James P. Geaghan
Louisiana State University
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Featured researches published by James P. Geaghan.
Appetite | 2010
Anantha Lakkakula; James P. Geaghan; Michael Zanovec; Sarah H. Pierce; Georgianna Tuuri
Childrens food preferences play a major role in their food choices and consumption. The objective of the present study was to examine if repeated tastings of selected vegetables in a school setting increased childrens liking of these items. A total of 360 fourth- and fifth-grade students attending four low-income, public elementary schools in southeastern Louisiana volunteered to participate. During the spring of 2008, children were offered a taste of carrots, peas, tomatoes, and bell peppers once a week for 10 weeks. At each tasting session children recorded whether they swallowed each of the vegetables, spit it into the napkin, or did not put it in their mouth and indicated their liking for each vegetable using a Likert-type response scale. Approximately one-half of the children tasted eight of ten times during the program (46.5% for those who began disliking and 68.5% for those who began liking the vegetables). Proc Glimmix analyses indicated that for children who began the program disliking the vegetables, repeated tasting improved liking scores for carrots, peas, and tomatoes; liking for bell peppers did not change. The number of children who reported liking or liking a lot for previously disliked vegetables was greater after eight or nine taste exposures. Repeated tasting of less-liked vegetables by children in a cafeteria-based setting is a strategy to promote liking of these items and is effective in approximately half of the participants.
Appetite | 2011
Anantha Lakkakula; James P. Geaghan; Weiping Wong; Michael Zanovec; Sarah H. Pierce; Georgianna Tuuri
This study aimed to increase 1st, 3rd, and 5th grade childrens liking for fruits and vegetables by offering repeated opportunities to taste selected items. Tastes of four fruits or four vegetables were offered to children (51% boys; 32% 1st graders and 34% 3rd graders) on alternate weeks for 8 weeks. Two-week follow-up tastings occurred 4 months and 10 months post-intervention. Children who began the program disliking the targeted fruits and vegetables improved liking for all items after 8 weeks and maintained higher scores at both follow-up assessments. Grade and gender differences in liking were observed but were not consistent at each time point.
Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation | 2008
Noelle G. Moreau; Li Li; James P. Geaghan; Diane L. Damiano
OBJECTIVES To investigate muscle fatigue of the knee flexors and extensors in people with cerebral palsy (CP) compared with those without motor disability during performance of a voluntary fatigue protocol and to investigate the relationship with functional mobility. DESIGN A case-control study. SETTING A biomechanics laboratory. PARTICIPANTS Ambulatory subjects with CP (n=18; mean age, 17.5 y) in Gross Motor Function Classification System (GMFCS) levels I, II, and III and a comparison group of age-matched subjects (n=16) without motor disability (mean age, 16.6 y). INTERVENTIONS Not applicable. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES The voluntary muscle fatigue protocol consisted of concentric knee flexion and extension at 60 degrees a second for 35 repetitions on an isokinetic dynamometer. Peak torque for each repetition was normalized by the maximum peak torque value. Muscle fatigue was calculated as the rate of decline in normalized peak torque across all repetitions, represented by the slope of the linear regression. Self-selected and fast gait velocities were measured as well as the Pediatric Outcomes Data Collection Instrument (PODCI). RESULTS Greater fatigability (slope) was observed in the comparison group for both knee flexors and extensors than in the group with CP. Within CP, lower knee extensor fatigue (slope) was associated with lower functioning GMFCS levels and lower levels of activity and participation as measured by the PODCI transfers and basic mobility. CONCLUSIONS Even after adjusting for maximum peak torque, the knee flexors and extensors of participants with CP were observed to be less fatigable than age-matched peers without motor disability. The lower rate of muscle fatigue was also associated with lower functional mobility in CP. These results may be related to strength or activation differences and/or muscle property alterations. Future investigations are warranted.
Environment and Behavior | 1996
Margaret A. Reams; James P. Geaghan; Raye C. Gendron
The purpose of our research was to determine whether residential recycling programs introduced an additional benefit-reduced litter. We evaluated the proposition that such programs should impart to participants a heightened environmental awareness and understanding that may encourage them to litter less and/or pick up more accumulated litter. We examined accumulated litter by various types-recyclable litter, recyclable accessories, and nonrecyclable litter-in selected neighborhoods before and after the implementation of the Baton Rouge, Louisiana, curbside recycling program. We found that recyclable lifter decreased significantly after the onset of the program. However, there was no similar decline in other types of litter. Although participants were motivated to discard fewer recyclables and/or pick up more recyclable litter after Implementation of the program, this behavior did not carry over to the proper disposal of nonrecyclable lifter.
Clinical Biomechanics | 2009
Noelle G. Moreau; Li Li; James P. Geaghan; Diane L. Damiano
BACKGROUND The purpose of this study was to elucidate relationships between quadriceps and hamstrings voluntary muscle fatigue and upper motor lesion impairments in cerebral palsy in order to gain a better understanding of their contribution to the observed fatigue resistance. METHODS Seventeen ambulatory subjects with cerebral palsy (mean age: 17.0, SD=4.8 years) were recruited. Quantitative measures of strength, spasticity, cocontraction, and stiffness for both muscle groups were collected on an isokinetic dynamometer and entered in a factor analysis. The resulting factors were used as independent variables in a multiple regression analysis with quadriceps and hamstrings fatigue as dependent variables. FINDINGS Five independent factors explained 90% of the variance. In order of loadings, higher hamstring cocontraction and spasticity and lower hamstring strength were associated with lower levels of hamstring fatigue. Higher quadriceps cocontraction and lower quadriceps strength were the most predictive of lower levels of quadriceps fatigue. INTERPRETATION Greater motor impairments of the agonist muscle, particularly cocontraction, spasticity, and weakness, were associated with lower rates of muscle fatigue of the same muscle during performance of a voluntary fatigue protocol for the hamstrings and quadriceps. Muscles are highly adaptable; therefore, the results of this study suggest that the observed fatigue resistance may be due to the effect of the primary neural insult on motor unit recruitment and rate modulation or the result of secondary adaptations to spasticity, weakness, or excessive cocontraction.
Journal of Wildlife Management | 2008
Jason D. Burke; Michael J. Chamberlain; James P. Geaghan
Abstract Northern bobwhite (Colinus virginianus) populations have experienced severe declines for several decades, and declines have been particularly precipitous in the southern United States. These declines are partially attributable to large-scale conversions of potential habitat to short-rotation pine (Pinus spp.) forests managed for wood fiber production and fire exclusion in pine-dominated landscapes. We used standard arthropod sampling techniques, human-imprinted bobwhite chicks, and vegetation response to evaluate effects of different understory vegetation management practices on brood habitat quality within a commercially managed pine forest in Louisiana, USA, during 2002–2005. Specifically, we evaluated effects of mowing, prescribed fire during the growing season, prescribed fire in combination with imazapyr application, and no vegetation management on arthropod abundance and diversity, vegetation response, and the probability of bobwhite chicks successfully capturing an arthropod. Bobwhite chicks were more successful at capturing arthropods, and arthropod abundance and diversity were greatest, in plant communities managed using prescribed fire and imazapyr. Forest stands managed using a combination of fire and imazapyr were managed primarily to benefit the federally endangered red-cockaded woodpecker (Picoides borealis; RCW). Our findings suggest that management directed toward improving forest condition for RCWs improves habitat quality for brooding bobwhites. However, bobwhite chicks in our study area were less successful at capturing arthropods than were chicks in other studies in the southeastern United States. Brood-rearing habitat in pine forests similar to those we studied may be of generally poor quality, and could be related to precipitous declines of bobwhites in the West Gulf Coastal Plain. Managers should recognize that creating high-quality brood habitat in forests similar to those we studied will require more intensive management of understory vegetation than we studied.
Fisheries Research | 1994
Thomas E. Helser; James P. Geaghan; Richard E. Condrey
We present a method of estimating the corrected size composition and associated variances of a fish population as a companion paper to a recently developed method of estimating gillnet selectivity which uses a non-linear iterative least-squares approach. In this paper, we present a modification to the selectivity equation used in an earlier approach which reduces heterogeneous error variance. Nonlinear least-squares parameter estimates are used to estimate the population size composition corrected for the effects of mesh selectivity and a procedure is described to estimate their variances. We applied the selectivity model and variance estimation procedure to the experimental gillnet catches of spotted seatrout from 1988 to 1990 and examined model selection parameter estimates, corrected population size compositions, and their variances. Likelihood ratio tests indicated that model selection parameters estimates were significantly different between the sexes (P < 0.01), suggesting that factors which affect the selection process may differ between the sexes. Corrected size compositions for female and male spotted seatrout population were found to differ substantially from the observed catch frequencies, indicating negative bias for smallest size classes. Variability associated with corrected size composition estimates, as expressed by 95% confidence intervals, indicated that in general, precision associated with those quantities is good.
Transactions of The American Fisheries Society | 1993
Thomas E. Helser; Richard E. Condrey; James P. Geaghan
Abstract We analyzed experimental gill-net catches of spotted seatrout Cynoscion nebulosus at 28 stations in various estuarine habitats over 3 years (1988–1990). Cluster analysis indicated that the 28 stations reduced to three “natural” groupings representing salinity zones that correspond to upper (oligohaline, 0–9‰), intermediate (mesohaline, 10–14‰), and lower (polyhaline, 15–30‰) estuarine zones. Principal components analysis applied to log-transformed gill-net catches yielded a two-factor model that explained 78% of the variation in the data; factors were interpreted as recruit size (females smaller than 31 cm in total length and males smaller than 26 cm) and spawner size (females larger than 31 cm and males larger than 26 cm). Both recruit and spawner models were highly significant (P < 0.0001), and the zone-by-season interaction accounted for the greatest proportion of the variation in the models (P < 0.0001). Abundances of recruit and spawner spotted seatrout were greatest in the lower estuarine z...
North American Journal of Fisheries Management | 1989
E. Eric Knudsen; Ronald F. Paille; Barton D. Rogers; William H. Herke; James P. Geaghan
Abstract We investigated the effects of water-control weirs on growth, emigration, and mortality of brown shrimp. Juvenile brown shrimp were captured, marked, and released in two shallowwater marsh ponds. One pond had a weir at its only exit. All surviving marked brown shrimp were recaptured as they emigrated from each pond. Shrimp remained in the weired pond 12–18 d longer after marking than in the unweired pond. Growth of brown shrimp was best described by quadratic functions and was significantly faster in the weired pond than in the unweired one although differences in growth may have been confounded by delayed emigration from the weired pond. Estimated monthly instantaneous mortality of juvenile brown shrimp, from marking to recapture, ranged from 0.550 to 1.582 in the weired pond and 0.877 to 1.270 in the unweired pond and apparently varied between years. Even though brown shrimp remained in the weired pond longer, peaks in emigration from both ponds coincided with new and full moons. Mean total len...
PLOS ONE | 2015
Felicia Goldsmith; Michael J. Keenan; Anne M. Raggio; Xin Ye; Zheng Hao; Holiday Durham; James P. Geaghan; Weiping Jia; Roy J. Martin; Jianping Ye
Sitagliptin (SG) increases serum GLP-1 (Glucagon-like peptide-1) through inhibition of the hormone degradation. Resistant starch (RS) induces GLP-1 expression by stimulating L-cells in the intestine. Sitagliptin and resistant starch may have a synergistic interaction in the induction of GLP-1. This possibility was tested in current study in a mouse model of type 2 diabetes. Hyperglycemia was induced in the diet-induced obese mice by a signal injection of streptozotocin (STZ). Sitagliptin (0.4g/100g diet) was tested in the mice (n = 55) with dietary RS (HAM-RS2) at three dosages (0, 15, or 28g/100g diet). Energy and glucose metabolism were monitored in the evaluation of synergistic activity, and GLP-1 activity was determined in the GLP-1 receptor knockout (KO) mice. In the wild type mice, body weight and adiposity were reduced by sitagliptin, which was enhanced by RS (28g). Serum GLP-1 was induced and energy expenditure was enhanced by sitagliptin. Fasting glucose, insulin, and leptin levels were decreased by sitagliptin. The sitagliptin effects were lost in the KO mice (n = 25) although induction of serum GLP-1 by sitagliptin was even stronger in KO mice. The data suggests that sitagliptin is able to reduce adiposity and insulin resistance through induction of energy expenditure. The effect of sitagliptin is partially enhanced by RS. GLP-1 receptor may regulate serum GLP-1 by facilitating the hormone clearance.