Al-Qallaf, Danah A. A. A. Q., Tomlinson, Darren, Bell, Sandra, and McPherson, Michael
Abstract
Biomarkers are molecules present in the patients' samples. They are used to detect the presence of a disease or an infection. An array of laboratory tools is used to monitor changes in the biomarker levels for diagnostic and prognostic purposes. Affimers are relatively new tools, which can be used in similar ways to commonly used antibodies with many advantages over the later. The work described in this PhD thesis has focused on a number of methodologies for the generation of Affimers against purified proteins and cell-surface molecules, with the intention of using these to detect biomarkers in cancer. To ensure the development of functional Affimer reagents against different membrane target molecules, EGFR, HER2, and HER3 were used as models to optimise the process of Affimers isolation and selection using phage display technology. In vitro production of Affimers using bacterial cells was assessed and optimised. Following optimisation, a range of Affimers that bound to EGFR, HER2, and HER3 were generated and partially characterised by different molecular applications, including immunofluorescence, immunohistochemistry, and pull-down assay. Upon characterisation, the developed reagents were not only able to identify their targets on cells and to precipitate them down from cell lysates, but also exhibited a complete inhibition of the downstream signalling activation of both EGFR and HER3. In addition, this thesis provides clear evidence of the potential of Affimers in biomarker discovery studies. After multiple rounds on non-tumourigenic (HB2) and cancerous (MDA-MB-453) breast-cell lines, eight novel anti-breast-cancer Affimers were successfully isolated and characterised. Following pull-down assay and mass spectrometry analysis, the target proteins to which these Affimers were found to bind was identified as CK18 and 19. Upon identification, the specificity of Affimers was further validated on a panel of breast cells, tissues, and on multiple breast-tissue microarrays (TMAs). There is a need to develop the knowledge to utilise this new Affimers-based technology to encourage adoption of this useful tool. With the aid of such technology, several novel detection reagents were generated, partially validated and proved to be promising tools for biomarker detection in different conventional assays.
Childhood obesity has reached epidemic proportions globally, and poses a considerable burden on a child’s short- and long-term health. Most obesity presents in the early (preschool) years, and once established tracks into later life. Therefore, identification of risk factors in the preschool period is considered critical for prevention of long-term obesity. In the United Arab Emirate (UAE), the rising prevalence of childhood obesity is of great public health concern. However, no previous study has explored risk factors for obesity in preschool children. This PhD aimed to: (i) identify risk factors for preschool obesity in the UAE (Study 1); (ii) describe dietary intake and patterns of preschool children, and explore their associations with risk of obesity (Study 2); and (iii) in a randomised controlled trial investigate the effectiveness of the ‘Eat Right Emirates’ (ERE) tool, a simple leaflet intervention designed to encourage a healthy lifestyle and prevent preschool obesity (Study 3). Study 1 showed that a longer duration of breastfeeding, and later introduction of complementary foods were associated with lower BMI z-score. Study 2 found that, compared with UK dietary guidelines, preschool children in the UAE exceeded intakes of protein, but did not meet recommended intakes for fibre. A high carbohydrate intake as a percentage of energy was associated with lower BMI z-score, whereas a high fat intake was associated with higher BMI z-score. A priori derived diet score found diets of preschool children were suboptimal, and principal component analysis identified three dietary patterns (‘traditional/health-conscious’, ‘processed/western’ and ‘convenience/snack’), which were not associated with BMI z-score. Study 3 found that the ERE tool was effective in reducing obesity risk compared to controls at 6-month follow-up. These findings, and the high compliance rate, suggest that the simple intervention is a promising approach for prevention of obesity in the UAE.
This research considers the possibility of a locally-centric design education curricula in Amman, Jordan by investigating the philosophies, theories, practices and models of curriculum and pedagogy most appropriate for design education. It describes perceptions of design and examines the possibilities for shifting these perceptions to move towards transforming design education. Jordan is a neopatriarchal society, and education re-enacts the dominant structures of the state within curriculum and pedagogy centred on the authority of the educator. This thesis argues for a decolonised design education based on a student-centred pedagogy drawn from the process and praxis curriculum models - a design education and design otherwise. Working with a range of designers, students and educators, it investigates the potential of these actors to contribute to the development of a pedagogy for design education in Jordan that is relevant to the milieu and locality. It poses the following questions: What philosophies, theories, practices, models of curriculum, and pedagogy are appropriate?; What potential shifts could this require and create?; How do we shift perceptions? This qualitative research uses interviews, focus groups, and design charrettes for data collection. Through participation and engagement with people that have most at stake in design education - designers, design educators and design students - I argue for an emancipatory design education that reflects on design beyond its traditional service-provider definition. Drawing on scholarship from design and education studies, and literature from fields such as history, decolonial studies, architecture and urbanism, political science, economics and philosophy, I argue for a curriculum model and student-centred pedagogy that considers design's role in society. Literature on Arab higher education is preoccupied with reforms to help the Arab region build a knowledge-society without considering the role of curriculum models and pedagogy nor addressing power structures. In addition, within design, little literature exists on the Arab region or Jordan, leaving its design culture(s) largely undocumented. My thesis investigates design education in higher education in Jordan by concentrating on models of pedagogy and curriculum and provides an overview of Jordan's contemporary design culture.
Communications of the ACM. Nov2017, Vol. 60 Issue 11, p23-25. 3p. 1 Color Photograph.
Subjects
Computer ethics, Data science, Cooperation, Computer scientists, and Criticism
Abstract
The authors discuss their thoughts on computing ethics, particularly the cause of establishing common ground between data scientists and critics of data scientists who raise concerns about an alleged lack of ethical awareness on the part of data scientists. The article discusses ethical concerns about artificial intelligence (AI), the broad nature of some critiques of data science, and efforts to create a cooperative collaboration between data scientists and their critics.
Journal of the American Society for Information Science & Technology. May2013, Vol. 64 Issue 5, p981-991. 12p. 2 Charts.
Subjects
Computer software, Interviewing, Poverty, Access to information, Information-seeking behavior, Body piercing, Self-mutilation, Social stigma, Tattooing, Judgment sampling, and Medical coding
Abstract
When information practices are understood to be shaped by social context, privilege and marginalization alternately affect not only access to, but also use of information resources. In the context of information, privilege, and community, politics of marginalization drive stigmatized groups to develop collective norms for locating, sharing, and hiding information. In this paper, we investigate the information practices of a subcultural community whose activities are both stigmatized and of uncertain legal status: the extreme body modification community. We use the construct of information poverty to analyze the experiences of 18 people who had obtained, were interested in obtaining, or had performed extreme body modification procedures. With a holistic understanding of how members of this community use information, we complicate information poverty by working through concepts of stigma and community norms. Our research contributes to human information behavior scholarship on marginalized groups and to Internet studies research on how communities negotiate collective norms of information sharing online. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Social Research. Summer2019, Vol. 86 Issue 2, p449-476. 28p.
Subjects
Professional ethics, Artificial intelligence, Logic, Corporate power, Organizational power, and Everyday life
Abstract
The article illustrates what it looks like to own ethics in the technology industry today. Topics include given the increasing power and centrality of artificial intelligence (AI) and automated decision making tools in everyday life, there is an urgent need for a coherent approach to addressing ethics, values, and moral consequences, and ethics owners operate inside a fraught dynamic: on the one hand attempting to resolve critical external normative claims about the core logics of the tech industry; on the other hand doing so while fully embedded within those logics, and attempts to institutionalize ethics within entities structured by core logics of corporate power point towards a series of structural, conceptual, and procedural pitfalls that may ultimately stymie these efforts.
Social media & society, Public sphere, Social space, Audiences, Identity (Psychology), and Technology & society
Abstract
Social media complicate the very nature of public life. In this article, we consider how technology reconfigures publicness, blurs 'audiences' and publics, and alters what it means to engage in public life. The nature of publicness online is shaped by the architecture and affordances of social media, but also by people's social contexts, identities, and practices. Navigating socially mediated publicness requires new mechanisms of control and new skills. Understanding socially-mediated publicness is an ever-shifting process throughout which people juggle blurred boundaries, multi-layered audiences, individual attributes, the specifics of the systems they use, and the contexts of their use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Digital communications, Economists, Social scientists, Digital technology, and Behavioral scientists
Abstract
The era of Big Data has begun. Computer scientists, physicists, economists, mathematicians, political scientists, bio-informaticists, sociologists, and other scholars are clamoring for access to the massive quantities of information produced by and about people, things, and their interactions. Diverse groups argue about the potential benefits and costs of analyzing genetic sequences, social media interactions, health records, phone logs, government records, and other digital traces left by people. Significant questions emerge. Will large-scale search data help us create better tools, services, and public goods? Or will it usher in a new wave of privacy incursions and invasive marketing? Will data analytics help us understand online communities and political movements? Or will it be used to track protesters and suppress speech? Will it transform how we study human communication and culture, or narrow the palette of research options and alter what ‘research’ means? Given the rise of Big Data as a socio-technical phenomenon, we argue that it is necessary to critically interrogate its assumptions and biases. In this article, we offer six provocations to spark conversations about the issues of Big Data: a cultural, technological, and scholarly phenomenon that rests on the interplay of technology, analysis, and mythology that provokes extensive utopian and dystopian rhetoric. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
American Fastener Journal. Sep/Oct2016, Vol. 32 Issue 5, p62-63. 2p.
Subjects
Industrial relations, Coworker relationships, Employees, Profit, and Time
Abstract
The article discusses the importance for businesses to develop and maintain a positive internal relationship (IR) throughout the entire organization. Topics mentioned include the hindrances to IR including the lack of time to do what is needed to do and the weakness of employees, the negative impact of broken IR on profit, and ways to upkeep the IR.
American Fastener Journal. Nov/Dec2015, Vol. 31 Issue 6, p44-46. 2p.
Subjects
Inventories, Inventory control, Product management, Material requirements planning, and Production planning
Abstract
The article discusses the cost implications of having unmanaged inventory which can affect the company's bottom line. Topics include the tendency of buyers to keep on buying being unaware of the inventory that lurked in every corner of the company, some companies' total lack of inventory understanding, and the need to have a material requirements planning a system to control inventory or stock.
Leadership, Spirituality, Intellect, Emotional intelligence, Behavior, and Ability
Abstract
Offers insights on spiritually intelligent leadership. Definition of a great leader; Reason why visionary leadership is in short supply; Overview of the concept of spiritual capital; Intelligence quotient, spiritual intelligence, and emotional intelligence; Principles of Spiritually Intelligent Leadership; Changing human behavior.
MIT Technology Review. Sep/Oct2013, Vol. 116 Issue 5, p52-52. 1p. 1 Black and White Photograph.
Subjects
Technology and Interpersonal relations
Abstract
The article presents an answer from social networking researcher Danah Boyd to the question of how does one know whether a technology will stimulate connections between people.
Venture capital, Social networks, New business enterprises, Computer software, and Social media
Abstract
In this article, the authors discuss issues related to venture capital, social networking and crowdsourcing in the U.S. One author states that choosing startups to invest is a hunt for people and technology. Another author notes that one must rethink how privacy is encoded to the systems as the social media mature. One author suggests that social software can help during and after a catastrophe.