1,085 results on '"R A, Cole"'
Search Results
2. Vertical distribution patterns of ichthyoplankton in temperate waters of New Zealand
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M. J. Kingsford and R. G. Cole
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Ecology ,Aquatic Science ,Oceanography ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Multifactorial sampling designs were used to determine the vertical distribution of ichthyoplankton at multiple temporal and spatial scales in New Zealand. Hypotheses concerning the vertical distribution of fish larvae were tested in the following: depth strata, surface, near-surface, mid-depth and deep, and near the substratum. The consistency of abundance patterns was examined at three sites separated by 2–20 km over 2 months. We also tested for differences in shallow water columns of two depths (20 and 40 m) and both day and night. Although peak abundance of total larval fish was found at upper and lower strata, regardless of total depth of the water column, consistent taxa specific patterns of vertical distribution were also found. Some taxa were most abundant at the surface (e.g. mullids, hemiramphids, and kyphosids), whereas others were found at multiple depths below the surface and throughout the water column, regardless of site, time or depth of water column (e.g. carangids, engraulids, clupeids, scombrids, sparids and pleuronectids). Some taxa were most abundant in shallow water columns (e.g. mullids, tripterygiids and gobiids). Rank abundance by depth stratum for non-surface dwelling species varied among sites and times. Diel vertical movements were detected, some taxa (e.g. clupeids, scombrids and bothids) that were most abundant at the surface at night whereas for other taxa this pattern was more variable (e.g. carangids). We conclude that diel depth-related patterns in shallow water columns will influence interactions among taxa and the importance of different transport mechanisms for larval transport.
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- 2022
3. Antiferromagnetic FeTe2 1T−phase formation at the Sb2Te3/Ni80Fe20 interface
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A. R. Will-Cole, James L. Hart, Matthew Matzelle, Adrian Podpirka, Nirjhar Bhattacharjee, Shreya K. Patel, Sarah H. Tolbert, Arun Bansil, Judy J. Cha, Don Heiman, and Nian X. Sun
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Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous) ,General Materials Science - Published
- 2023
4. 1174 THE ROLE OF HIP FRACTURE IN TRAJECTORIES OF DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS AMONG OLDER ADULTS: ANALYSIS FROM THE ENGLISH LONGITUDINAL STUDY
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R Milton-Cole, S Ayis, M D L O'Connell, T Smith, and K Sheehan
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Aging ,General Medicine ,Geriatrics and Gerontology - Abstract
Introduction Older adults experience ‘Late life depression’. Hip fractures may negatively influence trajectories of depressive symptoms in older adults. This study aimed to determine trajectories of depressive symptoms among older adults in England, overall and for those after hip fracture, and identify characteristics defining trajectory membership. Methods Analysis of adults aged 60 years or more (n=7,050), including a hip fracture subgroup (n = 384), from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing. Latent class growth mixture modelling was completed. Depressive symptom prevalence was estimated at baseline. Chi-squared tests were completed to compare baseline characteristics across trajectories. Results Three trajectory groups were identified overall and for those with hip fracture: no-, mild-, and moderate-severe- symptoms. The moderate-severe group comprised 13.7% and 7% of participants for overall and hip fracture populations respectively. Overall, the proportion of participants with depressive symptoms were 0.4%, 12.4% and 65.4% for no-, mild-, and moderate-severe- symptom groups, respectively. For the hip fracture subgroup, these proportions were 0.7%, 28.8%, and 85.2%. Depressive symptoms were stable over time, with a weak trend towards increasing severity for the moderate-severe group. Individuals with moderate-severe trajectories were older, more likely to be female, live alone and had worse health outcomes (p < 0.001). Conclusions Older adults, and those after hip fracture, follow one of three trajectories of depressive symptoms which are broadly stable over time. The prevalence of depressive symptoms was lower for those with hip fracture however, when present, the symptoms were more severe than the overall population. Results suggest a role of factors including age, gender, and marital status in depressive symptoms trajectories.
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- 2023
5. The conundrum of depressive symptom-frailty comorbidity and overlap
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Brendon Stubbs and R Milton-Cole
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Frailty ,Depression ,business.industry ,Frail Elderly ,Comorbidity ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Psychiatry ,business ,Gerontology ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Depressive symptoms ,Aged - Published
- 2021
6. Electric field tuning of ultrafast demagnetization in a magnetoelectric heterostructure
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A. R. Will-Cole, Chuangtang Wang, Nirjhar Bhattacharjee, Yongmin Liu, and N. X. Sun
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- 2022
7. Infidel or Paganus? The Polysemy of kafara in the Quran
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Juan R. I. Cole
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Infidel ,Philosophy ,Polysemy ,Linguistics - Abstract
This article explores the meaning of the root k-f-r in the Quran, questioning the practice of translating the noun kāfir as “infidel.” It argues for a distinction between the idiomatic phrasal verb kafara bi-, which does mean to reject or disbelieve, and the simple intransitive verb kafara and its deverbal nouns, which are used in the Quran in a large number of different ways. This polysemy is explored through contextual readings of Quran passages. It is argued that the noun kāfir, unlike the verb kafara, is used only with regard to adherents of traditional polytheism and is not deployed in an unmodified way with regard to Jews and Christians. The possible influence on the Arabic kafara of Greek and Latin conceptions is also broached.
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- 2021
8. ‘It was made to appear to them so’: the crucifixion, Jews and Sasanian war propaganda in the Qur’ān
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Juan R. I. Cole
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History ,Sociology and Political Science ,Philosophy ,Islam ,Ancient history ,Christianity - Abstract
The quranic sūra The Women 4:157-58 says that Jews claimed to have killed and crucified Christ but denies that they did so. Rather, the verse says, ‘it was made to appear to them so.’ For centuries...
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- 2021
9. 661 PROGNOSTIC FACTORS OF DEPRESSION AFTER HIP FRACTURE SURGERY: SYSTEMATIC REVIEW
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R Milton-Cole, S Ayis, K Lambe, M D L O’Connell, C Sackley, and K J Sheehan
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Aging ,General Medicine ,Geriatrics and Gerontology - Abstract
Introduction Patients with hip fracture and depression are less likely to recover. This review aimed to identify prognostic factors of depression up to one year after hip fracture surgery in adults. Secondary aims were to determine whether identified factors are modifiable or non-modifiable and describe proposed underlying mechanisms for their association with depression. Methods We searched MEDLINE, Embase, PsychInfo, CINAHL and Web of Science Core Collection databases for published studies as well as grey literature. We did not impose any date, geographical, or language limitations. Two reviewers independently screened studies against predefined eligibility criteria to identify relevant papers. We included observational studies investigating prognostic factors of depression up to one year after surgery in adults surgically managed for non-pathological hip fracture. Two reviewers independently extracted data (Checklist for critical Appraisal and data extraction for systematic Reviews of prediction Modelling Studies, adapted for use with prognostic factors studies Checklist) and completed quality appraisal (using Quality in Prognosis Studies tool). Results 3,402 studies were identified; 2,915 studies were excluded leaving 13 studies included in this review. 3,769 patients were included across all studies with a mean age ranging from 76.21–81.82 years. A total of 39 prognostic factors were investigated and most studies failed to identify a primary prognostic factor of interest. Most of these factors were patient factors with only a few being process or structure factors. Conclusion Various potential prognostic factors of depression after hip fracture were identified however, Methodological quality and heterogeneity between studies limited the certainty of which prognostic factors were the strongest. High-quality research investigating prognostic factors using the same study design, Methodology and measurements is warranted to allow for comparisons of the predictive power of factors. As well as future research into the underlying mechanisms of prognostic factors.
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- 2022
10. Muhammad and Justinian: Roman Legal Traditions and the Qurʾān
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Juan R. I. Cole
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Cultural Studies ,Linguistics and Language ,Archeology ,General Arts and Humanities - Published
- 2020
11. Paradosis and monotheism: a late antique approach to the meaning ofislāmin the Quran
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Juan R. I. Cole
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Cultural Studies ,Literature ,060303 religions & theology ,History ,060102 archaeology ,business.industry ,Philosophy ,Islam ,06 humanities and the arts ,0603 philosophy, ethics and religion ,Monotheism ,Logos Bible Software ,Late Antiquity ,Scholarship ,Close reading ,0601 history and archaeology ,Meaning (existential) ,Surrender ,business - Abstract
Both the Muslim exegetical tradition and most Western scholarship have posited that the termislāmin the Quran means “submission”, i.e. to God, and that it refers to the religion brought by the prophet Muhammad. This paper argues that neither of these assertions is correct. Rather, the abstract nounislāmas used in the Quran means “tradition”. It is underlain by the Aramaicmashlmānūtā, which in turn was the term generally used to translate the Greekparadosis. That the Greek usage had a direct impact on Arabic is also considered. The wide range of meanings givenparadosisby Greek and Syriac authors is surveyed. A close reading of Quran verses in which the wordislāmappears shows that it refers to the prophetic tradition of monotheism rather than the surrender of an individual to God. It is synonymous with the Logos of Abraham, in which all the monotheistic religions participate.
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- 2019
12. Tutorial: Piezoelectric and magnetoelectric N/MEMS—Materials, devices, and applications
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A. R. Will-Cole, Ahmed E. Hassanien, Sila Deniz Calisgan, Min-Gyo Jeong, Xianfeng Liang, Sungho Kang, Vageeswar Rajaram, Isabel Martos-Repath, Huaihao Chen, Antea Risso, Zhenyun Qian, Seyed Mahdi Seyed Abrishami, Nader Lobandi, Matteo Rinaldi, Songbin Gong, and Nian X. Sun
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General Physics and Astronomy - Abstract
Nano- and micro-electromechanical systems (N/MEMSs) are traditionally based on electrostatic or piezoelectric coupling, which couples electrical and mechanical energy through acoustic resonator structures. Most recently, N/MEMS devices based on magnetoelectrics are gaining much attention. Unlike electrostatic or piezoelectric N/MEMS that rely on an AC electric field or voltage excitation, magnetoelecric N/MEMS rely on the electromechanical resonance of a magnetostrictive/piezoelectric bilayer heterostructure exhibiting a strong strain-mediated magnetoelectric coupling under the excitation of a magnetic field and/or electric field. As a consequence, magnetoelectric N/MEMS enable unprecedented new applications, ranging from magnetoelectric sensors, ultra-compact magnetoelectric antennas, etc. This Tutorial will first outline the fundamental principles of piezoelectric materials, resonator design, specifically different acoustic modes, and piezoelectric-based N/MEMS applications, i.e., radio frequency front end filters and infrared radiation sensors. We will then provide an overview of magnetoelectric materials and N/MEMS focusing on the governing physics of the magnetoelectric effect, magnetic material properties for achieving high magnetoelectric coupling, state-of-the-art magnetoelectric N/MEMS devices, and their respective applications.
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- 2022
13. Caliphates and Juntas: Ottoman Legacies in Today's Controversies over Religion and State in the Arab World
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Juan R. I. Cole
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History ,Theocracy ,010405 organic chemistry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Empire ,Islam ,Ancient history ,Colonialism ,01 natural sciences ,Caliphate ,0104 chemical sciences ,0506 political science ,State (polity) ,Sharia ,Political science ,050602 political science & public administration ,Tyranny of the majority ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,media_common - Abstract
Egypt and Iraq display contrasting policies in the relationship between state and religion. Egypt's nationalist officer corps has subordinated political Islam, stigmatized the Muslim Brotherhood, and bended clerics to its will. While Arab Iraq presents two models, both hold a similar stance on religion: one an elected, parliamentary government dominated by political Islam and Shiite clerics; the other a theocratic Sunni caliphate of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant. Egypt and Iraq are heirs to two differing Ottoman solutions to the problem of religion-state relations, the legacy of which is often overlooked. The most prevalent model subordinates clergy and religion to the state in the tradition of Mehmet I. This model is characteristic of the empire in its glory years and would have been recognized by Suleyman the Magnificent. In the other model, the late-nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century Hamidian caliphate, the head of state claimed temporal and religious authority to combat colonial penetration. Neither Ottoman nor colonial norms of governance, nor nationalist states succeeding them, developed methods to deal with multiethnic states or avoid a tyranny of the majority. Unlike the modernizing Ottoman caliphate, however, the caliphates of Mulla Omar and Ibrahim al-Samarra'i display a literalist reading of sharia and a ruthless disregard of humane prohibitions in mainstream Islamic law against killing innocents. Of the two models, the likely victor is the state-centric subordination of religion because latter-day caliphates have flourished only briefly as radical and sectarian movements in rugged territories where power vacuums existed.
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- 2018
14. Composition and sources of winter haze in the Bakken oil and gas extraction region
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M. I. Schurman, Shannon L. Capps, Yi Li, J. L. Hand, Barkley C. Sive, Amy P. Sullivan, Bret A. Schichtel, Kristi A. Gebhart, Derek E. Day, Jeffrey L. Collett, Yong Zhou, Anthony J. Prenni, and A. R. Evanoski-Cole
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Atmospheric Science ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Ammonium nitrate ,Air stagnation ,010501 environmental sciences ,Particulates ,01 natural sciences ,Aerosol ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Ammonia ,chemistry ,Nitrate ,Environmental chemistry ,Air quality index ,Air mass ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
In the past decade increased use of hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling has dramatically expanded oil and gas production in the Bakken formation region. Long term monitoring sites have indicated an increase in wintertime aerosol nitrate and sulfate in this region from particulate matter (PM 2.5 ) measurements collected between 2000 and 2010. No previous intensive air quality field campaign has been conducted in this region to assess impacts from oil and gas development on regional fine particle concentrations. The research presented here investigates wintertime PM 2.5 concentrations and composition as part of the Bakken Air Quality Study (BAQS). Measurements from BAQS took place over two wintertime sampling periods at multiple sites in the United States portion of the Bakken formation and show regionally elevated episodes of PM 2.5 during both study periods. Ammonium nitrate was a major contributor to haze episodes. Periods of air stagnation or recirculation were associated with rapid increases in PM 2.5 concentrations. Volatile organic compound (VOC) signatures suggest that air masses during these episodes were dominated by emissions from the Bakken region itself. Formation rates of alkyl nitrates from alkanes revealed an air mass aging timescale of typically less than a day for periods with elevated PM 2.5 . A thermodynamic inorganic aerosol model (ISORROPIA) was used to investigate gas-particle partitioning and to examine the sensitivity of PM 2.5 concentrations to aerosol precursor concentrations. Formation of ammonium nitrate, the dominant component, was most sensitive to ammonia concentrations during winter and to nitric acid concentrations during early spring when ammonia availability increases. The availability of excess ammonia suggests capacity for further ammonium nitrate formation if nitrogen oxide emissions increase in the future and lead to additional secondary formation of nitric acid.
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- 2017
15. Clodronate disodium for treatment of clinical signs of navicular disease – a double-blinded placebo-controlled clinical trial
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R P Boswell, H M Poole, S L Longhofer, R C Cole, B L King, R S Shoemaker, M Frevel, D S Kolb, and J C Janicek
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medicine.medical_specialty ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Equine ,business.industry ,Double blinded ,0402 animal and dairy science ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Disease ,Placebo ,040201 dairy & animal science ,0403 veterinary science ,Clinical trial ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,business - Published
- 2017
16. 0417 Associations Between Rest-Activity Patterns and Resting-State Networks in Older Adults
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Michelle W. Voss, C Moon, Qian Xiao, and R A Cole
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Resting state fMRI ,Sleep apnea syndromes ,business.industry ,Brain activity and meditation ,Physiology (medical) ,Medicine ,Actigraphy ,Neurology (clinical) ,Rest activity ,business ,Brain function ,Demography ,Sleep duration - Abstract
Introduction Resting-state functional connectivity is coherent brain activity in a task-free state that strongly correlates to task-evoked sensory, motor, and higher-order cognitive systems. Certain networks show decreased functional connectivity with aging. Aging is associated with changes in circadian rhythms and sleep-wake cycles. Limited research has been conducted on how circadian activity and sleep are related to markers of functional brain aging. The purpose of this study was to explore whether rest-activity patterns and shorter sleep duration are related to functional connectivity of specific resting-state networks in older adults. Methods A total of 124 cognitively normal participants (mean age (SD) = 67.2 (5.7), 42% men) underwent 3.0 T MRI and week-long wrist actigraphy protocols. Rest-activity pattern was analyzed using an extended cosine model calculating acrophase (time of peak activity) and pseudo-F statistics of goodness-of-fit (a measure of overall rhythmicity). We used resting-state fMRI scans to measure functional connectivity in association and sensory networks as defined by the Schaefer 17 network functional atlas. Multiple linear regression analysis was used to investigate how rest-activity pattern parameters and sleep duration are associated with resting-state functional connectivity, adjusting for age, sex, and sleep apnea. Results We found that the average acrophase was 2:30 PM (SD = 54 min), and delayed acrophase (average vs. delayed [+1SD]) was associated with lower functional connectivity of the right-lateralized default mode network A (p=0.02), and higher pseudo-F statistics was associated with higher functional connectivity in networks including left dorsal attention B (p=0.001), right somatomotor A (p = 0.05), and somatomotor B (both p=0.02). Longer sleep duration was associated with higher right executive control B (p=0.03). Conclusion The overall rhythmicity of diurnal rest-activity patterns and longer sleep duration are associated with some resting-state functional networks. Further investigation is needed to understand the mechanisms between circadian rhythm and brain function. Support National Institute of Health, U of Iowa Aging Mind Brain Initiative, Center on Aging
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- 2020
17. Chinese Soft Power and Green Energy Investment in the Greater Middle East
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Juan R. I. Cole
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Government ,Middle East ,Soft power ,Economy ,business.industry ,Face (sociological concept) ,Business ,International trade ,China ,Investment (macroeconomics) ,Communism ,Renewable energy - Abstract
Green energy investment is one avenue through with the Chinese government is beginning to create a new relationship with the Middle East. Chinese solar panel firms have research and production advantages in the world market, but face rising labor costs at home. The Communist Party under Xi Jinping has pursued two major policies, “Go out!” and “One Road, One Belt.” The first refers to Chinese firms creating factories abroad to benefit from cheap labor and from local low-tariff trade blocs. China will therefore set up solar panel factories in the United Arab Emirates and in Morocco. Both countries have strong national commitments to renewable energy, but also have access to a wide range of export markets. This sort of investment changes China’s relationship to the region from being one of buying hydrocarbons to a much more intensive set of interactions, including acting as employer for local labor.
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- 2016
18. Dissociations of the Fluocinolone Acetonide Implant: The Multicenter Uveitis Steroid Treatment (MUST) Trial and Follow-up Study
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Janet T. Holbrook, Elizabeth A. Sugar, Alyce E. Burke, Albert T. Vitale, Jennifer E. Thorne, Janet L. Davis, Douglas A. Jabs, Glenn J. Jaffe, Brenda Branchaud, Paul Hahn, Larry Koreen, Eleonora (Nora) M. Lad, Phoebe Lin, Joseph Nissim Martel, Neha (Shah) Serrano, Cindy Skalak, Lejla Vajzovic, Claxton Baer, Joyce Bryant, Sai Chavala, Michael Cusick, Shelley Day, Pouya Dayani, Justis Ehlers, Muge Kesen, Annie Lee, Alex Melamud, Jawad A. Qureshi, Adrienne Williams Scott, Robert F. See, Robert K. Shuler, Megan Wood, Steven Yeh, Alcides Fernandes, Deborah Gibbs, Donna Leef, Daniel F. Martin, Sunil Srivastava, James P. Dunn, Hosne Begum, Jeff Boring, Kristen L. Brotherson, Bryn Burkholder, Nicholas J. Butler, Dennis Cain, Mary A. Cook, David Emmert, Janis R. Graul, Mark Herring, Ashley Laing, Theresa G. Leung, Michael C. Mahon, Ahmafreza Moradi, Antonia Nwankwo, Trucian L. Ostheimer, Terry Reed, Ellen Arnold, Patricia M. Barnabie, Marie-Lynn Belair, Stephen G. Bolton, Joseph B. Brodine, Diane M. Brown, Lisa M. Brune, Anat Galor, Theresa Gan, Adam Jacobowitz, Meera Kapoor, Sanjay Kedhar, Stephen Kim, Henry A. Leder, Alison G. Livingston, Yavette Morton, Kisten Nolan, George B. Peters, Priscilla Soto, Ricardo Stevenson, Michelle Tarver-Carr, Yue Wang, C. Stephen Foster, Stephen D. Anesi, null Linda Bruner, Olga Ceron, David M. Hinkle, Nancy Persons, Bailey Wentworth, Sarah Acevedo, Fahd Anzaar, Tom Cesca, Angelica Contero, Kayleigh Fitzpatrick, Faith Goronga, Jyothir Johnson, Karina Q. Lebron, Danielle Marvell, Chandra Morgan, Nita Patel, Jennifer Pinto, Sana S. Siddique, Janet Sprague, Taygan Yilmaz, H. Nida Sen, Michael Bono, Denise Cunningham, Darryl Hayes, Dessie Koutsandreas, Robert B. Nussenblatt, Patti R. Sherry, Gregory L. Short, Wendy Smith, Alana Temple, Allison Bamji, Hanna Coleman, Geetaniali Davuluri, Lisa Faia, Chloe Gottlieb, Guy V. Jirawuthiworavong, Julie C. Lew, Richard Mercer, Dominic Obiyor, Cheryl H. Perry, Natalia Potapova, Eric Weichel, Keith J. Wroblewski, Paul A. Latkany, Corinne Coonan, Andrea Honda, Monica Lorenzo-Latkany, Robert Masini, Susan Morell, Angela Nguyen, Jason Badamo, Kenneth M. Boyd, Matthew Enos, Jenny Gallardo, Jacek Jarczynski, Ji Yun Lee, Mirjana McGrosky, Ann Nour, Meredith Sanchez, Kate Steinberg, Richard J. Stawell, Lisa Breayley, Carly D'Sylva, Elizabeth Glatz, Lauren Hodgson, Lyndell Lim, Cecilia Ling, Rachel McIntosh, Julie Morrison (Ewing), Andrew Newton, Sutha Sanmugasundram, Richard Smallwood, Ehud Zamir, Nicola Hunt, Lisa Jones, Ignatios Koukouras, Suzanne Williams, Pauline T. Merrill, Danielle Carns, Len Richine, Denise L. Voskuil-Marre, Kisung Woo, Bruce Gaynes, Christina Giannoulis, Pam Hulvey, Elaine Kernbauer, Heena S. Khan, Sarah J. Levine, Scott Toennessen, Eileen Tonner, Robert C. Wang, Hank Aguado, Sally Arceneaux, Karen Duignan, Gary E. Fish, Nick Hesse, Diana Jaramillo, Michael Mackens, Jean Arnwine, David Callanan, Kimberly Cummings, Keith Gray, Susie Howden, Karin Mutz, Brenda Sanchez, Susan Lightman, Filis Ismetova, Ashley Prytherch, Sophie Seguin-Greenstein, Oren Tomkins, Asat Bar, Kate Edwards, Lavanish Joshi, Jiten Moraji, Ahmed Samy, Timothy Stubbs, Simon Taylor, Hamish Towler, Rebecca Tronnberg, Gary N. Holland, Robert D. Almanzor, Jose Castellanos, Jean Pierre Hubschman, Ann K. Johiro, Alla Kukuyev, Ralph D. Levinson, Colin A. McCannel, Susan S. Ransome, Christine R. Gonzales, Anurag Gupta, Partho S. Kalyani, Michael A. Kapamajian, Peter J. Kappel, Cheryl Arcinue, Janne Chuang, Giulio Barteselli, Glenn Currie, Veronica Mendoza, Debbie Powell, Tom Clark, Denine E. Cochran, William R. Freeman, Joshua Hedaya, Tiara Kemper, Igor Kozak, Jacqueline M. LeMoine, Megan E. Loughran, Luzandra Magana, Francesca Mojana, Victoria Morrison, Vivian Nguyen, Stephen F. Oster, Nisha Acharya, David Clay, Salena Lee, Mary Lew, Todd P. Margolis, Jay Stewart, Ira G. Wong, Debra Brown, Claire M. Khouri, Debra A. Goldstein, Andrea Birnbaum, Andrea Degillio, Gemma De la Rosa, Carmen Ramirez, Evica Simjanowski, Mariner Skelly, Anna L. Castro-Malek, Catherine E. Crooke, Melody Huntley, Katrina Nash, Marcia Niec, Dimitry Pyatetsky, Misel Ramirez, Zuzanna Rozenbajgier, Howard H. Tessler, Thomas A. Albini, Marie Chin, Daniela Castaño, Ariana Elizondo, Macy Ho, Jaclyn L. Kovach, Richard C-S. Lin, Efrem Mandelcorn, Jackie K-D. Nguyen, Aura Pacini, Susan Pineda, David A. Pinto, Jose Rebimbas, Kimberly E. Stepien, Claudia Teran, Susan G. Elner, Hillary Bernard, Linda Fournier, Lindsay Godsey, Linda Goings, Richard Hackel, Moella Hesselgrave, K. Thiran Jayasundera, Robert Prusak, Pamela Titus, Melissa Bergeron, Reneé Blosser, Rebecca Brown, Carrie Chrisman-McClure, Julie R. Gothrup, Stephen J. Saxe, Deanna Sizemore, John H. Kempen, James Berger, Sheri Drossner, Joan C. DuPont, Albert M. Maguire, Janice Petner, Stephanie Engelhard, Tim Hopkins, Dawn McCall, Monique McRay, Daniel Will, Wei Xu, Jonathan Lo, Rebecca Salvo, Elizabeth Windsor, Laurel Weeney, Peter R. Pavan, Ken Albritton, JoAnn Leto, Brian Madow, Lori Mayor, Scott E. Pautler, Wyatt Saxon, Judy Soto, Burton Goldstein, Amy Klukoff, Lucy Lambright, Kim McDonald, Maria Ortiz, Susan Scymanky, Dee Dee Szalay, Narsing Rao, Tamara Davis, Jackie Douglass, Judith Linton, Margaret Padilla, Sylvia Ramos, Alexia Aguirre, Lawrence Chong, Lupe Cisneros, Elizabeth Corona, Dean Eliott, Amani Fawzi, Jesse Garcia, Rahul Khurana, Jennifer Lim, Rachel Mead, Julie H. Tsai, Albert Vitale, Paul S. Bernstein, Bonnie Carlstrom, James Gilman, Sandra Hanseen, Paula Morris, Diana Ramirez, Kimberley Wegner, John D. Sheppard, Brianne Anthony, Amber Casper, Lisa Felix-Kent, Jeanette Fernandez, Tari Johnson, Stephen V. Scoper, R. Denise Cole, Nancy Crawford, Lisa Franklin, Krista Hamelin, Jen Martin, Rebecca Marx, Gregory Schultz, Joseph Webb, Pamela Yeager, Rosa Y. Kim, Matthew S. Benz, David M. Brown, Eric Chen, Richard H. Fish, Eric Kegley, Laura Shawver, Tien P. Wong, Rebecca De La Garza, Shayla Friday (Hay), P. Kumar Rao, Eve Adcock, Rajendra S. Apte, Amy Baladenski, Rhonda Curtis, Sarah Gould, Amanda Hebden, Jamie Kambarian, Charla Meyer, Sam Pistorius, Melanie Quinn, Greg Rathert, Kevin J. Blinder, Ashley Hartz, Pam Light, Gaurav K. Shah, Russell VanGelder, Michael M. Altaweel, Natalie Kurinij, Diane Brown, Nancy Prusakowski, Larry Hubbard, Janet Wittes, William E. Barlow, Marc Hochberg, Alice T. Lyon, Alan G. Palestine, Lee S. Simon, James T. Rosenbaum, Harmon Smith, Janet Davis, Jennifer Thorne, Nisha R. Acharya, Jeffrey A. Boring, Judith Alexander, Wai Ping Ng, David S. Friedman, Anna Adler, Alyce Burke, Joanne Katz, Susan Reed, Husam Ansari, Nicholas Cohen, Sanjukta Modak, Lea T. Drye, Mark L. Van Natta, Kevin Frick, Thomas A. Louis, David Shade, Karen Pascual, Jill S. Slutsky-Sanon, Colby Glomp, Melissa A. Nieves, Maria Stevens, Amanda Allen, Yasmin Hilal, Francis Abreu, Anne Shanklin Casper, Cathleen Ewing, Adante Hart, Andrea Lears, Shirley Li, Jill Meinert, Vinnette Morrison, Deborah Nowakowski, Girlie Reyes, Dave M. Shade, Jacqueline Smith, Karen Steuernagle, Mark Van Natta, Vidya Venugopal, Tsung Yu, Paul Chen, Karen Collins, John Dodge, Kevin D. Frick, Rosetta Jackson, Christian Jimenez, Ariel Landers, Hope Livingston, Curtis L. Meinert, Sobharani Rayapudi, Weijiang Shen, Charles Shiflett, Rochelle Smith, Ada Tieman, James A. Tonascia, Richard Zheng, James Allan, Wendy K. Benz, Amitha Domalpally, Kristine A. Johnson, Dawn J. Myers, Jeong Won Pak, James L. Reimers, Debra J. Christianson, Geoffrey Chambers, Margaret A. Fleischli, Jacquelyn Freund, Kathleen E. Glander, Anne Goulding, Vonnie Gama, Sapna Gangaputra, Dennis Hafford, Susan E. Harris, Larry D. Hubbard, Jeffrey M. Joyce, Christina N. Kruse, Lauren Nagle, Amy Remm, Gwyn E. Padden-Lechten, Alyson Pohlman, Ruth A. Shaw, Peggy Sivesind, Dennis Thayer, Erika Treichel, Kelly J. Warren, Sheila M. Watson, Mary K. Webster, James K. White, Tara Wilhelmson, and Grace Zhang
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Reoperation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Dissociation (neuropsychology) ,Visual acuity ,Adolescent ,genetic structures ,Visual Acuity ,Article ,law.invention ,Uveitis ,03 medical and health sciences ,Postoperative Complications ,0302 clinical medicine ,Foreign-Body Migration ,Randomized controlled trial ,Fluocinolone acetonide ,Risk Factors ,law ,medicine ,Humans ,Glucocorticoids ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Drug Implants ,business.industry ,030503 health policy & services ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,Surgery ,Ophthalmology ,Steroid therapy ,Fluocinolone Acetonide ,Anesthesia ,Intravitreal Injections ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,Equipment Failure ,Female ,Implant ,medicine.symptom ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Follow-Up Studies ,medicine.drug - Abstract
To describe fluocinolone acetonide implant dissociations in the Multicenter Uveitis Steroid Treatment (MUST) Trial.Randomized clinical trial with extended follow-up.Review of data collected on the first implant in the eye(s) of participants. Dissociation was defined as the drug pellet no longer being affixed to the strut and categorized as spontaneous or surgically related.A total of 250 eyes (146 patients) had at least 1 implant placed. Median follow-up time after implant placement was 6 years (range 0.5-9.2 years). Thirty-four dissociations were reported in 30 participants. There were 22 spontaneous events in 22 participants; 6-year cumulative risk of a spontaneous dissociation was 4.8% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 2.4%-9.1%). The earliest event occurred 4.8 years after placement. Nine of 22 eyes with data had a decline in visual acuity ≥5 letters temporally related to the dissociation. Thirty-nine implant removal surgeries were performed, 33 with replacement. Twelve dissociations were noted during implant removal surgeries in 10 participants (26%, 95% CI 15%-48%); 5 of these eyes had a decline in visual acuity ≥5 letters after surgery. The time from implant placement to removal surgery was longer for the surgeries at which dissociated implants were identified than for those without one (5.7 vs 3.7 years, P.001). Overall, visual acuity declined 15 or more letters from pre-implant values in 22% of affected eyes; declines were frequently associated with complications of uveitis or its treatment.There is an increasing risk of dissociation of Retisert implants during follow-up; the risk is greater with removal/exchange surgeries, but the risk of both spontaneous and surgically related events increases with longevity of the implants. In 22% of affected eyes visual acuity declined by 15 letters. In the context of eyes with moderate to severe uveitis for years, this rate is not unexpected.
- Published
- 2016
19. Evaluation of the Sequential Spot Sampler (S3) for time-resolved measurement of PM2.5 sulfate and nitrate through lab and field measurements
- Author
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Arantzazu Eiguren-Fernandez, Jeffrey L. Collett, A. R. Evanoski-Cole, Gregory S. Lewis, Susanne V. Hering, Amy P. Sullivan, and Arsineh Hecobian
- Subjects
Detection limit ,Atmospheric Science ,Chromatography ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Correlation coefficient ,Chemistry ,Extraction (chemistry) ,Ion chromatography ,Analytical chemistry ,010501 environmental sciences ,Particulates ,01 natural sciences ,6. Clean water ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Nitrate ,Sulfate ,Chemical composition ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
The Sequential Spot Sampler (S3), a newly developed instrument to collect aerosols for time-resolved chemical composition measurements, was evaluated in the laboratory and field for the measurement of particulate sulfate and nitrate. The S3 uses a multi-temperature condensation growth tube to grow individual aerosols to droplets which are then deposited as a ∼ 1 mm diameter dry spot at the end of the growth tube in a 100 µL well of a multi-well plate. The well plate advances automatically to provide a sequence of time-resolved samples. The collected aerosols are subsequently analyzed in the laboratory. The sample is concentrated during the collection process, and the laboratory extraction and analysis steps can be automated. The well plate, as received from the field, is placed onto a needle-based autosampler that adds liquid for sample extraction and injects sample extract from each well onto an ion chromatograph for analysis. Laboratory evaluation for sulfate and nitrate ions showed that poly ether ether ketone (PEEK) used as well plate material does not contribute any artifacts; a 60 min extraction procedure leads to the recovery of sulfate and nitrate from the dry spots at above 95 % extraction efficiency; and samples stored frozen and analyzed up to 23 months later show less than a 10 % change in sulfate and nitrate concentrations. The limit of detection was 0.5 µg m−3 for sulfate and 0.2 µg m−3 for nitrate for a 1 h sampling period. In a month-long field study conducted in southern California, two S3s were deployed alongside a URG denuder–filter-pack and a Particle-Into-Liquid Sampler combined with an Ion Chromatograph (PILS-IC). Collocated S3 sampler concentrations compared by linear regression show good agreement, with r2 = 0.99 and slope = 0.99 (±0.004) µg m−3 for sulfate and r2 = 0.99 and slope = 1.0 (±0.006) µg m−3 for nitrate. When compared to the URG denuder–filter-pack and the PILS-IC, the S3 sulfate and nitrate concentrations yielded correlations above 0.84 for the square of the correlation coefficient and regression slopes close to 1.
- Published
- 2016
20. Chapter 6 Between the Postcolonial and the Middle East: Writing the Subaltern in the Arab World
- Author
-
Juan R. I. Cole
- Published
- 2018
21. The Hospital Kitchen
- Author
-
R Langton, Cole
- Subjects
Editor's Letter-Box - Published
- 2018
22. The New Wards at Newcastle Union
- Author
-
R Langton, Cole
- Subjects
The Editor's Letter-Box - Published
- 2018
23. Hospital Construction
- Author
-
R Langton, Cole
- Subjects
The Editor's Letter-Box - Published
- 2018
24. Visibility impacts at Class I areas near the Bakken oil and gas development
- Author
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Bret A. Schichtel, A. R. Evanoski-Cole, Anthony J. Prenni, Derek E. Day, Kristi A. Gebhart, and Jenny L. Hand
- Subjects
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Oil and Gas Industry ,010501 environmental sciences ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,01 natural sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Nitrate ,Air Pollution ,Extraction (military) ,Sulfate ,Visibility ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Air quality index ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Hydrology ,Air Pollutants ,business.industry ,Fossil fuel ,Drilling ,Particulates ,chemistry ,North Dakota ,Environmental science ,Particulate Matter ,business ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
Oil and gas activities have occurred in the Bakken region of North Dakota and nearby states and provinces since the 1950s but began increasing rapidly around 2008 due to new extraction methods. Three receptor-based techniques were used to examine the potential impacts of oil and gas extraction activities on airborne particulate concentrations in Class I areas in and around the Bakken. This work was based on long-term measurements from the Interagency Monitoring of Protected Visual Environments (IMPROVE) monitoring network. Spatial and temporal patterns in measured concentrations were examined before and after 2008 to better characterize the influence of these activities. A multisite back-trajectory analysis and a receptor-based source apportionment model were used to estimate impacts. Findings suggest that recent Bakken oil and gas activities have led to an increase in regional fine (PM2.5-particles with aerodynamic diameters
- Published
- 2018
25. Pre- to Posttreatment Differences in Measures of Risk of Relapse and Reoffending for Participants of RAPt’s 6-week Programs
- Author
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Lucy V. Dean, Caroline R. F. Cole, Hattie Catherine Ann Moyes, Josefien J. F. Breedvelt, Bethan I. Thibaut, Katie L. Disbury, Albert M. Kopak, and Joshua James Heath
- Subjects
Program evaluation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Rehabilitation ,Adult male ,Substance dependence ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Alcohol dependence ,Ethnic group ,medicine.disease ,Completion Status ,medicine ,Relapse risk ,Psychiatry ,Psychology ,Law ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
This study evaluated the impact of two short-term, Rehabilitation for Addicted Prisoners Trust (RAPt), substance dependence treatment programs on the psychological processes they target, which are associated with relapse and/or reoffending. Posttreatment scores across subscales of three psychometric measures were compared to baseline scores for 2,299 alcohol and/or drug dependent adult male prisoners that engaged with the Alcohol Dependence Treatment Programme (ADTP) or the Bridge Programme in custody. Subsequent OLS regression analyses indicated that, while key variables such as age, ethnicity, offense type, main substance used, and completion status were held constant, participants of the programs made significant gains regarding motivation to change problematic substance abusing behavior, self-efficacy for abstaining from drugs and/or alcohol in high-risk situations, and social problem-solving skills.
- Published
- 2015
26. Brighter CARS hypermicroscopy via 'spectral surfing'
- Author
-
J. G. Porquez, R. A. Cole, Joel T. Tabarangao, and Aaron D. Slepkov
- Subjects
Physics ,Brightness ,business.industry ,02 engineering and technology ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,Supercontinuum ,Pulse (physics) ,010309 optics ,Synchronization (alternating current) ,Optics ,0103 physical sciences ,0210 nano-technology ,business - Abstract
We present a method for improving the brightness of supercontinuum-Stokes-based CARS hypermicroscopy. The synchronization of power-tuned supercontinuum generation with the time-delay of Pump/Stokes pulses in CARS hypermicroscopy allows for more effective pulse interactions — in a method we denote “spectral surfing. This, in turn, enables the single-window scanning of a broader range of CARS frequencies — from 300 cm−1 to 3500 cm−1.
- Published
- 2017
27. Predicting recidivism for offenders in UK substance dependence treatment: do mental health symptoms matter?
- Author
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Josefien J. F. Breedvelt, Lucy V. Dean, Caroline R. F. Cole, Gail Y. Jones, and Hattie Catherine Ann Moyes
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Social Psychology ,Substance dependence ,Recidivism ,Antisocial personality disorder ,Addiction ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Retrospective cohort study ,medicine.disease ,Mental health ,Psychological evaluation ,medicine ,Major depressive disorder ,Psychiatry ,Psychology ,Law ,Applied Psychology ,Clinical psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Purpose– The purpose of this paper is to assess whether mental health symptoms affect one-year reoffending rates upon release from prison for participants engaging in substance dependence treatment in the UK.Design/methodology/approach– A retrospective cohort study was used to assess reconviction outcomes upon release. The Comprehensive Addiction and Psychological Evaluation (CAAPE) was administered to 667 inmates admitted to the programme. The effect of mental health, drug use, and static risk factors on reoffending was assessed at one-year post release.Findings– Logistic regression analysis showed that symptoms of Major Depressive Disorder at the start of substance dependence treatment increased the likelihood to reoffend, whilst Obsessive Compulsive Disorder symptoms and length of sentence decreased the likelihood to reoffend. Antisocial Personality Disorder symptoms show a trend towards increasing the likelihood to reoffend. In addition, previously established risk factors for reoffending, including dependence on heroin, crack/cocaine, and poly drug use significantly increased the likelihood of reconviction.Practical implications– Depressive symptomatology pre-treatment could affect reoffending outcomes for participants in substance dependence treatment in prison. An integrative approach addressing both substance misuse and mental health factors is pivotal. Future efforts to address both simultaneously can be made to improve assessment, training, treatment, and through care for prisoners in substance dependence treatment.Originality/value– Few studies have assessed the effect of mental health factors on reoffending outcomes for offenders in substance dependence treatment. A large sample was studied in an understudied population of UK prisoners in substance dependence treatment. The results have implications for clinical settings where mental health symptoms are not addressed concurrently with substance dependence. This finding can inform policy makers and practitioners who provide substance dependence treatment in prison.
- Published
- 2014
28. Comparison of two photonic crystal fibers for supercontinuum-Stokes spectral-focusing-CARS hyperspectroscopy
- Author
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R. A. Cole, Aaron D. Slepkov, and J. G. Porquez
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Materials science ,business.industry ,Hyperspectral imaging ,02 engineering and technology ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Polarization (waves) ,01 natural sciences ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,Spectral line ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Supercontinuum ,Spectral imaging ,010309 optics ,symbols.namesake ,Optics ,0103 physical sciences ,Broadband ,medicine ,symbols ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,Raman scattering ,Photonic-crystal fiber - Abstract
A popular and inexpensive experimental approach to broadband CARS microscopy involves the generation of a supercontinuum pulse from a microstructured fibre. Despite such fibres being used for CARS microscopy for over a decade, concerns about excessive spectral and polarization noise have prevented their wider adoption for this technique. In this work, the applicability of two commercially-available supercontinuum generating fibres, the NL-1.4-775-945 and the NL-PM-750 in packaged module form, are compared for spectral-focusing CARS (SF-CARS) imaging. The former has been a mainstay of SF-CARS implementations while the latter has largely found application in a related but distinct broadband CARS technique and has not been used for SF-CARS applications. We first characterize the intensity and polarization behaviour of the supercontinuum output of the fibres and demonstrate that while both can be used to produce high-quality CARS images and spectra, key operational differences between the fibres must be taken into consideration when optimizing their use for SF-CARS applications. In particular, we show via spectroscopy of a solvent sample and hyperspectral imaging of a pharmaceutical sample that the NL-1.4-775-945 is inferior for SF-CARS applications when used under fixed-power supercontinuum generation conditions. However, its operation can be significantly improved under power-tuned supercontinuum generation conditions known as spectral-surfing, an approach that does not confer the same advantage with the NL-PM-750. Furthermore, we identify a latent polarization-dependent spectral artifact in the NL-PM-750, which can degrade the CARS spectrum in time-gated techniques such as SF-CARS.
- Published
- 2018
29. Use of a Video Assistive Device in a University Course in Laboratory Science: A Case Study
- Author
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Alan J. Slavin and R. A. Cole
- Subjects
Government ,Higher education ,Multimedia ,business.industry ,Rehabilitation ,Resistance (psychoanalysis) ,computer.software_genre ,Management ,Ophthalmology ,Software ,Component (UML) ,Chemistry (relationship) ,business ,Psychology ,computer ,Multimeter ,PATH (variable) - Abstract
Many countries, including Canada (Government of Ontario, 2005) and the United States (U.S. Government, 2004) have legislated the provision of assistive devices for persons with disabilities during their education and subsequent employment to enable them to contribute more fully to society. The complex visual requirements of the laboratory component of many university science courses require a collaboration between a student with low vision and a particular university science department to determine which devices are appropriate for each student. A number of articles have addressed this issue for physics students who are totally blind and use special hardware (see, for example, Carver, 1967; Parry, Brazier, & Fischbach, 1997; University of Nottingham, 2009; Windelborn, 1999) or software (such as Thompson, 2005). The assistive devices described in those articles allow limited access to certain kinds of experiments, usually in mechanics, but are not applicable in general. In contrast, this article addresses the use of modern video technology to allow a student with low vision to participate almost fully in a standard university science program that includes laboratory experiments. CASE STUDY A student with low vision (the first author) registered in the introductory physics course at Trent University in the fall of 2009. His Snellen visual acuity fluctuates significantly, with an average acuity of about 20/400. This low acuity presented obvious difficulties for him with the laboratory component of the course, for which he relied on his lab partner for the setup of the apparatus and the collection of data, although he was a full participant in the data analysis. The student then decided to major in Trent's program in chemical physics. Because the required physics labs have visual components, these components needed to be evaluated for accessibility. The available options were to (1) continue relying on sighted classmates as in his first-year course, (2) create a different "theoretical physics" degree program that did not require a laboratory component, or (3) work with the student to find assistive technology that would allow him to participate in a meaningful way in setting up equipment and recording data. The student and the department agreed that familiarity with laboratory equipment and the skill in recording data properly were desirable benefits ensuing from the laboratory component and that would be expected by an employer of a physics or chemistry graduate, so the third option were the best one if it was possible. Even if the student continued into theoretical areas, laboratory experience would assist him in relating theory to an experiment. Selection of the assistive device Without an assistive device, the student could see the outline of a power supply or a signal generator but could not tell them apart visually or see the gradations on the dials. He could not select the voltage, current, or resistance on a digital multimeter or its banana-plug holes in which to insert patch cords. He also could not see his hands well enough to insert the patch cords even if he could have seen the holes. Thus, he could not assemble equipment, view physical results, or read meters to take data. For example, in the classic e/m (electron charge-to-mass ratio) experiment, he could not see the circular path of an electron beam in a magnetic field as evidenced by the faint glow from the excited mercury vapor or the pins that fluoresce, when struck by the beam, that determine the radius of the beam. To participate fully in an undergraduate experiment, he was required to see well enough to do all of these tasks while having his hands free to manipulate the equipment. The assistive device described here satisfied all these requirements. The student chose the Acrobat Panel and Long Arm (Enhanced Vision Systems, United States) for assessment. The weight is 3.5 pounds (1.6 kilograms) for the camera, long arm, and clamp, and 8 ounces (0. …
- Published
- 2013
30. Iraq in 1939: British Alliance or Nationalist Neutrality toward the Axis?
- Author
-
Juan R. I. Cole
- Subjects
History ,Politics ,Liberalism ,Alliance ,Historiography ,Ancient history ,Dictatorship ,Colonialism ,Communism ,Nationalism - Abstract
‘Iraq in 1939’ makes an argument that this pivotal year in the history of the Greater Mediterranean was also pivotal for Iraq. The European contest among fascism, communism and liberalism, had strong echoes in Iraq. Whereas the existing historiography paints Arab Iraq as deeply influenced by fascism, the author found no evidence for this allegation. Iraqis were reported in the British archives to have been disgusted by Hitler's invasion of Poland as a form of colonialism. Italy's own colonial enterprise in Libya tarnished its image among Arabs, and the Iraqi monarch expressed unease about a Yemeni arms deal with Italy. Germany was not at that point interested in Arab nationalism, and still hoped for a British alliance of Aryans. The reach of German radio broadcasts has been exaggerated, and prominent Iraqi poets and political societies roundly condemned fascism. The Communist movement in Iraq was still in its infancy in 1939, and a left-leaning military dictatorship had recently been overthrown in favor of a return to constitutional monarchy. The victor in 1939 was the relatively pro-British liberal government of Nuri al-Sa'id. The Arab nationalists in the officer corps, however, did wish to use the rise of the Axis as a lever to escape the onerous postcolonial British dominance stipulated in the 1930 treaty. Although they did not seek an Axis alliance, merely a neutrality as between it and Britain, this attempt to move away from London's embrace set them on a collision course with Britain, which reoccupied the country only two years later. The war-time British interpretation of Iraqi elites' flirtation with a Turkish-style neutrality as an embrace of Nazism has too long influenced later historians, and needs to be abandoned in light of the evidence in the British archives themselves.
- Published
- 2012
31. Blogging Current Affairs History
- Author
-
Juan R. I. Cole
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,History ,Iraq war ,Internet communication ,Middle East ,Sociology and Political Science ,business.industry ,The Internet ,Sociology ,Public relations ,business - Abstract
The internet poses acute challenges to historians. Blogging and other forms of internet communication have outstripped the reach of more conventional forms of academic publications. They also provide new types of sources that would otherwise be impossible for historians to access, not least in areas of conflict. These new forms of communication must be embraced by contemporary historians as they seek to speak truth to power. They allow contemporary historians to engage with public and political debate in critical new ways. Blogging will not replace the monograph or the peer-reviewed journal article, nor will it replace archival research. In affecting public debates and political outcomes, and in obtaining new sources, blogging is a form of communication contemporary historians ignore at their peril.
- Published
- 2011
32. Patient autoantibodies deplete postsynaptic muscle-specific kinase leading to disassembly of the ACh receptor scaffold and myasthenia gravis in mice
- Author
-
Othon L. Gervásio, R. N. Cole, Stephen W. Reddel, Nazanin Ghazanfari, William D. Phillips, and Shyuan T. Ngo
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,animal structures ,Physiology ,Chemistry ,Tyrosine phosphorylation ,musculoskeletal system ,medicine.disease ,Neuromuscular junction ,Myasthenia gravis ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Postsynaptic potential ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Cholinergic ,Myocyte ,Receptor ,Acetylcholine receptor - Abstract
The postsynaptic muscle-specific kinase (MuSK) coordinates formation of the neuromuscular junction (NMJ) during embryonic development. Here we have studied the effects of MuSK autoantibodies upon the NMJ in adult mice. Daily injections of IgG from four MuSK autoantibody-positive myasthenia gravis patients (MuSK IgG; 45 mg day(1)i.p. for 14 days) caused reductions in postsynaptic ACh receptor (AChR) packing as assessed by fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET). IgG from the patients with the highest titres of MuSK autoantibodies caused large (51-73%) reductions in postsynaptic MuSK staining (cf. control mice; P < 0.01) and muscle weakness. Among mice injected for 14 days with control and MuSK patient IgGs, the residual level of MuSK correlated with the degree of impairment of postsynaptic AChR packing. However, the loss of postsynaptic MuSK preceded this impairment of postsynaptic AChR. When added to cultured C2 muscle cells the MuSK autoantibodies caused tyrosine phosphorylation of MuSK and the AChR beta-subunit, and internalization of MuSK from the plasma membrane. The results suggest a pathogenic mechanism in which MuSK autoantibodies rapidly deplete MuSK from the postsynaptic membrane leading to progressive dispersal of postsynaptic AChRs. Moreover, maintenance of postsynaptic AChR packing at the adult NMJ would appear to depend upon physical engagement of MuSK with the AChR scaffold, notwithstanding activation of the MuSK-rapsyn system of AChR clustering.
- Published
- 2010
33. Interplay of pulse bandwidth and spectral resolution in spectral-focusing CARS microscopy
- Author
-
Aaron D. Slepkov and R. A. Cole
- Subjects
Physics ,business.industry ,Bandwidth (signal processing) ,Physics::Optics ,Hyperspectral imaging ,Statistical and Nonlinear Physics ,02 engineering and technology ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,010309 optics ,symbols.namesake ,Fourier transform ,Optics ,0103 physical sciences ,Group delay dispersion ,Microscopy ,symbols ,Spectral resolution ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,Raman scattering ,Photonic-crystal fiber - Abstract
We present a theoretical analysis of the relationship among the spectral resolution, the degree of chirp-matching, and pulse bandwidth in coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering microscopy implementations based on spectral focusing (SF-CARS). We find that, despite allowing better ultimate spectral resolution when chirp-matching is attained, the use of the broadest bandwidth pulses can significantly worsen the spectral resolution if the pulses are not chirp-matched. We demonstrate that the bandwidth of the detected anti-Stokes signal is minimized when the pump is twice as chirped as the Stokes, meaning that—contrary to our initial presumption—a narrow anti-Stokes bandwidth does not imply good spectral resolution. We present approximate expressions that relate the bandwidths of the pump, Stokes, and anti-Stokes pulses to the degree of chirp-matching and outline how these could be used to estimate the amount of glass needed to attain chirp-matching. These expressions also permit a useful estimate of the group delay dispersion from other optics in the pump or Stokes beam path. This work aims to clarify several technical aspects of SF-CARS microscopy and provides researchers with valuable information to consider when working with SF-CARS microscopy systems.
- Published
- 2018
34. Alterations in the proteome of the NHERF1 knockout mouse jejunal brush border membrane vesicles
- Author
-
M, Donowitz, S, Singh, P, Singh, F F, Salahuddin, Y, Chen, M, Chakraborty, R, Murtazina, M, Gucek, R N, Cole, N C, Zachos, O, Kovbasnjuk, N, Broere, W G, Smalley-Freed, A B, Reynolds, A L, Hubbard, U, Seidler, E, Weinman, H R, de Jonge, B M, Hogema, X, Li, and Biochemistry
- Subjects
Male ,Mice, Knockout ,Proteomics ,Sodium-Hydrogen Exchangers ,Microvilli ,Proteome ,Physiology ,Immunoblotting ,Articles ,Cadherins ,Chromatography, Ion Exchange ,Phosphoproteins ,Immunohistochemistry ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Mice ,Microscopy, Electron ,Jejunum ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,Genetics ,Animals ,Female ,Transport Vesicles ,beta Catenin - Abstract
Donowitz M, Singh S, Singh P, Salahuddin FF, Chen Y, Chakraborty M, Murtazina R, Gucek M, Cole RN, Zachos NC, Kovbasnjuk O, Broere N, Smalley-Freed WG, Reynolds AB, Hubbard AL, Seidler U, Weinman E, de Jonge HR, Hogema BM, Li X. Alterations in the proteome of the NHERF1 knockout mouse jejunal brush border membrane vesicles. Physiol Genomics 42A: 200-210, 2010. First published August 24, 2010; doi:10.1152/physiolgenomics.00001.2010.-Na/H exchanger regulatory factor 1 (NHERF1) is a scaffold protein made up of two PDZ domains and an ERM binding domain. It is in the brush border of multiple epithelial cells where it modulates 1) Na absorption by regulating NHE3 complexes and cytoskeletal association, 2) Cl secretion through trafficking of CFTR, and 3) Na-coupled phosphate absorption through membrane retention of NaPi2a. To further understand the role of NHERF1 in regulation of small intestinal Na absorptive cell function, with emphasis on apical membrane transport regulation, quantitative proteomic analysis was performed on brush border membrane vesicles (BBMV) prepared from wild-type (WT) and homozygous NHERF1 knockout mouse jejunal villus Na absorptive cells. Jejunal architecture appeared normal in NHERF1 null; however, there was increased proliferative activity, as indicated by increased crypt BrdU staining. LC-MS/MS analysis using iTRAQ to compare WT and NHERF1 null BBMV identified 463 proteins present in both WT and NHERF1 null BBMV of simultaneously prepared and studied samples. Seventeen proteins had an altered amount of expression between WT and NHERF1 null in two or more separate preparations, and 149 total proteins were altered in at least one BBMV preparation. The classes of the majority of proteins altered included transport proteins, signaling and trafficking proteins, and proteins involved in proliferation and cell division. Affected proteins also included tight junction and adherens junction proteins, cytoskeletal proteins, as well as metabolic and BB digestive enzymes. Changes in abundance of several proteins were confirmed by immunoblotting [increased CEACAM1, decreased ezrin (p-ezrin), NHERF3, PLC beta 3, E-cadherin, p120, beta-catenin]. The changes in the jejunal BBMV proteome of NHERF1 null mice are consistent with a more complex role of NHERF1 than just forming signaling complexes and anchoring proteins to the apical membrane and include at least alterations in proteins involved in transport, signaling, and proliferation.
- Published
- 2010
35. New Method to Quantify Angiogenesis in vivo Using Multi-photon Imaging
- Author
-
Bruce J. Herron, R. W. Cole, and Jason Smith
- Subjects
medicine.anatomical_structure ,General Computer Science ,In vivo ,Computer science ,Angiogenesis ,medicine ,Multiple time ,Surgical methods ,Blood vessel ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
Efforts to understand the basic mechanisms of angiogenesis, that is, the formation of new blood vessels from existing vasculature, have been limited by the methods that are currently used to measure vessel growth. Although in vivo assays provide the best environment in which to track angiogenesis, inherent difficulties in obtaining reproducible data limit the power of this approach. Limitations include: environmental variations between experimental animals, induction of inflammatory responses by surgical methods, and labor-intensive blood vessel quantification procedures. A better assay would measure vessel growth in one animal at multiple time points and would focus on minimization of artifacts induced by experimental manipulation.
- Published
- 2009
36. Microheterogeneity in H1 histones and its consequences
- Author
-
R. David Cole
- Subjects
Genetics ,Histone-modifying enzymes ,biology ,Cellular differentiation ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Genetic Variation ,DNA ,Biochemistry ,Chromatin ,Cell biology ,Histones ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Prophase ,Histone ,chemistry ,Histone H1 ,Gene expression ,biology.protein ,Animals ,Humans ,Amino Acid Sequence - Abstract
The extent of microheterogeneity of H1 histones in individual higher organisms, without considering post-translational modifications, is such that five to eight molecular species can be recognized. The H1 variants differ among themselves in their ability to condense DNA and chromatin fragments, and they are non-uniformly distributed in chromatin. This review assembles data that support the notion that the differences in chromatin condensation (heterochromatization) observed through the microscope are maintained by the non-uniform distribution of H1 variants, and that this pattern of chromatin condensation may determine the dynamics of chromatin during replication and may represent the commitment aspect of differentiation. The differential response of the multiple H1 variants with regard to their synthesis and turnover is consistent with this notion.
- Published
- 2009
37. Pakistan and Afghanistan: Beyond the Taliban
- Author
-
Juan R. I. Cole
- Subjects
Government ,Politics ,Afghan ,Sociology and Political Science ,State (polity) ,Political economy ,Political science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Terrorism ,Redress ,Islam ,FATA ,media_common - Abstract
The horrific bombing of the Islamabad Marriott in September 2008, continued attacks on United States and NATO military garrisons in Afghanistan, and assassination attempts on Afghan president Hamid Karzai all point to a Taliban resurgence in Pakistan and Afghanistan. Political insta bility in both countries continues to cause concern about security threats to NATO societies. The Taliban create Islam Anxiety in the West not only be cause they hosted al Qaeda but also because they dislike foreigners, oppress women, and practice extreme puritanism. Westerners confuse the social con flict between urban and rural society in these two countries with mere terrorism and tend to assume that the deployment of military might by a praetorian state against rural and tribal peoples is synonymous with a war on terror. In fact, good policymaking would recognize the legitimate social and economic discon tents of the rural population and seek to redress them with well considered aid programs instead of with bombs. When Westerners insist on seeing Pakistan and Afghanistan solely through the lens of terrorism, however, they deeply dis tort the two complex societies, since most people in both countries are not rigid Muslim fundamentalists. Seeing them as Taliban also creates a caricature that gets in the way of practical understanding. Pakistani Taliban have become active in the relatively small Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) of Pakistan. Though the politics of the FATA tribes is consequential, the fear, often expressed by U.S. pundits, that the Taliban from this region might take over the government in Islamabad, or that Pakistani opinion is shifting in their favor, is wholly unrealistic. The Afghan Taliban are active throughout a much larger expanse of their county than their Pakistani counterparts, but are very active in only a few southern provinces. Frustrated that these two South Asian states seem unable to control their militants, the Bush administration pressed both Afghanistan and Pakistan to
- Published
- 2009
38. Islamophobia as a Social Problem: 2006 Presidential Address
- Author
-
Juan R. I. Cole
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,History ,Islamophobia ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Subject (philosophy) ,Antipathy ,Class (philosophy) ,Social issues ,Generalization (learning) ,Meaning (existential) ,Prejudice ,Social psychology ,media_common - Abstract
“Prejudice is an antipathy based on faulty and inflexible generalization. It may be felt or expressed. It may be directed toward a group or an individual of that group.” So the social psychologist Gordon Allport defined prejudice in a 1954 book on the subject. My focus today is on a specific sort of prejudice and discrimination, that against Muslims. Prejudice is generally recognized as similar in meaning to bias, and as having to do with attitudes and beliefs. Discrimination is the practical disadvantaging of the member of a class of persons, not for his or her personal actions but for those associated with his or her group by the majority in society.
- Published
- 2007
39. Supplementary material to 'Oil and gas impacts on air quality in federal lands in the Bakken region: an overview of the Bakken Air Quality Study and first results'
- Author
-
A. J. Prenni, D. E. Day, A. R. Evanoski-Cole, B. C. Sive, A. Hecobian, Y. Zhou, K. A. Gebhart, J. L. Hand, A. P. Sullivan, Y. Li, M. I. Schurman, Y. Desyaterik, W. C. Malm, B. A. Schichtel, and J. L. Collett
- Published
- 2015
40. ION-EXCHANGE CHROMATOGRAPHY OF INSULIN AND OTHER PROTEINS IN BUFFERS CONTAINING UREA*
- Author
-
Leticia Mendiola and R. David Cole
- Subjects
Chromatography ,Chemistry ,General Neuroscience ,Hydrophilic interaction chromatography ,Insulin ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Ion chromatography ,Proteins ,Buffers ,Chromatography, Ion Exchange ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,History and Philosophy of Science ,Urea ,medicine ,Thermoresponsive polymers in chromatography - Published
- 2006
41. A 'Shiite Crescent'? The Regional Impact of the Iraq War
- Author
-
Juan R. I. Cole
- Subjects
History ,Iraq war ,Political science ,Ancient history - Abstract
US policies in the Middle East … may have helped create the conditions for a second phase of Iran's Islamic Revolution, which is now at long last having a significant impact among Iran's Arab neighbors.
- Published
- 2006
42. The Reelection of Bush and the Fate of Iraq
- Author
-
Juan R. I. Cole
- Subjects
Political science ,General Medicine - Published
- 2005
43. A comparison of surface sensitive reflection spectroscopies
- Author
-
D S Roseburgh and R J Cole
- Subjects
Surface (mathematics) ,Optics ,Materials science ,Reflection (mathematics) ,business.industry ,Spectroscopic ellipsometry ,General Materials Science ,Condensed Matter Physics ,business ,Reflectometry - Abstract
The surface sensitivity (in the sub-nanometre regime) of reflection spectroscopies is discussed. Simulations are used to illustrate the strengths and limitations of 45 degree reflectometry (45DR). Particular emphasis is placed upon the comparison with spectroscopic ellipsometry.
- Published
- 2004
44. Dynamic External Fixation for Complex Intraarticular Phalangeal Fractures
- Author
-
R. P. Cole, E. Tiernan, Adrian Richards, and D. Johnson
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,musculoskeletal diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Joint mobilization ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Fractures, Bone ,Fixation (surgical) ,External fixation ,Fracture Fixation ,Finger Injuries ,Fracture fixation ,medicine ,Humans ,Fractures, Comminuted ,Orthodontics ,Transplantation ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,Phalanx ,Surgery ,Radiography ,Joint stiffness ,Orthopedic surgery ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Interphalangeal Joint - Abstract
Intraarticular phalangeal fractures are difficult to treat. The advantages of using dynamic external fixation devices include distraction of impacted fracture fragments and reduction in joint stiffness by allowing early joint mobilization. Previous reports have concentrated on pilon fractures and dorsal fracture dislocations affecting the proximal interphalangeal joint. We report our experience using a dynamic external spring fixator in the management of 15 patients with a variety of fracture patterns affecting the metacarpophalangeal, proximal interphalangeal and distal interphalangeal joints. In three cases the device spanned two adjacent joints. Long-term follow-up has shown excellent range of joint movement and no major complications. We consider that this device is an effective tool in the management of a range on complex intraarticular phalangeal fractures.
- Published
- 2004
45. The Effect of Rubbing Strength on the Formation of Zigzag Defects in Surface Stabilised Ferroelectric Liquid Crystals
- Author
-
W. Zheng, I. Underwood, B. F. Macdonald, R. J. Cole, and D. G. Vass
- Subjects
Materials science ,business.industry ,General Chemistry ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Ferroelectricity ,Rubbing ,Optics ,Reflection (mathematics) ,Zigzag ,Liquid crystal ,General Materials Science ,Composite material ,Spectroscopy ,business ,Anisotropy ,Polyimide - Abstract
The effect of the rubbing strength on the formation of the zigzag defects in surface stabilised ferroelectric liquid crystal (SSFLC) devices is demonstrated. Atomic force microscopy images of rubbed polyimide (PI) films reveal that the surface topography is modified by mechanical rubbing and reflection anisotropy spectroscopy reveals the surface anisotropy of the rubbed polyimide films increases with rubbing strength. Strongly rubbed PI films are found to generate zigzag lines and the density of these defects in the SSFLC layers is found to increase with rubbing strength.
- Published
- 2004
46. Stress-induced optical anisotropy in polycrystalline copper studied by reflection anisotropy spectroscopy
- Author
-
Daniel David Higgins, Jane R. Blackford, Vasileios Koutsos, R. J. Cole, F. Madani, S. Kheradmand, and B. F. Macdonald
- Subjects
Materials science ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,Condensed matter physics ,business.industry ,Electromagnetic spectrum ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Photon energy ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Copper ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Stress (mechanics) ,Optics ,Reflection (mathematics) ,chemistry ,Spectroscopy ,business ,Anisotropy ,Nanomechanics - Abstract
The optical properties of polycrystalline copper subjected to tensile stress are monitored in situ and in real time using reflection anisotropy spectroscopy (RAS). It is shown that RAS allows investigation of the plastic regime. Here, in contrast to the Hooke's law regime, the stress-induced RAS lineshape is found to be dependent on the applied stress. The optical anisotropy in the visible region of the electromagnetic spectrum is directly proportional to the mechanical strain. An intense RAS peak observed at a photon energy of 4.0 eV is observed to saturate at a stress approximately equal to the yield stress of copper. This work demonstrates the potential of RAS as a nanomechanics monitor of materials under mechanical stress.
- Published
- 2003
47. The Taliban, Women, and the Hegelian Private Sphere
- Author
-
Juan R. I. Cole
- Published
- 2003
48. Azimuth-dependent reflection anisotropy spectroscopy
- Author
-
B. F. Macdonald, R. J. Cole, and J. S. Law
- Subjects
Azimuth ,Reflection (mathematics) ,Optics ,Condensed matter physics ,business.industry ,Chemistry ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Spectroscopy ,Anisotropy ,business ,Reflectometry ,Surface reconstruction - Abstract
A detailed explanation of “azimuth dependent reflection anisotropy spectroscopy” (ADRAS) [B. F. Macdonald and R. J. Cole, Appl. Phys. Lett. 80, 3527 (2002)] is presented. Experimental data and simulations are used to illustrate the greater information content of ADRAS compared to the standard reflection anisotropy technique. The application of ADRAS to the study of chiral surface modifiers, relevant to biomolecular adsorption and enantioselective catalysis, is discussed.
- Published
- 2003
49. RAS measurements of optical retardation in rubbed polymer thin films
- Author
-
B. F. Macdonald and R J Cole
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,genetic structures ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,Analytical chemistry ,Polymer ,Condensed Matter Physics ,eye diseases ,Spectral line ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Condensed Matter::Soft Condensed Matter ,Reflection (mathematics) ,chemistry ,sense organs ,Thin film ,Anisotropy ,Spectroscopy ,Layer (electronics) ,Polyimide - Abstract
Reflectance anisotropy spectroscopy (RAS) is used to study anisotropic polymer thin films. The measured spectra are interpreted in terms of molecular orientation at the polymer surface. It is shown that RAS spectra of thin transparent films resemble the logarithmic derivative of the corresponding polarization-averaged reflection spectra. The amplitudes of the spectra are found to be highly sensitive to the optical retardation in the anisotropic layer.
- Published
- 2002
50. The Provincial Politics of Heresy and Reform in Qajar Iran: Shaykh al-Rais in Shiraz, 1895-1902
- Author
-
Juan R. I. Cole
- Subjects
Politics ,History ,Heresy ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Political Science and International Relations ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Development ,Ancient history ,Public administration ,media_common - Published
- 2002
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