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In the United States, the prevalence of pediatric obesity has increased to 17% in the general population and even more so in the Hispanic pediatric population to 22.4%. These children are at a higher risk for associated comorbidities, including cardiovascular disease and insulin resistance. The purpose of the following study

In the United States, the prevalence of pediatric obesity has increased to 17% in the general population and even more so in the Hispanic pediatric population to 22.4%. These children are at a higher risk for associated comorbidities, including cardiovascular disease and insulin resistance. The purpose of the following study is to determine the effectiveness of the Nutrition and Health Awareness curriculum at reducing childhood obesity by evaluating alterations in the gut microbial composition, diet, and overall health of the students throughout the five-week program. Nutrition and Health Awareness (NHA) is a student organization that strives to reduce the prevalence of obesity, diabetes, and cardiovascular diseases, specifically in children, by providing active nutrition education services through peer mentoring in elementary schools and community programs. This study went through ASU's Institutional Review Board process and all forms were translated into Spanish. The control group maintained their normal routines and the experimental group received the 5 week NHA program and then continued with their normal routines. Anthropometric measures (Body Mass Index, waist-to-hip ratio, and blood pressure), diet measures (Hispanic food frequency questionnaire), fecal swabs, and content surveys were collected on weeks 0, 5, and 8. Contrary to expected, alpha diversity, kilocalorie intake, and macronutrient intake decreased as the study progressed for both the control and experimental groups. Anthropometric measurements were relatively stable. Though not statistically significant, the greatest difference in time points is between weeks 1 and 8. This decrease in alpha diversity and kilocalorie intake could be due to a change in environment since the children started school on week 8. Future implications of this study are that parental involvement is necessary for an effective, sustainable change in these children. More research in different settings is necessary to determine NHA's effectiveness
ContributorsPatel, Kapila Cristina (Author) / Krajmalnik-Brown, Rosa (Thesis director) / Whisner, Corrie (Committee member) / School of Nutrition and Health Promotion (Contributor) / School of Life Sciences (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2016-05
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Microorganisms can produce metabolites in the gut including short chain fatty acids, vitamins, and amino acids. Certain metabolites produced in the gut can affect the brain through changes in neurotransmitter concentrations. Serotonin, a neurotransmitter, is associated with mood, appetite, and sleep. Up to 90% of serotonin synthesis

Microorganisms can produce metabolites in the gut including short chain fatty acids, vitamins, and amino acids. Certain metabolites produced in the gut can affect the brain through changes in neurotransmitter concentrations. Serotonin, a neurotransmitter, is associated with mood, appetite, and sleep. Up to 90% of serotonin synthesis is located in the gut, by human enterochromaffin cells. Bacteria known to biosynthesize tryptophan, precursor to serotonin, include Escherichia coli, Enterococcus and Streptococcus. Tryptophan is synthesized by bacteria with the enzyme tryptophan synthase and requires Vitamin B6 (Pyridoxal). We hypothesize that gut isolates from surgical weight loss patients can enhance tryptophan production, which relies on vitamin B6 availability. Our goal was to isolate bacteria in order to test for tryptophan production and to determine how Vitamin B6 concentrations could affect tryptophan production. We isolated gut bacteria was from successful surgical weight loss patient with selective pressures for Enterobacter isolates and Enterococcus isolates. We tested the isolates were tested to determine if they could biosynthesize tryptophan in-vitro. Bacterial cultures were enriched with yeast and enriched with serine and indole, substrates necessary for tryptophan biosynthesis. We analyzed the supernatant samples for tryptophan production using GC-FID. Bacterial isolates most closely related to E. coli and Klebsiella based on 16S rRNA gene sequences, produced tryptophan in vitro. While under serine & indole media conditions, R1, the isolate most similar to Klebsiella produced more tryptophan than R14, the isolate most similar to E. coli. We tested the R1 isolate with a gradient of vitamin B6 concentrations from 0.02 µg/mL to 0.2 µg/mL to determine its effect on tryptophan production. When less than 0.05 µg/mL of Vitamin B6 was added, tryptophan production at 6 hours was higher than tryptophan production with Vitamin B6 concentrations at 0.05 µg/mL and above. The production and consumption of tryptophan by Klebsiella under 0 µg/mL and 0.02 µg/mL concentrations of Vitamin B6 occurred at a faster rate when compared to concentrations 0.05 µg/mL or higher of Vitamin B6.
ContributorsYee, Emily L. (Author) / Krajmalnik-Brown, Rosa (Thesis director) / Ilhan, Zehra (Committee member) / W. P. Carey School of Business (Contributor) / School of Life Sciences (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2016-05
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The dissertation focuses on several Romanian avant-garde magazines, such as Contimporanul, Integral, and 75HP, that Romanian artists and writers created in Romania in the 1920s, after Romanian Dadaists Tristan Tzara and Marcel Iancu disbanded from Zurich Dada in the 1910s. The Romanian avant-garde magazines launched the Romanian avant-garde movement—the most

The dissertation focuses on several Romanian avant-garde magazines, such as Contimporanul, Integral, and 75HP, that Romanian artists and writers created in Romania in the 1920s, after Romanian Dadaists Tristan Tzara and Marcel Iancu disbanded from Zurich Dada in the 1910s. The Romanian avant-garde magazines launched the Romanian avant-garde movement—the most intense period of artistic production in the country. The Romanian avant-gardists established Integralism in an attempt to differentiate themselves from other European avant-garde groups and to capture the intense and innovative creative spirit of their modern era by uniting and condensing avant-garde and modern styles on the pages of their magazines. However, I argue that instead of Integralism, what the Romanian avant-garde magazines put forth were Romanian avant-garde versions of Constructivism and Cubism conveyed in the magazines’ constructivist prints and reproductions of cubist paintings. The originality of the Romanian avant-garde magazines, thus, is concentrated in their appropriation and reinterpretation of Constructivism and Cubism rather than in their Integralism. Moreover, in their rebellion and resistance to Romania’s social, political, and artistic status quo, the Romanian avant-garde magazines functioned as an instrument with which the Romanian avant-gardists expressed their complex relationship with their Jewish identity. The magazines were not on the periphery of artistic production, as art history discourse on modern and avant-garde art has situated them, but were an important player in the global network of avant-garde magazines that traversed across eastern and western Europe, South America, the United States, and Japan.
ContributorsMiholca, Amelia (Author) / Mesch, Claudia (Thesis advisor) / Orlich, Ileana (Committee member) / Holian, Anna (Committee member) / Navarro, Rudy (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
Under current climate conditions northern peatlands mostly act as C sinks; however, changes in climate and environmental conditions, can change the soil carbon decomposition cascade, thus altering the sink status. Here I studied one of the most abundant northern peatland types, poor fen, situated along a climate gradient from tundra

Under current climate conditions northern peatlands mostly act as C sinks; however, changes in climate and environmental conditions, can change the soil carbon decomposition cascade, thus altering the sink status. Here I studied one of the most abundant northern peatland types, poor fen, situated along a climate gradient from tundra (Daring Lake, Canada) to boreal forest (Lutose, Canada) to temperate broadleaf and mixed forest (Bog Lake, MN and Chicago Bog, NY) biomes to assess patterns of microbial abundance across the climate gradient. Principal component regression analysis of the microbial community and environmental variables determined that mean annual temperature (MAT) (r2=0.85), mean annual precipitation (MAP) (r2=0.88), and soil temperature (r2=0.77), were the top significant drivers of microbial community composition (p < 0.001). Niche breadth analysis revealed the relative abundance of Intrasporangiaceae, Methanobacteriaceae and Candidatus Methanoflorentaceae fam. nov. to increase when MAT and MAP decrease. The same analysis showed Spirochaetaceae, Methanosaetaceae and Methanoregulaceae to increase in relative abundance when MAP, soil temperature and MAT increased, respectively. These findings indicated that climate variables were the strongest predictors of microbial community composition and that certain taxa, especially methanogenic families demonstrate distinct patterns across the climate gradient. To evaluate microbial production of methanogenic substrates, I carried out High Resolution-DNA-Stable Isotope Probing (HR-DNA-SIP) to evaluate the active portion of the community’s intermediary ecosystem metabolic processes. HR-DNA-SIP revealed several challenges in efficiency of labelling and statistical identification of responders, however families like Veillonellaceae, Magnetospirillaceae, Acidobacteriaceae 1, were found ubiquitously active in glucose amended incubations. Differences in metabolic byproducts from glucose amendments show distinct patterns in acetate and propionate accumulation across sites. Families like Spirochaetaceae and Sphingomonadaceae were only found to be active in select sites of propionate amended incubations. By-product analysis from propionate incubations indicate that the northernmost sites were acetate-accumulating communities. These results indicate that microbial communities found in poor fen northern peatlands are strongly influenced by climate variables predicted to change under current climate scenarios. I have identified patterns of relative abundance and activity of select microbial taxa, indicating the potential for climate variables to influence the metabolic pathway in which carbon moves through peatland systems.
ContributorsSarno, Analissa Flores (Author) / Cadillo-Quiroz, Hinsby (Thesis advisor) / Garcia-Pichel, Ferran (Committee member) / Krajmalnik-Brown, Rosa (Committee member) / Childers, Daniel (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Traditional Reinforcement Learning (RL) assumes to learn policies with respect to reward available from the environment but sometimes learning in a complex domain requires wisdom which comes from a wide range of experience. In behavior based robotics, it is observed that a complex behavior can be described by a combination

Traditional Reinforcement Learning (RL) assumes to learn policies with respect to reward available from the environment but sometimes learning in a complex domain requires wisdom which comes from a wide range of experience. In behavior based robotics, it is observed that a complex behavior can be described by a combination of simpler behaviors. It is tempting to apply similar idea such that simpler behaviors can be combined in a meaningful way to tailor the complex combination. Such an approach would enable faster learning and modular design of behaviors. Complex behaviors can be combined with other behaviors to create even more advanced behaviors resulting in a rich set of possibilities. Similar to RL, combined behavior can keep evolving by interacting with the environment. The requirement of this method is to specify a reasonable set of simple behaviors. In this research, I present an algorithm that aims at combining behavior such that the resulting behavior has characteristics of each individual behavior. This approach has been inspired by behavior based robotics, such as the subsumption architecture and motor schema-based design. The combination algorithm outputs n weights to combine behaviors linearly. The weights are state dependent and change dynamically at every step in an episode. This idea is tested on discrete and continuous environments like OpenAI’s “Lunar Lander” and “Biped Walker”. Results are compared with related domains like Multi-objective RL, Hierarchical RL, Transfer learning, and basic RL. It is observed that the combination of behaviors is a novel way of learning which helps the agent achieve required characteristics. A combination is learned for a given state and so the agent is able to learn faster in an efficient manner compared to other similar approaches. Agent beautifully demonstrates characteristics of multiple behaviors which helps the agent to learn and adapt to the environment. Future directions are also suggested as possible extensions to this research.
ContributorsVora, Kevin Jatin (Author) / Zhang, Yu (Thesis advisor) / Yang, Yezhou (Committee member) / Praharaj, Sarbeswar (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description

Widespread use of halogenated organic compounds for commercial and industrial purposes makes halogenated organic pollutants (HOPs) a global challenge for environmental quality. Current wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) are successful at reducing chemical oxygen demand (COD), but the removal of HOPs often is poor. Since HOPs are xenobiotics, the biodegradation of

Widespread use of halogenated organic compounds for commercial and industrial purposes makes halogenated organic pollutants (HOPs) a global challenge for environmental quality. Current wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) are successful at reducing chemical oxygen demand (COD), but the removal of HOPs often is poor. Since HOPs are xenobiotics, the biodegradation of HOPs is usually limited in the WWTPs. The current methods for HOPs treatments (e.g., chemical, photochemical, electrochemical, and biological methods) do have their limitations for practical applications. Therefore, a combination of catalytic and biological treatment methods may overcome the challenges of HOPs removal.This dissertation investigated a novel catalytic and biological synergistic platform to treat HOPs. 4-chlorophenol (4-CP) and halogenated herbicides were used as model pollutants for the HOPs removal tests. The biological part of experiments documented successful co-oxidation of HOPs and analog non-halogenated organic pollutants (OPs) (as the primary substrates) in the continuous operation of O2-based membrane biofilm reactor (O2-MBfR). In the first stage of the synergistic platform, HOPs were reductively dehalogenated to less toxic and more biodegradable OPs during continuous operation of a H2-based membrane catalytic-film reactor (H2-MCfR). The synergistic platform experiments demonstrated that OPs generated in the H2-MCfR were used as the primary substrates to support the co-oxidation of HOPs in the subsequent O2-MBfR. Once at least 90% conversation of HOPs to OPs was achieved in the H2-MCfR, the products (OPs to HOPs mole ratio >9) in the effluent could be completely mineralized through co-oxidation in O2-MBfR. By using H2 gas as the primary substrate, instead adding the analog OP, the synergistic platform greatly reduced chemical costs and carbon-dioxide emissions during HOPs co-oxidation.

ContributorsLuo, Yihao (Author) / Rittmann, Bruce (Thesis advisor) / Krajmalnik-Brown, Rosa (Committee member) / Torres, Cesar (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
The Hong Kong-born Canadian photographer and performance artist Tseng Kwong Chi mostly worked in the United States until the year he died in 1990. Upon arriving in New York in 1979, he started his career with a new name. By dropping his anglicized name Joseph and replacing it with his

The Hong Kong-born Canadian photographer and performance artist Tseng Kwong Chi mostly worked in the United States until the year he died in 1990. Upon arriving in New York in 1979, he started his career with a new name. By dropping his anglicized name Joseph and replacing it with his Chinese given name Kwong Chi, Tseng made a clear statement: this is my staged persona who refuses to assimilate to Western culture. This thesis deconstructs Tseng’s key works, including his party-crashing Met series, the decade-long East Meets West series, and the extended Expeditionary series. With his persona disguised by wearing a Mao suit and a pair of sunglasses, I argue that Tseng was a pioneer in the genre of Asian American performance photography and that his work foreshadowed the cultural jamming movement in his innovative use of détournement while it also critically comments on orientalism, cultural fetish, and Asian identity politics. Additionally, Tseng’s work served as a bridge, connecting art history with issues of Asian American identity. As a gay artist who worked mostly in the United States, his work was an early example of what Jachinson Chan has suggested as an alternative model of masculinity for Asian American men: that Asian American men can be free, independent, expressive, and willing to embrace femininity with their masculinity. As David Eng has argued, Tseng also bridged the fields of Asian American queer studies and diaspora studies. Moreover, Tseng carried the legacy of the first-generation Chinese American artists in the medium of photography and inspired the next generation of diasporic artists to explore Asian identity, and to contest the image of Mao and the power dynamics between East and West.
ContributorsWei, Xin (Author) / Mesch, Claudia (Thesis advisor) / Hoy, Meredith (Committee member) / Kuo, Karen (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
Description

This report documents the results of an empirical study to characterize science diaspora networks and their underlying organizations and to document how network managers characterize operational successes, challenges, future plans, and relations to science diplomacy.

ContributorsElliott, Steve (Author) / Butler, Dorothy (Author) / Del Castello, Barbara (Author) / Goldenkoff, Elana (Author) / Warner, Isabel (Author) / Zimmermann, Alessandra (Author)
Created2022-09-14
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Description
This dissertation consists of three chapters that investigate the rapid adoption and complex implementation of city commitments to transition to 100% renewable energy (100RE). The first paper uses a two-stage, mixed methods approach to examine 100RE commitments across the US, combining a multivariate regression of demographic, institutional, and policy factors

This dissertation consists of three chapters that investigate the rapid adoption and complex implementation of city commitments to transition to 100% renewable energy (100RE). The first paper uses a two-stage, mixed methods approach to examine 100RE commitments across the US, combining a multivariate regression of demographic, institutional, and policy factors in adoption and six interview-based state case studies to discuss implementation. Adoption of this non-binding commitment progressed rapidly for city councils around the US. Results show that many cities passed 100RE commitments with no implementation plan and minimal understanding of implementation challenges. This analysis highlights that many cities will need new institutions and administrative capacities for successful implementation of these ambitious new policies. While many cities abandoned the commitment soon after adoption, collaboration allowed cities in a few states to break through and pursue implementation, examined further in the next two studies. The second paper is a qualitative case study examining policymaking for the Utah Community Renewable Energy Act. Process tracing methods are used to identify causal factors in enacting this legislation at the state level and complementary resolutions at the local level. This Act was passed through the leadership and financial backing of major cities and committed the investor-owned utility to fulfill any city 100RE resolutions passed through 2019. Finally, the third paper is a mixed-methods, descriptive case study of the benefits of Community Choice Aggregation (CCA) in California, which many cities are using to fulfill their 100RE commitments. Cities have adopted CCAs to increase their local voice in the energy process, while fulfilling climate and energy goals. Overall, this research shows that change in the investor-owned utility electricity system is in fact possible from the city scale, though many cities will need institutional innovation to implement these policies and achieve the change they desire. While cities with greater resources are better positioned to make an impact, smaller cities can collaborate to similarly influence the energy system. Communities are interested in lowering energy costs for customers where possible, but the central motivations in these cases were the pursuit of sustainability and increasing local voice in energy decision-making.
ContributorsKunkel, Leah Christine (Author) / Breetz, Hanna L (Thesis advisor) / Parker, Nathan (Committee member) / Salon, Deborah (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Electroactive bacteria connect biology to electricity, acting as livingelectrochemical catalysts. In nature, these bacteria can respire insoluble compounds like iron oxides, and in the laboratory, they are able to respire an electrode and produce an electrical current. This document investigates two of these electroactive bacteria: Geobacter sulfurreducens and Thermincola ferriacetica.

Electroactive bacteria connect biology to electricity, acting as livingelectrochemical catalysts. In nature, these bacteria can respire insoluble compounds like iron oxides, and in the laboratory, they are able to respire an electrode and produce an electrical current. This document investigates two of these electroactive bacteria: Geobacter sulfurreducens and Thermincola ferriacetica. G. sulfurreducens is a Gramnegative iron-reducing soil bacterium, and T. ferriacetica is a thermophilic, Grampositive bacterium that can reduce iron minerals and several other electron acceptors. Respiring insoluble electron acceptors like metal oxides presents challenges to a bacterium. The organism must extend its electron transport chain from the inner membrane outside the cell and across a significant distance to the surface of the electron acceptor. G. sulfurreducens is one of the most-studied electroactive bacteria, and despite this there are many gaps in knowledge about its mechanisms for transporting electrons extracellularly. Research in this area is complicated by the presence of multiple pathways that may be concurrently expressed. I used cyclic voltammetry to determine which pathways are present in electroactive biofilms of G. sulfurreducens grown under different conditions and correlated this information with gene expression data from the same conditions. This correlation presented several genes that may be components of specific pathways not just at the inner membrane but along the entire respiratory pathway, and I propose an updated model of the pathways in this organism. I also characterized the composition of G. sulfurreducens and found that it has high iron and lipid content independent of growth condition, and the high iron content is explained by the large abundance of multiheme cytochrome expression that I observed. I used multiple microscopy techniques to examine extracellular respiration in G. sulfurreducens, and in the process discovered a novel organelle: the intracytoplasmic membrane. I show 3D reconstructions of the organelle in G. sulfurreducens and discuss its implications for the cell’s metabolism. Finally, I discuss gene expression in T. ferriacetica in RNA samples collected from an anode-respiring culture and highlight the most abundantly expressed genes related to anode-respiring metabolism.
ContributorsHowley, Ethan Thomas (Author) / Torres, César I (Thesis advisor) / Krajmalnik-Brown, Rosa (Thesis advisor) / Nannenga, Brent (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022