ORCID Profile
0000-0003-3711-4338
Current Organisation
University of Oxford
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Publisher: Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Date: 04-07-2000
Abstract: We used s le sequencing, a technique which generates random genomic sequence from cosmid clones and compares them with sequences deposited in the GenBank databases, to identify new genes in the class I region of the human major histocompatibility region. We isolated and ordered cosmid clones from a flow-sorted chromosome (Chr) 6 cosmid library, generating cosmid contigs covering approximately one third of the HLA class I region. Fifteen of these cosmids were then s le sequenced. A total of 216,694 bp of genomic sequence was generated and compared with sequences deposited in GenBank databases. In addition to identifying established class I region genes, a number of potential new genes were identified, including several which were not included in the recent major histocompatibility complex (MHC) consensus sequence map. Of particular interest are several new transcripts in the psoriasis susceptibility region.
Publisher: eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd
Date: 09-11-2021
DOI: 10.7554/ELIFE.72185
Abstract: Any large dataset can be analyzed in a number of ways, and it is possible that the use of different analysis strategies will lead to different results and conclusions. One way to assess whether the results obtained depend on the analysis strategy chosen is to employ multiple analysts and leave each of them free to follow their own approach. Here, we present consensus-based guidance for conducting and reporting such multi-analyst studies, and we discuss how broader adoption of the multi-analyst approach has the potential to strengthen the robustness of results and conclusions obtained from analyses of datasets in basic and applied research.
Publisher: Society for Neuroscience
Date: 10-04-2018
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2747-17.2018
Abstract: Although the manipulation of load is popular in visual working memory research, many studies confound general attentional demands with context binding by drawing memoranda from the same stimulus category. In this fMRI study of human observers (both sexes), we created high- versus low-binding conditions, while holding load constant, by comparing trials requiring memory for the direction of motion of one random dot kinematogram (RDK 1M trials) versus for three RDKs (3M), or versus one RDK and two color patches (1M2C). Memory precision was highest for 1M trials and comparable for 3M and 1M2C trials. And although delay-period activity in occipital cortex did not differ between the three conditions, returning to baseline for all three, multivariate pattern analysis decoding of a remembered RDK from occipital cortex was also highest for 1M trials and comparable for 3M and 1M2C trials. Delay-period activity in intraparietal sulcus (IPS), although elevated for all three conditions, displayed more sensitivity to demands on context binding than to load per se. The 1M-to-3M increase in IPS signal predicted the 1M-to-3M declines in both behavioral and neural estimates of working memory precision. These effects strengthened along a caudal-to-rostral gradient, from IPS0 to IPS5. Context binding-independent load sensitivity was observed when analyses were lateralized and extended into PFC, with trend-level effects evident in left IPS and strong effects in left lateral PFC. These findings illustrate how visual working memory capacity limitations arise from multiple factors that each recruit dissociable brain systems. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Visual working memory capacity predicts performance on a wide array of cognitive and real-world outcomes. At least two theoretically distinct factors are proposed to influence visual working memory capacity limitations: an amodal attentional resource that must be shared across remembered items and the demands on context binding. We unconfounded these two factors by varying load with items drawn from the same stimulus category (“high demands on context binding”) versus items drawn from different stimulus categories (“low demands on context binding”). The results provide evidence for the dissociability, and the neural bases, of these two theorized factors, and they specify that the functions of intraparietal sulcus may relate more strongly to the control of representations than to the general allocation of attention.
Publisher: eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd
Date: 05-10-2021
Location: United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Location: United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Location: United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Location: United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Location: United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
No related grants have been discovered for Nelson Cowan.