1. The document discusses various biochemical topics including amino acids, sugars, lipids, proteins, and more. Key points include:
2. The most abundant amino acid in collagen is glycine. Chondroitin sulfate is built of alternating N-acetylgalactosamine and glucuronic acid units.
3. Unsaturated fatty acids help maintain the fluidity of cell membranes. Porins are transmembrane proteins that form channels for transport. Prostaglandins, leukotrienes, and thromboxanes are derived from arachidonic acid.
4. Questions cover additional topics like protein structure, enzyme activity, carbohydrate structure, and more.
Lipids have a hydrophobic nature due to hydrocarbon chains. They are insoluble in water but soluble in nonpolar solvents. Major lipids include fatty acids, triacylglycerols, phospholipids, cholesterol, and steroid hormones. Fatty acids are used for energy storage and membrane components. Triacylglycerols store fatty acids as an energy source. Phospholipids are major membrane components. Cholesterol is important for membrane structure and steroid hormone synthesis. Lipids are digested into fatty acids and monoacylglycerols then absorbed into intestinal cells to form chylomicrons which transport lipids through lymph and blood.
Polysaccharides - Biochemistry for Msc StudentsKEVENLIAM
This note is based on polysaccharides and glycoprotein which is useful for MSc zoology students. All the points including the structure is being added.
Carbohydrates are polyhydroxyalcohols that contain an aldehyde or ketone group. They include monosaccharides like glucose and fructose, disaccharides like sucrose, and polysaccharides like starch and cellulose. Monosaccharides are classified based on number of carbons and functional groups, and many contain asymmetric carbons leading to isomers. Glycosaminoglycans are heteropolysaccharides made of repeating disaccharide units that provide structure and hydration to tissues. Carbohydrates serve important roles as energy stores, structural components, and in processes like blood clotting.
This document discusses lipids, including their structure, classification, functions and metabolism. It begins by outlining the learning objectives which are to understand the structure and composition of lipids, the pathways of fatty acid oxidation and ketogenesis, and lipid synthesis, transport and metabolism. It then defines lipids and classifies them as simple (fats, waxes) or complex (phospholipids, glycolipids). Key aspects of fatty acid chemistry and essential fatty acids are explained. The roles of the major lipids like triacylglycerols and phospholipids are described. Finally, it outlines the digestion and absorption of lipids in the stomach, small intestine and role of enzymes.
Lipids are a heterogeneous group of compounds that are insoluble in water but soluble in organic solvents. They serve important structural and energy storage functions. Lipids include fats, oils, waxes, phospholipids, and sterols. They undergo digestion in the small intestine by pancreatic lipases into fatty acids and monoacylglycerols. Fatty acids are transported to tissues for energy production or storage. Triglycerides in adipose tissue undergo lipolysis to release fatty acids into the bloodstream. In mitochondria, fatty acids undergo beta-oxidation in repeated cycles to produce acetyl-CoA for the TCA cycle or ketone body production.
Lipids are hydrophobic molecules that include fatty acids, triglycerides, phospholipids, sphingolipids, and sterols. They serve important structural and metabolic roles in the body. Fatty acids are used for energy storage and signaling molecules. Triglycerides store fatty acids in adipose tissue. Phospholipids and sphingolipids are major components of cell membranes. Sterols like cholesterol are important membrane components and steroid hormones modulate physiological activity.
This document discusses lipid metabolism and fatty acid synthesis and oxidation. It begins by explaining that triacylglycerols (TGs), consisting of fatty acids esterified to glycerol, are the main form in which lipids are stored in the body as an energy reserve. The pathways of fatty acid synthesis and oxidation, which occur in the cytoplasm and mitochondria respectively, are then outlined. Key processes like elongation, desaturation, and the carnitine shuttle for transporting long-chain fatty acids into mitochondria are also summarized. Alternative pathways for unsaturated fatty acids and the production of ketone bodies during fasting are briefly mentioned.
Carbohydrates are the most abundant biomolecules on Earth. They are classified as monosaccharides, oligosaccharides, or polysaccharides depending on their complexity. Monosaccharides include simple sugars like glucose and fructose. Oligosaccharides contain 2-10 monosaccharide units and include disaccharides like sucrose, lactose, and maltose. Polysaccharides are long chains of monosaccharides and include starch, cellulose, and glycogen. Carbohydrates serve important functions like energy storage, structure, and participating in biological processes as components of other biomolecules.
Lipids have a hydrophobic nature due to hydrocarbon chains. They are insoluble in water but soluble in nonpolar solvents. Major lipids include fatty acids, triacylglycerols, phospholipids, cholesterol, and steroid hormones. Fatty acids are used for energy storage and membrane components. Triacylglycerols store fatty acids as an energy source. Phospholipids are major membrane components. Cholesterol is important for membrane structure and steroid hormone synthesis. Lipids are digested into fatty acids and monoacylglycerols then absorbed into intestinal cells to form chylomicrons which transport lipids through lymph and blood.
Polysaccharides - Biochemistry for Msc StudentsKEVENLIAM
This note is based on polysaccharides and glycoprotein which is useful for MSc zoology students. All the points including the structure is being added.
Carbohydrates are polyhydroxyalcohols that contain an aldehyde or ketone group. They include monosaccharides like glucose and fructose, disaccharides like sucrose, and polysaccharides like starch and cellulose. Monosaccharides are classified based on number of carbons and functional groups, and many contain asymmetric carbons leading to isomers. Glycosaminoglycans are heteropolysaccharides made of repeating disaccharide units that provide structure and hydration to tissues. Carbohydrates serve important roles as energy stores, structural components, and in processes like blood clotting.
This document discusses lipids, including their structure, classification, functions and metabolism. It begins by outlining the learning objectives which are to understand the structure and composition of lipids, the pathways of fatty acid oxidation and ketogenesis, and lipid synthesis, transport and metabolism. It then defines lipids and classifies them as simple (fats, waxes) or complex (phospholipids, glycolipids). Key aspects of fatty acid chemistry and essential fatty acids are explained. The roles of the major lipids like triacylglycerols and phospholipids are described. Finally, it outlines the digestion and absorption of lipids in the stomach, small intestine and role of enzymes.
Lipids are a heterogeneous group of compounds that are insoluble in water but soluble in organic solvents. They serve important structural and energy storage functions. Lipids include fats, oils, waxes, phospholipids, and sterols. They undergo digestion in the small intestine by pancreatic lipases into fatty acids and monoacylglycerols. Fatty acids are transported to tissues for energy production or storage. Triglycerides in adipose tissue undergo lipolysis to release fatty acids into the bloodstream. In mitochondria, fatty acids undergo beta-oxidation in repeated cycles to produce acetyl-CoA for the TCA cycle or ketone body production.
Lipids are hydrophobic molecules that include fatty acids, triglycerides, phospholipids, sphingolipids, and sterols. They serve important structural and metabolic roles in the body. Fatty acids are used for energy storage and signaling molecules. Triglycerides store fatty acids in adipose tissue. Phospholipids and sphingolipids are major components of cell membranes. Sterols like cholesterol are important membrane components and steroid hormones modulate physiological activity.
This document discusses lipid metabolism and fatty acid synthesis and oxidation. It begins by explaining that triacylglycerols (TGs), consisting of fatty acids esterified to glycerol, are the main form in which lipids are stored in the body as an energy reserve. The pathways of fatty acid synthesis and oxidation, which occur in the cytoplasm and mitochondria respectively, are then outlined. Key processes like elongation, desaturation, and the carnitine shuttle for transporting long-chain fatty acids into mitochondria are also summarized. Alternative pathways for unsaturated fatty acids and the production of ketone bodies during fasting are briefly mentioned.
Carbohydrates are the most abundant biomolecules on Earth. They are classified as monosaccharides, oligosaccharides, or polysaccharides depending on their complexity. Monosaccharides include simple sugars like glucose and fructose. Oligosaccharides contain 2-10 monosaccharide units and include disaccharides like sucrose, lactose, and maltose. Polysaccharides are long chains of monosaccharides and include starch, cellulose, and glycogen. Carbohydrates serve important functions like energy storage, structure, and participating in biological processes as components of other biomolecules.
Biomolecules include carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, nucleic acids, and vitamins. Carbohydrates can be monosaccharides (such as glucose), oligosaccharides, or polysaccharides (such as starch and cellulose). Proteins are made of amino acids linked through peptide bonds. Important proteins include enzymes, antibodies, and hemoglobin. Nucleic acids such as DNA and RNA contain nucleotides and carry genetic information. Vitamins are organic compounds essential in small amounts for normal growth and activity.
This document discusses various types of polysaccharides. It begins by defining polysaccharides as complex carbohydrates made of monosaccharide chains linked by glycosidic bonds. Polysaccharides are then classified into homopolysaccharides and heteropolysaccharides. Homopolysaccharides like starch, glycogen, cellulose, and chitin are made of single monosaccharide units, while heteropolysaccharides like hyaluronic acid and heparin contain different sugar derivatives. The document provides examples of important polysaccharides and their structures and sources.
The document discusses several key topics regarding proteins and biochemistry:
1) The major objectives of biochemistry are to understand all chemical processes in living cells at the molecular level, and how this knowledge is essential for medicine to understand health, disease, and effective treatments.
2) Diseases can be caused by various physical, chemical, biological, genetic, immunological, nutritional, and endocrine factors that all influence cellular biochemical mechanisms.
3) Proteins are the most abundant and versatile biomolecules, built from 20 standard amino acids, and serve important structural, regulatory, transport, and other roles essential for life.
This document discusses lipid synthesis. It begins by introducing lipids and their functions. It then describes the different types of lipids and the synthesis of specific lipids like fatty acids, triglycerides, and cholesterol. Fatty acids are synthesized from acetyl-CoA and malonyl-CoA. Triglycerides are formed by attaching fatty acids to glycerol. Cholesterol is synthesized from acetyl-CoA via the mevalonate pathway. Lipids are stored mainly as triglycerides in adipose tissue. Abnormal lipid metabolism can lead to conditions like obesity, atherosclerosis, and diabetes.
This document provides information about polysaccharides. It defines polysaccharides as natural condensation polymers composed of long chains of monosaccharides. Polysaccharides are classified as homopolysaccharides or heteropolysaccharides depending on whether they are composed of one type of monosaccharide or multiple types. Examples of important polysaccharides are discussed, including starch, glycogen, cellulose, chitin, pectin, and hyaluronic acid. Their structures and functions in storage, structure, and as acidic polymers are described in 1-3 sentences for each.
Lipids are a structurally diverse group of hydrophobic molecules that are preferentially soluble in non-aqueous solvents. They serve major roles in plant membranes, energy storage, protection, and signaling. Fatty acids are synthesized in plastids through a multi-step process involving acetyl-CoA carboxylation, condensation, and reduction. Saturated and unsaturated fatty acids can be exported from plastids or used to synthesize storage lipids like triacylglycerols. Storage lipids accumulate in oil bodies within the endoplasmic reticulum and are regulated by transcription factors like WRI1.
is provided by esterification of glycerol 3-phosphate (or dihydroxyacetonephosphate) by activated fatty acids - acylcoenzymes A.
There are two possible sources of glycerol phosphate:
In liver and small intestine (but not in adipose tissue) is glycerol phosphorylated by glycerol kinase.
In most other tissues glycerol phosphate originates by reduction of dihydroxyacetone phosphate, an intermediate of glycolysis, by the action of glycerol phosphate dehydrogenase
Organisms require nutrients from food for energy, growth, repair, and health. There are six main types of nutrients: carbohydrates, proteins, lipids, vitamins, minerals, and water. Carbohydrates, proteins, and lipids provide energy and are made up of smaller units called monosaccharides, amino acids, and fatty acids, respectively. These macronutrients are broken down into their smaller subunits before the body can use them. In contrast, water and minerals can be absorbed directly.
The document discusses macromolecules, specifically carbohydrates. It provides details on the four main types of carbohydrates: monosaccharides, disaccharides, oligosaccharides, and polysaccharides. Monosaccharides are the simplest form of carbohydrate and include glucose, fructose, and galactose. Disaccharides are formed from two monosaccharide units joined by glycosidic bonds, such as sucrose and lactose. Carbohydrates serve important functions like energy storage and providing structural components in cells.
This tackles the topic on Lipids, generally. This include its uses, structures, metabolism and Chemical reactions involved with it.
This is a great help for learners in Junior High School, senior high school and those who are majoring in Science.
This document discusses carbohydrate chemistry and digestion. It defines carbohydrates and describes their functions in the body. It outlines the nomenclature of monosaccharides, disaccharides, oligosaccharides, and polysaccharides. Key monosaccharides like glucose, fructose and galactose are explained. Important disaccharides like sucrose, lactose and maltose are defined. Polysaccharides discussed include starch, glycogen, cellulose, and heteroglycans. The process of carbohydrate digestion by salivary and pancreatic amylases and intestinal disaccharide-hydrolyzing enzymes is summarized. Lactose intolerance is also briefly explained, along with monosaccharide absorption mechanisms.
Glycoprotein, lipoprotein, structure and functionKAUSHAL SAHU
INTRODUCTION
DEFINITION
STRUCTURE
TYPES OF BONDS
N-LINKED GLYCOSYLATION
O-LINKED GLYCOSYLATION
AMOUNT OF CARBOHYDRATES PRESENT IN GLYCOPROTEIN
BIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE AND
FUNCTION
BIOLOGICAL ADVANTAGE OF ADDING OLIGOSACCHARIDES TO PROTEIN
Lipids are fatty acids and their derivatives that play important structural and storage roles in plants. There are three main types of lipids - glycerolipids, sphingolipids, and steroids. Glycerolipids like mono-, di-, and triacylglycerols are the main constituents of plant membranes and storage lipids. Fatty acids are synthesized in plastids from acetyl-CoA and undergo elongation and desaturation. Glycerolipids are then synthesized in plastids or the endoplasmic reticulum. Triacylglycerols provide carbon and energy storage in seeds and are broken down by lipases during germination.
The lipids are a heterogeneous group of compounds that include fats, oils, steroids, waxes, and related compounds. They share the properties of being relatively insoluble in water but soluble in nonpolar solvents. Lipids serve important functions such as energy storage, structural components of cell membranes, and insulation. They can also be classified based on their structure into simple lipids like triglycerides and complex lipids like phospholipids and glycolipids. Phospholipids and glycolipids are amphipathic molecules that form lipid bilayers, which are the basic structure of biological membranes.
Lec 5 level 3-de(chemistry of carbohydrates)dream10f
This document discusses carbohydrates, including their definition, functions, nomenclature, classification, and digestion. Key points include:
- Carbohydrates are composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen and serve as the main energy source. They include monosaccharides, disaccharides, and polysaccharides.
- Monosaccharides include glucose, fructose, and galactose. Disaccharides are two monosaccharides bonded together, such as sucrose, lactose, and maltose. Polysaccharides are long chains of monosaccharides like starch, glycogen, and cellulose.
- Carbohydrates are digested into monosaccharides in the mouth, stomach and small intestine by
Polysaccharides are polymers of monosaccharides or their derivatives joined by glycosidic bonds. They are classified as homopolymers or heteropolymers. Starch is a major homopolysaccharide composed of amylose and amylopectin, while glycogen is the animal equivalent found mainly in liver and muscle. Cellulose is an insoluble polymer of glucose that provides structure to plant cell walls. Mucopolysaccharides are heteropolymers containing amino sugars and acidic sugars. Common types include hyaluronic acid, chondroitin sulfate, keratin sulfate, heparin, and heparan sulfate. Mucopolysaccharidoses are a group of genetic disorders caused by
Solubility
Source
Classification
Important polysaccharide
Starch
Glycogen
Cellulose
Xantham
Pectin
Agar
Inulin
Chitin
Function of polysaccharide
Conclusion
Please readRobert Geraci, Russia Minorities and Empire,” in .docxTatianaMajor22
Please read:
Robert Geraci, “Russia: Minorities and Empire,” in Abbott Gleason, ed., A Companion to Russian History (Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, 2009), 243-260.
And discuss:
How does Geraci portray the legacy of the early Russian history for the make-up of 18-19th century Russia?
Please read: Leonard Victor Rutgers, “Roman Policy Towards the Jews: Expulsions from the City of Rome during the First Century C.E.,” in Classical Antiquity, Vol. 13, No. 1 (Apr., 1994), pp. 56-74.
And discuss: Rutgers surveys the different reasons historians have given for the expulsion of the Jews from Rome in the first century C.E. Who place did Jews have in Roman society at this time? Were they expelled because of their religious practices, or because they were ‘unruly’ as Rutgers argues? If so, what caused them to act in this way? What kind of historical evidence does the author use?
There are 2 essay, each one should write at least 300-350 words and plus one reference page.
MLA format. Must use quote( “ ”) for every source you use from website. And put (author, page number) behind quote.
Roman Policy towards the Jews: Expulsions from the City of Rome during the First Century
C.E.
Author(s): Leonard Victor Rutgers
Source: Classical Antiquity, Vol. 13, No. 1 (Apr., 1994), pp. 56-74
Published by: University of California Press
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/25011005 .
Accessed: 26/08/2011 13:35
Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of
content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms
of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]
University of California Press is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Classical
Antiquity.
http://www.jstor.org
http://www.jstor.org/action/showPublisher?publisherCode=ucal
http://www.jstor.org/stable/25011005?origin=JSTOR-pdf
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
LEONARD VICTOR RUTGERS
Roman Policy towards the Jews:
Expulsions from the City of Rome
during the First Century c. E.
Tant de causes secretes se melent souvent a la cause apparente, tant de ressorts
inconnus servent a persecuter un homme, qu'il est impossible de demeler dans les
siecles posterieures la source cachee des malheurs des hommes les plus consider
ables, a plus forte raison celle du supplice d'un particulier qui ne pouvait etre
connu que par ceux de son parti.
-Voltaire, Traite sur la tolerance (1763)
IN THIS ARTICLE I want to discuss the evidence for expulsions of Jews from
the city of Rome in the first century C.E. Scholars have long been interested in the
reasons underlying these expulsions. Because the anci.
Ford VS ChevroletThere are many reasons that make the Chevy.docxTatianaMajor22
Ford VS Chevrolet
There are many reasons that make the Chevy’s and Ford’s motors two most common trucks. Studies reveal that that they are the most popular vehicles on sales today. It is because they are powerful, versatile and reasonably priced. They also come in a wide variety of configurations and styles. However, many buyers and sellers have questioned themselves on the better vehicle compared to the other in terms of quality, Wi-Fi, price ranges, value, and costs. To compare and contrast on this subject, let us take an example of two vehicles each from each company to facilitate comparison.
Ford offers the full-size track with automatic high-beam control, automatic parallel parking and power-retractable running boards. Fords are elegant, and they are mostly aluminum making them save weight and bolster gas mileage. None of these features are offered Chevy’s. Chevrolets have outstanding quality. They are mostly comprised of steel, for instance, the Chevrolet Silverado. This makes them good for rough roads and difficult terrains.
Fords have employed the use of up to date Wi-Fi technology. Ford intends to provide the Ford Sync, which will provide robust connections for occupants. Latest Chevrolet brands Malibu utilize the 4G LTE Wi-Fi Technology that provides rich in-vehicle experiences. This technology is powerful compared to Ford Sync, and is used for connecting devices and executing few remote operations within the car.
From the value and cost standpoint, Ford can consume a little more, and its payload capacity is a little higher. Additionally, its mileage is too better. The prices vary from nation to nation. Chevrolet seems to be a little cheaper, and reasonably priced going for $33,044, which is slightly less than Ford, but the differences are not serious to propel buyers towards one truck leaving the other
Technophiles are likely to put their preferences on Ford to Chevrolet. On overall, Fords have many features as compared Chevy’s. However, they may be hard to maintain. Compared to Fords, Chevrolets are reliable and cheaper. However, the two brands are equally good performers. It is, therefore, prudent to pick what one thinks would fit his or her usage and preference and personal style
Ethical Systems, Research Paper, Spring 2015, Douglas Green, Page 1 of 1
Ethical
Systems/Final
Research
Paper
2,000
words
minimum,
double-‐spaced
Final
Draft
Due:
Tuesday,
April
28,
12:00
pm
(afternoon)
Please
email
your
final
research
paper
to
me
via
MS
Word
attachment
AND
by
cutting/pasting
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into
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of
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email.
IF
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DO
NOT
RECEIVE
A
CONFIRMATION
EMAIL
BACK,
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DID
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AND
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WILL
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NO
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WORK
WILL
BE
ACCEPTED…
PERIOD!
.
More Related Content
Similar to 1. The most abundant amino acid in collagen is● glycine●
Biomolecules include carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, nucleic acids, and vitamins. Carbohydrates can be monosaccharides (such as glucose), oligosaccharides, or polysaccharides (such as starch and cellulose). Proteins are made of amino acids linked through peptide bonds. Important proteins include enzymes, antibodies, and hemoglobin. Nucleic acids such as DNA and RNA contain nucleotides and carry genetic information. Vitamins are organic compounds essential in small amounts for normal growth and activity.
This document discusses various types of polysaccharides. It begins by defining polysaccharides as complex carbohydrates made of monosaccharide chains linked by glycosidic bonds. Polysaccharides are then classified into homopolysaccharides and heteropolysaccharides. Homopolysaccharides like starch, glycogen, cellulose, and chitin are made of single monosaccharide units, while heteropolysaccharides like hyaluronic acid and heparin contain different sugar derivatives. The document provides examples of important polysaccharides and their structures and sources.
The document discusses several key topics regarding proteins and biochemistry:
1) The major objectives of biochemistry are to understand all chemical processes in living cells at the molecular level, and how this knowledge is essential for medicine to understand health, disease, and effective treatments.
2) Diseases can be caused by various physical, chemical, biological, genetic, immunological, nutritional, and endocrine factors that all influence cellular biochemical mechanisms.
3) Proteins are the most abundant and versatile biomolecules, built from 20 standard amino acids, and serve important structural, regulatory, transport, and other roles essential for life.
This document discusses lipid synthesis. It begins by introducing lipids and their functions. It then describes the different types of lipids and the synthesis of specific lipids like fatty acids, triglycerides, and cholesterol. Fatty acids are synthesized from acetyl-CoA and malonyl-CoA. Triglycerides are formed by attaching fatty acids to glycerol. Cholesterol is synthesized from acetyl-CoA via the mevalonate pathway. Lipids are stored mainly as triglycerides in adipose tissue. Abnormal lipid metabolism can lead to conditions like obesity, atherosclerosis, and diabetes.
This document provides information about polysaccharides. It defines polysaccharides as natural condensation polymers composed of long chains of monosaccharides. Polysaccharides are classified as homopolysaccharides or heteropolysaccharides depending on whether they are composed of one type of monosaccharide or multiple types. Examples of important polysaccharides are discussed, including starch, glycogen, cellulose, chitin, pectin, and hyaluronic acid. Their structures and functions in storage, structure, and as acidic polymers are described in 1-3 sentences for each.
Lipids are a structurally diverse group of hydrophobic molecules that are preferentially soluble in non-aqueous solvents. They serve major roles in plant membranes, energy storage, protection, and signaling. Fatty acids are synthesized in plastids through a multi-step process involving acetyl-CoA carboxylation, condensation, and reduction. Saturated and unsaturated fatty acids can be exported from plastids or used to synthesize storage lipids like triacylglycerols. Storage lipids accumulate in oil bodies within the endoplasmic reticulum and are regulated by transcription factors like WRI1.
is provided by esterification of glycerol 3-phosphate (or dihydroxyacetonephosphate) by activated fatty acids - acylcoenzymes A.
There are two possible sources of glycerol phosphate:
In liver and small intestine (but not in adipose tissue) is glycerol phosphorylated by glycerol kinase.
In most other tissues glycerol phosphate originates by reduction of dihydroxyacetone phosphate, an intermediate of glycolysis, by the action of glycerol phosphate dehydrogenase
Organisms require nutrients from food for energy, growth, repair, and health. There are six main types of nutrients: carbohydrates, proteins, lipids, vitamins, minerals, and water. Carbohydrates, proteins, and lipids provide energy and are made up of smaller units called monosaccharides, amino acids, and fatty acids, respectively. These macronutrients are broken down into their smaller subunits before the body can use them. In contrast, water and minerals can be absorbed directly.
The document discusses macromolecules, specifically carbohydrates. It provides details on the four main types of carbohydrates: monosaccharides, disaccharides, oligosaccharides, and polysaccharides. Monosaccharides are the simplest form of carbohydrate and include glucose, fructose, and galactose. Disaccharides are formed from two monosaccharide units joined by glycosidic bonds, such as sucrose and lactose. Carbohydrates serve important functions like energy storage and providing structural components in cells.
This tackles the topic on Lipids, generally. This include its uses, structures, metabolism and Chemical reactions involved with it.
This is a great help for learners in Junior High School, senior high school and those who are majoring in Science.
This document discusses carbohydrate chemistry and digestion. It defines carbohydrates and describes their functions in the body. It outlines the nomenclature of monosaccharides, disaccharides, oligosaccharides, and polysaccharides. Key monosaccharides like glucose, fructose and galactose are explained. Important disaccharides like sucrose, lactose and maltose are defined. Polysaccharides discussed include starch, glycogen, cellulose, and heteroglycans. The process of carbohydrate digestion by salivary and pancreatic amylases and intestinal disaccharide-hydrolyzing enzymes is summarized. Lactose intolerance is also briefly explained, along with monosaccharide absorption mechanisms.
Glycoprotein, lipoprotein, structure and functionKAUSHAL SAHU
INTRODUCTION
DEFINITION
STRUCTURE
TYPES OF BONDS
N-LINKED GLYCOSYLATION
O-LINKED GLYCOSYLATION
AMOUNT OF CARBOHYDRATES PRESENT IN GLYCOPROTEIN
BIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE AND
FUNCTION
BIOLOGICAL ADVANTAGE OF ADDING OLIGOSACCHARIDES TO PROTEIN
Lipids are fatty acids and their derivatives that play important structural and storage roles in plants. There are three main types of lipids - glycerolipids, sphingolipids, and steroids. Glycerolipids like mono-, di-, and triacylglycerols are the main constituents of plant membranes and storage lipids. Fatty acids are synthesized in plastids from acetyl-CoA and undergo elongation and desaturation. Glycerolipids are then synthesized in plastids or the endoplasmic reticulum. Triacylglycerols provide carbon and energy storage in seeds and are broken down by lipases during germination.
The lipids are a heterogeneous group of compounds that include fats, oils, steroids, waxes, and related compounds. They share the properties of being relatively insoluble in water but soluble in nonpolar solvents. Lipids serve important functions such as energy storage, structural components of cell membranes, and insulation. They can also be classified based on their structure into simple lipids like triglycerides and complex lipids like phospholipids and glycolipids. Phospholipids and glycolipids are amphipathic molecules that form lipid bilayers, which are the basic structure of biological membranes.
Lec 5 level 3-de(chemistry of carbohydrates)dream10f
This document discusses carbohydrates, including their definition, functions, nomenclature, classification, and digestion. Key points include:
- Carbohydrates are composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen and serve as the main energy source. They include monosaccharides, disaccharides, and polysaccharides.
- Monosaccharides include glucose, fructose, and galactose. Disaccharides are two monosaccharides bonded together, such as sucrose, lactose, and maltose. Polysaccharides are long chains of monosaccharides like starch, glycogen, and cellulose.
- Carbohydrates are digested into monosaccharides in the mouth, stomach and small intestine by
Polysaccharides are polymers of monosaccharides or their derivatives joined by glycosidic bonds. They are classified as homopolymers or heteropolymers. Starch is a major homopolysaccharide composed of amylose and amylopectin, while glycogen is the animal equivalent found mainly in liver and muscle. Cellulose is an insoluble polymer of glucose that provides structure to plant cell walls. Mucopolysaccharides are heteropolymers containing amino sugars and acidic sugars. Common types include hyaluronic acid, chondroitin sulfate, keratin sulfate, heparin, and heparan sulfate. Mucopolysaccharidoses are a group of genetic disorders caused by
Solubility
Source
Classification
Important polysaccharide
Starch
Glycogen
Cellulose
Xantham
Pectin
Agar
Inulin
Chitin
Function of polysaccharide
Conclusion
Similar to 1. The most abundant amino acid in collagen is● glycine● (20)
Please readRobert Geraci, Russia Minorities and Empire,” in .docxTatianaMajor22
Please read:
Robert Geraci, “Russia: Minorities and Empire,” in Abbott Gleason, ed., A Companion to Russian History (Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, 2009), 243-260.
And discuss:
How does Geraci portray the legacy of the early Russian history for the make-up of 18-19th century Russia?
Please read: Leonard Victor Rutgers, “Roman Policy Towards the Jews: Expulsions from the City of Rome during the First Century C.E.,” in Classical Antiquity, Vol. 13, No. 1 (Apr., 1994), pp. 56-74.
And discuss: Rutgers surveys the different reasons historians have given for the expulsion of the Jews from Rome in the first century C.E. Who place did Jews have in Roman society at this time? Were they expelled because of their religious practices, or because they were ‘unruly’ as Rutgers argues? If so, what caused them to act in this way? What kind of historical evidence does the author use?
There are 2 essay, each one should write at least 300-350 words and plus one reference page.
MLA format. Must use quote( “ ”) for every source you use from website. And put (author, page number) behind quote.
Roman Policy towards the Jews: Expulsions from the City of Rome during the First Century
C.E.
Author(s): Leonard Victor Rutgers
Source: Classical Antiquity, Vol. 13, No. 1 (Apr., 1994), pp. 56-74
Published by: University of California Press
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/25011005 .
Accessed: 26/08/2011 13:35
Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of
content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms
of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]
University of California Press is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Classical
Antiquity.
http://www.jstor.org
http://www.jstor.org/action/showPublisher?publisherCode=ucal
http://www.jstor.org/stable/25011005?origin=JSTOR-pdf
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
LEONARD VICTOR RUTGERS
Roman Policy towards the Jews:
Expulsions from the City of Rome
during the First Century c. E.
Tant de causes secretes se melent souvent a la cause apparente, tant de ressorts
inconnus servent a persecuter un homme, qu'il est impossible de demeler dans les
siecles posterieures la source cachee des malheurs des hommes les plus consider
ables, a plus forte raison celle du supplice d'un particulier qui ne pouvait etre
connu que par ceux de son parti.
-Voltaire, Traite sur la tolerance (1763)
IN THIS ARTICLE I want to discuss the evidence for expulsions of Jews from
the city of Rome in the first century C.E. Scholars have long been interested in the
reasons underlying these expulsions. Because the anci.
Ford VS ChevroletThere are many reasons that make the Chevy.docxTatianaMajor22
Ford VS Chevrolet
There are many reasons that make the Chevy’s and Ford’s motors two most common trucks. Studies reveal that that they are the most popular vehicles on sales today. It is because they are powerful, versatile and reasonably priced. They also come in a wide variety of configurations and styles. However, many buyers and sellers have questioned themselves on the better vehicle compared to the other in terms of quality, Wi-Fi, price ranges, value, and costs. To compare and contrast on this subject, let us take an example of two vehicles each from each company to facilitate comparison.
Ford offers the full-size track with automatic high-beam control, automatic parallel parking and power-retractable running boards. Fords are elegant, and they are mostly aluminum making them save weight and bolster gas mileage. None of these features are offered Chevy’s. Chevrolets have outstanding quality. They are mostly comprised of steel, for instance, the Chevrolet Silverado. This makes them good for rough roads and difficult terrains.
Fords have employed the use of up to date Wi-Fi technology. Ford intends to provide the Ford Sync, which will provide robust connections for occupants. Latest Chevrolet brands Malibu utilize the 4G LTE Wi-Fi Technology that provides rich in-vehicle experiences. This technology is powerful compared to Ford Sync, and is used for connecting devices and executing few remote operations within the car.
From the value and cost standpoint, Ford can consume a little more, and its payload capacity is a little higher. Additionally, its mileage is too better. The prices vary from nation to nation. Chevrolet seems to be a little cheaper, and reasonably priced going for $33,044, which is slightly less than Ford, but the differences are not serious to propel buyers towards one truck leaving the other
Technophiles are likely to put their preferences on Ford to Chevrolet. On overall, Fords have many features as compared Chevy’s. However, they may be hard to maintain. Compared to Fords, Chevrolets are reliable and cheaper. However, the two brands are equally good performers. It is, therefore, prudent to pick what one thinks would fit his or her usage and preference and personal style
Ethical Systems, Research Paper, Spring 2015, Douglas Green, Page 1 of 1
Ethical
Systems/Final
Research
Paper
2,000
words
minimum,
double-‐spaced
Final
Draft
Due:
Tuesday,
April
28,
12:00
pm
(afternoon)
Please
email
your
final
research
paper
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MS
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attachment
AND
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IF
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Fairness and Discipline Weve all been disciplined at one.docxTatianaMajor22
Fairness and Discipline
We've all been disciplined at one time or another by a parent or a teacher. What disciplinary experiences have you had as a child that took a non-punitive approach?
I need paragraph or half page with reference
.
Appendix 12A Statement of Cash Flows—Direct MethodLEARNING .docxTatianaMajor22
Appendix 12A
Statement of Cash Flows—Direct Method
LEARNING OBJECTIVE
6
Prepare a statement of cash flows using the direct method.
To explain and illustrate the direct method, we will use the transactions of Computer Services Company for 2014, to prepare a statement of cash flows. Illustration 12A-1 presents information related to 2014 for Computer Services Company.
To prepare a statement of cash flows under the direct approach, we will apply the three steps outlined in Illustration 12-4.
Illustration 12A-1
Comparative balance sheets, income statement, and additional information for Computer Services Company
STEP 1: OPERATING ACTIVITIES
DETERMINE NET CASH PROVIDED/USED BY OPERATING ACTIVITIES BY CONVERTING NET INCOME FROM AN ACCRUAL BASIS TO A CASH BASIS
Under the direct method, companies compute net cash provided by operating activities by adjusting each item in the income statement from the accrual basis to the cash basis. To simplify and condense the operating activities section, companies report only major classes of operating cash receipts and cash payments. For these major classes, the difference between cash receipts and cash payments is the net cash provided by operating activities. These relationships are as shown in Illustration 12A-2.
Illustration 12A-2
Major classes of cash receipts and payments
An efficient way to apply the direct method is to analyze the items reported in the income statement in the order in which they are listed. We then determine cash receipts and cash payments related to these revenues and expenses. The following pages present the adjustments required to prepare a statement of cash flows for Computer Services Company using the direct approach.
CASH RECEIPTS FROM CUSTOMERS.
The income statement for Computer Services Company reported sales revenue from customers of $507,000. How much of that was cash receipts? To answer that, companies need to consider the change in accounts receivable during the year. When accounts receivable increase during the year, revenues on an accrual basis are higher than cash receipts from customers. Operations led to revenues, but not all of these revenues resulted in cash receipts.
To determine the amount of cash receipts, the company deducts from sales revenue the increase in accounts receivable. On the other hand, there may be a decrease in accounts receivable. That would occur if cash receipts from customers exceeded sales revenue. In that case, the company adds to sales revenue the decrease in accounts receivable. For Computer Services Company, accounts receivable decreased $10,000. Thus, cash receipts from customers were $517,000, computed as shown in Illustration 12A-3.
Illustration 12A-3
Computation of cash receipts from customers
Computer Services can also determine cash receipts from customers from an analysis of the Accounts Receivable account, as shown in Illustration 12A-4.
Illustration 12A-4
Analysis of Accounts Receivable
Illustration.
Effects of StressProvide a 1-page description of a stressful .docxTatianaMajor22
Effects of Stress
Provide a 1-page description of a stressful event currently occurring in your life.
Discuss I am married work a full time job as an occupational therapy assistant am taking two courses
Have to take care of a home feed the animals attend to laundry
Think of my pateitns worry about their well being and what I can do for them ( I bring home my patients issues)
Constantly doing paper work for work such as documentation for billing
I feel like I have no free time for me some days I don’t even eat dinner or lunch because I don’t have time to make anything or am just too tired to cook
On top of this I am married and married ppl do argue and my husband am I have been bunting heads on finances.
Then, referring to information you learned throughout this course, address the following:
· What physiological changes occur in the brain due to the stress response?
· What emotional and cognitive effects might occur due to this stressful situation?
· Would the above changes (physiological, cognitive, or emotional) be any different if the same stress were being experienced by a person of the opposite sex or someone much older or younger than you?
· If the situation continues, how might your physical health be affected?
· What three behavioral strategies would you implement to reduce the effects of this stressor? Describe each strategy. Explain how each behavior could cause changes in brain physiology (e.g., exercise can raise serotonin levels).
· If you were encouraging an adult client to make the above changes, what ethical considerations would you have to keep in mind? How would you address those ethical considerations?
In addition to citing the online course and the text, you are also required to cite a minimum of four scholarly sources. For reputable web sources, look for .gov or .edu sites as opposed to .com sites. Please do not use Wikipedia.
Your paper should be double-spaced, in 12-point Times New Roman font, and with normal 1-inch margins; written in APA style; and free of typographical and grammatical errors. It should include a title page with a running head, an abstract, and a reference page.
The body of the paper should be at least 6 pages in length total
not including the reference or title page
Assignment 1 Grading Criteria
Maximum Points
Described a stressful event.
20
Explained the physiological changes that occur in the brain due to the stress response.
36
Explained the emotional and cognitive effects that may occur due to this stressful situation.
32
Analyzed potential differences in physiological, cognitive, and emotional responses in someone of a different age or sex.
32
Discussed the physical health risks.
28
Provided three behavioral strategies to reduce the effects of the stressor and explained how each could cause changes in brain physiology.
40
Analyzed ethical considerations in implementing behavioral strategies and offered suggestions for addressing these.
40
Integrated at least two scholarly references .
Design Factors NotesCIO’s Office 5 People IT Chief’s Offi.docxTatianaMajor22
Design Factors
Notes
CIO’s Office
5 People
IT Chief’s Office
5 People
LAN/WAN Maint.
20 People
Reception
4 People
Telecommunications
20 People
LAN Management
50 People
Server Room A
2 Person
Server Room B
4 Person
Equipment:
Patch Cable
Computer to Wall
Patch Cable
LAN Room
Cable Trays/Runs
Horizontal Runs
Cisco Border Router
Research: Attached to 5 Floor Switches
Server Room A
10 Servers
Server Room B
10 Servers
Computers
One Per Person
Standard floor (first floor) Lesson 2 Project Plan info
Design Factors
Notes
CIO’s Office
5 People
IT Chief’s Office
5 People
LAN/WAN Maint.
20 People
Reception
4 People
Telecommunications
20 People
LAN Management
50 People
Server Room A
2 Person
Server Room B
4 Person
Equipment:
Patch Cable
Computer to Wall
Patch Cable
LAN Room
Cable Trays/Runs
Horizontal Runs
Cisco Border Router
Research: Attached to 5 Floor Switches
Server Room A
10 Servers
Server Room B
10 Servers
Computers
One Per Person
Basement floor
Design Factors
Notes
Vertical Riser Run
On Outside Wall of LAN Room on Each Floor.
Fiber-Optic Multimode
Riser Runs: Backbone
SC Connectors
Fiber-Optic Cable
Cisco Catalyst: Switch: WS-C3750G-24PS-S: 24 Ports
Leave a Minimum of four ports free on each switch
Color Laser Printer
Minimum of One per Room or One per 20 people
Vertical Riser Run
On Outside Wall of LAN Room on Each Floor and Server RM B on this floor.
Fiber-Optic Multimode
Riser Runs: Backbone
SC Connectors
Fiber-Optic Cable
Cable Trays/Runs
Horizontal Runs
Horizontal Runs
Leave a Minimum of four ports free on each switch
Applicataion
U.S. Minimum Requirement Ranges
Space per Employee - 1997
Two people, such as a supervisor and an employee, can meet in an office with a table or desk between them
60" to 72" x 90" to 126:/5.78m2 to 11.7m2
280Sq. Ft./26.0m2
Worker has a primary desk plus a return
60" to 72"x60"to 84"/5.78 to 7.8m2
193Sq. Ft./17.9m2
Executive office - three to four people can meet around a desk
105 to 130"x96 to 123"/9.75 to 11.4 m2
142Sq. Ft./13.2m2
Basic workstation such as a call center
42" to 52" x 60" to 72"/3.9 to 6.7 m2
114Sq. Ft./10.6 m2
NT1310: Project
Page 1
PRO JECT D ESC RIPT ION
As the project manager for the Cable Planning team, you will manage the creation of the cable plan for
the new building that will be built, with construction set to begin in six weeks.
The deliverables for the entire Cable Plan will consist of an Executive Summary, a PowerPoint
Presentation and an Excel Spreadsheet. You will develop different parts of each of these in three parts.
The final organization should contain these elements:
The Executive Summary:
o Project Introduction
o Standards and Codes
Cable Standards and Codes
Building Standards and Codes
o Project Materials
o Copper Cable, Tools, and Test Equipment
o Fiber-Optic Cable, Tools, and Test Equipment
o Fiber-Optic Design Considerations
o Basement Server Comp.
Question 12.5 pointsSaveThe OSU studies concluded that le.docxTatianaMajor22
The document contains questions about leadership, motivation, communication, groups/teams, and decision making. The questions assess knowledge of topics like situational leadership theory, Maslow's hierarchy of needs, organizational communication barriers, stages of team development, and group decision making techniques like brainstorming.
Case Study 1 Questions1. What is the allocated budget .docxTatianaMajor22
Case Study 1 Questions:
1. What is the allocated budget ? $250,000
2. Where does the server room located? Currently, there is no server room
3. What is the number of users with PCs inside each existing site?
Currently there are
4. What is the current cabling used in each location? (cat5e or cat6) Current cabling does not meet the company’s current and future needs
5. Do want us to upgrade token Ring or use a completely new Ethernet network What is your recommendation and why?
6. regarding the ordering system , it is not clear what the we should do , do you want to talk about how to connect the system to the network or how to built the ordering online system because it is more software engineering than networking . Talk about the kind of network (hardware) you recommend based on the business requirements
7. all the sites should have access to our servers in the main branch? yes
8. Regarding the order software, do you need more details about the way it works or just about its connection with the network? Your solution should be from a network point of view
9. Distances are given in Meters or feet? feet
10. Shipment is done by truck, or ships? Currently, only trucking
11. In Dimebox branch, where are administration offices located? See Business goals # 4
12. What is the current network connectivity status? How many devices are currently on the network? How they are physically laid out? Is cabling running all over the floor, hidden in walls or threaded through the ceiling? What are the switches used and its speed? Currently, only the office is networked (token ring) NOVELL
13. What is the minimum Internet speed wanted? See Business Goals on page 2 – I only can tell you what we need the network for, you must tell me what we need to meet the business needs
14. Will the corporation provide wireless access? If yes will it be in all department and buildings? Wireless access would be helpful if we can justify the cost
15. Are there phones in offices? yes
16. What is the internet speed available now? What speed do you want for future? Internet access is through time warner cable company which is not very reliable
17. Do employees access their emails outside the company? yes
18. Do you have plans for future expansion? We like to increase our customer base by 20% over the next year
REMEMBER, you are the IT expert, I’m only a business person who must rely on your expertise.
Network Design and Performance
Case Study
Dooma-Flochies, Inc. with headquarters located on Podunk Road in Trumansburg, NY, is the sole manufacturer of Dooma-Flochies (big surprise). They currently have a manufacturing facility in, Lake Ridge, NY (across Cayuga Lake) on Cayuga Dr. and have recently diversified by purchasing a company, This-N-That, on Industry Ave. in, Dime Box Texas. This-N-That is the sole competitor of Domma-Flochies with their product Thinga-Ma-Jigs. This acquisition gives Dooma-Flochies, Inc a monopoly in this mark.
Behavior in OrganizationsIntercultural Communications Exercise .docxTatianaMajor22
Behavior in Organizations
Intercultural Communications Exercise Response Paper –
Week 5
The most overt cultural differences, such as greeting rituals and name format, can be overcome most easily. The underlying, intangible differences are very difficult to overcome. In this case, the underlying cultural differences are
· Assumptions about the purpose of the event (is the party strictly for fun and for relationship building, or are their business matters to take care of?).
· Assumptions about the purpose and the nature of business relationship.
· Assumptions about power and leadership relationships (who makes the decisions and how?).
· Response styles (verbal and nonverbal signals of agreement, disagreement, politeness, etc.).
Many (though not all) cultural differences can be overcome if you carefully observe other people, think creatively, remain flexible, and remember that your own culture is not inherently superior to others.
The Scenario
Three corporations are planning a joint venture to sponsor an international concert tour. The corporations are Decibel, an agency representing the musicians (from the US, Britain, and Japan); Images, a marketing firm which will handle sales of tickets, snacks and beverages, clothing, and CDs; and Event, a special events company which will hire the ushers, concessionaires, and security officers; print the programs; and clean up the arenas after the shows. The companies come from three different cultures: Blue, Green, and Red. Each has specific cultural traits, customs, and practices.
You are a manager in one of these companies. You will attend the opening cocktail party in Perth, Australia the evening before a 3-day meeting during which the three companies will negotiate the details of the partnership. Your management team includes a Vice President and a number of other managers.
During the 3-day meeting, the companies have the following goals:
Decibel
· As high a royalty rate as possible on sales of T-shirts, videos, and CDs
· Aggressive marketing and advertising to increase attendance and sales
· Good security, both before and during the show Image
Image
· Well known bands that will be easy to market
· As much income as possible from the concerts
· Smoothly functioning event so that publicity from early concerts is positive
Event
· Bands that are not likely to provoke stampedes, riots, or other antisocial behavior
· Bands that are reliable and will show up on time, ready to play
· As much income as possible from the concerts
The cultures that are assigned to the various companies are:
BLUE CULTURE
Image (Marketing Company)
Beliefs, Values, and Attitudes that Underlie This Culture’s Communication
Believe that fate and luck control most things.
Believe in feelings more than reasoning.
An authoritarian leader makes the ultimate decisions.
Nonverbal Traits of This Culture
Treat time as something that is unimportant. It is not a commodity that can be lost.
Conversation distance is close (about 15 inches, face-.
Discussion Question Comparison of Theories on Anxiety Disord.docxTatianaMajor22
Discussion Question:
Comparison of Theories on Anxiety Disorders
There are numerous theories that attempt to explain the development and manifestation of psychological disorders. Some researchers hold that certain disorders result from learned behaviors (behavioral theory), while other researchers believe that there is a genetic or biological basis to psychological disorders (medical model), while still others hold that psychological disorders stem from unresolved unconscious conflict (psychoanalytic theory). How would each of these theoretical viewpoints explain anxiety disorders? Does one explain the development and manifestation of anxiety disorders better than the others?
200- 400 words please
Three min resources with
in text citations and examples
you can use the following as a module reference
cite as university 2014
Anxiety Disorders
Anxiety disorders such as panic disorder, specific phobias, and social anxiety disorder feature a heightened autonomic nervous system response that is above and beyond what would be considered normal when faced with the object or situation that the person reacts to. For example, a person with a specific phobia of spiders (called arachnophobia) experiences a heightened autonomic response when confronted with a spider (or even an image of a spider). This anxiety response must result in significant distress or impairment. In general, anxiety disorders have been linked to underactive gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) in the brain, resulting in overexcitability of the amygdala and the anterior cingulate cortex. Additionally, genetic research shows that anxiety disorders demonstrate a clear pattern of genetic predisposition
Charles Darwin's Perspective
We talked about Charles Darwin when discussing evolution and natural selection. Darwin was also very interested in emotions. One of his books published in 1872,The Expression of Emotions in Man and Animals, was devoted to this topic.
Darwin believed that emotions play an important role in the survival of the species and result from evolutionary processes in the same way as other behaviors and psychological functions. Darwin's writing on this topic also prompted psychologists to study animal behavior as a way to better understand human behavior.
James–Lange Theory of Emotions
Modern theories of emotion can be traced to William James and Carl Lange (Pinel, 2011). William James was a renowned Harvard psychologist who is sometimes called the father of American psychology. Carl Lange was a Danish physician. James and Lange formulated the same theory of emotions independently at about the same time (1884). As a result, it is called the James–Lange theory of emotions. This theory reversed the commonsensical notion that emotions are automatic responses to events around us. Instead, it proposes that emotions are the brain's interpretation of physiological responses to emotionally provocative stimuli.
Cannon–Bard Theory of Emotions
In 1915, Harvard physiologist Walt.
I have always liked Dustin Hoffmans style of acting, in this mov.docxTatianaMajor22
I have always liked Dustin Hoffman's style of acting, in this movie he takes on a sexually deprived young male just out of college, and has never been with a female, and is duped by horny older woman that feels neglected. Dustin Hoffman takes the characters form of a young male, goofy, respectful virgin and intelligent male, missing something but not really sure at the beginning till Ann Bancroft coaxes him with seduction to fulfill her own needs. In an other movie called "The life of Little Big Man" he plays almost the same character but as a white child raised by the Native Americans and a wise old chief that deeply care and loves him as his own, and Fay Dunaway plays a Holy rollers wife that is older and sexually deprived and feeling neglected by her husband and also she goes through major changes in her life from devoted wife, to a honey bell/ house hooker, whats funny Dustin Hoffman is a awesome actor but has to have his surrounding characters bring his character to life. The Graduate was Dustin Hoffman's first big movie of his career.
I actually liked movie "Little Big man" way better due to he went through major changes in his life, from being a Native boy warrior, captured by Yankees, meets Fay Dunaway who loves to give baths, to finding his sister who teaches him to be a gunslinger and then returns to his Grand Father to be a native again and tells his blind Grand Father the world of the white man is a crazy one, then his see the Psyho Col. Custer and gets his revenge by telling Custer the truth. The movie Little Big Man makes you laugh, teaches you things about people and survial and cry at times... its a must see...
Although a stray away from the Benjamin Braddock written about in the novel The Graduate, Dustin Hoffman does an awesome job with this character on film. When you first meet Ben he is at a party that his parents are throwing in his academic honor upon his graduation from school and return home. The whole night, Hoffman stumbles though various conversations and tries to coyly escape from the festivities. Small things such as this Hoffman did a great job at, conveying the hesitance and crisis that Ben was going through as a graduate. There are multiple times in the movie he hardly expresses anything at all, yet it clearly shows you that Ben is having a very hard time internally with everything going on. Even through his relationships with Mrs. Robinson and her daughter Elaine you see the young man struggling with himself through either failed attempts at affection or lack thereof.
.
Is obedience to the law sufficient to ensure ethical behavior Wh.docxTatianaMajor22
Is obedience to the law sufficient to ensure ethical behavior? Why, or why not? Support your answer with at least three reasons that justify your position.
100 words
Discuss the differences between an attitude and a behavior. Provide 4 substantive reasons why it is important for organizations to monitor and mitigate employee behavior that is either beneficial or detrimental to the organization's goals and existence.
150 words
.
If you are using the Blackboard Mobile Learn IOS App, please clic.docxTatianaMajor22
If you are using the Blackboard Mobile Learn IOS App, please click "View in Browser." V BUS 520Week 9 Assignment 4 Paper
I need the paper as soon as possible
Students, please view the "Submit a Clickable Rubric Assignment" in the Student Center.
Instructors, training on how to grade is within the Instructor Center.
Assignment 4: Leadership Style: What Do People Do When They Are Leading?
Due Week 9 and worth 100 points
Choose one (1) of the following CEOs for this assignment: Larry Page (Google), Tony Hsieh (Zappos), Gary Kelly (Southwest Airlines), Meg Whitman (Hewlett Packard), Ursula Burns (Xerox), Terri Kelly (W.L. Gore), Ellen Kullman (DuPont), or Bob McDonald (Procter & Gamble). Use the Internet to investigate the leadership style and effectiveness of the selected CEO. (Note: Just choose one that is easier for you to right about.) It does not matter to me which CEO you pick
Write a five to six (5-6) page paper in which you:
1. Provide a brief (one [1] paragraph) background of the CEO.
2. Analyze the CEO’s leadership style and philosophy, and how the CEO’s leadership style aligns with the culture.
3. Examine the CEO’s personal and organizational values.
4. Evaluate how the values of the CEO are likely to influence ethical behavior within the organization.
5. Determine the CEO’s three (3) greatest strengths and three (3) greatest weaknesses.
6. Select the quality that you believe contributes most to this leader’s success. Support your reasoning.
7. Assess how communication and collaboration, and power and politics influence group (i.e., the organization’s) dynamics.
8. Use at least five (5) quality academic resources in this assignment. Note: Wikipedia and other Websites do not qualify as academic resources.
Your assignment must follow these formatting requirements:
· Be typed, double spaced, using Times New Roman font (size 12), with one-inch margins on all sides; citations and references must follow APA or school-specific format. Check with your professor for any additional instructions.
· Include a cover page containing the title of the assignment, the student’s name, the professor’s name, the course title, and the date. The cover page and the reference page are not included in the required assignment page length.
The specific course learning outcomes associated with this assignment are:
· Analyze the formation and dynamics of group behavior and work teams, including the application of power in groups.
· Outline various individual and group decision-making processes and key factors affecting these processes.
· Examine the primary conflict levels within organization and the process for negotiating resolutions.
· Examine how power and influence empower and affect office politics, political interpretations, and political behavior.
· Use technology and information resources to research issues in organizational behavior.
· Write clearly and concisely about organizational behavior using proper writing mechanics.
Click here.
Is the proliferation of social media and communication devices a .docxTatianaMajor22
Social media and communication devices have both benefits and drawbacks for society. While they allow easy connection with others and access to information, overuse can negatively impact relationships and mental health. Overall, moderation is key to reap the upsides of technology while avoiding the downsides.
MATH 107 FINAL EXAMINATIONMULTIPLE CHOICE1. Deter.docxTatianaMajor22
The document contains a 30-question math exam covering topics like functions, graphs, equations, inequalities, logarithms, and other math concepts. It includes multiple choice, short answer, and show work questions assessing skills like domain and range, solving equations, graphing, composites, inverses, lines, maximizing profit, and more. Students must demonstrate mathematical reasoning and problem-solving abilities.
If the CIO is to be valued as a strategic actor, how can he bring.docxTatianaMajor22
If the CIO is to be valued as a strategic actor, how can he bring to the table the ethos of alignment, bound to the demands of process strategic planning to move IT to the forefront of the organization's future? Is there a lack of information on strategic planning? Nope. I think the process of planning is poorly understood, and rarely endorsed. The reasons are simple enough. Planning requires a commitment of resources (time, talent, money); it requires insight; it requires a total immersion in the corporate culture. While organizations do plan, planning is invariably attached to the budget process. It is typically here that the CIO lays out his/her vision for the coming year Now a few years ago authors began writing on the value of aligning IT purpose to organizational purpose. They wrote at a time when enterprise architectural planning was fairly new, and enterprise resource management was on the lips of every executive. My view is that alignment is a natural process driven by the availability of the tools to accomplish it. Twenty years ago making sense of IT was more about processing power, and database management. We are in a new age of IT, and it is the computer that is the network, not the network as an independent self-contained exchange of information. If you will spend some time reviewing the basic materials I provided on strategic planning and alignment, we can begin our discussions for the course. Again, here is the problem I would like for us to tackle: If the CIO is to be valued as a strategic actor, how can he bring to the table the ethos of alignment, bound to the demands of process strategic planning to move IT to the forefront of the organization's future? Most of the articles I bundled together for this week are replete with tables and charts. These can be a heavy read. Your approach should be to review these articles for the "big ideas" or lessons that are take away. I think these studies are significant enough that we will conclude our first week with an understanding of the roles between executive leaders, and how they see Information Technology playing a role in shaping a business strategy.
Read the articles to answer the question. Please No Plagerism or verbatim but you are allowed to quote from the article.
Achieving and Sustaining
Business-IT Alignment
Jerry Luftman
Tom Brier
I
n recent decades, billions of dollars have been invested in intormation tech-
nology (IT). A key concern of business executives is alignment—applying IT
in an appropriate and timely way and in harmony with business strategies,
goals, and needs. This issue addresses both how IT is aligned with the busi-
ness and how the business should be aligned with IT Frustratingly, organizations
seem to find it difficult or impossible to harness the power of information tech-
nology for their own long-term benefit, even though there is worldwide evi-
dence that IT has the power to transform whole industries and markets.' How
can companies.
I am showing below the proof of breakeven, which is fixed costs .docxTatianaMajor22
I am showing below the proof of breakeven, which is fixed costs/ contribution margin.
We start with the definition of breakeven and proceed using elementary algebra to derive the formula. Breakeven is a number and is created by knowing fixed and variable costs, and the retail sales price. It is thus not a point of discussion but is based on the assumptions of these variables.
Proof of Breakeven
Definition of BreakevenVolume: Total Revenue = Total Expenses
Definition
1.Total Revenue = Total Expenses
Breakdown of Definition
2. Retail Price * Volume = Fixed Expenses + Variable Expenses
Further Analysis
3. Retail Price * Volume = Fixed Expenses + (Volume * Unit Variable Expenses)
Subtract (Volume * Unit Variable Expenses) from both sides
4. Fixed Expenses = (Retail Price * Volume) — (Volume * Unit Variable Expenses)
Factor
5. Fixed Expenses = Volume * (Retail Price – Unit Variable Expenses)
Divide both sides by (Retail Price – Unit Variable Expenses)
6. Volume = Fixed Expenses
(Retail Price – Unit Variable Expenses)
Substitution based on Definition
7. Since (Retail Price — Unit Variable Expenses) is called Contribution Margin,
Therefore:
Breakeven Volume = Fixed Expenses / Contribution Margin
NAME_________________________________________________ DATE ____________
1. Explain some of the economic, social, and political considerations involved in changing the tax law.
2. Explain the difference between a Partnership, a Limited Liability Partnership (LLP) and a Limited Liability Company (LLC). In each structure who has liability?
3. How is “control” defined for purposes of Section 351 of the IRS Code?
4. What are the advantages and disadvantages of using debt in a firm’s capital structure?
5. Under what circumstances is a corporation’s assumption of liabilities considered boot in a Section 351exchange?
6. What are the tax consequences for the transferor and transferee when property is transferred to a newly created corporation in an exchange qualifying as nontaxable under Section 351?
7. Why are corporations allowed a dividend-received deduction? What dividends qualify for this special deduction?
8. Provide 3 examples of a Constructive Dividend. Are these Constructive Dividends taxable?
9. Discuss the tax consequences of a new Partnership Formation and give details to gain and losses and basis?
10. Provide 2 similarities and 2 differences when comparing Sections 351 and 721 of the IRS Code.
11. What is the difference between inside and outside basis with a partnership?
12. ABC Partnership distributes $12,000 of taxable income to partner Bob and $24,000 of tax-exempt income to Partner Bob. As a result of these two distributions, how does Bob’s basis change?
13. On January 1, Katie pays $2,000 for a 10% capital, profits, and loss interest in a partnership.
Examine the way in which death and dying are viewed at different .docxTatianaMajor22
Examine the way in which death and dying are viewed at different points in human development.
Using only my text as a reference:
Berger, K.S. (2011). The developing person through the life span (8th ed.).
I need 3 detailed PowerPoint slide with very detailed speaker notes. There must be detailed speaker notes on each slide. The 4th slide will be the reference.
.
Karimi 1 Big Picture Blog Post First Draft College .docxTatianaMajor22
Karimi 1
Big Picture Blog Post First Draft
College Girls in Media
Sogand Karimi
Media and Hollywood movies have affected and influenced society’s perception on
female college students. Due to Hollywood movies and media, society mostly recognizes the
negative stereotypes of a college women. Saran Donahoo, an associate professor and education
administration of Southern Illinois University, once said, “The messages in these films
consistently emphasized college as a place where young women come to have fun, engage in
romances with young men, experiment with sex and alcohol, face dilemmas regarding body
image, and encounter difficulties in associating with other college women.” In this essay I will
be talking about the recurring stereotypes and themes portrayed in three hollywood movies,
Spring Breakers, The house bunny and Legally Blond and how these stereotypes affect our
society.
The movie Spring Breakers is about four college girls who are bored with their daily
routines and want to escape on a spring break vacation to Florida. After realizing they don’t have
enough money, they rub a local diner with fake guns and ski masks. They break the laws in order
to get down to Florida, just to break more rules and laws once they’re there. During the film, you
will notice a lot of partying, drugs and sexual activity. The four girls wear bikinis for majority of
the film and are overly sexual. These are some common themes and stereotypes seen in all three
movies. Media and movies like spring breakers have made it a norm to constantly want to party,
get drunk and have sex as a college woman. In an article by Heather Long, she mentions how the
movie can even be seen as supporting rape culture. She believes because of these stereotypes
always being shown in media, it is contributing to the “girls asking for it” excuse when it comes
to rape cases with young girls. Long also said “...never mind the fact that thousands of college
students are spending their spring break not on a beach, but volunteering with groups like Habitat
for Humanity and the United Way, especially after Hurricanes Katrina and Sandy.” THIS shows
how media only displays one side of a certain group or story. Even though not all college girls
like to party and lay on a beach naked for spring break, that’s what media likes to portray. Not
only does this give the wrong message to our society but it influences bigger issues like rape, as
the author mentioned.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/03/10/alternative-spring-break_n_494028.html
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/03/10/alternative-spring-break_n_494028.html
Karimi 2
The movie House bunny. The House bunny is a movie about an ex playmate or girlfriend
if Hugh Hefner that gets kicked out of the Playboy Mansion due to her aging. She then becomes
a mother of an unpopular sorority with girls that are bit geeky, and unusual compared to other
girls on campus. The story.
Please try not to use hard words Thank youWeek 3Individual.docxTatianaMajor22
Please try not to use hard words Thank you
Week 3
Individual
Problems and Goals Case Study
Select one of the following three case studies in Ch. 6 of The Helping Process:
· Case Susanna
· Case James and Samantha
· Case Alicia and Montford
Identify three to five problems in the case study you have selected.
Write a 500- to 700-word paperthatincludes the following:
· A problem-solving strategy and a goal for each problem
· The services, resources, and supports the client may need and why
· A description of how goals are measurable and realistically attainable for the client
Here is the case studies
Exercise 3: Careful Assessment
The following case studies are about Susanna, James, Samantha, Alicia, and Montford, all
homeless children attending school. The principal of the school has asked you to conduct
an assessment of these children and provide initial recommendations.
Before you begin this exercise, go to the website that accompanies this book: www.
wadsworth.com/counseling/mcclam, Chapter Three, Link 1, to read more about homeless
families and children.
Susanna
Susanna is 15 years old. Th e city where she lives has four schools: two elementary, one
middle, and one high school. Th ere are about 1,500 students enrolled in the city/county
school district and about 450 in the local high school that Susanna is attending. For the
past six months, Susanna has been living with her boyfriend and his parents. Prior to this,
she left her mother’s home and lived on the streets. She is pregnant and her boyfriend’s
parents want her to move out of their home. Her father lives in a town with his girlfriend,
about 50 miles from the city. Her mother lives outside the city with Susanna’s baby brother.
Right now Susanna’s mother is receiving child support for the two children. Susanna wants
to have a portion of the child support so that she can find a place of her own to live. Her
mother says that the only way that Susanna can have access to that money is to move back
home. Susanna refuses to move back in with her mother.
You receive a call from the behavior specialist at Susanna’s high school. Susanna’s
mother is at the school demanding that Susanna be withdrawn from school. Susanna’s
mother indicates that Susanna will be moving in with her and will be enrolling in another
school district.
Currently Susanna is not doing very well in school. She misses school and she tells the
helper it is because she is tired and that she does not have good food to eat. She has not told
the helper that she is looking for a place to live. Right now she is failing two of her classes
and she has one B and two Ds. Her boyfriend has missed a lot of school, too.
James and Samantha
James is 10 years old and he has a sister, Samantha, who is 8. At the beginning of the
school year, both of the children were attending Boone Elementary School. Both children
live with their aunt and uncle; their parents are in prison. In the middle of the scho.
This presentation was provided by Steph Pollock of The American Psychological Association’s Journals Program, and Damita Snow, of The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), for the initial session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session One: 'Setting Expectations: a DEIA Primer,' was held June 6, 2024.
A Strategic Approach: GenAI in EducationPeter Windle
Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies such as Generative AI, Image Generators and Large Language Models have had a dramatic impact on teaching, learning and assessment over the past 18 months. The most immediate threat AI posed was to Academic Integrity with Higher Education Institutes (HEIs) focusing their efforts on combating the use of GenAI in assessment. Guidelines were developed for staff and students, policies put in place too. Innovative educators have forged paths in the use of Generative AI for teaching, learning and assessments leading to pockets of transformation springing up across HEIs, often with little or no top-down guidance, support or direction.
This Gasta posits a strategic approach to integrating AI into HEIs to prepare staff, students and the curriculum for an evolving world and workplace. We will highlight the advantages of working with these technologies beyond the realm of teaching, learning and assessment by considering prompt engineering skills, industry impact, curriculum changes, and the need for staff upskilling. In contrast, not engaging strategically with Generative AI poses risks, including falling behind peers, missed opportunities and failing to ensure our graduates remain employable. The rapid evolution of AI technologies necessitates a proactive and strategic approach if we are to remain relevant.
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Physiology and chemistry of skin and pigmentation, hairs, scalp, lips and nail, Cleansing cream, Lotions, Face powders, Face packs, Lipsticks, Bath products, soaps and baby product,
Preparation and standardization of the following : Tonic, Bleaches, Dentifrices and Mouth washes & Tooth Pastes, Cosmetics for Nails.
ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, and GDPR: Best Practices for Implementation and...PECB
Denis is a dynamic and results-driven Chief Information Officer (CIO) with a distinguished career spanning information systems analysis and technical project management. With a proven track record of spearheading the design and delivery of cutting-edge Information Management solutions, he has consistently elevated business operations, streamlined reporting functions, and maximized process efficiency.
Certified as an ISO/IEC 27001: Information Security Management Systems (ISMS) Lead Implementer, Data Protection Officer, and Cyber Risks Analyst, Denis brings a heightened focus on data security, privacy, and cyber resilience to every endeavor.
His expertise extends across a diverse spectrum of reporting, database, and web development applications, underpinned by an exceptional grasp of data storage and virtualization technologies. His proficiency in application testing, database administration, and data cleansing ensures seamless execution of complex projects.
What sets Denis apart is his comprehensive understanding of Business and Systems Analysis technologies, honed through involvement in all phases of the Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC). From meticulous requirements gathering to precise analysis, innovative design, rigorous development, thorough testing, and successful implementation, he has consistently delivered exceptional results.
Throughout his career, he has taken on multifaceted roles, from leading technical project management teams to owning solutions that drive operational excellence. His conscientious and proactive approach is unwavering, whether he is working independently or collaboratively within a team. His ability to connect with colleagues on a personal level underscores his commitment to fostering a harmonious and productive workplace environment.
Date: May 29, 2024
Tags: Information Security, ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, Artificial Intelligence, GDPR
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Macroeconomics- Movie Location
This will be used as part of your Personal Professional Portfolio once graded.
Objective:
Prepare a presentation or a paper using research, basic comparative analysis, data organization and application of economic information. You will make an informed assessment of an economic climate outside of the United States to accomplish an entertainment industry objective.
A review of the growth of the Israel Genealogy Research Association Database Collection for the last 12 months. Our collection is now passed the 3 million mark and still growing. See which archives have contributed the most. See the different types of records we have, and which years have had records added. You can also see what we have for the future.
How to Fix the Import Error in the Odoo 17Celine George
An import error occurs when a program fails to import a module or library, disrupting its execution. In languages like Python, this issue arises when the specified module cannot be found or accessed, hindering the program's functionality. Resolving import errors is crucial for maintaining smooth software operation and uninterrupted development processes.
How to Add Chatter in the odoo 17 ERP ModuleCeline George
In Odoo, the chatter is like a chat tool that helps you work together on records. You can leave notes and track things, making it easier to talk with your team and partners. Inside chatter, all communication history, activity, and changes will be displayed.
1. The most abundant amino acid in collagen is● glycine●
1. 1. The most abundant amino acid in collagen is:
● glycine
● lysine/hydroxylysine
● alanine
● proline/hydroxyproline
2. Chondroitin sulfate is built of:
GalNAc + GlcUA
Alternating N-acetylgalactosamine and glucuronic acid, with
variable sulfation along the
polysaccharide.
D-glucuronic acid (GlcA) and N-acetyl-D-galactosamine
(GalNAc).
3. Mark chemical functional groups that may be present in
natural sugar derivatives
● sulfhydryl
● amine
● sulfate
● nitric
● acetylamine
● carboxyl
● acetyl
4. What is the impact of unsaturated fatty acids on the
properties of cell membrane:
Unsaturated fatty acid in their tails push adjacent phospholipid
molecule away which help
maintain fluidity in the membrane
5. Porins:
2. ● are classified as peripheric membrane proteins
● serve as channels that enable transport of proteins inside the
cell
● are present in outer membrane of bacteria, but also in
mitochondrial and chloroplast
membranes
● are transmembrane proteins with B-barrel structure
6. List three groups of products derived from arachidonic acid
through its cyclic oxidation
Prostaglandins, leukotrienes, thromboxanes
7. Mark the true sentences
● Glutathione acts as a scavenger of free radicals through the
formation of disulfide
bonds between the two molecules.
● Vasopressin is nonapeptide hormone involved in maintaining
blood pressure
● Glutathione is an important tripeptide involved in maintaining
redox balance inside
the cell.
8. Mark true sentences
● Polypeptide chain fragments of regular secondary structure
are connected with tight B
turns and irregular omega loops.
● In the hydrogen bond stabilizing secondary protein structure
carbonyl group is
hydrogen donor while amine group is hydrogen acceptor.
3. ● Mesomeric transfer of electrons makes peptide bond rigid and
lacking free rotationπ
● Secondary protein structure is maintained by hydrogen bonds
located in amino acids
side chains
● Desmosine is a product of a cross-link of four valine side
chains and maintains the
structure of keratins.
9. Mark the amino acids which are susceptible to nitration
● Phe
● Val
● Tyr
● His
● Asp
● Arg
10. Biogenic amines derived from tryptophan include:
● DOPA
● melatonine
● adrenaline
● serotonine
● putrescine
11. Biogenic amines derived from tyrosine include:
● DOPA
● serotonine
● histamine
● cadaverine
● adrenaline
12. 45 mg of glucose (MW = 180 g/mol) was dissolved in water
to prepare 100 mL of the
solution. Its molar concentration is:
4. ● 4 mM
● 0,04 M
● 2,5 mM
13. The percentage of 2M solution of NaCl (MW = 58,5 g/mol,
density of the solution: 1
g/mL) is:
● 29 %
● 11,7 %
● 5,85 %
14. In mammal biological membranes, the following lipid
compounds may be present:
● cholesteryl esters
● glycerophospholipids
● cerebrosides and gangliosides
● lipopolysaccarides
● triacylglycerides
● phosphoceramides
15. Mark sentences that characterize a-helical transmembrane
proteins
● transmembrane fragments contain mostly serine, aspargine
and cysteine to anchor in
the membrane
● may serve as signal transduction molecules exploiting
extracellular domain to catch
the signal and intracellular one to start metabolic pathways
● make the membrane porous and more fluid
● are permanently bound to the membrane
5. 16. List the most typical compounds that may estrify
phosphatidic acid to extend its polar
head:
Stearic acid and other fatty acids
17. Mark the sentences that characterize collagen:
● In collagen cross links Shiff base is formed between
hydroxyproline and lysine
● Hydroxyapatite may be deposited in the gaps between
tropocollagen units to harden
the structure
● Proline residue protruding outside the helix helps in
maintaining the appropriate shape
of collagen molecule
● Network forming collagen is present in tendons, collagen,
skin and blood vessels,
while the fibril-forming one builds mainly the basement
membrane
18. Mark the features that characterize fibrous proteins
● form long filaments shaped like rods or wires
● often play roles of hormones and transporters
● often contain repeating amino acid sequences
● present in blood and the other body fluids
● may be present both inside the cell and in extracellular matrix
● need low concentration of salt to be dissolved in water
environment
19. 10 mg of liophylized (dried) protein was dissolved in 20 mL
of a buffer. Protein molar
6. mass is 100 000 Da. Molarity of the solution is:
● 0,5 mM
● 5 Mµ
● 0,5 Mµ
20. Lipid fragments that serve as anchors that bind a protein to
cell membrane include
● acetyl residue
● glycosylated sfingolipid
● glycosyl-phosphatidyl-inositol
● fatty acids
● isoprenyl oligomers
21. Phosphate buffer is involved in:
● calcification of bones
● excretion of the excess of hydrogen ions with urea
● resorption of bicarbonate in kidneys
● maintaining partial pressure of CO2 in lungs
22. Respiratory acidosis means that:
● Co2 concentration in blood is too low
● bicarbonate ions are lost because of kidney impairment
● bicarbonate concentration in blood is too low
● Co2 cannot be exhaled properly
23. Respiratory alkalosis means that:
● Co2 concentration in blood is increased
● bicarbonate is lost because of kidney impairment
● bicarbonate ion concentration in blood is increased
● Co2 exhale is too fast and intensive
24. Chemical compounds classified as carbohydrates must
contain:
● carbonyl group
● more than one hydroxyl group
7. ● carboxyl group
● amine group
● hydroxyl group
25. Mark the amino acids that tend to gather inside the molecule
of globular proteins to avoid
contact with water
● Asp
● Val
● Ser
● Ala
● Ile
● His
● Gln
● Phe
26. Product of chemical reduction of mannose is called:
● mannitol
● mannose-phosphate
● mannic acid
● sorbitol
27. Select the appropriate secondary/tertiary structure for the
following fibrous proteins:
A: collagen , B: keratin , C: elastin
structure descriptions:
1: polymerisation of short unfolded fragments via inter-chain
crosslinks
2: bundle of a-helices
3: triple helix of polypeptide chains, products of three different
genes
4: anti-parallel B-structured fibrils
A-3
8. B- 2
C- 1
28. The child who weighs 10 kg should be given the medicine.
The recommended medicine
amount is 2 mg per 1 kg of body weight per day, and this total
amount should be divided into
2 doses. Commercial drug preparation contains 0,2% of the
active compound. The volume of
a single dose that should be administered is:
● 2 mL
● 5 mL
● 0,5 mL
29. The child who weighs 15 kg should be given the medicine.
The recommended medicine
amount is 1 mg per 1 kg of body weight per day, and this total
amount should be divided into
3 doses. Commercial drug preparation contains 0,1% of the
active compound. The volume of
a single dose is:
● 2,5 mL
● 5 mL
● 1 mL
30. Lysine charge in the physiological pH (7,4) is:
● positive
● negative
● almost neutral
31. Proteins work as buffers thanks to their:
● ionization ability of functional a-amino and carboxyl groups
9. of amino acids
● ability to form anions and cations depending on the acidity of
the environment
● content of acidic and basic amino acids with side chains able
to attract and release
protons
● tendency to aggregation in low ionic strength
32. Enolization means:
● change of a monosaccharide to its epimer (for example
glucuronic to iduronic acid)
● change of aldose to ketose via re-arrangement of chemical
bonds in high temperature
and alkaline solution
● change of a to B sugar ring anomer through the chain form
33. In B-turn the following amino acids are the most common:
● Val Asp Lys
● Ile Trp Pro
● Gly Asp Asn
● Pro Lys Hyp
34. Four miligrams of a lyophilized (dried) protein was
dissolved in 10 mL of a buffer (final
volume). Protein molecular mass is 80 000 Da. Molar
concentration of the solution is:
● 0,2 mM
● 5 Mµ
● 2 Mµ
35. The risk of cardiovascular disease is suggested by
10. ● the ratio of LDL/HDL fractions
● high level of HDL fraction in blood
● the ratio of ILD/LDL fractions
● too low level of chylomicrons
36. As a result of proper folding the protein molecule can reach
the structure of maximal
internal energy
● true
● false
37. The percentage of 1 M glucose solution (MW = 180 g/mol,
density 1 g/mL) is:
● 1,8 %
● 18 %
● 9 %
38. Post-translational modification of glutamic acid side chain
important for blood clotting
cascade is called:
● carboxylation
● phosphorylation
● methylation
● acetylation
39. The patient suffers from respiratory tract problems
(asthma). As a result CO2 is not
exhaled properly and its blood concentration increases. What
happens to the blood pH?
Explain. How is this rate called?
Acidosis. The pH of the blood is lower than 7,35.
40. In a-helix, hydrogen bonds are aligned along the helix axes
and amino acid side chain are
11. hidden insight the helix:
● false
● true
41. Glucose is the metabolic precursor of:
● vitamin K
● vitamin C
● vitamin B12
● vitamin D
42. For each monosaccharide select information that describes
its structure (possible more
than one feature)
A) erythrose
B) fructose
C) xylulose
features to be chosen:
1: hexose
2: aldose
3: tetrose
4: ketose
5: pentose
erythrose- tetrose + aldose
fructose- ketose + hexose
xylose- pentose + ketose
43. Which chemical compounds are gathered inside
lipoproteins:
Inside: triacylglycerides and cholesteryl esters
external: phospholipids, free cholesterol, apoproteins
12. 44. Mark all the components that built GPI anchor
● ethanolamine
● 2 fatty acids
● glycerol
● phosphate
● serine
● mannitol
● oligosaccharide (GlcNAcMan3)
● ceramide
45. Mark all the sets of amino acids with an isoelectric point
close to six in all of them:
● Ala, Thr, Gly
● His, Arg, Gly
● Asn, Gln, Ser
● Lys, Ile, Trp
● Val, Glu, Ser
● Leu, Ile, Thr
46. Complete the sentence: Heparan sulfate is built of….
linear chains of repeating disaccharide units consisting of a
glucosamine and uronic acid
47. Mark true sentences
● Hemoglobin and myoglobin belong to all a-protein structural
class
● Rodopsin in anchored in the membrane eye retina with the
bundle of seven a-helices
● Chaperone proteins are involved in degradation of incorrectly
folded proteins
● In immunoglobulins the same active domain is responsible for
antigen binding and
interaction with the cells of immune system
13. ● Blood plasma albumin is responsible for water balance
between blood and tissues
48. Guanidine functional group that provides positive charge is
present in:
● arginine
● methionine
● tryptophan
● lysine
● histidine
● valine
49. List the components of the external layer of lipoproteins:
phospholipids, cholesterol, apolipoproteins
50. In all a-protein's the helical fragments may be arranged in a
globin fold or a bundle
of parallel sections
● False
● True
51. Mark all sentences that are true for eikosanoids
● their excess increases a risk of heart attach and stroke
● in blood they are transported inside lipoproteins
● prostaglandins belong to this group of compounds
● they are important mediators of immune reactions
● this group comprise plasmalogens, cerebrosides and
tromboxanes
● they are derivatives of fatty acid containing 20 C atoms and 4
double bonds
52. Functional groups present in non-polar amino acids include:
● guanidine group
14. ● amide group
● isopropyl and other branched hydrocarbons
● hydroxyl group
● phenyl group
● thioether group
53. Complete the sentence: Dermatan sulfate is built of….
GalNAc+ IdUA/GlcUA
linear polysaccahrides assembled as disaccaride units
containing a hexosamine, N-acetyl
galactosamine or glucuronic acid joined by B 1,4 or 1,3
linkages respectively
Complete the sentence: Heparan sulfate is built of….
GlcNAc+ IUA/GlcUA
54. Mannose and galactose are:
● none of above
● anomers
● epimers
● diastereoizomers
55. The change of a to B anomer via open ring (chain form) is
called:
● mutarotation
● obtaining mirror reflection structure
● oxidation
● reduction
56. The fibrous protein that builds hair, nails, animal fur and
horns is called:
● kreatinine
● fibroine
● keratine
● troponine
15. 57. Posttranslational modifications necessary to maintain
collagen structure are:
● hydroxylation of lysine and proline
● fosforylation of tyrosine
● methylation of lysine
● lysine/allysine cross links
● glycation
58. Globular proteins:
● are soluble in water or low concentration salt solution thanks
to hydration envelope
surrounding the molecule
● help in maintaining acid-base balance thanks to their
buffering properties
● serve as structural support in tissue or cell
● present non-polar amino acids on their surface
● differ in water solubility depending on their size, shape and
charge distribution.
● often contain repeating amino acid sequences
59. Free aspartic acid in physiological pH (7,4) forms:
● cations
● anions
● zwitterions (bipolar ions)
60. 11,7 g of NaCl (MW = 58,5 g/mol) was dissolved in water to
prepare 200 mL of the
solution. Molarity of the solution (density; 1 g/mL) is:
● 0,5 M
● 0,2 M
● 1 M
16. 61. List the monosaccharides that build glycosaminoglycans.
What is their common chemical
modification.
Uronic acid and amino sugars. Chemical modifications of
GAGs, which are commonly
performed to engineer molecular delivery systems, affect
protein binding and are highly
dependent on the site of modification on the GAG molecules.
62. Antiparallel B-structure is more stable than a-helix
● False
● True
63. Product of glucose chemical oxidation in the mild
conditions is called:
● gluconic acid
● glucaric acid
● glucuronic acid
● sorbitol
64. mark the sets of amino acids containing only those with four
ionic forms:
● His, Arg, Glu
● Glu, Asn, Gln
● Asn, Val, Thr
● Trp, Arg, Lys
● Glu, Asp, Lys
65. Mark the sentences that describe proteoglycans:
● they act as important mediators of inflammation
● they are involved in transport of lipid compounds in blood
● they form an important storage material in the liver, because
of their content of long
17. polysaccharide chain
● some of them take part in signal transduction from the
external environment of the
cell
● they are components of connective tissue (skin, cartilage,
synovial fluid and so on)
● they are responsible for mechanic strength of a tissue and act
as dumpers
66. Cholesterol is transported in blood mainly in lipoprotein
fraction:
● chylomicrons
● LDL
● VLDL
● HDL
67. List the buffers that maintain acid-base balance in the
organism. Which one of the
supports gas exchange in lungs and peripheral tissues.
Bicarbonate buffer
68. Twenty microliters were taken from the patient's serum and
diluted to obtain a final
volume of 1 mL. Next, glucose concentration was determined
with the phenolic method and
the absorbance of the sample was 0,2. Sugar concentration in
patient blood is:
● 2 mg/ml
● 400 g/mlµ
● 0,2 mg/ml
18. 69. The presented compound is:
● hydrophobic
● polar
● amphipatic
70. Which of the presented fractions is necessary for proper
digestion of dietary lipids:
● A
● C
● B
71. Which of the presented structure belongs to sphingolipids?
● B
● A
● C
72. To determine protein concentration in patients serum 200 L
of the sample was taken andµ
diluted up to 1 mL. Protein was determined with biuret method
and the absorbance was equal
to 0,5. Protein concentration in the serum is:
● 0,2 mg/mL
● 10 mg/mL
● 0,05 g/mL
73. The compound shown below belongs to:
● Phosphoglycerides
● Phosphosfingosides
● triacylglycerides
19. 74. Among the presented structures, mark nonpolar amino acids:
● A
● E
● C
● D
● F
● B
75. The compound presented here is:
● polar
● amphipatic
● hydrophobic
76. Among the amino acids presented below find a set of those
that tend to gather at the
surface of globular proteins
● A, C, D, G
● B, E, F, G
● C, D, E, F
● A, B, E, G
77. The structure below presents:
● Vitamin D
● Glycocholic acid
● Cholesterol
● Testosteron
20. 78. The figure present:
● protein association with the membrane through the fragment
built of hydrophobic
amino acids
● GPI anchor
● anchoring of membrane protein through acylation
79. The correct name of the presented tripeptide is:
● Cys-Thr-Val
● IIE-Ser-Cys
● Val-Thr-Cys
● Val-Ser-Cys
80. Which of the presented structures is classified as
triacylglycerol
● B
● A
● C
81. Which of the presented structure belongs to plasmalogens
● C
● A
● B
82. Among the shown monosaccharides mark all ketoses:
● F
● E
● B
21. ● A
● D
● C
83. The structure shown below:
● builds biological membrane
● serves for energy storage in the body
84. One hundred microliters were taken from the patient's serum
and diluted to obtain a final
volume of 1 mL. Next, glucose concentration was determined
with the phenolic method and
the absorbance of the sample was 0,30. Sugar concentration in
patient blood is:
● 60 g/ mlµ
● 120 g/ mlµ
● 0,6 mg/ml
85. The compound shown in the figure is involved in:
● mediation of inflammatory reactions
● transport of aromatic compounds in blood
● excretion of hydrophobic metabolites and xenobiotics with
urine
86. The formula presents:
● glucocorticoid
● vitamin D
● taurocholic acid
● cholesteryl ester
22. 87. Among the structures below, mark arginine:
● D
● A
● C
● B
88. The compound presented below:
Cholesterol
● too high level in blood may result from an inappropriate diet
● too high level in blood may be associated with a risk of
cardiovascular disease
● is highly hydrophobic
● is necessary for proper structure and function of biological
membranes
● too low level in blood may be associated with a risk of
osteoporosis
● works as a mediator of immune reactions
In this issue: Focusing on Publication Ethics
Peer review in scientific publications:
benefits, critiques, & a survival guide
Jacalyn Kelly1, Tara Sadeghieh1, Khosrow Adeli1,2,3
1 Clinical Biochemistry, Department of Pediatric Laboratory
Medicine, The Hospital for Sick Children,
University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
2 Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology,
University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada
3 Chair, Communications and Publications Division (CPD) ,
23. International Federation for Sick Clinical
Chemistry (IFCC), Milan, Italy
A R T I C L E I N F O A B S T R A C T
Corresponding author:
Khosrow Adeli
Clinical Biochemistry
The Hospital for Sick Children
University of Toronto
Toronto, Ontario
Canada, M5G 1X8
E-mail: [email protected]
Disclosure
The authors declare no conflicts of interest
regarding publication of this article.
Key words:
peer review, manuscript,
publication, journal, open access
Peer review has been defined as a process of subjecting an
author’s scholarly work, research or ideas to the scrutiny
of others who are experts in the same field. It functions to
encourage authors to meet the accepted high standards of
their discipline and to control the dissemination of research
data to ensure that unwarranted claims, unacceptable inter-
pretations or personal views are not published without pri -
or expert review. Despite its wide-spread use by most jour-
nals, the peer review process has also been widely criticised
due to the slowness of the process to publish new findings
and due to perceived bias by the editors and/or reviewers.
Within the scientific community, peer review has become
an essential component of the academic writing process.
It helps ensure that papers published in scientific journals
24. answer meaningful research questions and draw accurate
conclusions based on professionally executed experimen-
tation. Submission of low quality manuscripts has become
increasingly prevalent, and peer review acts as a filter to
prevent this work from reaching the scientific community.
The major advantage of a peer review process is that peer -
reviewed articles provide a trusted form of scientific com-
munication. Since scientific knowledge is cumulative and
builds on itself, this trust is particularly important. Despite
the positive impacts of peer review, critics argue that the
peer review process stifles innovation in experimentation,
Peer review in scientific publications: benefits, critiques, & a
survival guide
Jacalyn Kelly, Tara Sadeghieh, Khosrow Adeli
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idea
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expert
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Author
Jacalyn Kelly, Tara Sadeghieh, Khosrow Adeli
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and acts as a poor screen against plagiarism.
Despite its downfalls, there has not yet been a
foolproof system developed to take the place of
peer review, however, researchers have been
looking into electronic means of improving the
peer review process. Unfortunately, the recent
25. explosion in online only/electronic journals has
led to mass publication of a large number of sci-
entific articles with little or no peer review. This
poses significant risk to advances in scientific
knowledge and its future potential. The current
article summarizes the peer review process,
highlights the pros and cons associated with dif-
ferent types of peer review, and describes new
methods for improving peer review.
WHAT IS PEER REVIEW
AND WHAT IS ITS PURPOSE?
Peer Review is defined as “a process of sub-
jecting an author’s scholarly work, research or
ideas to the scrutiny of others who are experts
in the same field” (1). Peer review is intended
to serve two primary purposes. Firstly, it acts as
a filter to ensure that only high quality research
is published, especially in reputable journals,
by determining the validity, significance and
originality of the study. Secondly, peer review
is intended to improve the quality of manu-
scripts that are deemed suitable for publication.
Peer reviewers provide suggestions to authors
on how to improve the quality of their manu-
scripts, and also identify any errors that need
correcting before publication.
HISTORY OF PEER REVIEW
The concept of peer review was developed long
before the scholarly journal. In fact, the peer re-
view process is thought to have been used as
a method of evaluating written work since an-
cient Greece (2). The peer review process was
26. first described by a physician named Ishaq bin
Ali al-Rahwi of Syria, who lived from 854-931
CE, in his book Ethics of the Physician (2). There,
he stated that physicians must take notes de-
scribing the state of their patients’ medical con-
ditions upon each visit. Following treatment,
the notes were scrutinized by a local medical
council to determine whether the physician had
met the required standards of medical care. If
the medical council deemed that the appropri-
ate standards were not met, the physician in
question could receive a lawsuit from the mal-
treated patient (2).
The invention of the printing press in 1453 al-
lowed written documents to be distributed to
the general public (3). At this time, it became
more important to regulate the quality of the
written material that became publicly available,
and editing by peers increased in prevalence.
In 1620, Francis Bacon wrote the work Novum
Organum, where he described what eventually
became known as the first universal method for
generating and assessing new science (3). His
work was instrumental in shaping the Scientific
Method (3). In 1665, the French Journal des sça-
vans and the English Philosophical Transactions
of the Royal Society were the first scientific jour-
nals to systematically publish research results
(4). Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Soci-
ety is thought to be the first journal to formalize
the peer review process in 1665 (5), however,
it is important to note that peer review was ini-
tially introduced to help editors decide which
manuscripts to publish in their journals, and at
27. that time it did not serve to ensure the valid-
ity of the research (6). It did not take long for
the peer review process to evolve, and shortly
thereafter papers were distributed to reviewers
with the intent of authenticating the integrity of
the research study before publication. The Roy-
al Society of Edinburgh adhered to the following
peer review process, published in their Medical
Essays and Observations in 1731: “Memoirs
sent by correspondence are distributed accord-
ing to the subject matter to those members who
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_Royal_Society
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophical_Transactions_of_the
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Peer review in scientific publications: benefits, critiques, & a
survival guide
are most versed in these matters. The report
of their identity is not known to the author.”
(7). The Royal Society of London adopted this
review procedure in 1752 and developed the
“Committee on Papers” to review manuscripts
before they were published in Philosophical
Transactions (6).
Peer review in the systematized and institution-
28. alized form has developed immensely since the
Second World War, at least partly due to the
large increase in scientific research during this
period (7). It is now used not only to ensure that
a scientific manuscript is experimentally and
ethically sound, but also to determine which
papers sufficiently meet the journal’s standards
of quality and originality before publication.
Peer review is now standard practice by most
credible scientific journals, and is an essential
part of determining the credibility and quality
of work submitted.
IMPACT OF THE PEER REVIEW PROCESS
Peer review has become the foundation of the
scholarly publication system because it effective-
ly subjects an author’s work to the scrutiny of
other experts in the field. Thus, it encourages au-
thors to strive to produce high quality research
that will advance the field. Peer review also sup-
ports and maintains integrity and authenticity in
the advancement of science. A scientific hypoth-
esis or statement is generally not accepted by
the academic community unless it has been pub-
lished in a peer-reviewed journal (8). The Insti-
tute for Scientific Information (ISI) only considers
journals that are peer-reviewed as candidates
to receive Impact Factors. Peer review is a well-
established process which has been a formal part
of scientific communication for over 300 years.
OVERVIEW OF THE PEER REVIEW PROCESS
The peer review process begins when a scien-
tist completes a research study and writes a
29. manuscript that describes the purpose, experi-
mental design, results, and conclusions of the
study. The scientist then submits this paper to
a suitable journal that specializes in a relevant
research field, a step referred to as pre-submis-
sion. The editors of the journal will review the
paper to ensure that the subject matter is in line
with that of the journal, and that it fits with the
editorial platform. Very few papers pass this ini-
tial evaluation. If the journal editors feel the pa-
per sufficiently meets these requirements and
is written by a credible source, they will send
the paper to accomplished researchers in the
field for a formal peer review. Peer reviewers
are also known as referees (this process is sum-
marized in Figure 1). The role of the editor is to
select the most appropriate manuscripts for the
journal, and to implement and monitor the peer
review process. Editors must ensure that peer
reviews are conducted fairly, and in an effective
and timely manner. They must also ensure that
there are no conflicts of interest involved in the
peer review process.
When a reviewer is provided with a paper, he or
she reads it carefully and scrutinizes it to evalu-
ate the validity of the science, the quality of the
experimental design, and the appropriateness
of the methods used. The reviewer also assess-
es the significance of the research, and judges
whether the work will contribute to advance-
ment in the field by evaluating the importance
of the findings, and determining the originality
of the research. Additionally, reviewers identi-
fy any scientific errors and references that are
30. missing or incorrect. Peer reviewers give rec-
ommendations to the editor regarding whether
the paper should be accepted, rejected, or im-
proved before publication in the journal. The
editor will mediate author-referee discussion
in order to clarify the priority of certain referee
requests, suggest areas that can be strength-
ened, and overrule reviewer recommenda-
tions that are beyond the study’s scope (9). If
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Figure 1 Overview of the review process
the paper is accepted, as per suggestion by the
peer reviewer, the paper goes into the produc-
tion stage, where it is tweaked and formatted
by the editors, and finally published in the sci-
entific journal. An overview of the review pro-
cess is presented in Figure 1.
WHO CONDUCTS REVIEWS?
Peer reviews are conducted by scientific experts
with specialized knowledge on the content of
the manuscript, as well as by scientists with a
more general knowledge base. Peer review-
ers can be anyone who has competence and
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expertise in the subject areas that the journal
covers. Reviewers can range from young and
up-and-coming researchers to old masters in
the field. Often, the young reviewers are the
most responsive and deliver the best quality
reviews, though this is not always the case. On
average, a reviewer will conduct approximately
eight reviews per year, according to a study on
peer review by the Publishing Research Consor-
tium (PRC) (7). Journals will often have a pool of
reviewers with diverse backgrounds to allow for
many different perspectives. They will also keep
a rather large reviewer bank, so that review-
ers do not get burnt out, overwhelmed or time
constrained from reviewing multiple articles
simultaneously.
WHY DO REVIEWERS REVIEW?
Referees are typically not paid to conduct peer
reviews and the process takes considerable ef-
fort, so the question is raised as to what incen-
tive referees have to review at all. Some feel an
academic duty to perform reviews, and are of
the mentality that if their peers are expected
to review their papers, then they should review
the work of their peers as well. Reviewers may
32. also have personal contacts with editors, and
may want to assist as much as possible. Oth-
ers review to keep up-to-date with the latest
developments in their field, and reading new
scientific papers is an effective way to do so.
Some scientists use peer review as an opportu-
nity to advance their own research as it stimu-
lates new ideas and allows them to read about
new experimental techniques. Other reviewers
are keen on building associations with presti-
gious journals and editors and becoming part of
their community, as sometimes reviewers who
show dedication to the journal are later hired
as editors. Some scientists see peer review as a
chance to become aware of the latest research
before their peers, and thus be first to develop
new insights from the material. Finally, in terms
of career development, peer reviewing can be
desirable as it is often noted on one’s resume or
CV. Many institutions consider a researcher’s in-
volvement in peer review when assessing their
performance for promotions (11). Peer review-
ing can also be an effective way for a scientist to
show their superiors that they are committed to
their scientific field (5).
ARE REVIEWERS KEEN TO REVIEW?
A 2009 international survey of 4000 peer re-
viewers conducted by the charity Sense About
Science at the British Science Festival at the
University of Surrey, found that 90% of review-
ers were keen to peer review (12). One third of
respondents to the survey said they were happy
to review up to five papers per year, and an ad-
33. ditional one third of respondents were happy to
review up to ten.
HOW LONG DOES IT TAKE
TO REVIEW ONE PAPER?
On average, it takes approximately six hours
to review one paper (12), however, this num-
ber may vary greatly depending on the con-
tent of the paper and the nature of the peer
reviewer. One in every 100 participants in the
“Sense About Science” survey claims to have
taken more than 100 hours to review their last
paper (12).
HOW TO DETERMINE
IF A JOURNAL IS PEER REVIEWED
Ulrichsweb is a directory that provides informa-
tion on over 300,000 periodicals, including in-
formation regarding which journals are peer re-
viewed (13). After logging into the system using
an institutional login (eg. from the University
of Toronto), search terms, journal titles or ISSN
numbers can be entered into the search bar.
The database provides the title, publisher, and
country of origin of the journal, and indicates
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34. whether the journal is still actively publishing.
The black book symbol (labelled ‘refereed’) re-
veals that the journal is peer reviewed.
THE EVALUATION CRITERIA
FOR PEER REVIEW OF SCIENTIFIC PAPERS
As previously mentioned, when a reviewer re-
ceives a scientific manuscript, he/she will first
determine if the subject matter is well suited
for the content of the journal. The reviewer will
then consider whether the research question is
important and original, a process which may be
aided by a literature scan of review articles.
Scientific papers submitted for peer review usu-
ally follow a specific structure that begins with
the title, followed by the abstract, introduction,
methodology, results, discussion, conclusions,
and references. The title must be descriptive
and include the concept and organism inves-
tigated, and potentially the variable manipu-
lated and the systems used in the study. The
peer reviewer evaluates if the title is descriptive
enough, and ensures that it is clear and concise.
A study by the National Association of Realtors
(NAR) published by the Oxford University Press
in 2006 indicated that the title of a manuscript
plays a significant role in determining reader in-
terest, as 72% of respondents said they could
usually judge whether an article will be of inter-
est to them based on the title and the author,
while 13% of respondents claimed to always be
able to do so (14).
35. The abstract is a summary of the paper, which
briefly mentions the background or purpose,
methods, key results, and major conclusions of
the study. The peer reviewer assesses whether
the abstract is sufficiently informative and if the
content of the abstract is consistent with the
rest of the paper. The NAR study indicated that
40% of respondents could determine whether
an article would be of interest to them based
on the abstract alone 60-80% of the time, while
32% could judge an article based on the ab-
stract 80-100% of the time (14). This demon-
strates that the abstract alone is often used to
assess the value of an article.
The introduction of a scientific paper presents
the research question in the context of what
is already known about the topic, in order to
identify why the question being studied is of
interest to the scientific community, and what
gap in knowledge the study aims to fill (15). The
introduction identifies the study’s purpose and
scope, briefly describes the general methods of
investigation, and outlines the hypothesis and
predictions (15). The peer reviewer determines
whether the introduction provides sufficient
background information on the research topic,
and ensures that the research question and hy-
pothesis are clearly identifiable.
The methods section describes the experimen-
tal procedures, and explains why each experi-
ment was conducted. The methods section also
includes the equipment and reagents used in
the investigation. The methods section should
36. be detailed enough that it can be used it to re-
peat the experiment (15). Methods are written
in the past tense and in the active voice. The
peer reviewer assesses whether the appropri-
ate methods were used to answer the research
question, and if they were written with suffi-
cient detail. If information is missing from the
methods section, it is the peer reviewer’s job to
identify what details need to be added.
The results section is where the outcomes of
the experiment and trends in the data are ex-
plained without judgement, bias or interpre-
tation (15). This section can include statistical
tests performed on the data, as well as figures
and tables in addition to the text. The peer re-
viewer ensures that the results are described
with sufficient detail, and determines their
credibility. Reviewers also confirm that the text
is consistent with the information presented in
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tables and figures, and that all figures and ta-
bles included are important and relevant (15).
The peer reviewer will also make sure that table
and figure captions are appropriate both con-
textually and in length, and that tables and fig-
ures present the data accurately.
37. The discussion section is where the data is an-
alyzed. Here, the results are interpreted and
related to past studies (15). The discussion
describes the meaning and significance of the
results in terms of the research question and
hypothesis, and states whether the hypothesis
was supported or rejected. This section may
also provide possible explanations for unusual
results and suggestions for future research (15).
The discussion should end with a conclusions
section that summarizes the major findings of
the investigation. The peer reviewer determines
whether the discussion is clear and focused,
and whether the conclusions are an appropri-
ate interpretation of the results. Reviewers also
ensure that the discussion addresses the limi-
tations of the study, any anomalies in the re-
sults, the relationship of the study to previous
research, and the theoretical implications and
practical applications of the study.
The references are found at the end of the pa-
per, and list all of the information sources cited
in the text to describe the background, meth-
ods, and/or interpret results. Depending on the
citation method used, the references are listed
in alphabetical order according to author last
name, or numbered according to the order in
which they appear in the paper. The peer re-
viewer ensures that references are used appro-
priately, cited accurately, formatted correctly,
and that none are missing.
Finally, the peer reviewer determines whether
the paper is clearly written and if the content
38. seems logical. After thoroughly reading through
the entire manuscript, they determine whether
it meets the journal’s standards for publication,
and whether it falls within the top 25% of papers
in its field (16) to determine priority for publica-
tion. An overview of what a peer reviewer looks
for when evaluating a manuscript, in order of
importance, is presented in Figure 2.
To increase the chance of success in the peer
review process, the author must ensure that
the paper fully complies with the journal guide-
lines before submission. The author must also
be open to criticism and suggested revisions,
and learn from mistakes made in previous
submissions.
ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES OF
THE DIFFERENT TYPES OF PEER REVIEW
The peer review process is generally conducted
in one of three ways: open review, single-blind
review, or double-blind review. In an open re-
view, both the author of the paper and the peer
reviewer know one another’s identity. Alter-
natively, in single-blind review, the reviewer’s
identity is kept private, but the author’s iden-
tity is revealed to the reviewer. In double-blind
review, the identities of both the reviewer and
author are kept anonymous. Open peer review
is advantageous in that it prevents the reviewer
from leaving malicious comments, being care-
less, or procrastinating completion of the re-
view (2). It encourages reviewers to be open
and honest without being disrespectful. Open
39. reviewing also discourages plagiarism amongst
authors (2). On the other hand, open peer re-
view can also prevent reviewers from being
honest for fear of developing bad rapport with
the author. The reviewer may withhold or tone
down their criticisms in order to be polite (2).
This is especially true when younger review-
ers are given a more esteemed author’s work,
in which case the reviewer may be hesitant to
provide criticism for fear that it will damper
their relationship with a superior (2). Accord-
ing to the Sense About Science survey, editors
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find that completely open reviewing decreases
the number of people willing to participate, and
leads to reviews of little value (12). In the afore-
mentioned study by the PRC, only 23% of au-
thors surveyed had experience with open peer
review (7).
Single-blind peer review is by far the most com-
mon. In the PRC study, 85% of authors surveyed
had experience with single-blind peer review (7).
This method is advantageous as the reviewer is
more likely to provide honest feedback when
their identity is concealed (2). This allows the
reviewer to make independent decisions with-
40. out the influence of the author (2). The main
disadvantage of reviewer anonymity, howev-
er, is that reviewers who receive manuscripts
on subjects similar to their own research may
be tempted to delay completing the review in
order to publish their own data first (2).
Double-blind peer review is advantageous as
it prevents the reviewer from being biased
against the author based on their country of
origin or previous work (2). This allows the pa-
per to be judged based on the quality of the
content, rather than the reputation of the au-
thor. The Sense About Science survey indicates
that 76% of researchers think double-blind
peer review is a good idea (12), and the PRC
survey indicates that 45% of authors have had
experience with double-blind peer review (7).
The disadvantage of double-blind peer review
is that, especially in niche areas of research,
it can sometimes be easy for the reviewer to
determine the identity of the author based on
Figure 2 How a peer review evaluates a manuscript
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writing style, subject matter or self-citation,
41. and thus, impart bias (2).
Masking the author’s identity from peer review-
ers, as is the case in double-blind review, is gen-
erally thought to minimize bias and maintain
review quality. A study by Justice et al. in 1998
investigated whether masking author identity
affected the quality of the review (17). One hun-
dred and eighteen manuscripts were random-
ized; 26 were peer reviewed as normal, and 92
were moved into the ‘intervention’ arm, where
editor quality assessments were completed for
77 manuscripts and author quality assessments
were completed for 40 manuscripts (17). There
was no perceived difference in quality between
the masked and unmasked reviews. Addition-
ally, the masking itself was often unsuccessful,
especially with well-known authors (17). How-
ever, a previous study conducted by McNutt et
al. had different results (18). In this case, blind-
ing was successful 73% of the time, and they
found that when author identity was masked,
the quality of review was slightly higher (18).
Although Justice et al. argued that this differ-
ence was too small to be consequential, their
study targeted only biomedical journals, and
the results cannot be generalized to journals
of a different subject matter (17). Additionally,
there were problems masking the identities of
well-known authors, introducing a flaw in the
methods. Regardless, Justice et al. concluded
that masking author identity from reviewers
may not improve review quality (17).
In addition to open, single-blind and double-
blind peer review, there are two experimental
42. forms of peer review. In some cases, following
publication, papers may be subjected to post-
publication peer review. As many papers are
now published online, the scientific commu-
nity has the opportunity to comment on these
papers, engage in online discussions and post
a formal review. For example, online publish-
ers PLOS and BioMed Central have enabled
scientists to post comments on published pa-
pers if they are registered users of the site (10).
Philica is another journal launched with this ex-
perimental form of peer review. Only 8% of au-
thors surveyed in the PRC study had experience
with post-publication review (7). Another ex-
perimental form of peer review called Dynamic
Peer Review has also emerged. Dynamic peer
review is conducted on websites such as Naboj,
which allow scientists to conduct peer reviews
on articles in the preprint media (19). The peer
review is conducted on repositories and is a
continuous process, which allows the public
to see both the article and the reviews as the
article is being developed (19). Dynamic peer
review helps prevent plagiarism as the scien-
tific community will already be familiar with the
work before the peer reviewed version appears
in print (19). Dynamic review also reduces the
time lag between manuscript submission and
publishing. An example of a preprint server is
the ‘arXiv’ developed by Paul Ginsparg in 1991,
which is used primarily by physicists (19). These
alternative forms of peer review are still un-
established and experimental. Traditional peer
review is time-tested and still highly utilized. All
methods of peer review have their advantages
43. and deficiencies, and all are prone to error.
PEER REVIEW OF OPEN ACCESS JOURNALS
Open access (OA) journals are becoming in-
creasingly popular as they allow the potential
for widespread distribution of publications in
a timely manner (20). Nevertheless, there can
be issues regarding the peer review process
of open access journals. In a study published
in Science in 2013, John Bohannon submitted
304 slightly different versions of a fictional sci -
entific paper (written by a fake author, working
out of a non-existent institution) to a selected
group of OA journals. This study was performed
in order to determine whether papers sub-
mitted to OA journals are properly reviewed
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before publication in comparison to subscrip-
tion-based journals. The journals in this study
were selected from the Directory of Open Ac-
cess Journals (DOAJ) and Biall’s List, a list of
journals which are potentially predatory, and
all required a fee for publishing (21). Of the 304
journals, 157 accepted a fake paper, suggesting
that acceptance was based on financial interest
rather than the quality of article itself, while 98
44. journals promptly rejected the fakes (21). Al-
though this study highlights useful information
on the problems associated with lower quality
publishers that do not have an effective peer
review system in place, the article also general-
izes the study results to all OA journals, which
can be detrimental to the general perception of
OA journals. There were two limitations of the
study that made it impossible to accurately de-
termine the relationship between peer review
and OA journals: 1) there was no control group
(subscription-based journals), and 2) the fake
papers were sent to a non-randomized selec-
tion of journals, resulting in bias.
JOURNAL ACCEPTANCE RATES
Based on a recent survey, the average accep-
tance rate for papers submitted to scientific
journals is about 50% (7). Twenty percent of the
submitted manuscripts that are not accepted
are rejected prior to review, and 30% are reject-
ed following review (7). Of the 50% accepted,
41% are accepted with the condition of revi-
sion, while only 9% are accepted without the
request for revision (7).
SATISFACTION WITH THE
PEER REVIEW SYSTEM
Based on a recent survey by the PRC, 64% of ac-
ademics are satisfied with the current system of
peer review, and only 12% claimed to be ‘dissat-
isfied’ (7). The large majority, 85%, agreed with
the statement that ‘scientific communication is
45. greatly helped by peer review’ (7). There was a
similarly high level of support (83%) for the idea
that peer review ‘provides control in scientific
communication’ (7).
HOW TO PEER REVIEW EFFECTIVELY
The following are ten tips on how to be an effec-
tive peer reviewer as indicated by Brian Lucey,
an expert on the subject (22):
1) Be professional
Peer review is a mutual responsibility among
fellow scientists, and scientists are expected, as
part of the academic community, to take part in
peer review. If one is to expect others to review
their work, they should commit to reviewing
the work of others as well, and put effort into it.
2) Be pleasant
If the paper is of low quality, suggest that it be
rejected, but do not leave ad homine m com-
ments. There is no benefit to being ruthless.
3) Read the invite
When emailing a scientist to ask them to con-
duct a peer review, the majority of journals will
provide a link to either accept or reject. Do not
respond to the email, respond to the link.
4) Be helpful
Suggest how the authors can overcome the
46. shortcomings in their paper. A review should
guide the author on what is good and what
needs work from the reviewer’s perspective.
5) Be scientific
The peer reviewer plays the role of a scientific
peer, not an editor for proofreading or decision-
making. Don’t fill a review with comments on
editorial and typographic issues. Instead, focus
on adding value with scientific knowledge and
commenting on the credibility of the research
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conducted and conclusions drawn. If the paper
has a lot of typographical errors, suggest that
it be professionally proof edited as part of the
review.
6) Be timely
Stick to the timeline given when conducting a
peer review. Editors track who is reviewing what
and when and will know if someone is late on
completing a review. It is important to be timely
both out of respect for the journal and the au-
thor, as well as to not develop a reputation of
being late for review deadlines.
47. 7) Be realistic
The peer reviewer must be realistic about the
work presented, the changes they suggest and
their role. Peer reviewers may set the bar too
high for the paper they are editing by propos-
ing changes that are too ambitious and editors
must override them.
8) Be empathetic
Ensure that the review is scientific, helpful and
courteous. Be sensitive and respectful with
word choice and tone in a review.
9) Be open
Remember that both specialists and generalists
can provide valuable insight when peer review-
ing. Editors will try to get both specialised and
general reviewers for any particular paper to
allow for different perspectives. If someone is
asked to review, the editor has determined they
have a valid and useful role to play, even if the
paper is not in their area of expertise.
10) Be organised
A review requires structure and logical flow.
A reviewer should proofread their review be-
fore submitting it for structural, grammatical
and spelling errors as well as for clarity. Most
publishers provide short guides on structuring
a peer review on their website. Begin with an
48. overview of the proposed improvements; then
provide feedback on the paper structure, the
quality of data sources and methods of inves-
tigation used, the logical flow of argument, and
the validity of conclusions drawn. Then provide
feedback on style, voice and lexical concerns,
with suggestions on how to improve.
In addition, the American Physiology Society
(APS) recommends in its Peer Review 101 Hand-
out that peer reviewers should put themselves
in both the editor’s and author’s shoes to en-
sure that they provide what both the editor
and the author need and expect (11). To please
the editor, the reviewer should ensure that the
peer review is completed on time, and that it
provides clear explanations to back up recom-
mendations. To be helpful to the author, the re-
viewer must ensure that their feedback is con-
structive. It is suggested that the reviewer take
time to think about the paper; they should read
it once, wait at least a day, and then re-read
it before writing the review (11). The APS also
suggests that Graduate students and research-
ers pay attention to how peer reviewers edit
their work, as well as to what edits they find
helpful, in order to learn how to peer review ef-
fectively (11). Additionally, it is suggested that
Graduate students practice reviewing by editing
their peers’ papers and asking a faculty member
for feedback on their efforts. It is recommend-
ed that young scientists offer to peer review as
often as possible in order to become skilled at
the process (11). The majority of students, fel-
lows and trainees do not get formal training in
peer review, but rather learn by observing their
49. mentors. According to the APS, one acquires ex-
perience through networking and referrals, and
should therefore try to strengthe n relationships
with journal editors by offering to review manu-
scripts (11). The APS also suggests that experi-
enced reviewers provide constructive feedback
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to students and junior colleagues on their peer
review efforts, and encourages them to peer
review to demonstrate the importance of this
process in improving science (11).
The peer reviewer should only comment on ar-
eas of the manuscript that they are knowledge-
able about (23). If there is any section of the
manuscript they feel they are not qualified to
review, they should mention this in their com-
ments and not provide further feedback on
that section. The peer reviewer is not permit-
ted to share any part of the manuscript with
a colleague (even if they may be more knowl-
edgeable in the subject matter) without first
obtaining permission from the editor (23). If a
peer reviewer comes across something they are
unsure of in the paper, they can consult the lit-
erature to try and gain insight. It is important
for scientists to remember that if a paper can
50. be improved by the expertise of one of their
colleagues, the journal must be informed of
the colleague’s help, and approval must be ob-
tained for their colleague to read the protected
document. Additionally, the colleague must be
identified in the confidential comments to the
editor, in order to ensure that he/she is appro-
priately credited for any contributions (23). It is
the job of the reviewer to make sure that the
colleague assisting is aware of the confidenti-
ality of the peer review process (23). Once the
review is complete, the manuscript must be de-
stroyed and cannot be saved electronically by
the reviewers (23).
COMMON ERRORS IN SCIENTIFIC PAPERS
When performing a peer review, there are
some common scientific errors to look out for.
Most of these errors are violations of logic and
common sense: these may include contradict-
ing statements, unwarranted conclusions, sug-
gestion of causation when there is only support
for correlation, inappropriate extrapolation,
circular reasoning, or pursuit of a trivial ques-
tion (24). It is also common for authors to sug-
gest that two variables are different because
the effects of one variable are statistically sig-
nificant while the effects of the other variable
are not, rather than directly comparing the two
variables (24). Authors sometimes oversee a
confounding variable and do not control for it,
or forget to include important details on how
their experiments were controlled or the physi-
cal state of the organisms studied (24). Another
51. common fault is the author’s failure to define
terms or use words with precision, as these
practices can mislead readers (24). Jargon and/
or misused terms can be a serious problem in
papers. Inaccurate statements about specific
citations are also a common occurrence (24).
Additionally, many studies produce knowledge
that can be applied to areas of science outside
the scope of the original study, therefore it is
better for reviewers to look at the novelty of
the idea, conclusions, data, and methodology,
rather than scrutinize whether or not the paper
answered the specific question at hand (24). Al-
though it is important to recognize these points,
when performing a review it is generally better
practice for the peer reviewer to not focus on
a checklist of things that could be wrong, but
rather carefully identify the problems specific to
each paper and continuously ask themselves if
anything is missing (24). An extremely detailed
description of how to conduct peer review ef-
fectively is presented in the paper How I Review
an Original Scientific Article written by Frederic
G. Hoppin, Jr. It can be accessed through the
American Physiological Society website under
the Peer Review Resources section.
CRITICISM OF PEER REVIEW
A major criticism of peer review is that there is
little evidence that the process actually works,
that it is actually an effective screen for good
quality scientific work, and that it actually
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Peer review in scientific publications: benefits, critiques, & a
survival guide
improves the quality of scientific literature. As
a 2002 study published in the Journal of the
American Medical Association concluded, ‘Edito-
rial peer review, although widely used, is largely
untested and its effects are uncertain’ (25). Crit-
ics also argue that peer review is not effective
at detecting errors. Highlighting this point, an
experiment by Godlee et al. published in the
British Medical Journal (BMJ) inserted eight
deliberate errors into a paper that was nearly
ready for publication, and then sent the pa-
per to 420 potential reviewers (7). Of the 420
reviewers that received the paper, 221 (53%)
responded, the average number of errors spot-
ted by reviewers was two, no reviewer spotted
more than five errors, and 35 reviewers (16%)
did not spot any.
Another criticism of peer review is that the pro-
cess is not conducted thoroughly by scientific
conferences with the goal of obtaining large
numbers of submitted papers. Such conferenc-
es often accept any paper sent in, regardless of
its credibility or the prevalence of errors, be-
cause the more papers they accept, the more
money they can make from author registration
fees (26). This misconduct was exposed in 2014
by three MIT graduate students by the names
of Jeremy Stribling, Dan Aguayo and Maxwell
53. Krohn, who developed a simple computer pro-
gram called SCIgen that generates nonsense
papers and presents them as scientific papers
(26). Subsequently, a nonsense SCIgen paper
submitted to a conference was promptly ac-
cepted. Nature recently reported that French
researcher Cyril Labbé discovered that sixteen
SCIgen nonsense papers had been used by
the German academic publisher Springer (26).
Over 100 nonsense papers generated by SCIgen
were published by the US Institute of Electrical
and Electronic Engineers (IEEE) (26). Both or-
ganisations have been working to remove the
papers. Labbé developed a program to detect
SCIgen papers and has made it freely available
to ensure publishers and conference organizers
do not accept nonsense work in the future. It
is available at this link: http://scigendetection.
imag.fr/main.php (26).
Additionally, peer review is often criticized for
being unable to accurately detect plagiarism.
However, many believe that detecting plagia-
rism cannot practically be included as a com-
ponent of peer review. As explained by Alice
Tuff, development manager at Sense About
Science, ‘The vast majority of authors and re-
viewers think peer review should detect plagia-
rism (81%) but only a minority (38%) think it is
capable. The academic time involved in detect-
ing plagiarism through peer review would cause
the system to grind to a halt’ (27). Publishing
house Elsevier began developing electronic pla-
giarism tools with the help of journal editors in
2009 to help improve this issue (27).
54. It has also been argued that peer review has
lowered research quality by limiting creativity
amongst researchers. Proponents of this view
claim that peer review has repressed scientists
from pursuing innovative research ideas and
bold research questions that have the potential
to make major advances and paradigm shifts in
the field, as they believe that this work will like-
ly be rejected by their peers upon review (28).
Indeed, in some cases peer review may result in
rejection of innovative research, as some stud-
ies may not seem particularly strong initially, yet
may be capable of yielding very interesting and
useful developments when examined under dif-
ferent circumstances, or in the light of new in-
formation (28). Scientists that do not believe in
peer review argue that the process stifles the
development of ingenious ideas, and thus the
release of fresh knowledge and new develop-
ments into the scientific community.
Another issue that peer review is criticized for,
is that there are a limited number of people
that are competent to conduct peer review
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55. compared to the vast number of papers that
need reviewing. An enormous number of pa-
pers published (1.3 million papers in 23,750
journals in 2006), but the number of compe-
tent peer reviewers available could not have
reviewed them all (29). Thus, people who lack
the required expertise to analyze the quality of
a research paper are conducting reviews, and
weak papers are being accepted as a result. It
is now possible to publish any paper in an ob-
scure journal that claims to be peer-reviewed,
though the paper or journal itself could be sub-
standard (29). On a similar note, the US Nation-
al Library of Medicine indexes 39 journals that
specialize in alternative medicine, and though
they all identify themselves as “peer-reviewed”,
they rarely publish any high quality research
(29). This highlights the fact that peer review of
more controversial or specialized work is typi-
cally performed by people who are interested
and hold similar views or opinions as the au-
thor, which can cause bias in their review. For
instance, a paper on homeopathy is likely to be
reviewed by fellow practicing homeopaths, and
thus is likely to be accepted as credible, though
other scientists may find the paper to be non-
sense (29). In some cases, papers are initially
published, but their credibility is challenged at
a later date and they are subsequently retract-
ed. Retraction Watch is a website dedicated to
revealing papers that have been retracted after
publishing, potentially due to improper peer re-
view (30).
Additionally, despite its many positive out-
56. comes, peer review is also criticized for being
a delay to the dissemination of new knowledge
into the scientific community, and as an unpaid-
activity that takes scientists’ time away from
activities that they would otherwise prioritize,
such as research and teaching, for which they
are paid (31). As described by Eva Amsen, Out-
reach Director for F1000Research, peer review
was originally developed as a means of helping
editors choose which papers to publish when
journals had to limit the number of papers they
could print in one issue (32). However, nowadays
most journals are available online, either ex-
clusively or in addition to print, and many jour-
nals have very limited printing runs (32). Since
there are no longer page limits to journals, any
good work can and should be published. Con-
sequently, being selective for the purpose of
saving space in a journal is no longer a valid
excuse that peer reviewers can use to reject
a paper (32). However, some reviewers have
used this excuse when they have personal ulte-
rior motives, such as getting their own research
published first.
RECENT INITIATIVES TOWARDS
IMPROVING PEER REVIEW
F1000Research was launched in January 2013
by Faculty of 1000 as an open access journal
that immediately publishes papers (after an
initial check to ensure that the paper is in fact
produced by a scientist and has not been pla-
giarised), and then conducts transparent post-
publication peer review (32). F1000Research
57. aims to prevent delays in new science reaching
the academic community that are caused by
prolonged publication times (32). It also aims to
make peer reviewing more fair by eliminating
any anonymity, which prevents reviewers from
delaying the completion of a review so they
can publish their own similar work first (32).
F1000Research offers completely open peer re-
view, where everything is published, including
the name of the reviewers, their review reports,
and the editorial decision letters (32).
PeerJ was founded by Jason Hoyt and Peter Bin-
field in June 2012 as an open access, peer re-
viewed scholarly journal for the Biological and
Medical Sciences (33). PeerJ selects articles to
publish based only on scientific and methodolog-
ical soundness, not on subjective determinants
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nals&term=Complementary%20Therapies%5bst%5d
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nals&term=Complementary%20Therapies%5bst%5d
Jacalyn Kelly, Tara Sadeghieh, Khosrow Adeli
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of ‘impact,’ ‘novelty’ or ‘interest’ (34). It works
on a “lifetime publishing plan” model which
charges scientists for publishing plans that give
them lifetime rights to publish with PeerJ, rather
58. than charging them per publication (34). PeerJ
also encourages open peer review, and authors
are given the option to post the full peer review
history of their submission with their published
article (34). PeerJ also offers a pre-print review
service called PeerJ Pre-prints, in which paper
drafts are reviewed before being sent to PeerJ
to publish (34).
Rubriq is an independent peer review service
designed by Shashi Mudunuri and Keith Collier
to improve the peer review system (35). Rubriq
is intended to decrease redundancy in the peer
review process so that the time lost in redundant
reviewing can be put back into research (35). Ac-
cording to Keith Collier, over 15 million hours are
lost each year to redundant peer review, as pa-
pers get rejected from one journal and are sub-
sequently submitted to a less prestigious journal
where they are reviewed again (35). Authors of-
ten have to submit their manuscript to multiple
journals, and are often rejected multiple times
before they find the right match. This process
could take months or even years (35). Rubriq
makes peer review portable in order to help
authors choose the journal that is best suited
for their manuscript from the beginning, thus
reducing the time before their paper is pub-
lished (35). Rubriq operates under an author-
pay model, in which the author pays a fee and
their manuscript undergoes double-blind peer
review by three expert academic reviewers us-
ing a standardized scorecard (35). The major-
ity of the author’s fee goes towards a reviewer
honorarium (35). The papers are also screened
for plagiarism using iThenticate (35). Once the
59. manuscript has been reviewed by the three ex-
perts, the most appropriate journal for submis-
sion is determined based on the topic and qual-
ity of the paper (35). The paper is returned to
the author in 1-2 weeks with the Rubriq Report
(35). The author can then submit their paper to
the suggested journal with the Rubriq Report
attached. The Rubriq Report will give the jour-
nal editors a much stronger incentive to con-
sider the paper as it shows that three experts
have recommended the paper to them (35).
Rubriq also has its benefits for reviewers; the
Rubriq scorecard gives structure to the peer re-
view process, and thus makes it consistent and
efficient, which decreases time and stress for
the reviewer. Reviewers also receive feedback
on their reviews and most significantly, they
are compensated for their time (35). Journals
also benefit, as they receive pre-screened pa-
pers, reducing the number of papers sent to
their own reviewers, which often end up re-
jected (35). This can reduce reviewer fatigue,
and allow only higher-quality articles to be sent
to their peer reviewers (35).
According to Eva Amsen, peer review and sci-
entific publishing are moving in a new direc-
tion, in which all papers will be posted online,
and a post-publication peer review will take
place that is independent of specific journal
criteria and solely focused on improving paper
quality (32). Journals will then choose papers
that they find relevant based on the peer re-
views and publish those papers as a collection
(32). In this process, peer review and individual
60. journals are uncoupled (32). In Keith Collier’s
opinion, post-publication peer review is likely
to become more prevalent as a complement
to pre-publication peer review, but not as a re-
placement (35). Post-publication peer review
will not serve to identify errors and fraud but
will provide an additional measurement of im-
pact (35). Collier also believes that as journals
and publishers consolidate into larger systems,
there will be stronger potential for “cascading”
and shared peer review (35).
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CONCLUDING REMARKS
Peer review has become fundamental in assist-
ing editors in selecting credible, high quality,
novel and interesting research papers to pub-
lish in scientific journals and to ensure the cor-
rection of any errors or issues present in sub-
mitted papers. Though the peer review process
still has some flaws and deficiencies, a more
suitable screening method for scientific papers
has not yet been proposed or developed. Re-
searchers have begun and must continue to
look for means of addressing the current issues
with peer review to ensure that it is a full-proof
system that ensures only quality research pa-
61. pers are released into the scientific community.
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