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Famous Persons

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Most cited protocols related to «Famous Persons»

The MMM survey is a cross-sectional opportunistic study of BPs of volunteer adults aged 18 years or more. Over 100 countries were contacted either via those who had collaborated in MMM 2017 or via other national and international hypertension, cardiovascular or renal societies. In each country, one or more national leaders were identified to take the responsibility of acquiring national ethical clearance for the survey (if required) and to identify volunteer staff to set up screening sites and measure BPs. The protocol produced for MMM 2017 (www.maymeasure.com) was modified slightly on the feedback and input from the 2017 investigators and distributed to all national leaders potentially collaborating in 2018. The website that was produced for MMM in 2017 was updated and included training materials on BP measurement, and campaign promotional materials.
Staff identified in each country set up screening sites in a wide range of locations including hospitals, primary care clinics, indoor and outdoor public places, places of worship, pharmacies, and workplaces. The campaign was promoted internationally by the ISH and the World Hypertension League and locally through television, radio, the media, and social media. Endorsements from sporting, political, and national celebrities were also used.
Volunteers were recruited at local sites using convenience sampling. Having been made aware of the availability of BP screening, those adults who wished to take advantage of the campaign attended one of the available MMM screening sites and were therefore self-referred. The campaign was targeted ideally at those who had not had their BP measured in the previous year, but participants who presented and had been screened more recently were not excluded from the study.
Volunteer staff were trained to measure BP using either automated or manual sphygmomanometers via video recordings housed on the MMM website and via face-to-face on-site training. Standard methods for BP measurement were recommended to include three sitting recordings taken at 1 min intervals, from either the right or left arm, with pulse rate measurements between BP recordings. In 2017 and 2018, ∼14 000 Omron BP devices (Omron Healthcare, Kyoto, Japan) were distributed to MMM sites where insufficient devices were available. In total, 87.3% of readings were taken using Omron devices. Otherwise, locally available devices were used to measure BP with a recommendation to use automated devices where possible.
Prior to BP measurement, a questionnaire was used to collect limited data from each participant. The questionnaire was slightly modified from MMM 2017 to improve clarity and data quality (see Supplementary material online, Appendix). Height and weight were recorded where facilities were available or estimated by screenees if not.
Hypertension was defined as a systolic BP of ≥140 mmHg or a diastolic BP of ≥90 mmHg, on the basis of the mean of the second and third BP recording. Those taking antihypertensive medications were also assumed to have hypertension and to be aware of their condition. Among those on treatment, controlled BP was defined as a systolic BP of <140 mmHg and a diastolic BP < 90 mmHg. Screenees found to have untreated or inadequately treated hypertension were provided with evidence-based dietary and lifestyle advice as to how to lower BP (Ten Top Tips: see Supplementary material online, Appendix). Advice for further follow-up of their raised BP was also provided, tailored by national investigators based on locally available facilities.
Publication 2019
Adult Antihypertensive Agents Cardiovascular System Diet Face Famous Persons High Blood Pressures Kidney Medical Devices Pressure, Diastolic Primary Health Care Pulse Rate Sphygmomanometers Systolic Pressure Voluntary Workers
The Faculty of Health and Wellness Sciences Ethics Committee of the Cape Peninsula University of Technology approved the study, which was conducted according to the code of ethics of the World Medical Association (Declaration of Helsinki). All participants signed written informed consent after all the procedures had been fully explained in the language of their choice. In addition, permission was also sought from other relevant authorities such as city and community authorities. These authorities granted permission to operate in the community and also to make use of designated places such as community halls or nearby schools for data and sample collection.
Bellville South is located within the northern suburbs of Cape Town, South Africa. It is traditionally a mixed-ancestry township formed in the late 1950s. In the South African context, the term township usually refers to the often underdeveloped urban living areas that, under the Apartheid regime, were reserved for people of mixed ancestry. According to the 2001 population census, its population was approximately 26 758, with the people of mixed ancestry making up 80.48% (21 536). The target population for this study were subjects between the ages of 35 and 65 years and their number was estimated to be 6 500.21 Based on these statistics and the recommended sample size for a pilot study, usually 10%, the sample size required for this pilot study was 650.
This was a cross-sectional study aimed at establishing a cohort that could be followed up for insulin resistance and its sequel in randomly selected mixed-ancestry subjects aged 35 to 65 years. The data presented here were collected from mid January 2008 to March 2009. Using a map of Bellville South, random sampling was approached as follows. From a list of streets from each stratum, the streets were then classified as short, medium and long streets based on the number of houses. Streets with 22 or fewer houses were classified as short, streets with 23–40 houses were medium, and long streets were those with more than 40 houses. A total of 16 short streets representing approximately 190 houses, 15 medium streets representing approximately 410 houses and 12 long streets representing approximately 400 houses were randomly selected across the different strata.
From the selected streets, all household members meeting the selection criteria were eligible to participate in the study. Community authorities requested that participants outside the random selection area should benefit from the study. These were also included, but given a different code.
Information regarding the project was disseminated to the residents through the local radio station (Radio Tygerberg) and community newspaper (the Tygerberger). Brochures and fliers bearing information about the project were distributed via the school children and taxis to the local residents. The recruitment team consisted of unemployed matriculants and was managed by a qualified, retired nurse from the community. Additionally, a ‘road show’ strategy that involved a celebrity suffering from diabetes from the same community was also used, especially in the targeted streets.
Recruited subjects were visited by the recruitment team the evening before participation and reminded of all the survey instructions. The instructions included overnight fasting, and abstinence from drinking alcohol or consumption of any fluids on the morning of participation. Since the participants were required to bring in an early morning mid-stream urine sample, they were provided with a sterile container as well as instructions on how to collect the sample. Furthermore, participants were encouraged to bring along their medical/clinic cards and/or drugs they were currently using.
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Publication 2012
Child Diabetes Mellitus Ethics Committees Faculty Famous Persons Households Insulin Resistance Nurses Pharmaceutical Preparations Southern African People Specimen Collection Sterility, Reproductive Target Population Taxis Response Technology, Health Care Urine
FAMEs in the samples were identified by comparison of their retention times with those of individual FAME standards. The palmitic acid methyl ester (C16:0) was used as a reference FAME. We measured the relative quantities of the 37 fatty acids, with each of the 37 analytes being measured as a percentage of the total fatty-acid signal.
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Publication 2013
Famous Persons Fatty Acids methyl palmitate Retention (Psychology)
All studies conformed to the guidelines of the Medical Institutional Review Board at the University of California, Los Angeles. Electrode locations were based exclusively on clinical criteria and were verified by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) or by computer tomography coregistered to preoperative MRI. Each electrode probe had nine microwires protruding from its tip, eight high-impedance recording channels (typically 200–400 kΩ), and one low-impedance reference with stripped insulation. The differential signal from the microwires was amplified using a 64-channel Neuralynx system, filtered between 1 and 9000 Hz, and sampled at 28 kHz. Spike detection and sorting was performed after bandpass filtering the signals between 300 and 3000 Hz (Quiroga et al., 2004 (link)).
Each recording session lasted ~30 min. Subjects were sitting in bed, facing a laptop computer on which pictures of famous individuals, landmarks, animals, or objects were shown. A median number of 97 (range, 60–202) different images were shown per session, centered on a laptop screen and covering ~1.5°, and displayed six times each for 1 s in pseudorandom order (Quiroga et al., 2005 (link)). After image offset, subjects had to indicate whether the picture contained a human face or something else by pressing the “Y” and “N” keys, respectively. This simple task, on which performance was virtually flawless, required them to attend to the pictures. Every stimulus presentation was preceded by a fixation cross for 500 ms to assess baseline firing activity. In a slightly different variant of the paradigm (23 of96 sessions), images were presented for 500 ms (20 sessions) or 750 ms (3 sessions), and the attention task was omitted. Absence of a significant influence of the presentation time on the observed response latencies was confirmed post hoc by nonparametric one-way ANOVA (Kruskal–Wallis; p = 0.18).
To determine whether a unit responded selectively to one or more of the stimuli presented, we divided the 1000 ms after stimulus onset into 19 overlapping 100 ms bins, and for each bin we compared the spike rates for the six presentations of each stimulus to the baseline intervals of 500 ms before all of the stimulus onsets in a session (~100 × 6) by means of a two-tailed Mann–Whitney U test, using the Simes procedure (Rodland, 2006 ) to correct for multiple comparisons and applying a conservative significance threshold of p = 0.001 to reduce false-positive detections. Only responsive units were included in the subsequent latency and selectivity analyses.
Onset latencies for responsive units were determined by Poisson spike train analysis (Hanes et al., 1995 (link)). For this procedure, the interspike intervals (ISIs) of a given unit are processed continuously over the entire recording session, and the onset of a spike train is detected based on its deviation from a baseline Poisson, i.e., exponential, distribution of ISIs (regardless of the experimental paradigm). For each response-eliciting stimulus, we determined the time between stimulus onset and the onset of the first spike train in all six presentations. Only spike train onsets within the first 1000 ms after stimulus onset were considered. The median length of these six time intervals was taken as response latency. For sparsely firing units with mean baseline firing activity of <2 Hz, Poisson spike train analysis generally failed to pick up any onset spike, thus we used the median latency of the first spike during stimulus presentation instead. To minimize spurious latency values, we excluded responses for which the onsets of the three trials closest to the calculated response latency were >200 ms apart. For a neuron responding to more than one stimulus, the median of the different stimulus latencies was taken.
For the nonparametric correlation analysis, selectivity of each unit was operationally defined as the reciprocal value of the relative number of response-eliciting stimuli.
Baseline firing rates of the responsive cells were calculated from the 500 ms before stimulus onset and quantified as the median across six presentations. For a neuron responding to more than one stimulus, the median of the baseline rates for different stimuli was taken.
Publication 2008
Afterimage Animals Attention Cells Conditioning, Psychology Ethics Committees, Research Face Famous Persons Genetic Selection Homo sapiens neuro-oncological ventral antigen 2, human Neurons Tomography
The samples in this study were from the original Weibo data pool [17 (link)]. The data pool contained more than 1.16 million active Weibo users. Weibo is a popular platform to share and discuss individual information and life activities, as well as celebrity news in China [18 ].
The retrieved data included (1) user’s profile information, (2) network behaviors, and (3) Weibo messages. Privacy was strictly protected during the procedure, referring to the ethical principles [19 (link)]. We have obtained the Ethical Committee’s approval and the ethic code is H15009.
The following inclusion criteria were employed to select active Weibo users from the data pool. First, they had published at least 50 original Weibo posts around a month in total from 31 December, 2019 to 26 January, 2020. Second, their authentication type is non-institutional (e.g., individual user, etc.). Third, their regional authentication is in China, not “overseas” or “other”.
We acquired 17,865 active Weibo users finally, then fetched all their original posts published during 13 January, 2020 to 26 January, 2020 into the two-week period for the analysis.
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Publication 2020
Famous Persons

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Publication 2023
Epidemics Famous Persons Males Marijuana Abuse

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Publication 2023
Famous Persons
Fatty acid composition in each experimental diet was determined by modifying a previously described protocol (64 (link)). Briefly, 400 mg of each diet sample was reconstituted in a 4:1 (v/v) ethanol/methanol solution + 0.1% (v/v) butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT) and heated 15 min at 55°C in a CEM Mars 6 Xpress microwave digestion system (CEM Corporation, Matthews, NC). Then, 2 mg of extracted fatty acids from each diet sample were converted to fatty acid methyl esters (FAMEs) by treating with 500 µl of toluene and 20 µg of internal standard (methyl-12-tridecenoate), incubating with 2 ml of KOH (0.5 N) at 50°C for 10 min, then subsequently incubating with 3 ml of methanolic HCl (5% [v/v] at 80°C for 10 min to allow base-catalyzed methylation and acid-catalyzed methylation, respectively. Following methylation, 2 ml of HPLC-grade water was added to the samples, and FAMEs were extracted by adding 2 ml of hexane to the samples twice. Extracted FAMEs were dried under nitrogen with an Organomation Multivap Nitrogen Evaporator (Organomation Associates, Berlin, MA). Dried FAMEs were then resuspended in 1 ml of isooctane and kept at -20°C until further analysis.
FAMEs were analyzed by GC-MS as previously described (64 (link)). Briefly, FAMEs in each sample were separated on a Perkin Elmer 680/600 GC-MS (Waltham, MA) outfitted with a HP-88 capillary column (100 m × 0.25 mm inner diameter × 0.2 µm film thickness; Agilent Technologies, Santa Clara, CA). MassLynxTM (4.1 SCN 714; Waters Corporation, Milford, MA) was used to compare analyte retention time and electron ionization (EI) mass fragmentation to those in the reference standard, which consisted of Supelco 37 Component FAME Mix (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO), mead acid, docosatetraenoic acid, ω-3 docosapentaenoic acid (DPA), ω-6 DPA, and palmitelaidic acid (Cayman Chemical, Ann Arbor, MI). FAME analyte peak areas were converted to individual FAME concentrations using a standard curve based on the reference standard and internal standard. For fatty acids with a detected chain length of 10 to 24 carbon atoms, fatty acid content in the diet is reported as percentage (w/w) of total fatty acids quantified (Table 1).
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Publication 2023
2,2,4-trimethylpentane Acids Caimans Capillaries Carbon Diet Digestive System docosapentaenoic acid Electrons Esters Ethanol Famous Persons Fatty Acids Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry Hexanes High-Performance Liquid Chromatographies mead acid Methanol Methylation Microwaves Nitrogen palmitelaidic acid Retention (Psychology) Toluene
CAS has been shown to have good psychometric properties over the course of several studies [6 (link), 8 (link), 9 , 11 , 24 (link), 25 (link)]. It consists of 23 items. The response format for the CAS is a 5-point scale, ranging from 1(strongly disagree) to 5(strongly agree). The CAS measures three dimensions of celebrity admiration that emerged from factor analysis [10 ]. The first subscale is entertainment-social (10 items; e.g., “My friends and I like to discuss what my favorite celebrity has done, alpha = .83), intense-personal (9 items; e.g., “I have frequent thoughts about my favorite celebrity, even when I don’t want to,” alpha = .89), and borderline pathological (4 items; e.g., “I often feel compelled to learn the personal habits of my favorite celebrity;” alpha = .72). High scores on each subscale suggest a person who is strongly attached to a favorite celebrity. Across several studies total scale Cronbach’s alpha values ranged from .84 to .94 [10 ]. Cronbach’s alpha for the CAS in the current study was .89, .87 and .66 for the entertainment-social, intense-personal and borderline pathological subscales respectively. Cronbach’s alpha for the whole CAS was .93.
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Publication 2023
Famous Persons Feelings Friend Psychometrics Thinking
BSSS [21 (link)] consists of eight of the best items from the original scale developed by Zuckerman [26 ]. Two items are derived from each of the four content domains: experience seeking (ES; “I would like to explore strange places”); boredom susceptibility (BS; “I get restless when I spend too much time alone”); thrill and adventure seeking (TAS; “I would like to do frightening things”); and disinhibition (DIS; “I like wild parties”). Each item is responded to on a Likert scale anchored by “1 = strongly disagree” and “5 = strongly agree.” We added four items, one to each of the subscales, in an effort to increase the spread of scores. None of the 12 items are reverse-scored, thus high scores suggest a tendency to be a strong sensation seeker. High scores on the eight-item version predicted tobacco and marijuana use, deviance, poor quality of home life [17 ], and a borderline pathological addiction to a favorite celebrity [27 (link)]. In previous studies the BSSS had Cronbach alphas of .73 [27 (link)] and .76 [21 (link)]. Cronbach’s alpha for the total BSSS-12 in the current study was .77.
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Publication 2023
Addictive Behavior Barber Say syndrome Boredom Famous Persons Marijuana Use Susceptibility, Disease Tobacco Products

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