158 results on '"Stanley, T."'
Search Results
2. Human Rights and China. Lesson Units.
- Author
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National Committee on United States-China Relations, New York, NY., Center for International Education (ED), Washington, DC., and Holmes, Stanley T.
- Abstract
This curriculum unit presents lessons based on information and ideas gained from a 1994 Fulbright-Hays Summer Seminar Abroad Program in the People's Republic of China. This series of three lessons is created as an introduction to Model United Nations types of activities for high school students. Lesson 1, "What are Human Rights?" deals with concepts and definitions of human rights. Lesson 2, "Chinese and American Concepts of Human Rights," enables students to compare the human rights perspectives of China and the USA, with the lesson culminating in forums where students role-play advocates of differing positions on human rights issues. Lesson 3, "Multilateral Human Rights Forums," provides ideas for additional interactive situations for further consideration of human rights and other important political topics. An extensive section of appendices follows the lessons and provides teachers the necessary materials with which to conduct the lessons. (EH)
- Published
- 1994
3. Fabrication And Welding Skills Required For Employment Of University Students In Rivers State: A Tool For Curbing Electoral Malpractice In Nigeria
- Author
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WORDU, Chiduhiegem C.R., DIRI, Stanley T., IGWE, Glory N., WORDU, Chiduhiegem C.R., DIRI, Stanley T., and IGWE, Glory N.
- Abstract
This study focused on the assessment of fabrication and welding skills required for employment of university students in Rivers State used as a tool in curbing electoral malpractice in Nigeria. A descriptive survey design guided the study. The population comprised 24 Fabrication and Welding (FW) lecturers and Instructors in the owned Universities (Rivers State University lecturers and Ignatius Ajuru University of Education in Rivers State) (i. e. FW lecturers 16 and Instructors 8). No sampling was done as the population was manageable. Two research questions and two hypotheses were formulated for the study. A questionnaire titled “Fabrication and Welding Skills Required for Employment of University Students in Rivers State: A Tool for Curbing Electoral Malpractice in Nigeria (FWSNEATCEMN)" was developed to elicit responses from the respondents. The instrument was validated by three experts in the fields of Vocational and Technology Education and Training and Political Science Ignatius Ajuru University of Education, Port Harcourt. The reliability of the instrument was established using Cronbach Alpha Reliability coefficient which yielded 0.86 and 0.87 respectively. Statistical Mean was used to answer the research questions while standard deviation was used to determine the homogeneity in the responses of the respondent and z-test was used to test the hypotheses. The study found that fabrication skills are required for employment of university students in Rivers State used as a tool in curbing electoral malpractice in Nigeria. The study also showed that fabrication skills are required for employment of university students in Rivers State used as a tool in curbing electoral malpractice in Nigeria. Among the recommendations in the study are: TVET institution’s administrators should ensure that there is a synergy between TVET institutions and industries during training to ensure that students acquire fabrication skills needed for employment: A tool for curbing electoral
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- 2023
4. Transverse Emittance Reduction in Muon Beams by Ionization Cooling
- Author
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The MICE Collaboration, Bogomilov, M., Tsenov, R., Vankova-Kirilova, G., Song, Y. P., Tang, J. Y., Li, Z. H., Bertoni, R., Bonesini, M., Chignoli, F., Mazza, R., de Bari, A., Orestano, D., Tortora, L., Kuno, Y., Sakamoto, H., Sato, A., Ishimoto, S., Chung, M., Sung, C. K., Filthaut, F., Fedorov, M., Jokovic, D., Maletic, D., Savic, M., Jovancevic, N., Nikolov, J., Vretenar, M., Ramberger, S., Asfandiyarov, R., Blondel, A., Drielsma, F., Karadzhov, Y., Boyd, S., Greis, J. R., Lord, T., Pidcott, C., Taylor, I., Charnley, G., Collomb, N., Dumbell, K., Gallagher, A., Grant, A., Griffiths, S., Hartnett, T., Martlew, B., Moss, A., Muir, A., Mullacrane, I., Oates, A., Owens, P., Stokes, G., Warburton, P., White, C., Adams, D., Bayliss, V., Boehm, J., Bradshaw, T. W., Brown, C., Courthold, M., Govans, J., Hayler, T., Hills, M., Lagrange, J. B., Macwaters, C., Nichols, A., Preece, R., Ricciardi, S., Rogers, C., Stanley, T., Tarrant, J., Tucker, M., Watson, S., Wilson, A., Bayes, R., Nugent, J. C., Soler, F. J. P., Chatzitheodoridis, G. T., Dick, A. J., Ronald, K., Whyte, C. G., Young, A. R., Gamet, R., Cooke, P., Blackmore, V. J., Colling, D., Dobbs, A., Dornan, P., Franchini, P., Hunt, C., Jurj, P. B., Kurup, A., Long, K., Martyniak, J., Middleton, S., Pasternak, J., Uchida, M. A., Cobb, J. H., Booth, C. N., Hodgson, P., Langlands, J., Overton, E., Pec, V., Smith, P. J., Wilbur, S., Ellis, M., Gardener, R. B. S., Kyberd, P., Nebrensky, J. J., DeMello, A., Gourlay, S., Lambert, A., Li, D., Luo, T., Prestemon, S., Virostek, S., Palmer, M., Witte, H., Adey, D., Bross, A. D., Bowring, D., Liu, A., Neuffer, D., Popovic, M., Rubinov, P., Freemire, B., Hanlet, P., Kaplan, D. M., Mohayai, T. A., Rajaram, D., Snopok, P., Torun, Y., Cremaldi, L. M., Sanders, D. A., Coney, L. R., Hanson, G. G., Heidt, C., The MICE Collaboration, Bogomilov, M., Tsenov, R., Vankova-Kirilova, G., Song, Y. P., Tang, J. Y., Li, Z. H., Bertoni, R., Bonesini, M., Chignoli, F., Mazza, R., de Bari, A., Orestano, D., Tortora, L., Kuno, Y., Sakamoto, H., Sato, A., Ishimoto, S., Chung, M., Sung, C. K., Filthaut, F., Fedorov, M., Jokovic, D., Maletic, D., Savic, M., Jovancevic, N., Nikolov, J., Vretenar, M., Ramberger, S., Asfandiyarov, R., Blondel, A., Drielsma, F., Karadzhov, Y., Boyd, S., Greis, J. R., Lord, T., Pidcott, C., Taylor, I., Charnley, G., Collomb, N., Dumbell, K., Gallagher, A., Grant, A., Griffiths, S., Hartnett, T., Martlew, B., Moss, A., Muir, A., Mullacrane, I., Oates, A., Owens, P., Stokes, G., Warburton, P., White, C., Adams, D., Bayliss, V., Boehm, J., Bradshaw, T. W., Brown, C., Courthold, M., Govans, J., Hayler, T., Hills, M., Lagrange, J. B., Macwaters, C., Nichols, A., Preece, R., Ricciardi, S., Rogers, C., Stanley, T., Tarrant, J., Tucker, M., Watson, S., Wilson, A., Bayes, R., Nugent, J. C., Soler, F. J. P., Chatzitheodoridis, G. T., Dick, A. J., Ronald, K., Whyte, C. G., Young, A. R., Gamet, R., Cooke, P., Blackmore, V. J., Colling, D., Dobbs, A., Dornan, P., Franchini, P., Hunt, C., Jurj, P. B., Kurup, A., Long, K., Martyniak, J., Middleton, S., Pasternak, J., Uchida, M. A., Cobb, J. H., Booth, C. N., Hodgson, P., Langlands, J., Overton, E., Pec, V., Smith, P. J., Wilbur, S., Ellis, M., Gardener, R. B. S., Kyberd, P., Nebrensky, J. J., DeMello, A., Gourlay, S., Lambert, A., Li, D., Luo, T., Prestemon, S., Virostek, S., Palmer, M., Witte, H., Adey, D., Bross, A. D., Bowring, D., Liu, A., Neuffer, D., Popovic, M., Rubinov, P., Freemire, B., Hanlet, P., Kaplan, D. M., Mohayai, T. A., Rajaram, D., Snopok, P., Torun, Y., Cremaldi, L. M., Sanders, D. A., Coney, L. R., Hanson, G. G., and Heidt, C.
- Abstract
Accelerated muon beams have been considered for next-generation studies of high-energy lepton-antilepton collisions and neutrino oscillations. However, high-brightness muon beams have not yet been produced. The main challenge for muon acceleration and storage stems from the large phase-space volume occupied by the beam, derived from the muon production mechanism through the decay of pions from proton collisions. Ionization cooling is the technique proposed to decrease the muon beam phase-space volume. Here we demonstrate a clear signal of ionization cooling through the observation of transverse emittance reduction in beams that traverse lithium hydride or liquid hydrogen absorbers in the Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment (MICE). The measurement is well reproduced by the simulation of the experiment and the theoretical model. The results shown here represent a substantial advance towards the realization of muon-based facilities that could operate at the energy and intensity frontiers., Comment: 23 pages and 5 figures
- Published
- 2023
5. Volcanic deformation and degassing: the role of volatile exsolution and magma compressibility
- Author
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Yip, Stanley T H and Yip, Stanley T H
- Abstract
Integrating multi-parameter observations of volcanic processes is crucial for volcano monitoring. Qualitative models demonstrate that combining observations of volcanic deformation, gas emissions, and other parameters enhances the detection of volcanic unrest and provide insights into the magma plumbing system. Despite the progress made in this field, quantitative models that link these observations are still lacking. Thermodynamic models have been used to constrain the characteristics of magma properties and its plumbing system. In this thesis, I develop models based on melt inclusion data and thermodynamics to reconstruct magma properties such as compressibility, and investigate how magmatic volatile content and magma storage conditions influence observations of volcanic deformation and SO2 degassing. By comparing mafic systems in arc and ocean island settings, I provide evidence for the lack of deformation observed during water-rich arc eruptions. In contrast, despite having low magmatic volatile content, ocean island eruptions have high SO2 emissions due to their high diffusivity, which results in co-eruptive degassing. By comparing model predictions and observations, I show that all magmatic systems experience a certain degree of outgassing prior to an eruption, consistent with current conceptual models of transcrustal magmatic systems. Additionally, integrating time series of deformation, degassing, and extrusion flux can reveal the evolution of magma properties. Using this framework, I provide evidence for the increase in bulk magma compressibility following the removal of the degassed magma during the 2004 eruption of Mount St. Helens. This study contributes to the better understanding of the effects of magmatic volatile content and pre-eruptive gas segregation on the physicochemical properties of magma, and provides a framework for modelling magma prop
- Published
- 2023
6. Unrestricted weighted least squares represent medical research better than random effects in 67,308 Cochrane meta-analyses
- Author
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Projectafdeling KIND, Brain, Stanley, T D, Ioannidis, John P A, Maier, Maximilian, Doucouliagos, Hristos, Otte, Willem M, Bartoš, František, Projectafdeling KIND, Brain, Stanley, T D, Ioannidis, John P A, Maier, Maximilian, Doucouliagos, Hristos, Otte, Willem M, and Bartoš, František
- Published
- 2023
7. Physiologic Insulin Resensitization as a Treatment Modality for Insulin Resistance Pathophysiology.
- Author
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Greenway, Frank, Greenway, Frank, Loveridge, Brian, Grimes, Richard M, Tucker, Tori R, Alexander, Michael, Hepford, Scott A, Fontenot, Justin, Nobles-James, Candi, Wilson, Carol, Starr, Adam M, Abdelsaid, Mohammed, Lewis, Stanley T, Lakey, Jonathan RT, Greenway, Frank, Greenway, Frank, Loveridge, Brian, Grimes, Richard M, Tucker, Tori R, Alexander, Michael, Hepford, Scott A, Fontenot, Justin, Nobles-James, Candi, Wilson, Carol, Starr, Adam M, Abdelsaid, Mohammed, Lewis, Stanley T, and Lakey, Jonathan RT
- Abstract
Prevalence of type 2 diabetes increased from 2.5% of the US population in 1990 to 10.5% in 2018. This creates a major public health problem, due to increases in long-term complications of diabetes, including neuropathy, retinopathy, nephropathy, skin ulcers, amputations, and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. In this review, we evaluated the scientific basis that supports the use of physiologic insulin resensitization. Insulin resistance is the primary cause of type 2 diabetes. Insulin resistance leads to increasing insulin secretion, leading to beta-cell exhaustion or burnout. This triggers a cascade leading to islet cell destruction and the long-term complications of type 2 diabetes. Concurrent with insulin resistance, the regular bursts of insulin from the pancreas become irregular. This has been treated by the precise administration of insulin more physiologically. There is consistent evidence that this treatment modality can reverse the diabetes-associated complications of neuropathy, diabetic ulcers, nephropathy, and retinopathy, and that it lowers HbA1c. In conclusion, physiologic insulin resensitization has a persuasive scientific basis, significant treatment potential, and likely cost benefits.
- Published
- 2022
8. Multiple Coulomb Scattering of muons in Lithium Hydride
- Author
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Bogomilov, M., Tsenov, R., Vankova-Kirilova, G., Song, Y. P., Tang, J. Y., Li, Z. H., Bertoni, R., Bonesini, M., Chignoli, F., Mazza, R., Palladino, V., de Bari, A., Orestano, D., Tortora, L., Kuno, Y., Sakamoto, H., Sato, A., Ishimoto, S., Chung, M., Sung, C. K., Filthaut, F., Fedorov, M., Jokovic, D., Maletic, D., Savic, M., Jovancevic, N., Nikolov, J., Vretenar, M., Ramberger, S., Asfandiyarov, R., Blondel, A., Drielsma, F., Karadzhov, Y., Charnley, G., Collomb, N., Dumbell, K., Gallagher, A., Grant, A., Griffiths, S., Hartnett, T., Martlew, B., Moss, A., Muir, A., Mullacrane, I., Oates, A., Owens, P., Stokes, G., Warburton, P., White, C., Adams, D., Bayliss, V., Boehm, J., Bradshaw, T. W., Brown, C., Courthold, M., Govans, J., Hills, M., Lagrange, J. -B., Macwaters, C., Nichols, A., Preece, R., Ricciardi, S., Rogers, C., Stanley, T., Tarrant, J., Tucker, M., Watson, S., Wilson, A., Bayes, R., Nugent, J. C., Soler, F. J. P., Gamet, R., Cooke, P., Blackmore, V. J., Colling, D., Dobbs, A., Dornan, P., Franchini, P., Hunt, C., Jurj, P. B., Kurup, A., Long, K., Martyniak, J., Middleton, S., Pasternak, J., Uchida, M. A., Cobb, J. H., Booth, C. N., Hodgson, P., Langlands, J., Overton, E., Pec, V., Smith, P. J., Wilbur, S., Chatzitheodoridis, G. T., Dick, A. J., Ronald, K., Whyte, C. G., Young, A. R., Boyd, S., Greis, J. R., Lord, T., Pidcott, C., Taylor, I., Ellis, M., Gardener, R. B. S., Kyberd, P., Nebrensky, J. J., Palmer, M., Witte, H., Adey, D., Bross, A. D., Bowring, D., Hanlet, P., Liu, A., Neuffer, D., Popovic, M., Rubinov, P., DeMello, A., Gourlay, S., Lambert, A., Li, D., Luo, T., Prestemon, S., Virostek, S., Freemire, B., Kaplan, D. M., Mohayai, T. A., Rajaram, D., Snopok, P., Torun, Y., Cremaldi, L. M., Sanders, D. A., Summers, D. J., Coney, L. R., Hanson, G. G., Heidt, C., Bogomilov, M., Tsenov, R., Vankova-Kirilova, G., Song, Y. P., Tang, J. Y., Li, Z. H., Bertoni, R., Bonesini, M., Chignoli, F., Mazza, R., Palladino, V., de Bari, A., Orestano, D., Tortora, L., Kuno, Y., Sakamoto, H., Sato, A., Ishimoto, S., Chung, M., Sung, C. K., Filthaut, F., Fedorov, M., Jokovic, D., Maletic, D., Savic, M., Jovancevic, N., Nikolov, J., Vretenar, M., Ramberger, S., Asfandiyarov, R., Blondel, A., Drielsma, F., Karadzhov, Y., Charnley, G., Collomb, N., Dumbell, K., Gallagher, A., Grant, A., Griffiths, S., Hartnett, T., Martlew, B., Moss, A., Muir, A., Mullacrane, I., Oates, A., Owens, P., Stokes, G., Warburton, P., White, C., Adams, D., Bayliss, V., Boehm, J., Bradshaw, T. W., Brown, C., Courthold, M., Govans, J., Hills, M., Lagrange, J. -B., Macwaters, C., Nichols, A., Preece, R., Ricciardi, S., Rogers, C., Stanley, T., Tarrant, J., Tucker, M., Watson, S., Wilson, A., Bayes, R., Nugent, J. C., Soler, F. J. P., Gamet, R., Cooke, P., Blackmore, V. J., Colling, D., Dobbs, A., Dornan, P., Franchini, P., Hunt, C., Jurj, P. B., Kurup, A., Long, K., Martyniak, J., Middleton, S., Pasternak, J., Uchida, M. A., Cobb, J. H., Booth, C. N., Hodgson, P., Langlands, J., Overton, E., Pec, V., Smith, P. J., Wilbur, S., Chatzitheodoridis, G. T., Dick, A. J., Ronald, K., Whyte, C. G., Young, A. R., Boyd, S., Greis, J. R., Lord, T., Pidcott, C., Taylor, I., Ellis, M., Gardener, R. B. S., Kyberd, P., Nebrensky, J. J., Palmer, M., Witte, H., Adey, D., Bross, A. D., Bowring, D., Hanlet, P., Liu, A., Neuffer, D., Popovic, M., Rubinov, P., DeMello, A., Gourlay, S., Lambert, A., Li, D., Luo, T., Prestemon, S., Virostek, S., Freemire, B., Kaplan, D. M., Mohayai, T. A., Rajaram, D., Snopok, P., Torun, Y., Cremaldi, L. M., Sanders, D. A., Summers, D. J., Coney, L. R., Hanson, G. G., and Heidt, C.
- Abstract
Multiple Coulomb Scattering (MCS) is a well known phenomenon occurring when charged particles traverse materials. Measurements of muons traversing low $Z$ materials made in the MuScat experiment showed that theoretical models and simulation codes, such as GEANT4 (v7.0), over-estimated the scattering. The Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment (MICE) measured the cooling of a muon beam traversing a liquid hydrogen or lithium hydride (LiH) energy absorber as part of a programme to develop muon accelerator facilities, such as a Neutrino Factory or a Muon Collider. The energy loss and MCS that occur in the absorber material are competing effects that alter the performance of the cooling channel. Therefore measurements of MCS are required in order to validate the simulations used to predict the cooling performance in future accelerator facilities. We report measurements made in the MICE apparatus of MCS using a LiH absorber and muons within the momentum range 160 to 245 MeV/c. The measured RMS scattering width is about 9% smaller than that predicted by the approximate formula proposed by the Particle Data Group. Data at 172, 200 and 240 MeV/c are compared to the GEANT4 (v9.6) default scattering model. These measurements show agreement with this more recent GEANT4 (v9.6) version over the range of incident muon momenta., Comment: 20 pages, 14 figures, journal
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. American Focus on World Constitutions. Teacher's Guide.
- Author
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Utah Endowment for the Humanities, Salt Lake City. and Holmes, Stanley T., III
- Abstract
This curriculum project was designed to familiarize high school students with their own constitutional roots while gaining a better understanding of governmental systems developed by other nations. The project uses the U.S. Constitution as a baseline for analyzing the constitutions of other nations, and is intended to supplement courses in such subjects as U.S. history, comparative governments, international relations, and world civilizations. The five lessons included in the unit require an estimated 5 to 8 weeks to implement. The lessons are entitled: (1) What's in a Constitution?; (2) The U.S. Constitution: A Review; (3) Constitutions of the World; (4) Focus on a Theme: Human Rights; and (5) A Constitutional Convention...on Mars. Sixteen nations, providing a cross-section of major governmental forms, geographic regions, and levels of economic development were selected for comparative study. The countries included are Ethiopia, Nicaragua, the Philippines, Canada, Chile, China, France, Iran, Japan, Lebanon, Mexico, Poland, South Africa, the Soviet Union, Swaziland, and the United Kingdom. (DB)
- Published
- 1988
10. Integrated Assessment of the Clinical Performance of GalNAc3-Conjugated 2'-O-Methoxyethyl Chimeric Antisense Oligonucleotides: I. Human Volunteer Experience.
- Author
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Crooke, Stanley T, Crooke, Stanley T, Baker, Brenda F, Xia, Shuting, Yu, Rosie Z, Viney, Nicholas J, Wang, Yanfeng, Tsimikas, Sotirios, Geary, Richard S, Crooke, Stanley T, Crooke, Stanley T, Baker, Brenda F, Xia, Shuting, Yu, Rosie Z, Viney, Nicholas J, Wang, Yanfeng, Tsimikas, Sotirios, and Geary, Richard S
- Abstract
Advances in medicinal chemistry have produced new chemical classes of antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) with enhanced therapeutic properties. Conjugation of the triantennary N-acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc3) moiety to the extensively characterized phosphorothioate (PS)-modified 2'-O-methoxyethyl (2'MOE) ASO exemplifies such an advance. This structure-activity optimized moiety effects receptor-mediated uptake of the ASO prodrug through the asialoglycoprotein receptor 1 to support selective targeting of RNAs expressed by hepatocytes. In this study we report the integrated assessment of data available from randomized placebo-controlled dose-ranging studies of this chemical class of ASOs administered systemically to healthy human volunteers. First, we compare the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic profiles of a subset of the GalNAc3-conjugated PS-modified 2'MOE ASOs to the parent PS-modified 2'MOE ASOs for which plasma analytes are available. We then evaluate the safety profile of the full set of GalNAc3-conjugated PS-modified 2'MOE ASO conjugates by the incidence of signals in standardized laboratory tests and by the mean laboratory test results as a function of dose level over time. With hepatocyte targeted delivery, the ED50 for the GalNAc3-conjugated PS-modified 2'MOE ASO subset ranges from 4 to 10 mg/week, up to 30-fold more potent than the parent PS-modified 2'MOE ASO. No GalNAc3-conjugated PS-modified 2'MOE ASO class effects were identified from the assessment of the integrated laboratory test data across all doses tested with either single or multidose regimens. The increase in potency supports an increase in the safety margin for this new chemical class of ASOs now under broad investigation in the clinic. Although the total exposure is limited in the initial phase 1 trials, ongoing and future investigations in patient populations will support evaluation of the effects of long-term exposure.
- Published
- 2019
11. Phenotypic Spectrum of Seizure Disorders in MBD5-Associated Neurodevelopmental Disorder
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Myers, KA, Marini, C, Carvill, GL, McTague, A, Panetta, J, Stutterd, C, Stanley, T, Marin, S, Nguyen, J, Barba, C, Rosati, A, Scott, RH, Mefford, HC, Guerrini, R, Scheffer, IE, Myers, KA, Marini, C, Carvill, GL, McTague, A, Panetta, J, Stutterd, C, Stanley, T, Marin, S, Nguyen, J, Barba, C, Rosati, A, Scott, RH, Mefford, HC, Guerrini, R, and Scheffer, IE
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To describe the phenotypic spectrum in patients with MBD5-associated neurodevelopmental disorder (MAND) and seizures; features of MAND include intellectual disability, epilepsy, psychiatric features of aggression and hyperactivity, and dysmorphic features including short stature and microcephaly, sleep disturbance, and ataxia. METHODS: We performed phenotyping on patients with MBD5 deletions, duplications, or point mutations and a history of seizures. RESULTS: Twenty-three patients with MAND and seizures were included. Median seizure onset age was 2.9 years (range 3 days-13 years). The most common seizure type was generalized tonic-clonic; focal, atypical absence, tonic, drop attacks, and myoclonic seizures occurred frequently. Seven children had convulsive status epilepticus and 3 nonconvulsive status epilepticus. Fever, viral illnesses, and hot weather provoked seizures. EEG studies in 17/21 patients were abnormal, typically showing slow generalized spike-wave and background slowing. Nine had drug-resistant epilepsy, although 3 eventually became seizure-free. All but one had moderate-to-severe developmental impairment. Epilepsy syndromes included Lennox-Gastaut syndrome, myoclonic-atonic epilepsy, and infantile spasms syndrome. Behavioral problems in 20/23 included aggression, self-injurious behavior, and sleep disturbance. CONCLUSIONS: MBD5 disruption may be associated with severe early childhood-onset developmental and epileptic encephalopathy. Because neuropsychiatric dysfunction is common and severe, it should be an important focus of clinical management.
- Published
- 2021
12. A phenomenological study of instructors' experiences with receiving and utilizing student feedback in online course
- Author
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Triplett, Stanley T. and Triplett, Stanley T.
- Subjects
- Student evaluation of teachers., Community college teachers Case studies. Southern States, Teacher-student relationships., Web-based instruction., Enseignants Évaluation par les étudiants., Professeurs (Collèges communautaires) Études de cas. États-Unis (Sud), Community college teachers, Student evaluation of teachers, Teacher-student relationships, Web-based instruction, Southern States
- Abstract
The purpose of this qualitative transcendental phenomenological study was to explore how community college online course instructors at a large community college in the Deep South experience students' feedback to reevaluate course quality and instruction. The central question of the study regarded how community college online instructors experience receiving and engaging with student evaluations. The theory guiding this study was Knowles's theory of andragogy as it provides a framework for understanding adult learning, including those of adult learners in community college contexts as well as those instructors receiving and responding to student evaluations of teaching. A total of 11 instructors who teach online courses through a community college were recruited, and data resulting from in-depth, unstructured interviews, reflective journal entries, and document collection were analyzing using the phenomenological approach defined by Moustakas (1994). Results indicated that instructors valued and acted upon honest feedback targeting specific problems, particularly related to exam preparation. Instructors noted disregarding feedback perceived to be untimely or vague and suggested preferring to rely on class-based informal evaluations for insights into students' learning needs and responses to instruction. Future research should further engage with the relative value of formal and informal student feedback, as well as to examine the experiences of instructors at institutions where no formal process for receiving student feedback of teaching exists. In all, the results reveal that evaluation can, if used and assessed correctly, provide significant value in terms of improving educational design, course content, test preparedness, and the ability to fulfill the needs of all students in a class. Hence, evaluation and feedback are of great importance and require significant executive decision making from teachers to navigate and utilize effectively.
- Published
- 2021
13. Reporting guidelines for meta-analysis in economics
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Havránek, Tomáš, Stanley, T. D., Doucouliagos, Hristos, Bom, Pedro, Geyer‐klingeberg, Jerome, Iwasaki, Ichiro, Reed, W. Robert, Rost, Katja, van Aert, Robbie, Havránek, Tomáš, Stanley, T. D., Doucouliagos, Hristos, Bom, Pedro, Geyer‐klingeberg, Jerome, Iwasaki, Ichiro, Reed, W. Robert, Rost, Katja, and van Aert, Robbie
- Abstract
Meta‐analysis has become the conventional approach to synthesizing the results of empirical economics research. To further improve the transparency and replicability of the reported results and to raise the quality of meta‐analyses, the Meta‐Analysis of Economics Research Network has updated the reporting guidelines that were published by this Journal in 2013. Future meta‐analyses in economics will be expected to follow these updated guidelines or give valid reasons why a meta‐analysis should deviate from them.
- Published
- 2020
14. The Flexural Strength of Laminated Materials with Particular Reference to Timber Beams
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Stanley, T. J.
- Subjects
624.18 - Published
- 1973
15. The epileptology of GNB5 encephalopathy
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Poke, G, King, C, Muir, A, de Valles-Ibanez, G, Germano, M, Moura de Souza, CF, Fung, J, Chung, B, Fung, CW, Mignot, C, Ilea, A, Keren, B, Vermersch, A-I, Davis, S, Stanley, T, Moharir, M, Kannu, P, Shao, Z, Malerba, N, Merla, G, Mefford, HC, Scheffer, IE, Sadleir, LG, Poke, G, King, C, Muir, A, de Valles-Ibanez, G, Germano, M, Moura de Souza, CF, Fung, J, Chung, B, Fung, CW, Mignot, C, Ilea, A, Keren, B, Vermersch, A-I, Davis, S, Stanley, T, Moharir, M, Kannu, P, Shao, Z, Malerba, N, Merla, G, Mefford, HC, Scheffer, IE, and Sadleir, LG
- Abstract
Pathogenic variants in GNB5 cause an autosomal recessive neurodevelopmental disorder with neonatal sinus bradycardia. Seizures or epilepsy occurred in 10 of 22 previously reported cases, including 6 children from one family. We delineate the epileptology of GNB5 encephalopathy. Our nine patients, including five new patients, were from seven families. Epileptic spasms were the most frequent seizure type, occurring in eight of nine patients, and began at a median age of 3 months (2 months to 3 years). Focal seizures preceded spasms in three children, with onset at 7 days, 11 days, and 4 months. One child presented with convulsive status epilepticus at 6 months. Three children had burst suppression on electroencephalography (EEG), three had hypsarrhythmia, and one evolved from burst suppression to hypsarrhythmia. Background slowing was present in all after age 3 years. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed cerebral atrophy in one child and cerebellar atrophy in another. All nine had abnormal development prior to seizure onset and ultimately had profound impairment without regression. Hypotonia was present in all, with contractures developing in two older patients. All individuals had biallelic pathogenic variants in GNB5, predicted by in silico tools to result in protein truncation and loss-of-function. GNB5 developmental and epileptic encephalopathy is characterized by epileptic spasms, focal seizures, and profound impairment.
- Published
- 2019
16. The Sustained Induction of c-MYC Drives Nab-Paclitaxel Resistance in Primary Pancreatic Ductal Carcinoma Cells.
- Author
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Parasido, Erika, Parasido, Erika, Avetian, George S, Naeem, Aisha, Graham, Garrett, Pishvaian, Michael, Glasgow, Eric, Mudambi, Shaila, Lee, Yichien, Ihemelandu, Chukwuemeka, Choudhry, Muhammad, Peran, Ivana, Banerjee, Partha P, Avantaggiati, Maria Laura, Bryant, Kirsten, Baldelli, Elisa, Pierobon, Mariaelena, Liotta, Lance, Petricoin, Emanuel, Fricke, Stanley T, Sebastian, Aimy, Cozzitorto, Joseph, Loots, Gabriela G, Kumar, Deepak, Byers, Stephen, Londin, Eric, DiFeo, Analisa, Narla, Goutham, Winter, Jordan, Brody, Jonathan R, Rodriguez, Olga, Albanese, Chris, Parasido, Erika, Parasido, Erika, Avetian, George S, Naeem, Aisha, Graham, Garrett, Pishvaian, Michael, Glasgow, Eric, Mudambi, Shaila, Lee, Yichien, Ihemelandu, Chukwuemeka, Choudhry, Muhammad, Peran, Ivana, Banerjee, Partha P, Avantaggiati, Maria Laura, Bryant, Kirsten, Baldelli, Elisa, Pierobon, Mariaelena, Liotta, Lance, Petricoin, Emanuel, Fricke, Stanley T, Sebastian, Aimy, Cozzitorto, Joseph, Loots, Gabriela G, Kumar, Deepak, Byers, Stephen, Londin, Eric, DiFeo, Analisa, Narla, Goutham, Winter, Jordan, Brody, Jonathan R, Rodriguez, Olga, and Albanese, Chris
- Abstract
Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is a highly aggressive disease with limited and, very often, ineffective medical and surgical therapeutic options. The treatment of patients with advanced unresectable PDAC is restricted to systemic chemotherapy, a therapeutic intervention to which most eventually develop resistance. Recently, nab-paclitaxel (n-PTX) has been added to the arsenal of first-line therapies, and the combination of gemcitabine and n-PTX has modestly prolonged median overall survival. However, patients almost invariably succumb to the disease, and little is known about the mechanisms underlying n-PTX resistance. Using the conditionally reprogrammed (CR) cell approach, we established and verified continuously growing cell cultures from treatment-naïve patients with PDAC. To study the mechanisms of primary drug resistance, nab-paclitaxel-resistant (n-PTX-R) cells were generated from primary cultures and drug resistance was verified in vivo, both in zebrafish and in athymic nude mouse xenograft models. Molecular analyses identified the sustained induction of c-MYC in the n-PTX-R cells. Depletion of c-MYC restored n-PTX sensitivity, as did treatment with either the MEK inhibitor, trametinib, or a small-molecule activator of protein phosphatase 2a. IMPLICATIONS: The strategies we have devised, including the patient-derived primary cells and the unique, drug-resistant isogenic cells, are rapid and easily applied in vitro and in vivo platforms to better understand the mechanisms of drug resistance and for defining effective therapeutic options on a patient by patient basis.
- Published
- 2019
17. First demonstration of ionization cooling by the Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment
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Bogomilov, M., Tsenov, R., Vankova-Kirilova, G., Song, Y. P., Tang, J. Y., Li, Z. H., Bertoni, R., Bonesini, M., Chignoli, F., Mazza, R., Palladino, V., de Bari, A., Orestano, D., Tortora, L., Kuno, Y., Sakamoto, H., Sato, A., Ishimoto, S., Chung, M., Sung, C. K., Filthaut, F., Jokovic, D., Maletic, D., Savic, M., Jovancevic, N., Nikolov, J., Vretenar, M., Ramberger, S., Asfandiyarov, R., Blondel, A., Drielsma, F., Karadzhov, Y., Charnley, G., Collomb, N., Dumbell, K., Gallagher, A., Grant, A., Griffiths, S., Hartnett, T., Martlew, B., Moss, A., Muir, A., Mullacrane, I., Oates, A., Owens, P., Stokes, G., Warburton, P., White, C., Adams, D., Bayliss, V., Boehm, J., Bradshaw, T. W., Brown, C., Courthold, M., Govans, J., Hills, M., Lagrange, J. -B., Macwaters, C., Nichols, A., Preece, R., Ricciardi, S., Rogers, C., Stanley, T., Tarrant, J., Tucker, M., Watson, S., Wilson, A., Bayes, R., Nugent, J. C., Soler, F. J. P., Gamet, R., Cooke, P., Blackmore, V. J., Colling, D., Dobbs, A., Dornan, P., Franchini, P., Hunt, C., Jurj, P. B., Kurup, A., Long, K., Martyniak, J., Middleton, S., Pasternak, J., Uchida, M. A., Cobb, J. H., Booth, C. N., Hodgson, P., Langlands, J., Overton, E., Pec, V., Smith, P. J., Wilbur, S., Chatzitheodoridis, G. T., Dick, A. J., Ronald, K., Whyte, C. G., Young, A. R., Boyd, S., Greis, J. R., Lord, T., Pidcott, C., Taylor, I., Ellis, M., Gardener, R. B. S., Kyberd, P., Nebrensky, J. J., Palmer, M., Witte, H., Adey, D., Bross, A. D., Bowring, D., Hanlet, P., Liu, A., Neuffer, D., Popovic, M., Rubinov, P., DeMello, A., Gourlay, S., Lambert, A., Li, D., Luo, T., Prestemon, S., Virostek, S., Freemire, B., Kaplan, D. M., Mohayai, T. A., Snopok, P., Torun, Y., Cremaldi, L. M., Sanders, D. A., Summers, D. J., Coney, L. R., Hanson, G. G., Heidt, C., Bogomilov, M., Tsenov, R., Vankova-Kirilova, G., Song, Y. P., Tang, J. Y., Li, Z. H., Bertoni, R., Bonesini, M., Chignoli, F., Mazza, R., Palladino, V., de Bari, A., Orestano, D., Tortora, L., Kuno, Y., Sakamoto, H., Sato, A., Ishimoto, S., Chung, M., Sung, C. K., Filthaut, F., Jokovic, D., Maletic, D., Savic, M., Jovancevic, N., Nikolov, J., Vretenar, M., Ramberger, S., Asfandiyarov, R., Blondel, A., Drielsma, F., Karadzhov, Y., Charnley, G., Collomb, N., Dumbell, K., Gallagher, A., Grant, A., Griffiths, S., Hartnett, T., Martlew, B., Moss, A., Muir, A., Mullacrane, I., Oates, A., Owens, P., Stokes, G., Warburton, P., White, C., Adams, D., Bayliss, V., Boehm, J., Bradshaw, T. W., Brown, C., Courthold, M., Govans, J., Hills, M., Lagrange, J. -B., Macwaters, C., Nichols, A., Preece, R., Ricciardi, S., Rogers, C., Stanley, T., Tarrant, J., Tucker, M., Watson, S., Wilson, A., Bayes, R., Nugent, J. C., Soler, F. J. P., Gamet, R., Cooke, P., Blackmore, V. J., Colling, D., Dobbs, A., Dornan, P., Franchini, P., Hunt, C., Jurj, P. B., Kurup, A., Long, K., Martyniak, J., Middleton, S., Pasternak, J., Uchida, M. A., Cobb, J. H., Booth, C. N., Hodgson, P., Langlands, J., Overton, E., Pec, V., Smith, P. J., Wilbur, S., Chatzitheodoridis, G. T., Dick, A. J., Ronald, K., Whyte, C. G., Young, A. R., Boyd, S., Greis, J. R., Lord, T., Pidcott, C., Taylor, I., Ellis, M., Gardener, R. B. S., Kyberd, P., Nebrensky, J. J., Palmer, M., Witte, H., Adey, D., Bross, A. D., Bowring, D., Hanlet, P., Liu, A., Neuffer, D., Popovic, M., Rubinov, P., DeMello, A., Gourlay, S., Lambert, A., Li, D., Luo, T., Prestemon, S., Virostek, S., Freemire, B., Kaplan, D. M., Mohayai, T. A., Snopok, P., Torun, Y., Cremaldi, L. M., Sanders, D. A., Summers, D. J., Coney, L. R., Hanson, G. G., and Heidt, C.
- Abstract
High-brightness muon beams of energy comparable to those produced by state-of-the-art electron, proton and ion accelerators have yet to be realised. Such beams have the potential to carry the search for new phenomena in lepton-antilepton collisions to extremely high energy and also to provide uniquely well-characterised neutrino beams. A muon beam may be created through the decay of pions produced in the interaction of a proton beam with a target. To produce a high-brightness beam from such a source requires that the phase space volume occupied by the muons be reduced (cooled). Ionization cooling is the novel technique by which it is proposed to cool the beam. The Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment collaboration has constructed a section of an ionization cooling cell and used it to provide the first demonstration of ionization cooling. We present these ground-breaking measurements., Comment: 19 pages and 6 figures
- Published
- 2019
18. RF system for the MICE demonstration of ionisation cooling
- Author
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Ronald, K, Ronald, K, Whyte, CG, Dick, AJ, Young, AR, Li, D, Demello, AJ, Lambert, AR, Luo, T, Anderson, T, Bowring, D, Bross, A, Moretti, A, Pasquinelli, R, Peterson, D, Popovic, M, Schultz, R, Volk, J, Torun, Y, Hanlet, P, Freemire, B, Moss, A, Dumbell, K, Grant, A, White, C, Griffiths, S, Stanley, T, Anderson, R, Alsari, S, Long, K, Kurup, A, Summers, D, Smith, PJ, Ronald, K, Ronald, K, Whyte, CG, Dick, AJ, Young, AR, Li, D, Demello, AJ, Lambert, AR, Luo, T, Anderson, T, Bowring, D, Bross, A, Moretti, A, Pasquinelli, R, Peterson, D, Popovic, M, Schultz, R, Volk, J, Torun, Y, Hanlet, P, Freemire, B, Moss, A, Dumbell, K, Grant, A, White, C, Griffiths, S, Stanley, T, Anderson, R, Alsari, S, Long, K, Kurup, A, Summers, D, and Smith, PJ
- Abstract
Muon accelerators offer an attractive option for a range of future particle physics experiments. They can enable high energy (TeV+) high energy lepton colliders whilst mitigating the difficulty of synchrotron losses, and can provide intense beams of neutrinos for fundamental physics experiments investigating the physics of flavor. The method of production of muon beams results in high beam emittance which must be reduced for efficient acceleration. Conventional emittance control schemes take too long, given the very short (2.2 microsecond) rest lifetime of the muon. Ionisation cooling offers a much faster approach to reducing particle emittance, and the international MICE collaboration aims to demonstrate this technique for the first time. This paper will present the MICE RF system and its role in the context of the overall experiment.
- Published
- 2018
19. 'Will she live a long happy life?' Parents' concerns for their children with Fontan circulation
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du Plessis, K, Peters, R, King, I, Robertson, K, Mackley, J, Maree, R, Stanley, T, Pickford, L, Rose, B, Orchard, M, Stewart, H, d'Udekem, Y, du Plessis, K, Peters, R, King, I, Robertson, K, Mackley, J, Maree, R, Stanley, T, Pickford, L, Rose, B, Orchard, M, Stewart, H, and d'Udekem, Y
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Families of children at the worst end of the congenital heart disease endure a significant burden which is often not clearly delineated in the clinical literature. We examined the greatest concerns of parents whose children have a Fontan circulation. METHODS: Parents (N = 107) of children in the Australian and New Zealand Fontan Registry completed online surveys with open-ended and closed questions. A qualitative method approach incorporating thematic analyses was used. RESULTS: The greatest concerns for parents of a child with a Fontan circulation were centered on fear of death for their child and psychosocial well-being, followed by lesser themes around anti-coagulation use, pregnancy and financial burdens. CONCLUSIONS: Fear of death and the psychological well-being of their children were the main parental concerns. It highlights the need to clearly communicate information on outcomes to families, and the need for family-focused psychological interventions to improve the psychosocial functioning of both parents and young people.
- Published
- 2018
20. Lattice design and expected performance of the Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment demonstration of ionization cooling
- Author
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Bogomilov, M, Bogomilov, M, Tsenov, R, Vankova-Kirilova, G, Song, Y, Tang, J, Li, Z, Bertoni, R, Bonesini, M, Chignoli, F, Mazza, R, Palladino, V, De Bari, A, Cecchet, G, Orestano, D, Tortora, L, Kuno, Y, Ishimoto, S, Filthaut, F, Jokovic, D, Maletic, D, Savic, M, Hansen, OM, Ramberger, S, Vretenar, M, Asfandiyarov, R, Blondel, A, Drielsma, F, Karadzhov, Y, Charnley, G, Collomb, N, Dumbell, K, Gallagher, A, Grant, A, Griffiths, S, Hartnett, T, Martlew, B, Moss, A, Muir, A, Mullacrane, I, Oates, A, Owens, P, Stokes, G, Warburton, P, White, C, Adams, D, Anderson, RJ, Barclay, P, Bayliss, V, Boehm, J, Bradshaw, TW, Courthold, M, Francis, V, Fry, L, Hayler, T, Hills, M, Lintern, A, Macwaters, C, Nichols, A, Preece, R, Ricciardi, S, Rogers, C, Stanley, T, Tarrant, J, Tucker, M, Wilson, A, Watson, S, Bayes, R, Nugent, JC, Soler, FJP, Gamet, R, Barber, G, Blackmore, VJ, Colling, D, Dobbs, A, Dornan, P, Hunt, C, Kurup, A, Lagrange, JB, Long, K, Martyniak, J, Middleton, S, Pasternak, J, Uchida, MA, Cobb, JH, Lau, W, Booth, CN, Hodgson, P, Langlands, J, Overton, E, Robinson, M, Smith, PJ, Wilbur, S, Dick, AJ, Ronald, K, Whyte, CG, Young, AR, Boyd, S, Franchini, P, Greis, JR, Pidcott, C, Bogomilov, M, Bogomilov, M, Tsenov, R, Vankova-Kirilova, G, Song, Y, Tang, J, Li, Z, Bertoni, R, Bonesini, M, Chignoli, F, Mazza, R, Palladino, V, De Bari, A, Cecchet, G, Orestano, D, Tortora, L, Kuno, Y, Ishimoto, S, Filthaut, F, Jokovic, D, Maletic, D, Savic, M, Hansen, OM, Ramberger, S, Vretenar, M, Asfandiyarov, R, Blondel, A, Drielsma, F, Karadzhov, Y, Charnley, G, Collomb, N, Dumbell, K, Gallagher, A, Grant, A, Griffiths, S, Hartnett, T, Martlew, B, Moss, A, Muir, A, Mullacrane, I, Oates, A, Owens, P, Stokes, G, Warburton, P, White, C, Adams, D, Anderson, RJ, Barclay, P, Bayliss, V, Boehm, J, Bradshaw, TW, Courthold, M, Francis, V, Fry, L, Hayler, T, Hills, M, Lintern, A, Macwaters, C, Nichols, A, Preece, R, Ricciardi, S, Rogers, C, Stanley, T, Tarrant, J, Tucker, M, Wilson, A, Watson, S, Bayes, R, Nugent, JC, Soler, FJP, Gamet, R, Barber, G, Blackmore, VJ, Colling, D, Dobbs, A, Dornan, P, Hunt, C, Kurup, A, Lagrange, JB, Long, K, Martyniak, J, Middleton, S, Pasternak, J, Uchida, MA, Cobb, JH, Lau, W, Booth, CN, Hodgson, P, Langlands, J, Overton, E, Robinson, M, Smith, PJ, Wilbur, S, Dick, AJ, Ronald, K, Whyte, CG, Young, AR, Boyd, S, Franchini, P, Greis, JR, and Pidcott, C
- Abstract
Muon beams of low emittance provide the basis for the intense, well-characterized neutrino beams necessary to elucidate the physics of flavor at a neutrino factory and to provide lepton-antilepton collisions at energies of up to several TeV at a muon collider. The international Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment (MICE) aims to demonstrate ionization cooling, the technique by which it is proposed to reduce the phase-space volume occupied by the muon beam at such facilities. In an ionization-cooling channel, the muon beam passes through a material in which it loses energy. The energy lost is then replaced using rf cavities. The combined effect of energy loss and reacceleration is to reduce the transverse emittance of the beam (transverse cooling). A major revision of the scope of the project was carried out over the summer of 2014. The revised experiment can deliver a demonstration of ionization cooling. The design of the cooling demonstration experiment will be described together with its predicted cooling performance.
- Published
- 2017
21. An Evaluation of Risk Attitudes and Risk Tolerance in Emergency Medicine Residents
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Papanagnou, D, Papanagnou, D, Buttar, S, Rahman, N, Stanley, T, Governatori, N, Piela, N, Chandra, S, Naples, R, London, K, Hall, R, Papanagnou, D, Papanagnou, D, Buttar, S, Rahman, N, Stanley, T, Governatori, N, Piela, N, Chandra, S, Naples, R, London, K, and Hall, R
- Published
- 2017
22. Valuing nature’s contributions to people: the IPBES approach
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Economía aplicada I, Ekonomia aplikatua I, Pascual, Unai, Balvanera, Patricia, Díaz, Sandra, Pataki, György, Roth, Eva, Stenseke, Marie, Watson, Robert T., Dessane, Esra Başak, Islar, Mine, Kelemen, Eszter, Maris, Virginie, Quaas, Martin, Subramanian, Suneetha M, Wittmer, Heidi, Adlan, Asia, Ahn, SoEun, Al-Hafedh, Yousef S., Amankwah, Edward, Asah, Stanley T., Berry, Pam, Bilgin, Adem, Breslow, Sara J., Bullock, Craig, Cáceres, Daniel, Daly-Hassen, Hamed, Figueroa, Eugenio, Golden, Christopher D., Gómez-Baggethun, E, González-Jiménez, David, Houdet, Joël, Keune, Hans, Kumar, Ritesh, Ma, Keping, May, Peter H., Mead, Aroha, O’Farrell, Patrick, Pandit, Ram, Pengue, Walter, Pichis-Madruga, Ramón, Popa, Florin, Preston, Susan, Pacheco-Balanza, Diego, Saarikoski, Heli, Strassburg, Bernardo B., Van den Belt, Marjan, Verma, Madhu, Wickson, Fern, Yagi, Noboyuki, Economía aplicada I, Ekonomia aplikatua I, Pascual, Unai, Balvanera, Patricia, Díaz, Sandra, Pataki, György, Roth, Eva, Stenseke, Marie, Watson, Robert T., Dessane, Esra Başak, Islar, Mine, Kelemen, Eszter, Maris, Virginie, Quaas, Martin, Subramanian, Suneetha M, Wittmer, Heidi, Adlan, Asia, Ahn, SoEun, Al-Hafedh, Yousef S., Amankwah, Edward, Asah, Stanley T., Berry, Pam, Bilgin, Adem, Breslow, Sara J., Bullock, Craig, Cáceres, Daniel, Daly-Hassen, Hamed, Figueroa, Eugenio, Golden, Christopher D., Gómez-Baggethun, E, González-Jiménez, David, Houdet, Joël, Keune, Hans, Kumar, Ritesh, Ma, Keping, May, Peter H., Mead, Aroha, O’Farrell, Patrick, Pandit, Ram, Pengue, Walter, Pichis-Madruga, Ramón, Popa, Florin, Preston, Susan, Pacheco-Balanza, Diego, Saarikoski, Heli, Strassburg, Bernardo B., Van den Belt, Marjan, Verma, Madhu, Wickson, Fern, and Yagi, Noboyuki
- Abstract
Nature is perceived and valued in starkly different and often conflicting ways. This paper presents the rationale for the inclusive valuation of nature's contributions to people (NCP) in decision making, as well as broad methodological steps for doing so. While developed within the context of the Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES), this approach is more widely applicable to initiatives at the knowledge-policy interface, which require a pluralistic approach to recognizing the diversity of values. We argue that transformative practices aiming at sustainable futures would benefit from embracing such diversity, which require recognizing and addressing power relationships across stakeholder groups that hold different values on human naturerelations and NCP.
- Published
- 2017
23. Yes, nicotine replacement therapy's effectiveness is much lower than often reported
- Author
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Stanley, T D and Stanley, T D
- Published
- 2017
24. Sustained CD28 Expression Delays Multiple Features of Replicative Senescence in Human CD8 T Lymphocytes
- Author
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Parish, Stanley T., Parish, Stanley T., Wu, Jennifer E., Effros, Rita B., Parish, Stanley T., Parish, Stanley T., Wu, Jennifer E., and Effros, Rita B.
- Abstract
CD28 costimulatory signal transduction in T lymphocytes is essential for optimal telomerase activity, stabilization of cytokine mRNAs, and glucose metabolism. During aging and chronic infection with HIV-1, there are increased proportions of CD8 T lymphocytes that lack CD28 expression and show additional features of replicative senescence. Moreover, the abundance of these cells correlates with decreased vaccine responsiveness, early mortality in the very old, and accelerated HIV disease progression. Here, we show that sustained expression of CD28, via gene transduction, retards the process of replicative senescence, as evidenced by enhanced telomerase activity, increased overall proliferative potential, and reduced secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines. Nevertheless, the transduced cultures eventually do reach senescence, which is associated with increased CTLA-4 gene expression and a loss of CD28 cell surface expression. These findings further elucidate the central role of CD28 in the replicative senescence program, and may ultimately lead to novel therapies for diseases associated with replicative senescence.
- Published
- 2010
25. Considerations of statistical power and risk of bias question the strength of nicotine replacement therapy's effectiveness
- Author
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Stanley, T D and Stanley, T D
- Published
- 2016
26. The Probiotics in Pregnancy Study (PiP Study): rationale and design of a double-blind randomised controlled trial to improve maternal health during pregnancy and prevent infant eczema and allergy.
- Author
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Barthow, C, Wickens, K, Stanley, T, Mitchell, EA, Maude, R, Abels, P, Purdie, G, Murphy, R, Stone, P, Kang, J, Hood, F, Rowden, J, Barnes, P, Fitzharris, P, Craig, J, Slykerman, RF, Crane, J, Barthow, C, Wickens, K, Stanley, T, Mitchell, EA, Maude, R, Abels, P, Purdie, G, Murphy, R, Stone, P, Kang, J, Hood, F, Rowden, J, Barnes, P, Fitzharris, P, Craig, J, Slykerman, RF, and Crane, J
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Worldwide there is increasing interest in the manipulation of human gut microbiota by the use of probiotic supplements to modify or prevent a range of communicable and non-communicable diseases. Probiotic interventions administered during pregnancy and breastfeeding offer a unique opportunity to influence a range of important maternal and infant outcomes. The aim of the Probiotics in Pregnancy Study (PiP Study) is to assess if supplementation by the probiotic Lactobacillus rhamnosus HN001 administered to women from early pregnancy and while breastfeeding can reduce the rates of infant eczema and atopic sensitisation at 1 year, and maternal gestational diabetes mellitus, bacterial vaginosis and Group B Streptococcal vaginal colonisation before birth, and depression and anxiety postpartum. METHODS/DESIGN: The PiP Study is a two-centre, randomised, double-blind placebo-controlled trial in Wellington and Auckland, New Zealand. Four hundred pregnant women expecting infants at high risk of allergic disease will be enrolled in the study at 14-16 weeks gestation and randomised to receive either Lactobacillus rhamnosus HN001 (6 × 10(9) colony-forming units per day (cfu/day)) or placebo until delivery and then continuing until 6 months post-partum, if breastfeeding. Primary infant outcomes are the development and severity of eczema and atopic sensitisation in the first year of life. Secondary outcomes are diagnosis of maternal gestational diabetes mellitus, presence of bacterial vaginosis and vaginal carriage of Group B Streptococcus (at 35-37 weeks gestation). Other outcome measures include maternal weight gain, maternal postpartum depression and anxiety, infant birth weight, preterm birth, and rate of caesarean sections. A range of samples including maternal and infant faecal samples, maternal blood samples, cord blood and infant cord tissue samples, breast milk, infant skin swabs and infant buccal swabs will be collected for the investigation of the mechanisms
- Published
- 2016
27. The IPBES Conceptual Framework - connecting nature and people
- Author
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Diaz, Sandra, Demissew, Sebsebe, Carabias, Julia, Joly, Carlos, Lonsdale, Mark, Ash, Neville, Larigauderie, Anne, Adhikari, Jay Ram, Arico, Salvatore, Baldi, Andras, Bartuska, Ann, Baste, Ivar Andreas, Bilgin, Adem, Brondizio, Eduardo, Chan, Kai M. A., Figueroa, Viviana Elsa, Duraiappah, Anantha, Fischer, Markus, Hill, Rosemary, Koetz, Thomas, Leadley, Paul, Lyver, Philip, Mace, Georgina M., Martin-Lopez, Berta, Okumura, Michiko, Pacheco, Diego, Pascual, Unai, Perez, Edgar Selvin, Reyers, Belinda, Roth, Eva, Saito, Osamu, Scholes, Robert John, Sharma, Nalini, Tallis, Heather, Thaman, Randolph, Watson, Robert, Yahara, Tetsukazu, Hamid, Zakri Abdul, Akosim, Callistus, Al-Hafedh, Yousef, Allahverdiyev, Rashad, Amankwah, Edward, Asah, Stanley T., Asfaw, Zemede, Bartus, Gabor, Brooks, L. Anathea, Caillaux, Jorge, Dalle, Gemedo, Darnaedi, Dedy, Driver, Amanda, Erpul, Gunay, Escobar-Eyzaguirre, Pablo, Failler, Pierre, Fouda, Ali Moustafa Mokhtar, Fu, Bojie, Gundimeda, Haripriya, Hashimoto, Shizuka, Homer, Floyd, Lavorel, Sandra, Lichtenstein, Gabriela, Mala, William Armand, Mandivenyi, Wadzanayi, Matczak, Piotr, Mbizvo, Carmel, Mehrdadi, Mehrasa, Metzger, Jean Paul, Mikissa, Jean Bruno, Moller, Henrik, Mooney, Harold A., Mumby, Peter, Nagendra, Harini, Nesshover, Carsten, Oteng-Yeboah, Alfred Apau, Pataki, Gyoergy, Roue, Marie, Rubis, Jennifer, Schultz, Maria, Smith, Peggy, Sumaila, Rashid, Takeuchi, Kazuhiko, Thomas, Spencer, Verma, Madhu, Yeo-Chang, Youn, Zlatanova, Diana, Diaz, Sandra, Demissew, Sebsebe, Carabias, Julia, Joly, Carlos, Lonsdale, Mark, Ash, Neville, Larigauderie, Anne, Adhikari, Jay Ram, Arico, Salvatore, Baldi, Andras, Bartuska, Ann, Baste, Ivar Andreas, Bilgin, Adem, Brondizio, Eduardo, Chan, Kai M. A., Figueroa, Viviana Elsa, Duraiappah, Anantha, Fischer, Markus, Hill, Rosemary, Koetz, Thomas, Leadley, Paul, Lyver, Philip, Mace, Georgina M., Martin-Lopez, Berta, Okumura, Michiko, Pacheco, Diego, Pascual, Unai, Perez, Edgar Selvin, Reyers, Belinda, Roth, Eva, Saito, Osamu, Scholes, Robert John, Sharma, Nalini, Tallis, Heather, Thaman, Randolph, Watson, Robert, Yahara, Tetsukazu, Hamid, Zakri Abdul, Akosim, Callistus, Al-Hafedh, Yousef, Allahverdiyev, Rashad, Amankwah, Edward, Asah, Stanley T., Asfaw, Zemede, Bartus, Gabor, Brooks, L. Anathea, Caillaux, Jorge, Dalle, Gemedo, Darnaedi, Dedy, Driver, Amanda, Erpul, Gunay, Escobar-Eyzaguirre, Pablo, Failler, Pierre, Fouda, Ali Moustafa Mokhtar, Fu, Bojie, Gundimeda, Haripriya, Hashimoto, Shizuka, Homer, Floyd, Lavorel, Sandra, Lichtenstein, Gabriela, Mala, William Armand, Mandivenyi, Wadzanayi, Matczak, Piotr, Mbizvo, Carmel, Mehrdadi, Mehrasa, Metzger, Jean Paul, Mikissa, Jean Bruno, Moller, Henrik, Mooney, Harold A., Mumby, Peter, Nagendra, Harini, Nesshover, Carsten, Oteng-Yeboah, Alfred Apau, Pataki, Gyoergy, Roue, Marie, Rubis, Jennifer, Schultz, Maria, Smith, Peggy, Sumaila, Rashid, Takeuchi, Kazuhiko, Thomas, Spencer, Verma, Madhu, Yeo-Chang, Youn, and Zlatanova, Diana
- Abstract
The first public product of the Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) is its Conceptual Framework. This conceptual and analytical tool, presented here in detail, will underpin all IPBES functions and provide structure and comparability to the syntheses that IPBES will produce at different spatial scales, on different themes, and in different regions. Salient innovative aspects of the IPBES Conceptual Framework are its transparent and participatory construction process and its explicit consideration of diverse scientific disciplines, stakeholders, and knowledge systems, including indigenous and local knowledge. Because the focus on co-construction of integrative knowledge is shared by an increasing number of initiatives worldwide, this framework should be useful beyond IPBES, for the wider research and knowledge-policy communities working on the links between nature and people, such as natural, social and engineering scientists, policy-makers at different levels, and decision-makers in different sectors of society.
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- 2015
- Full Text
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28. Familial neonatal seizures in 36 families: Clinical and genetic features correlate with outcome.
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Mulley J.C., Malone S., Bassan H., Goldberg-Stern H., Stanley T., Hayman M., Calvert S., Korczyn A.D., Lev D., Lerman-Sagie T., Shevell M., Scheffer I.E., Berkovic S.F., Grinton B.E., Heron S.E., Pelekanos J.T., Zuberi S.M., Kivity S., Afawi Z., Williams T.C., Casalaz D.M., Yendle S., Linder I., Mulley J.C., Malone S., Bassan H., Goldberg-Stern H., Stanley T., Hayman M., Calvert S., Korczyn A.D., Lev D., Lerman-Sagie T., Shevell M., Scheffer I.E., Berkovic S.F., Grinton B.E., Heron S.E., Pelekanos J.T., Zuberi S.M., Kivity S., Afawi Z., Williams T.C., Casalaz D.M., Yendle S., and Linder I.
- Abstract
Objective We evaluated seizure outcome in a large cohort of familial neonatal seizures (FNS), and examined phenotypic overlap with different molecular lesions. Methods Detailed clinical data were collected from 36 families comprising two or more individuals with neonatal seizures. The seizure course and occurrence of seizures later in life were analyzed. Families were screened for KCNQ2, KCNQ3, SCN2A, and PRRT2 mutations, and linkage studies were performed in mutation-negative families to exclude known loci. Results Thirty-three families fulfilled clinical criteria for benign familial neonatal epilepsy (BFNE); 27 of these families had KCNQ2 mutations, one had a KCNQ3 mutation, and two had SCN2A mutations. Seizures persisting after age 6 months were reported in 31% of individuals with KCNQ2 mutations; later seizures were associated with frequent neonatal seizures. Linkage mapping in two mutation-negative BFNE families excluded linkage to KCNQ2, KCNQ3, and SCN2A, but linkage to KCNQ2 could not be excluded in the third mutation-negative BFNE family. The three remaining families did not fulfill criteria of BFNE due to developmental delay or intellectual disability; a molecular lesion was identified in two; the other family remains unsolved. Significance Most families in our cohort of familial neonatal seizures fulfill criteria for BFNE; the molecular cause was identified in 91%. Most had KCNQ2 mutations, but two families had SCN2A mutations, which are normally associated with a mixed picture of neonatal and infantile onset seizures. Seizures later in life are more common in BFNE than previously reported and are associated with a greater number of seizures in the neonatal period. Linkage studies in two families excluded known loci, suggesting a further gene is involved in BFNE.Copyright © Wiley Periodicals, Inc. © 2015 International League Against Epilepsy.
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- 2015
29. Familial neonatal seizures in 36 families: Clinical and genetic features correlate with outcome
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Grinton, BE, Heron, SE, Pelekanos, JT, Zuberi, SM, Kivity, S, Afawi, Z, Williams, TC, Casalaz, DM, Yendle, S, Linder, I, Lev, D, Lerman-Sagie, T, Malone, S, Bassan, H, Goldberg-Stern, H, Stanley, T, Hayman, M, Calvert, S, Korczyn, AD, Shevell, M, Scheffer, IE, Mulley, JC, Berkovic, SF, Grinton, BE, Heron, SE, Pelekanos, JT, Zuberi, SM, Kivity, S, Afawi, Z, Williams, TC, Casalaz, DM, Yendle, S, Linder, I, Lev, D, Lerman-Sagie, T, Malone, S, Bassan, H, Goldberg-Stern, H, Stanley, T, Hayman, M, Calvert, S, Korczyn, AD, Shevell, M, Scheffer, IE, Mulley, JC, and Berkovic, SF
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: We evaluated seizure outcome in a large cohort of familial neonatal seizures (FNS), and examined phenotypic overlap with different molecular lesions. METHODS: Detailed clinical data were collected from 36 families comprising two or more individuals with neonatal seizures. The seizure course and occurrence of seizures later in life were analyzed. Families were screened for KCNQ2, KCNQ3, SCN2A, and PRRT2 mutations, and linkage studies were performed in mutation-negative families to exclude known loci. RESULTS: Thirty-three families fulfilled clinical criteria for benign familial neonatal epilepsy (BFNE); 27 of these families had KCNQ2 mutations, one had a KCNQ3 mutation, and two had SCN2A mutations. Seizures persisting after age 6 months were reported in 31% of individuals with KCNQ2 mutations; later seizures were associated with frequent neonatal seizures. Linkage mapping in two mutation-negative BFNE families excluded linkage to KCNQ2, KCNQ3, and SCN2A, but linkage to KCNQ2 could not be excluded in the third mutation-negative BFNE family. The three remaining families did not fulfill criteria of BFNE due to developmental delay or intellectual disability; a molecular lesion was identified in two; the other family remains unsolved. SIGNIFICANCE: Most families in our cohort of familial neonatal seizures fulfill criteria for BFNE; the molecular cause was identified in 91%. Most had KCNQ2 mutations, but two families had SCN2A mutations, which are normally associated with a mixed picture of neonatal and infantile onset seizures. Seizures later in life are more common in BFNE than previously reported and are associated with a greater number of seizures in the neonatal period. Linkage studies in two families excluded known loci, suggesting a further gene is involved in BFNE.
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- 2015
30. Pion contamination in the MICE muon beam
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Adams, D., Alekou, A., Apollonio, M., Asfandiyarov, R., Barber, G., Barclay, P., de Bari, A., Bayes, R., Bayliss, V., Bertoni, R., Blackmore, V. J., Blondel, A., Blot, S., Bogomilov, M., Bonesini, M., Booth, C. N., Bowring, D., Boyd, S., Bradshaw, T. W., Bravar, U., Bross, A. D., Capponi, M., Carlisle, T., Cecchet, G., Charnley, C., Chignoli, F., Cline, D., Cobb, J. H., Colling, G., Collomb, N., Coney, L., Cooke, P., Courthold, M., Cremaldi, L. M., DeMello, A., Dick, A., Dobbs, A., Dornan, P., Drews, M., Drielsma, F., Filthaut, F., Fitzpatrick, T., Franchini, P., Francis, V., Fry, L., Gallagher, A., Gamet, R., Gardener, R., Gourlay, S., Grant, A., Greis, J. R., Griffiths, S., Hanlet, P., Hansen, O. M., Hanson, G. G., Hart, T. L., Hartnett, T., Hayler, T., Heidt, C., Hills, M., Hodgson, P., Hunt, C., Iaciofano, A., Ishimoto, S., Kafka, G., Kaplan, D. M., Karadzhov, Y., Kim, Y. K., Kuno, Y., Kyberd, P., Lagrange, J-B, Langlands, J., Lau, W., Leonova, M., Li, D., Lintern, A., Littlefield, M., Long, K., Luo, T., Macwaters, C., Martlew, B., Martyniak, J., Mazza, R., Middleton, S., Moretti, A., Moss, A., Muir, A., Mullacrane, I., Nebrensky, J. J., Neuffer, D., Nichols, A., Nicholson, R., Nugent, J. C., Oates, A., Onel, Y., Orestano, D., Overton, E., Owens, P., Palladino, V., Pasternak, J., Pastore, F., Pidcott, C., Popovic, M., Preece, R., Prestemon, S., Rajaram, D., Ramberger, S., Rayner, M. A., Ricciardi, S., Roberts, T. J., Robinson, M., Rogers, C., Ronald, K., Rubinov, P., Rucinski, P., Sakamato, H., Sanders, D. A., Santos, E., Savidge, T., Smith, P. J., Snopok, P., Soler, F. J. P., Speirs, D., Stanley, T., Stokes, G., Summers, D. J., Tarrant, J., Taylor, I., Tortora, L., Torun, Y., Tsenov, R., Tunnell, C. D., Uchida, M. A., Vankova-Kirilova, G., Virostek, S., Vretenar, M., Warburton, P., Watson, S., White, C., Whyte, C. G., Wilson, A., Winter, M., Yang, X., Young, A., Zisman, M., Adams, D., Alekou, A., Apollonio, M., Asfandiyarov, R., Barber, G., Barclay, P., de Bari, A., Bayes, R., Bayliss, V., Bertoni, R., Blackmore, V. J., Blondel, A., Blot, S., Bogomilov, M., Bonesini, M., Booth, C. N., Bowring, D., Boyd, S., Bradshaw, T. W., Bravar, U., Bross, A. D., Capponi, M., Carlisle, T., Cecchet, G., Charnley, C., Chignoli, F., Cline, D., Cobb, J. H., Colling, G., Collomb, N., Coney, L., Cooke, P., Courthold, M., Cremaldi, L. M., DeMello, A., Dick, A., Dobbs, A., Dornan, P., Drews, M., Drielsma, F., Filthaut, F., Fitzpatrick, T., Franchini, P., Francis, V., Fry, L., Gallagher, A., Gamet, R., Gardener, R., Gourlay, S., Grant, A., Greis, J. R., Griffiths, S., Hanlet, P., Hansen, O. M., Hanson, G. G., Hart, T. L., Hartnett, T., Hayler, T., Heidt, C., Hills, M., Hodgson, P., Hunt, C., Iaciofano, A., Ishimoto, S., Kafka, G., Kaplan, D. M., Karadzhov, Y., Kim, Y. K., Kuno, Y., Kyberd, P., Lagrange, J-B, Langlands, J., Lau, W., Leonova, M., Li, D., Lintern, A., Littlefield, M., Long, K., Luo, T., Macwaters, C., Martlew, B., Martyniak, J., Mazza, R., Middleton, S., Moretti, A., Moss, A., Muir, A., Mullacrane, I., Nebrensky, J. J., Neuffer, D., Nichols, A., Nicholson, R., Nugent, J. C., Oates, A., Onel, Y., Orestano, D., Overton, E., Owens, P., Palladino, V., Pasternak, J., Pastore, F., Pidcott, C., Popovic, M., Preece, R., Prestemon, S., Rajaram, D., Ramberger, S., Rayner, M. A., Ricciardi, S., Roberts, T. J., Robinson, M., Rogers, C., Ronald, K., Rubinov, P., Rucinski, P., Sakamato, H., Sanders, D. A., Santos, E., Savidge, T., Smith, P. J., Snopok, P., Soler, F. J. P., Speirs, D., Stanley, T., Stokes, G., Summers, D. J., Tarrant, J., Taylor, I., Tortora, L., Torun, Y., Tsenov, R., Tunnell, C. D., Uchida, M. A., Vankova-Kirilova, G., Virostek, S., Vretenar, M., Warburton, P., Watson, S., White, C., Whyte, C. G., Wilson, A., Winter, M., Yang, X., Young, A., and Zisman, M.
- Abstract
The international Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment (MICE) will perform a systematic investigation of ionization cooling with muon beams of momentum between 140 and 240\,MeV/c at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory ISIS facility. The measurement of ionization cooling in MICE relies on the selection of a pure sample of muons that traverse the experiment. To make this selection, the MICE Muon Beam is designed to deliver a beam of muons with less than $\sim$1\% contamination. To make the final muon selection, MICE employs a particle-identification (PID) system upstream and downstream of the cooling cell. The PID system includes time-of-flight hodoscopes, threshold-Cherenkov counters and calorimetry. The upper limit for the pion contamination measured in this paper is $f_\pi < 1.4\%$ at 90\% C.L., including systematic uncertainties. Therefore, the MICE Muon Beam is able to meet the stringent pion-contamination requirements of the study of ionization cooling., Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures
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- 2015
- Full Text
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31. Electron-Muon Ranger: performance in the MICE Muon Beam
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Adams, D., Alekou, A., Apollonio, M., Asfandiyarov, R., Barber, G., Barclay, P., de Bari, A., Bayes, R., Bayliss, V., Bene, P., Bertoni, R., Blackmore, V. J., Blondel, A., Blot, S., Bogomilov, M., Bonesini, M., Booth, C. N., Bowring, D., Boyd, S., Bradshaw, T. W., Bravar, U., Bross, A. D., Cadoux, F., Capponi, M., Carlisle, T., Cecchet, G., Charnley, C., Chignoli, F., Cline, D., Cobb, J. H., Colling, G., Collomb, N., Coney, L., Cooke, P., Courthold, M., Cremaldi, L. M., Debieux, S., DeMello, A., Dick, A., Dobbs, A., Dornan, P., Drielsma, F., Filthaut, F., Fitzpatrick, T., Franchini, P., Francis, V., Fry, L., Gallagher, A., Gamet, R., Gardener, R., Gourlay, S., Grant, A., Graulich, J. S., Greis, J., Griffiths, S., Hanlet, P., Hansen, O. M., Hanson, G. G., Hart, T. L., Hartnett, T., Hayler, T., Heidt, C., Hills, M., Hodgson, P., Hunt, C., Husi, C., Iaciofano, A., Ishimoto, S., Kafka, G., Kaplan, D. M., Karadzhov, Y., Kim, Y. K., Kuno, Y., Kyberd, P., Lagrange, J-B, Langlands, J., Lau, W., Leonova, M., Li, D., Lintern, A., Littlefield, M., Long, K., Luo, T., Macwaters, C., Martlew, B., Martyniak, J., Masciocchi, F., Mazza, R., Middleton, S., Moretti, A., Moss, A., Muir, A., Mullacrane, I., Nebrensky, J. J., Neuffer, D., Nichols, A., Nicholson, R., Nicola, L., Messomo, E. Noah, Nugent, J. C., Oates, A., Onel, Y., Orestano, D., Overton, E., Owens, P., Palladino, V., Pasternak, J., Pastore, F., Pidcott, C., Popovic, M., Preece, R., Prestemon, S., Rajaram, D., Ramberger, S., Rayner, M. A., Ricciardi, S., Roberts, T. J., Robinson, M., Rogers, C., Ronald, K., Rothenfusser, K., Rubinov, P., Rucinski, P., Sakamato, H., Sanders, D. A., Sandstrom, R., Santos, E., Savidge, T., Smith, P. J., Snopok, P., Soler, F. J. P., Speirs, D., Stanley, T., Stokes, G., Summers, D. J., Tarrant, J., Taylor, I., Tortora, L., Torun, Y., Tsenov, R., Tunnell, C. D., Uchida, M. A., Vankova-Kirilova, G., Virostek, S., Vretenar, M., Warburton, P., Watson, S., White, C., Whyte, C. G., Wilson, A., Wisting, H., Yang, X., Young, A., Zisman, M., Adams, D., Alekou, A., Apollonio, M., Asfandiyarov, R., Barber, G., Barclay, P., de Bari, A., Bayes, R., Bayliss, V., Bene, P., Bertoni, R., Blackmore, V. J., Blondel, A., Blot, S., Bogomilov, M., Bonesini, M., Booth, C. N., Bowring, D., Boyd, S., Bradshaw, T. W., Bravar, U., Bross, A. D., Cadoux, F., Capponi, M., Carlisle, T., Cecchet, G., Charnley, C., Chignoli, F., Cline, D., Cobb, J. H., Colling, G., Collomb, N., Coney, L., Cooke, P., Courthold, M., Cremaldi, L. M., Debieux, S., DeMello, A., Dick, A., Dobbs, A., Dornan, P., Drielsma, F., Filthaut, F., Fitzpatrick, T., Franchini, P., Francis, V., Fry, L., Gallagher, A., Gamet, R., Gardener, R., Gourlay, S., Grant, A., Graulich, J. S., Greis, J., Griffiths, S., Hanlet, P., Hansen, O. M., Hanson, G. G., Hart, T. L., Hartnett, T., Hayler, T., Heidt, C., Hills, M., Hodgson, P., Hunt, C., Husi, C., Iaciofano, A., Ishimoto, S., Kafka, G., Kaplan, D. M., Karadzhov, Y., Kim, Y. K., Kuno, Y., Kyberd, P., Lagrange, J-B, Langlands, J., Lau, W., Leonova, M., Li, D., Lintern, A., Littlefield, M., Long, K., Luo, T., Macwaters, C., Martlew, B., Martyniak, J., Masciocchi, F., Mazza, R., Middleton, S., Moretti, A., Moss, A., Muir, A., Mullacrane, I., Nebrensky, J. J., Neuffer, D., Nichols, A., Nicholson, R., Nicola, L., Messomo, E. Noah, Nugent, J. C., Oates, A., Onel, Y., Orestano, D., Overton, E., Owens, P., Palladino, V., Pasternak, J., Pastore, F., Pidcott, C., Popovic, M., Preece, R., Prestemon, S., Rajaram, D., Ramberger, S., Rayner, M. A., Ricciardi, S., Roberts, T. J., Robinson, M., Rogers, C., Ronald, K., Rothenfusser, K., Rubinov, P., Rucinski, P., Sakamato, H., Sanders, D. A., Sandstrom, R., Santos, E., Savidge, T., Smith, P. J., Snopok, P., Soler, F. J. P., Speirs, D., Stanley, T., Stokes, G., Summers, D. J., Tarrant, J., Taylor, I., Tortora, L., Torun, Y., Tsenov, R., Tunnell, C. D., Uchida, M. A., Vankova-Kirilova, G., Virostek, S., Vretenar, M., Warburton, P., Watson, S., White, C., Whyte, C. G., Wilson, A., Wisting, H., Yang, X., Young, A., and Zisman, M.
- Abstract
The Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment (MICE) will perform a detailed study of ionization cooling to evaluate the feasibility of the technique. To carry out this program, MICE requires an efficient particle-identification (PID) system to identify muons. The Electron-Muon Ranger (EMR) is a fully-active tracking-calorimeter that forms part of the PID system and tags muons that traverse the cooling channel without decaying. The detector is capable of identifying electrons with an efficiency of 98.6%, providing a purity for the MICE beam that exceeds 99.8%. The EMR also proved to be a powerful tool for the reconstruction of muon momenta in the range 100-280 MeV/$c$., Comment: 22 pages, 19 figures
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- 2015
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32. ETS factors regulate the Vegf-dependent, arterial-specific expression of Dll4
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Wythe, Joshua, Wythe, Joshua, Lan, Dang, Devine, W Patrick, Boudreau, Emilie, Artap, Stanley T, He, Daniel, Schachterle, William, Stainier, Didier YR, Oettgen, Peter, Black, Brian L, Fish, Jason E, Bruneau, Benoit G, Wythe, Joshua, Wythe, Joshua, Lan, Dang, Devine, W Patrick, Boudreau, Emilie, Artap, Stanley T, He, Daniel, Schachterle, William, Stainier, Didier YR, Oettgen, Peter, Black, Brian L, Fish, Jason E, and Bruneau, Benoit G
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- 2014
33. Meta-analysis of economics research reporting guidelines
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Stanley, T. D., Doucouliagos, Hristos, Giles, Margaret, Heckemeyer, Jost H., Johnston, Robert J., Laroche, Patrice, Nelson, Jon P., Paldam, Martin, Poot, Jacques, Pugh, Geoff, Rosenberger, Randall S., Rost, Katja, Stanley, T. D., Doucouliagos, Hristos, Giles, Margaret, Heckemeyer, Jost H., Johnston, Robert J., Laroche, Patrice, Nelson, Jon P., Paldam, Martin, Poot, Jacques, Pugh, Geoff, Rosenberger, Randall S., and Rost, Katja
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- 2013
34. Targeted resequencing in epileptic encephalopathies identifies de novo mutations in CHD2 and SYNGAP1.
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Mefford H.C., Andrade D.M., Freeman J.L., Sadleir L.G., Shendure J., Berkovic S.F., Scheffer I.E., Carvill G.L., Heavin S.B., Yendle S.C., McMahon J.M., O'Roak B.J., Cook J., Khan A., Dorschner M.O., Weaver M., Calvert S., Malone S., Wallace G., Stanley T., Bye A.M.E., Bleasel A., Howell K.B., Kivity S., Mackay M.T., Rodriguez-Casero V., Webster R., Korczyn A., Afawi Z., Zelnick N., Lerman-Sagie T., Lev D., Moller R.S., Gill D., Mefford H.C., Andrade D.M., Freeman J.L., Sadleir L.G., Shendure J., Berkovic S.F., Scheffer I.E., Carvill G.L., Heavin S.B., Yendle S.C., McMahon J.M., O'Roak B.J., Cook J., Khan A., Dorschner M.O., Weaver M., Calvert S., Malone S., Wallace G., Stanley T., Bye A.M.E., Bleasel A., Howell K.B., Kivity S., Mackay M.T., Rodriguez-Casero V., Webster R., Korczyn A., Afawi Z., Zelnick N., Lerman-Sagie T., Lev D., Moller R.S., and Gill D.
- Abstract
Epileptic encephalopathies are a devastating group of epilepsies with poor prognosis, of which the majority are of unknown etiology. We perform targeted massively parallel resequencing of 19 known and 46 candidate genes for epileptic encephalopathy in 500 affected individuals (cases) to identify new genes involved and to investigate the phenotypic spectrum associated with mutations in known genes. Overall, we identified pathogenic mutations in 10% of our cohort. Six of the 46 candidate genes had 1 or more pathogenic variants, collectively accounting for 3% of our cohort. We show that de novo CHD2 and SYNGAP1 mutations are new causes of epileptic encephalopathies, accounting for 1.2% and 1% of cases, respectively. We also expand the phenotypic spectra explained by SCN1A, SCN2A and SCN8A mutations. To our knowledge, this is the largest cohort of cases with epileptic encephalopathies to undergo targeted resequencing. Implementation of this rapid and efficient method will change diagnosis and understanding of the molecular etiologies of these disorders. © 2013 Nature America, Inc. All rights reserved.
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- 2013
35. Targeted resequencing in epileptic encephalopathies reveals marked genetic heterogeneity and novel genes.
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Scheffer I.E., Shendure J., Berkovic S.F., Mefford H.C., Carvill G.L., Heavin S.B., Yendle S.C., O'Roak B.J., Cook J., Khan A., Dorschner M.O., Weaver M.A., Calvert S., Malone S., Wallace G., Stanley T., Bye A.M., Bleasel A., Howell K.B., Kivity S., Mackay M.T., Rodriguez-Casero V., Webster R., Korczyn A., Zelnick N., Lerman-Sagie T., Lev D., SteensbjerreMoller R., Andrade D.M., Freeman J.L., Sadleir L.G., Scheffer I.E., Shendure J., Berkovic S.F., Mefford H.C., Carvill G.L., Heavin S.B., Yendle S.C., O'Roak B.J., Cook J., Khan A., Dorschner M.O., Weaver M.A., Calvert S., Malone S., Wallace G., Stanley T., Bye A.M., Bleasel A., Howell K.B., Kivity S., Mackay M.T., Rodriguez-Casero V., Webster R., Korczyn A., Zelnick N., Lerman-Sagie T., Lev D., SteensbjerreMoller R., Andrade D.M., Freeman J.L., and Sadleir L.G.
- Abstract
Purpose: Epileptic encephalopathies (EEs) are a devastating group of epilepsies characterized by refractory seizures, cognitive arrest or regression, associated with ongoing epileptic activity, and a poor prognosis. De novo mutations in a number of genes, as well as rare, de novo copy number changes, are known to cause EE. However, the vast majority of cases have an unknown etiology. Method(s): We performed targeted massively parallel resequencing of 18 known and 47 candidate EE genes in 500 patients to identify novel genes, and investigate the phenotypic spectrum of known genes. Result(s): Overall, we identify pathogenic mutations in 10% of our cohort. Pathogenic variants were found in seven of our 47 candidate genes, collectively accounting for 3% of EE in our cohort. Most notably, we identify mutations in 1.2% of our cohort in a novel gene that acts in the chromatin remodeling pathway. Also, de novo mutations were detected in 1% of the cohort in SYNGAP1, a gene identified in individuals with intellectual disability. The remaining pathogenic variants were detected in known EE genes. For some, including SCN1A, SCN2A, and SCN8A, we expand the phenotypic spectrum, presenting novel clinical features associated with these genes. Conclusion(s): We have developed a rapid, cost-effective ($1/gene/proband) and efficient targeted resequencing approach to define the molecular etiology of EE. These results will transform molecular diagnostic approaches and facilitate the management of families affected by this devastating disorder. Furthermore, we have identified the chromatin remodeling pathway as a novel biological process involved in epileptogenesis. Future studies of this pathway will provide new avenues for development of therapeutic interventions.
- Published
- 2013
36. Galton, Stein and empirical Bayes: artefacts and connections
- Author
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Stanley, T. D. and Stanley, T. D.
- Abstract
The problem of fallible data ('errors-in-variables') is traced back to Galton's original discovery of 'regression'. Galton's regression is nothing more than the statistical artefact associated with the well known bias of least squares. The interconnections of Galtonts regression, errors-in-variables, Stein-rule estimation, psychometric test theory, least squares, 'permanent income hypothesis', reliability and empirical Bayes are investigated. This essay discusses how a hybrid solution for fallible observation, Stein-rule least squares, can help to improve our understanding of diverse statistical approaches and problems and why the reliability of our data needs to be explicitly incorporated into our empirical estimates.
- Published
- 2013
37. Targeted resequencing in epileptic encephalopathies identifies de novo mutations in CHD2 and SYNGAP1
- Author
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Carvill, GL, Heavin, SB, Yendle, SC, McMahon, JM, O'Roak, BJ, Cook, J, Khan, A, Dorschner, MO, Weaver, M, Calvert, S, Malone, S, Wallace, G, Stanley, T, Bye, AME, Bleasel, A, Howell, KB, Kivity, S, Mackay, MT, Rodriguez-Casero, V, Webster, R, Korczyn, A, Afawi, Z, Zelnick, N, Lerman-Sagie, T, Lev, D, Moller, RS, Gill, D, Andrade, DM, Freeman, JL, Sadleir, LG, Shendure, J, Berkovic, SF, Scheffer, IE, Mefford, HC, Carvill, GL, Heavin, SB, Yendle, SC, McMahon, JM, O'Roak, BJ, Cook, J, Khan, A, Dorschner, MO, Weaver, M, Calvert, S, Malone, S, Wallace, G, Stanley, T, Bye, AME, Bleasel, A, Howell, KB, Kivity, S, Mackay, MT, Rodriguez-Casero, V, Webster, R, Korczyn, A, Afawi, Z, Zelnick, N, Lerman-Sagie, T, Lev, D, Moller, RS, Gill, D, Andrade, DM, Freeman, JL, Sadleir, LG, Shendure, J, Berkovic, SF, Scheffer, IE, and Mefford, HC
- Abstract
Epileptic encephalopathies are a devastating group of epilepsies with poor prognosis, of which the majority are of unknown etiology. We perform targeted massively parallel resequencing of 19 known and 46 candidate genes for epileptic encephalopathy in 500 affected individuals (cases) to identify new genes involved and to investigate the phenotypic spectrum associated with mutations in known genes. Overall, we identified pathogenic mutations in 10% of our cohort. Six of the 46 candidate genes had 1 or more pathogenic variants, collectively accounting for 3% of our cohort. We show that de novo CHD2 and SYNGAP1 mutations are new causes of epileptic encephalopathies, accounting for 1.2% and 1% of cases, respectively. We also expand the phenotypic spectra explained by SCN1A, SCN2A and SCN8A mutations. To our knowledge, this is the largest cohort of cases with epileptic encephalopathies to undergo targeted resequencing. Implementation of this rapid and efficient method will change diagnosis and understanding of the molecular etiologies of these disorders.
- Published
- 2013
38. ETS factors regulate Vegf-dependent arterial specification.
- Author
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Wythe, Joshua D, Wythe, Joshua D, Dang, Lan TH, Devine, W Patrick, Boudreau, Emilie, Artap, Stanley T, He, Daniel, Schachterle, William, Stainier, Didier YR, Oettgen, Peter, Black, Brian L, Bruneau, Benoit G, Fish, Jason E, Wythe, Joshua D, Wythe, Joshua D, Dang, Lan TH, Devine, W Patrick, Boudreau, Emilie, Artap, Stanley T, He, Daniel, Schachterle, William, Stainier, Didier YR, Oettgen, Peter, Black, Brian L, Bruneau, Benoit G, and Fish, Jason E
- Abstract
Vegf signaling specifies arterial fate during early vascular development by inducing the transcription of Delta-like 4 (Dll4), the earliest Notch ligand gene expressed in arterial precursor cells. Dll4 expression precedes that of Notch receptors in arteries, and factors that direct its arterial-specific expression are not known. To identify the transcriptional program that initiates arterial Dll4 expression, we characterized an arterial-specific and Vegf-responsive enhancer of Dll4. Our findings demonstrate that Notch signaling is not required for initiation of Dll4 expression in arteries and suggest that Notch instead functions as a maintenance factor. Importantly, we find that Vegf signaling activates MAP kinase (MAPK)-dependent E26 transformation-specific sequence (ETS) factors in the arterial endothelium to drive expression of Dll4 and Notch4. These findings identify a Vegf/MAPK-dependent transcriptional pathway that specifies arterial identity by activating Notch signaling components and illustrate how signaling cascades can modulate broadly expressed transcription factors to achieve tissue-specific transcriptional outputs.
- Published
- 2013
39. Efficacy of Gamma-glutamylcysteine (GGC) in Ischemia-reperfusion Injury
- Author
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NEVADA SYSTEM OF HIGHER EDUCATION RENO NV, Omaye, Stanley T, NEVADA SYSTEM OF HIGHER EDUCATION RENO NV, and Omaye, Stanley T
- Abstract
Experiments were performed to study Gamma-glutamycysteine (GGC) a precursor dipeptide for glutathione (GSH) for its ability to inhibit oxidative stress in human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC). HUVEC were used as a model to assess cellular biochemical changes that occur in hemorrhagic shock. We found that GGC protects against oxidative stress by alteration of gene expression of antioxidant defense independent of increased induction of endogenous GSH synthesis. In mixture studies looking at the effects of GGC with conjugated linoleic acid in HUVEC, we found that the mixture protected against oxidative stress similar to treatment with GGC alone. Therefore, GGC is likely a unique compound that exerts protection from oxidative stress by novel by modulation of gene expression of antioxidant defense enzymes. We have also develop a sensitive high performance liquid chromatographic method (HPLC) using fluorimetric detection to measure cellular changes in GGC., The original document contains color images.
- Published
- 2012
40. The spectrum of SCN1A-related infantile epileptic encephalopathies.
- Author
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Crow Y., Seltzer W.K., Gardner A., Sutherland G., Berkovic S.F., Mulley J.C., Scheffer I.E., Abbott K., Andrews I., Appleton B., Bleasel A., Buchanan N., Burke C., Bye A., Camfield C., Camfield P., Chow G., Collins K., Cook M., Cross J.H., D'Agostino M.D., Delatycki M., Dunkley C., Fawke J., Ferrie C., Geraghty M., Graham G., Grattan-Smith P., Hallam E., Hamiwka L., Harding A., Harvey S., Hayman M., Hufton I., Humphries P., Jacob P., Jacquemard R., Jamison D., Jardine P., Jones S., Keene D., Kelley K., Ketteridge D., Kim A., Kivity S., Kneebone C., Kornberg A., Lamb C., Lander C., Lerman-Sagie T., Lev D., Leventer R., Mackay M., Malone S., Manson J., McLellan A., Moore P., Nagarajan L., Nash M., Nikanorova M., Nordli D., O'Regan M., Ouvrier R., Patel J., Pridmore C., Ramesh V., Reutens D., Rowe P., Shield L., Shillito P., Smith L., Spooner C., Wallace G., Watemberg N., Whitehouse W., Wirrell E., Harkin L.A., McMahon J.M., Iona X., Dibbens L., Pelekanos J.T., Zuberi S.M., Sadleir L.G., Andermann E., Gill D., Farrell K., Connolly M., Stanley T., Harbord M., Andermann F., Wang J., Batish S.D., Jones J.G., Crow Y., Seltzer W.K., Gardner A., Sutherland G., Berkovic S.F., Mulley J.C., Scheffer I.E., Abbott K., Andrews I., Appleton B., Bleasel A., Buchanan N., Burke C., Bye A., Camfield C., Camfield P., Chow G., Collins K., Cook M., Cross J.H., D'Agostino M.D., Delatycki M., Dunkley C., Fawke J., Ferrie C., Geraghty M., Graham G., Grattan-Smith P., Hallam E., Hamiwka L., Harding A., Harvey S., Hayman M., Hufton I., Humphries P., Jacob P., Jacquemard R., Jamison D., Jardine P., Jones S., Keene D., Kelley K., Ketteridge D., Kim A., Kivity S., Kneebone C., Kornberg A., Lamb C., Lander C., Lerman-Sagie T., Lev D., Leventer R., Mackay M., Malone S., Manson J., McLellan A., Moore P., Nagarajan L., Nash M., Nikanorova M., Nordli D., O'Regan M., Ouvrier R., Patel J., Pridmore C., Ramesh V., Reutens D., Rowe P., Shield L., Shillito P., Smith L., Spooner C., Wallace G., Watemberg N., Whitehouse W., Wirrell E., Harkin L.A., McMahon J.M., Iona X., Dibbens L., Pelekanos J.T., Zuberi S.M., Sadleir L.G., Andermann E., Gill D., Farrell K., Connolly M., Stanley T., Harbord M., Andermann F., Wang J., Batish S.D., and Jones J.G.
- Abstract
The relationship between severe myoclonic epilepsy of infancy (SMEI or Dravet syndrome) and the related syndrome SMEI-borderland (SMEB) with mutations in the sodium channel alpha 1 subunit gene SCN1A is well established. To explore the phenotypic variability associated with SCN1A mutations, 188 patients with a range of epileptic encephalopathies were examined for SCN1A sequence variations by denaturing high performance liquid chromatography and sequencing. All patients had seizure onset within the first 2 years of life. A higher proportion of mutations were identified in patients with SMEI (52/66; 79%) compared to patients with SMEB (25/36; 69%). By studying a broader spectrum of infantile epileptic encephalopathies, we identified mutations in other syndromes including cryptogenic generalized epilepsy (24%) and cryptogenic focal epilepsy (22%). Within the latter group, a distinctive subgroup designated as severe infantile multifocal epilepsy had SCN1A mutations in three of five cases. This phenotype is characterized by early onset multifocal seizures and later cognitive decline. Knowledge of an expanded spectrum of epileptic encephalopathies associated with SCN1A mutations allows earlier diagnostic confirmation for children with these devastating disorders. © The Author (2007). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2012
41. Wide band performance of low level traveling-wave amplifiers.
- Author
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Dept. of Electronics, Counts, Stanley T., Dept. of Electronics, and Counts, Stanley T.
- Abstract
http://www.archive.org/details/widebandperforma00coun, U.S. Navy (U.S.N.) author.
- Published
- 2012
42. Quantifying the CDK inhibitor VMY-1-103's activity and tissue levels in an in vivo tumor model by LC-MS/MS and by MRI.
- Author
-
Sirajuddin, Paul, Das, Sudeep, Ringer, Lymor, Rodriguez, Olga C, Sivakumar, Angiela, Lee, Yi-Chien, Üren, Aykut, Fricke, Stanley T, Rood, Brian, Ozcan, Alpay, Wang, Sean S, Karam, Sana, Yenugonda, Venkata, Salinas, Patricia, Petricoin, Emanuel, Pishvaian, Michael, Lisanti, Michael P, Wang, Yue, Schlegel, Richard, Moasser, Bahram, Albanese, Chris, Sirajuddin, Paul, Das, Sudeep, Ringer, Lymor, Rodriguez, Olga C, Sivakumar, Angiela, Lee, Yi-Chien, Üren, Aykut, Fricke, Stanley T, Rood, Brian, Ozcan, Alpay, Wang, Sean S, Karam, Sana, Yenugonda, Venkata, Salinas, Patricia, Petricoin, Emanuel, Pishvaian, Michael, Lisanti, Michael P, Wang, Yue, Schlegel, Richard, Moasser, Bahram, and Albanese, Chris
- Abstract
The development of new small molecule-based therapeutic drugs requires accurate quantification of drug bioavailability, biological activity and treatment efficacy. Rapidly measuring these endpoints is often hampered by the lack of efficient assay platforms with high sensitivity and specificity. Using an in vivo model system, we report a simple and sensitive liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry assay to quantify the bioavailability of a recently developed novel cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor VMY-1-103, a purvalanol B-based analog whose biological activity is enhanced via dansylation. We developed a rapid organic phase extraction technique and validated wide and functional VMY-1-103 distribution in various mouse tissues, consistent with its enhanced potency previously observed in a variety of human cancer cell lines. More importantly, in vivo MRI and single voxel proton MR-Spectroscopy further established that VMY-1-103 inhibited disease progression and affected key metabolites in a mouse model of hedgehog-driven medulloblastoma.
- Published
- 2012
43. Are estimates of the value of a statistical life exaggerated?
- Author
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Doucouliagos, Chris, Stanley, T D, Giles, Margaret J, Doucouliagos, Chris, Stanley, T D, and Giles, Margaret J
- Abstract
The magnitude of the value of astatisticallife (VSL) is critical to the evaluation of many health and safety initiatives. To date, the large and rigorous VSL research literature has not explicitly accommodated publication selectivity bias (i.e., the reduced probability that insignificant or negative VSL values are reported). This study demonstrates that doing so is essential. For studies that employ hedonic wage equations to estimate VSL, correction for selection bias reduces the average value of astatisticallife by 70–80%. Our meta-regression analysis also identifies several sources for the wide heterogeneity found among reported VSL estimates.
- Published
- 2011
44. Developing a Methodology for the Evaluation of Hybrid Vehicle Thermal Management Systems
- Author
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ARMY TANK AUTOMOTIVE RESEARCH DEVELOPMENT AND ENGINEERING CENTER WARREN MI, Jones, Stanley T., Mendoza, John, Frazier, George, Khalil, Ghassan, ARMY TANK AUTOMOTIVE RESEARCH DEVELOPMENT AND ENGINEERING CENTER WARREN MI, Jones, Stanley T., Mendoza, John, Frazier, George, and Khalil, Ghassan
- Abstract
How can Thermal Management System Evaluation be defined? Performance--does it meet the demand of maximum load at worst case boundary conditions? Is the TMS operational power demand (hotel load) disproportionately large? Size--it TMS disproportionately oversized in terms of: volume, weight. An evaluation metric structure could be developed that would: provide a means for comparison for and/or across classes of vehicles, evaluate design maturity and point toward potential issues, identify significant technological advancement., Presented at NDIA's Ground Vehicle Systems Engineering and Technology Symposium (GVSETS), 17 - 22 August 2009,Troy, Michigan, USA. The original document contains color images.
- Published
- 2009
45. Assessment of regression-based methods to adjust for publication bias through a comprehensive simulation study
- Author
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Moreno, SG, Sutton, AJ, Ades, AE, Stanley, T D, Abrams, KR, Peters, JL, Cooper, NJ, Moreno, SG, Sutton, AJ, Ades, AE, Stanley, T D, Abrams, KR, Peters, JL, and Cooper, NJ
- Published
- 2009
46. Antisense drug technology : principles, strategies, and applications
- Author
-
Crooke, Stanley T. and Crooke, Stanley T.
- Published
- 2008
47. Modulating gene function with peptide nucleic acids (PNA)
- Author
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Nielsen, Peter E., Crooke, Stanley T., Nielsen, Peter E., and Crooke, Stanley T.
- Abstract
A review on peptide nucleic acid (PNA) oligomers as modulators of gene expression ranging from gene silencing at the mRNAor the dsDNA (antigene) level, and redirection of mRNA splicing to gene activation through transcription bubble mimicking. PNA chem., anti-infective agents, cellular delivery, and in vivo bioavailability of PNA are briefly discussed. [on SciFinder (R)]
- Published
- 2008
48. Rapid identification of emerging pathogens: coronavirus.
- Author
-
Sampath, Rangarajan, Sampath, Rangarajan, Hofstadler, Steven A, Blyn, Lawrence B, Eshoo, Mark W, Hall, Thomas A, Massire, Christian, Levene, Harold M, Hannis, James C, Harrell, Patina M, Neuman, Benjamin, Buchmeier, Michael J, Jiang, Yun, Ranken, Raymond, Drader, Jared J, Samant, Vivek, Griffey, Richard H, McNeil, John A, Crooke, Stanley T, Ecker, David J, Sampath, Rangarajan, Sampath, Rangarajan, Hofstadler, Steven A, Blyn, Lawrence B, Eshoo, Mark W, Hall, Thomas A, Massire, Christian, Levene, Harold M, Hannis, James C, Harrell, Patina M, Neuman, Benjamin, Buchmeier, Michael J, Jiang, Yun, Ranken, Raymond, Drader, Jared J, Samant, Vivek, Griffey, Richard H, McNeil, John A, Crooke, Stanley T, and Ecker, David J
- Abstract
We describe a new approach for infectious disease surveillance that facilitates rapid identification of known and emerging pathogens. The process uses broad-range polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to amplify nucleic acid targets from large groupings of organisms, electrospray ionization mass spectrometry for accurate mass measurements of PCR products, and base composition signature analysis to identify organisms in a sample. We demonstrate this principle by using 14 isolates of 9 diverse Coronavirus spp., including the severe acute respiratory syndrome-associated coronavirus (SARS-CoV). We show that this method could identify and distinguish between SARS and other known CoV, including the human CoV 229E and OC43, individually and in a mixture of all 3 human viruses. The sensitivity of detection, measured by using titered SARS-CoV spiked into human serum, was approximate, equals1 PFU/mL. This approach, applicable to the surveillance of bacterial, viral, fungal, or protozoal pathogens, is capable of automated analysis of >900 PCR reactions per day.
- Published
- 2005
49. Publication bias in union-productivity research?
- Author
-
Doucouliagos, Chris, Laroche, Patrice, Stanley, T. D., Doucouliagos, Chris, Laroche, Patrice, and Stanley, T. D.
- Abstract
This paper develops and applies several meta-analytic techniques to investigate the presence of publication bias in industrial relations research, specifically in the union-productivity effects literature. Publication bias arises when statistically insignificant results are suppressed or when results satisfying prior expectations are given preference. Like most fields, research in industrial relations is vulnerable to publication bias. Unlike other fields such as economics, there is no evidence of publication bias in the union-productivity literature, as a whole. However, there are pockets of publication selection, as well as negative autoregression, confirming the controversial nature of this area of research. Meta-regression analysis reveals evidence of publication bias (or selection) among US studies.
- Published
- 2005
50. Meta-analysis - Response from T.D. Stanley
- Author
-
Stanley, T D and Stanley, T D
- Published
- 2002
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