Matching Items (3)
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Leadership is an essential component of engineering career success, yet early-career engineers report a lack of leadership skills entering the workplace. Studies have suggested that mentoring opportunities have the potential to provide an alternative approach to learning and practicing leadership. What is not yet understood is to what extent and

Leadership is an essential component of engineering career success, yet early-career engineers report a lack of leadership skills entering the workplace. Studies have suggested that mentoring opportunities have the potential to provide an alternative approach to learning and practicing leadership. What is not yet understood is to what extent and in what ways serving as a mentor develops leadership. This dissertation fills this knowledge gap by sequentially conducting qualitative and quantitative studies examining how serving as a research mentor influences engineering graduate students and postdoctoral scholars’ leadership understanding and competencies. Study participants were recruited from short-term research programs offered by National Science Foundation (NSF)-funded Engineering Research Centers (ERCs). A total of 17 former ERC mentors and 75 current ERC graduate students and postdoctoral scholars participated in the qualitative study and the quantitative study, respectively. The results suggest that serving as a research mentor can help to advance leadership understanding and competencies. The qualitative study discovered that former ERC mentors believed they gained new perspectives of leadership and developed their leadership competencies while serving as a mentor. This included a growth in awareness of importance to express empathy toward other people and ability to develop others and delivering project results. The quantitative study demonstrated that ERC mentors reported higher competencies in leading other people and delivering project results compared to their peers who had not served as mentors. ERC mentors still primarily connected leadership to leaders, despite the noted gains. This finding indicated the ERC mentors have not yet fully captured the true essence of leadership. The overall evidence suggests that serving as a mentor in a short-term program provided an effective and efficient opportunity for ERC graduate students and postdoctoral scholars to further their understanding of what it means to be a leader and improve their competencies of being a good leader. Such experiences left much to be desired in establishing a social, processual view on leadership.
ContributorsZhao, Zhen (Author) / Carberry, Adam ARC (Thesis advisor) / Chandler, Jennifer JLSC (Committee member) / Brunhaver, Samantha SRB (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description

Background: HIV-associated immune defects inhibit tuberculosis (TB) diagnosis, promote development of extrapulmonary TB and paucibacillary pulmonary TB cases with atypical radiographic features, and increase TB relapse rates. We therefore assessed the diagnostic performance of a novel assay that directly quantitates serum levels of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) virulence factor 10-kDa culture

Background: HIV-associated immune defects inhibit tuberculosis (TB) diagnosis, promote development of extrapulmonary TB and paucibacillary pulmonary TB cases with atypical radiographic features, and increase TB relapse rates. We therefore assessed the diagnostic performance of a novel assay that directly quantitates serum levels of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) virulence factor 10-kDa culture filtrate protein (CFP-10) to overcome limitations associated with detecting Mtb bacilli in sputum or tissue biopsies.

Methods: This study analyzed HIV-positive adults enrolled in a large, population-based TB screening and surveillance project, the Houston Tuberculosis Initiative, between October 1995 and September 2004, and assigned case designations using standardized criteria. Serum samples were trypsin-digested and immunoprecipitated for an Mtb-specific peptide of CFP-10 that was quantified by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry for rapid and sensitive TB diagnosis.

Results: Among the 1053 enrolled patients, 110 met all inclusion criteria; they included 60 tuberculosis cases (12 culture-negative TB), including 9 relapse TB cases, and 50 non-TB controls, including 15 cases with history of TB. Serum CFP-10 levels diagnosed 89.6% (77.3–96.5) and 66.7% (34.9–90.1) of culture-positive and culture-negative TB cases, respectively, and exhibited 88% (75.7–95.5) diagnostic specificity in all non-TB controls. Serum antigen detection and culture, respectively, identified 85% (73.4–92.9) and 80.0% (67.3–88.8) of all 60 TB cases.

Conclusions: Quantitation of the Mtb virulence factor CFP-10 in serum samples of HIV-infected subjects diagnosed active TB cases with high sensitivity and specificity and detected cases missed by the gold standard of Mtb culture. These results suggest that serum CFP-10 quantitation holds great promise for the rapid diagnosis of suspected TB cases in patients who are HIV-infected.

ContributorsFan, Jia (Author) / Zhang, Hedong (Author) / Nguyen, Duc T. (Author) / Lyon, Christopher (Author) / Mitchell, Charles D. (Author) / Zhao, Zhen (Author) / Graviss, Edward A. (Author) / Hu, Ye (Author)
Created2017-11-01
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Description

Background: Nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM)-mediated infections are a growing cause of worldwide morbidity, but lack of rapid diagnostics for specific NTM species can delay the initiation of appropriate treatment regimens. We thus examined whether mass spectrometry analysis of an abundantly secreted mycobacterial antigen could identify specific NTM species.

Methods: We analyzed predicted tryptic

Background: Nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM)-mediated infections are a growing cause of worldwide morbidity, but lack of rapid diagnostics for specific NTM species can delay the initiation of appropriate treatment regimens. We thus examined whether mass spectrometry analysis of an abundantly secreted mycobacterial antigen could identify specific NTM species.

Methods: We analyzed predicted tryptic peptides of the major mycobacterial antigen Ag85B for their capacity to distinguish Mycobacterium tuberculosis and three NTM species responsible for the majority of pulmonary infections caused by slow-growing mycobacterial species. Next, we analyzed trypsin-digested culture supernatants of these four mycobacterial species by liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (LC–MS/MS) to detect candidate species-specific Ag85B peptides, the identity of which were validated by LC–MS/MS performed in parallel reaction monitoring mode.

Results: Theoretical tryptic digests of the Ag85B proteins of four common mycobacterial species produced peptides with distinct sequences, including two peptides that could each identify the species origin of each Ag85B protein. LC–MS/MS analysis of trypsinized culture supernatants of these four species detected one of these species-specific signature peptides in each sample. Subsequent LC–MS/MS analyses confirmed these results by targeting these species-specific Ag85B peptides.

Conclusions: LC–MS/MS analysis of Ag85B peptides from trypsin-digested mycobacterial culture supernatants can rapidly detect and identify common mycobacteria responsible for most pulmonary infections caused by slow-growing mycobacteria, and has the potential to rapidly diagnose pulmonary infections caused by these mycobacteria through direct analysis of clinical specimens.

ContributorsZhang, Wei (Author) / Shu, Qingbo (Author) / Zhao, Zhen (Author) / Fan, Jia (Author) / Lyon, Christopher (Author) / Zelazny, Adrian M. (Author) / Hu, Ye (Author) / Biodesign Institute (Contributor)
Created2018-01-08