75 results on '"R., Wendell"'
Search Results
2. Interactive Relations Across Dimensions of Interpersonal-Level Discrimination and Depressive Symptoms to Carotid Intimal-Medial Thickening in African Americans
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Shari R. Waldstein, Carrington R. Wendell, Danielle L. Beatty Moody, Michele K. Evans, Alan B. Zonderman, Daniel K. Leibel, and Elizabeth J. Pantesco
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Adult ,Male ,Disease ,Interpersonal communication ,Carotid Intima-Media Thickness ,Article ,White People ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Interpersonal Relations ,Stroke ,Applied Psychology ,Subclinical infection ,Depression ,business.industry ,Multilevel model ,Social Discrimination ,Middle Aged ,Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale ,Atherosclerosis ,medicine.disease ,Health Surveys ,030227 psychiatry ,Black or African American ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Psychological Distance ,Household income ,Female ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Demography ,Social status - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to examine within-race interactions of multiple dimensions of self-reported discrimination with depressive symptoms in relation to carotid intimal-medial thickness (IMT), a subclinical marker of atherosclerosis prospectively implicated in stroke incidence, in middle-aged to older African American and white adults. METHODS: Participants were a socioeconomically diverse group of 1941 African Americans (56.5%) and whites from the Healthy Aging in Neighborhoods of Diversity across the Life Span study (30–64 years old, 47% men, 45.2% with household income
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- 2019
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3. Reliability and validity of the Conners’ Continuous Performance Test
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Robert J. Spencer, Carrington R. Wendell, Shari R. Waldstein, Kathryn A. Tolle, Lauren M.D. Faulkner, and Danielle Shaked
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Adult ,Male ,050103 clinical psychology ,Personality Inventory ,Psychometrics ,Universities ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Impulsivity ,Session (web analytics) ,Executive Function ,Young Adult ,Internal consistency ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,Attention ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Students ,Reliability (statistics) ,05 social sciences ,Reproducibility of Results ,Test (assessment) ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Behavior Rating Scale ,Impulsive Behavior ,Stroop Test ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Personality Assessment Inventory ,Psychology ,Psychomotor Performance ,Clinical psychology ,Stroop effect - Abstract
The Conners' Continuous Performance Test-Second Edition (CCPT-2) is a widely used measure of attention and impulsivity, however, only a minimal amount is known about its reliability. To clarify the psychometric properties of the CCPT-2, we assessed its performance stability and related it to criterion measures. A total of 91 undergraduate students completed the CCPT-2, the State-Trait Personality Inventory (STPI), and reported on sleep during two sessions approximately one week apart. They completed the Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function-Adult Version (BRIEF-A) at session one and the Stroop Color and Word Test at session two. Findings indicated that the CCPT-2 had strong internal consistency, adequate test-retest reliability for commission errors and response time, poor test-retest reliability for omission errors, and practice effects for omission and commission errors. The CCPT-2 was largely unrelated to the BRIEF-A, Stroop Color and Word Test, and the STPI. More sleep was related to a quicker response time and more commission errors on the CCPT-2, and the BRIEF-A's Behavior Regulation Index was positively related to commission errors. Relative to the omission error component of the CCPT-2, commission errors and response time may be useful and stable measures of sustained attention and impulsivity.
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- 2019
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4. Incremental utility of an extended stroop task for identifying subtle differences in cognitive performance among healthy older adults
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Lauren M D Faulkner, Robert J. Spencer, Carrington R. Wendell, Shari R. Waldstein, Leslie I. Katzel, and Kathryn A Tolle
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Male ,050103 clinical psychology ,Time Factors ,Psychometrics ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Article ,Executive Function ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Effects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performance ,Neuropsychological assessment ,Stroop color word test ,Response inhibition ,Aged ,Trail Making Test ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,05 social sciences ,Middle Aged ,Test (assessment) ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Cognitive Aging ,Stroop Test ,Female ,Psychology ,Psychomotor Performance ,Stroop effect ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
The Stroop Color and Word Test is a test of processing speed, response inhibition, and executive functioning (EF). This project examined whether extending the Stroop Color-Word trial beyond the standard time limit could more accurately assess performance on EF measures. Cognitively healthy older individuals (n=198) enrolled in a study of cardiovascular health completed the Stroop as part of a neuropsychological battery. Two scores were computed for the Color-Word trial: the number of items completed within the first 45 seconds (traditional Color-Word score) and the speed of page completion beyond the first 45 seconds (Stroop-Extended score). Criterion measures included the Trail-Making Test Part B (TMT-B), Digit Span Backward, Symbol Digit Modalities Test, Short Category Test, and measures of verbal fluency. Results from hierarchical linear regression analyses indicated that the extended Stroop score accounted for small but statistically significant variance in TMT-B (additional 2.6%) and Digit Span Backwards (additional 2.6%) beyond the standard Color-Word score. These findings suggest that extending the Stroop Color-Word trial beyond the first 45 seconds provides a limited increase in predictive power within a healthy sample with restricted range of performance. The extended Stroop requires additional examination in heterogeneous samples, including clinical populations, to determine its predictive utility.
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- 2019
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5. Measurement of the charged-current electron (anti-)neutrino inclusive cross-sections at the T2K off-axis near detector ND280
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M. Gonin, Lars Eklund, C. Bronner, T. Vladisavljevic, E. Rondio, N. McCauley, C. M. Nantais, Thorsten Lux, K. Porwit, A. Eguchi, C. Touramanis, M. Jiang, Antonio Ereditato, N. Yershov, M. McCarthy, T. Lindner, T. Kikawa, Kevin Scott McFarland, S. Suvorov, R. P. Litchfield, S. Ban, M. Barbi, P. Hamacher-Baumann, L. Molina Bueno, B. Radics, B. Bourguille, A. Mefodiev, Vladimir Volkov, S. R. Johnson, J. Morrison, J. McElwee, C. E. R. Naseby, Lester D.R. Thompson, M. Mezzetto, N. Dokania, S. M. Oser, G. Pintaudi, Y. Ashida, A. Gorin, M. Ikeda, K. Nakayoshi, Kimihiro Okumura, M. J. Wilking, C. Alt, N. Teshima, A. T. Suzuki, Y. Nagai, Y. Fukuda, G. Christodoulou, P. B. Jurj, G. Zarnecki, M. Buizza Avanzini, F. Iacob, L. Berns, T. Towstego, S. Murphy, S. Bolognesi, C. K. Jung, B. Quilain, J. Kameda, T. Okusawa, Alexander N. Smirnov, K. Nakamura, K. Sakashita, M. Kuze, G.D. Barr, K. Niewczas, M. M. Khabibullin, R. Wendell, Y. Tanihara, Th. A. Mueller, N. Kukita, M. Licciardi, T. Feusels, T. Hayashino, R. Fukuda, C. Wilkinson, C. Giganti, S. Kuribayashi, R. Akutsu, M. Vagins, M. Yu, T. Kobata, S. Mine, D. Brailsford, T. Radermacher, A. Bubak, K. Iwamoto, A. Knox, T. Arihara, Y. Hayato, L. Ludovici, S. Parsa, J. Steinmann, T. Honjo, Y. Nakajima, G. Fiorillo, Hiroyuki Sekiya, F. Nova, Y. Oyama, Hyun-Chul Kim, V. Paolone, P. Novella, Jaroslaw Pasternak, K. Mavrokoridis, Y. Fujii, A. Konaka, J. L. Palomino, R. Fujita, D. Karlen, L. Pickering, C. Ruggles, G. Santucci, S. L. Liu, Z. Vallari, K. Wood, Masayuki Nakahata, C. Pidcott, Y. Uchida, E. D. Zimmerman, E. Mazzucato, A. Takeda, J. C. Nugent, Keigo Nakamura, C. Vilela, Kendall Mahn, A. Rychter, C. Checchia, A. Longhin, M. Friend, A. Shaykina, J. Lagoda, S. R. Dennis, Yoshihiro Suzuki, K. M. Tsui, C. M. Schloesser, Robert Wilson, C. Barry, A. Hiramoto, R.P. Kurjata, Marco Laveder, S. King, A. Izmaylov, A. C. Kaboth, S. P. Kasetti, J. Zalipska, R. Shah, T. Kobayashi, M. G. Catanesi, T. Hasegawa, A. Blondel, D. Sgalaberna, C. Jesús-Valls, Alexander Finch, L. N. Machado, J. Holeczek, Michelangelo Pari, Shuji Tanaka, G. De Rosa, J. G. Walsh, Y. Takeuchi, R. A. Owen, X. Junjie, H. Kikutani, A. Cervera, K. Yamamoto, D. R. Hadley, L. Marti-Magro, F. Bench, K. Zaremba, J. T. Haigh, O. Drapier, S. Yen, D. Cherdack, Y. Kato, S. Valder, A. Pritchard, T. Campbell, Y. Kataoka, M. Batkiewicz-Kwasniak, E. T. Atkin, K. Yasutome, V. A. Matveev, C. Metelko, C. Wret, T. Nakadaira, N. Akhlaq, T. Kajita, M. Lawe, T. Wachala, L. Maret, M. Tani, T. Sekiguchi, Stephanie Bron, C. Riccio, T. Dealtry, K. Abe, C. McGrew, M. Pavin, S. J. Jenkins, L. Koch, M. Guigue, T. Tsukamoto, Akitaka Ariga, D. Coplowe, A. Beloshapkin, M. Miura, F. Di Lodovico, A. A. Sztuc, Federico Sanchez, E. S. Pinzon Guerra, M. Tada, Vincenzo Berardi, G. A. Fiorentini, P. Paudyal, A. Bravar, M. Kabirnezhad, C. Andreopoulos, A. Zykova, W. Toki, Y. Awataguchi, D. Barrow, T. Ishii, P. N. Ratoff, Yu. G. Kudenko, Etam Noah, F. J. P. Soler, T. Kutter, S. L. Cartwright, T. Bonus, N. C. Hastings, D. G. Payne, H. Kubo, A. Nakamura, S. Nakayama, J. Calcutt, Y. Asada, Hiromasa Tanaka, P. Jonsson, Ahmed Ali, M. Hogan, Shigeki Aoki, G. C. Penn, L. Labarga, Alan Cosimo Ruggeri, Y. Nishimura, Gareth J. Barker, M. B. Smy, A. Knight, Y. Seiya, L. Munteanu, H. Sobel, T. Ishida, T. Odagawa, Xiao-yan Li, T. S. Nonnenmacher, S. Bienstock, M. Tajima, Yusuke Koshio, Teppei Katori, L. L. Kormos, H. M. O'Keeffe, E. Radicioni, M. Lamoureux, Y. Sonoda, J. P. Coleman, Laura Gutermuth Anthony, K. Kowalik, S. Zsoldos, S. Roth, C. Pistillo, A. Dabrowska, F. Shaker, T. Matsubara, D. L. Wark, G. Vasseur, V. Palladino, Patrick Dunne, N. Chikuma, J. A. Nowak, W. C. Parker, M. O. Wascko, A. Chappell, E. Kearns, Sy Suzuki, A. N. Khotjantsev, A. K. Ichikawa, J. F. Martin, M. Tzanov, M. Jakkapu, J. R. Wilson, M. Ishitsuka, W. Shorrock, J. Kisiel, Yuuki Nakano, S. Manly, P. F. Denner, A. Minamino, T. Yano, M. Antonova, K. Matsushita, A. D. Marino, R. Okada, T. Ogawa, Y. Katayama, S. Emery-Schrenk, M. Malek, S. Moriyama, Samira Hassani, T. A. Doyle, Jan T. Sobczyk, S. Dolan, C. Densham, A. Cudd, T. Koga, Oleg Mineev, C. Francois, M. Ziembicki, Yufeng Wang, M. Zito, Hidekazu Kakuno, Y. Yamada, G. Yang, S. B. Boyd, N. Izumi, B. A. Popov, B. Jamieson, A. Zalewska, T. Golan, A. Shvartsman, K. Fusshoeller, D. Bravo Berguño, Pablo Fernandez, Kate Scholberg, H. K. Tanaka, D. Vargas, A. C. Weber, J. Dumarchez, J. Schwehr, M. Posiadala-Zezula, G. Collazuol, Mark Scott, T. Yoshida, M. Cicerchia, W. G. S. Vinning, T. Maruyama, T. V. Ngoc, A. Shaikhiev, E. Reinherz-Aronis, K. Nishikawa, Masashi Yokoyama, N. T. Hong Van, J. Walker, Tsuyoshi Nakaya, C. Mauger, Masato Shiozawa, A. Kostin, D. Fukuda, S. Bhadra, L. Cook, L. O'Sullivan, Xianguo Lu, M. Hartz, André Rubbia, L. Magaletti, C. Yanagisawa, S. V. Cao, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Abe, K., Akutsu, R., Ali, A., Alt, C., Andreopoulos, C., Anthony, L., Antonova, M., Aoki, S., Ariga, A., Ashida, Y., Atkin, E. T., Awataguchi, Y., Ban, S., Barbi, M., Barker, G. J., Barr, G., Barry, C., Batkiewicz-Kwasniak, M., Beloshapkin, A., Bench, F., Berardi, V., Berkman, S., Berns, L., Bhadra, S., Bienstock, S., Blondel, A., Bolognesi, S., Bourguille, B., Boyd, S. B., Brailsford, D., Bravar, A., Berguno, D. Bravo, Bronner, C., Bubak, A., Avanzini, M. Buizza, Calcutt, J., Campbell, T., Cao, S., Cartwright, S. L., Catanesi, M. G., Cervera, A., Chappell, A., Checchia, C., Cherdack, D., Chikuma, N., Christodoulou, G., Coleman, J., Collazuol, G., Cook, L., Coplowe, D., Cudd, A., Dabrowska, A., De Rosa, G., Dealtry, T., Denner, P. F., Dennis, S. R., Densham, C., Di Lodovico, F., Dokania, N., Dolan, S., Drapier, O., Dumarchez, J., Dunne, P., Eklund, L., Emery-Schrenk, S., Ereditato, A., Fernandez, P., Feusels, T., Finch, A. J., Fiorentini, G. A., Fiorillo, G., Francois, C., Friend, M., Fujii, Y., Fujita, R., Fukuda, D., Fukuda, R., Fukuda, Y., Gameil, K., Giganti, C., Golan, T., Gonin, M., Gorin, A., Guigue, M., Hadley, D. R., Haigh, J. T., Hamacher-Baumann, P., Hartz, M., Hasegawa, T., Hastings, N. C., Hayashino, T., Hayato, Y., Hiramoto, A., Hogan, M., Holeczek, J., Hong Van, N. T., Iacob, F., Ichikawa, A. K., Ikeda, M., Ishida, T., Ishii, T., Ishitsuka, M., Iwamoto, K., Izmaylov, A., Jamieson, B., Jenkins, S. J., Jesus-Valls, C., Jiang, M., Johnson, S., Jonsson, P., Jung, C. K., Kabirnezhad, M., Kaboth, A. C., Kajita, T., Kakuno, H., Kameda, J., Karlen, D., Kasetti, S. P., Kataoka, Y., Katori, T., Kato, Y., Kearns, E., Khabibullin, M., Khotjantsev, A., Kikawa, T., Kim, H., Kim, J., King, S., Kisiel, J., Knight, A., Knox, A., Kobayashi, T., Koch, L., Koga, T., Konaka, A., Kormos, L. L., Koshio, Y., Kowalik, K., Kubo, H., Kudenko, Y., Kukita, N., Kuribayashi, S., Kurjata, R., Kutter, T., Kuze, M., Labarga, L., Lagoda, J., Lamoureux, M., Laveder, M., Lawe, M., Licciardi, M., Lindner, T., Litchfield, R. P., Liu, S. L., Li, X., Longhin, A., Ludovici, L., Lu, X., Lux, T., Nascimento Machado, L., Magaletti, L., Mahn, K., Malek, M., Manly, S., Maret, L., Marino, A. D., Martin, J. F., Maruyama, T., Matsubara, T., Matsushita, K., Matveev, V., Mavrokoridis, K., Mazzucato, E., Mccarthy, M., Mccauley, N., Mcfarland, K. S., Mcgrew, C., Mefodiev, A., Metelko, C., Mezzetto, M., Minamino, A., Mineev, O., Mine, S., Miura, M., Bueno, L. Molina, Moriyama, S., Morrison, J., Mueller, Th. A., Munteanu, L., Murphy, S., Nagai, Y., Nakadaira, T., Nakahata, M., Nakajima, Y., Nakamura, A., Nakamura, K. G., Nakamura, K., Nakayama, S., Nakaya, T., Nakayoshi, K., Nantais, C., Ngoc, T. V., Niewczas, K., Nishikawa, K., Nishimura, Y., Nonnenmacher, T. S., Nova, F., Novella, P., Nowak, J., Nugent, J. C., O'Keeffe, H. M., O'Sullivan, L., Odagawa, T., Okumura, K., Okusawa, T., Oser, S. M., Owen, R. A., Oyama, Y., Palladino, V., Palomino, J. L., Paolone, V., Parker, W. C., Paudyal, P., Pavin, M., Payne, D., Penn, G. C., Pickering, L., Pidcott, C., Guerra, E. S. Pinzon, Pistillo, C., Popov, B., Porwit, K., Posiadala-Zezula, M., Pritchard, A., Quilain, B., Radermacher, T., Radicioni, E., Radics, B., Ratoff, P. N., Reinherz-Aronis, E., Riccio, C., Rondio, E., Roth, S., Rubbia, A., Ruggeri, A. C., Rychter, A., Sakashita, K., Sanchez, F., Schloesser, C. M., Scholberg, K., Schwehr, J., Scott, M., Seiya, Y., Sekiguchi, T., Sekiya, H., Sgalaberna, D., Shah, R., Shaikhiev, A., Shaker, F., Shaykina, A., Shiozawa, M., Shorrock, W., Shvartsman, A., Smirnov, A., Smy, M., Sobczyk, J. T., Sobel, H., Soler, F. J. P., Sonoda, Y., Steinmann, J., Suvorov, S., Suzuki, A., Suzuki, S. Y., Suzuki, Y., Sztuc, A. A., Tada, M., Tajima, M., Takeda, A., Takeuchi, Y., Tanaka, H. K., Tanaka, H. A., Tanaka, S., Thompson, L. F., Toki, W., Touramanis, C., Tsui, K. M., Tsukamoto, T., Tzanov, M., Uchida, Y., Uno, W., Vagins, M., Valder, S., Vallari, Z., Vargas, D., Vasseur, G., Vilela, C., Vinning, W. G. S., Vladisavljevic, T., Volkov, V. V., Wachala, T., Walker, J., Walsh, J. G., Wang, Y., Wark, D., Wascko, M. O., Weber, A., Wendell, R., Wilking, M. J., Wilkinson, C., Wilson, J. R., Wilson, R. J., Wood, K., Wret, C., Yamada, Y., Yamamoto, K., Yanagisawa, C., Yang, G., Yano, T., Yasutome, K., Yen, S., Yershov, N., Yokoyama, M., Yoshida, T., Yu, M., Zalewska, A., Zalipska, J., Zaremba, K., Zarnecki, G., Ziembicki, M., Zimmerman, E. D., Zito, M., Zsoldos, S., Zykova, A., Laboratoire de Physique Nucléaire et de Hautes Énergies (LPNHE (UMR_7585)), Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université de Paris (UP), Institut de Recherches sur les lois Fondamentales de l'Univers (IRFU), Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Université Paris-Saclay, Laboratoire Leprince-Ringuet (LLR), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-École polytechnique (X)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3), T2K, Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC), Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-École polytechnique (X)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), and ANR-19-CE31-0001,SUNCORE,Incertitudes systématiques dans les combinaisons de résultats d'oscillations de neutrinos(2019)
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electron ,Physics::Instrumentation and Detectors ,Monte Carlo method ,far detector ,Electron ,KAMIOKANDE ,antineutrino/mu: secondary beam ,Other experiments ,antineutrino/e: particle identification ,01 natural sciences ,neutrino: flux ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,charged current ,High Energy Physics - Experiment (hep-ex) ,secondary beam [neutrino/mu] ,[PHYS.HEXP]Physics [physics]/High Energy Physics - Experiment [hep-ex] ,neutrino/e: particle identification ,measured [total cross section] ,detector [neutrino] ,Charged current ,Physics ,0105 Mathematical Physics ,J-PARC Lab ,Detector ,Monte Carlo [numerical calculations] ,Nuclear & Particles Physics ,angular dependence ,neutrino: detector ,0202 Atomic, Molecular, Nuclear, Particle and Plasma Physics ,Neutrino ,numerical calculations: Monte Carlo ,Particle Physics - Experiment ,scattering [neutrino] ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,530 Physics ,Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,particle identification [antineutrino/e] ,FOS: Physical sciences ,momentum dependence ,secondary beam [antineutrino/mu] ,Nuclear physics ,Momentum ,differential cross section: measured ,phase space ,near detector ,measured [differential cross section] ,0103 physical sciences ,neutrino: scattering ,ddc:530 ,lcsh:Nuclear and particle physics. Atomic energy. Radioactivity ,010306 general physics ,0206 Quantum Physics ,hep-ex ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Scattering ,particle identification [neutrino/e] ,background ,Computer Science::Information Retrieval ,High Energy Physics::Phenomenology ,scintillation counter: target ,flux [neutrino] ,neutrino/mu: secondary beam ,total cross section: measured ,target [scintillation counter] ,lcsh:QC770-798 ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Electron neutrino ,experimental results - Abstract
The electron (anti-)neutrino component of the T2K neutrino beam constitutes the largest background in the measurement of electron (anti-)neutrino appearance at the far detector. The electron neutrino scattering is measured directly with the T2K off-axis near detector, ND280. The selection of the electron (anti-)neutrino events in the plastic scintillator target from both neutrino and anti-neutrino mode beams is discussed in this paper. The flux integrated single differential charged-current inclusive electron (anti-)neutrino cross-sections, dσ/dp and dσ/d cos(θ), and the total cross-sections in a limited phase-space in momentum and scattering angle (p > 300 MeV/c and θ ≤ 45°) are measured using a binned maximum likelihood fit and compared to the neutrino Monte Carlo generator predictions, resulting in good agreement., Journal of High Energy Physics, 2020 (10), ISSN:1126-6708, ISSN:1029-8479
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- 2020
- Full Text
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6. Search for Electron Antineutrino Appearance in a Long-baseline Muon Antineutrino Beam
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E. Rondio, N. McCauley, C. M. Nantais, K. Porwit, J. T. Haigh, M. McCarthy, Vladimir Volkov, Lester D.R. Thompson, M. Mezzetto, W. Toki, L. Molina Bueno, K. Nishikawa, A. A. Sztuc, E. S. Pinzon Guerra, M. Vagins, S. Mine, Xianguo Lu, F. Di Lodovico, M. Barbi, M. Tada, B. Radics, Masashi Yokoyama, C. Alt, K. M. Tsui, M. G. Catanesi, Yu. G. Kudenko, N. C. Hastings, N. T. Hong Van, Y. Takeuchi, K. Kowalik, J. Walker, R. Shah, S. V. Cao, V. Paolone, A. Knight, André Rubbia, B. Bourguille, L. Magaletti, M. Gonin, Y. Nishimura, G. De Rosa, J. G. Walsh, S. M. Oser, Tsuyoshi Nakaya, Alexander N. Smirnov, Th. A. Mueller, T. Towstego, Z. Vallari, K. Wood, R. A. Owen, M. Batkiewicz-Kwasniak, D. Karlen, L. Maret, R. Akutsu, H. M. O'Keeffe, Y. Sonoda, P. N. Ratoff, T. Kutter, S. P. Kasetti, C. Ruggles, F. Iacob, L. Berns, E. D. Zimmerman, A. Cervera, A. Mefodiev, M. Ikeda, K. Nakayoshi, Kimihiro Okumura, N. Kukita, M. Licciardi, N. Chikuma, A. N. Khotjantsev, J. C. Nugent, S. King, T. Feusels, S. Bolognesi, Y. Ashida, A. Beloshapkin, Teppei Katori, K. Yamamoto, C. Wret, M. Guigue, J. A. Nowak, M. Miura, A. Shaikhiev, A. Chappell, T. Okusawa, M. O. Wascko, E. Kearns, S. L. Liu, C. Yanagisawa, Lars Eklund, Y. Oyama, J. Calcutt, G. Fiorillo, S. Berkman, B. Quilain, T. A. Doyle, P. Paudyal, C. Bronner, E. Radicioni, K. Niewczas, Hyun-Chul Kim, A. Izmaylov, J. Steinmann, M. M. Khabibullin, M. Zito, Hidekazu Kakuno, P. Novella, K. Nakamura, R. Wendell, E. Reinherz-Aronis, Y. Fukuda, G. Christodoulou, S. L. Cartwright, Vincenzo Berardi, D. Barrow, O. Drapier, L. Pickering, F. J. P. Soler, G. Yang, J. L. Palomino, J. Zalipska, E. T. Atkin, Y. Nakajima, K. Sakashita, M. Kuze, L. Marti-Magro, L. Munteanu, Alan Cosimo Ruggeri, K. Zaremba, Laura Gutermuth Anthony, C. Vilela, D. Fukuda, D. Sgalaberna, Hiroyuki Sekiya, F. Nova, T. Matsubara, C. Wilkinson, C. Touramanis, Y. Kato, M. Tajima, R. Fujita, S. Yen, K. Yasutome, D. L. Wark, S. Bienstock, L. O'Sullivan, A. Knox, M. Jiang, D. R. Hadley, S. Ban, Yusuke Koshio, Kendall Mahn, G. Vasseur, J. Lagoda, Yoshihiro Suzuki, L. N. Machado, Antonio Ereditato, Federico Sanchez, A. C. Weber, D. Brailsford, W. G. S. Vinning, J. Kameda, Y. Hayato, L. Ludovici, S. Murphy, N. Yershov, M. Ishitsuka, C. Giganti, S. Kuribayashi, J. R. Wilson, C. Jesús-Valls, Alexander Finch, S. Nakayama, Masayuki Nakahata, C. Pidcott, W. Shorrock, Kevin Scott McFarland, T. Radermacher, M. Posiadala-Zezula, Robert Wilson, T. Maruyama, Sy Suzuki, T. Wachala, M. Yu, S. Moriyama, Y. Seiya, T. V. Ngoc, M. Antonova, C. Barry, Y. Uchida, C. Checchia, T. Yano, H. Sobel, T. Koga, R.P. Kurjata, G. Collazuol, T. S. Nonnenmacher, Mark Scott, T. Yoshida, P. Hamacher-Baumann, S. R. Dennis, Y. Fujii, C. M. Schloesser, Jungsang Kim, A. D. Marino, A. Longhin, M. Friend, A. Shaykina, A. Blondel, M. Lamoureux, Masato Shiozawa, A. Takeda, B. Jamieson, A. Zalewska, A. C. Kaboth, N. Dokania, G. A. Fiorentini, S. R. Johnson, T. Golan, S. Emery-Schrenk, J. Holeczek, S. Zsoldos, A. Pritchard, V. Palladino, A. Shvartsman, T. Kobayashi, G. C. Penn, T. Sekiguchi, D. Bravo Berguño, W. Uno, Ahmed Ali, C. Pistillo, C. Riccio, Pablo Fernandez, A. Dabrowska, M. B. Smy, A. Kostin, B. A. Popov, C. Metelko, D. Coplowe, T. Dealtry, S. Bhadra, L. Cook, G.D. Barr, M. Jakkapu, D. Vargas, Xiao-yan Li, J. Dumarchez, J. Schwehr, M. Hartz, A. Bravar, S. Dolan, T. Ishii, C. Densham, A. Cudd, Y. Yamada, H. Kubo, M. J. Wilking, P. Jonsson, S. B. Boyd, S. Roth, Keigo Nakamura, L. Labarga, K. Fusshoeller, K. Gameil, J. Morrison, W. C. Parker, A. Zykova, M. Pavin, S. J. Jenkins, Gareth J. Barker, D. G. Payne, A. Nakamura, Kate Scholberg, J. P. Coleman, F. Shaker, T. Tsukamoto, H. K. Tanaka, J. F. Martin, M. Tzanov, G. Zarnecki, A. Rychter, J. Kisiel, K. Matsushita, A. Hiramoto, A. K. Ichikawa, M. Buizza Avanzini, L. L. Kormos, T. Hasegawa, D. Cherdack, T. Campbell, S. Valder, K. Abe, Y. Kataoka, G. Pintaudi, C. McGrew, A. Gorin, L. Koch, C. Andreopoulos, T. Vladisavljevic, Thorsten Lux, T. Lindner, T. Kikawa, S. Suvorov, R. P. Litchfield, F. Bench, T. Kajita, M. Lawe, M. Kabirnezhad, A. T. Suzuki, Y. Nagai, C. K. Jung, Akitaka Ariga, T. Hayashino, R. Fukuda, E. Mazzucato, Y. Asada, Oleg Mineev, T. Nakadaira, Shigeki Aoki, M. Ziembicki, Yufeng Wang, M. Hogan, V. Matveev, T. Ishida, T. Odagawa, K. Mavrokoridis, A. Konaka, A. Bubak, H. A. Tanaka, K. Iwamoto, Jaroslaw Pasternak, Y. Awataguchi, Marco Laveder, Patrick Dunne, Jan T. Sobczyk, S. Manly, P. F. Denner, C. Francois, A. Minamino, M. Malek, Shuji Tanaka, Laboratoire de Physique Nucléaire et de Hautes Énergies (LPNHE (UMR_7585)), Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7 (UPD7)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Institut de Recherches sur les lois Fondamentales de l'Univers (IRFU), Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Université Paris-Saclay, Laboratoire Leprince-Ringuet (LLR), Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-École polytechnique (X)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), T2K, Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC), Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université de Paris (UP), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-École polytechnique (X)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Abe, K., Akutsu, R., Ali, A., Alt, C., Andreopoulos, C., Anthony, L., Antonova, M., Aoki, S., Ariga, A., Asada, Y., Ashida, Y., Atkin, E. T., Awataguchi, Y., Ban, S., Barbi, M., Barker, G. J., Barr, G., Barrow, D., Barry, C., Batkiewicz-Kwasniak, M., Beloshapkin, A., Bench, F., Berardi, V, Berkman, S., Berns, L., Bhadra, S., Bienstock, S., Blondel, A., Bolognesi, S., Bourguille, B., Boyd, S. B., Brailsford, D., Bravar, A., Bravo Berguno, D., Bronner, C., Bubak, A., Avanzini, M. Buizza, Calcutt, J., Campbell, T., Cao, S., Cartwright, S. L., Catanesi, M. G., Cervera, A., Chappell, A., Checchia, C., Cherdack, D., Chikuma, N., Christodoulou, G., Coleman, J., Collazuol, G., Cook, L., Coplowe, D., Cudd, A., Dabrowska, A., De Rosa, G., Dealtry, T., Denner, P. F., Dennis, S. R., Densham, C., Di Lodovico, F., Dokania, N., Dolan, S., Doyle, T. A., Drapier, O., Dumarchez, J., Dunne, P., Eklund, L., Emery-Schrenk, S., Ereditato, A., Fernandez, P., Feusels, T., Finch, A. J., Fiorentini, G. A., Fiorillo, G., Francois, C., Friend, M., Fujii, Y., Fujita, R., Fukuda, D., Fukuda, R., Fukuda, Y., Fusshoeller, K., Gameil, K., Giganti, C., Golan, T., Gonin, M., Gorin, A., Guigue, M., Hadley, D. R., Haigh, J. T., Hamacher-Baumann, P., Hartz, M., Hasegawa, T., Hastings, N. C., Hayashino, T., Hayato, Y., Hiramoto, A., Hogan, M., Holeczek, J., Van, N. T. Hong, Iacob, F., Ichikawa, A. K., Ikeda, M., Ishida, T., Ishii, T., Ishitsuka, M., Iwamoto, K., Izmaylov, A., Jakkapu, M., Jamieson, B., Jenkins, S. J., Jesus-Valls, C., Jiang, M., Johnson, S., Jonsson, P., Jung, C. K., Kabirnezhad, M., Kaboth, A. C., Kajita, T., Kakuno, H., Kameda, J., Karlen, D., Kasetti, S. P., Kataoka, Y., Katori, T., Kato, Y., Kearns, E., Khabibullin, M., Khotjantsev, A., Kikawa, T., Kim, H., Kim, J., King, S., Kisiel, J., Knight, A., Knox, A., Kobayashi, T., Koch, L., Koga, T., Konaka, A., Kormos, L. L., Koshio, Y., Kostin, A., Kowalik, K., Kubo, H., Kudenko, Y., Kukita, N., Kuribayashi, S., Kurjata, R., Kutter, T., Kuze, M., Labarga, L., Lagoda, J., Lamoureux, M., Laveder, M., Lawe, M., Licciardi, M., Lindner, T., Litcheld, R. P., Liu, S. L., Li, X., Longhin, A., Ludovici, L., Lu, X., Lux, T., Nascimento Machado, L., Magaletti, L., Mahn, K., Malek, M., Manly, S., Maret, L., Marino, A. D., Marti-Magro, L., Martin, J. F., Maruyama, T., Matsubara, T., Matsushita, K., Matveev, V, Mavrokoridis, K., Mazzucato, E., Mccarthy, M., Mccauley, N., Mcfarland, K. S., Mcgrew, C., Mefodiev, A., Metelko, C., Mezzetto, M., Minamino, A., Mineev, O., Mine, S., Miura, M., Bueno, L. Molina, Moriyama, S., Morrison, J., Mueller, Th A., Munteanu, L., Murphy, S., Nagai, Y., Nakadaira, T., Nakahata, M., Nakajima, Y., Nakamura, A., Nakamura, K. G., Nakamura, K., Nakayama, S., Nakaya, T., Nakayoshi, K., Nantais, C., Ngoc, T., V, Niewczas, K., Nishikawa, K., Nishimura, Y., Nonnenmacher, T. S., Nova, F., Novella, P., Nowak, J., Nugent, J. C., O'Keeffe, H. M., O'Sullivan, L., Odagawa, T., Okumura, K., Okusawa, T., Oser, S. M., Owen, R. A., Oyama, Y., Palladino, V, Palomino, J. L., Paolone, V, Parker, W. C., Pasternak, J., Paudyal, P., Pavin, M., Payne, D., Penn, G. C., Pickering, L., Pidcott, C., Pintaudi, G., Guerra, E. S. Pinzon, Pistillo, C., Popov, B., Porwit, K., Posiadala-Zezula, M., Pritchard, A., Quilain, B., Radermacher, T., Radicioni, E., Radics, B., Rato, P. N., Reinherz-Aronis, E., Riccio, C., Rondio, E., Roth, S., Rubbia, A., Ruggeri, A. C., Ruggles, C. A., Rychter, A., Sakashita, K., Sanchez, F., Schloesser, C. M., Scholberg, K., Schwehr, J., Scott, M., Seiya, Y., Sekiguchi, T., Sekiya, H., Sgalaberna, D., Shah, R., Shaikhiev, A., Shaker, F., Shaykina, A., Shiozawa, M., Shorrock, W., Shvartsman, A., Smirnov, A., Smy, M., Sobczyk, J. T., Sobel, H., Soler, F. J. P., Sonoda, Y., Steinmann, J., Suvorov, S., Suzuki, A., Suzuki, S. Y., Suzuki, Y., Sztuc, A. A., Tada, M., Tajima, M., Takeda, A., Takeuchi, Y., Tanaka, H. K., Tanaka, H. A., Tanaka, S., Thompson, L. F., Toki, W., Touramanis, C., Towstego, T., Tsui, K. M., Tsukamoto, T., Tzanov, M., Uchida, Y., Uno, W., Vagins, M., Valder, S., Vallari, Z., Vargas, D., Vasseur, G., Vilela, C., Vinning, W. G. S., Vladisavljevic, T., Volkov, V. V., Wachala, T., Walker, J., Walsh, J. G., Wang, Y., Wark, D., Wascko, M. O., Weber, A., Wendell, R., Wilking, M. J., Wilkinson, C., Wilson, J. R., Wilson, R. J., Wood, K., Wret, C., Yamada, Y., Yamamoto, K., Yanagisawa, C., Yang, G., Yano, T., Yasutome, K., Yen, S., Yershov, N., Yokoyama, M., Yoshida, T., Yu, M., Zalewska, A., Zalipska, J., Zaremba, K., Zarnecki, G., Ziembicki, M., Zimmerman, E. D., Zito, M., Zsoldos, S., and Zykova, A.
- Subjects
muon antineutrino beam ,General Physics and Astronomy ,antineutrino/mu: secondary beam ,KAMIOKANDE ,antineutrino/e: particle identification ,01 natural sciences ,09 Engineering ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Experiment (hep-ex) ,secondary beam [neutrino/mu] ,[PHYS.HEXP]Physics [physics]/High Energy Physics - Experiment [hep-ex] ,neutrino/e: particle identification ,QC ,Physics ,02 Physical Sciences ,J-PARC Lab ,T2K experiment ,electron antineutrino ,T2K Collaboration ,kinematics ,Physical Sciences ,Particle Physics - Experiment ,T2K experiment in an accelerator-produced ,General Physics ,530 Physics ,Physics, Multidisciplinary ,FOS: Physical sciences ,particle identification [antineutrino/e] ,Neutrino beam ,secondary beam [antineutrino/mu] ,Physics::Geophysics ,Nuclear physics ,0103 physical sciences ,mixing ,ddc:530 ,010306 general physics ,01 Mathematical Sciences ,Muon ,Science & Technology ,particle identification [neutrino/e] ,hep-ex ,background ,neutrino/mu: secondary beam ,antineutrino: oscillation ,oscillation [antineutrino] ,Elementary Particles and Fields ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,PMNS ,Electron neutrino ,Beam (structure) ,Free parameter ,experimental results - Abstract
Electron antineutrino appearance is measured by the T2K experiment in an accelerator-produced antineutrino beam, using additional neutrino beam operation to constrain parameters of the Pontecorvo-Maki-Nakagawa-Sakata (PMNS) mixing matrix. T2K observes 15 candidate electron antineutrino events with a background expectation of 9.3 events. Including information from the kinematic distribution of observed events, the hypothesis of no electron antineutrino appearance is disfavored with a significance of 2.40 σ and no discrepancy between data and PMNS predictions is found. A complementary analysis that introduces an additional free parameter which allows non-PMNS values of electron neutrino and antineutrino appearance also finds no discrepancy between data and PMNS predictions., Physical Review Letters, 124 (16), ISSN:0031-9007, ISSN:1079-7114
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Search for heavy neutrinos with the T2K near detector ND280
- Author
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C. Bronner, James R. Wilson, A. Bravar, S. King, A. Minamino, S. Ban, Robert Wilson, K. Yasutome, K. Nakamura, H. Kubo, P. Novella, P. Jonsson, K. Kowalik, E. Rondio, N. Chikuma, N. McCauley, C. M. Nantais, M. M. Khabibullin, A. N. Khotjantsev, Y. Nakajima, P. P. Koller, Federico Sanchez, D. R. Hadley, Y. Yamada, D. G. Payne, T. Wachala, A. Nakamura, L. Labarga, D. Sgalaberna, S. B. Boyd, S. Suvorov, R. P. Litchfield, K. Porwit, L. Molina Bueno, T. Inoue, R. Shah, Shin Sasaki, Jung-Hyun Kim, S. R. Johnson, G. De Rosa, G. A. Fiorentini, G.D. Barr, M. McCarthy, M. Malek, E. Scantamburlo, C. Barry, B. Radics, Xianguo Lu, D. Shaw, R.P. Kurjata, R. M. Berner, P. Lasorak, Patrick Dunne, K. Zaremba, S. Yen, R. A. Owen, F. Hosomi, Vladimir Volkov, M. Batkiewicz-Kwasniak, J. Morrison, S. Nakayama, A. Blondel, B. Bourguille, André Rubbia, A. Mefodiev, Lester D.R. Thompson, M. Mezzetto, Leïla Haegel, C. Pistillo, A. Dabrowska, K. Niewczas, W. Toki, J. Holeczek, Yusuke Suda, A. K. Ichikawa, G. 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Intonti, L. L. Kormos, Yufeng Wang, Y. Takeuchi, L. Maret, P. N. Ratoff, T. Kutter, Teppei Katori, Hiroyuki Sekiya, R. Fujita, Kendall Mahn, P. Hamacher-Baumann, N. Dokania, Alexander N. Smirnov, Th. A. Mueller, R. Akutsu, G. Fiorillo, L. Pickering, J. Lagoda, Yoshihiro Suzuki, A. Knox, Y. Hayato, L. Ludovici, Keigo Nakamura, T. Vladisavljevic, Thorsten Lux, T. Lindner, W. Oryszczak, D. Cherdack, K. Abe, C. McGrew, L. Koch, C. Andreopoulos, V. Paolone, Z. Vallari, W. Y. Ma, Gareth J. Barker, E. D. Zimmerman, J. P. Coleman, A. Cervera, K. Yamamoto, F. Shaker, K. Nishikawa, Vincenzo Berardi, Alan Cosimo Ruggeri, D. Coplowe, T. Ishii, S. Bienstock, Masashi Yokoyama, N. T. Hong Van, G. Vasseur, J. Walker, D. Karlen, Tsuyoshi Nakaya, Masato Shiozawa, S. Moriyama, S. Bhadra, M. Hartz, A. Shaikhiev, T. Koga, E. Reinherz-Aronis, P. Stowell, M. Zito, Hidekazu Kakuno, G. Yang, A. C. Weber, A. Longhin, M. Friend, A. Shaykina, M. Posiadala-Zezula, G. Collazuol, Mark Scott, M. Pavin, T. 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G., Cervera, A., Chappell, A., Checchia, C., Cherdack, D., Chikuma, N., Christodoulou, G., Coleman, J., Collazuol, G., Coplowe, D., Cudd, A., Dabrowska, A., DE ROSA, Gianfranca, Dealtry, T., Denner, P. F., Dennis, S. R., Densham, C., Di Lodovico, F., Dokania, N., Dolan, S., Drapier, O., Duffy, K. E., Dumarchez, J., Dunne, P., Emery-Schrenk, S., Ereditato, A., Fernandez, P., Feusels, T., Finch, A. J., Fiorentini, G. A., Fiorillo, Giuliana, Francois, C., Friend, M., Fujii, Y., Fujita, R., Fukuda, D., Fukuda, Y., Gameil, K., Giganti, C., Gizzarelli, F., Golan, T., Gonin, M., Hadley, D. R., Haegel, L., Haigh, J. T., Hamacher-Baumann, P., Hartz, M., Hasegawa, T., Hastings, N. C., Hayashino, T., Hayato, Y., Hiramoto, A., Hogan, M., Holeczek, J., Hong Van, N. T., Hosomi, F., Iacob, F., Ichikawa, A. K., Ikeda, M., Inoue, T., Intonti, R. A., Ishida, T., Ishii, T., Ishitsuka, M., Iwamoto, K., Izmaylov, A., Jamieson, B., Jesus, C., Jiang, M., Johnson, S., Jonsson, P., Jung, C. K., Kabirnezhad, M., Kaboth, A. C., Kajita, T., Kakuno, H., Kameda, J., Karlen, D., Katori, T., Kato, Y., Kearns, E., Khabibullin, M., Khotjantsev, A., Kim, H., Kim, J., King, S., Kisiel, J., Knight, A., Knox, A., Kobayashi, T., Koch, L., Koga, T., Koller, P. P., Konaka, A., Kormos, L. L., Koshio, Y., Kowalik, K., Kubo, H., Kudenko, Y., Kurjata, R., Kutter, T., Kuze, M., Labarga, L., Lagoda, J., Lamoureux, M., Lasorak, P., Laveder, M., Lawe, M., Licciardi, M., Lindner, T., Liptak, Z. J., Litchfield, R. P., Li, X., Longhin, A., Lopez, J. P., Lou, T., Ludovici, L., Lu, X., Lux, T., Magaletti, L., Mahn, K., Malek, M., Manly, S., Maret, L., Marino, A. D., Martin, J. F., Martins, P., Maruyama, T., Matsubara, T., Matveev, V., Mavrokoridis, K., Ma, W. Y., Mazzucato, E., Mccarthy, M., Mccauley, N., Mcfarland, K. S., Mcgrew, C., Mefodiev, A., Metelko, C., Mezzetto, M., Minamino, A., Mineev, O., Mine, S., Miura, M., Molina Bueno, L., Moriyama, S., Morrison, J., Mueller, T. A., Murphy, S., Nagai, Y., Nakadaira, T., Nakahata, M., Nakajima, Y., Nakamura, A., Nakamura, K. G., Nakamura, K., Nakamura, K. D., Nakanishi, Y., Nakayama, S., Nakaya, T., Nakayoshi, K., Nantais, C., Niewczas, K., Nishikawa, K., Nishimura, Y., Nonnenmacher, T. S., Novella, P., Nowak, J., O'Keeffe, H. M., O'Sullivan, L., Okumura, K., Okusawa, T., Oryszczak, W., Oser, S. M., Owen, R. A., Oyama, Y., Palladino, Vittorio, Palomino, J. L., Paolone, V., Parker, W. C., Paudyal, P., Pavin, M., Payne, D., Pickering, L., Pidcott, C., Pinzon Guerra, E. S., Pistillo, C., Popov, B., Porwit, K., Posiadala-Zezula, M., Pritchard, A., Quilain, B., Radermacher, T., Radicioni, E., Radics, B., Ratoff, P. N., Reinherz-Aronis, E., Riccio, C., Rondio, E., Rossi, B., Roth, S., Rubbia, A., Ruggeri, ALAN COSIMO, Rychter, A., Sakashita, K., Sanchez, F., Sasaki, S., Scantamburlo, E., Schloesser, C. M., Scholberg, K., Schwehr, J., Scott, M., Seiya, Y., Sekiguchi, T., Sekiya, H., Sgalaberna, D., Shah, R., Shaikhiev, A., Shaker, F., Shaw, D., Shaykina, A., Shiozawa, M., Smirnov, A., Smy, M., Sobczyk, J. T., Sobel, H., Sonoda, Y., Steinmann, J., Stewart, T., Stowell, P., Suda, Y., Suvorov, S., Suzuki, A., Suzuki, S. Y., Suzuki, Y., Sztuc, A. A., Tacik, R., Tada, M., Takeda, A., Takeuchi, Y., Tamura, R., Tanaka, H. K., Tanaka, H. A., Thakore, T., Thompson, L. F., Toki, W., Touramanis, C., Tsui, K. M., Tsukamoto, T., Tzanov, M., Uchida, Y., Uno, W., Vagins, M., Vallari, Z., Vargas, D., Vasseur, G., Vilela, C., Vladisavljevic, T., Volkov, V. V., Wachala, T., Walker, J., Wang, Y., Wark, D., Wascko, M. O., Weber, A., Wendell, R., Wilking, M. J., Wilkinson, C., Wilson, J. R., Wilson, R. J., Wret, C., Yamada, Y., Yamamoto, K., Yamasu, S., Yanagisawa, C., Yang, G., Yano, T., Yasutome, K., Yen, S., Yershov, N., Yokoyama, M., Yoshida, T., Yu, M., Zalewska, A., Zalipska, J., Zaremba, K., Zarnecki, G., Ziembicki, M., Zimmerman, E. D., Zito, M., Zsoldos, S., Zykova, A., Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC), Laboratoire de Physique Nucléaire et de Hautes Énergies (LPNHE (UMR_7585)), Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7 (UPD7)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Institut de Recherches sur les lois Fondamentales de l'Univers (IRFU), Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Université Paris-Saclay, Laboratoire Leprince-Ringuet (LLR), Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-École polytechnique (X)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), T2K, Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université de Paris (UP), and Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-École polytechnique (X)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)
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decay modes [neutrino] ,GENERAL-THEORY ,mixing [neutrino] ,Physics::Instrumentation and Detectors ,neutrino: heavy: search for ,KAMIOKANDE ,01 natural sciences ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Physics, Particles & Fields ,High Energy Physics - Experiment (hep-ex) ,LIMITS ,secondary beam [neutrino/mu] ,neutrino: decay modes ,[PHYS.HEXP]Physics [physics]/High Energy Physics - Experiment [hep-ex] ,Particle Physics Experiments ,neutrino: mass ,media_common ,Physics ,VMSM ,J-PARC Lab ,statistical analysis: Bayesian ,K: decay ,heavy neutrinos, T2K Experiment, Time Projection Chambers ,mass dependence ,General theory ,T2K Experiment ,Time Projection Chambers ,Physical Sciences ,Christian ministry ,data analysis method ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Library science ,heavy: search for [neutrino] ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Bayesian [statistical analysis] ,near detector ,0103 physical sciences ,DARK-MATTER ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,ddc:530 ,Early career ,European union ,S077A00 ,010306 general physics ,S077A01 ,heavy neutrinos ,Science & Technology ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,background ,hep-ex ,High Energy Physics::Phenomenology ,Física ,neutrino/mu: secondary beam ,time projection chamber ,decay [K] ,mass [neutrino] ,Hypothetical particle physics models Particle phenomena ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,neutrino: mixing ,statistical ,experimental results - Abstract
This paper reports on the search for heavy neutrinos with masses in the range 140, Physical Review D, 100 (5), ISSN:1550-7998, ISSN:0556-2821, ISSN:1550-2368
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- 2019
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8. Measurement of the ν µ charged-current cross sections on water, hydrocarbon, iron, and their ratios with the T2K on-axis detectors
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K Abe, R Akutsu, A Ali, C Andreopoulos, L Anthony, M Antonova, S Aoki, A Ariga, Y Ashida, Y Awataguchi, Y Azuma, S Ban, M Barbi, G J Barker, G Barr, C Barry, M Batkiewicz-Kwasniak, F Bench, V Berardi, S Berkman, R M Berner, L Berns, S Bhadra, S Bienstock, A Blondel, S Bolognesi, B Bourguille, S B Boyd, D Brailsford, A Bravar, C Bronner, M Buizza Avanzini, J Calcutt, T Campbell, S Cao, S L Cartwright, M G Catanesi, A Cervera, A Chappell, C Checchia, D Cherdack, N Chikuma, G Christodoulou, J Coleman, G Collazuol, D Coplowe, A Cudd, A Dabrowska, G De Rosa, T Dealtry, P F Denner, S R Dennis, C Densham, F Di Lodovico, N Dokania, S Dolan, O Drapier, K E Duffy, J Dumarchez, P Dunne, S Emery-Schrenk, A Ereditato, Fernandez, Pablo, T Feusels, A J Finch, G A Fiorentini, G Fiorillo, C Francois, M Friend, Y Fujii, R Fujita, D Fukuda, Y Fukuda, K Gameil, C Giganti, F Gizzarelli, T Golan, M Gonin, D R Hadley, J T Haigh, P Hamacher-Baumann, M Hartz, T Hasegawa, N C Hastings, T Hayashino, Y Hayato, A Hiramoto, M Hogan, J Holeczek, N T Hong, W C Parker, P Paudyal, M Pavin, D Payne, L Pickering, C Pidcott, E S Pinzon Guerra, C Pistillo, B Popov, K Porwit, M Posiadala-Zezula, A Pritchard, B Quilain, T Radermacher, E Radicioni, P N Ratoff, E Reinherz-Aronis, C Riccio, E Rondio, B Rossi, S Roth, A Rubbia, A C Ruggeri, A Rychter, K Sakashita, F Sánchez, S Sasaki, K Scholberg, J Schwehr, M Scott, Y Seiya, T Sekiguchi, H Sekiya, D Sgalaberna, R Shah, A Shaikhiev, F Shaker, D Shaw, A Shaykina, M Shiozawa, A Smirnov, M Smy, J T Sobczyk, H Sobel, Y Sonoda, J Steinmann, T Stewart, P Stowell, S Suvorov, A Suzuki, S Y Suzuki, Y Suzuki, A A Sztuc, R Tacik, M Tada, A Takeda, Y Takeuchi, R Tamura, H K Tanaka, H A Tanaka, L F Thompson, W Toki, C Touramanis, K M Tsui, T Tsukamoto, M Tzanov, Y Uchida, W Uno, M Vagins, Z Vallari, D Vargas, G Vasseur, C Vilela, T Vladisavljevic, V V Volkov, T Wachala, J Walker, Y Wang, D Wark, M O Wascko, A Weber, R Wendell, M J Wilking, C Wilkinson, J R Wilson, R J Wilson, C Wret, Y Yamada, K Yamamoto, S Yamasu, C Yanagisawa, G †, Yang, T Yano, K Yasutome, S Yen, N Yershov, M Yokoyama, T Yoshida, M Yu, A Zalewska, J Zalipska, K Zaremba, G Zarnecki, M Ziembicki, E D Zimmerman, M Zito, S Zsoldos, and A Zykova
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- 2019
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9. The Caries Management System: are preventive effects sustained postclinical trial?
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Nan Jia, R. Wendell Evans, and Paula Clark
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Male ,dental services research ,Private Practice ,Dentistry ,Dental Caries ,Logistic regression ,Time ,Odds ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Caries management ,Multicenter Studies as Topic ,Humans ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,General Dentistry ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,General linear model ,Risk Management ,DMF Index ,non‐surgical treatment ,business.industry ,Multilevel model ,Australia ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,risk assessment ,Original Articles ,030206 dentistry ,3. Good health ,Clinical trial ,General Practice, Dental ,cariology ,Female ,Original Article ,Guideline Adherence ,preventive dentistry ,business ,Risk assessment ,Demography - Abstract
Objectives To report, at two and 4 years post-trial, on the potential legacy of a 3-year randomized controlled clinical trial (RCT) of the Caries Management System (CMS) at private general dental practices. The CMS was designed to reduce caries risk and need for restorative care. Methods Nineteen dental practices located in city, urban, and rural locations in both fluoridated and nonfluoridated communities participated in the RCT. Eight practices were lost to follow-up post-trial; however, baseline mean DMFT balance between CMS and control practices was maintained. At the control practices, caries management following usual practice continued to be delivered. The patient outcome measure was the cumulative increment in the DMFT index score, and the practice outcome measures included the practice-mean and practice-median increments of patient DMFT index scores. In covariable analysis (patient-level unit of analysis), as the patients were clustered by practices, mean DMFT increments were determined through multilevel modeling analysis. Practice-mean DMFT increments (practice-level unit of analysis) and practice-median DMFT increments (also practice level) were determined through general linear modeling analysis of covariance. In addition, a multiple variable logistic regression analysis of caries risk status was conducted. Results The overall 4-year post-trial result (years 4–7) for CMS patients was a DMFT increment of 2.44 compared with 3.39 for control patients (P < 0.01), a difference equivalent to 28%. From the clinical trial baseline to the end of the post-trial follow-up period, the CMS and control increments were 6.13 and 8.66, respectively, a difference of 29% (P < 0.0001). Over the post-trial period, the CMS and control practice-mean DMFT increments were 2.16 and 3.10 (P = 0.055) and the respective increments from baseline to year 7 were 4.38 and 6.55 (P = 0.029), difference of 33%. The practice-median DMFT increments during the 4-year post-trial period for CMS and control practices were 1.25 and 2.36 (P = 0.039), and the respective increments during the period from baseline to year 7 were 2.87 and 5.36 (P < 0.01), difference of 47%. Minimally elevated odds of being high risk were associated with baseline DMFT (OR = 1.17). Patients attending the CMS practices had lower odds of being high risk than those attending control practices (OR = 0.23, 95% CI = 0.06, 0.88). Conclusion In practices where adherence to the CMS protocols was maintained during the 4-year post-trial follow-up period, patients continued to benefit from a reduced risk of caries and, therefore, experienced lower needs for restorative treatment.
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- 2015
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10. A survey of cariology teaching in Australia and New Zealand
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Lyndie A. Foster Page, Matthew S Hopcraft, Sarah L. Raphael, R. Wendell Evans, Peter J. Dennison, and Richard Widmer
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education ,lcsh:Medicine ,Dental Caries ,Oral health ,Dental education ,Education ,Caries lesion ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Dentistry, Operative ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Cariology ,Dental Caries Activity Tests ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Education, Dental ,Curriculum ,Clinical teaching ,Multiple choice ,lcsh:LC8-6691 ,Medical education ,lcsh:Special aspects of education ,Lesion detection ,Teaching ,Prevention ,lcsh:R ,Australia ,030206 dentistry ,General Medicine ,Lesion depth ,Minimum intervention ,Psychology ,New Zealand ,Program Evaluation ,Research Article - Abstract
Background The Australian and New Zealand chapter of the Alliance for a Cavity Free Future was launched in 2013 and one of its primary aims was to conduct a survey of the local learning and teaching of cariology in dentistry and oral health therapy programs. Methods A questionnaire was developed using the framework of the European Organisation for Caries Research (ORCA)/Association of Dental Education in Europe (ADEE) cariology survey conducted in Europe in 2009. The questionnaire was comprised of multiple choice and open-ended questions exploring many aspects of the cariology teaching. The survey was distributed to the cariology curriculum coordinator of each of the 21 programs across Australia and New Zealand via Survey Monkey in January 2015. Simple analysis of results was carried out with frequencies and average numbers of hours collated and open-ended responses collected and compiled into tables. Results Seventeen responses from a total of 21 programs had been received including 7 Dentistry and 10 Oral Health programs. Key findings from the survey were – one quarter of respondents indicated that cariology was identified as a specific discipline with their course and 41% had a cariology curriculum in written format. With regard to lesion detection and caries diagnosis, all of the program coordinators who responded indicated that visual/tactile methods and radiographic interpretation were recommended with ICDAS also being used by over half them. Despite all respondents teaching early caries lesion management centred on prevention and remineralisation, many taught operative intervention at an earlier stage of lesion depth than current evidence supports. Findings showed over 40% of respondents still teach operative intervention for lesions confined to enamel. Conclusion Despite modern theoretical concepts of cariology being taught in Australia and New Zealand, they do not appear to be fully translated into clinical teaching at the present time. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (10.1186/s12909-018-1176-4) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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- 2018
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11. Dental fluorosis in the Blue Mountains and Hawkesbury, New South Wales, Australia: policy implications
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R. Wendell Evans, Ikreet Singh Bal, and PJ Dennison
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Toothbrushing ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Fluorosis, Dental ,Mouthwashes ,Dentistry ,Fluorides ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Risk Factors ,Fluoridation ,Environmental health ,Fluoride toothpaste ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Humans ,Fluorides, Topical ,Maxillary central incisor ,Child ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Incidence ,Public health ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Age Factors ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Cariostatic Agents ,Incisor ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,chemistry ,New South Wales ,business ,Fluoride ,Toothpastes ,Dental fluorosis ,Tablets - Abstract
Aim The aim of the present study was to determine whether the adjustment of the fluoride concentration to 1 ppm in the drinking water supplied to the Blue Mountains, New South Wales, Australia in 1993 was associated with fluorosis incidence. Methods In 2003, children attending schools in the Blue Mountains and a control region (fluoridated in 1967) that had been randomly selected at baseline in 1992 were examined for dental fluorosis (maxillary central incisors only) using Dean's index. A fluoride history for each child was obtained by questionnaire. Associations between fluorosis and 58 potential explanatory variables were explored. Results The response rate was 63%. A total of 1138 children aged from 7 to 11 years with erupted permanent central incisors were examined for dental fluorosis. Fluorosis prevalence was the same in both regions. The Community Index of Dental Fluorosis values were slightly different, but were both above 0.6, indicative of public health concern. Conclusions For the group as a whole, we concluded that: (a) fluorosis prevalence (0.39) in both regions was similar; and (b) the higher-than-expected prevalence and severity of fluorosis was due mainly to two factors: (a) the higher-than-optimal fluoride level in drinking water; and (b) swallowing of fluoride toothpaste in early childhood.
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- 2014
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12. Distributions of subclinical cardiovascular disease in a socioeconomically and racially diverse sample
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Shari R. Waldstein, Michele K. Evans, Alan B. Zonderman, and Carrington R. Wendell
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Gerontology ,Adult ,Carotid Artery Diseases ,Male ,Cross-sectional study ,Population ,Disease ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Pulse Wave Analysis ,Social class ,Carotid Intima-Media Thickness ,Article ,White People ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Sex Factors ,Vascular Stiffness ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,education ,Socioeconomic status ,Subclinical infection ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Health equity ,United States ,Black or African American ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Social Class ,Arterial stiffness ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Background and Purpose— Differential subgroup vulnerability to subclinical cardiovascular disease is likely, and yet few, if any, studies have addressed interactive relations of age, sex, race, and socioeconomic status (SES) to these conditions to examine nuances of known health disparities. We examined distributions of carotid atherosclerosis and arterial stiffness in a socioeconomically diverse, biracial, urban sample. Methods— Participants (n=2270) in the population-based HANDLS study (Healthy Aging in Neighborhoods of Diversity Across the Life Span; 30–64 years old, 44% men, 57% African American, 39% with household income Results— In cross-sectional hierarchical regression analyses, interactive race×SES effects were identified for IMT and pulse wave velocity, such that high SES African Americans had significantly thicker IMTs and faster pulse wave velocities than all other subgroups (ie, low SES African Americans, low SES whites, and high SES whites). A race×sex effect was also identified for IMT, such that the IMT discrepancy between white men and women was more pronounced than the discrepancy between African American men and women. Finally, an SES×sex effect indicated that while IMTs of high SES and low SES men did not significantly differ, high SES women had marginally thicker IMTs than low SES women. Conclusions— High SES African Americans may be particularly vulnerable to subclinical cardiovascular diseases, placing them at enhanced risk for clinical cardiovascular diseases, including stroke. These findings suggest that male sex, low SES, and African American ancestry may represent imprecise generalizations as risk factors for subclinical cardiovascular disease.
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- 2017
13. Psychometric Limitations of the Mini-Mental State Examination Among Nondemented Older Adults: An Evaluation of Neurocognitive and Magnetic Resonance Imaging Correlates
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Eliot L. Siegel, Leslie I. Katzel, Paul P. Giggey, Robert J. Spencer, Shari R. Waldstein, Carrington R. Wendell, and David M. Lefkowitz
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Male ,Aging ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Psychometrics ,MEDLINE ,Context (language use) ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Statistics, Nonparametric ,Cognition ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,medicine ,Humans ,Psychiatry ,Stroke ,General Psychology ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Mini–Mental State Examination ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Brain ,Reproducibility of Results ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Radiography ,Female ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Cognition Disorders ,Psychology ,human activities ,Neurocognitive ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
BACKGROUND/STUDY CONTEXT: Although many of the Mini-Mental State Examination's (MMSE) limitations are well accepted among geriatricians, neuropsychologists, and other interested clinicians and researchers, its continued use in psychometrically unsound ways suggests that additional investigation and dissemination of information are sorely needed. The authors aimed to describe the reliability and validity of the MMSE as a measure of cognitive function among healthy older adults.The authors examined MMSE performance in 124 stroke- and dementia-free, community-dwelling older adults (65% male; mean age = 66.5 years). All participants were administered an extensive neuropsychological battery composed of measures of attention, executive function, memory, and visuospatial function. A subset of 99 participants also underwent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). MMSE test-retest reliability was examined among 65 participants who underwent repeat MMSE testing over an average interval of 83.2 days.Spearman test-retest correlation for total MMSE scores was r S = .35 (p = .004), for Serial Sevens was r S = .40 (p = .001), and for Word Recall was r S = -.01 (p = .96). Total MMSE performance correlated significantly with a minority of neuropsychological tests and MRI-derived indices of white matter disease and brain atrophy. A subset of 17% of participants demonstrated inappropriate intrusion of MMSE Pentagon Copy during another test of visuospatial recall.Overall, MMSE scores exhibited ceiling effects, poor test-retest reliability, limited sensitivity to subtle brain abnormalities, and a high rate of intrusion elsewhere in the neuropsychological battery. Individual MMSE items demonstrated poor construct validity. These qualities illustrate the serious limitations of the MMSE in detecting individual differences in cognitive function among healthy older adults.
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- 2013
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14. THE CARIES MANAGEMENT SYSTEM: UPDATING COST-EFFECTIVENESS WITH 4-YEAR POSTTRIAL DATA
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Nan Jia, Emma Warren, Bradley Curtis, and R. Wendell Evans
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Adult ,Cost effectiveness ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Psychological intervention ,Dentistry ,Oral Health ,Dental Caries ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,health care economics and organizations ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Protocol (science) ,Cost–benefit analysis ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Incidence ,Australia ,030206 dentistry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Markov Chains ,Private practice ,Economic evaluation ,Medical emergency ,business - Abstract
Objectives: Long-term follow-up of the Caries Management System (CMS) protocol demonstrated that regular monitoring and noninvasive management of dental caries is effective in reducing the number of caries-related events over a 7-year period. This analysis complements the authors’ original economic evaluation of the CMS by re-evaluating the per-protocol cost-effectiveness of the CMS approach.Methods: An individual patient-simulation Markov model was developed previously, based on 3-year randomized-controlled trial (RCT) data, to simulate the incidence and progression of dental caries, and resultant interventions, and to evaluate the lifetime cost-effectiveness of the CMS versus standard dental care from the Australian private dental practitioner perspective (in which the baseline age distribution was similar to that of the Australian population). The 4-year posttrial follow-up data are used to re-evaluate the long-term cost-effectiveness of the CMS in a more real-life setting.Results: The reduction in caries risk was maintained among those practices within which the CMS protocols were adhered to. The per-protocol model appears to be reasonably accurate at predicting the risk of restorative events in the posttrial follow-up period. The per-protocol lifetime cost per restorative event avoided is AUD1,980 (USD1,409; 1 AUD = 0.71 USD).Conclusions: The current analysis confirms that the CMS approach is both effective, when the protocols are adhered to appropriately, and cost-effective compared with standard care in the Australian private practice setting.
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- 2016
15. Neuropsychological Performance of Native versus Non-native English Speakers
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Jason E. Kisser, Robert J. Spencer, Carrington R. Wendell, and Shari R. Waldstein
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Adult ,Cross-Cultural Comparison ,Male ,Adolescent ,First language ,Neuropsychological Tests ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,Developmental psychology ,Young Adult ,Fluency ,Cognition ,medicine ,Humans ,Language ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Verbal Behavior ,Neuropsychology ,General Medicine ,Neuropsychological test ,Executive functions ,Cognitive test ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Educational Status ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,Verbal memory ,Psychology ,psychological phenomena and processes - Abstract
Relatively little is known about differences in English-administered, clinical neuropsychological test performance between native versus non-native English speakers, with prior literature yielding mixed findings. The purpose of this study was to examine the performance of native and non-native English speakers with similar age and educational backgrounds on a variety of cognitive tests. Participants were 153 university students (115 native and 38 non-native English speakers) who completed a neuropsychological battery during two testing sessions. Multiple regression analyses examined relations of native language to cognitive performance after adjustment for age, education, sex, and depressive symptomatology. Results showed that native English speakers outperformed non-native English speakers on several language-mediated tasks-Letter and Category Fluency and the Cognitive Estimation Test-as well as Trails A (p's < .05). The two groups performed similarly on tests of executive functions, perceptuo-motor speed, verbal memory, and visuospatial abilities. These results suggest that non-native English language may have a negative influence predominantly on language-dependent tasks.
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- 2012
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16. How do dentists understand evidence and adopt it in practice?
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Stacy M Carter, A Sbaraini, and R. Wendell Evans
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Medical education ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Alternative medicine ,Novelty ,Dentistry ,Coding (therapy) ,Preventive care ,Grounded theory ,Transfer of training ,medicine ,business ,Evidence-based dentistry ,Qualitative research - Abstract
Although there is now a large evidence-based dentistry literature, previous investigators have shown that dentists often consider research evidence irrelevant to their practice. To understand why this is the case, we conducted a qualitative study. Objective: Our aim was to identify how dentists define evidence and how they adopt it in practice. Methods: A qualitative study using grounded theory methodology was conducted. Ten dentists working in eight dental practices were interviewed about their experience and work processes while adopting evidence-based preventive care. Analysis involved transcript coding, detailed memo writing, and data interpretation. Results: Findings revealed that dentists’ direct observations – referred to as clinical evidence – provided the most tangible and trusted evidence in practice and during discussions with colleagues. Dentists described a detailed process used to gather, compare and implement clinical evidence. This process began when they were exposed to novelty in daily practice and proceeded through self-driven testing, producing clinical or tangible evidence that clinicians could use in practice. Conclusion: Based on these findings, we propose an alternative to the linear form of knowledge transfer commonly represented in the literature.
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- 2012
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17. Atmospheric neutrino oscillations and the search for appearance at Super-Kamiokande
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R. Wendell
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Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Particle physics ,Flux ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Atmospheric neutrino ,Neutrino ,Super-Kamiokande ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,Standard Model - Abstract
In contrast to the predictions of the Standard Model of particle physics, experimental data now indicate that neutrinos are massive and undergo flavor oscillations. Indeed, observations of atmospheric neutrinos have confirmed that the disappearance of high-energy muon-like events is well described by the conversion of ν μ into ν τ . Though the primary atmospheric neutrino flux at these energies is composed almost exclusively of ν e and ν μ , this transition implies that it is also possible to observe ν τ -induced events. Recent results from the Super-Kamiokande ν μ disappearance analysis as well the search for the subsequent appearance of ν τ events in the data are presented.
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- 2011
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18. Greater Coffee Intake in Men Is Associated With Steeper Age-Related Increases in Blood Pressure
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Shari R. Waldstein, Carrington R. Wendell, Alan B. Zonderman, and Paul P. Giggey
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Physical activity ,Coffee ,Article ,Body Mass Index ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Age Distribution ,Age related ,Coffee intake ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Prospective cohort study ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Follow up studies ,Middle Aged ,Blood pressure ,chemistry ,Hypertension ,Physical therapy ,Female ,business ,Caffeine ,Body mass index ,Follow-Up Studies ,Demography - Abstract
Administration of caffeine or caffeinated coffee in laboratory and ambulatory settings results in small to moderate acute increases in blood pressure (BP). However, habitual coffee intake has not been linked conclusively to long-term increases in basal BP, and findings are inconsistent by sex. This study examined longitudinal relations of habitual coffee use to resting BP and pulse pressure.In a sample of 2,442 participants from the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging (BLSA), coffee consumption was used to predict resting systolic and diastolic BP and pulse pressure using longitudinal mixed-effects regression models adjusted for age, education, antihypertensive, and antihyperlipidemic use, smoking, and body mass index (BMI). Analyses were stratified by sex (865 women and 1,577 men), and age and BMI were examined as possible effect modifiers.In men, we identified a significant three-way interaction among coffee intake (nonlinear), baseline age, and length of follow-up for systolic BP (SBP) and pulse pressure. A significant interaction of coffee intake and BMI (nonlinear) was also noted for SBP in men. There were no significant relations of coffee intake to BP or pulse pressure in women.Greater coffee intake in men was associated with steeper age-related increases in SBP and pulse pressure, particularly beyond 70 years of age and in overweight to obese men.
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- 2011
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19. Hypertension and Neurocognitive Function in Older Adults Blood Pressure and Beyond
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Carrington R. Wendell, Leslie I. Katzel, and Shari R. Waldstein
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Aging ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health (social science) ,Blood pressure ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Cardiology ,medicine ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,business ,Gerontology ,Neurocognitive - Published
- 2010
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20. Neurocognitive Function and Cardiovascular Disease
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Shari R. Waldstein and Carrington R. Wendell
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medicine.medical_specialty ,General Neuroscience ,Poison control ,Cognition ,General Medicine ,Disease ,Neuropsychological Tests ,medicine.disease ,Executive functions ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Risk Factors ,medicine ,Humans ,Dementia ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Cognitive decline ,Cognition Disorders ,Psychology ,Psychiatry ,Stroke ,Neurocognitive - Abstract
Cardiovascular (CV) diseases and their risk factors negatively impact the brain and neurocognitive function prior to stroke, dementia, or mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Indeed, a progression of neurocognitive and neurobiological impairments may be associated with increasingly severe manifestations of CV risk and disease. In samples ranging from children to elderly, a broad spectrum of CV risk factors, and both subclinical and clinical CV diseases, have been related to decrements in cognitive function and cognitive decline across multiple domains of performance including executive functions, attention, learning and memory, perceptuo-motor speed, and others. In contrast to the MCI literature, the possibility of distinct subgroups has not been explored. Further, it remains unknown whether neurocognitive performance (or its pattern) per se can predict conversion to MCI and later dementia. We suggest that neurocognitive function may contribute to such prediction in concert with relevant radiological, genetic, biomedical, sociodemographic, and other data. To best do so, future research would benefit from inclusion of a breadth of neurocognitive tests that tap multiple domains of function and have historical sensitivity to vascular and neurodegenerative pathology, in addition to biological or radiological assessment of such pathology. Aggressive efforts at prevention and early intervention with CV risk may play a critical role in the prevention of MCI or dementia.
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- 2010
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21. Nonsteroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs, Aspirin, and Cognitive Function in the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging
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Stephen L. Seliger, Alan B. Zonderman, Shari R. Waldstein, Carrington R. Wendell, E. Jeffrey Metter, and Luigi Ferrucci
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Gerontology ,Drug ,Longitudinal study ,Aspirin ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.drug_class ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Analgesic ,Neuropsychology ,Anti-inflammatory ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Antipyretic ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Prospective cohort study ,business ,medicine.drug ,media_common - Abstract
Objective To examine the relations of non-aspirin, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) and aspirin use to age-related change in multiple domains of cognitive function among non-demented, community-dwelling individuals.
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- 2010
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22. Has urbanization become a risk factor for dental caries in Kerala, India: a cross-sectional study of children aged 6 and 12 years
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Bradley Christian and R. Wendell Evans
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Male ,Rural Population ,Urban Population ,Dental Caries Susceptibility ,Cross-sectional study ,India ,Dentistry ,Dental Caries ,Logistic regression ,World health ,Diet, Cariogenic ,stomatognathic system ,Risk Factors ,Urbanization ,Environmental health ,Humans ,Medicine ,Risk factor ,Child ,Dental Health Surveys ,Poverty ,General Dentistry ,business.industry ,Potential risk ,Significant difference ,stomatognathic diseases ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Logistic Models ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Female ,business - Abstract
Objectives. The objectives of this study were to: (i) test the hypothesis that urbanization is a risk factor for dental caries in children aged 6 and 12 years in Kollam, Kerala; and (ii) identify other possible risk factors for dental caries. Methods. A cross-sectional study design was followed. The subjects were stratified by socio-demographic status into urban middle class, urban poor, and rural poor. Caries experience was measured by visual examination of teeth according to the World Health Organization criteria. Data on potential risk factors were collected using a close-ended, structured, and interviewer-administered questionnaire. Data modelling was conducted using logistic regression analyses. Results. Eight hundred seventy-six children were examined; 53% of 6-year-olds and 90% of 12-year-olds examined were caries free. The caries experience rates were 1.40 decayed, missing, or filled primary teeth and 0.15 Decayed, Missing, and Filled Teeth (DMFT) for the 6- and 12-year-olds, respectively. Urban children did not have a higher caries experience compared with rural children. The only risk factor associated with a significant difference in DMFT scores was the dental visiting pattern. Children who visited the dentist had a significantly higher mean DMFT score (P = 0.009). Conclusion. There was no evidence that urbanization is a risk factor for dental caries in Kerala. Dental caries experience was low, against any standard, in Kollam. Risk factors for caries were not identified.
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- 2009
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23. Study of TeV neutrinos with upward showering muons in Super-Kamiokande
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C. W. Walter, R. Wendell, R. Svoboda, T. Ishizuka, S. Yamada, T. Sasaki, M. Yoshida, H. G. Berns, M. B. Smy, Y. Furuse, K. Kaneyuki, C. Saji, Masashi Yokoyama, R. Terri, A. Minamino, J. Dunmore, Takaaki Kajita, Y. Totsuka, K. Iida, M. Koshiba, Y. Oyama, B. S. Yang, Y. Choi, K. Ishihara, T. J. Haines, T. Sato, D. W. Liu, Haruki Watanabe, Masato Shiozawa, N. Tamura, H. Nishino, I. Kato, Lawrence Sulak, J. L. Raaf, J. L. Stone, S. Mine, Y. Takeuchi, Atsushi Takeda, E. Kearns, S. T. Clark, C. Ishihara, Shantanu Desai, Kunio Inoue, M. Sugihara, H. Ishii, C. K. Jung, T. Ishida, M. Swanson, K. Abe, T. Kobayashi, K. Nishikawa, T. Nakaya, T. Nakadaira, Yusuke Koshio, K. Nitta, J. Yoo, S. Yamamoto, Kate Scholberg, J. Y. Kim, C. McGrew, M. R. Vagins, C. Yanagisawa, K. Kobayashi, Y. Obayashi, K. Washburn, W. E. Keig, M. Hasegawa, Shigetaka Moriyama, S. Likhoded, G. Mitsuka, K. Ueshima, I. S. Jeong, M. Sakuda, Y. Hayato, R. Gran, T. Hasegawa, F. Dufour, I. T. Lim, H. K. Seo, A. K. Ichikawa, J. S. Jang, T. Tanaka, D. Kielczewska, Y. Kuno, K. Nishijima, S. Nakayama, M. Ishitsuka, N. Tanimoto, S. Tasaka, H. Okazawa, R. J. Wilkes, W. Wang, Masayuki Nakahata, Alec Habig, T. Koike, B. Hartfiel, Y. Takenaga, K. Okumura, Y. Fukuda, Y. Idehara, K. S. Ganezer, M. Miura, Hirokazu Ishino, M. D. Messier, C. Regis, J. Kameda, Katsuki Hiraide, S. Dazeley, J. P. Cravens, T. Ishii, H. Sato, Y. Gando, J. Hill, Yasunari Suzuki, S. Matsuno, G. Guillian, A. T. Suzuki, H. W. Sobel, Eric Thrane, M. Fechner, Y. Watanabe, W. R. Kropp, S. B. Kim, A. Clough, David William Casper, C. Mitsuda, H. Ogawa, K. K. Shiraishi, I. Higuchi, J. G. Learned, H. Maesaka, M. Goldhaber, T. Kato, Yoshitaka Itow, S. Hatakeyama, K. Nakamura, and A. Sarrat
- Subjects
Physics ,Muon ,Physics::Instrumentation and Detectors ,Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Bremsstrahlung ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Nuclear physics ,Pair production ,WIMP ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Neutrino ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Super-Kamiokande ,Neutrino oscillation ,Zenith - Abstract
A subset of neutrino-induced upward through-going muons in the Super-Kamiokande detector consists of high energy muons which lose energy through radiative processes such as bremsstrahlung, e^{+} e^{-} pair production and photonuclear interactions. These ``upward showering muons'' comprise an event sample whose mean parent neutrino energy is approximately 1 TeV. We show that the zenith angle distribution of upward showering muons is consistent with negligible distortion due to neutrino oscillations, as expected of such a high-energy neutrino sample. We present astronomical searches using these high energy events, such as those from WIMP annihilations in the Sun, Earth and Galactic Center, some suspected point sources, as well as searches for diffuse flux from the interstellar medium., Comment: Submitted for publication to Astroparticle Physics. Fig 12 has slightly higher resolution in the version submitted to the journal
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- 2008
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24. Subclinical carotid atherosclerosis and neurocognitive function in an urban population
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Shari R. Waldstein, Alan B. Zonderman, Carrington R. Wendell, and Michele K. Evans
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Adult ,Carotid Artery Diseases ,Male ,Urban Population ,Population ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Carotid Intima-Media Thickness ,White People ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cognition ,Memory ,Medicine ,Humans ,Attention ,Effects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performance ,Longitudinal Studies ,Prospective Studies ,education ,Socioeconomic status ,Poverty ,Subclinical infection ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Carotid ultrasonography ,Middle Aged ,Atherosclerosis ,Cognitive test ,Black or African American ,Social Class ,Baltimore ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Cognition Disorders ,Neurocognitive ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Demography - Abstract
Background and aims Examine age, sex, race, and socioeconomic status as modifiers of the association between carotid intimal medial thickness (IMT) and neurocognitive performance in a socioeconomically diverse, biracial, urban, adult population. Methods Participants were 1712 community-dwelling adults (45% men, 56% African-American, 38% below poverty threshold, aged 30–64 years) enrolled in the Healthy Aging in Neighborhoods of Diversity across the Life Span (HANDLS) study. Participants underwent initial carotid ultrasonography followed by cognitive testing on up to two occasions over 4 years. Mixed-effects regression analyses were adjusted for demographic, behavioral, and biomedical covariates. Results Significant cross-sectional IMT × race × poverty interactions were identified for measures of delayed recall memory, auditory-verbal attention, and working memory. An IMT × race interaction also appeared for auditory-verbal learning. Higher IMT was generally associated with worse cognitive performance, but the disadvantage was most pronounced among those with higher socioeconomic status and white participants. No longitudinal associations were identified. Conclusions Carotid IMT-cognition associations differed as a function of race and socioeconomic status and were most compelling for measures of attention, executive function, and memory. These findings highlight the possibility that subclinical atherosclerosis may be differentially informative as a predictor of cognitive performance among varied demographic subgroups.
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- 2015
25. Coal Combustion By-Product Use on Acid Soil: Effects on Maize Growth and Soil pH and Electrical Conductivity
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V. C. Baligar, K. Dale Ritchey, S. K. Zeto, R. B. Clark, and R. R. Wendell
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Waste management ,Electrical resistivity and conductivity ,Soil pH ,By-product ,Coal combustion products ,Soil chemistry ,Environmental science ,Fluidized bed combustion ,Flue-gas desulfurization - Published
- 2015
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26. Renal Function and Long-term Decline in Cognitive Function: The Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging
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Luigi Ferrucci, Alan B. Zonderman, Stephen L. Seliger, Carrington R. Wendell, and Shari R. Waldstein
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Longitudinal study ,Aging ,Adolescent ,Renal function ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Verbal learning ,Kidney Function Tests ,Kidney ,Article ,Cohort Studies ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Executive Function ,Young Adult ,Memory ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Dementia ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Prospective Studies ,Renal Insufficiency, Chronic ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Creatinine ,business.industry ,Neuropsychology ,Cognition ,Middle Aged ,Verbal Learning ,medicine.disease ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Nephrology ,Baltimore ,Cardiology ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,business ,Cognition Disorders ,Cohort study ,Glomerular Filtration Rate - Abstract
Background: Renal disease has been associated with greater risk of dementia and greater cognitive impairment. However, the relationship of lower renal function with long-term decline in specific domains of cognitive function remains unclear among community-dwelling, non-demented individuals. Methods: Stroke- and dementia-free participants (n = 2,116) were enrolled in the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging, a community-based, prospective, longitudinal study. Renal function was estimated by the inverse of serum creatinine adjusted for age, sex and race and (in sensitivity analyses) estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) using the MDRD formula. Outcome measures were changes in scores on 6 cognitive tests encompassing a range of cognitive functions, measured at 2-year intervals. Mixed-effects regression models examined the longitudinal relations of renal function with cognitive functions after adjusting for demographics, comorbidity and other potential confounders. Results: Mean age at initial testing was 53.9 years (SD 17.1), and 94 participants (4.4%) had an eGFR 2 and 18.5% had at least one comorbidity. With increasing age, longitudinal increases in creatinine concentrations were associated with more rapid decline in performance on several cognitive measures, including the learning slope of the California Verbal Learning Test, a test of verbal learning (p < 0.01), and the Benton Visual Retention Test, a test of visual memory (p < 0.01). Associations were similar for changes in eGFRMDRD, which was also associated with the rate of decline in verbal memory. Conclusion: In a community-based adult population, declines in renal function independently associated with greater long-term declines in visual memory and verbal memory and learning.
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- 2015
27. Late-breaking abstracts presented for the 41st Annual Meeting of the Society of Gynecologic Oncologists
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R. Wendell Naumann
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Oncology ,business.industry ,Family medicine ,medicine ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,business - Published
- 2010
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28. Nonlinear Longitudinal Trajectories of Cholesterol and Neuropsychological Function
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Shari R. Waldstein, Carrington R. Wendell, and Alan B. Zonderman
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Adult ,Male ,Longitudinal study ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Aging ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Verbal learning ,Article ,Young Adult ,Cognition ,medicine ,Dementia ,Humans ,Neuropsychological assessment ,Effects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performance ,Longitudinal Studies ,Cognitive decline ,Psychiatry ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Cholesterol Measurement ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Cholesterol ,Data Interpretation, Statistical ,Female ,Psychology ,Demography ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
OBJECTIVE Prior literature has identified inconsistent longitudinal associations between total cholesterol and cognitive decline. The authors examined prospective nonlinear relations of coincident trajectories of total cholesterol and cognitive function among persons free of stroke, dementia, and other neurological disease. METHOD Up to 1,601 participants from the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging (aged 19-93, 51% male, 75% White) underwent fasting cholesterol measurement and neuropsychological assessment on up to 12 occasions (M = 3.2, SD = 2.1) over up to 19 years (M = 6.4, SD = 5.3) of follow-up. Mixed-effects regression analyses were adjusted for age, sex, race, education, systolic blood pressure, body mass index, cardiovascular disease, lipid-lowering medication use, smoking, alcohol use, and depressive symptoms. RESULTS Analyses revealed significant longitudinal associations between quadratic total cholesterol and performance on measures of global mental status, verbal learning, executive function, and language (all ps < .05). In general, higher total cholesterol was associated with poorer middle-aged or young-old (60-69 years) cognitive performance, but better old-old (80-89 years) cognitive performance. Linear models also revealed an association between lower total cholesterol and accelerated decline in visual memory performance. CONCLUSIONS Overall, results indicate nonlinear longitudinal relations of total cholesterol to cognitive decline. Whereas higher cholesterol levels were associated with cognitive decline in the middle-aged or young-old, lower cholesterol levels were related to cognitive decline among old-old participants.
- Published
- 2013
29. Search for nucleon decay via n→ν[over ¯]π0 and p→ν[over ¯]π+ in Super-Kamiokande
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K, Abe, Y, Hayato, T, Iida, K, Iyogi, J, Kameda, Y, Koshio, Y, Kozuma, Ll, Marti, M, Miura, S, Moriyama, M, Nakahata, S, Nakayama, Y, Obayashi, H, Sekiya, M, Shiozawa, Y, Suzuki, A, Takeda, Y, Takenaga, K, Ueno, K, Ueshima, S, Yamada, T, Yokozawa, C, Ishihara, H, Kaji, T, Kajita, K, Kaneyuki, K P, Lee, T, McLachlan, K, Okumura, Y, Shimizu, N, Tanimoto, L, Labarga, E, Kearns, M, Litos, J L, Raaf, J L, Stone, L R, Sulak, M, Goldhaber, K, Bays, W R, Kropp, S, Mine, C, Regis, A, Renshaw, M B, Smy, H W, Sobel, K S, Ganezer, J, Hill, W E, Keig, J S, Jang, J Y, Kim, I T, Lim, J B, Albert, K, Scholberg, C W, Walter, R, Wendell, T M, Wongjirad, T, Ishizuka, S, Tasaka, J G, Learned, S, Matsuno, S N, Smith, T, Hasegawa, T, Ishida, T, Ishii, T, Kobayashi, T, Nakadaira, K, Nakamura, K, Nishikawa, Y, Oyama, K, Sakashita, T, Sekiguchi, T, Tsukamoto, A T, Suzuki, Y, Takeuchi, M, Ikeda, A, Minamino, T, Nakaya, Y, Fukuda, Y, Itow, G, Mitsuka, T, Tanaka, C K, Jung, G D, Lopez, I, Taylor, C, Yanagisawa, H, Ishino, A, Kibayashi, S, Mino, T, Mori, M, Sakuda, H, Toyota, Y, Kuno, M, Yoshida, S B, Kim, B S, Yang, H, Okazawa, Y, Choi, K, Nishijima, M, Koshiba, M, Yokoyama, Y, Totsuka, K, Martens, J, Schuemann, M R, Vagins, S, Chen, Y, Heng, Z, Yang, H, Zhang, D, Kielczewska, P, Mijakowski, K, Connolly, M, Dziomba, E, Thrane, and R J, Wilkes
- Abstract
We present the results of searches for nucleon decay via n→ν[over ¯]π0 and p→ν[over ¯]π+ using data from a combined 172.8 kt·yr exposure of Super-Kamiokande-I,-II, and-III. We set lower limits on the partial lifetime for each of these modes: τn→ν[over ¯]π01.1×10(33) years and τp→ν[over ¯]π+3.9×10(32) years at a 90% confidence level.
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- 2013
30. Interactions of calcium sulfite with soils and plants
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K. Dale Ritchey, Thomas B. Kinraide, and Russell R. Wendell
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Preservative ,Soil Science ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Mineralogy ,Plant Science ,Calcium ,complex mixtures ,Soil management ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Calcium sulfite ,Environmental chemistry ,Soil pH ,Soil water ,Phytotoxicity ,Sulfur dioxide - Abstract
CaSO3 is a by-product formed by several of the processes used for scrubbing SO2 from flue gas produced by coal-burning power generators. Using CaSO3 to improve the calcium status of acid soils would be a beneficial alternative to disposal in landfills. CaSO3 has biocidal properties and is used as a disinfectant and food and drink preservative. It is important to evaluate under what conditions application to soils would not harm plant growth. Laboratory experiments confirmed that two transformations of CaSO3 occurred in soil systems: (1) decomposition to produce SO2 gas, and (2) oxidation to calcium sulfate. Conversion to SO2 occurred in solution and soil at low pH, and acid soils treated with CaSO3 were initially toxic to seedling root growth. The degree of toxicity was time-dependent, with reduction in toxicity occurring as CaSO3 oxidized to calcium sulfate. Soil reaction also influenced toxicity, and at soil pH levels above 6, little seedling toxicity was evident.
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- 1995
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31. Nonlinear Relations of Cardiovascular Risk Factors to Neuropsychological Function and Dementia
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Leslie I. Katzel, Carrington R. Wendell, and Shari R. Waldstein
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Mini–Mental State Examination ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Cardiovascular risk factors ,Cognition ,Context (language use) ,Disease ,medicine.disease ,medicine ,Dementia ,Intensive care medicine ,business ,Neurocognitive ,Stroke - Abstract
Cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the United States and most westernized nations [1]. Cardiovascular risk factors and diseases confer substantial increase in risk for ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke [2]. Yet, outside the context of clinical stroke, the brain is an under-recognized target organ of a spectrum of cardiovascular diseases. Although it has long been known that cardiovascular risk factors and diseases contribute to the development of vascular (previously known as multi-infarct) dementia, we now know that similar risk is conferred for Alzheimer’s disease (AD) [3]. Importantly, long before clinical manifestations of stroke or dementia are apparent, cardiovascular risk factors are also known to negatively impact the brain and neurocognitive function. Evidence suggests that cardiovascular risk factors elevate risk of concurrent cognitive dysfunction, as well as accelerated cognitive aging.
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- 2012
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32. Carotid atherosclerosis and prospective risk of dementia
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Alan B. Zonderman, James B. Strait, Luigi Ferrucci, Carrington R. Wendell, Shari R. Waldstein, and Richard O'Brien
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Carotid Artery Diseases ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Longitudinal study ,Aging ,Carotid Intima-Media Thickness ,Severity of Illness Index ,Article ,Alzheimer Disease ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Risk Factors ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal medicine ,Severity of illness ,medicine ,Dementia ,Humans ,Carotid Stenosis ,Longitudinal Studies ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Aged ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Advanced and Specialized Nursing ,Aged, 80 and over ,Proportional hazards model ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Blood pressure ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Alzheimer's disease ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Background and Purpose— Although vascular risk factors have been implicated in the development of all-cause dementia and Alzheimer disease (AD), few studies have examined the association between subclinical atherosclerosis and prospective risk of dementia. Methods— Participants from the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging (n=364; age, 60–95 years; median age, 73; 60% male; 82% white) underwent initial carotid atherosclerosis assessment and subsequently were assessed for dementia and AD annually for up to 14 years (median, 7.0). Cox proportional hazards models predicting all-cause dementia and AD were adjusted for age, sex, race, education, blood pressure, cholesterol, cardiovascular disease, diabetes mellitus, and smoking. Results— Sixty participants developed dementia, with 53 diagnosed as AD. Raw rates of future dementia and AD among individuals initially in the upper quintile of carotid intimal medial thickness or with bilateral carotid plaque were generally double the rates of individuals with intimal medial thickness in the lower quintiles or no plaque at baseline. Adjusted proportional hazards models revealed >2.5-fold increased risk of dementia and AD among individuals in the upper quintile of carotid intimal medial thickness, and approximately 2.0-fold increased risk of dementia among individuals with bilateral plaque. Conclusions— Multiple measures of carotid atherosclerosis are associated with prospective risk of dementia. Individuals in the upper quintile of carotid intimal medial thickness or bilateral carotid plaque were at greatest risk. These findings underscore the possibility that early intervention to reduce atherosclerosis may help delay or prevent onset of dementia and AD.
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- 2012
33. Depressive symptoms are associated with subclinical cerebrovascular disease among healthy older women, not men
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William F. Rosenberger, Eliot L. Siegel, Shari R. Waldstein, Leslie I. Katzel, David M. Lefkowitz, Megan M. Hosey, and Carrington R. Wendell
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Nerve Fibers, Myelinated ,Article ,Atrophy ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Subclinical infection ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Sex Characteristics ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Depression ,Beck Depression Inventory ,Brain ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Hyperintensity ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Cerebrovascular Disorders ,Blood pressure ,Physical therapy ,Female ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Psychology ,Body mass index - Abstract
Background Associations among diagnosed unipolar depression, depressive symptoms, and cerebrovascular disease are well known. However, minimal research has investigated whether sex may modify such associations, despite known sex differences in depression and depressive symptoms. This study examined whether depressive symptoms were disproportionately related to subclinical cerebrovascular disease (SCD) in women versus men. Methods One hundred one older adults (58% men; mean age=67 years), free of major comorbidities, completed the Beck Depression Inventory and underwent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). MRI scans were neuroradiologist rated for markers of SCD (periventricular and deep white matter hyperintensities, and number of silent infarcts) and brain atrophy (ventricular enlargement and sulcal widening). Two rank-sum outcome variables (SCD and brain atrophy) were then created. Results On average, depressive symptoms were relatively low in magnitude (mean = 3.8, standard deviation=3.6, range=0–17). Multiple regression analyses, adjusted for age, sex, education, systolic blood pressure, fasting glucose, maximal oxygen consumption, body mass index, average weekly alcohol consumption, and Mini-Mental State Examination performance revealed sex to be a significant effect modifier of depressive symptoms in the prediction of SCD. Sex-stratified regression analyses indicated depressive symptoms, and SCD was strongly related among women but not men. Depressive symptoms were not related to brain atrophy, regardless of inclusion of sex as an effect modifier. Conclusions Depressive symptoms, even in a subclinical range, are significantly associated with an MRI-derived index of SCD among women, but not men, in the present sample of relatively healthy older adults.
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- 2010
34. Applications of Neurocognitive Assessment in Behavioral Medicine
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Shari R. Waldstein, Megan M. Hosey, and Carrington R. Wendell
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Psychomotor learning ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Cognition ,Executive functions ,medicine.disease ,Quality of life (healthcare) ,Behavioral medicine ,medicine ,Dementia ,Neuropsychological assessment ,Psychiatry ,Psychology ,Neurocognitive ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Neurocognition is a critically important dimension of our daily functioning that is impacted negatively by a host of non-neurological, systemic diseases. In the field of behavioral medicine, neurocognitive testing is used to examine the impact of such diseases and their risk factors on multiple domains of function including attention; learning and memory; executive functions; visuospatial; psychomotor; and perceptual abilities; and language. In that regard, a host of behavioral, biomedical, psychosocial, and psychophysiological risk factors and a broad spectrum of systemic medical diseases confer vulnerability to (or in some instances resilience against) cognitive difficulties, subclinical cerebrovascular disease, and ultimately dementia or stroke. Neurocognitive assessment can also be used to help facilitate an understanding of medical decision making, treatment outcomes, quality of life, and functional status. For example, the executive functions may have a particularly important role in health behaviors and their change, management of chronic disease and chronic pain, treatment adherence, and other medical decision making. Neuropsychological assessment is highly relevant to the study and practice of behavioral medicine.
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- 2010
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35. Longitudinal examination of obesity and cognitive function: results from the Baltimore longitudinal study of aging
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April Lhotsky, Carrington R. Wendell, Alan B. Zonderman, Luigi Ferrucci, and John Gunstad
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Gerontology ,Male ,Longitudinal study ,Aging ,Epidemiology ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Body Mass Index ,Executive Function ,Waist–hip ratio ,Cognition ,Memory ,medicine ,Verbal fluency test ,Humans ,Attention ,Longitudinal Studies ,Obesity ,Association (psychology) ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Waist-Hip Ratio ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Baltimore ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Cognition Disorders ,Body mass index ,Neurocognitive - Abstract
Background: Obesity indices (i.e. BMI, waist-to-hip ratio) show differential relationships to other health outcomes, though their association to neurocognitive outcome is unclear. Methods: We examined whether central obesity would be more closely associated with cognitive function in 1,703 participants from the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging. Results: Longitudinal mixed-effects regression models showed multiple obesity indices were associated with poorer performance in a variety of cognitive domains, including global screening measures, memory, and verbal fluency tasks. Obesity was associated with better performance on tests of attention and visuospatial ability. An obesity index by age interaction emerged in multiple domains, including memory and attention/executive function. Conclusion: Obesity indices showed similar associations to cognitive function, and further work is needed to clarify the physiological mechanisms that link obesity to poor neurocognitive outcome.
- Published
- 2009
36. Search for Neutrinos from GRB 080319B at Super-Kamiokande
- Author
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E. Thrane, K. Abe, Y. Hayato, T. Iida, M. Ikeda, J. Kameda, K. Kobayashi, Y. Koshio, M. Miura, S. Moriyama, M. Nakahata, S. Nakayama, Y. Obayashi, H. Ogawa, H. Sekiya, M. Shiozawa, Y. Suzuki, A. Takeda, Y. Takenaga, Y. Takeuchi, K. Ueno, K. Ueshima, H. Watanabe, S. Yamada, M. R. Vagins, S. Hazama, I. Higuchi, C. Ishihara, T. Kajita, K. Kaneyuki, G. Mitsuka, H. Nishino, K. Okumura, N. Tanimoto, F. Dufour, E. Kearns, M. Litos, J. L. Raaf, J. L. Stone, L. R. Sulak, M. Goldhaber, K. Bays, D. Casper, J. P. Cravens, W. R. Kropp, S. Mine, C. Regis, M. B. Smy, H. W. Sobel, K. S. Ganezer, J. Hill, W. E. Keig, J. S. Jang, I. S. Jeong, J. Y. Kim, I. T. Lim, M. Fechner, K. Scholberg, C. W. Walter, R. Wendell, S. Tasaka, J. G. Learned, S. Matsuno, Y. Watanabe, T. Hasegawa, T. Ishida, T. Ishii, T. Kobayashi, T. Nakadaira, K. Nakamura, K. Nishikawa, Y. Oyama, K. Sakashita, T. Sekiguchi, T. Tsukamoto, A. T. Suzuki, A. K. Ichikawa, A. Minamino, T. Nakaya, M. Yokoyama, S. Dazeley, R. Svoboda, A. Habig, Y. Fukuda, Y. Itow, T. Tanaka, C. K. Jung, G. Lopez, C. McGrew, C. Yanagisawa, N. Tamura, Y. Idehara, H. Ishino, A. Kibayashi, M. Sakuda, Y. Kuno, M. Yoshida, S. B. Kim, B. S. Yang, T. Ishizuka, H. Okazawa, Y. Choi, H. K. Seo, Y. Furuse, K. Nishijima, Y. Yokosawa, M. Koshiba, Y. Totsuka, S. Chen, G. Gong, Y. Heng, T. Xue, Z. Yang, H. Zhang, D. Kielczewska, P. Mijakowski, H. G. Berns, K. Connolly, M. Dziomba, and R. J. Wilkes
- Subjects
Physics ,Muon ,Physics::Instrumentation and Detectors ,Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Fluence ,Space and Planetary Science ,Coincident ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Limit (mathematics) ,Neutrino ,Super-Kamiokande ,Gamma-ray burst ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We perform a search for neutrinos coincident with GRB 080319B, the brightest GRB observed to date, in a +/- 1,000 s window. No statistically significant coincidences were observed and we thereby obtain an upper limit on the fluence of neutrino-induced muons from this source. From this we apply reasonable assumptions to derive a limit on neutrino fluence from the GRB., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, May 2009 issue. 10 pages, 1 figure, 3 tables
- Published
- 2009
37. Search for proton decay via p--e+pi0 and p--micro+pi0 in a large water Cherenkov detector
- Author
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H, Nishino, S, Clark, K, Abe, Y, Hayato, T, Iida, M, Ikeda, J, Kameda, K, Kobayashi, Y, Koshio, M, Miura, S, Moriyama, M, Nakahata, S, Nakayama, Y, Obayashi, H, Ogawa, H, Sekiya, M, Shiozawa, Y, Suzuki, A, Takeda, Y, Takenaga, Y, Takeuchi, K, Ueno, K, Ueshima, H, Watanabe, S, Yamada, S, Hazama, I, Higuchi, C, Ishihara, T, Kajita, K, Kaneyuki, G, Mitsuka, K, Okumura, N, Tanimoto, M R, Vagins, F, Dufour, E, Kearns, M, Litos, J L, Raaf, J L, Stone, L R, Sulak, W, Wang, M, Goldhaber, S, Dazeley, R, Svoboda, K, Bays, D, Casper, J P, Cravens, W R, Kropp, S, Mine, C, Regis, M B, Smy, H W, Sobel, K S, Ganezer, J, Hill, W E, Keig, J S, Jang, J Y, Kim, I T, Lim, M, Fechner, K, Scholberg, C W, Walter, R, Wendell, S, Tasaka, J G, Learned, S, Matsuno, Y, Watanabe, T, Hasegawa, T, Ishida, T, Ishii, T, Kobayashi, T, Nakadaira, K, Nakamura, K, Nishikawa, Y, Oyama, K, Sakashita, T, Sekiguchi, T, Tsukamoto, A T, Suzuki, A, Minamino, T, Nakaya, M, Yokoyama, Y, Fukuda, Y, Itow, T, Tanaka, C K, Jung, G, Lopez, C, McGrew, R, Terri, C, Yanagisawa, N, Tamura, Y, Idehara, M, Sakuda, Y, Kuno, M, Yoshida, S B, Kim, B S, Yang, T, Ishizuka, H, Okazawa, Y, Choi, H K, Seo, Y, Furuse, K, Nishijima, Y, Yokosawa, M, Koshiba, Y, Totsuka, S, Chen, Y, Heng, Z, Yang, H, Zhang, D, Kielczewska, E, Thrane, and R J, Wilkes
- Abstract
We have searched for proton decays via p--e;{+}pi;{0} and p--micro;{+}pi;{0} using data from a 91.7 kt.yr exposure of Super-Kamiokande-I and a 49.2 kt.yr exposure of Super-Kamiokande-II. No candidate events were observed with expected backgrounds induced by atmospheric neutrinos of 0.3 events for each decay mode. From these results, we set lower limits on the partial lifetime of 8.2 x 10;{33} and 6.6 x 10;{33} years at 90% confidence level for p--e;{+}pi;{0} and p--micro;{+}pi;{0} modes, respectively.
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- 2009
38. Dental Fluorosis Following Downward Adjustment of Fluoride in Drinking Water
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R. Wendell Evans and John W. Stamm
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Male ,Fluorosis, Dental ,Dentistry ,Sampling Studies ,Cohort Studies ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,stomatognathic system ,Fluoridation ,Maxilla ,Prevalence ,Cluster Analysis ,Humans ,Medicine ,Water fluoride ,Child ,General Dentistry ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Reproducibility of Results ,medicine.disease ,Incisor ,stomatognathic diseases ,chemistry ,Dental Epidemiology ,Hong Kong ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,business ,Fluoride ,Dental fluorosis - Abstract
The drinking water fluoride concentration in Hong Kong was reduced by about 0.2 ppm in June 1978. This study was undertaken to determine whether the prevailing level of dental fluorosis was affected by such a minor change. Cohorts of children (N = 1,062) aged seven to 12 years, who were born both before and after the fluoride reduction, were examined clinically using Dean's fluorosis index. Based on upper right central incisors, dental fluorosis prevalence decreased from 64 to 47 percent and the community fluorosis index decreased from 1.01 to 0.75 (P less than .01). Thus, dental fluorosis was reduced, although the reduction in water fluoride concentration was not sufficient to achieve the minimal fluorosis level that Dean associated with a fluoride concentration optimal for caries prevention. Variation in dental fluorosis has been reported previously to result from marked sudden changes, during tooth formative years, to drinking water fluoride concentration. This study confirms preliminary findings that variation in dental fluorosis arising from minor changes to the fluoride level in drinking water is also measurable.
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- 1991
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39. Utilization of the Government Dental Service by Chinese civil servants in Hong Kong
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R. Wendell Evans, O. Preben Lind, and Kelvin K. Y. Mak
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Adult ,Waiting time ,China ,Time Factors ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Health Behavior ,Oral Health ,Sample (statistics) ,Civil servants ,Education ,Appointments and Schedules ,Denial ,Humans ,Sociology ,Dental Health Services ,General Dentistry ,media_common ,Service (business) ,Government ,Medical education ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Middle Aged ,State Dentistry ,Income ,Income level ,Hong Kong ,Attitude to Health - Abstract
A sociological study was conducted in 1987 on a sample of 490 Hong Kong Chinese civil servants for the purpose of investigating factors which influenced their utilization of a freely available Government dental service. The proportions of regular, irregular and non-users of the dental service were 69, 18, and 13% respectively. Regular users had a higher educational standard and income level than the other two user-types. Most of the regular users attended the dental clinics for a check-up. The irregular users did not regularly utilize the service mainly because it took a long time to obtain an appointment. Non-users referred to the long waiting time to obtain an appointment and to their perception of not having dental problems when asked to give their main reasons for not utilizing the dental service. The majority of the user-types considered that shortening the waiting time and employing more dentists would increase the utilization of the Government dental service.
- Published
- 1990
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- View/download PDF
40. Measurement of neutrino oscillation with KamLAND: Evidence of spectral distortion
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S. Hatakeyama, M. P. Decowski, H. Ikeda, J. Shirai, K. Ishii, Ryan Rohm, G. Guillian, J. A. Detwiler, John G. Learned, T. Maeda, Frederick Gray, B. K. Fujikawa, K. Eguchi, A. Rojas, Y. Fu, Y. Kamyshkov, T. Miletic, K. Tamae, S. Matsuno, J. S. Ricol, K. Nakajima, M. Koga, J. Goldman, Yuri Efremenko, Kunio Inoue, J. A. Messimore, K. M. Heeger, Osamu Tajima, Z. Djurcic, Y. Tsuda, T. Kawashima, M. Motoki, D. A. Dwyer, B. D. Dieterle, A. Kozlov, A. Suzuki, C. R. Gould, K. Furuno, N. Tolich, Y. Uchida, M. Batygov, Hiroko Watanabe, K. McKinny, T. Mitsui, D. M. Markoff, B. E. Berger, R. Wendell, M. J. Chen, A. W. P. Poon, F. Suekane, J. Busenitz, H. M. Steiner, Hitoshi Murayama, G. A. Horton-Smith, S. Dazeley, Sandip Pakvasa, F. Piquemal, Albert Young, Hugon J Karwowski, R. D. McKeown, T. Araki, J. Maricic, Stuart J. Freedman, Werner Tornow, Petr Vogel, Koji Nakamura, K. Ishihara, K. Tada, Y. F. Wang, E. Yakushev, Y. D. Chan, C. Mauger, Y. Koseki, T. Iwamoto, Lindley Winslow, Koichi Ichimura, Y. Nakamura, Dongming Mei, Giorgio Gratta, G. Keefer, T. Classen, K. T. Lesko, Yasuhiro Kishimoto, Kam Biu Luk, Robert Svoboda, I. Shimizu, W. M. Bugg, C. E. Lane, Hiroshi Ogawa, Peter Gorham, A. Piepke, Sanshiro Enomoto, and K. Owada
- Subjects
Physics ,Particle physics ,Spectral shape analysis ,Geoneutrino ,Oscillation ,Solar neutrino ,Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,FOS: Physical sciences ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Spectral distortion ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Nuclear physics ,High Energy Physics - Experiment (hep-ex) ,Distortion ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Neutrino oscillation ,Charged current - Abstract
We present results of a study of neutrino oscillation based on a 766 ton-year exposure of KamLAND to reactor anti-neutrinos. We observe 258 \nuebar\ candidate events with energies above 3.4 MeV compared to 365.2 events expected in the absence of neutrino oscillation. Accounting for 17.8 expected background events, the statistical significance for reactor \nuebar disappearance is 99.998%. The observed energy spectrum disagrees with the expected spectral shape in the absence of neutrino oscillation at 99.6% significance and prefers the distortion expected from \nuebar oscillation effects. A two-neutrino oscillation analysis of the KamLAND data gives \DeltaMSq = 7.9$^{+0.6}_{-0.5}\times10^{-5}$ eV$^2$. A global analysis of data from KamLAND and solar neutrino experiments yields \DeltaMSq = 7.9$^{+0.6}_{-0.5}\times10^{-5}$ eV$^2$ and \ThetaParam = 0.40$^{+0.10}_{-0.07}$, the most precise determination to date., 5 pages, 4 figures; submitted to Phys.Rev.Letters
- Published
- 2005
41. Subsea Source Control Planning Solutions to Prepare Operators for Worse Case Discharge Well Events
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Jameson R. Wendell and Michael Drieu
- Subjects
Engineering ,Operator (computer programming) ,Emergency response ,business.industry ,Control (management) ,Operations management ,Plan (drawing) ,business ,Subsea - Abstract
The development of a Source Control Emergency Response Plan is one of the best ways in which an operator can ensure that the goals of their regional or project-specific Source Control emergency preparedness efforts will be met, if needed. Procedures for handling emergencies are absolutely essential to ensure the protection of life, property, and the environment. This Source Control Emergency Response Plan (SCERP) is based on decades of conventional and subsea well control experience to ensure that the planning efforts and to develop Source Control Emergency Response Planning (SCERP) through field deployment of the system in order to cap a subsea well. The aforementioned experience covers many years of source control, well control and intervention operations in conceivable operational settings and in a variety of geographic locations. The equipment and procedures specified in this SCERP address a “worst case” scenario involving a loss of well control, necessitating the immediate mobilization of intervention equipment and personnel. The primary objective of the SCERP is to establish a process for responding to and safely managing source-control emergencies using a standard, uniform approach. This process includes the following information:emergency contact information and resourcesresponse managementsource-control operational overview with strategic methodologiesorganizational staffing recommendationscheck list to guide groups and unit leaders andkey resource identification The SCERP is not intended to replace sound judgment. Modification of the mobilization plan and intervention strategy may be necessary, depending on circumstances. Subsea source-control events require common sense and professional judgment on the part of the person(s) in charge of operations, and no operation should be undertaken if it involves unreasonable risk to personnel. Additional, a Logistics Plan must be developed to support operations by identifying mobilization guidelines from the stored location for the capping stack and other support equipment necessary to secure the well. Disembarkation of the equipment clearly offering various options with estimated timelines for transporting the equipment by air, ground and sea should also be outlined to ensure equipment arrives timely and safely. Locating vessels and rigs meeting operational requirements will help ensure well incidents are managed and executed within incident-command and other expectations.
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- 2014
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42. Refining the estimate of the critical period for susceptibility to enamel fluorosis in human maxillary central incisors
- Author
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R. Wendell Evans and Brian W. Darvell
- Subjects
Male ,China ,Month of birth ,Fluorosis, Dental ,Dentistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Disease susceptibility ,Fluorides ,Sex Factors ,Sex factors ,Risk Factors ,Water Supply ,Maxilla ,Medicine ,Humans ,Maxillary central incisor ,Child ,General Dentistry ,Probability ,Orthodontics ,Enamel paint ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Age Factors ,Infant ,medicine.disease ,Cariostatic Agents ,Incisor ,chemistry ,visual_art ,Child, Preschool ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Hong Kong ,Odontogenesis ,Female ,Disease Susceptibility ,business ,Fluoride ,Dental fluorosis - Abstract
Purpose The purpose of this study was to determine an improved estimate of the critical period for susceptibility to fluorosis in human maxillary central incisors. Methods The fluorosis score, S, of the incisal (I), middle (M), and cervical (C) third divisions on the labial surface of right maxillary central incisors of subjects (a representative sample of 1,085 Hong Kong Chinese children aged 7 to 12 years surveyed in 1986) was determined according to the Chronological Fluorosis Assessment (CFA) Index. Subject data were grouped by month of birth relative to June 1978, when the designated concentration for waterborne fluoride in the community water supply was reduced from 1.0 to 0.7 mg/L. The analytical task was one of finding the correlation maximum in a system of 12 variates and adjustable parameters including the waterborne fluoride concentration, [F-], and the fluorosis score. Results The main findings were: (1) the peak correlation of S vs [F-] for the male incisal third centered at 17.5 months after birth; (2) and six months later for females; (3) the correlation of S with [F-] is maximized for S(M) following S(I) by two months, and S(C) following S(M) by a further two months for both males and females; and (4) the critical period for exposure to fluoride is of about four months' duration for each third. Conclusions The maxillary central incisor, as a whole, appears most at risk to fluorosis from dietary fluoride between age 15 and 24 months for males and between 21 and 30 months for females.
- Published
- 1995
43. Effects of coal flue gas desulfurisation by-products and calcium-sulfite, -sulfate and -carbonate on maize grown in acid soil
- Author
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R. R. Wendell, Virupax C. Baligar, R. B. Clark, S. K. Zeto, and K. D. Ritchey
- Subjects
engineering.material ,Desulfurisation ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Animal science ,chemistry ,Agronomy ,Calcium sulfite ,Soil pH ,Shoot ,Soil water ,engineering ,Dry matter ,Sulfate ,Lime - Abstract
Sulfite and sulfate compounds are common in many coal combustion by-products (CCBP), some of which have potential as amendments to acid soils. This study was conducted to determine effects of high-sulfite (BP-#1) and high-sulfate (BP-#16 and BP-#22) coal flue gas desulfurisation by-products (FGD-BPs) and chemical grade CaSO3, CaSO4, and CaCO3 (lime) mixed with acid Porters soil (Umbric Dystrochrepts) on growth of maize (Zea mays L.) in a greenhouse. Shoot and root dry matter yields (DMY) increased or remained unchanged at low levels of BP-#1 (>1%) before decreases occurred. Shoot DMY increased and/or remained high when increasing levels of BP-#16 and BP-#22 (up to 75%) were added to soil. Root DMY decreased at low levels of BP-#16 (>5%), but increased at high levels ( 0.5–1.0%), and increased at higher levels (
- Published
- 1995
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44. Experiences of dental care: what do patients value?
- Author
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A Sbaraini, Anthony S. Blinkhorn, Stacy M Carter, and R. Wendell Evans
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cosmetic dentistry ,Adolescent ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Oral Health ,Health informatics ,Health administration ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Patient satisfaction ,Nursing ,stomatognathic system ,Qualitative research ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Dental Care ,Dentist-patient relationship ,Aged ,Dentist-Patient Relations ,business.industry ,Public health ,Nursing research ,Health Policy ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,Prevention ,Australia ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,Patient Preference ,030206 dentistry ,Middle Aged ,3. Good health ,stomatognathic diseases ,Patient Satisfaction ,Female ,Dentures ,business ,Psychosocial ,Research Article - Abstract
Background Dentistry in Australia combines business and health care service, that is, the majority of patients pay money for tangible dental procedures such as fluoride applications, dental radiographs, dental fillings, crowns, and dentures among others. There is evidence that patients question dentists’ behaviours and attitudes during a dental visit when those highly technical procedures are performed. However, little is known about how patients’ experience dental care as a whole. This paper illustrates the findings from a qualitative study recently undertaken in general dental practice in Australia. It focuses on patients’ experiences of dental care, particularly on the relationship between patients and dentists during the provision of preventive care and advice in general dental practices. Methods Seventeen patients were interviewed. Data analysis consisted of transcript coding, detailed memo writing, and data interpretation. Results Patients described their experiences when visiting dental practices with and without a structured preventive approach in place, together with the historical, biological, financial, psychosocial and habitual dimensions of their experience. Potential barriers that could hinder preventive activities as well as facilitators for prevention were also described. The offer of preventive dental care and advice was an amazing revelation for this group of patients as they realized that dentists could practice dentistry without having to “drill and fill” their teeth. All patients, regardless of the practice they came from or their level of clinical risk of developing dental caries, valued having a caring dentist who respected them and listened to their concerns without “blaming” them for their oral health status. These patients complied with and supported the preventive care options because they were being “treated as a person not as a patient” by their dentists. Patients valued dentists who made them aware of existing preventive options, educated them about how to maintain a healthy mouth and teeth, and supported and reassured them frequently during visits. Conclusions Patients valued having a supportive and caring dentist and a dedicated dental team. The experience of having a dedicated, supportive and caring dentist helped patients to take control of their own oral health. These dentists and dental teams produced profound changes in not just the oral health care routines of patients, but in the way patients thought about their own oral health and the role of dental professionals. Keywords: Qualitative research; Dentist-patient relationship; Prevention
- Published
- 2012
45. How to do a grounded theory study: a worked example of a study of dental practices
- Author
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A Sbaraini, Anthony S. Blinkhorn, Stacy M Carter, and R. Wendell Evans
- Subjects
Research design ,Quality Assurance, Health Care ,Epidemiology ,Process (engineering) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Health Informatics ,Dental Caries ,Grounded theory ,methods ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Correspondence ,Medicine ,Humans ,Quality (business) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Qualitative Research ,media_common ,Practice Patterns, Dentists' ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,lcsh:R5-920 ,Data collection ,Management science ,business.industry ,Interpretation (philosophy) ,methodology ,030206 dentistry ,3. Good health ,Research Design ,Data Interpretation, Statistical ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,dental care ,New South Wales ,lcsh:Medicine (General) ,business ,Medical literature ,Clinical psychology ,Qualitative research ,grounded theory - Abstract
Background Qualitative methodologies are increasingly popular in medical research. Grounded theory is the methodology most-often cited by authors of qualitative studies in medicine, but it has been suggested that many 'grounded theory' studies are not concordant with the methodology. In this paper we provide a worked example of a grounded theory project. Our aim is to provide a model for practice, to connect medical researchers with a useful methodology, and to increase the quality of 'grounded theory' research published in the medical literature. Methods We documented a worked example of using grounded theory methodology in practice. Results We describe our sampling, data collection, data analysis and interpretation. We explain how these steps were consistent with grounded theory methodology, and show how they related to one another. Grounded theory methodology assisted us to develop a detailed model of the process of adapting preventive protocols into dental practice, and to analyse variation in this process in different dental practices. Conclusions By employing grounded theory methodology rigorously, medical researchers can better design and justify their methods, and produce high-quality findings that will be more useful to patients, professionals and the research community. Keywords: qualitative research; grounded theory; methodology; methods; dental care
- Published
- 2011
46. Determinants of variation in dental caries experience in primary teeth of Hong Kong children aged 6-8 years
- Author
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R. Wendell Evans, Brian W. Darvell, and Edward C. M. Lo
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Dentistry ,Mothers ,Dental Caries ,Affect (psychology) ,Oral hygiene ,stomatognathic system ,Epidemiology ,Medicine ,Humans ,Tooth, Deciduous ,Child ,Dental Care ,General Dentistry ,Socioeconomic status ,Analysis of Variance ,Models, Statistical ,business.industry ,DMF Index ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,stomatognathic diseases ,Variation (linguistics) ,Respondent ,Income ,Household income ,Educational Status ,Hong Kong ,Schools, Dental ,Female ,business ,Caries experience ,Attitude to Health ,Demography - Abstract
– A representative sample of Hong Kong children aged 6–8 yr was examined for dental caries, and data on possible explanatory variables for dmft were obtained from questionnaires. Variation in dmft was partially accounted for by the effect of some demographic variables and other variables having a socioeconomic base. Girls had a lower dmft index than boys, and being born in Hong Kong rather than elsewhere (that is, China) was also associated with a lower dmft index. Better dental status was strongly associated with increasing educational level of the mother, monthly household income, and with an increasingly positive perception of the questionnaire respondent's own dental status. Preschool dental visits and enrolment in the School Dental Care Service were associated with higher dmft indices. Altogether, 22.5% of the variance in dmft was explained. It was concluded that 1) demographic and socioeconomic factors significantly affect dmft variation in Hong Kong, 2) the mother's role in determining the dental status of her child is probably important, and 3) further elucidation of the variation in dmft will depend on the analysis of data pertaining to dietary and oral hygiene practices during the preschool years and to an analysis of tooth morphology, fluoride exposure, and microbiologic, salivary, and genetic factors.
- Published
- 1993
47. An epidemiologic estimate of the critical period during which human maxillary central incisors are most susceptible to fluorosis
- Author
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R. Wendell Evans and John W. Stamm
- Subjects
Aging ,Time Factors ,Fluorosis, Dental ,Dentistry ,Cohort Studies ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Fluorides ,Incisor ,Amelogenesis ,Risk Factors ,Water Supply ,Fluoridation ,medicine ,Humans ,Water fluoride ,Maxillary central incisor ,Dental Enamel ,General Dentistry ,Orthodontics ,Enamel paint ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,medicine.disease ,Enamel mineralization ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,visual_art ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Hong Kong ,Odontogenesis ,Disease Susceptibility ,business ,Epidemiologic Methods ,Fluoride ,Dental fluorosis ,Tooth Calcification ,Cohort study - Abstract
The temporal relation between a declining fluorosis gradient and an abrupt downward shift in community drinking water fluoride concentration was evaluated through multiple correlation analysis to determine the critical time frame during which developing maxillary central incisors are most susceptible to fluoride challenge. Fluorosis data were scrutinized through a time-related series of epidemiologic "windows" or time frames of varying lengths. The placement of these time frames was in turn related to the presumed start of enamel mineralization (at birth), and ranged from zero to 60 months later. In this way, the susceptibility of developing enamel to changes in water fluoride concentration was localized. The greatest risk was associated with a four-month critical period commencing at 22 months following birth. The risk of fluorosis from exposures to a fluoride challenge acting during shorter periods was better localized than risk associated with longer exposures. We concluded (1) that human maxillary central incisors are most susceptible to fluorosis during a critical period of as little as four months' duration, commencing at 22 months of age; and (2) that for these incisors, fluoride exposure during the months prior to this period carries less risk than continued exposure for up to 36 months beyond this critical time.
- Published
- 1991
48. Resintering of conventional PM steels
- Author
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R Wendell
- Subjects
Mechanics of Materials ,Mechanical Engineering ,Automotive Engineering ,Aerospace Engineering ,General Materials Science - Published
- 1997
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49. Diflunisal. A new oral analgesic with an unusually long duration of action
- Author
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E. Hartley White, Gloria B. Neilson, R. Wendell White, William T. Beaver, Robert W. Shackleford, and James A. Forbes
- Subjects
Time Factors ,Oral surgery ,Analgesic ,Administration, Oral ,Pain ,Diflunisal ,Codeine Phosphate ,Placebo ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Double-Blind Method ,medicine ,Humans ,Short duration ,Acetaminophen ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,Nonsteroidal ,Codeine ,business.industry ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,General Medicine ,Surgery, Oral ,Salicylates ,stomatognathic diseases ,chemistry ,Delayed-Action Preparations ,Anesthesia ,Drug Therapy, Combination ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The analgesic efficacy of single 500- and 1,000-mg doses of diflunisal (Dolobid), a new nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory analgesic, was compared in a double-blind study with that of acetaminophen, 600 mg, the combination of acetaminophen, 600 mg, with codeine phosphate, 60 mg, and placebo in 159 oral surgery outpatients. Using a self-rating record, patients rated their pain and its relief hourly for 12 hours after medication. Both doses of diflunisal were significantly more effective than acetaminophen alone and produced peak analgesia comparable to that of the acetaminophen-codeine combination. Diflunisal proved to have an unusually long duration of analgesic action. Acetaminophen and the combination were significantly superior to placebo through hours 2 and 5, respectively; both doses of diflunisal were significantly superior through the end of the 12-hour observation period. None of the active treatments produced more side effects than the placebo. ( JAMA 1982;248:2139-2142)
- Published
- 1982
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50. Relationship between fluoridation and socioeconomic status on dental caries experience in 5-year-old New Zealand children
- Author
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R. Harvey Brown, R. Wendell Evans, Phil A. Silva, and Donald J. Beck
- Subjects
Gerontology ,Analysis of Variance ,Urban Population ,DMF Index ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Dental Caries ,Social class ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Child, Preschool ,Fluoridation ,Humans ,Medicine ,Longitudinal Studies ,Caries experience ,business ,General Dentistry ,Socioeconomic status ,New Zealand ,Demography - Abstract
This article examines the relationship between fluoridation and socioeconomic status on caries experience, as measured by the dmf index, in 5-yr-old New Zealand children in the city of Dunedin (fluoridated in 1967) and in adjacent non-fluoride communities. The children were subdivided into six socioeconomic status groups (SES 1, professional and managerial-SES 6, unskilled workers), but then for simplicity they were combined to form three groups. A two-way analysis of variance demonstrated that interaction between fluoride history and socioeconomic status was not significant. In all three SES groups, dmf was higher in non-fluoride communities, but the difference was significant only in SES group (5&6) (P less than 0.01). Caries experience increased with decreasing socioeconomic status in both fluoride and non-fluoride communities, but this effect was only significant between SES groups (1&2) and (3&4) in the fluoridated community (P less than 0.05), and between SES groups (3&4) and (5&6) in non-fluoride communities (P less than 0.01). These results are compared with those of similar studies, and it is concluded that so far, the relationship between fluoridation and socioeconomic status on caries experience remains equivocal. A note of caution is sounded regarding the interpretation of such results, and the difficulties faced when comparing studies is discussed.
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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