group showed better outcome especially for larger defects (types II C and III as described by Paprosky) and stem diameters >= 17 mm. The two groups did not show significant differences in the rate of aseptic loosening (1.4% vs. 2.9%) and the rate of revisions (8.6% vs. 11%). The Kaplan-Meier survival for the MRP-TITAN stem in both groups together was 93.8% after 8.8 years. [Study group 95.7% after 8.54 years; control group 93.1% after 8.7 years]. Radiologic evaluation showed no significant change in axial implant migration (4.3% vs. 9.3%; p = 0.19) but a significant reduction in proximal stress shielding (5.7% vs. 17.9%; p < 0.05) in the study group. Periprosthetic radiolucencies were detected in 5.7% of the study group and in 9.8% of the control group (p = 0.30). Radiolucencies in the proximal zones 1 and 7 according to Gruen occurred significantly more often in the control group without allograft augmentation (p = 0.05). Conclusion: We present the largest analysis of the impaction grafting technique in combination with cementless distal diaphyseal stem fixation published so far. Our data provides initial evidence of improved bone regeneration after graft augmentation of metaphyseal bone defects. The data suggests that proximal metaphyseal graft augmentation is beneficial for large metaphyseal bone defects (Paprosky types IIC and III) and stem diameters of 17 mm and above. Due to the limitations of a retrospective and descriptive study the level of evidence remains low and prospective trials should be conducted. KW - prosthesis KW - replacement KW - collarless KW - surgery KW - allografts KW - porous-coated stems KW - femoral revision KW - roentgenographic assessment KW - tapered stem KW - follow-up KW - modular KW - revision KW - hip KW - arthroplasty KW - impaction bone grafting Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-122061 SN - 1471-2474 VL - 14 IS - 19 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Brandenburg, Vincent M. A1 - Kramann, Rafael A1 - Koos, Ralf A1 - Krueger, Thilo A1 - Schurgers, Leon A1 - Mühlenbruch, Georg A1 - Hübner, Sinah A1 - Gladziwa, Ulrich A1 - Drechler, Christiane A1 - Ketteler, Markus T1 - Relationship between sclerostin and cardiovascular calcification in hemodialysis patients: a cross-sectional study JF - BMC Nephrology N2 - Background: Sclerostin is a Wnt pathway antagonist regulating osteoblast activity and bone turnover. Here, we assessed the potential association of sclerostin with the development of coronary artery (CAC) and aortic valve calcifications (AVC) in haemodialysis (HD) patients. Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional multi-slice computed tomography (MS-CT) scanning study in 67 chronic HD patients (59.4 +/- 14.8 yrs) for measurement of CAC and AVC. We tested established biomarkers as well as serum sclerostin (ELISA) regarding their association to the presence of calcification. Fifty-four adults without relevant renal disease served as controls for serum sclerostin levels. Additionally, sclerostin expression in explanted aortic valves from 15 dialysis patients was analysed ex vivo by immunohistochemistry and mRNA quantification (Qt-RT-PCR). Results: CAC (Agatston score > 100) and any AVC were present in 65% and in 40% of the MS-CT patient group, respectively. Serum sclerostin levels (1.53 +/- 0.81 vs 0.76 +/- 0.31 ng/mL, p < 0.001) were significantly elevated in HD compared to controls and more so in HD patients with AVC versus those without AVC (1.78 +/- 0.84 vs 1.35 +/- 0.73 ng/mL, p = 0.02). Multivariable regression analysis for AVC revealed significant associations with higher serum sclerostin. Ex vivo analysis of uraemic calcified aortic valves (n = 10) revealed a strong sclerostin expression very close to calcified regions (no sclerostin staining in non-calcified valves). Correspondingly, we observed a highly significant upregulation of sclerostin mRNA in calcified valves compared to non-calcified control valves. Conclusion: We found a strong association of sclerostin with calcifying aortic heart valve disease in haemodialysis patients. Sclerostin is locally produced in aortic valve tissue adjacent to areas of calcification. KW - coronary calcification KW - cardiovascular disease KW - aortic valve disease KW - calcium KW - mortality KW - sclerostin KW - aortic valve KW - bone formation KW - computed tomography KW - fetuin A KW - risk factors KW - GLA protein UCMGP KW - kidney-disease CKD KW - coronary-artery calcification KW - hemodialysis KW - mineral metabolism KW - vascular calcification KW - renal osteodystrophy Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-122070 SN - 1471-2369 VL - 14 IS - 219 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Dempfle, Astrid A1 - Herpertz-Dahlmann, Beate A1 - Timmesfeld, Nina A1 - Schwarte, Reinhild A1 - Egberts, Karin M. A1 - Pfeiffer, Ernst A1 - Fleischhaker, Christian A1 - Wewetzer, Christoph A1 - Bühren, Katharina T1 - Predictors of the resumption of menses in adolescent anorexia nervosa JF - BMC Psychiatry N2 - Background: The resumption of menses is an important indicator of recovery in anorexia nervosa (AN). Patients with early-onset AN are at particularly great risk of suffering from the long-term physical and psychological consequences of persistent gonadal dysfunction. However, the clinical variables that predict the recovery of menstrual function during weight gain in AN remain poorly understood. The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of several clinical parameters on the resumption of menses in first-onset adolescent AN in a large, well-characterized, homogenous sample that was followed-up for 12 months. Methods: A total of 172 female adolescent patients with first-onset AN according to DSM-IV criteria were recruited for inclusion in a randomized, multi-center, German clinical trial. Menstrual status and clinical variables (i.e., premorbid body mass index (BMI), age at onset, duration of illness, duration of hospital treatment, achievement of target weight at discharge, and BMI) were assessed at the time of admission to or discharge from hospital treatment and at a 12-month follow-up. Based on German reference data, we calculated the percentage of expected body weight (%EBW), BMI percentile, and BMI standard deviation score (BMI-SDS) for all time points to investigate the relationship between different weight measurements and resumption of menses. Results: Forty-seven percent of the patients spontaneously began menstruating during the follow-up period. %EBW at the 12-month follow-up was strongly correlated with the resumption of menses. The absence of menarche before admission, a higher premorbid BMI, discharge below target weight, and a longer duration of hospital treatment were the most relevant prognostic factors for continued amenorrhea. Conclusions: The recovery of menstrual function in adolescent patients with AN should be a major treatment goal to prevent severe long-term physical and psychological sequelae. Patients with premenarchal onset of AN are at particular risk for protracted amenorrhea despite weight rehabilitation. Reaching and maintaining a target weight between the 15th and 20th BMI percentile is favorable for the resumption of menses within 12 months. Whether patients with a higher premorbid BMI may benefit from a higher target weight needs to be investigated in further studies. KW - girls KW - amenorrhea KW - brain KW - increases KW - return KW - menarche KW - target weight KW - adolescence anorexia nervosa KW - resumption of menses KW - recovery KW - ovarian function KW - weight gain KW - eating disorders KW - bone-mineral density KW - menstrual recovery KW - outcome KW - body mass index Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-122106 VL - 13 IS - 308 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Harris, Fiona M. A1 - Maxwell, Margaret A1 - O'Connor, Rory C. A1 - Coyne, James A1 - Arensman, Ella A1 - András, Székely A1 - Gusmão, Ricardo A1 - Coffey, Claire A1 - Costa, Susana A1 - Zoltan, Cserháti A1 - Koburger, Nicole A1 - van Audenhove, Chantal A1 - McDaid, David A1 - Maloney, Julia A1 - Värnik, Peeter A1 - Hegerl, Ulrich T1 - Developing social capital in implementing a complex intervention: a process evaluation of the early implementation of a suicide prevention intervention in four European countries JF - BMC Public Health N2 - Background: Variation in the implementation of complex multilevel interventions can impact on their delivery and outcomes. Few suicide prevention interventions, especially multilevel interventions, have included evaluation of both the process of implementation as well as outcomes. Such evaluation is essential for the replication of interventions, for interpreting and understanding outcomes, and for improving implementation science. This paper reports on a process evaluation of the early implementation stage of an optimised suicide prevention programme (OSPI-Europe) implemented in four European countries. Methods: The process analysis was conducted within the framework of a realist evaluation methodology, and involved case studies of the process of implementation in four European countries. Datasets include: repeated questionnaires to track progress of implementation including delivery of individual activities and their intensity; serial interviews and focus groups with stakeholder groups; and detailed observations at OSPI implementation team meetings. Results: Analysis of local contexts in each of the four countries revealed that the advisory group was a key mechanism that had a substantial impact on the ease of implementation of OSPI interventions, particularly on their ability to recruit to training interventions. However, simply recruiting representatives of key organisations into an advisory group is not sufficient to achieve impact on the delivery of interventions. In order to maximise the potential of high level 'gatekeepers', it is necessary to first transform them into OSPI stakeholders. Motivations for OSPI participation as a stakeholder included: personal affinity with the shared goals and target groups within OSPI; the complementary and participatory nature of OSPI that adds value to pre-existing suicide prevention initiatives; and reciprocal reward for participants through access to the extended network capacity that organisations could accrue for themselves and their organisations from participation in OSPI. Conclusions: Exploring the role of advisory groups and the meaning of participation for these participants revealed some key areas for best practice in implementation: careful planning of the composition of the advisory group to access target groups; the importance of establishing common goals; the importance of acknowledging and complementing existing experience and activity; and facilitating an equivalence of benefit from network participation. KW - suicide prevention KW - realist evaluation KW - social capital KW - advisory groups KW - depression KW - strategies KW - alliance KW - complex interventions KW - process evaluation Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-122117 VL - 13 IS - 158 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Verner, Martin A1 - Herrmann, Martin J. A1 - Troche, Stefan J. A1 - Roebers, Claudia M. A1 - Rammsayer, Thomas H. T1 - Cortical oxygen consumption in mental arithmetic as a function of task difficulty: a near-infrared spectroscopy approach JF - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience N2 - The present study investigated changes in cortical oxygenation during mental arithmetic using near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS). Twenty-nine male volunteers were examined using a 52-channel continuous wave system for analyzing activity in prefrontal areas. With the help of a probabilistic mapping method, three regions of interest (ROIs) on each hemisphere were defined: The inferior frontal gyri (IFG), the middle frontal gyri (MFG), and the superior frontal gyri (SFG). Oxygenation as an indicator of functional brain activation was compared over the three ROI and two levels of arithmetic task difficulty (simple and complex additions). In contrast to most previous studies using fMRI or NIRS, in the present study arithmetic tasks were presented verbally in analogue to many daily life situations. With respect to task difficulty, more complex addition tasks led to higher oxygenation in all defined ROI except in the left IFG compared to simple addition tasks. When compared to the channel positions covering different gyri of the temporal lobe, the observed sensitivity to task complexity was found to be restricted to the specified ROIs. As to the comparison of ROIs, the highest oxygenation was found in the IFG, while MFG and SFG showed significantly less activation compared to IFG. The present cognitive-neuroscience approach demonstrated that NIRS is a suitable and highly feasible research tool for investigating and quantifying neural effects of increasing arithmetic task difficulty. KW - cortical activation KW - working memory KW - individual differences KW - prefrontal cortex KW - FMRI KW - brain-regions KW - subsctraction KW - activation KW - bold KW - intelligibility KW - NIRS KW - oxygen consumption KW - task difficulty KW - mental arithmetic KW - near-infrared spectroscopy Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-122449 SN - 1662-5161 VL - 7 IS - 217 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Meule, Adrian A1 - Kübler, Andrea A1 - Blechert, Jens T1 - Time course of electrocortical food-cue responses during cognitive regulation of craving JF - Frontiers in Psychology N2 - In our current obesogenic environment, exposure to visual food-cues can easily lead to craving and overeating because short-term, pleasurable effects of food intake dominate over the anticipated long-term adverse effects such as weight gain and associated health problems. Here we contrasted these two conditions during food-cue presentation while acquiring event-related potentials (ERPs) and subjective craving ratings. Female participants (n = 25) were presented with either high-calorie (HC) or low-calorie (LC) food images under instructions to imagine either immediate (NOW) or long-term effects (LATER) of consumption. On subjective ratings for HC foods, the LATER perspective reduced cravings as compared to the NOW perspective. For LC foods, by contrast, craving increased under the LATER perspective. Early ERPs (occipital N1, 150-200 ms) were sensitive to food type but not to perspective. Late ERPs (late positive potential, LPP, 350-550 ms) were larger in the HC-LATER condition than in all other conditions, possibly indicating that a cognitive focus on negative long-term consequences induced negative arousal. This enhancement for HC-LATER attenuated to the level of the LC conditions during the later slow wave (550-3000 ms), but amplitude in the HC-NOW condition was larger than in all other conditions, possibly due to a delayed appetitive response. Across all conditions, LPP amplitudes were positively correlated with self-reported emotional eating. In sum, results reveal that regulation effects are secondary to an early attentional analysis of food type and dynamically evolve over time. Adopting a long-term perspective on eating might promote a healthier food choice across a range of food types. KW - EEG KW - disorder examination questionnaire KW - eating disorder KW - emotion regulation KW - future directions KW - attention KW - brain KW - high-calorie KW - german version KW - bulimia nervosa KW - chocolate images KW - event-related potentials KW - eating KW - calorie content KW - food-cues KW - food craving KW - LPP KW - slow wave Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-122566 SN - 1664-1078 VL - 4 IS - 669 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Fischer, Rico A1 - Plessow, Franziska A1 - Kiesel, Andrea T1 - The effects of alerting signals in masked priming JF - Frontiers in Psychology N2 - Alerting signals often serve to reduce temporal uncertainty by predicting the time of stimulus onset. The resulting response time benefits have often been explained by facilitated translation of stimulus codes into response codes on the basis of established stimulus-response (S-R) links. In paradigms of masked S-R priming alerting signals also modulate response activation processes triggered by subliminally presented prime stimuli. In the present study we tested whether facilitation of visuo-motor translation processes due to alerting signals critically depends on established S-R links. Alerting signals resulted in significantly enhanced masked priming effects for masked prime stimuli that included and that did not include established S-R links fi.e., target vs. novel primes). Yet, the alerting-priming interaction was more pronounced for target than for novel primes. These results suggest that effects of alerting signals on masked priming are especially evident when S-R links between prime and target exist. At the same time, an alerting-priming interaction also for novel primes suggests that alerting signals also facilitate stimulus-response translation processes when masked prime stimuli provide action-trigger conditions in terms of programmed S-R links. KW - response selection KW - visual cortex KW - temporal predictability KW - stimuli KW - primes KW - target primes KW - simon task KW - automaticity KW - performance KW - perception KW - mechanism KW - novel primes KW - action-trigger KW - masked priming KW - accessory KW - alerting signal Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-122581 SN - 1664-1078 VL - 4 IS - 448 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Menzel, Florian A1 - Blüthgen, Nico A1 - Tolasch, Till A1 - Conrad, Jürgen A1 - Beifuss, Uwe A1 - Beuerle, Till A1 - Schmitt, Thomas T1 - Crematoenones - a novel substance class exhibited by ants functions as appeasement signal JF - Frontiers in Zoology N2 - Background: Parasitic, commensalistic, and mutualistic guests in social insect colonies often circumvent their hosts' nestmate recognition system to be accepted. These tolerance strategies include chemical mimicry and chemical insignificance. While tolerance strategies have been studied intensively in social parasites, little is known about these mechanisms in non-parasitic interactions. Here, we describe a strategy used in a parabiotic association, i.e. two mutualistic ant species that regularly share a common nest although they have overlapping food niches. One of them, Crematogaster modiglianii, produces an array of cuticular compounds which represent a substance class undescribed in nature so far. They occur in high abundances, which suggests an important function in the ant's association with its partner Camponotus rufifemur. Results: We elucidated the structure of one of the main compounds from cuticular extracts using gas chromatography, mass spectrometry, chemical derivatizations and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR). The compound consists of two fused six-membered rings with two alkyl groups, one of which carries a keto functionality. To our knowledge, this is the first report on the identification of this substance class in nature. We suggest naming the compound crematoenone. In behavioural assays, crematoenones reduced interspecific aggression. Camponotus showed less aggression to allospecific cuticular hydrocarbons when combined with crematoenones. Thus, they function as appeasement substances. However, although the crematoenone composition was highly colony-specific, interspecific recognition was mediated by cuticular hydrocarbons, and not by crematoenones. Conclusions: Crematenones enable Crematogaster to evade Camponotus aggression, and thus reduce potential costs from competition with Camponotus. Hence, they seem to be a key factor in the parabiosis, and help Crematogaster to gain a net benefit from the association and thus maintain a mutualistic association over evolutionary time. To our knowledge, putative appeasement substances have been reported only once so far, and never between non-parasitic species. Since most organisms associated with social insects need to overcome their nestmate recognition system, we hypothesize that appeasement substances might play an important role in the evolution and maintenance of other mutualistic associations as well, by allowing organisms to reduce costs from antagonistic behaviour of other species. KW - cuticular hydrocarbons KW - appeasement substance KW - bees KW - ecology KW - parasitism KW - alkyloctahydronaphthalene KW - usurpation KW - venom KW - pheromone KW - crematogaster KW - parabiotic ants KW - Dufours gland KW - polyergus rufescens KW - formicidae KW - interspecific aggression KW - nestmate recognition cues KW - parabiotic association Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-122595 SN - 1742-9994 VL - 10 IS - 32 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Mueller, Kerstin A1 - Quandt, Jasmin A1 - Marienfeld, Ralf B. A1 - Weihrich, Petra A1 - Fiedler, Katja A1 - Claussnitzer, Melina A1 - Laumen, Helmut A1 - Vaeth, Martin A1 - Berberich-Siebelt, Frederike A1 - Serfling, Edgar A1 - Wirth, Thomas A1 - Brunner, Cornelia T1 - Octamer-dependent transcription in T cells is mediated by NFAT and \(NF-\kappa B\) JF - Nucleic Acids Research N2 - The transcriptional co-activator BOB.1/OBF.1 was originally identified in B cells and is constitutively expressed throughout B cell development. BOB.1/OBF.1 associates with the transcription factors Oct1 and Oct2, thereby enhancing octamer-dependent transcription. In contrast, in T cells, BOB.1/OBF.1 expression is inducible by treatment of cells with PMA/Ionomycin or by antigen receptor engagement, indicating a marked difference in the regulation of BOB.1/OBF.1 expression in B versus T cells. The molecular mechanisms underlying the differential expression of BOB.1/OBF.1 in T and B cells remain largely unknown. Therefore, the present study focuses on mechanisms controlling the transcriptional regulation of BOB.1/OBF.1 and Oct2 in T cells. We show that both calcineurin- and \(NF-\kappa B\)-inhibitors efficiently attenuate the expression of BOB.1/OBF.1 and Oct2 in T cells. In silico analyses of the BOB.1/OBF.1 promoter revealed the presence of previously unappreciated combined NFAT/\(NF-\kappa B\) sites. An array of genetic and biochemical analyses illustrates the involvement of the \(Ca^{2+}\)/calmodulin-dependent phosphatase calcineurin as well as NFAT and \(NF-\kappa B\) transcription factors in the transcriptional regulation of octamer-dependent transcription in T cells. Conclusively, impaired expression of BOB.1/OBF.1 and Oct2 and therefore a hampered octamer-dependent transcription may participate in T cell-mediated immunodeficiency caused by the deletion of NFAT or \(NF-\kappa B\) transcription factors. KW - germinal center formation KW - OBF-1 OCA-B KW - coactivator OBF-1 KW - gene expression KW - functional characterization KW - immunoglobulin promoters KW - OCT-1-deficient mice KW - embryonic lethality KW - endothelial cells KW - murine homolog Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-123280 SN - 1362-4962 VL - 41 IS - 4 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ablin, Jacob A1 - Fitzcharles, Mary-Ann A1 - Buskila, Dan A1 - Shir, Yoram A1 - Sommer, Claudia A1 - Häuser, Winfried T1 - Treatment of Fibromyalgia Syndrome: Recommendations of Recent Evidence-Based Interdisciplinary Guidelines with Special Emphasis on Complementary and Alternative Therapies JF - Evidence-Bayed Complementary and Alternative Medicine N2 - Objective. Current evidence indicates that there is no single ideal treatment for fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS). First choice treatment options remain debatable, especially concerning the importance of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) treatments. Methods. Three evidence-based interdisciplinary guidelines on FMS in Canada, Germany, and Israel were compared for their first choice and CAM-recommendations. Results. All three guidelines emphasized a patient-tailored approach according to the key symptoms. Aerobic exercise, cognitive behavioral therapy, and multicomponent therapy were first choice treatments. The guidelines differed in the grade of recommendation for drug treatment. Anticonvulsants (gabapentin, pregabalin) and serotonin noradrenaline reuptake inhibitors (duloxetine, milnacipran) were strongly recommended by the Canadian and the Israeli guidelines. These drugs received only a weak recommendation by the German guideline. In consideration of CAM-treatments, acupuncture, hypnosis/guided imagery, and Tai Chi were recommended by the German and Israeli guidelines. The Canadian guidelines did not recommend any CAM therapy. Discussion. Recent evidence-based interdisciplinary guidelines concur on the importance of treatment tailored to the individual patient and further emphasize the need of self-management strategies (exercise, and psychological techniques). KW - metaanalysis KW - management KW - care Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-122235 SN - 1741-427X ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Spinelli, Simona A1 - Müller, Tanja A1 - Friedel, Miriam A1 - Sigrist, Hannes A1 - Lesch, Klaus-Peter A1 - Henkelman, Mark A1 - Rudin, Markus A1 - Seifritz, Erich A1 - Pryce, Christopher R. T1 - Effects of repeated adolescent stress and serotonin transporter gene partial knockout in mice on behaviors and brain structures relevant to major depression JF - Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience N2 - In humans, exposure to stress during development is associated with structural and functional alterations of the prefrontal cortex (PFC), amygdala (AMY), and hippocampus (HC) and their circuits of connectivity, and with an increased risk for developing major depressive disorder particularly in carriers of the short (s) variant of the serotonin transporter (5-HTT) gene-linked polymorphic region (5-HTTLPR). Although changes in these regions are found in carriers of the s allele and/or in depressed patients, evidence for a specific genotype x developmental stress effect on brain structure and function is limited. Here, we investigated the effect of repeated stress exposure during adolescence in mice with partial knockout of the 5-HIT gene (HET) vs. wildtype (WT) on early-adulthood behavioral measures and brain structure [using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)] relevant to human major depression. Behaviorally, adolescent stress (AS) increased anxiety and decreased activity and did so to a similar degree in HET and WT. In a probabilistic reversal learning task, HET-AS mice achieved fewer reversals than did HET-No-AS mice. 5-HIT genotype and AS were without effect on corticosterone stress response. In terms of structural brain differences, AS reduced the volume of two long-range white matter tracts, the optic tract (OT) and the cerebral peduncle (CP), in WT mice specifically. In a region-of-interest analysis, AS was associated with increased HC volume and HET genotype with a decreased frontal lobe volume. In conclusion, we found that 5-HIT and AS genotype exerted long-term effects on behavior and development of brain regions relevant to human depression. KW - mouse-brain KW - white-matter integrity KW - linked polymorphic region KW - C57BL/6 mice KW - lerned helplessness KW - 5-HTTLPR polymorphism KW - childhood maltreatment KW - rhesus macaques KW - 3-dimensional MRI KW - life stress Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-122240 VL - 7 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ehrenfeld, Stephan A1 - Herbort, Oliver A1 - Butz, Martin V. T1 - Modular neuron-based body estimation: maintaining consistency over different limbs, modalities, and frames of reference JF - Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience N2 - This paper addresses the question of how the brain maintains a probabilistic body state estimate over time from a modeling perspective. The neural Modular Modality Frame (nMMF) model simulates such a body state estimation process by continuously integrating redundant, multimodal body state information sources. The body state estimate itself is distributed over separate, but bidirectionally interacting modules. nMMF compares the incoming sensory and present body state information across the interacting modules and fuses the information sources accordingly. At the same time, nMMF enforces body state estimation consistency across the modules. nMMF is able to detect conflicting sensory information and to consequently decrease the influence of implausible sensor sources on the fly. In contrast to the previously published Modular Modality Frame (MMF) model, nMMF offers a biologically plausible neural implementation based on distributed, probabilistic population codes. Besides its neural plausibility, the neural encoding has the advantage of enabling (a) additional probabilistic information flow across the separate body state estimation modules and (b) the representation of arbitrary probability distributions of a body state. The results show that the neural estimates can detect and decrease the impact of false sensory information, can propagate conflicting information across modules, and can improve overall estimation accuracy due to additional module interactions. Even bodily illusions, such as the rubber hand illusion, can be simulated with nMMF. We conclude with an outlook on the potential of modeling human data and of invoking goal-directed behavioral control. KW - information KW - posterior parietal cortex KW - hand KW - population code KW - conflicting information KW - multimodal interaction KW - probabilistic inference KW - modular body schema KW - sensor fusion KW - multisensory perception KW - fusion KW - representation KW - multisensory processing KW - see KW - implementation KW - perspective KW - multisensory integration KW - population codes Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-122253 VL - 7 IS - 148 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Borchers, Svenja A1 - Müller, Laura A1 - Synofzik, Matthis A1 - Himmelbach, Marc T1 - Guidelines and quality measures for the diagnosis of optic ataxia JF - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience N2 - Since the first description of a systematic mis-reaching by Balint in 1909, a reasonable number of patients showing a similar phenomenology, later termed optic ataxia (OA), has been described. However, there is surprising inconsistency regarding the behavioral measures that are used to detect OA in experimental and clinical reports, if the respective measures are reported at all. A typical screening method that was presumably used by most researchers and clinicians, reaching for a target object in the peripheral visual space, has never been evaluated. We developed a set of instructions and evaluation criteria for the scoring of a semi-standardized version of this reaching task. We tested 36 healthy participants, a group of 52 acute and chronic stroke patients, and 24 patients suffering from cerebellar ataxia. We found a high interrater reliability and a moderate test-retest reliability comparable to other clinical instruments in the stroke sample. The calculation of cut-off thresholds based on healthy control and cerebellar patient data showed an unexpected high number of false positives in these samples due to individual outliers that made a considerable number of errors in peripheral reaching. This study provides first empirical data from large control and patient groups for a screening procedure that seems to be widely used but rarely explicitly reported and prepares the grounds for its use as a standard tool for the description of patients who are included in single case or group studies addressing optic ataxia similar to the use of neglect, extinction, or apraxia screening tools. KW - systems KW - deficit KW - target KW - damage KW - delay KW - posterior cortical atrophy KW - Balints-Syndrome KW - hand KW - impairments KW - reliability KW - cerebellar atrophy KW - cerebellar ataxia KW - cerebellum KW - parietal lobe KW - optic ataxia KW - beside test Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-122439 SN - 1662-5161 VL - 7 IS - 324 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Falge, M. A1 - Engel, V. A1 - Gräfe, S. T1 - Time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy of coupled nuclear-electronic dynamics JF - EPJ Web of Conferences N2 - We study the effect of nuclear-electron coupling on time-resolved photo-electron spectra, employing a model system which allows to directly comparing spectra resulting from the adiabatic approximation with those obtained within a non-Born-Oppenheimer description. Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-121812 SN - 2100-014X VL - 41 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Moffet, R. C. A1 - Rödel, R. C. A1 - Kelly, S. T. A1 - Yu, X. Y. A1 - Carroll, G. T. A1 - Fast, J. A1 - Zaveri, R. A. A1 - Laskin, A. A1 - Gilles, M. K. T1 - Spectro-microscopic measurements of carbonaceous aerosol aging in Central California JF - Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics N2 - Carbonaceous aerosols are responsible for large uncertainties in climate models, degraded visibility, and adverse health effects. The Carbonaceous Aerosols and Radiative Effects Study (CARES) was designed to study carbonaceous aerosols in the natural environment of the Central Valley, California, and learn more about their atmospheric formation and aging. This paper presents results from spectro-microscopic measurements of carbonaceous particles collected during CARES at the time of a pollution accumulation event (27-29 June 2010), when in situ measurements indicated an increase in the organic carbon content of aerosols as the Sacramento urban plume aged. Computer-controlled scanning electron microscopy coupled with an energy dispersive X-ray detector (CCSEM/EDX) and scanning transmission X-ray microscopy coupled with near-edge X-ray absorption spectroscopy (STXM/NEXAFS) were used to probe the chemical composition and morphology of individual particles. It was found that the mass of organic carbon on individual particles increased through condensation of secondary organic aerosol. STXM/NEXAFS indicated that the number fraction of homogenous organic particles lacking inorganic inclusions (greater than similar to 50 nm equivalent circular diameter) increased with plume age, as did the organic mass per particle. Comparison of the CARES spectro-microscopic dataset with a similar dataset obtained in Mexico City during the MILAGRO campaign showed that fresh particles in Mexico City contained three times as much carbon as those sampled during CARES. The number fraction of soot particles at the Mexico City urban site (ranging from 16.6 to 47.3 %) was larger than at the CARES urban site (13.4-15.7%), and the most aged samples from CARES contained fewer carbon-carbon double bonds. Differences between carbonaceous particles in Mexico City and California result from different sources, photochemical conditions, gas phase reactants, and secondary organic aerosol precursors. The detailed results provided by these spectro-microscopic measurements will allow for a comprehensive evaluation of aerosol process models used in climate research. KW - photochemical air-pollution KW - Mexico City KW - black carbon KW - mixing state KW - atmospheric aerosols Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-121827 SN - 1680-7324 VL - 13 IS - 20 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Dietz, Mariana S. A1 - Hasse, Daniel A1 - Ferraris, Davide M. A1 - Göhler, Antonia A1 - Niemann, Hartmut H. A1 - Heilemann, Mike T1 - Single-molecule photobleaching reveals increased MET receptor dimerization upon ligand binding in intact cells JF - BMC Biophysics N2 - Background: The human receptor tyrosine kinase MET and its ligand hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor are essential during embryonic development and play an important role during cancer metastasis and tissue regeneration. In addition, it was found that MET is also relevant for infectious diseases and is the target of different bacteria, amongst them Listeria monocytogenes that induces bacterial uptake through the surface protein internalin B. Binding of ligand to the MET receptor is proposed to lead to receptor dimerization. However, it is also discussed whether preformed MET dimers exist on the cell membrane. Results: To address these issues we used single-molecule fluorescence microscopy techniques. Our photobleaching experiments show that MET exists in dimers on the membrane of cells in the absence of ligand and that the proportion of MET dimers increases significantly upon ligand binding. Conclusions: Our results indicate that partially preformed MET dimers may play a role in ligand binding or MET signaling. The addition of the bacterial ligand internalin B leads to an increase of MET dimers which is in agreement with the model of ligand-induced dimerization of receptor tyrosine kinases. KW - single-molecule photobleaching KW - fluorescence correlation spectroscopy KW - fluorescence KW - EGF receptor KW - rat hepatocytes KW - structural insights KW - Scatter factor KW - SEMA domain KW - hepatocyte-growth-factor KW - invasion protein-INLB KW - listeria-monocytogenes KW - tyrosine kinase KW - living cells KW - dimerization KW - MET receptor KW - Signal transduction Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-121835 SN - 2046-1682 VL - 6 IS - 6 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Rybalka, Nataliya A1 - Wolf, Matthias A1 - Andersen, Robert A1 - Friedl, Thomas T1 - Congruence of chloroplast- and nuclear-encoded DNA sequence variations used to assess species boundaries in the soil microalga Heterococcus (Stramenopiles, Xanthophyceae) JF - BMC Evolutionary Biology N2 - Background: Heterococcus is a microalgal genus of Xanthophyceae (Stramenopiles) that is common and widespread in soils, especially from cold regions. Species are characterized by extensively branched filaments produced when grown on agarized culture medium. Despite the large number of species described exclusively using light microscopic morphology, the assessment of species diversity is hampered by extensive morphological plasticity. Results: Two independent types of molecular data, the chloroplast-encoded psbA/rbcL spacer complemented by rbcL gene and the internal transcribed spacer 2 of the nuclear rDNA cistron (ITS2), congruently recovered a robust phylogenetic structure. With ITS2 considerable sequence and secondary structure divergence existed among the eight species, but a combined sequence and secondary structure phylogenetic analysis confined to helix II of ITS2 corroborated relationships as inferred from the rbcL gene phylogeny. Intra-genomic divergence of ITS2 sequences was revealed in many strains. The 'monophyletic species concept', appropriate for microalgae without known sexual reproduction, revealed eight different species. Species boundaries established using the molecular-based monophyletic species concept were more conservative than the traditional morphological species concept. Within a species, almost identical chloroplast marker sequences (genotypes) were repeatedly recovered from strains of different origins. At least two species had widespread geographical distributions; however, within a given species, genotypes recovered from Antarctic strains were distinct from those in temperate habitats. Furthermore, the sequence diversity may correspond to adaptation to different types of habitats or climates. Conclusions: We established a method and a reference data base for the unambiguous identification of species of the common soil microalgal genus Heterococcus which uses DNA sequence variation in markers from plastid and nuclear genomes. The molecular data were more reliable and more conservative than morphological data. KW - xanthophyceae KW - psbA/rbcL spacer KW - ITS2 KW - tool KW - RBCL KW - alignment KW - evolution KW - chlorophyta KW - RNA secondary structure KW - terrestrial habitats KW - phylogenetic trees KW - mixed models KW - green algae KW - heterococcus KW - systematics KW - molecular phylogeny KW - species concept Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-121848 SN - 1471-2148 VL - 13 IS - 39 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Farag, Heba Gamal A1 - Froehler, Sebastian A1 - Oexle, Konrad A1 - Ravindran, Ethiraj A1 - Schindler, Detlev A1 - Staab, Timo A1 - Huebner, Angela A1 - Kraemer, Nadine A1 - Chen, Wei A1 - Kaindl, Angela M. T1 - Abnormal centrosome and spindle morphology in a patient with autosomal recessive primary microcephaly type 2 due to compound heterozygous WDR62 gene mutation JF - Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases N2 - Background: Autosomal recessive primary microcephaly (MCPH) is a rare neurodevelopmental disease with severe microcephaly at birth due to a pronounced reduction in brain volume and intellectual disability. Biallelic mutations in the WD repeat-containing protein 62 gene WDR62 are the genetic cause of MCPH2. However, the exact underlying pathomechanism of MCPH2 remains to be clarified. Methods/results: We characterized the clinical, radiological, and cellular features that add to the human MCPH2 phenotype. Exome sequencing followed by Sanger sequencing in a German family with two affected daughters with primary microcephaly revealed in the index patient the compound heterozygous mutations c. 1313G>A (p.R438H) / c.2864-2867delACAG (p.D955Afs*112) of WDR62, the second of which is novel. Radiological examination displayed small frontal lobes, corpus callosum hypoplasia, simplified hippocampal gyration, and cerebellar hypoplasia. We investigated the cellular phenotype in patient-derived lymphoblastoid cells and compared it with that of healthy female controls. WDR62 expression in the patient's immortalized lymphocytes was deranged, and mitotic spindle defects as well as abnormal centrosomal protein localization were apparent. Conclusion: We propose that a disruption of centrosome integrity and/or spindle organization may play an important role in the development of microcephaly in MCPH2. KW - cell division KW - intellectual disability KW - missense mutations KW - protein KW - malformations KW - establishment KW - cytokinesis KW - genome KW - midbody KW - database KW - maintenance KW - families KW - microcephaly KW - WDR62 mutation Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-123505 SN - 1750-1172 VL - 8 IS - 178 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Edgecock, T. R. A1 - Caretta, O. A1 - Davenne, T. A1 - Densam, C. A1 - Fitton, M. A1 - Kelliher, D. A1 - Loveridge, P. A1 - Machida, S. A1 - Prior, C. A1 - Rogers, C. A1 - Rooney, M. A1 - Thomason, J. A1 - Wilcox, D. A1 - Wildner, E. A1 - Efthymiopoulos, I. A1 - Garoby, R. A1 - Gilardoni, S. A1 - Hansen, C. A1 - Benedetto, E. A1 - Jensen, E. A1 - Kosmicki, A. A1 - Martini, M. A1 - Osborne, J. A1 - Prior, G. A1 - Stora, T. A1 - Melo Mendonca, T. A1 - Vlachoudis, V. A1 - Waaijer, C. A1 - Cupial, P. A1 - Chancé, A. A1 - Longhin, A. A1 - Payet, J. A1 - Zito, M. A1 - Baussan, E. A1 - Bobeth, C. A1 - Bouquerel, E. A1 - Dracos, M. A1 - Gaudiot, G. A1 - Lepers, B. A1 - Osswald, F. A1 - Poussot, P. A1 - Vassilopoulos, N. A1 - Wurtz, J. A1 - Zeter, V. A1 - Bielski, J. A1 - Kozien, M. A1 - Lacny, L. A1 - Skoczen, B. A1 - Szybinski, B. A1 - Ustrycka, A. A1 - Wroblewski, A. A1 - Marie-Jeanne, M. A1 - Balint, P. A1 - Fourel, C. A1 - Giraud, J. A1 - Jacob, J. A1 - Lamy, T. A1 - Latrasse, L. A1 - Sortais, P. A1 - Thuillier, T. A1 - Mitrofanov, S. A1 - Loiselet, M. A1 - Keutgen, Th. A1 - Delbar, Th. A1 - Debray, F. A1 - Trophine, C. A1 - Veys, S. A1 - Daversin, C. A1 - Zorin, V. A1 - Izotov, I. A1 - Skalyga, V. A1 - Burt, G. A1 - Dexter, A. C. A1 - Kravchuk, V. L. A1 - Marchi, T. A1 - Cinausero, M. A1 - Gramegna, F. A1 - De Angelis, G. A1 - Prete, G. A1 - Collazuol, G. A1 - Laveder, M. A1 - Mazzocco, M. A1 - Mezzetto, M. A1 - Signorini, C. A1 - Vardaci, E. A1 - Di Nitto, A. A1 - Brondi, A. A1 - La Rana, G. A1 - Migliozzi, P. A1 - Moro, R. A1 - Palladino, V. A1 - Gelli, N. A1 - Berkovits, D. A1 - Hass, M. A1 - Hirsh, T. Y. A1 - Schuhmann, M. A1 - Stahl, A. A1 - Wehner, J. A1 - Bross, A. A1 - Kopp, J. A1 - Neuffer, D. A1 - Wands, R. A1 - Bayes, R. A1 - Laing, A. A1 - Soler, P. A1 - Agarwalla, S. K. A1 - Cervera Villanueva, A. A1 - Donini, A. A1 - Ghosh, T. A1 - Gómez Cadenas, J. J. A1 - Hernández, P. A1 - Martín-Albo, J. A1 - Mena, O. A1 - Burguet-Castell, J. A1 - Agostino, L. A1 - Buizza-Avanzini, M. A1 - Marafini, M. A1 - Patzak, T. A1 - Tonazzo, A. A1 - Duchesneau, D. A1 - Mosca, L. A1 - Bogomilov, M. A1 - Karadzhov, Y. A1 - Matev, R. A1 - Tsenov, R. A1 - Akhmedov, E. A1 - Blennow, M. A1 - Lindner, M. A1 - Schwetz, T. A1 - Fernández Martinez, E. A1 - Maltoni, M. A1 - Menéndez, J. A1 - Giunti, C. A1 - González García, M. C. A1 - Salvado, J. A1 - Coloma, P. A1 - Huber, P. A1 - Li, T. A1 - López Pavón, J. A1 - Orme, C. A1 - Pascoli, S. A1 - Meloni, D. A1 - Tang, J. A1 - Winter, W. A1 - Ohlsson, T. A1 - Zhang, H. A1 - Scotto-Lavina, L. A1 - Terranova, F. A1 - Bonesini, M. A1 - Tortora, L. A1 - Alekou, A. A1 - Aslaninejad, M. A1 - Bontoiu, C. A1 - Kurup, A. A1 - Jenner, L. J. A1 - Long, K. A1 - Pasternak, J. A1 - Pozimski, J. A1 - Back, J. J. A1 - Harrison, P. A1 - Beard, K. A1 - Bogacz, A. A1 - Berg, J. S. A1 - Stratakis, D. A1 - Witte, H. A1 - Snopok, P. A1 - Bliss, N. A1 - Cordwell, M. A1 - Moss, A. A1 - Pattalwar, S. A1 - Apollonio, M. T1 - High intensity neutrino oscillation facilities in Europe JF - Physical Review Special Topics-Accelerators and Beams N2 - The EUROnu project has studied three possible options for future, high intensity neutrino oscillation facilities in Europe. The first is a Super Beam, in which the neutrinos come from the decay of pions created by bombarding targets with a 4 MW proton beam from the CERN High Power Superconducting Proton Linac. The far detector for this facility is the 500 kt MEMPHYS water Cherenkov, located in the Frejus tunnel. The second facility is the Neutrino Factory, in which the neutrinos come from the decay of mu(+) and mu(-) beams in a storage ring. The far detector in this case is a 100 kt magnetized iron neutrino detector at a baseline of 2000 km. The third option is a Beta Beam, in which the neutrinos come from the decay of beta emitting isotopes, in particular He-6 and Ne-18, also stored in a ring. The far detector is also the MEMPHYS detector in the Frejus tunnel. EUROnu has undertaken conceptual designs of these facilities and studied the performance of the detectors. Based on this, it has determined the physics reach of each facility, in particular for the measurement of CP violation in the lepton sector, and estimated the cost of construction. These have demonstrated that the best facility to build is the Neutrino Factory. However, if a powerful proton driver is constructed for another purpose or if the MEMPHYS detector is built for astroparticle physics, the Super Beam also becomes very attractive. KW - EMMA KW - beta-beam Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-126611 VL - 16 IS - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - König, Markus A1 - Baenninger, Matthias A1 - Garcia, Andrei G. F. A1 - Harjee, Nahid A1 - Pruitt, Beth L. A1 - Ames, C. A1 - Leubner, Philipp A1 - Brüne, Christoph A1 - Buhmann, Hartmut A1 - Molenkamp, Laurens W. A1 - Goldhaber-Gordon, David T1 - Spatially Resolved Study of Backscattering in the Quantum Spin Hall State JF - Physical Review X N2 - The discovery of the quantum spin Hall (QSH) state, and topological insulators in general, has sparked strong experimental efforts. Transport studies of the quantum spin Hall state have confirmed the presence of edge states, showed ballistic edge transport in micron-sized samples, and demonstrated the spin polarization of the helical edge states. While these experiments have confirmed the broad theoretical model, the properties of the QSH edge states have not yet been investigated on a local scale. Using scanning gate microscopy to perturb the QSH edge states on a submicron scale, we identify well-localized scattering sites which likely limit the expected nondissipative transport in the helical edge channels. In the micron-sized regions between the scattering sites, the edge states appear to propagate unperturbed, as expected for an ideal QSH system, and are found to be robust against weak induced potential fluctuations. KW - mesoscopics KW - topological insulators KW - transport KW - charge KW - wells KW - branched flow KW - nanostructures Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-127225 SN - 2160-3308 VL - 3 IS - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Szabó, Áron A1 - Papin, Christian A1 - Zorn, Daniela A1 - Ponien, Prishila A1 - Weber, Frank A1 - Raabe, Thomas A1 - Rouyer, François T1 - The CK2 Kinase Stabilizes CLOCK and Represses Its Activity in the Drosophila Circadian Oscillator JF - PLoS Biology N2 - Phosphorylation is a pivotal regulatory mechanism for protein stability and activity in circadian clocks regardless of their evolutionary origin. It determines the speed and strength of molecular oscillations by acting on transcriptional activators and their repressors, which form negative feedback loops. In Drosophila, the CK2 kinase phosphorylates and destabilizes the PERIOD (PER) and TIMELESS (TIM) proteins, which inhibit CLOCK (CLK) transcriptional activity. Here we show that CK2 also targets the CLK activator directly. Downregulating the activity of the catalytic alpha subunit of CK2 induces CLK degradation, even in the absence of PER and TIM. Unexpectedly, the regulatory beta subunit of the CK2 holoenzyme is not required for the regulation of CLK stability. In addition, downregulation of \(CK2\alpha\) activity decreases CLK phosphorylation and increases per and tim transcription. These results indicate that CK2 inhibits CLK degradation while reducing its activity. Since the CK1 kinase promotes CLK degradation, we suggest that CLK stability and transcriptional activity result from counteracting effects of CK1 and CK2. KW - negative feedback loop KW - PER-TIM complex KW - posttranslational regulation KW - transcription factor KW - in-vivo KW - behavioral rhythms KW - proteins period KW - beta-subunit KW - phosphorylation KW - gene KW - CT, circadian time KW - LD, light:dark KW - DD, constant darkness Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-127234 SN - 1545-7885 VL - 11 IS - 8 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Cornelius, Christine A1 - Leingärtner, Annette A1 - Hoiss, Bernhard A1 - Krauss, Jochen A1 - Steffan-Dewenter, Ingolf A1 - Menzel, Annette T1 - Phenological response of grassland species to manipulative snowmelt and drought along an altitudinal gradient JF - Journal of Experimental Botany N2 - Plant communities in the European Alps are assumed to be highly affected by climate change, as the temperature rise in this region is above the global average. It is predicted that higher temperatures will lead to advanced snowmelt dates and that the number of extreme weather events will increase. The aims of this study were to determine the impacts of extreme climatic events on flower phenology and to assess whether those impacts differed between lower and higher altitudes. In 2010, an experiment simulating advanced and delayed snowmelt as well as a drought event was conducted along an altitudinal transect approximately every 250 m (600–2000 m above sea level) in the Berchtesgaden National Park, Germany. The study showed that flower phenology was strongly affected by altitude; however, there were few effects of the manipulative treatments on flowering. The effects of advanced snowmelt were significantly greater at higher than at lower sites, but no significant difference was found between both altitudinal bands for the other treatments. The response of flower phenology to temperature declined through the season and the length of flowering duration was not significantly influenced by treatments. The stronger effect of advanced snowmelt at higher altitudes may be a response to differences in treatment intensity across the gradient. Consequently, shifts in the date of snowmelt due to global warming may affect species more at higher than at lower altitudes, as changes may be more pronounced at higher altitudes. These data indicate a rather low risk of drought events on flowering phenology in the Bavarian Alps. KW - flowering KW - advanced KW - snowmelt KW - Alps KW - BBCH KW - climate change KW - delayed snowmelt Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-126888 VL - 64 IS - 1 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ginzkey, Christian A1 - Eicker, Sven A1 - Marget, Matthias A1 - Krause, Jörg A1 - Brecht, Stefan A1 - Westphal, Manfred A1 - Hugo, Heinz-Hermann A1 - Mehdorn, Maximilian A1 - Steinmann, Jörg A1 - Hamel, Wolfgang T1 - Incomplete tumour control following DNA vaccination against rat gliomas expressing a model antigen JF - Acta Neurochirurgica N2 - Background Vaccination against tumour-associated antigens is one approach to elicit anti-tumour responses. We investigated the effect of polynucleotide (DNA) vaccination using a model antigen (E. coli lacZ) in a syngeneic gliosarcoma model (9L). Methods Fisher 344 rats were vaccinated thrice by intramuscular injection of a lacZ-encoding or a control plasmid in weekly intervals. One week after the last vaccination, lacZ-expressing 9L cells were implanted into the striatum. Results After 3 weeks, in lacZ-vaccinated animals the tumours were significantly smaller than in control-vaccinated animals. In cytotoxic T cell assays lysis rates of >50 % could only be observed in a few of the lacZ-vaccinated animals. This response was directed against lacZ-expressing and parental 9L cells but not against syngeneic MADB 106 adenocarcinoma cells. In Elispot assays interferon-γ production was observed upon stimulation with 9LlacZ and 9L wild-type but not MADB 106 cells. This response was higher for lacZ-immunized animals. All animals revealed dense infiltrates with CD8+ lymphocytes and, to a lesser extent, with NK cells. CD25-staining indicated cells possibly associated with the maintenance of peripheral tolerance to self-antigens. All tumours were densely infiltrated by microglia consisting mostly of ramified cells. Only focal accumulation of macrophage-like cells expressing ED1, a marker for phagocytic activity, was observed. Conclusion Prophylactic DNA vaccination resulted in effective but incomplete suppression of brain tumour formation. Mechanisms other than cytotoxic T cell responses as measured in the generally used in vitro assays appear to play a role in tumour suppression. KW - lacZ KW - rat glioma KW - immunotherapy KW - DNA vaccination Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-126775 VL - 155 IS - 1 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Holzschuh, Andrea A1 - Dormann, Carsten F. A1 - Tscharntke, Teja A1 - Steffan-Dewenter, Ingolf T1 - Mass-flowering crops enhance wild bee abundance JF - Oecologia N2 - Although agricultural habitats can provide enormous amounts of food resources for pollinator species, links between agricultural and (semi-)natural habitats through dispersal and foraging movements have hardly been studied. In 67 study sites, we assessed the interactions between mass-flowering oilseed rape fields and semi-natural grasslands at different spatial scales, and their effects on the number of brood cells of a solitary cavity-nesting bee. The probability that the bee Osmia bicornis colonized trap nests in oilseed rape fields increased from 12 to 59 % when grassland was nearby, compared to fields isolated from grassland. In grasslands, the number of brood cells of O. bicornis in trap nests was 55 % higher when adjacent to oilseed rape compared to isolated grasslands. The percentage of oilseed rape pollen in the larval food was higher in oilseed rape fields and grasslands adjacent to oilseed rape than in isolated grasslands. In both oilseed rape fields and grasslands, the number of brood cells was positively correlated with the percentage of oilseed rape pollen in the larval food. We show that mass-flowering agricultural habitats—even when they are intensively managed—can strongly enhance the abundance of a solitary bee species nesting in nearby semi-natural habitats. Our results suggest that positive effects of agricultural habitats have been underestimated and might be very common (at least) for generalist species in landscapes consisting of a mixture of agricultural and semi-natural habitats. These effects might also have—so far overlooked—implications for interspecific competition and mutualistic interactions in semi-natural habitats. KW - spillover KW - trap nests KW - pollen KW - oilseed rape KW - canola Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-126852 VL - 172 IS - 2 ER -