1,246 results on '"Hsu, A T"'
Search Results
2. Ascertaining the Francophone population in Ontario: validating the language variable in health data
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Batista, Ricardo, Hsu, Amy T., Bouchard, Louise, Reaume, Michael, Rhodes, Emily, Sucha, Ewa, Guerin, Eva, Prud’homme, Denis, Manuel, Douglas G., and Tanuseputro, Peter
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- 2024
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3. Multicore fiber optic imaging reveals that astrocyte calcium activity in the mouse cerebral cortex is modulated by internal motivational state
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Gau, Yung-Tian A., Hsu, Eric T., Cha, Richard J., Pak, Rebecca W., Looger, Loren L., Kang, Jin U., and Bergles, Dwight E.
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- 2024
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4. Development and Validation of a Survival Prediction Model for Patients with Pancreatic Cancer
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James, Paul D., Almousawi, Fatema, Salim, Misbah, Khan, Rishad, Tanuseputro, Peter, Hsu, Amy T., Coburn, Natalie, Alabdulkarim, Balqis, Talarico, Robert, Gayowsky, Anastasia, Webber, Colleen, Seow, Hsien, and Sutradhar, Rinku
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- 2024
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5. Estimated mortality risk and use of palliative care services among home care clients during the last 6 months of life: a retrospective cohort study
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Murmann, Maya, Manuel, Douglas G., Tanuseputro, Peter, Bennett, Carol, Pugliese, Michael, Li, Wenshan, Roberts, Rhiannon, and Hsu, Amy T.
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Medical care -- Utilization ,Home care -- Usage ,Palliative treatment -- Usage ,Real property -- Valuation ,Home care services industry -- Usage ,Long-term care of the sick -- Usage ,Home care services -- Usage ,Health - Abstract
Background: In Canada, only 15% of patients requiring palliative care receive such services in the year before death. We describe health care utilization patterns among home care users in their last 6 months of life to inform care planning for older people with varying mortality risks and evolving care needs as they decline. Methods: Using population health administrative data from Ontario, we performed a retrospective cohort study involving home care clients aged 50 years and older who received at least 1 interRAI (Resident Assessment Instrument) Home Care assessment between April 2018 and September 2019. We report the proportion of clients who used acute care, long-term care, and palliative home care services within 6 months of their assessment, stratified by their predicted 6-month mortality risk using a prognostic tool called the Risk Evaluation for Support: Predictions for Elder-life in their Communities Tool (RESPECT) and vital status. Results: The cohort included 247 377 adults, 11.9% of whom died within 6 months of an assessment. Among decedents, 50.6% of those with a RESPECT-estimated median survival of fewer than 3 months received at least 1 nonphysician palliative home care visit before death. This proportion declined to 38.7% and 29.5% among decedents with an estimated median survival between 3 and 6 months and between 6 and 12 months, respectively. Interpretation: Many older adults in Ontario do not receive any palliative home care before death. Prognostic tools such as RESPECT may improve recognition of reduced life expectancies and palliative care needs of individuals in their final years of life., Palliative care is an essential component of a holistic, comprehensive, and patient-centred approach to care for all people with a life-limiting illness from the time of diagnosis with the disease. [...]
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- 2024
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6. Exploring perceptions of online calculators for identifying community-dwelling older people at risk of dying: A qualitative study
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Bennett, Carol, Beach, Sarah, Pacheco, Karen, Hsu, Amy T., Tanuseputro, Peter, and Manuel, Douglas G.
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- 2024
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7. Activated eosinophils in early life impair lung development and promote long-term lung damage
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Raftery, April L., O’Brien, Caitlin A., Shad, Ali, L’Estrange-Stranieri, Elan, Hsu, Amy T., Jacobsen, Elizabeth A., Harris, Nicola L., Tsantikos, Evelyn, and Hibbs, Margaret L.
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- 2024
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8. Compartmentalizing the cuprate strange metal
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Berben, M., Ayres, J., Duffy, C., Hinlopen, R. D. H., Hsu, Y. -T., Leroux, M., Gilmutdinov, I., Massoudzadegan, M., Vignolles, D., Huang, Y., Kondo, T., Takeuchi, T., Cooper, J. R., Friedemann, S., Carrington, A., Proust, C., and Hussey, N. E.
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Condensed Matter - Superconductivity ,Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons - Abstract
It has long been recognized that the key to unlocking the mystery of cuprate high-Tc superconductivity lies in understanding the anomalous normal state from which pairs form and condense. While many of its defining properties have been identified, they are often considered either at a singular doping level or as an isolated phenomenon as a function of doping. As a result, their relation to each other and to the pseudogap (PG), strange metal (SM) and non-superconducting (non-SC) regimes that define the cuprate phase diagram has yet to be elucidated. Here, we report a high-field in-plane MR study on several cuprate families spanning all 3 regimes that reveal a complex yet nonetheless systematic evolution of the form of the MR, with each regime possessing its own distinct scaling behavior. In the PG regime, the MR exhibits pure H/T^2 scaling at low fields and H-linearity at the highest field strengths. While the H-linearity persists inside the SM regime, the scaling changes abruptly to H/T. The size of the H-linear slope, meanwhile, is found to be correlated with both the T-linear resistivity coefficient and Tc, strengthening the characterization of the SM regime as a quantum critical phase. We interpret the omnipresence of H-linear MR across both regimes as a signature of highly anisotropic, possibly discontinuous features on the Fermi surface. Finally, within the non-SC, Fermi-liquid regime, we observe a recovery of conventional Kohler scaling. This comprehensive study establishes the distinct nature of the magnetotransport within each regime and identifies power-law scaling of the normal state MR as a defining feature of SC hole-doped cuprates. The incompatibility of such power-law scaling with any known variant of Boltzmann transport theory motivates the quest for an altogether new theoretical framework, one in which the MR is entirely decoupled from elastic impurity scattering.
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- 2022
9. Orbitofrontal and striatal metabolism, volume, thickness and structural connectivity in relation to social anhedonia in depression: A multimodal study
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Donnelly, Brianna M., Hsu, David T., Gardus, John, Wang, Junying, Yang, Jie, Parsey, Ramin V., and DeLorenzo, Christine
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- 2024
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10. Incoherent transport across the strange metal regime of highly overdoped cuprates
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Ayres, J., Berben, M., Culo, M., Hsu, Y. -T., van Heumen, E., Huang, Y., Zaanen, J., Kondo, T., Takeuchi, T., Cooper, J. R., Putzke, C., Friedemann, S., Carrington, A., and Hussey, N. E.
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Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons ,Condensed Matter - Superconductivity - Abstract
Strange metals possess highly unconventional transport characteristics, such as a linear-in-temperature ($T$) resistivity, an inverse Hall angle that varies as $T^2$ and a linear-in-field ($H$) magnetoresistance. Identifying the origin of these collective anomalies has proved profoundly challenging, even in materials such as the hole-doped cuprates that possess a simple band structure. The prevailing dogma is that strange metallicity in the cuprates is tied to a quantum critical point at a doping $p*$ inside the superconducting dome. Here, we study the high-field in-plane magnetoresistance of two superconducting cuprate families at doping levels beyond $p*$. At all dopings, the magnetoresistance exhibits quadrature scaling and becomes linear at high $H/T$ ratios. Moreover, its magnitude is found to be much larger than predicted by conventional theory and insensitive to both impurity scattering and magnetic field orientation. These observations, coupled with analysis of the zero-field and Hall resistivities, suggest that despite having a single band, the cuprate strange metal phase hosts two charge sectors, one containing coherent quasiparticles, the other scale-invariant `Planckian' dissipators., Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures and 3 tables (including Supplementary Information)
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- 2020
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11. Determination of the Fermi surface and field-induced quasi-particle tunneling around the Dirac nodal-loop in ZrSiS
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Müller, C. S. A., Khouri, T., van Delft, M. R., Pezzini, S., Hsu, Y. -T., Ayres, J., Breitkreiz, M., Schoop, L. M., Carrington, A., Hussey, N. E., and Wiedmann, S.
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Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics ,Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons - Abstract
Unambiguous and complete determination of the Fermi surface is a primary step in understanding the electronic properties of topical metals and semi-metals, but only in a relatively few cases has this goal been realized. In this work, we present a systematic high-field quantum oscillation study up to 35 T on ZrSiS, a textbook example of a nodal-line semimetal with only linearly dispersive bands crossing the Fermi energy. The topology of the Fermi surface is determined with unprecedented precision and all pockets are identified by comparing the measured angle dependence of the quantum oscillations to density functional theory calculations. Comparison of the Shubnikov-de Haas and de Haas-van Alphen oscillations at low temperatures and analysis of the respective Dingle plots reveal the presence of significantly enhanced scattering on the electron pocket. Above a threshold field that is aligned along the c-axis of the crystal, the specific cage-like Fermi surface of ZrSiS allows for electron-hole tunneling to occur across finite gaps in momentum space leading to quantum oscillations with a complex frequency spectrum. Additional high-frequency quantum oscillations signify magnetic breakdown orbits that encircle the entire Dirac nodal loop. We suggest that the persistence of quantum oscillations in the resistivity to high temperatures is caused by Stark interference between orbits of nearly equal masses., Comment: 14 pages, 13 figures
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- 2020
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12. Expanded quantum vortex liquid regimes in the electron nematic superconductors FeSe1−xSx and FeSe1−xTex
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Čulo, M., Licciardello, S., Ishida, K., Mukasa, K., Ayres, J., Buhot, J., Hsu, Y.-T., Imajo, S., Qiu, M. W., Saito, M., Uezono, Y., Otsuka, T., Watanabe, T., Kindo, K., Shibauchi, T., Kasahara, S., Matsuda, Y., and Hussey, N. E.
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- 2023
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13. Waitlist and Posttransplant Outcomes of Children and Young Adults With Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
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Cheong, Daniel, Eisenberg, Ruth, Lamour, Jacqueline M., Hsu, Daphne T., Choi, Jaeun, and Bansal, Neha
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- 2023
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14. Mu Opioid Receptor Dynamics in Healthy Volunteers with a History of Childhood Maltreatment
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Hill, Kathryn R., Hsu, David T., Taylor, Stephan F., Ogden, R. Todd, Parsey, Ramin V., and DeLorenzo, Christine
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- 2022
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15. Hugin ⁺ neurons provide a link between sleep homeostat and circadian clock neurons
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Schwarz, Jessica E., King, Anna N., Hsu, Cynthia T., Barber, Annika F., and Sehgal, Amita
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- 2021
16. Multi-atlas tool for automated segmentation of brain gray matter nuclei and quantification of their magnetic susceptibility
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Li, Xu, Chen, Lin, Kutten, Kwame, Ceritoglu, Can, Li, Yue, Kang, Ningdong, Hsu, John T, Qiao, Ye, Wei, Hongjiang, Liu, Chunlei, Miller, Michael I, Mori, Susumu, Yousem, David M, van Zijl, Peter CM, and Faria, Andreia V
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Bioengineering ,Neurosciences ,Aging ,Biomedical Imaging ,Adult ,Aged ,Atlases as Topic ,Brain ,Brain Mapping ,Datasets as Topic ,Female ,Gray Matter ,Humans ,Image Processing ,Computer-Assisted ,Male ,Middle Aged ,QSM ,SWI ,Atlas ,Automated segmentation ,Susceptibility quantification ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
Quantification of tissue magnetic susceptibility using MRI offers a non-invasive measure of important tissue components in the brain, such as iron and myelin, potentially providing valuable information about normal and pathological conditions during aging. Despite many advances made in recent years on imaging techniques of quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM), accurate and robust automated segmentation tools for QSM images that can help generate universal and sharable susceptibility measures in a biologically meaningful set of structures are still not widely available. In the present study, we developed an automated process to segment brain nuclei and quantify tissue susceptibility in these regions based on a susceptibility multi-atlas library, consisting of 10 atlases with T1-weighted images, gradient echo (GRE) magnitude images and QSM images of brains with different anatomic patterns. For each atlas in this library, 10 regions of interest in iron-rich deep gray matter structures that are better defined by QSM contrast were manually labeled, including caudate, putamen, globus pallidus internal/external, thalamus, pulvinar, subthalamic nucleus, substantia nigra, red nucleus and dentate nucleus in both left and right hemispheres. We then tested different pipelines using different combinations of contrast channels to bring the set of labels from the multi-atlases to each target brain and compared them with the gold standard manual delineation. The results showed that the segmentation accuracy using dual contrasts QSM/T1 pipeline outperformed other dual-contrast or single-contrast pipelines. The dice values of 0.77 ± 0.09 using the QSM/T1 multi-atlas pipeline rivaled with the segmentation reliability obtained from multiple evaluators with dice values of 0.79 ± 0.07 and gave comparable or superior performance in segmenting subcortical nuclei in comparison with standard FSL FIRST or recent multi-atlas package of volBrain. The segmentation performance of the QSM/T1 multi-atlas was further tested on QSM images acquired using different acquisition protocols and platforms and showed good reliability and reproducibility with average dice of 0.79 ± 0.08 to manual labels and 0.89 ± 0.04 in an inter-protocol manner. The extracted quantitative magnetic susceptibility values in the deep gray matter nuclei also correlated well between different protocols with inter-protocol correlation constants all larger than 0.97. Such reliability and performance was ultimately validated in an external dataset acquired at another study site with consistent susceptibility measures obtained using the QSM/T1 multi-atlas approach in comparison to those using manual delineation. In summary, we designed a susceptibility multi-atlas tool for automated and reliable segmentation of QSM images and for quantification of magnetic susceptibilities. It is publicly available through our cloud-based platform (www.mricloud.org). Further improvement on the performance of this multi-atlas tool is expected by increasing the number of atlases in the future.
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- 2019
17. Neuronal NLRP3 is a parkin substrate that drives neurodegeneration in Parkinson’s disease
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Panicker, Nikhil, Kam, Tae-In, Wang, Hu, Neifert, Stewart, Chou, Shih-Ching, Kumar, Manoj, Brahmachari, Saurav, Jhaldiyal, Aanishaa, Hinkle, Jared T., Akkentli, Fatih, Mao, Xiaobo, Xu, Enquan, Karuppagounder, Senthilkumar S., Hsu, Eric T., Kang, Sung-Ung, Pletnikova, Olga, Troncoso, Juan, Dawson, Valina L., and Dawson, Ted M.
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- 2022
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18. Fermi surface in the absence of a Fermi liquid in the Kondo insulator SmB$_6$
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Hartstein, M., Toews, W. H., Hsu, Y. -T., Zeng, B., Chen, X., Hatnean, M. Ciomaga, Zhang, Q. R., Nakamura, S., Padgett, A. S., Rodway-Gant, G., Berk, J., Kingston, M. K., Zhang, G. H., Chan, M. K., Yamashita, S., Sakakibara, T., Takano, Y., Park, J. -H., Balicas, L., Harrison, N., Shitsevalova, N., Balakrishnan, G., Lonzarich, G. G., Hill, R. W., Sutherland, M., and Sebastian, Suchitra E.
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Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons - Abstract
The search for a Fermi surface in the absence of a conventional Fermi liquid has thus far yielded very few potential candidates. Among promising materials are spin-frustrated Mott insulators near the insulator-metal transition, where theory predicts a Fermi surface associated with neutral low energy excitations. Here we reveal another route to experimentally realise a Fermi surface in the absence of a Fermi liquid by the experimental study of a Kondo insulator SmB$_6$ positioned close to the insulator-metal transition. We present experimental signatures down to low temperatures ($\ll 1$ K) associated with a Fermi surface in the bulk, including a sizeable linear specific heat coefficient, and on the application of a finite magnetic field, bulk magnetic quantum oscillations, finite quantum oscillatory entropy, and substantial enhancement in thermal conductivity well below the charge gap energy scale. Thus, the weight of evidence indicates that despite an extreme instance of Fermi liquid breakdown in Kondo insulating SmB$_6$, a Fermi surface arises from novel itinerant low energy excitations that couple to magnetic fields, but not weak DC electric fields.
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- 2017
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19. Effectiveness of the Sub-Acute Care for Frail Elderly (SAFE) Transitional Care Unit on Short-Term Functional Independence in Frail Older Patients Discharged from Hospital.
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Robert, Benoît, Sun, Annie H., Sinden, Danielle, Eddeen, Anan B., Murmann, Maya, and Hsu, Amy T.
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Background Transitional care programs help improve continuity of care and post-discharge outcomes for frail older adults who are hospitalized. In this study, we examined the effectiveness of a transitional care model, based in a long-term care (LTC) home, on the functional independence of older hospitalized patients post-discharge. Methods We used a propensity-score matched cohort, whereby cases comprised patients who were admitted to a transitional care program--called the Sub-Acute Care for Frail Elderly (SAFE) Unit--following a hospitalization between March 1, 2018 and June 30, 2019. Controls were matched to Usual Care patients discharged from hospitals within the same health region and accrual period who did not receive transitional care in the SAFE Unit. Outcomes included acute care, LTC, and home care use within six-month post-discharge. Results Compared to Usual Care, SAFE Unit patients were less likely to be admitted into an LTC home (RR 0.44, 95% CI 0.23-0.86) within six months post-discharge. Additionally, on average, SAFE Unit patients spent 34 fewer days in LTC homes than controls. SAFE Unit patients also incurred significantly fewer home care service days (median: 52 days, IQR: 12-132 days) than Usual Care patients (median: 65.5 days, IQR: 19-158 days), particularly in terms of their reliance on general nursing and personal support. Both groups had similar risks of six-month hospital readmission and having an ED visit. Conclusion Rehabilitative and restorative-focused care provided through transitional programs, such as the SAFE Unit, have the potential to enable independent living for older hospitalized patients discharged to the community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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20. Analysis of load flow based on power system analysis software package by using the IEEE 30-bus system.
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Hsu, W T, Liang, L W, Yang, C C, and Huang, C W
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- 2024
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21. Application of the percentage differential relay and stator earth fault protection in synchronous generators.
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Huang, C W, Wang, S R, and Hsu, W T
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- 2024
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22. Derivation and validation of an algorithm to predict transitions from community to residential long-term care among persons with dementia—A retrospective cohort study.
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Li, Wenshan, Turcotte, Luke, Hsu, Amy T., Talarico, Robert, Qureshi, Danial, Webber, Colleen, Hawken, Steven, Tanuseputro, Peter, Manuel, Douglas G., and Huyer, Greg
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- 2024
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23. The genetic architecture of pediatric cardiomyopathy
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Ware, Stephanie M., Bhatnagar, Surbhi, Dexheimer, Phillip J., Wilkinson, James D., Sridhar, Arthi, Fan, Xiao, Shen, Yufeng, Tariq, Muhammad, Schubert, Jeffrey A., Colan, Steven D., Shi, Ling, Canter, Charles E., Hsu, Daphne T., Bansal, Neha, Webber, Steven A., Everitt, Melanie D., Kantor, Paul F., Rossano, Joseph W., Pahl, Elfriede, Rusconi, Paolo, Lee, Teresa M., Towbin, Jeffrey A., Lal, Ashwin K., Chung, Wendy K., Miller, Erin M., Aronow, Bruce, Martin, Lisa J., and Lipshultz, Steven E.
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- 2022
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24. Initial treatment is associated with improved survival and end-of-life outcomes for patients with pancreatic cancer: a cohort study
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Khan, Rishad, Salim, Misbah, Tanuseputro, Peter, Hsu, Amy T., Coburn, Natalie, Hallet, Julie, Talarico, Robert, and James, Paul D.
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- 2022
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25. Accessing the Full Superconducting Dome in Pristine YBa2Cu3O6+x Under Pressure
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Alireza, P. L., Zhang, G. H., Guo, W., Porras, J., Loew, T., Hsu, Y. -T., Lonzarich, G. G., Tacon, M. Le, Keimer, B., and Sebastian, Suchitra E.
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Condensed Matter - Superconductivity - Abstract
We attain the previously unaccessed full superconducting dome in a pristine high temperature cuprate superconductor by applying pressures up to 280 kbar to samples of near stoichiometric YBa2Cu3O7. The obtained superconducting phase boundary as a function of hole doping closely follows the superconducting dome in La2-xSrxCuO4. Measurements are now enabled to trace the evolution of various entangled phases and the Fermi surface from the underdoped to overdoped regime in a single high purity cuprate superconducting family of materials.
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- 2016
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26. The 5 - 10 keV AGN luminosity function at 0.01<z<4.0
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Fotopoulou, S., Buchner, J., Georgantopoulos, I., Hasinger, G., Salvato, M., Georgakakis, A., Cappelluti, N., Ranalli, P., Hsu, L. T., Brusa, M., Comastri, A., Miyaji, T., Nandra, K., Aird, J., and Paltani, S.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The active galactic nuclei X-ray luminosity function traces actively accreting supermassive black holes and is essential for the study of the properties of the active galactic nuclei (AGN) population, black hole evolution, and galaxy-black hole coevolution. Up to now, the AGN luminosity function has been estimated several times in soft (0.5-2 keV) and hard X-rays (2-10 keV). AGN selection in these energy ranges often suffers from identification and redshift incompleteness and, at the same time, photoelectric absorption can obscure a significant amount of the X-ray radiation. We estimate the evolution of the luminosity function in the 5-10 keV band, where we effectively avoid the absorbed part of the spectrum, rendering absorption corrections unnecessary up to NH=10^23 cm^-2. Our dataset is a compilation of six wide, and deep fields: MAXI, HBSS, XMM-COSMOS, Lockman Hole, XMM-CDFS, AEGIS-XD, Chandra-COSMOS, and Chandra-CDFS. This extensive sample of ~1110 AGN (0.01
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- 2016
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27. “Going Home [Is] Just a Feel-Good Idea With No Structure”: A Qualitative Exploration of Patient and Family Caregiver Needs When Transitioning From Hospital to Home in Palliative Care
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Isenberg, Sarina R., Killackey, Tieghan, Saunders, Stephanie, Scott, Mary, Ernecoff, Natalie C., Bush, Shirley H., Varenbut, Jaymie, Lovrics, Emily, Stern, Maya A., Hsu, Amy T., Bernstein, Mark, Zimmermann, Camilla, Wentlandt, Kirsten, and Mahtani, Ramona
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- 2021
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28. Incoherent transport across the strange-metal regime of overdoped cuprates
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Ayres, J., Berben, M., Culo, M., Hsu, Y.-T., van Heumen, E., Huang, Y., and Zaanen, J.
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Copper oxide superconductors -- Magnetic properties ,Superconductivity -- Research ,Electron transport -- Research ,Environmental issues ,Science and technology ,Zoology and wildlife conservation - Abstract
Strange metals possess highly unconventional electrical properties, such as a linear-in-temperature resistivity.sup.1-6, an inverse Hall angle that varies as temperature squared.sup.7-9 and a linear-in-field magnetoresistance.sup.10-13. Identifying the origin of these collective anomalies has proved fundamentally challenging, even in materials such as the hole-doped cuprates that possess a simple bandstructure. The prevailing consensus is that strange metallicity in the cuprates is tied to a quantum critical point at a doping p* inside the superconducting dome.sup.14,15. Here we study the high-field in-plane magnetoresistance of two superconducting cuprate families at doping levels beyond p*. At all dopings, the magnetoresistance exhibits quadrature scaling and becomes linear at high values of the ratio of the field and the temperature, indicating that the strange-metal regime extends well beyond p*. Moreover, the magnitude of the magnetoresistance is found to be much larger than predicted by conventional theory and is insensitive to both impurity scattering and magnetic field orientation. These observations, coupled with analysis of the zero-field and Hall resistivities, suggest that despite having a single band, the cuprate strange-metal region hosts two charge sectors, one containing coherent quasiparticles, the other scale-invariant 'Planckian' dissipators. Measurements of high-field magnetotransport in overdoped cuprates indicate that the strange-metal regime exists beyond the critical doping, and that it has both coherent and incoherent contributions., Author(s): J. Ayres [sup.1] [sup.2] [sup.3] , M. Berben [sup.2] [sup.3] , M. Culo [sup.2] [sup.3] [sup.10] , Y.-T. Hsu [sup.2] [sup.3] , E. van Heumen [sup.4] [sup.5] , Y. [...]
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- 2021
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29. Comparison of influenza hospitalization outcomes among adults, older adults, and octogenarians: a US national population-based study
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Lee, C.-C., Liu, Y., Lu, K.-T., Wei, C., Su, K., Hsu, W.-T., and Chen, S.-C.
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- 2021
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30. Involvement of superior colliculus in complex figure detection of mice
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Cazemier, J Leonie, Haak, Robin, Tran, T K Loan, Hsu, Ann T Y, Husic, Medina, Peri, Brandon D, Kirchberger, Lisa, Self, Matthew W, Roelfsema, Pieter, Heimel, J Alexander, Cazemier, J Leonie, Haak, Robin, Tran, T K Loan, Hsu, Ann T Y, Husic, Medina, Peri, Brandon D, Kirchberger, Lisa, Self, Matthew W, Roelfsema, Pieter, and Heimel, J Alexander
- Abstract
Object detection is an essential function of the visual system. Although the visual cortex plays an important role in object detection, the superior colliculus can support detection when the visual cortex is ablated or silenced. Moreover, it has been shown that superficial layers of mouse SC (sSC) encode visual features of complex objects, and that this code is not inherited from the primary visual cortex. This suggests that mouse sSC may provide a significant contribution to complex object vision. Here, we use optogenetics to show that mouse sSC is involved in figure detection based on differences in figure contrast, orientation, and phase. Additionally, our neural recordings show that in mouse sSC, image elements that belong to a figure elicit stronger activity than those same elements when they are part of the background. The discriminability of this neural code is higher for correct trials than for incorrect trials. Our results provide new insight into the behavioral relevance of the visual processing that takes place in sSC.
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- 2024
31. The 2-10 keV unabsorbed luminosity function of AGN from the XMM-Newton LSS, CDFS and COSMOS surveys
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Ranalli, P., Koulouridis, E., Georgantopoulos, I., Fotopoulou, S., Hsu, L. -T., Salvato, M., Comastri, A., Pierre, M., Cappelluti, N., Carrera, F. J., Chiappetti, L., Clerc, N., Gilli, R., Iwasawa, K., Pacaud, F., Paltani, S., Plionis, E., and Vignali, C.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The XMM-LSS, XMM-COSMOS, and XMM-CDFS surveys are complementary in terms of sky coverage and depth. Together, they form a clean sample with the least possible variance in instrument effective areas and PSF. Therefore this is one of the best samples available to determine the 2-10 keV luminosity function of AGN and its evolution. The samples and the relevant corrections for incompleteness are described. A total of 2887 AGN is used to build the LF in the luminosity interval 10^42-10^46 erg/s, and in the redshift interval 0.001-4. A new method to correct for absorption by considering the probability distribution for the column density conditioned on the hardness ratio is presented. The binned luminosity function and its evolution is determined with a variant of the Page-Carrera method, improved to include corrections for absorption and to account for the full probability distribution of photometric redshifts. Parametric models, namely a double power-law with LADE or LDDE evolution, are explored using Bayesian inference. We introduce the Watanabe-Akaike information criterion (WAIC) to compare the models and estimate their predictive power. Our data are best described by the LADE model, as hinted by the WAIC indicator. We also explore the 15-parameter extended LDDE model recently proposed by Ueda et al., and find that this extension is not supported by our data. The strength of our method is that it provides: un-absorbed non-parametric estimates; credible intervals for luminosity function parameters; model choice according to which one has more predictive power for future data., Comment: In press on A&A. The revised version corrects typos and the LF normalisations in tables 1,2,5 and figs.9-12, which were on an incorrect scale. Online material available at http://www.astro.lu.se/~piero/xlf/xlf-paper-tables2.tgz . The software is available on the author's website http://www.astro.lu.se/~piero/LFTools/index.html and on github: https://github.com/piero-ranalli/LFTools
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- 2015
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32. Abstract 12163: Liver Disease in Right Heart Failure: Not Just Fontan Associated
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Christmyer, Zane J, Van, Heidi, Tow, Clara, Ovchinsky, Nadia, and Hsu, Daphne T
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- 2022
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33. Abstract 12060: Ventricular Arterial Coupling - A Potential Biomarker in Children With Dilated Cardiomyopathy
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Gajendran, Induja, Hsu, Daphne T, Agalliu, Ilir, Mahgerefteh, Joseph, Lamour, Jacqueline M, and Bansal, Neha
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- 2022
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34. The X-ray luminosity function of Active Galactic Nuclei in the redshift interval z=3-5
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Georgakakis, A., Aird, J., Buchner, J., Salvato, M., Menzel, M. -L., Brandt, W. N., McGreer, I. D., Dwelly, T., Mountrichas, G., Koki, K., Georgantopoulos, I., Hsu, L. -T., Merloni, A., Liu, Z., Nandra, K., and Ross, N. P.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We combine deep X-ray survey data from the Chandra observatory and the wide-area/shallow XMM-XXL field to estimate the AGN X-ray luminosity function in the redshift range z=3-5. The sample consists of nearly 340 sources with either photometric (212) or spectroscopic (128) redshift in the above range. The combination of deep and shallow survey fields provides a luminosity baseline of three orders of magnitude, Lx(2-10keV)~1e43-1e46erg/s at z>3. We follow a Bayesian approach to determine the binned AGN space density and explore their evolution in a model-independent way. Our methodology accounts for Poisson errors in the determination of X-ray fluxes and uncertainties in photometric redshift estimates. We demonstrate that the latter is essential for unbiased measurement of space densities. We find that the AGN X-ray luminosity function evolves strongly between the redshift intervals z=3-4 and z=4-5. There is also suggestive evidence that the amplitude of this evolution is luminosity dependent. The space density of AGN with Lx<1e45erg/s drops by a factor of 5 between the redshift intervals above, while the evolution of brighter AGN appears to be milder. Comparison of our X-ray luminosity function with that of UV/optical selected QSOs at similar redshifts shows broad agreement at bright luminosities, Lx>1e45erg/s. The faint-end slope of UV/optical luminosity functions however, is steeper than for X-ray selected AGN. This implies that the type-I AGN fraction increases with decreasing luminosity at z>3, opposite to trends established at lower redshift. We also assess the significance of AGN in keeping the hydrogen ionised at high redshift. Our X-ray luminosity function yields ionising photon rate densities that are insufficient to keep the Universe ionised at redshift z>4. A source of uncertainty in this calculation is the escape fraction of UV photons for X-ray selected AGN., Comment: MNRAS accepted
- Published
- 2015
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35. Unconventional Fermi surface in an insulating state
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Tan, B. S., Hsu, Y. -T., Zeng, B., Hatnean, M. Ciomaga, Harrison, N., Zhu, Z., Hartstein, M., Kiourlappou, M., Srivastava, A., Johannes, M. D., Murphy, T. P., Park, J. -H., Balicas, L., Lonzarich, G. G., Balakrishnan, G., and Sebastian, Suchitra E.
- Subjects
Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons - Abstract
Insulators occur in more than one guise, a recent finding was a class of topological insulators, which host a conducting surface juxtaposed with an insulating bulk. Here we report the observation of an unusual insulating state with an electrically insulating bulk that simultaneously yields bulk quantum oscillations with characteristics of an unconventional Fermi liquid. We present quantum oscillation measurements of magnetic torque in high purity single crystals of the Kondo insulator SmB6, which reveal quantum oscillation frequencies characteristic of a large three-dimensional conduction electron Fermi surface similar to the metallic rare earth hexaborides such as PrB6 and LaB6. The quantum oscillation amplitude strongly increases at low temperatures, appearing strikingly at variance with conventional metallic behaviour.
- Published
- 2015
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36. AEGIS-X: Deep Chandra imaging of the Central Groth Strip
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Nandra, K., Laird, E. S., Aird, J. A., Salvato, M., Georgakakis, A., Barro, G., Gonzalez, P. G. Perez, Barmby, P., Chary, R. -R., Coil, A., Cooper, M. C., Davis, M., Dickinson, M., Faber, S. M., Fazio, G. G., Guhathakurta, P., Gwyn, S., Hsu, L. -T., Huang, J. -S., Ivison, R. J., Koo, D. C., Newman, J. A., Rangel, C., Yamada, T., and Willmer, C.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the results of deep \chandra\ imaging of the central region of the Extended Groth Strip, the AEGIS-X Deep (AEGIS-XD) survey. When combined with previous \chandra\ observations of a wider area of the strip, AEGIS-X Wide (AEGIS-XW; Laird et~al. 2009), these provide data to a nominal exposure depth of 800ks in the three central ACIS-I fields, a region of approximately $0.29$~deg$^{2}$. This is currently the third deepest X-ray survey in existence, a factor $\sim 2-3$ shallower than the Chandra Deep Fields (CDFs) but over an area $\sim 3$ times greater than each CDF. We present a catalogue of 937 point sources detected in the deep \chandra\ observations. We present identifications of our X-ray sources from deep ground-based, Spitzer, GALEX and HST imaging. Using a likelihood ratio analysis, we associate multi band counterparts for 929/937 of our X-ray sources, with an estimated 95~\% reliability, making the identification completeness approximately 94~\% in a statistical sense. Reliable spectroscopic redshifts for 353 of our X-ray sources are provided predominantly from Keck (DEEP2/3) and MMT Hectospec, so the current spectroscopic completeness is $\sim 38$~per cent. For the remainder of the X-ray sources, we compute photometric redshifts based on multi-band photometry in up to 35 bands from the UV to mid-IR. Particular attention is given to the fact that the vast majority the X-ray sources are AGN and require hybrid templates. Our photometric redshifts have mean accuracy of $\sigma=0.04$ and an outlier fraction of approximately 5\%, reaching $\sigma=0.03$ with less than 4\% outliers in the area covered by CANDELS . The X-ray, multi-wavelength photometry and redshift catalogues are made publicly available., Comment: 35 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in ApJS
- Published
- 2015
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37. Microplastics in dermatology: Potential effects on skin homeostasis
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Aristizabal, Miguel, primary, Jiménez‐Orrego, Katherine V., additional, Caicedo‐León, María D., additional, Páez‐Cárdenas, Laura S., additional, Castellanos‐García, Isabella, additional, Villalba‐Moreno, Dennys L., additional, Ramírez‐Zuluaga, Luisa V., additional, Hsu, Jeffrey T. S., additional, Jaller, Jose, additional, and Gold, Michael, additional
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
38. Stellar masses from the CANDELS survey: the GOODS-South and UDS fields
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Santini, P., Ferguson, H. C., Fontana, A., Mobasher, B., Barro, G., Castellano, M., Finkelstein, S. L., Grazian, A., Hsu, L. T., Lee, B., Lee, S. -K., Pforr, J., Salvato, M., Wiklind, T., Wuyts, S., Almaini, O., Cooper, M. C., Galametz, A., Weiner, B., Amorin, R., Boutsia, K., Conselice, C. J., Dahlen, T., Dickinson, M. E., Giavalisco, M., Grogin, N. A., Guo, Y., Hathi, N. P., Kocevski, D., Koekemoer, A. M., Kurczynski, P., Merlin, E., Mortlock, A., Newman, J. A., Paris, D., Pentericci, L., Simons, R., and Willner, S. P.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the public release of the stellar mass catalogs for the GOODS-S and UDS fields obtained using some of the deepest near-IR images available, achieved as part of the Cosmic Assembly Near-infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey (CANDELS) project. We combine the effort from ten different teams, who computed the stellar masses using the same photometry and the same redshifts. Each team adopted their preferred fitting code, assumptions, priors, and parameter grid. The combination of results using the same underlying stellar isochrones reduces the systematics associated with the fitting code and other choices. Thanks to the availability of different estimates, we can test the effect of some specific parameters and assumptions on the stellar mass estimate. The choice of the stellar isochrone library turns out to have the largest effect on the galaxy stellar mass estimates, resulting in the largest distributions around the median value (with a semi interquartile range larger than 0.1 dex). On the other hand, for most galaxies, the stellar mass estimates are relatively insensitive to the different parameterizations of the star formation history. The inclusion of nebular emission in the model spectra does not have a significant impact for the majority of galaxies (less than a factor of 2 for ~80% of the sample). Nevertheless, the stellar mass for the subsample of young galaxies (age < 100 Myr), especially in particular redshift ranges (e.g., 2.2 < z < 2.4, 3.2 < z < 3.6, and 5.5 < z < 6.5), can be seriously overestimated (by up to a factor of 10 for < 20 Myr sources) if nebular contribution is ignored., Comment: Accepted for publication by ApJ. Replaced to match the final version (two tables and one figure added in the appendix)
- Published
- 2014
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39. Predicting death in home care users: derivation and validation of the Risk Evaluation for Support: Predictions for Elder-Life in the Community Tool (RESPECT)
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Hsu, Amy T., Manuel, Douglas G., Spruin, Sarah, Bennett, Carol, Taljaard, Monica, Beach, Sarah, Sequeira, Yulric, Talarico, Robert, Chalifoux, Mathieu, Kobewka, Daniel, Costa, Andrew P., Bronskill, Susan E., and Tanuseputro, Peter
- Subjects
Home care -- Patient outcomes ,Aged patients -- Models -- Care and treatment ,Mortality -- Models -- Health aspects -- Canada ,Medical care -- Needs assessment ,Needs assessment -- Models -- Methods ,Health risk assessment -- Models -- Methods ,Health - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Prognostication tools that report personalized mortality risk and survival could improve discussions about end-of-life and advance care planning. We sought to develop and validate a mortality risk model for older adults with diverse care needs in home care using self-reportable information--the Risk Evaluation for Support: Predictions for Elder-Life in the Community Tool (RESPECT). METHODS: Using a derivation cohort that comprised adults living in Ontario, Canada, aged 50 years and older with at least 1 Resident Assessment Instrument for Home Care (RAI-HC) record between Jan. 1, 2007, and Dec. 31, 2012, we developed a mortality risk model. The primary outcome was mortality 6 months after a RAI-HC assessment. We used proportional hazards regression with robust standard errors to account for clustering by the individual. We validated this algorithm for a second cohort of users of home care who were assessed between Jan. 1 and Dec. 31, 2013. We used Kaplan-Meier survival curves to estimate the observed risk of death at 6 months for assessment of calibration and median survival. We constructed 61 risk groups based on incremental increases in the estimated median survival of about 3 weeks among adults at high risk and 3 months among adults at lower risk. RESULTS: The derivation and validation cohorts included 435 009 and 139 388 adults, respectively. We identified a total of 122 823 deaths within 6 months of a RAI-HC assessment in the derivation cohort. The mean predicted 6-month mortality risk was 10.8% (95% confidence interval [CI] 10.7%-10.8%) and ranged from 1.54% (95% CI 1.53%-1.54%) in the lowest to 98.1% (95% CI 98.1%-98.2%) in the highest risk group. Estimated median survival spanned from 28 days (11 to 84 d at the 25th and 75th percentiles) in the highest risk group to over 8 years (1925 to 3420 d) in the lowest risk group. The algorithm had a c-statistic of 0.753 (95% CI 0.750-0.756) in our validation cohort. INTERPRETATION: The RESPECT mortality risk prediction tool that makes use of readily available information can improve the identification of palliative and end-of-life care needs in a diverse older adult population receiving home care., Most people in high-income countries die of causes with progressive, predictable trajectories of decline. (1-4) Since 2000, the 3 leading causes of death in Canada--accounting for 55% of all deaths--have [...]
- Published
- 2021
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40. AEGIS-X: DEEP CHANDRA IMAGING OF THE CENTRAL GROTH STRIP
- Author
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Nandra, K, Laird, ES, Aird, JA, Salvato, M, Georgakakis, A, Barro, G, Perez-Gonzalez, PG, Barmby, P, Chary, R-R, Coil, A, Cooper, MC, Davis, M, Dickinson, M, Faber, SM, Fazio, GG, Guhathakurta, P, Gwyn, S, Hsu, L-T, Huang, J-S, Ivison, RJ, Koo, DC, Newman, JA, Rangel, C, Yamada, T, and Willmer, C
- Subjects
galaxies: active ,galaxies: nuclei ,surveys ,astro-ph.HE ,astro-ph.GA ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Atomic ,Molecular ,Nuclear ,Particle and Plasma Physics ,Physical Chemistry (incl. Structural) ,Astronomy & Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results of deep Chandra imaging of the central region of the Extended Groth Strip, the AEGIS-X Deep (AEGIS-XD) survey. When combined with previous Chandra observations of a wider area of the strip, AEGIS-X Wide (AEGIS-XW), these provide data to a nominal exposure depth of 800 ks in the three central ACIS-I fields, a region of approximately 0.29 deg2. This is currently the third deepest X-ray survey in existence; a factor shallower than the Chandra Deep Fields (CDFs), but over an area ∼3 times greater than each CDF. We present a catalog of 937 point sources detected in the deep Chandra observations, along with identifications of our X-ray sources from deep ground-based, Spitzer, GALEX, and Hubble Space Telescope imaging. Using a likelihood ratio analysis, we associate multiband counterparts for 929/937 of our X-ray sources, with an estimated 95% reliability, making the identification completeness approximately 94% in a statistical sense. Reliable spectroscopic redshifts for 353 of our X-ray sources are available predominantly from Keck (DEEP2/3) and MMT Hectospec, so the current spectroscopic completeness is ∼38%. For the remainder of the X-ray sources, we compute photometric redshifts based on multiband photometry in up to 35 bands from the UV to mid-IR. Particular attention is given to the fact that the vast majority the X-ray sources are active galactic nuclei and require hybrid templates. Our photometric redshifts have mean accuracy of and an outlier fraction of approximately 5%, reaching with less than 4% outliers in the area covered by CANDELS . The X-ray, multiwavelength photometry, and redshift catalogs are made publicly available.
- Published
- 2015
41. The association between varying levels of palliative care involvement on costs during terminal hospitalizations in Canada from 2012 to 2015
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Isenberg, Sarina R., Meaney, Christopher, May, Peter, Tanuseputro, Peter, Quinn, Kieran, Qureshi, Danial, Saunders, Stephanie, Webber, Colleen, Seow, Hsien, Downar, James, Smith, Thomas J., Husain, Amna, Lawlor, Peter G., Fowler, Rob, Lachance, Julie, McGrail, Kimberlyn, and Hsu, Amy T.
- Published
- 2021
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42. Field-induced long-lived supermolecules
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Huang, S. -J., Hsu, Y. -T., Lee, H., Chen, Y. -C., Volosniev, A. G., Zinner, N. T., and Wang, D. -W.
- Subjects
Condensed Matter - Quantum Gases - Abstract
We demonstrate that the long-lived bound states (super-molecules) can exist in the dilute limit when we tune the shape of effective potential between polar molecules by an external microwave field. Binding energies, average sizes, and phase diagrams for both s-orbital (bosons) and p-orbital (fermions) dimers are studied, together with bosonic trimer states. We explicitly show that the non- adiabatic transition rate can be easily tuned small for such ground state super-molecules, so that the system can be stable from collapse even near the associated potential resonance. Our results, therefore, suggest a feasible cold molecule system to investigate both novel few-body and many-body physics (for example, the p-wave BCS-BEC crossover for fermions and the paired condensate for bosons) that can not be easily accessed in single species atomic gases., Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures
- Published
- 2011
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43. Sagnac Interferometer Enhanced Particle Tracking in Optical Tweezers
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Taylor, M. A., Knittel, J., Hsu, M. T. L., Bachor, H. -A., and Bowen, W. P.
- Subjects
Physics - Optics - Abstract
A setup is proposed to enhance tracking of very small particles, by using optical tweezers embedded within a Sagnac interferometer. The achievable signal-to-noise ratio is shown to be enhanced over that for a standard optical tweezers setup. The enhancement factor increases asymptotically as the interferometer visibility approaches 100%, but is capped at a maximum given by the ratio of the trapping field intensity to the detector saturation threshold. For an achievable visibility of 99%, the signal-to-noise ratio is enhanced by a factor of 200, and the minimum trackable particle size is 2.4 times smaller than without the interferometer.
- Published
- 2010
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44. Programmable unitary spatial modes manipulation
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Morizur, J-F., Nicholls, Lachlan, Jian, Pu, Armstrong, Seiji, Treps, Nicolas, Hage, Boris, Hsu, Magnus T. L., Bowen, Warwick P., Janousek, Jiri, and Bachor, Hans A.
- Subjects
Physics - Optics ,Quantum Physics - Abstract
Free space propagation and conventional optical systems such as lenses and mirrors all perform spatial unitary transforms. However, the subset of transforms available through these conventional systems is limited in scope. We present here a unitary programmable mode converter (UPMC) capable of performing any spatial unitary transform of the light field. It is based on a succession of reflections on programmable deformable mirrors and free space propagation. We first show theoretically that a UPMC without limitations on resources can perform perfectly any transform. We then build an experimental implementation of the UPMC and show that, even when limited to three reflections on an array of 12 pixels, the UPMC is capable of performing single mode tranforms with an efficiency greater than 80% for the first 4 modes of the TEM basis.
- Published
- 2010
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45. Quantum limited particle sensing in optical tweezers
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Tay, Jian Wei, Hsu, Magnus T. L., and Bowen, Warwick P.
- Subjects
Quantum Physics - Abstract
Particle sensing in optical tweezers systems provides information on the position, velocity and force of the specimen particles. The conventional quadrant detection scheme is applied ubiquitously in optical tweezers experiments to quantify these parameters. In this paper we show that quadrant detection is non-optimal for particle sensing in optical tweezers and propose an alternative optimal particle sensing scheme based on spatial homodyne detection. A formalism for particle sensing in terms of transverse spatial modes is developed and numerical simulations of the efficacy of both quadrant and spatial homodyne detection are shown. We demonstrate that an order of magnitude improvement in particle sensing sensitivity can be achieved using spatial homodyne over quadrant detection., Comment: Submitted to Biophys J
- Published
- 2009
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46. Spatial state Stokes-operator squeezing and entanglement for optical beams
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Hsu, M. T. L., Bowen, W. P., and Lam, P. K.
- Subjects
Quantum Physics - Abstract
The transverse spatial attributes of an optical beam can be decomposed into the position, momentum and orbital angular momentum observables. The position and momentum of a beam is directly related to the quadrature amplitudes, whilst the orbital angular momentum is related to the polarization and spin variables. In this paper, we study the quantum properties of these spatial variables, using a representation in the Stokes-operator basis. We propose a spatial detection scheme to measure all three spatial variables and consequently, propose a scheme for the generation of spatial Stokes operator squeezing and entanglement., Comment: submitted
- Published
- 2009
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47. Age‐regulated cycling metabolites are relevant for behavior.
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Schwarz, Jessica E., Sengupta, Arjun, Guevara, Camilo, Barber, Annika F., Hsu, Cynthia T., Zhang, Shirley L., Weljie, Aalim, and Sehgal, Amita
- Subjects
CYCLING ,CLOCK genes ,PENTOSE phosphate pathway ,INTRACELLULAR calcium ,CIRCADIAN rhythms ,GLUCOSE-6-phosphate dehydrogenase ,SLEEP deprivation - Abstract
Circadian cycles of sleep:wake and gene expression change with age in all organisms examined. Metabolism is also under robust circadian regulation, but little is known about how metabolic cycles change with age and whether these contribute to the regulation of behavioral cycles. To address this gap, we compared cycling of metabolites in young and old Drosophila and found major age‐related variations. A significant model separated the young metabolic profiles by circadian timepoint, but could not be defined for the old metabolic profiles due to the greater variation in this dataset. Of the 159 metabolites measured in fly heads, we found 17 that cycle by JTK analysis in young flies and 17 in aged. Only four metabolites overlapped in the two groups, suggesting that cycling metabolites are distinct in young and old animals. Among our top cyclers exclusive to young flies were components of the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP). As the PPP is important for buffering reactive oxygen species, and overexpression of glucose‐6‐phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD), a key component of the PPP, was previously shown to extend lifespan in Drosophila, we asked if this manipulation also affects sleep:wake cycles. We found that overexpression in circadian clock neurons decreases sleep in association with an increase in cellular calcium and mitochondrial oxidation, suggesting that altering PPP activity affects neuronal activity. Our findings elucidate the importance of metabolic regulation in maintaining patterns of neural activity, and thereby sleep:wake cycles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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48. A single-phase full-bridge soft-switching inverter circuit with an auxiliary resonant circuit
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Yang, C C, primary, Zeng, T H, additional, Huang, C W, additional, and Hsu, W T, additional
- Published
- 2023
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49. Delay of Squeezing and Entanglement using Electromagnetically Induced Transparency in a Vapour Cell
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Hétet, G., Buchler, B. C., Glöckl, O., Hsu, M. T. L., Akulshin, A. M., Bachor, H. -A., and Lam, P. K.
- Subjects
Quantum Physics - Abstract
We demonstrate experimentally the delay of squeezed light and entanglement using Electromagnetically Induced Transparency (EIT) in a rubidium vapour cell. We perform quadrature amplitude measurements of the probe field and find no appreciable excess noise from the EIT process. From an input squeezing of 3.1 dB at low sideband frequencies, we observed the survival of 2 dB of squeezing at the EIT output. By splitting the squeezed light on a beam-splitter, we generated biased entanglement between two beams. We transmit one of the entangled beams through the EIT cell and correlate the quantum statistics of this beam with its entangled counterpart. We experimentally observed a 2 $\mu$s delay of the biased entanglement and obtained a preserved degree of wavefunction inseparability of 0.71, below the unity value for separable states., Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures
- Published
- 2008
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50. Quantum study of information delay in electromagetically induced transparency
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Hsu, Magnus T. L., Hetet, Gabriel, Glockl, Oliver, Longdell, Jevon J., Buchler, Ben C., Bachor, Hans-A., and Lam, Ping Koy
- Subjects
Quantum Physics - Abstract
Using electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT), it is possible to delay and store light in atomic ensembles. Theoretical modelling and recent experiments have suggested that the EIT storage mechanism can be used as a memory for quantum information. We present experiments that quantify the noise performance of an EIT system for conjugate amplitude and phase quadratures. It is shown that our EIT system adds excess noise to the delayed light that has not hitherto been predicted by published theoretical modelling. In analogy with other continuous-variable quantum information systems, the performance of our EIT system is characterised in terms of conditional variance and signal transfer., Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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