114 results on '"Lemon, C."'
Search Results
2. Lung Health in the Solomon Islands: A Mixed Methods Study
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Di Michiel J, Gawthorne J, Shivam A, Maruno K, Cohn S, Lemon C, Liu Z, and Byrne A
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obstructive lung diseases ,copd ,asthma ,inhalational exposure ,pacific islands. ,Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 - Abstract
James Di Michiel,1 Julie Gawthorne,2 Aruna Shivam,2 Kevin Maruno,2– 4 Sarah Cohn,3,5 Christopher Lemon,3,6 Zhixin Liu,7 Anthony Byrne1,3 1Department of Thoracic Medicine, St Vincent’s Hospital, Sydney, NSW, 2010, Australia; 2Department of Emergency Medicine, St Vincent’s Hospital, Sydney, NSW, 2010, Australia; 3University of New South Wales, St Vincent’s Medical School, Sydney, NSW, 2010, Australia; 4University of Notre Dame, St Vincent’s Medical School, Sydney, NSW, 2010, Australia; 5Department of Psychiatry, Prince of Wales Hospital, Sydney, NSW, 2031, Australia; 6Department of Psychiatry, St Vincent’s Hospital, Sydney, NSW, 2010, Australia; 7Mark Wainwright Analytical Centre, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, 2052, AustraliaCorrespondence: James Di MichielDepartment of Thoracic Medicine, St Vincent’s Hospital, 390 Victoria Street, Darlinghurst, Sydney, NSW, 2010, AustraliaEmail james.dimichiel@health.nsw.gov.auBackground and Objectives: Despite a population of 600,000 people from 900 islands, there is little published data on the prevalence of lung disease in the Solomon Islands. We sought to 1) estimate the prevalence of obstructive lung disease (OLD) in Gizo, Solomon Islands, 2) identify risk factors for respiratory disease in this population and 3) review current management practices for respiratory disease through an audit of local emergency department (ED) presentations.Methods: A two-part mixed methods study was performed between March and May 2019; the first was a population-based, cross-sectional study conducted in Gizo, Solomon Islands, with a random sample undergoing questionnaires and spirometry. The second was an audit of Gizo Hospital ED records to assess presentation numbers, diagnoses and outcomes.Results: A total of 104 patients were randomly selected for spirometry. The mean age was 46.9 years. Current smoking rates were high (24.0% overall, 43.3% age < 40, 16.2% age ≥ 40) as was regular (> 10h/week) exposure to indoor/enclosed wood fire ovens (51.5%). The prevalence of COPD was 3.2% overall. A further 9.7% of participants demonstrated significant bronchodilator responsiveness suggestive of possible asthma. Most patients seen in ED presented with a respiratory condition or fever/viral illness, but spirometry was not available. Only four outpatients were prescribed salbutamol and two patients inhaled corticosteroid.Conclusion: There appears to be a high burden of obstructive lung disease in the Solomon Islands with high smoking rates, indoor smoke exposure and bronchodilator responsiveness. Respiratory symptoms are common amongst hospital ED presentations; however, inhaled asthma treatments are infrequently prescribed to outpatients.Keywords: obstructive lung diseases, COPD, asthma, inhalational exposure, Pacific Islands
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- 2021
3. JWST lensed quasar dark matter survey – I. Description and first results.
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Nierenberg, A M, Keeley, R E, Sluse, D, Gilman, D, Birrer, S, Treu, T, Abazajian, K N, Anguita, T, Benson, A J, Bennert, V N, Djorgovski, S G, Du, X, Fassnacht, C D, Hoenig, S F, Kusenko, A, Lemon, C, Malkan, M, Motta, V, Moustakas, L A, and Stern, D
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QUASARS ,DARK matter ,SPECTRAL energy distribution ,COSMOLOGICAL distances ,GRAVITATIONAL lenses ,STARS - Abstract
The flux ratios of gravitationally lensed quasars provide a powerful probe of the nature of dark matter. Importantly, these ratios are sensitive to small-scale structure, irrespective of the presence of baryons. This sensitivity may allow us to study the halo mass function even below the scales where galaxies form observable stars. For accurate measurements, it is essential that the quasar's light is emitted from a physical region of the quasar with an angular scale of milliarcseconds or larger; this minimizes microlensing effects by stars within the deflector. The warm dust region of quasars fits this criterion, as it has parsec-size physical scales and dominates the spectral energy distribution of quasars at wavelengths greater than 10 μm. The JWST Mid-Infrared Instrument is adept at detecting redshifted light in this wavelength range, offering both the spatial resolution and sensitivity required for accurate gravitational lensing flux ratio measurements. Here, we introduce our survey designed to measure the warm dust flux ratios of 31 lensed quasars. We discuss the flux-ratio measurement technique and present results for the first target, DES J0405-3308. We find that we can measure the quasar warm dust flux ratios with 3 per cent precision. Our simulations suggest that this precision makes it feasible to detect the presence of 10
7 M⊙ dark matter haloes at cosmological distances. Such haloes are expected to be completely dark in cold dark matter models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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4. THE TROPICAL AIR–SEA PROPAGATION STUDY (TAPS)
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Kulessa, A. S., Barrios, A., Claverie, J., Garrett, S., Haackck, T., Hackcker, J. M., Hansen, H. J., Horgan, K., Hurtaud, Y., Lemon, C., Marshall, R., McGregor, J., McMillan, M., Périard, C., Pourret, V., Price, J., Rogers, L. T., Short, C., Veasey, M., and Wiss, V. R.
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- 2017
5. Gravitationally lensed quasars in Gaia – IV. 150 new lenses, quasar pairs, and projected quasars.
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Lemon, C, Anguita, T, Auger-Williams, M W, Courbin, F, Galan, A, McMahon, R, Neira, F, Oguri, M, Schechter, P, Shajib, A, Treu, T, Agnello, A, and Spiniello, C
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QUASARS , *DATA release , *NUMBER systems , *GRAVITATIONAL lenses - Abstract
We report the spectroscopic follow-up of 175 lensed quasar candidates selected using Gaia Data Release 2 observations following Paper III of this series. Systems include 86 confirmed lensed quasars and a further 17 likely lensed quasars based on imaging and/or similar spectra. We also confirm 11 projected quasar pairs and 11 physical quasar pairs, while 25 systems are left as unclassified quasar pairs – pairs of quasars at the same redshift, which could be either distinct quasars or potential lensed quasars. Especially interesting objects include eight quadruply imaged quasars of which two have BAL sources, an apparent triple, and a doubly lensed LoBaL quasar. The source redshifts and image separations of these new lenses range between 0.65–3.59 and 0.78–6.23 arcsec, respectively. We compare the known population of lensed quasars to an updated mock catalogue at image separations between 1 and 4 arcsec, showing a very good match at z < 1.5. At z > 1.5, only 47 per cent of the predicted number are known, with 56 per cent of these missing lenses at image separations below 1.5 arcsec. The missing higher redshift, small-separation systems will have fainter lensing galaxies, and are partially explained by the unclassified quasar pairs and likely lenses presented in this work, which require deeper imaging. Of the 11 new reported projected quasar pairs, 5 have impact parameters below 10 kpc, almost tripling the number of such systems, which can probe the innermost regions of quasar host galaxies through absorption studies. We also report four new lensed galaxies discovered through our searches, with source redshifts ranging from 0.62 to 2.79. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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6. 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose Positron Emission Tomography/Computed Tomography in the Assessment of Occult Primary Head and Neck Cancers — An Audit and Review of Published Studies
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Wong, W.L., Sonoda, L.I., Gharpurhy, A., Gollub, F., Wellsted, D., Goodchild, K., Lemon, C., Farrell, R., and Saunders, M.
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- 2012
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7. Adaptive 18Fluoro-2-deoxyglucose Positron Emission Tomography/Computed Tomography-based Target Volume Delineation in Radiotherapy Planning of Head and Neck Cancer
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Moule, R.N., Kayani, I., Prior, T., Lemon, C., Goodchild, K., Sanghera, B., Wong, W.L., and Saunders, M.I.
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- 2011
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8. A search for galaxy-scale strong gravitational lenses in the Ultraviolet Near Infrared Optical Northern Survey (UNIONS)
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Savary, E., Rojas, K., Maus, M., Clément, B., Courbin, F., Gavazzi, R., Chan, J.H.H., Lemon, C., Vernardos, G., Cañameras, R., Schuldt, S., Suyu, S.H., Cuillandre, J.-C., Fabbro, S., Gwyn, S., Hudson, M.J., Kilbinger, M., Scott, D., Stone, C., Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris (IAP), Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Astrophysique Interprétation Modélisation (AIM (UMR_7158 / UMR_E_9005 / UM_112)), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7 (UPD7), Observatoire de Paris - Site de Paris (OP), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Observatoire de Paris, and Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)
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Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,[PHYS.ASTR]Physics [physics]/Astrophysics [astro-ph] ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a search for galaxy-scale strong gravitational lenses in the initial 2 500 square degrees of the Canada-France Imaging Survey (CFIS). We design a convolutional neural network (CNN) committee that we apply on a selection of 2 344 002 exquisite-seeing r-band images of color-selected luminous red galaxies (LRGs). Our training set is particularly realistic, since the deflector and source images of our mock lensing systems are taken from real CFIS r-band and Hubble Space Telescope (HST) images. Only the lensing effect is simulated. A total of 9 460 candidates obtain a score above 0.5 with the CNN committee. After a visual inspection of the candidates, we find a total of 133 lens candidates, among which 104 are completely new. The set of false positives mainly contains ring, spiral and merger galaxies and to a smaller extent galaxies with nearby companions. We classify 32 of the lens candidates as secure lenses and 101 as maybe lenses. For the 32 best-quality lenses, we also fit a singular isothermal ellipsoid mass profile with external shear along with an elliptical Sersic profile for the lens and source light. This modeling step is fully automated and provides distributions of properties for both sources and lenses. We also use auto-encoders to provide a lens/source deblended image of the best lens candidates.
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- 2021
9. Discovery of Strongly Lensed Quasars in the Ultraviolet Near Infrared Optical Northern Survey (UNIONS)
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Chan, J. H. H., Lemon, C., Courbin, F., Gavazzi, R., Cl��ment, B., Millon, M., Paic, E., Rojas, K., Savary, E., Vernardos, G., Cuillandre, J. -C., Fabbro, S., Gwyn, S., Hudson, M. J., Kilbinger, M., McConnachie, A., Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris (IAP), Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Astrophysique Interprétation Modélisation (AIM (UMR_7158 / UMR_E_9005 / UM_112)), and Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Université Paris-Saclay-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Paris Cité (UPCité)
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search ,[SDU.ASTR]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Astrophysics [astro-ph] ,gravitational lensing ,quasars ,FOS: Physical sciences ,gravitational lensing: strong ,selection ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,strong ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,objects ,1st data release ,dark-matter ,[SDU]Sciences of the Universe [physics] ,Space and Planetary Science ,general ,Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,quasars: general ,all-sky survey ,gaia ,hsc imaging sugohi ,galaxy ,constraints ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery of five new doubly-imaged lensed quasars from the first 2500 square degrees of the ongoing Canada-France Imaging Survey (CFIS), which is a component of the Ultraviolet Near Infrared Optical Northern Survey (UNIONS), selected from initial catalogues of either Gaia pairs or MILLIQUAS quasars. We take advantage of the deep, 0.6'' median-seeing $r$-band imaging of CFIS to confirm the presence of multiple point sources with similar colour of $u-r$, via convolution of the Laplacian of the point spread function. Requiring similar-colour point sources with flux ratios less than 2.5 mag in $r$-band, reduces the number of candidates from 256314 to 7815. After visual inspection we obtain 30 high-grade candidates, and prioritise spectroscopic follow-up for those showing signs of a lensing galaxy upon subtraction of the point sources. We obtain long-slit spectra for 18 candidates with ALFOSC on the 2.56-m Nordic Optical Telescope (NOT), confirming five new doubly lensed quasars with $1.21, Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures
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- 2021
10. Review of Solar Wind Entry into and Transport Within the Plasma Sheet
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Wing, S., Johnson, J. R., Chaston, C. C., Echim, M., Escoubet, C. P., Lavraud, B., Lemon, C., Nykyri, K., Otto, A., Raeder, J., and Wang, C.-P.
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- 2014
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11. STRIDES: automated uniform models for 30 quadruply imaged quasars.
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Schmidt, T, Treu, T, Birrer, S, Shajib, A J, Lemon, C, Millon, M, Sluse, D, Agnello, A, Anguita, T, Auger-Williams, M W, McMahon, R G, Motta, V, Schechter, P, Spiniello, C, Kayo, I, Courbin, F, Ertl, S, Fassnacht, C D, Frieman, J A, and More, A
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QUASARS ,COSMOGRAPHY ,SPACE telescopes ,GRAVITATIONAL lenses - Abstract
Gravitational time delays provide a powerful one-step measurement of H
0 , independent of all other probes. One key ingredient in time-delay cosmography are high-accuracy lens models. Those are currently expensive to obtain, both, in terms of computing and investigator time (105 –106 CPU hours and ∼0.5–1 yr, respectively). Major improvements in modelling speed are therefore necessary to exploit the large number of lenses that are forecast to be discovered over the current decade. In order to bypass this roadblock, we develop an automated modelling pipeline and apply it to a sample of 31 lens systems, observed by the Hubble Space Telescope in multiple bands. Our automated pipeline can derive models for 30/31 lenses with few hours of human time and <100 CPU hours of computing time for a typical system. For each lens, we provide measurements of key parameters and predictions of magnification as well as time delays for the multiple images. We characterize the cosmography-readiness of our models using the stability of differences in the Fermat potential (proportional to time delay) with respect to modelling choices. We find that for 10/30 lenses, our models are cosmography or nearly cosmography grade (<3 per cent and 3–5 per cent variations). For 6/30 lenses, the models are close to cosmography grade (5–10 per cent). These results utilize informative priors and will need to be confirmed by further analysis. However, they are also likely to improve by extending the pipeline modelling sequence and options. In conclusion, we show that uniform cosmography grade modelling of large strong lens samples is within reach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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12. Strong lensing by edge-on galaxies in UNIONS.
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Acevedo Barroso, J. A., Clément, B., Courbin, F., Gavazzi, R., Lemon, C., Rojas, K., and Savary, E.
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CONVOLUTIONAL neural networks ,GALAXIES - Abstract
Current searches for galaxy-scale strong lenses focus on massive Luminous Red Galaxies but tend to overlook late-type lenses, in part because of their smaller Einstein radii. We take advantage of the superb seeing of the UNIONS survey in the r -band to perform an imaging search for edge-on late-type lenses. We use Convolutional Neural Networks trained with simulated observations composed of images of real galaxies from UNIONS and real sources from HST. Using 3600 square degrees of the survey we test ∼7 million galaxies and find 56 systems with obvious signs of lensing. In addition, we empirically estimate the true prevalence of lenses in UNIONS by visually inspecting 120,000 randomly chosen images in the survey. We find that the number of edge-on lenses we discover with CNNs is compatible with these estimates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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13. Notes on the Physiology of Regeneration of Parts in Planaria Maculata
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Lemon, C. C.
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- 1900
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14. Notes on the Agricultural Produce of Cornwall
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Lemon, C.
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- 1841
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15. The Application of Photo-Electricity to the Determination of Bacterial Growth Rate
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Pulvertaft, R. J. V. and Lemon, C. G.
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- 1933
16. Electron Precipitation Curtains—Simulating the Microburst Origin Hypothesis.
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O'Brien, T. P., Lemon, C. L., and Blake, J. B.
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MICROBURSTS ,MAGNETIC dipoles ,ELECTRONS ,DRAPERIES ,MAGNETIC fields ,ORBITS (Astronomy) - Abstract
We explore the hypothesis that electron precipitation curtains such as those observed by the AeroCube‐6 satellite pair can be produced by electron microbursts. Precipitation curtains are latitudinal structures of stable precipitation that persist for timescales of 10s of seconds or longer. The electrons involved have energies of 10–100s of keV. The microburst formation hypothesis states that a source region in the equatorial region produces a series of very low frequency chorus wave emissions. Each of these emissions in turn produces a microburst of electron precipitation, filling the drift and bounce loss cone on the local field line. Electrons in the drift loss cone remain on the field line and bounce‐phase mix over subsequent bounces while also drifting in azimuth. When observed at downstream azimuths by a satellite equipped with an integral energy sensor, no bounce phase structure remains, or, equivalently, the same time profile is present when two such satellites pass by many seconds apart. The spatial structure that remains reflects the pattern of microburst sources. Statistical studies of where and when curtains occur have indicated that some, but not all, curtains could be caused by microbursts. We use test particle tracing in a dipole magnetic field to show that spatially stationary source regions generating periodic microbursts can produce curtain signatures azimuthally downstream. We conclude that one viable explanation for many of the curtains observed by the AeroCube‐6 pair is the accumulation of drift‐dispersed microburst electron byproducts in the drift loss cone. Plain Language Summary: The pair of low altitude, polar AeroCube‐6 satellites observed stable small‐scale structure in the electrons present in low Earth orbit (LEO). Even when the two vehicles are separated in time by over a minute, both measure roughly the same structured time profile of radiation intensity, offset by the time separation between vehicles. Individual features in this stable structure are known as curtains. We test whether the curtains could be formed by accumulation of electrons from short‐lived microbursts of radiation intensity, which individually last less than a second. Accordingly, each microburst adds electrons to the population that reaches LEO but does not enter the atmosphere before drifting into the atmosphere in the South Atlantic Anomaly. Because microbursts contain many energies, over time the sub‐second temporal structure will spread out during the bounce and drift motion of the electrons. Further, if the microburst source repeatedly produces bursts in the same location, fluxes from new and old bursts will eventually overlap. Thus, it is possible that satellites in LEO with wide‐energy sensors to see a stable temporal profile reflective of the spatial structure of the microburst source locations. We demonstrate this hypothesized mechanism by tracing electrons in a dipole magnetic field. Key Points: Curtains are small‐scale latitude structures observed by a pair of low altitude satellitesWe use test particle tracing to investigate the origin of curtainsCurtains can be caused by microbursts, which are transient, smaller‐scale structures [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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17. Finding quadruply imaged quasars with machine learning – I. Methods.
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Akhazhanov, A, More, A, Amini, A, Hazlett, C, Treu, T, Birrer, S, Shajib, A, Liao, K, Lemon, C, Agnello, A, Nord, B, Aguena, M, Allam, S, Andrade-Oliveira, F, Annis, J, Brooks, D, Buckley-Geer, E, Burke, D L, Carnero Rosell, A, and Carrasco Kind, M
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STELLAR initial mass function ,DISTRIBUTION of stars ,MACHINE learning ,QUASARS ,DARK energy ,PHYSICAL cosmology - Abstract
Strongly lensed quadruply imaged quasars (quads) are extraordinary objects. They are very rare in the sky and yet they provide unique information about a wide range of topics, including the expansion history and the composition of the Universe, the distribution of stars and dark matter in galaxies, the host galaxies of quasars, and the stellar initial mass function. Finding them in astronomical images is a classic 'needle in a haystack' problem, as they are outnumbered by other (contaminant) sources by many orders of magnitude. To solve this problem, we develop state-of-the-art deep learning methods and train them on realistic simulated quads based on real images of galaxies taken from the Dark Energy Survey, with realistic source and deflector models, including the chromatic effects of microlensing. The performance of the best methods on a mixture of simulated and real objects is excellent, yielding area under the receiver operating curve in the range of 0.86–0.89. Recall is close to 100 per cent down to total magnitude i ∼ 21 indicating high completeness, while precision declines from 85 per cent to 70 per cent in the range i ∼ 17–21. The methods are extremely fast: training on 2 million samples takes 20 h on a GPU machine, and 10
8 multiband cut-outs can be evaluated per GPU-hour. The speed and performance of the method pave the way to apply it to large samples of astronomical sources, bypassing the need for photometric pre-selection that is likely to be a major cause of incompleteness in current samples of known quads. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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18. TDCOSMO II: 6 new time delays in lensed quasars from high-cadence monitoring at the MPIA 2.2m telescope
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Millon, M., Courbin, F., Bonvin, V., Buckley-Geer, E., Fassnacht, C. D., Frieman, J., Marshall, P. J., Suyu, S. H., Treu, T., Anguita, T., Motta, V., Agnello, A., Chan, J. H. H., Chao, D. C. -Y, Chijani, M., Gilman, D., Gilmore, K., Lemon, C., Lucey, J. R., Melo, A., Paic, E., Rojas, K., Sluse, D., Williams, P. R., Hempel, A., Kim, S., Lachaume, R., and Rabus, M.
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Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics (astro-ph.IM) ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present six new time-delay measurements obtained from $R_c$-band monitoring data acquired at the Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics (MPIA) 2.2 m telescope at La Silla observatory between October 2016 and February 2020. The lensed quasars HE 0047-1756, WG 0214-2105, DES 0407-5006, 2M 1134-2103, PSJ 1606-2333 and DES 2325-5229 were observed almost daily at high signal-to-noise ratio to obtain high-quality light curves where we can record fast and small-amplitude variations of the quasars. We measured time delays between all pairs of multiple images with only one or two seasons of monitoring with the exception of the time delays relative to image D of PSJ 1606-2333. The most precise estimate was obtained for the delay between image A and image B of DES 0407-5006, where $\tau_{AB} = -128.4^{+3.5}_{-3.8}$ d (2.8% precision) including systematics due to extrinsic variability in the light curves. For HE 0047-1756, we combined our high-cadence data with measurements from decade-long light curves from previous COSMOGRAIL campaigns, and reach a precision of 0.9 d on the final measurement. The present work demonstrates the feasibility of measuring time delays in lensed quasars in only one or two seasons, provided high signal-to-noise ratio data are obtained at a cadence close to daily., Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, 4 Tables, published in A&A
- Published
- 2020
19. DIFFERENTIAL NEURAL REPRESENTATION OF ORAL ETHANOL BY CENTRAL TASTESENSITIVE NEURONS IN SELECTIVELY BRED ETHANOL-PREFERRING (P) AND WISTAR RATS: 0988
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Lemon, C. H., Wilson, D. M., and Brasser, S. M.
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- 2011
20. NEURAL TASTE RESPONSES TO ETHANOL IN C57BL/6J AND T1R3 SWEET TASTE RECEPTOR KNOCKOUT MICE: 545
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Lemon, C. H. and Brasser, S. M.
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- 2008
21. Is every strong lens model unhappy in its own way? Uniform modelling of a sample of 12 quadruply+ imaged quasars
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Shajib, A. J., Birrer, S., Treu, T., Auger, M. W., Agnello, A., Anguita, T., Buckley-Geer, E. J., Chan, J. H. H., Collett, T. E., Courbin, F., Fassnacht, C. D., Frieman, J., Kayo, I., Lemon, C., Lin, H., Marshall, P. J., McMahon, R., More, A., Morgan, N. D., Motta, V., Oguri, M., Ostrovski, F., Rusu, C. E., Schechter, P. L., Shanks, T., Suyu, S. H., Meylan, G., Abbott, T. M. C., Allam, S., Annis, J., Avila, S., Bertin, E., Brooks, D., Rosell, A. Carnero, Kind, M. Carrasco, Carretero, J., Cunha, C. E., Costa, L. N. da, Vicente, J. De, Desai, S., Doel, P., Flaugher, B., Fosalba, P., García-Bellido, J., Gerdes, D. W., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Hartley, W. G., Hollowood, D. L., Hoyle, B., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Kuropatkin, N., Lahav, O., Lima, M., Maia, M. A. G., March, M., Marshall, J. L., Melchior, P., Menanteau, F., Miquel, R., Plazas, A. A., Sanchez, E., Scarpine, V., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Smith, M., Soares-Santos, M., Sobreira, F., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., and Walker, A. R.
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astro-ph.GA ,RCUK ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,STFC - Abstract
Strong-gravitational lens systems with quadruply-imaged quasars (quads) are unique probes to address several fundamental problems in cosmology and astrophysics. Although they are intrinsically very rare, ongoing and planned wide-field deep-sky surveys are set to discover thousands of such systems in the next decade. It is thus paramount to devise a general framework to model strong-lens systems to cope with this large influx without being limited by expert investigator time. We propose such a general modelling framework (implemented with the publicly available software Lenstronomy) and apply it to uniformly model three band Hubble Space Telescope Wide Field Camera 3 images of 12 quads. This is the largest uniformly modelled sample of quads to date and paves the way for a variety of studies. To illustrate the scientific content of the sample, we investigate the alignment between the mass and light distribution in the deflectors. The position angles of these distributions are well-aligned, except when there is strong external shear. However, we find no correlation between the ellipticity of the light and mass distributions. We also show that the observed flux-ratios between the images depart significantly from the predictions of simple smooth models. The departures are strongest in the bluest band, consistent with microlensing being the dominant cause in addition to millilensing. Future papers will exploit this rich dataset in combination with ground based spectroscopy and time delays to determine quantities such as the Hubble constant, the free streaming length of dark matter, and the normalization of the initial stellar mass function.
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- 2019
22. Relationships Between Outdoor Time, Physical Activity, Sedentary Time, and Body Mass Index in Children: A 12-Country Study
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Larouche, R, Mire, Ef, Belanger, K, Barreira, Tv, Chaput, Jp, Fogelholm, M, Hu, G, Lambert, Ev, Maher, C, Maia, J, Olds, T, Onywera, V, Sarmiento, Ol, Standage, M, Tudor-Locke, C, Katzmarzyk, Pt, Tremblay, Ms, Church, Ts, Lambert, Dg, Barreira, T, Broyles, S, Butitta, B, Champagne, C, Cocreham, S, Dentro, K, Drazba, K, Harrington, D, Johnson, W, Milauskas, D, Mire, E, Tohme, A, Rodarte, R, Amoroso, B, Luopa, J, Neiberg, R, Rushing, S, Lewis, L, Ferrar, K, Georgiadis, E, Stanley, R, Matsudo, Vkr, Matsudo, S, Araujo, T, de Oliveira LC, Rezende, L, Fabiano, L, Bezerra, D, Ferrari, G, Belanger, P, Borghese, M, Boyer, C, Leblanc, A, Francis, C, Leduc, G, Zhao, P, Diao, Cm, Li, W, Li WQ Liu, Liu, Eq, GS Liu HY, Ma, J, Qiao, Yj, Tian, Hg, Wang, Y, Zhang, T, Zhang, Fx, Sarmiento, O, Acosta, J, Alvira, Y, Diaz, Mp, Gamez, R, Garcia, Mp, Gomez, Lg, Gonzalez, L, Gonzalez, S, Grijalba, C, Gutierrez, L, Leal, D, Lemus, N, Mahecha, E, Mahecha, Mp, Mahecha, R, Ramirez, A, Rios, P, Suarez, A, Triana, C, Hovi, E, Kivela, J, Rasanen, S, Sanna, Roito, Taru, Saloheimo, Valta, L, Kurpad, A, Kuriyan, R, Lokesh, Dp, D'Almeida, Ms, Mattilda, Ra, Correa, L, Vijay, D, Wachira, Lj, Muthuri, S, Borges, Ad, Cachada, Sos, de Chaves RN, Gomes, Tnqf, Pereira, Sis, Santos, Dmde, dos Santos FK, da Silva PGR, de Souza MC, Lambert, V, April, M, Uys, M, Naidoo, N, Synyanya, N, Carstens, M, Cumming, S, Drenowatz, C, Emm, L, Gillison, F, Zakrzewski, J, Braud, A, Donatto, S, Lemon, C, Jackson, A, Pearson, A, Pennington, G, Ragus, D, Roubion, R, Schuna, J, Wiltz, D, Batterham, A, Kerr, J, Pratt, M, Pietrobelli, A, Larouche, Richard, Barreira, Tiago V., Hu, Gang, Maia, José, Sarmiento, Olga L., Katzmarzyk, Peter T., Mire, Emily F., Chaput, Jean Philippe, Lambert, Estelle V., Olds, Tim, Standage, Martyn, Belanger, Kevin, Fogelholm, Mikael, Maher, Carol, Onywera, Vincent, Tudor-Locke, Catrine, Tremblay, Mark S., and ISCOLE Research Group
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatric Obesity ,Time Factors ,Sports medicine ,Cross-sectional study ,health promotion ,RJ101 ,Health Behavior ,Physical activity ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Standard score ,RA773 ,Body Mass Index ,RC1200 ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Residence Characteristics ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Accelerometry ,medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,2. Zero hunger ,Sedentary time ,exercise ,030229 sport sciences ,medicine.disease ,motor behavior ,Obesity ,Country study ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Social Class ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,epidemiology ,Female ,Sedentary Behavior ,Psychology ,Body mass index ,Demography - Abstract
Purpose: This study investigated the relationship between outdoor time and physical activity (PA), sedentary time (SED), and body mass index z scores among children from 12 lower-middle-income, upper-middle-income, and high-income countries. Methods: In total, 6478 children (54.4% girls) aged 9–11 years participated. Outdoor time was self-reported, PA and SED were assessed with ActiGraph GT3X+ accelerometers, and height and weight were measured. Data on parental education, neighborhood collective efficacy, and accessibility to neighborhood recreation facilities were collected from parent questionnaires. Country latitude and climate statistics were collected through national weather data sources. Gender-stratified multilevel models with parental education, climate, and neighborhood variables as covariates were used to examine the relationship between outdoor time, accelerometry measures, and body mass index z scores. Results: Each additional hour per day spent outdoors was associated with higher moderate- to vigorous-intensity PA (boys: +2.8 min/d; girls: +1.4 min/d), higher light-intensity PA (boys: +2.0 min/d; girls: +2.3 min/d), and lower SED (boys: −6.3 min/d; girls: −5.1 min/d). Effect sizes were generally weaker in lower-middle-income countries. Outdoor time was not associated with body mass index z scores. Conclusions: Outdoor time was associated with higher PA and lower SED independent of climate, parental education, and neighborhood variables, but effect sizes were small. However, more research is needed in low- and middle-income countries.
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- 2019
23. Association of an Odor With Activation of Olfactory Bulb Noradrenergic β-Receptors or Locus Coeruleus Stimulation Is Sufficient to Produce Learned Approach Responses to That Odor in Neonatal Rats
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Sullivan, R. M., Stackenwalt, G., Nasr, F., Lemon, C., and Wilson, D. A.
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- 2000
24. HOLISMOKES: II. Identifying galaxy-scale strong gravitational lenses in Pan-STARRS using convolutional neural networks.
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Cañameras, R., Schuldt, S., Suyu, S. H., Taubenberger, S., Meinhardt, T., Leal-Taixé, L., Lemon, C., Rojas, K., and Savary, E.
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CONVOLUTIONAL neural networks ,GRAVITATIONAL lenses ,ASTRONOMICAL surveys ,SPECTROSCOPIC imaging ,COSMOGRAPHY - Abstract
We present a systematic search for wide-separation (with Einstein radius θ
E ≳ 1.5″), galaxy-scale strong lenses in the 30 000 deg2 of the Pan-STARRS 3π survey on the Northern sky. With long time delays of a few days to weeks, these types of systems are particularly well-suited for catching strongly lensed supernovae with spatially-resolved multiple images and offer new insights on early-phase supernova spectroscopy and cosmography. We produced a set of realistic simulations by painting lensed COSMOS sources on Pan-STARRS image cutouts of lens luminous red galaxies (LRGs) with redshift and velocity dispersion known from the sloan digital sky survey (SDSS). First, we computed the photometry of mock lenses in gri bands and applied a simple catalog-level neural network to identify a sample of 1 050 207 galaxies with similar colors and magnitudes as the mocks. Second, we trained a convolutional neural network (CNN) on Pan-STARRS gri image cutouts to classify this sample and obtain sets of 105 760 and 12 382 lens candidates with scores of pCNN > 0.5 and > 0.9, respectively. Extensive tests showed that CNN performances rely heavily on the design of lens simulations and the choice of negative examples for training, but little on the network architecture. The CNN correctly classified 14 out of 16 test lenses, which are previously confirmed lens systems above the detection limit of Pan-STARRS. Finally, we visually inspected all galaxies with pCNN > 0.9 to assemble a final set of 330 high-quality newly-discovered lens candidates while recovering 23 published systems. For a subset, SDSS spectroscopy on the lens central regions proves that our method correctly identifies lens LRGs at z ∼ 0.1–0.7. Five spectra also show robust signatures of high-redshift background sources, and Pan-STARRS imaging confirms one of them as a quadruply-imaged red source at zs = 1.185, which is likely a recently quenched galaxy strongly lensed by a foreground LRG at zd = 0.3155. In the future, high-resolution imaging and spectroscopic follow-up will be required to validate Pan-STARRS lens candidates and derive strong lensing models. We also expect that the efficient and automated two-step classification method presented in this paper will be applicable to the ∼4 mag deeper gri stacks from the Rubin Observatory Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST) with minor adjustments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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25. The search for the Sedgwick boys
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Lemon, C
- Published
- 1994
26. TDCOSMO: II. Six new time delays in lensed quasars from high-cadence monitoring at the MPIA 2.2 m telescope.
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Millon, M., Courbin, F., Bonvin, V., Buckley-Geer, E., Fassnacht, C. D., Frieman, J., Marshall, P. J., Suyu, S. H., Treu, T., Anguita, T., Motta, V., Agnello, A., Chan, J. H. H., Chao, D. C.-Y., Chijani, M., Gilman, D., Gilmore, K., Lemon, C., Lucey, J. R., and Melo, A.
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LIGHT curves ,TELESCOPES ,GRAVITATIONAL lenses ,SIGNAL-to-noise ratio ,ASTROPHYSICS ,QUASARS ,OBSERVATORIES - Abstract
We present six new time-delay measurements obtained from R
c -band monitoring data acquired at the Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics (MPIA) 2.2 m telescope at La Silla observatory between October 2016 and February 2020. The lensed quasars HE 0047−1756, WG 0214−2105, DES 0407−5006, 2M 1134−2103, PSJ 1606−2333, and DES 2325−5229 were observed almost daily at high signal-to-noise ratio to obtain high-quality light curves where we can record fast and small-amplitude variations of the quasars. We measured time delays between all pairs of multiple images with only one or two seasons of monitoring with the exception of the time delays relative to image D of PSJ 1606−2333. The most precise estimate was obtained for the delay between image A and image B of DES 0407−5006, where τAB = −128.4−3.8 +3.5 τ AB = − 128. 4 − 3.8 + 3.5 $ \tau_{AB} = -128.4^{+3.5}_{-3.8} $ d (2.8% precision) including systematics due to extrinsic variability in the light curves. For HE 0047−1756, we combined our high-cadence data with measurements from decade-long light curves from previous COSMOGRAIL campaigns, and reach a precision of 0.9 d on the final measurement. The present work demonstrates the feasibility of measuring time delays in lensed quasars in only one or two seasons, provided high signal-to-noise ratio data are obtained at a cadence close to daily. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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27. The STRong lensing Insights into the Dark Energy Survey (STRIDES) 2017/2018 follow-up campaign: discovery of 10 lensed quasars and 10 quasar pairs.
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Lemon, C, Auger, M W, McMahon, R, Anguita, T, Apostolovski, Y, Chen, G C-F, Fassnacht, C D, Melo, A D, Motta, V, Shajib, A, Treu, T, Agnello, A, Buckley-Geer, E, Schechter, P L, Birrer, S, Collett, T, Courbin, F, Rusu, C E, Abbott, T M C, and Allam, S
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QUASARS , *DARK energy , *INFRARED cameras , *LIGHT curves , *PARAMETRIC modeling , *SPECTROGRAPHS - Abstract
We report the results of the STRong lensing Insights into the Dark Energy Survey (STRIDES) follow-up campaign of the late 2017/early 2018 season. We obtained spectra of 65 lensed quasar candidates with ESO Faint Object Spectrograph and Camera 2 on the NTT and Echellette Spectrograph and Imager on Keck, confirming 10 new lensed quasars and 10 quasar pairs. Eight lensed quasars are doubly imaged with source redshifts between 0.99 and 2.90, one is triply imaged (DESJ0345−2545, z = 1.68), and one is quadruply imaged (quad: DESJ0053−2012, z = 3.8). Singular isothermal ellipsoid models for the doubles, based on high-resolution imaging from SAMI on Southern Astrophysical Research Telescope or Near InfraRed Camera 2 on Keck, give total magnifications between 3.2 and 5.6, and Einstein radii between 0.49 and 1.97 arcsec. After spectroscopic follow-up, we extract multi-epoch grizY photometry of confirmed lensed quasars and contaminant quasar + star pairs from DES data using parametric multiband modelling, and compare variability in each system's components. By measuring the reduced χ2 associated with fitting all epochs to the same magnitude, we find a simple cut on the less variable component that retains all confirmed lensed quasars, while removing 94 per cent of contaminant systems. Based on our spectroscopic follow-up, this variability information improves selection of lensed quasars and quasar pairs from 34-45 per cent to 51–70 per cent, with most remaining contaminants being star-forming galaxies. Using mock lensed quasar light curves we demonstrate that selection based only on variability will over-represent the quad fraction by 10 per cent over a complete DES magnitude-limited sample, explained by the magnification bias and hence lower luminosity/more variable sources in quads. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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28. Thyroid cancer susceptibility polymorphisms: Confirmation of loci on chromosomes 9q22 and 14q13, validation of a recessive 8q24 locus and failure to replicate a locus on 5q24
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Jones, AM, Howarth, KM, Martin, L, Gorman, M, Mihai, R, Moss, L, Auton, A, Lemon, C, Mehanna, H, Mohan, H, Clarke, SEM, Wadsley, J, Macias, E, Coatesworth, A, Beasley, M, Roques, T, Martin, C, Ryan, P, Gerrard, G, Power, D, Bremmer, C, Tomlinson, I, Carvajal-Carmona, LG, Scrase, C, Goodman, A, Gildersleve, J, Robinson, A, Brammer, C, Mohan, HK, Clarke, SE, Goodchild, K, Hamid, A, Sharp, J, Coatsworth, MA, Courtney, H, Whitaker, S, Wood, K, McCaul, J, Ashford, C, Loo, V, Marshall, J, Roy, A, Simpson, J, Rowell, N, Babu, ME, Srihari, N, Ellenbogen, MS, and Jamil, A
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Linkage disequilibrium ,genetic epidemiology ,cancer: colon ,Genes, Recessive ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,Locus (genetics) ,heritability ,Biology ,association study ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Linkage Disequilibrium ,Thyroid cancer ,cancer: endocrine ,complex traits ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Genotype ,Cancer Genetics ,Genetics ,medicine ,Humans ,SNP ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Thyroid Neoplasms ,Genetic Association Studies ,Genetics (clinical) ,030304 developmental biology ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 14 ,0303 health sciences ,Haplotype ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,medicine.disease ,3. Good health ,MicroRNAs ,Haplotypes ,Genetic Loci ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Relative risk ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 5 ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 9 ,candidate genes ,cancer: gastric ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 8 ,genetic susceptibility - Abstract
Five single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with thyroid cancer (TC) risk have been reported: rs2910164 (5q24); rs6983267 (8q24); rs965513 and rs1867277 (9q22); and rs944289 (14q13). Most of these associations have not been replicated in independent populations and the combined effects of the SNPs on risk have not been examined. This study genotyped the five TC SNPs in 781 patients recruited through the TCUKIN study. Genotype data from 6122 controls were obtained from the CORGI and Wellcome Trust Case-Control Consortium studies. Significant associations were detected between TC and rs965513A (p=6.35×10(-34)), rs1867277A (p=5.90×10(-24)), rs944289T (p=6.95×10(-7)), and rs6983267G (p=0.016). rs6983267 was most strongly associated under a recessive model (P(GG vs GT + TT)=0.004), in contrast to the association of this SNP with other cancer types. However, no evidence was found of an association between rs2910164 and disease under any risk model (p>0.7). The rs1867277 association remained significant (p=0.008) after accounting for genotypes at the nearby rs965513 (p=2.3×10(-13)) and these SNPs did not tag a single high risk haplotype. The four validated TC SNPs accounted for a relatively large proportion (∼11%) of the sibling relative risk of TC, principally owing to the large effect size of rs965513 (OR 1.74).
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- 2016
29. Relationships between Parental Education and Overweight with Childhood Overweight and Physical Activity in 9-11 Year Old Children: Results from a 12-Country Study
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Muthuri, S. K., Onywera, V. O., Tremblay, M. S., Broyles, S. T., Chaput, J. P., Fogelholm, M., Hu, G., Kuriyan, R., Kurpad, A., Lambert, E. V., Maher, C., Maia, J., Matsudo, V., Olds, T., Sarmiento, O. L., Standage, M., Tudor Locke, C., Zhao, P., Church, T. S., Katzmarzyk, P. T., Lambert, D. G., Barreira, T., Broyles, S., Butitta, B., Champagne, C., Cocreham, S., Denstel, K. D., Drazba, K., Harrington, D., Johnson, W., Milauskas, D., Mire, E., Tohme, A., Rodarte, R., Amoroso, B., Luopa, J., Neiberg, R., Rushing, S., Lewis, L., Ferrar, K., Georgiadis, E., Stanley, R., Matsudo, V. K. R., Matsudo, S., Araujo, T., De Oliveira, L. C., Fabiano, L., Bezerra, D., Ferrari, G., Bélanger, P., Borghese, M., Boyer, C., Leblanc, A., Francis, C., Leduc, G., Diao, C., Li, W., Liu, E., Liu, G., Liu, H., Ma, J., Qiao, Y., Tian, H., Wang, Y., Zhang, T., Zhang, F., Sarmiento, O., Acosta, J., Alvira, Y., Diaz, M. P., Gamez, R., Garcia, M. P., Gómez, L. G., Gonzalez, L., Gonzalez, S., Grijalba, C., Gutierrez, L., Leal, D., Lemus, N., Mahecha, E., Mahecha, M. P., Mahecha, R., Ramirez, A., Rios, P., Suarez, A., Triana, C., Hovi, E., Kivelä, J., Räsänen, S., Roito, S., Saloheimo, T., Valta, L., Lokesh, D. P., D'Almeida, M. S., Mattilda R, A., Correa, L., Vijay, D., Wachira, L. J., Muthuri, S., Da Silva Borges, A., Sá Cachada, S. O., De Chaves, R. N., Gomes, T. N. Q. F., Pereira, S. I. S., De Vilhena E. Santos, D. M., Dos Santos, F. K., Da Silva, P. G. R., De Souza, M. C., Lambert, V., April, M., Uys, M., Naidoo, N., Synyanya, N., Carstens, M., Cumming, S., Drenowatz, C., Emm, L., Gillison, F., Zakrzewski, J., Braud, A., Donatto, S., Lemon, C., Jackson, A., Pearson, A., Pennington, G., Ragus, D., Roubion, R., Schuna, J., Wiltz, J. r., Batterham, A., Kerr, J., Pratt, M., Pietrobelli, Angelo, Muthuri, Stella K, Onywera, Vincent O, Tremblay, Mark S, Broyles, Stephanie T, Chaput, Jean-Philippe, Fogelholm, Mikael, Hu, Gang, Kuriyan, Rebecca, Kurpad, Anura, Lambert, Estelle V, Maher, Carol, Maia, José, Matsudo, Victor, Olds, Timothy, Sarmiento, Olga L, Standage, Martyn, Tudor-Locke, Catrine, Zhao, Pei, Church, Timothy S, Katzmarzyk, Peter T, MRC/UCT RU for Exercise and Sport Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Food and Nutrition, and Nutrition Science
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Gerontology ,Male ,Parents ,Pediatric Obesity ,Physiology ,Economics ,Physical fitness ,Economics of Training and Education ,SCHOOL-AGED CHILDREN, BODY-MASS INDEX, OBESITY ,Social Sciences ,lcsh:Medicine ,physical activity ,DETERMINANTS ,RA773 ,Overweight ,Pediatrics ,Families ,Fathers ,0302 clinical medicine ,Sociology ,Risk Factors ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Public and Occupational Health ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,lcsh:Science ,Children ,2. Zero hunger ,Human Capital ,Family Characteristics ,Multidisciplinary ,Child Health ,3142 Public health care science, environmental and occupational health ,FAMILY ,TIME ,3. Good health ,Multidisciplinary Sciences ,YOUTH ,Physiological Parameters ,Population Surveillance ,educational attainment ,OBESITY ,child health ,Educational Status ,ADIPOSITY ,Female ,SCHOOL-AGED CHILDREN ,medicine.symptom ,childhood obesity ,TRANSITION ,BEHAVIOR ,Research Article ,Childhood Obesity ,Mothers ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,fathers ,Childhood obesity ,Education ,03 medical and health sciences ,children ,medicine ,Humans ,Body Weights and Measures ,economics of training and education ,Socioeconomic status ,Exercise ,Life Style ,Educational Attainment ,business.industry ,Body Weight ,lcsh:R ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Odds ratio ,Physical Activity ,medicine.disease ,Obesity ,Educational attainment ,BODY-MASS INDEX ,mothers ,Age Groups ,People and Places ,Population Groupings ,lcsh:Q ,business ,Body mass index ,Demography - Abstract
Background: Globally, the high prevalence of overweight and low levels of physical activity among children has serious implications for morbidity and premature mortality in adulthood. Various parental factors are associated with childhood overweight and physical activity. The objective of this paper was to investigate relationships between parental education or overweight, and (i) child overweight, (ii) child physical activity, and (iii) explore household coexistence of overweight, in a large international sample. Methods: Data were collected from 4752 children (9–11 years) as part of the International Study of Childhood Obesity, Lifestyle and the Environment in 12 countries around the world. Physical activity of participating children was assessed by accelerometry, and body weight directly measured. Questionnaires were used to collect parents' education level, weight, and height. Results: Maternal and paternal overweight were positively associated with child overweight. Higher household coexistence of parent-child overweight was observed among overweight children compared to the total sample. There was a positive relationship between maternal education and child overweight in Colombia 1.90 (1.23–2.94) [odds ratio (confidence interval)] and Kenya 4.80 (2.21–10.43), and a negative relationship between paternal education and child overweight in Brazil 0.55 (0.33–0.92) and the USA 0.54 (0.33–0.88). Maternal education was negatively associated with children meeting physical activity guidelines in Colombia 0.53 (0.33–0.85), Kenya 0.35 (0.19–0.63), and Portugal 0.54 (0.31–0.96). Conclusions: Results are aligned with previous studies showing positive associations between parental and child overweight in all countries, and positive relationships between parental education and child overweight or negative associations between parental education and child physical activity in lower economic status countries. Relationships between maternal and paternal education and child weight status and physical activity appear to be related to the developmental stage of different countries. Given these varied relationships, it is crucial to further explore familial factors when investigating child overweight and physical activity. Refereed/Peer-reviewed
- Published
- 2016
30. Is every strong lens model unhappy in its own way? Uniform modelling of a sample of 13 quadruply+ imaged quasars.
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Shajib, A J, Birrer, S, Treu, T, Auger, M W, Agnello, A, Anguita, T, Buckley-Geer, E J, Chan, J H H, Collett, T E, Courbin, F, Fassnacht, C D, Frieman, J, Kayo, I, Lemon, C, Lin, H, Marshall, P J, McMahon, R, More, A, Morgan, N D, and Motta, V
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GALAXIES ,COMPUTER software ,ASTROPHYSICS ,METAPHYSICAL cosmology - Abstract
Strong-gravitational lens systems with quadruply imaged quasars (quads) are unique probes to address several fundamental problems in cosmology and astrophysics. Although they are intrinsically very rare, ongoing and planned wide-field deep-sky surveys are set to discover thousands of such systems in the next decade. It is thus paramount to devise a general framework to model strong-lens systems to cope with this large influx without being limited by expert investigator time. We propose such a general modelling framework (implemented with the publicly available software lenstronomy) and apply it to uniformly model three-band Hubble Space Telescope Wide Field Camera 3 images of 13 quads. This is the largest uniformly modelled sample of quads to date and paves the way for a variety of studies. To illustrate the scientific content of the sample, we investigate the alignment between the mass and light distribution in the deflectors. The position angles of these distributions are well-aligned, except when there is strong external shear. However, we find no correlation between the ellipticity of the light and mass distributions. We also show that the observed flux-ratios between the images depart significantly from the predictions of simple smooth models. The departures are strongest in the bluest band, consistent with microlensing being the dominant cause in addition to millilensing. Future papers will exploit this rich data set in combination with ground-based spectroscopy and time delays to determine quantities such as the Hubble constant, the free streaming length of dark matter, and the normalization of the initial stellar mass function. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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31. Stroke knowledge in underserved Spanish speakers in central California
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Lemon, C., Jamall, S., and Colorado, R.
- Published
- 2019
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32. An investigation into equestrian spur use in the United Kingdom
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Lemon, C., Lewis, V., Dumbell, L., and Brown, H.
- Published
- 2019
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33. Erratum: Is every strong lens model unhappy in its own way? Uniform modelling of a sample of 13 quadruply+ imaged quasars.
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Shajib, A J, Birrer, S, Treu, T, Auger, M W, Agnello, A, Anguita, T, Buckley-Geer, E J, Chan, J H H, Collett, T E, Courbin, F, Fassnacht, C D, Frieman, J, Kayo, I, Lemon, C, Lin, H, Marshall, P J, McMahon, R, More, A, Morgan, N D, and Motta, V
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PHYSICAL cosmology ,PARTICLE physics ,COMPUTATIONAL mathematics - Published
- 2021
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34. UV-luminous, star-forming hosts of z ~ 2 reddened quasars in the Dark Energy Survey.
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Wethers, C. F., Banerji, M., Hewett, P. C., Lemon, C. A., McMahon, R. G., Reed, S. L., Shen, Y., Abdalla, F. B., Benoit-Lévy, A., Brooks, D., Buckley-Geer, E., Capozzi, D., Carnero Rosell, A., CarrascoKind, M., Carretero, J., Cunha, C. E., D'Andrea, C. B., da Costa, L. N., DePoy, D. L., and Desai, S.
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STAR formation ,QUASARS ,DARK energy ,LUMINOSITY ,ULTRAVIOLET astronomy ,ASTRONOMICAL photometry - Abstract
We present the first rest-frame UV population study of 17 heavily reddened, high-luminosity [E(B - V)
QSO ≳ 0.5; Lbol >1046 erg s-1 ] broad-line quasars at 1.5 < z < 2.7. We combine the first year of deep, optical, ground-based observations from the Dark Energy Survey (DES) with the near-infrared VISTA Hemisphere Survey and UKIDSS Large Area Survey data, from which the reddened quasars were initially identified. We demonstrate that the significant dust reddening towards the quasar in our sample allows host galaxy emission to be detected at the rest-frame UV wavelengths probed by the DES photometry. By exploiting this reddening effect, we disentangle the quasar emission from that of the host galaxy via spectral energy distribution fitting. We find evidence for a relatively unobscured, star-forming host galaxy in at least 10 quasars, with a further three quasars exhibiting emission consistent with either star formation or scattered light. From the rest-frame UV emission, we derive instantaneous, dust-corrected star formation rates (SFRs) in the range 25 < SFRUV < 365M☉ yr-1 , with an average SFRUV = 130 ± 95 M☉ yr-1 . We find a broad correlation between SFRUV and the bolometric quasar luminosity. Overall, our results show evidence for coeval star formation and black hole accretion occurring in luminous, reddened quasars at the peak epoch of galaxy formation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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35. Models of the strongly lensed quasar DES J0408-5354.
- Author
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Agnello, A., Lin, H., Buckley-Geer, L., Treu, T., Bonvin, V., Courbin, F., Lemon, C., Morishita, T., Amara, A., Auger, M. W., Birrer, S., Chan, J., Collett, T., More, A., Fassnacht, C. D., Frieman, J., Marshall, P. J., McMahon, R. G., Meylan, G., and Suyu, S. H.
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QUASARS ,DARK energy ,ASTRONOMICAL observations ,STELLAR luminosity function ,ULTRAVIOLET radiation - Abstract
We present detailed modelling of the recently discovered, quadruply lensed quasar J0408-5354, with the aim of interpreting its remarkable configuration: besides three quasar images (A,B,D) around the main deflector (G1), a fourth image (C) is significantly reddened and dimmed by a perturber (G2) which is not detected in the Dark Energy Survey imaging data. From lens models incorporating (dust-corrected) flux ratios, we find a perturber Einstein radius 0.04 arcsec≲RE, G2≲0.2 arcsec and enclosed mass M
p (RE, G2 )≲1.0 × 1010 M☉. The main deflector has stellar mass log10(M⋆/M☉) = 11.49+0.46 -0.32 , a projected mass Mp (RE, G1 ) ≈ 6 × 1011 M☉ within its Einstein radius RE, G1 = (1.85 ± 0.15) arcsec and predicted velocity dispersion 267-280 km s-1 . Follow-up images from a companion monitoring campaign show additional components, including a candidate second source at a redshift between the quasar and G1. Models with free perturbers, and dust-corrected and delay-corrected flux ratios, are also explored. The predicted time-delays (ΔtAB = (135.0 ± 12.6) d, ΔtBD = (21.0 ± 3.5) d) roughly agree with those measured, but better imaging is required for proper modelling and comparison. We also discuss some lessons learnt from J0408-5354 on lensed quasar finding strategies, due to its chromaticity and morphology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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36. An Interpretation of Bacterial Growth-Rate Curves
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Lemon, C. G.
- Published
- 1933
37. PO-093: COSTAR trial results: 3-D Conformal Radiotherapy vs Cochlea-Sparing IMRT in parotid cancer patients
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Nutting, C., Morden, J., Beasley, M., Bhide, S., Emson, M., Evans, M., Fresco, L., Gujral, D., Harrington, K., Lemon, C., Neupane, R., Newbold, K., Prestwich, R., Robinson, M., Sanghera, P., Sivaramalingam, M., Sydenham, M., Wells, E., Witts, S., and Hall, E.
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- 2017
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38. Microinjections observed by MMS FEEPS in the dusk to midnight region.
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Fennell, J. F., Turner, D. L., Lemon, C. L., Blake, J. B., Clemmons, J. H., Mauk, B. H., Jaynes, A. N., Cohen, I. J., Westlake, J. H., Baker, D. N., Craft, J. V., Spence, H. E., Reeves, G. D., Torbert, R. B., Burch, J. L., Giles, B. L., Paterson, W. R., and Strangeway, R. J.
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- 2016
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39. Maintaining Continuity of Care in a Multidisciplinary Health Service by Using M-Health Technologies to Develop Patient Medical Records.
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Lemon, C. A., Kim, J., Haraguchi, D., Sud, A., Branley, J., and Khadra, M. H.
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- 2014
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40. A Telehealth Framework for Mobile Nursing: Improving Patient Medical Record Management and Staff Communications.
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Haraguchi, D., Kim, J., Lemon, C. A., Sud, A., Branley, J., and Khadra, M. H.
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- 2014
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41. Feasibility of measuring temperature and density fluctuations in air using laser-induced O2 fluorescence
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Massey, G. A and Lemon, C. J
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Lasers And Masers - Abstract
A tunable line-narrowed ArF laser can selectively excite several rotation al lines of the Schumann-Runge band system of O2 in air. The resulting ultraviolet fluorescence can be monitored at 90 deg to the laser beam axis, permitting space and time resolved observation of density and temperature fluctuations in turbulence. Experiments and calculations show that + or - 1 K, + or - 1 percent density, 1 cu mm spatial, and 1 microsecond temporal resolution can be achieved simultaneously under some conditions.
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- 1984
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42. Energetic electron injections deep into the inner magnetosphere associated with substorm activity.
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Turner, D. L., Claudepierre, S. G., Fennell, J. F., O'Brien, T. P., Blake, J. B., Lemon, C., Gkioulidou, M., Takahashi, K., Reeves, G. D., Thaller, S., Breneman, A., Wygant, J. R., Li, W., Runov, A., and Angelopoulos, V.
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- 2015
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43. Computing magnetospheric equilibria with anisotropic pressures.
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Wu, L., Toffoletto, F., Wolf, R. A., and Lemon, C.
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- 2009
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44. Reanalysis of plasma measurements at geosynchronous orbit.
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O'Brien, T. P. and Lemon, C. L.
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- 2007
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45. Estimating local plasma sheet PV5/3 from single-spacecraft measurements.
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Wolf, R. A., Kumar, V., Toffoletto, F. R., Erickson, G. M., Savoie, A. M., Chen, C. X., and Lemon, C. L.
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- 2006
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46. Magnetic storm ring current injection modeled with the Rice Convection Model and a self-consistent magnetic field.
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Lemon, C., Wolf, R. A., Hill, T. W., Sazykin, S., Spiro, R. W., Toffoletto, F. R., Birn, J., and Hesse, M.
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- 2004
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47. 86 poster: Advantages of Fixed and Adaptive 18FDG PET/CT Based BTV Delineation in Squamous Cell Carcinoma of the Head and Neck : Effect on Dose Escalated IMRT.
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Saunders, M.I., Moule, R., Kyani, I., Dickson, J., Lemon, C., and Goodchild, K.
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- 2010
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48. Improving wear time compliance with a 24-hour waist-worn accelerometer protocol in the International Study of Childhood Obesity, Lifestyle and the Environment (ISCOLE)
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Tudor Locke, C., Barreira, T. V., Schuna, J. M., Mire, E. F., Chaput, J. P., Fogelholm, M., Hu, G., Kuriyan, R., Kurpad, A., Lambert, E. V., Maher, C., Maia, J., Matsudo, V., Olds, T., Onywera, V., Sarmiento, O. L., Standage, M., Tremblay, M. S., Zhao, P., Church, T. S., Katzmarzyk, P. T., Lambert, D. G., Barreira, T., Broyles, S., Butitta, B., Champagne, C., Cocreham, S., Dentro, K., Drazba, K., Harrington, D., Johnson, W., Milauskas, D., Mire, E., Tohme, A., Rodarte, R., Amoroso, B., Luopa, J., Neiberg, R., Rushing, S., Lewis, L., Ferrar, K., Physio, B., Georgiadis, E., Stanley, R., Matsudo, V. K. R., Matsudo, S., Araujo, T., de Oliveira, L. C., Rezende, L., Fabiano, L., Bezerra, D., Ferrari, G., Bélanger, P., Borghese, M., Boyer, C., Leblanc, A., Francis, C., Leduc, G., Diao, C., Li, W., Liu, E., Liu, G., Liu, H., Ma, J., Qiao, Y., Tian, H., Wang, Y., Zhang, T., Zhang, F., Sarmiento, O., Acosta, J., Alvira, Y., Diaz, M. P., Gamez, R., Garcia, M. P., Gómez, L. G., Gonzalez, L., Gonzalez, S., Grijalba, C., Gutierrez, L., Leal, D., Lemus, N., Mahecha, E., Mahecha, M. P., Mahecha, R., Ramirez, A., Rios, P., Suarez, A., Triana, C., Hovi, E., Kivelä, J., Räsänen, S., Roito, S., Saloheimo, T., Valta, L., Lokesh, D. P., D'Almeida, M. S., Annie Mattilda, R., Correa, L., Vijay, D., Wachira, L. J., Muthuri, S., da Silva Borges, A., Oliveira Sá Cachada, S., de Chaves, R. N., Gomes, T. N. Q. F., Pereira, S. I. S., de Vilhena e. Santos, D. M., dos Santos, F. K., Rodrigues da Silva, P. G., de Souza, M. C., Lambert, V., April, M., Uys, M., Naidoo, N., Synyanya, N., Carstens, M., Donatto, S., Lemon, C., Jackson, A., Pearson, A., Pennington, G., Ragus, D., Roubion, R., Schuna, J., Wiltz, D., Batterham, A., Kerr, J., Pratt, M., Pietrobelli, Angelo, ISCOLE Research Group, Tudor-Locke, Catrine, Barreira, Tiago V, Schuna, John M, Mire, Emily F, Maher, Carol A, Olds, Timothy S, Katzmarzyk, Peter T, University of Helsinki, Department of Food and Nutrition, Nutrition Science, MRC/UCT RU for Exercise and Sport Medicine, and Faculty of Health Sciences
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Male ,Gerontology ,Pediatric Obesity ,Time Factors ,Accelerometry, Exercise, Measurement, Physical activity, Sedentary time, Pediatrics ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,RA773 ,Accelerometer ,Pediatrics ,0302 clinical medicine ,Clinical Protocols ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Accelerometry ,030212 general & internal medicine ,315 Sport and fitness sciences ,Child ,Measurement ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,ALGORITHMS ,Nutrition Surveys ,16. Peace & justice ,3. Good health ,Sedentary time ,Female ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Waist ,National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey ,Physical activity ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Motor Activity ,Childhood obesity ,03 medical and health sciences ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,medicine ,Humans ,WRIST ,Accelerometer data ,Wakefulness ,Life Style ,Exercise ,Protocol (science) ,HIP ,business.industry ,Methodology ,030229 sport sciences ,medicine.disease ,United States ,PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY ,Physical therapy ,Sleep ,business - Abstract
Background We compared 24-hour waist-worn accelerometer wear time characteristics of 9–11 year old children in the International Study of Childhood Obesity, Lifestyle and the Environment (ISCOLE) to similarly aged U.S. children providing waking-hours waist-worn accelerometer data in the 2003–2006 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). Methods Valid cases were defined as having ≥4 days with ≥10 hours of waking wear time in a 24-hour period, including one weekend day. Previously published algorithms for extracting total sleep episode time from 24-hour accelerometer data and for identifying wear time (in both the 24-hour and waking-hours protocols) were applied. The number of valid days obtained and a ratio (percent) of valid cases to the number of participants originally wearing an accelerometer were computed for both ISCOLE and NHANES. Given the two surveys’ discrepant sampling designs, wear time (minutes/day, hours/day) from U.S. ISCOLE was compared to NHANES using a meta-analytic approach. Wear time for the 11 additional countries participating in ISCOLE were graphically compared with NHANES. Results 491 U.S. ISCOLE children (9.92±0.03 years of age [M±SE]) and 586 NHANES children (10.43 ± 0.04 years of age) were deemed valid cases. The ratio of valid cases to the number of participants originally wearing an accelerometer was 76.7% in U.S. ISCOLE and 62.6% in NHANES. Wear time averaged 1357.0 ± 4.2 minutes per 24-hour day in ISCOLE. Waking wear time was 884.4 ± 2.2 minutes/day for U.S. ISCOLE children and 822.6 ± 4.3 minutes/day in NHANES children (difference = 61.8 minutes/day, p
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49. 167 The Hillingdon Hospital NHS Trust Test community case study – adult cancer survivorship programme: tumour group lung.
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Lynch, J., Lemon, C., Pike, L., and Walker, J.
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LUNG cancer diagnosis , *LUNG cancer treatment , *HEALTH programs ,HILLINGDON Hospital (London, England) ,DISEASES in adults - Published
- 2016
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50. Design and initial flight test of the Champagne Flyer.
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Lemon, C. and Hauser, J.
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- 1994
- Full Text
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