775 research outputs found

    Senior Recital: Jonathan Swann, saxophone

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    This recital is presented in partial fulfillment of requirements for the degree Bachelor of Music in Music Education. Mr. Swann studies saxophone with Sam Skelton.https://digitalcommons.kennesaw.edu/musicprograms/2219/thumbnail.jp

    Youth Power Solidarity Meetup, Alix Swann, Spring 2020

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    Alix Swann is a graduating senior International Studies major and Comparative Women�s Studies minor. She was born in Woodland Hills, California and currently resides in Silver Spring, Maryland. During her time at Spelman, Alix focused on bringing civic engagement to the Atlanta University Center as part of Spelman�s Social Justice Program through the Andrew Goodman Foundation, which furthers the 1964 Freedom Summer mission. After graduating from Spelman, she will attend Columbia University and earn a master�s degree in Nonprofit Management in the HBCU Fellowship Program. She is the first Young Scholar to be named Summa Scholar in SIS and to receive the highest honor of Summa from Spelman College

    My Visit to SIS Library, Alix Swann, Spring 2020

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    Alix Swann is a graduating senior International Studies major and Comparative Women�s Studies minor. She was born in Woodland Hills, California and currently resides in Silver Spring, Maryland. During her time at Spelman, Alix focused on bringing civic engagement to the Atlanta University Center as part of Spelman�s Social Justice Program through the Andrew Goodman Foundation, which furthers the 1964 Freedom Summer mission. After graduating from Spelman, she will attend Columbia University and earn a master�s degree in Nonprofit Management in the HBCU Fellowship Program. She is the first Young Scholar to be named Summa Scholar in SIS and to receive the highest honor of Summa from Spelman College

    An In Vitro Pilot Fermentation Study on the Impact of Chlorella pyrenoidosa on Gut Microbiome Composition and Metabolites in Healthy and Coeliac Subjects

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    © 2021 C. van der Linde, M. Barone, S. Turroni, P. Brigidi, E. Keleszade, J. Swann, A. Costabile. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0

    Forgotten Elders, Black, and Aging, in Prison, Research Excerpts, Alix Swann, Spring 2020

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    Alix Swann is a graduating senior International Studies major and Comparative Women�s Studies minor. She was born in Woodland Hills, California and currently resides in Silver Spring, Maryland. During her time at Spelman, Alix focused on bringing civic engagement to the Atlanta University Center as part of Spelman�s Social Justice Program through the Andrew Goodman Foundation, which furthers the 1964 Freedom Summer mission. After graduating from Spelman, she will attend Columbia University and earn a master�s degree in Nonprofit Management in the HBCU Fellowship Program. She is the first Young Scholar to be named Summa Scholar in SIS and to receive the highest honor of Summa from Spelman College

    Datasets in support of the Doctoral Thesis 'Characterising the short- and long-term biomolecular consequences of early life malnutrition and its impact on health and development'

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    Meta and metabolomic data relating to the ELICIT (Early Life Interventions for Childhood Growth and Development) trial used in Chapter 3 and 4, the LoSCM (Long-term outcomes after severe childhood malnutrition in adolescents in Malawi) study used in Chapter 5, and a Bangladeshi study of nutritional rickets used in Chapter 6.</span

    Small talk: microbial metabolites involved in the signaling from microbiota to brain

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    The wealth of biotransformational capabilities encoded in the microbiome expose the host to an array of bioactive xenobiotic products. Several of these metabolites participate in the communication between the gastrointestinal tract and the central nervous system and have potential to modulate central physiological and pathological processes. This biochemical interplay can occur through various direct and indirect mechanisms. These include binding to host receptors in the brain, stimulation of the vagus nerve in the gut, alteration of central neurotransmission, and modulation of neuroinflammation. Here, the potential for short chain fatty acids, bile acids, neurotransmitters and other bioactive products of the microbiome to participate in the gut-brain axis will be reviewed
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