Rodent body weight data from National Toxicology Program studies is an important end point used to determine if a toxicant causes adverse effects. Statistical tests for differences between body weights of control and treated groups often assume that the data are normally distributed (i.e., are bell-shaped curves). This study evaluated the importance of the normality assumption in statistical testing of rodent body weight measurements. It was found that the normality test used in this project, Shapiro-Wilk’s test for normality, has 6-56% power to detect skew normal distributions with samples sizes of 50 animals or less. However, statistical tests that compare body weights in a control group to a treated group were able to detect 10% differences in body weight with at least 80% power for sample sizes of 10, 20, and 50 rodents for both normally distributed data and data with a skew normal distribution while keeping False Positive Rates at an acceptable level of approximately 5%.
Press Release: The Power of Parametrics
In a study done by Alyssa M. Taylor-LaPole, Helen C. Funny, and Keith R. Shockley from Virginia Wesleyan University and published by the Journal of Young Investigators, these questions were put to the test by analyzing the body weights of rodents among normal and non-normal populations, testing the power of our trusty parametric testing system against the statistical assumption of normality.
Life as an Exceptionally Entertaining and Energised Paediatrician: Dr. Nicole Phoebe Tanner
From Tanner’s perspective, effective communication with children firstly involves jumping out of the “white coat” image of doctors. In the wards, Tanner is not only a doctor who corrects children’s electrolyte disturbances or dehydration, but also a big sister who jokes along with sick children. It is essential for children to realise that doctors do not only approach them for physical examination or blood-taking, but also treat them as friends. While this is a soft skill that can be easily acquired, the technique of describing medical conditions to the paediatric population requires even more practice.
Press Release: Harnessing the Power of Bioinformatics: Identifying Therapeutic Targets for Resistant Small Cell Lung Cancer
In a paper published in this issue of the Journal of Young Investigators, Sie and coworkers analyzed single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) datasets from Stewart et al. Using bioinformatics tools, Sie et al. aim to shed insights on the possible therapeutic targets for resistant SCLC — a condition defined as SCLC relapse that occurs within 60 days after first-line treatment.
The Effect of Transposable Elements in the Stem-cell-Like State of Cancer
Transposable Elements (TEs) have been well investigated in tumorigenesis, yet their role as developmental regulators has only recently been recognized, thus stirring the interest towards a likely link between TEs expressed in early development and those expressed in tumorigenesis, since both states exhibit functional and molecular similarities.