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Metodik för anpassning av standardsystem : från en kund och utvecklares perspektivBasic, Kemal, Mohammadi, Iman January 2007 (has links)
Standardsystem är ett allt mer förekommande begrepp i dagens moderna verksamheter. Dessa system möjliggör en effektivisering av verksamheten vilket leder till att den blir mer konkurrenskraftig på marknaden. Dock finns det en del problem att lösa vid anpassningen av standardsystem. Eftersom det på marknaden idag finns ett stort utbud av olika standardsystem är det svårt för kunden att välja rätt system för dennes verksamhet. En av riskerna med att anskaffa ett standardsystem är att bunden betalar alldeles för höga summor för onödiga funktioner eller att systemet de anskaffat inte tillfredställer de funktioner företaget eftersträvar. Därför måste grova verksamhetsanalyser utföras innan anskaffningen. Detta för att avgöra om standardsystemet i fråga uppfyller verksamhetskraven samt att det kan anpassas till de delar den inte tillfredställer. Till hjälp finns det kompletta metoder för anskaffningen av standardsystem. En av dessa är SIV-metoden, den är en komplett metod för anskaffning av standardsystem. Efter genomförda val av system är det viktigt att kunna utföra anpassningar av det valda systemet och utifrån den aspekten härstammar idén för denna uppsats. Anpassningen av standardsystem är enligt oss ett outforskat ämne och kräver därför en mer djupgående forskning för att hitta och knyta de delar typiska för denna process. Forskningen i denna uppsats omfattar de delar där anpassningen av standardsystem behandlas. Dessa delar har vi lyft fram från befintliga metoder där anpassnings delen bara är en del av det hela. / A common term in today’s modern businesses is Software packaged system. These system’s are used to make the business operations more efficient thus the enterprises more competitive on the marketplace. But there are still issues regarding the adaptation of these system’s to the specific enterprise that must be resolved. Since the supply of software packages is very high, it is hard for the consumer to find the right kind of system that will fully satisfy company’s requirements. One of the major risks with acquiring these software packaged systems is that the customer pays too much money for a system with functions that are not necessary for the customer business needs. In order avoid this; the customer must make thorough analysis of their business operations before buying and implementing these kinds of systems. There are many obtainable methods that the customer can apply. In this thesis, we have accounted for two of these methods, namely, the SIV-method and the VFS-model. These methods describe different steps that the customer must consider before implementing a software packaged system. One of the significant steps in these methods is the adaptation process of software packaged systems. A matter we believe is unexplored and therefore further research is required on the subject.
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Characterization of CD49A+ NK cells in SIV/SHIV-infected rhesus macaquesArias, Christian Fernando 09 October 2019 (has links)
BACKGROUND: Natural killer (NK) cells are traditionally considered part of the innate immune system but have recently been shown to possess adaptive qualities similar to T cells in response to an infection with a pathogen. In addition to possessing adaptive features, NK cells have also been found to reside in different organs such as the liver, spleen, and lymph nodes and differ based on phenotypic markers and their responses to different cytokines. Utilizing these findings, several groups have isolated and identified CD49a as a marker for tissue-resident NK cells. In the liver, CD49a has also been shown to be a positive indicator for NK cell memory-like responses in murine models. Building off work that demonstrated antigen-specific responses in rhesus macaques, this project focuses on characterizing the phenotypic markers and functional profile of CD49a+ NK cells in non-human primates. To better understand the role of CD49a in memory-like NK cells outside of the liver, this project utilized spleen samples from rhesus macaques infected with SIV/SHIV. This work aims to help us better understand the dysfunction NK cells experience as a result of HIV-1 infection in humans and also to demonstrate the changes NK cells experience as the disease progresses. A thorough understanding of the adaptive capabilities of NK cells can pave the way for targeted therapies to increase NK cell antiviral activity in HIV and other infections.
METHODS: To characterize the functional and phenotypic profiles of CD49a+ NK cells by multiparameter flow cytometry, thirteen samples of spleen from rhesus macaques were thawed and then stained with two different protocols. A phenotyping protocol involved staining with antibodies against surface markers as well as intracellular markers T-Bet and Eomes. For the functional characterization protocol, the same thirteen samples were stained intracellularly after being stimulated with a cocktail of PMA and ionomyocin. The antibodies used in this were for functional markers. Of the thirteen samples used, six were infected with SHIVSF162P3, two were infected with SIVmac239X, and the remaining five were uninfected.
After staining, these samples were analyzed on an BD LSRII from BD Biosciences. The data obtained were then analyzed using FlowJo software to study NK cells, which were characterized as CD45+CD14-CD20-CD3-CD159+.
RESULTS: The analysis compared NK cells with T cells, B cells, and NKB cells. Some increases were seen among CD49a+ NK cells in the frequency of CD336+ (NCR2/NKp44), CD337+ (NKp30), and CD366+ (Tim-3) after infection.
Although there were some mild increases in CD107a and TNF- in infected samples compared to uninfected, a significant increase was observed in the frequency of IFN-ɣ among infected CD49a+ NK cells compared to uninfected.
CONCLUSION: When comparing samples that were infected vs uninfected, it appears there were some mild decreases after infection in the ratio of NK cells to other lymphocytes. In addition, there did not appear to be a significant increase in the frequency of CD49a+ among these NK cells as a result of the infection. However, among the CD49a+ subpopulation, there were some observed non-significant decreases in CD56-CD16+ cells. Furthermore, there was found to be an almost significant increase in TNF- (p = 0.06) among CD49a+ cells after infection. These findings demonstrate an increase in cytotoxic activity in splenic NK cells associated with an adaptation to the virus. Although there does not appear to be significant changes in the ratio of NK cell populations in the spleen, the changes observed in phenotypic and functional markers associated with CD49a+ demonstrate an increase in the cytotoxic activity of NK cells as a result of infection with SIV/SHIV. However, it remains to be seen if CD49a is a direct indicator of this type of infection. Future work geared toward memory-like NK cells in non-human primate splenic tissue could look at the contrast in CD49a+ NK cells from different states of infection with HIV-1 and/or SIV (acute vs chronic) to better understand the integrin’s role in adaptation.
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Monocyte / Macrophage Activation and Traffic Mediates HIV and SIV – Associated Peripheral NeuropathyLakritz, Jessica Robyn January 2016 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Tricia H. Burdo / Human immunodeficiency virus-associated peripheral neuropathy (HIVPN) continues to be a prevalent comorbidity of HIV infection, despite virologic control due to effective antiretroviral therapy (ART). Symptoms include bilateral tingling, numbness, and pain in distal extremities. Severity of symptoms is associated with a loss of intraepidermal nerve fiber density (IENFD) in the feet. Damage to the dorsal root ganglia (DRG) has also been observed in postmortem tissue analysis from patients with HIV-PN. Treatment options are limited due to a lack of understanding of the disease pathogenesis. Chronic monocyte activation and accumulation of macrophages in peripheral nervous system (PNS) tissues has been reported but few studies have directly demonstrated the role of monocyte/macrophage activation and traffic in the pathogenesis of HIV-PN. The central hypothesis of this thesis is that monocyte activation and traffic mediates PNS neuronal damage. We addressed this hypothesis in several ways. In chapter 2, we describe pathology seen in a rapid disease progression animal model of HIV-PN. We found that an early loss of IENFD preceded a loss of small diameter DRG neurons. In chapter 3, we associated DRG pathology with an accumulation of inflammatory macrophages surrounding DRG neurons. Increased monocyte traffic to the DRG was associated with severity of DRG pathology and with a loss of IENFD. In chapter 4, we directly tested the impact of monocyte traffic on DRG pathology by blocking leukocyte traffic with an anti-VLA-4 antibody, natalizumab. Blocking cell traffic reduced accumulation of macrophages in the DRG and improved pathology. Next we treated animals with methylglyoxal-bisguanylhydrazone (MGBG) to specifically target myeloid cells and reduce their activation. MGBG treatment improved DRG pathology and reduced accumulation of macrophages in tissues. Having demonstrated the role of monocyte traffic and activation, we aimed to identify signaling proteins and inflammatory proteins associated with PNS pathology. We found elevated monocyte chemoattractants in DRG tissue and elevated markers of monocyte activation in plasma that were associated with a loss of IENFD. Together, these studies demonstrate that systemic monocyte activation, macrophage accumulation in DRG tissue, and monocyte traffic plays a major role in SIV-PN pathogenesis. These studies provide novel insight into immune mechanisms that impact neuronal loss during SIV infection. Thus, modulating macrophage activation and reducing monocyte traffic may have therapeutic benefits to patients suffering from or at risk of developing HIV-PN. / Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2016. / Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. / Discipline: Biology.
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Human-specific adaptations in Vpu conferring anti-tetherin activity are critical for efficient early HIV-1 replication in vivo / In vivoでVpuの抗Tetherin活性はHIV-1複製の初期に重要であるYamada, Eri 26 March 2018 (has links)
京都大学 / 0048 / 新制・課程博士 / 博士(医学) / 甲第21022号 / 医博第4368号 / 新制||医||1028(附属図書館) / 京都大学大学院医学研究科医学専攻 / (主査)教授 朝長 啓造, 教授 萩原 正敏, 教授 髙折 晃史 / 学位規則第4条第1項該当 / Doctor of Medical Science / Kyoto University / DFAM
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Kinetik von NK-Zellen und gamma-delta-T-Zellen nach Infektion von Rhesusaffen mit Immundefizienzviren / Kinetik of NK-cells and gamma-delta-T-cells post infection of Rhesusmarquqes with ImmunodeficiencyvirusesGriesbach, Ralph 12 August 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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Dendritic cell and IgA responses in SIV and HIV-1 pathogenesis /Söderlund, Johan, January 2004 (has links)
Diss. (sammanfattning) Stockholm : Karol. inst., 2004. / Härtill 4 uppsatser.
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SME Performance and Its Relationship to InnovationAbouzeedan, Adli January 2011 (has links)
Current SME performance models suffer from a number of disadvantages. The models use intensively a business ratio approach, they look at SMEs as a homogenous group, they consider firms to be closed systems, they do not directly incorporate the impact of an enterprise’s innovation activities, and finally they are complex and rely on sophisticated statistical refining methods making them unpractical to use by SME managers. There are four major challenges when one tries to build SME performance models that lack these deficiencies. The first challenge is that the desired performance evaluation model must optimally incorporate both quantitative and qualitative input. The second challenge is that the model must incorporate non-financial input parameters, such as firm size and age (among others), in the performance evaluation models. The third is that the model must consider the variety of SMEs as concerns their business sectors, nationalities, sizes, and ages. The final challenge is that the model must be able to utilize existing limited information available from the SMEs bookkeeping practices in an optimal way. The thesis addresses three questions related to constructing a better SMEperformance model, namely (1) What are the advantages and disadvantages of the existing models used in evaluating SME performance? (2) What characterizes a comprehensive model for measuring SME performance with acknowledgement of the firm’s innovation activities? (3) How can a firm’s innovation activities be enhanced in relation to the firm’s external environment? To construct a model that copes with these challenges, I used a literature-based selection of parameters as well as a theory-based selection. I used both a conceptual approach and an empirical approach to discuss and propose a model, the Survival Index Value (or SIV) model, as an alternative to the existing performance models for SMEs. The major contributions of this thesis to the field of SME performance can be summarized in three outcomes: the SIV model as a new model of SME performance evaluation, the ASPEM as a new tool for strategic utilization of SME performance models, and a new approach to account for innovation in relation to the external environment of the firm using the IBAM tool. The work adds to the theory of the firm, as it presents a new way of evaluating firm performance. It also contributes to bridging the theory of the firm to organizational theory, by elevating the significance of networking and its impact on SME efficiency.
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Emmys skrivundervisning : - En lärares försök att öka sina elevers skrivförmåga inom svenskundervisningen i gymnasietIdlinge, Jan January 2006 (has links)
<p>Det här examensarbetet handlar om skrivundervisning. Undersökningen är huvudsakligen en fallstudie. Syftet är att få ökade kunskaper om en gymnasielärares arbetssätt för att utveckla sina elevers skrivande. Den huvudsakliga forskningsfrågan i detta arbete är: Hur beskriver en erfaren gymnasielärare sin skrivundervisning för att öka sina elevers skrivförmåga inom svenskundervisningen i gymnasiet?</p><p>Examensarbetet börjar i en teoretisk utgångspunkt med tre olika teorier om skrivande och skrivundervisning. Sedan fortsätter det med den empiriska delen som är en djupintervju med en lärare vid namn Emmy (fiktivt namn) på en gymnasieskola i Småland. I resultaten, analysen och diskussionen i examensarbetet visas det hur en lärare har försökt att svara på frågeställningen ovan.</p><p>Den huvudsakliga slutsatsen är att läraren är flexibel och att hon har ett antal olika metoder att arbeta med när hon försöker öka sina elevers skrivförmåga i sin dagliga undervisning. Den här fallstudien visar också något av hennes syn på skrivundervisning inom svenskämnet på gymnasiet. Emmys teoretiska grundsyn ligger nära skrivprocessteorin som representeras av den svenska forskaren Siv Strömquist.</p><p>Det är omöjligt att dra några generella slutsatser om alla lärare bara på basis av en enda fallstudie. En försiktig tanke som dock uppstår i diskussionen är att det kan vara svårt att vara lärare, om man tittar på och lever sig in i Emmys bild av sin skrivundervisning. Några av hennes ledstjärnor är värdegrunden, den lokala kursplanen, skrivprocessteorin, en bra lärare–elev-relation, mycket läsning, textanalys, bra skrivuppgifter, tydliga uppgiftsinstruktioner, mönsterexempel, mycket skrivträning, nyttig textrespons, infärgning, goda råd till eleverna samt sist men inte minst humor och lust i skrivundervisningen. Allt detta ska leda henne framåt för att öka skrivförmågan hos eleverna.</p>
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The silicon-vacancy centre in diamond for quantum information processingPingault, Benjamin Jean-Pierre January 2017 (has links)
Atomic defects in solids offer access to atom-like quantum properties without complex trapping methods while displaying a rich physics due to interactions with their solid-state environment. Such properties have made them an advantageous building block for quantum information processing, in particular to construct a quantum network, where information would be encoded in spins and transferred between nodes through photons. Among defects in solids, the negatively charged silicon-vacancy centre in diamond (SiV$^{−}$) has attracted attention for its very promising optical properties for such a network. In this thesis, we investigate the spin properties of the silicon-vacancy centre as a potential spin-photon interface. First, we use resonant excitation of an SiV$^{−}$ centre in an external magnetic field to selectively address different electronic states and analyse the resulting fluorescence. We find evidence of selection rules in the optical transitions revealing that the centre possesses an electronic spin S = 1/2. Making use of the dependence of such selection rules on the applied magnetic field orientation, we resonantly drive two optical transitions forming a $\Lambda$-scheme. In the double resonance condition, we achieve coherent population trapping, whereby the SiV$^{−}$ is pumped into a dark state corresponding to a superposition of the two addressed ground states of opposite spin. This technique allows us to evaluate the coherence time of the dark state and hence of the spin, while demonstrating the possibility of all-optical control of the spin when a $\Lambda$-scheme is available. We then use resonant optical pulses to initialise and read out the spin state of a single SiV$^{−}$. By tuning a microwave pulse into resonance between two ground states of opposite spin, we demonstrate optically detected magnetic resonance. Subsequently, by varying the duration of a resonant microwave pulse, we achieve coherent control of a single SiV$^{−}$ electronic spin. Through Ramsey interferometry, we measure a spin dephasing time of 115 $\pm$ 9 ns. We then investigate interactions of the SiV$^{−}$ with its environment. We analyse the hyperfine interaction of the SiV$^{−}$ spin with the nuclear spin of $^{29}$Si, with a view to taking advantage of the long-lived nuclear spin in the future. We show that single-phonon-mediated excitations between electronic states of the SiV$^{−}$ are the dominant spin dephasing and population decay mechanism and evaluate how external strain alters optical selection rules and can be used to improve the coherence time of the spin.
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Rôle of semen infected leukocytes in HIV mucosal transmission : Experimental model of SIVmac251 infection in Macaca fascicularis.Bernard-Stoecklin, Sibylle 15 May 2013 (has links) (PDF)
Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) infection mostly spreads by the mucosal route: sexual transmission is the dominant mode of transmission, responsible for between 85% and 90% of cases of infection worldwide. These epidemiological data indicate that semen is one of the major sources of HIV-1 transmission. Semen, like other bodily secretions involved in HIV sexual transmission, contains the virus as two forms: cell-free viral particles and cell-associated virus, mostly in infected leukocytes. Although cell-to-cell HIV transmission has been extensively described as more efficient, rapid and resistant to host immune responses, very few studies have investigated the role in vivo of infected leukocytes in virus mucosal transmission. One such study has been recently conducted in our lab, and demonstrated that SIV-infected splenocytes are able to transmit infection to female macaques after vaginal exposure. However, all these studies used immune cells from peripheral blood or lymphoid tissues, such as spleen, and none have investigated the capacity of infected leukocytes in semen to transmit the infection in vivo. Indeed, nature, phenotype and infectivity of HIV associated with semen leukocytes may be different from that of HIV from other sources.Therefore, the objectives of this work are, first, to study of semen leukocytes and their dynamics during SIVmac251 infection in detail, then to investigate seminal factors that may influence semen infectiousness, and finally to test semen leukocyte infectivity in vitro and in vivo, using a model of mucosal exposure in cynomolgus macaques.Macaque semen contains all the target cells for HIV/SIV: CD4+ T cells, macrophages and dendritic cells in lower proportions. Semen CD4+ T cells and macrophages display an activation, differenciation and expression of migration markers profile which is typical of mucosal leucocytes. SIV infection induces significant changes in their phenotype and dynamics. Both cell types can be productively infected and are found in the semen at all stages of infection. These observations suggest that semen CD4+ T cells and macrophages may be able to transmit infection after mucosal exposure.If the role of semen infected leukocytes in HIV/SIV mucosal transmission is confirmed in vivo, this mechanism will be important to consider for further preventive strategies design, like microbicides.
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