4,785 results on '"DAUM, A"'
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2. Oil on Stream! A History of Interstate Oil Pipe Line Company, 1909–1959 by John L. Loos (review)
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Daum, Arnold R.
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- 2023
3. A Century of Oil and Gas in Books: A Descriptive Bibliography comp. by E. B. Swanson (review)
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Daum, Arnold R.
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- 2023
4. Adults Adapt to Child Speech in Causative Semantics
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Guanghao You, Moritz M. Daum, and Sabine Stoll
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Causation is a core feature of human cognition and language. How children learn about intricate causal meanings is yet unresolved. Here, we focus on how children learn verbs that express causation. Such verbs, known as lexical causatives (e.g., break and raise), lack explicit morphosyntactic markers indicating causation, thus requiring that the child generalizes the causal meaning from the context. The language addressed to children presumably plays a crucial role in this learning process. Hence, we tested whether adults adapt their use of lexical causatives to children when talking to them in day-to-day interactions. We analyzed naturalistic longitudinal data from 12 children in the Manchester corpus (spanning from 20 to 36 months of age). To detect semantic generalization, we employed a network approach with semantics learned from cross-situational contexts. Our results show an increasing trend in the expansion of causative semantics, observable in both child speech and child-directed speech. Adults consistently maintain somewhat more intricate causative semantic networks compared to children. However, both groups display evolving patterns. Around 28-30 months of age, children undergo a reduction in the degree of causative generalization, followed by a slightly time-lagged adjustment by adults in their speech directed to children. These findings substantiate adults' adaptation in child-directed speech, extending to semantics. They highlight child-directed speech as a highly adaptive and subconscious teaching tool that facilitates the dynamic processes of language acquisition.
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- 2024
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5. Measurement of groomed event shape observables in deep-inelastic electron-proton scattering at HERA
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The H1 collaboration, Andreev, V., Arratia, M., Baghdasaryan, A., Baty, A., Begzsuren, K., Bolz, A., Boudry, V., Brandt, G., Britzger, D., Buniatyan, A., Bystritskaya, L., Campbell, A. J., Avila, K. B. Cantun, Cerny, K., Chekelian, V., Chen, Z., Contreras, J. G., Cvach, J., Dainton, J. B., Daum, K., Deshpande, A., Diaconu, C., Drees, A., Eckerlin, G., Egli, S., Elsen, E., Favart, L., Fedotov, A., Feltesse, J., Fleischer, M., Fomenko, A., Gal, C., Gayler, J., Goerlich, L., Gogitidze, N., Gouzevitch, M., Grab, C., Greenshaw, T., Grindhammer, G., Haidt, D., Henderson, R. C. W., Hessler, J., Hladký, J., Hoffmann, D., Horisberger, R., Hreus, T., Huber, F., Jacobs, P. M., Jacquet, M., Janssen, T., Jung, A. W., Katzy, J., Kiesling, C., Klein, M., Kleinwort, C., Klest, H. T., Kogler, R., Kostka, P., Kretzschmar, J., Krücker, D., Krüger, K., Landon, M. P. J., Lange, W., Laycock, P., Lee, S. H., Levonian, S., Li, W., Lin, J., Lipka, K., List, B., List, J., Lobodzinski, B., Long, O. R., Malinovski, E., Martyn, H. -U., Maxfield, S. J., Mehta, A., Meyer, A. B., Meyer, J., Mikocki, S., Mikuni, V. M., Mondal, M. M., Müller, K., Nachman, B., Naumann, Th., Newman, P. R., Niebuhr, C., Nowak, G., Olsson, J. E., Ozerov, D., Park, S., Pascaud, C., Patel, G. D., Perez, E., Petrukhin, A., Picuric, I., Pitzl, D., Polifka, R., Preins, S., Radescu, V., Raicevic, N., Ravdandorj, T., Reichelt, D., Reimer, P., Rizvi, E., Robmann, P., Roosen, R., Rostovtsev, A., Rotaru, M., Sankey, D. P. C., Sauter, M., Sauvan, E., Schmitt, S., Schmookler, B. A., Schnell, G., Schoeffel, L., Schöning, A., Schumann, S., Sefkow, F., Shushkevich, S., Soloviev, Y., Sopicki, P., South, D., Specka, A., Steder, M., Stella, B., Stöcker, L., Straumann, U., Sun, C., Sykora, T., Thompson, P. D., Acosta, F. Torales, Traynor, D., Tseepeldorj, B., Tu, Z., Tustin, G., Valkárová, A., Vallée, C., Van Mechelen, P., Wegener, D., Wünsch, E., Žáček, J., Zhang, J., Zhang, Z., Žlebčík, R., Zohrabyan, H., and Zomer, F.
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High Energy Physics - Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The H1 Collaboration at HERA reports the first measurement of groomed event shape observables in deep inelastic electron-proton scattering (DIS) at $\sqrt{s}=319$ GeV, using data recorded between the years 2003 and 2007 with an integrated luminosity of $351$ pb$^{-1}$. Event shapes provide incisive probes of perturbative and non-perturbative QCD. Grooming techniques have been used for jet measurements in hadronic collisions; this paper presents the first application of grooming to DIS data. The analysis is carried out in the Breit frame, utilizing the novel Centauro jet clustering algorithm that is designed for DIS event topologies. Events are required to have squared momentum-transfer $Q^2 > 150$ GeV$^2$ and inelasticity $ 0.2 < y < 0.7$. We report measurements of the production cross section of groomed event 1-jettiness and groomed invariant mass for several choices of grooming parameter. Monte Carlo model calculations and analytic calculations based on Soft Collinear Effective Theory are compared to the measurements., Comment: 32 pages, 17 tables, 7 figures, version as accepted by EPJ C
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- 2024
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6. Observation and differential cross section measurement of neutral current DIS events with an empty hemisphere in the Breit frame
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The H1 collaboration, Andreev, V., Arratia, M., Baghdasaryan, A., Baty, A., Begzsuren, K., Bolz, A., Boudry, V., Brandt, G., Britzger, D., Buniatyan, A., Bystritskaya, L., Campbell, A. J., Avila, K. B. Cantun, Cerny, K., Chekelian, V., Chen, Z., Contreras, J. G., Cvach, J., Dainton, J. B., Daum, K., Deshpande, A., Diaconu, C., Drees, A., Eckerlin, G., Egli, S., Elsen, E., Favart, L., Fedotov, A., Feltesse, J., Fleischer, M., Fomenko, A., Gal, C., Gayler, J., Goerlich, L., Gogitidze, N., Gouzevitch, M., Grab, C., Greenshaw, T., Grindhammer, G., Haidt, D., Henderson, R. C. W., Hessler, J., Hladký, J., Hoffmann, D., Horisberger, R., Hreus, T., Huber, F., Jacobs, P. M., Jacquet, M., Janssen, T., Jung, A. W., Katzy, J., Kiesling, C., Klein, M., Kleinwort, C., Klest, H. T., Kluth, S., Kogler, R., Kostka, P., Kretzschmar, J., Krücker, D., Krüger, K., Landon, M. P. J., Lange, W., Laycock, P., Lee, S. H., Levonian, S., Li, W., Lin, J., Lipka, K., List, B., List, J., Lobodzinski, B., Long, O. R., Malinovski, E., Martyn, H. -U., Maxfield, S. J., Mehta, A., Meyer, A. B., Meyer, J., Mikocki, S., Mikuni, V. M., Mondal, M. M., Müller, K., Nachman, B., Naumann, Th., Newman, P. R., Niebuhr, C., Nowak, G., Olsson, J. E., Ozerov, D., Park, S., Pascaud, C., Patel, G. D., Perez, E., Petrukhin, A., Picuric, I., Pitzl, D., Polifka, R., Preins, S., Radescu, V., Raicevic, N., Ravdandorj, T., Reichelt, D., Reimer, P., Rizvi, E., Robmann, P., Roosen, R., Rostovtsev, A., Rotaru, M., Sankey, D. P. C., Sauter, M., Sauvan, E., Schmitt, S., Schmookler, B. A., Schnell, G., Schoeffel, L., Schöning, A., Schumann, S., Sefkow, F., Shushkevich, S., Soloviev, Y., Sopicki, P., South, D., Specka, A., Steder, M., Stella, B., Stöcker, L., Straumann, U., Sun, C., Sykora, T., Thompson, P. D., Acosta, F. Torales, Traynor, D., Tseepeldorj, B., Tu, Z., Tustin, G., Valkárová, A., Vallée, C., Van Mechelen, P., Wegener, D., Wünsch, E., Žáček, J., Zhang, J., Zhang, Z., Žlebčík, R., Zohrabyan, H., and Zomer, F.
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High Energy Physics - Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The Breit frame provides a natural frame to analyze lepton-proton scattering events. In this reference frame, the parton model hard interactions between a quark and an exchanged boson defines the coordinate system such that the struck quark is back-scattered along the virtual photon momentum direction. In Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD), higher order perturbative or non-perturbative effects can change this picture drastically. As Bjorken-$x$ decreases below one half, a rather peculiar event signature is predicted with increasing probability, where no radiation is present in one of the two Breit-frame hemispheres and all emissions are to be found in the other hemisphere. At higher orders in $\alpha_s$ or in the presence of soft QCD effects, predictions of the rate of these events are far from trivial, and that motivates measurements with real data. We report on the first observation of the empty current hemisphere events in electron-proton collisions at the HERA collider using data recorded with the H1 detector at a center-of-mass energy of 319 GeV. The fraction of inclusive neutral-current DIS events with an empty hemisphere is found to be $0.0112 \pm 3.9\,\%_\text{stat} \pm 4.5\,\%_\text{syst} \pm 1.6\,\%_\text{mod}$ in the selected kinematic region of $150< Q^2<1500$ GeV$^2$ and inelasticity $0.14< y<0.7$. The data sample corresponds to an integrated luminosity of 351.1 pb$^{-1}$, sufficient to enable differential cross section measurements of these events. The results show an enhanced discriminating power at lower Bjorken-$x$ among different Monte Carlo event generator predictions., Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, 2 Tables. This version as accepted for publication
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- 2024
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7. Neurospora intermedia from a traditional fermented food enables waste-to-food conversion
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Maini Rekdal, Vayu, Villalobos-Escobedo, José Manuel, Rodriguez-Valeron, Nabila, Olaizola Garcia, Mikel, Prado Vásquez, Diego, Rosales, Alexander, Sörensen, Pia M., Baidoo, Edward E. K., Calheiros de Carvalho, Ana, Riley, Robert, Lipzen, Anna, He, Guifen, Yan, Mi, Haridas, Sajeet, Daum, Christopher, Yoshinaga, Yuko, Ng, Vivian, Grigoriev, Igor V., Munk, Rasmus, Wijaya, Christofora Hanny, Nuraida, Lilis, Damayanti, Isty, Cruz-Morales, Pablo, and Keasling, Jay. D.
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- 2024
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8. Incident Beamline Design for a Modern Cold Triple Axis Spectrometer at the High Flux Isotope Reactor
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Granroth, G. E., Daum, M., Aczel, A. A., Williams, T. J., Winn, B., Fernandez-Baca, J. A., Mourigal, M., and Lumsden, M. D.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
A modern cold triple axis spectrometer is being planned for the High Flux Isotope Reactor (HFIR) at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Here, we describe the design of an incident beamline that will put a flux of $\sim 10^8\mathrm{\frac{n}{cm^2 s}}$ on a sample with an area of 2 cm x 2 cm. It takes current physical constraints at HFIR into account and it can accommodate both single and multiplexed analyzer-detector secondary spectrometers and large superconducting magnets. The proposed incident beamline includes a multi-channel guide with horizontal focusing, a neutron velocity selector, components to facilitate an incident beam polarization option, and a double-focusing pyrolytic graphite monochromator. This work describes the process of optimizing the guide system and monochromator and summarizes the expected performance of the incident beamline for non-polarized operation.
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- 2024
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9. Monte-Carlo ray-tracing studies of multiplexed prismatic graphite analyzers for the cold-neutron triple-axis spectrometer at the High Flux Isotope Reactor
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Desai, Adit S., Williams, Travis J., Daum, Marcus, Sala, Gabriele, Aczel, Adam A., Granroth, Garrett E., and Mourigal, Martin
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Condensed Matter - Materials Science ,Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons - Abstract
A modern cold triple-axis spectrometer to study quantum condensed matter systems is planned for the High Flux Isotope Reactor (HFIR) at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Here, we describe the conceptual principles and design of a secondary spectrometer using a multiplexed, prismatic analyzer system relying on graphite crystals and inspired by the successful implementation of the Continuous Angle Multiple Energy Analysis (CAMEA) spectrometers at the Paul Scherrer Institute. This project is currently known as MANTA for Multi-analyzer Neutron Triple-Axis. We report Monte-Carlo ray-tracing simulations on a simple but realistic sample scattering kernel to further illustrate the prismatic analyzer concept's workings, calibration, and performance. Then, we introduce a new statistical analysis approach based on the prismatic analyzer concept to improve the number of final energies measured on the spectrometer. We also study possible evolutions in the CAMEA design relevant for MANTA., Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures
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- 2023
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10. Introduction
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Daum, Andreas W., Hake, Sabine, and Prager, Brad
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- 2016
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11. Physical Fitness Testing Concerns: Bullying and Inclusion
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Bittner, Melissa, Daum, David N., Moore, Tonya, Patterson, Debra, Wilson-Graham, Dianne, and Suppe, Patricia
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California. Department of Education -- Analysis -- Surveys ,United States. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention -- Surveys -- Analysis ,Disability -- Surveys -- Analysis ,Bullying -- Surveys -- Analysis ,Disabled students -- Surveys ,Discrimination in education -- Analysis -- Surveys ,Physical fitness -- Surveys -- Analysis ,Education ,Sports and fitness ,United Kingdom. Gender Recognition Act 2004 - Abstract
In February 2020, California Governor Gavin Newsom's proposed budget recommended suspending the state-mandated physical fitness test (Fitness Gram*) for three years due to concerns over bullying and test discrimination against students who identify as gender non-binary and students with disabilities. The purpose of this study was to gain an understanding of California physical educators' perceptions of the state-mandated physical fitness assessment. Snowball sampling was used to recruit 1,082 participants who completed a survey with quantitative and open-ended questions. Analysis of the open-ended questions indicated the two main themes were 'how to improve fitness testing' and 'challenges in fitness testing.' It is imperative to consider the needs of all students, including those who identify as gender non-binary or have a disability, and ensure physical fitness testing is conducted in a, Introduction The FitnessGram[R] was developed by The Cooper Institute and is used to identify student progress related to the Healthy Fitness Zone[R]. It is estimated that FitnessGram[R] is used by [...]
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- 2024
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12. A surgical activity model of laparoscopic cholecystectomy for co-operation with collaborative robots
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Younis, R., Yamlahi, A., Bodenstedt, S., Scheikl, PM., Kisilenko, A., Daum, M., Schulze, A., Wise, P. A., Nickel, F., Mathis-Ullrich, F., Maier-Hein, L., Müller-Stich, BP., Speidel, S., Distler, M., Weitz, J., and Wagner, M.
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- 2024
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13. Microbial Metagenomes Across a Complete Phytoplankton Bloom Cycle: High-Resolution Sampling Every 4 Hours Over 22 Days
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Brook L. Nunn, Emma Timmins-Schiffman, Miranda C. Mudge, Deanna L. Plubell, Gabriella Chebli, Julia Kubanek, Michael Riffle, William S. Noble, Elizabeth Harvey, Tasman A. Nunn, Marcel Huntemann, Alicia Clum, Brian Foster, Bryce Foster, Simon Roux, Krishnaveni Palaniappan, Supratim Mukherjee, T. B. K. Reddy, Chris Daum, Alex Copeland, I-Min A. Chen, Natalia N. Ivanova, Nikos C. Kyrpides, Tijana Glavina del Rio, and Emiley A. Eloe-Fadrosh
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Science - Abstract
Abstract In May and June of 2021, marine microbial samples were collected for DNA sequencing in East Sound, WA, USA every 4 hours for 22 days. This high temporal resolution sampling effort captured the last 3 days of a Rhizosolenia sp. bloom, the initiation and complete bloom cycle of Chaetoceros socialis (8 days), and the following bacterial bloom (2 days). Metagenomes were completed on the time series, and the dataset includes 128 size-fractionated microbial samples (0.22–1.2 µm), providing gene abundances for the dominant members of bacteria, archaea, and viruses. This dataset also has time-matched nutrient analyses, flow cytometry data, and physical parameters of the environment at a single point of sampling within a coastal ecosystem that experiences regular bloom events, facilitating a range of modeling efforts that can be leveraged to understand microbial community structure and their influences on the growth, maintenance, and senescence of phytoplankton blooms.
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- 2024
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14. Simply the green: Urban refuges
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Johanna L. Berger, Sonja N.K. Daum, and Margarita Hartlieb
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Arthropods ,City ,Environmental ethics ,Green space ,Humans ,Insects ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Large refugia and small refuges have always been crucial for species survival, particularly during periods like the Ice Age. When their original habitats became uninhabitable, they provided important shelters in space and time. Drawing from a biological and philosophical perspective, we propose creating and preserving refuges as socio-ecological solutions in an epoch primarily shaped by human activity, the Anthropocene. Our focus lies on green refuges within urban settings, given that urbanization is one of the large drivers of insect decline and has adverse effects on humans, such as increased heat. Refuges can be beneficial for both biodiversity and human well-being.After clarifying the relevant terminology on four levels of abstraction, we conducted a systematic biological literature review - as a case study. Here, we summarize the current state of research on the effects of unmown refuges on insects and spiders. The mere existence of refuges proved beneficial for arthropods, with over 70 % of studies reporting positive responses among these species.While insects and spiders have specific habitat requirements, humans are able to create a habitable environment for themselves. However, ecological crises for humans and arthropods are increasing, as are human populations. Therefore, refuges offer a way to address both ecological and social challenges simultaneously, enhancing biodiversity and human well-being.
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- 2024
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15. Immunolocalization and Ultrastructure Show Ingestion of Cry Protein Expressed in Glycine max by Heterodera glycines and Its Mode of Action
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R. Howard Berg, Theodore W. Kahn, Michael T. McCarville, Jayme Williams, Kirk J. Czymmek, and Julia Daum
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Bacillus thuringiensis proteins ,Cry14Ab ,enteric coated membranes ,immunogold ,intestine ,lysis ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 ,Botany ,QK1-989 - Abstract
Great interest exists in developing a transgenic trait that controls the economically important soybean (Glycine max) pest, soybean cyst nematode (SCN, Heterodera glycines), due to its adaptation to native resistance. Soybean plants expressing the Bacillus thuringiensis delta-endotoxin, Cry14Ab, were recently demonstrated to control SCN in both growth chamber and field testing. In that communication, ingestion of the Cry14Ab toxin by SCN second stage juveniles (J2s) was demonstrated using fluorescently labeled Cry14Ab in an in vitro assay. Here, we show that consistent with expectations for a Cry toxin, Cry14Ab has a mode of action unique from the native resistance sources Peking and PI 88788. Further, we demonstrate in planta the ingestion and localization of the Cry14Ab toxin in the midgut of nematodes feeding on roots expressing Cry14Ab using immunogold labeling and transmission electron microscopy. We observed immunolocalization of the toxin and resulting intestinal damage primarily in the microvillus-like structure (MvL)-containing region of the midgut intestine but not in nematodes feeding on roots lacking toxin. This demonstrated that Cry14Ab was taken up by the J2 SCN, presumably through the feeding tube within the plant root cell that serves as its feeding site. This suggests that relatively large proteins can be taken up through the feeding tube. Electron microscopy showed that Cry14Ab caused lysis of the midgut MvL membrane and eventual degradation of the MvL and the lysate, forming particulate aggregates. The accumulated electron-dense aggregate in the posterior midgut intestine was not observed in SCN in nonCry14Ab-expressing plants. [Figure: see text] Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). This is an open access article distributed under the CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license.
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- 2024
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16. Student ultrasound education, current view and controversies. Role of Artificial Intelligence, Virtual Reality and telemedicine
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Nils Daum, Michael Blaivas, Adrian Goudie, Beatrice Hoffmann, Christian Jenssen, Ricarda Neubauer, Florian Recker, Tudor Voicu Moga, Constantinos Zervides, and Christoph Frank Dietrich
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Artificial Intelligence ,Education ,Students ,Telemedicine ,Ultrasound ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 - Abstract
Abstract The digitization of medicine will play an increasingly significant role in future years. In particular, telemedicine, Virtual Reality (VR) and innovative Artificial Intelligence (AI) systems offer tremendous potential in imaging diagnostics and are expected to shape ultrasound diagnostics and teaching significantly. However, it is crucial to consider the advantages and disadvantages of employing these new technologies and how best to teach and manage their use. This paper provides an overview of telemedicine, VR and AI in student ultrasound education, presenting current perspectives and controversies.
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- 2024
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17. Mogamulizumab and Concomitant Hypofractionated Low-Dose Total Skin Electron Beam Therapy (2 × 4 Gy) in Cutaneous T-Cell Lymphoma: Proof of Principle, Report of Two Cases
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Mathias Oymanns, Michael Daum-Marzian, and Chalid Assaf
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mogamulizumab ,total skin electron beam therapy ,cutaneous T-cell lymphoma ,Sézary syndrome ,combination therapy ,CTCL ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Patients with advanced-stage mycosis fungoides (MF IIB–IVB) and Sézary syndrome (SS) have poor prognoses, with survival ranging from 4.7 to 1.4 years depending on the disease stage. There is a need for therapeutic approaches that lead to long-lasting responses and improved quality of life and survival. Mogamulizumab, a humanized antibody against the CCR4 molecule, and low-dose total skin electron beam therapy (TSEBT) are two known established treatments for MF and SS as a monotherapy. However, little is known about the potential additive effect on the combination of both treatments. We report here for the first time the concurrent use of low-dose hypofractionated TSEBT (2 × 4 Gy) with mogamulizumab. Based on two relapsed/refractory and advanced-stage CTCL patients, we show that this combination may be well tolerated in advanced-stage MF or SS and may potentially lead to an additive treatment effect on response times, particularly in the skin and blood within two weeks. We propose that this combination may be a treatment option for patients with SS. Further research is needed to understand the efficacy and tolerability profile of this therapeutic combination and to determine if there is an additive effect of the combination on the response rates when compared with the monotherapy.
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- 2024
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18. Coassembly and binning of a twenty-year metagenomic time-series from Lake Mendota
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Tiffany Oliver, Neha Varghese, Simon Roux, Frederik Schulz, Marcel Huntemann, Alicia Clum, Brian Foster, Bryce Foster, Robert Riley, Kurt LaButti, Robert Egan, Patrick Hajek, Supratim Mukherjee, Galina Ovchinnikova, T. B. K. Reddy, Sara Calhoun, Richard D. Hayes, Robin R. Rohwer, Zhichao Zhou, Chris Daum, Alex Copeland, I-Min A. Chen, Natalia N. Ivanova, Nikos C. Kyrpides, Nigel J. Mouncey, Tijana Glavina del Rio, Igor V. Grigoriev, Steven Hofmeyr, Leonid Oliker, Katherine Yelick, Karthik Anantharaman, Katherine D. McMahon, Tanja Woyke, and Emiley A. Eloe-Fadrosh
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Science - Abstract
Abstract The North Temperate Lakes Long-Term Ecological Research (NTL-LTER) program has been extensively used to improve understanding of how aquatic ecosystems respond to environmental stressors, climate fluctuations, and human activities. Here, we report on the metagenomes of samples collected between 2000 and 2019 from Lake Mendota, a freshwater eutrophic lake within the NTL-LTER site. We utilized the distributed metagenome assembler MetaHipMer to coassemble over 10 terabases (Tbp) of data from 471 individual Illumina-sequenced metagenomes. A total of 95,523,664 contigs were assembled and binned to generate 1,894 non-redundant metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) with ≥50% completeness and ≤10% contamination. Phylogenomic analysis revealed that the MAGs were nearly exclusively bacterial, dominated by Pseudomonadota (Proteobacteria, N = 623) and Bacteroidota (N = 321). Nine eukaryotic MAGs were identified by eukCC with six assigned to the phylum Chlorophyta. Additionally, 6,350 high-quality viral sequences were identified by geNomad with the majority classified in the phylum Uroviricota. This expansive coassembled metagenomic dataset provides an unprecedented foundation to advance understanding of microbial communities in freshwater ecosystems and explore temporal ecosystem dynamics.
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- 2024
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19. Struggles and Successes of Pre-Service Teachers When Implementing a Student-Centered Curriculum in an After-School Program
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Dominique Banville, Risto Marttinen, David Daum, and Kelly Johnston
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The purpose of the study is to examine pre-service teachers (PSTs)' experience in implementing a student-centered curriculum integrating physical activity and literacy in an after-school program. Field notes along with journal and interview data from nine PSTs were analyzed using the constant comparison method. PSTs were able to look at the goal for the lesson and create learning opportunities that were a blend of the written curriculum and the transposition of that curriculum based on their and their students' knowledge to create and teach the lesson. The experience allowed them to improve their pedagogical skills and suggests implications for how teacher educators might partner with after-school programs for service learning opportunities that benefit PSTs as well as K-12 students.
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- 2024
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20. Entering the Digital Research Age: Investigating the Effectiveness of Visual Digital Tools in Agricultural Research
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Laura Kawerau, Athena Birkenberg, Thomas Daum, Cosmas Alfred Butele, and Regina Birner
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Agricultural studies mainly rely on quantitative research approaches. Despite growing interest in and uptake of qualitative, participatory, and visual methods due to their perceived advantages in gathering in-depth information and empowering participants, visual-digital research methods have yet to be largely applied. In our study on adaptation strategies to climate change among smallholder farmers in Uganda we compared different data collection methods, including: semi-structured interviews with manual note-taking, participatory impact diagrams, and adapted photovoice and cellphilm methodologies.
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- 2024
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21. Academic Achievement among NCAA Division 2 Student-Athletes and Non-Athletes
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Holden Thomas Daum, Luke Thomas Daum, and Shane D. Scholten
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NCAA ,academics ,student-athletes ,traditional students ,Augustana University ,achievement ,Urban groups. The city. Urban sociology ,HT101-395 - Abstract
There is a lack of published research on the evaluation of academic success among student-athletes in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division 2 (D2) institutions. Our study focused on comparing academic performance and career prospects between student-athletes and non-athletes (traditional students) at a D2 university. A survey measuring academic and career-related variables was administered to 170 participants, with 92 (54%) being student-athletes and 78 (46%) being non-athlete students. Our findings revealed no statistically significant differences between the two groups in terms of study hours, grade point average, and academic motivation. Moreover, there were no disparities in declared majors, expected graduation timelines, and career aspirations. The academic performance of student-athletes was found to be similar to that of their non-athlete counterparts. Most D2 student-athletes did not foresee pursuing professional sports careers, highlighting the importance of academic achievement in their overall career objectives.
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- 2024
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22. Small nucleolar RNA expression profiles: A potential prognostic biomarker for non-viral Hepatocellular carcinoma
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Venkata Ramana Mallela, Phanindra Babu Kasi, Dattatrya Shetti, Andriy Trailin, Lenka Cervenkova, Richard Palek, Ondřej Daum, Vaclav Liska, Kari Hemminki, and Filip Ambrozkiewicz
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Small nucleolar RNA ,Hepatocellular carcinoma ,Prognostic marker ,Non-viral HCC snoRA47 and snoRD126 ,Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a challenging cancer with high mortality rates, limited predictability, and a lack of effective prognostic indicators. The relationship between small nucleolar RNAs (snoRNAs) and HCC is poorly understood. Based on the literature data, snoRNA studies were primarily focused on viral-related causes of HCC, such as Hepatitis B or C viruses (HBV or HCV). According to these studies, we selected four snoRNAs (snoRA12, snoRA47, snoRA80E, and snoRD126) for exploration in the context of non-viral-related causes, including non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), non-alcoholic fatty liver diseases (NAFLD), and alcohol steatohepatitis. The primary goal of this study was to gain a deeper understanding of how snoRNA expression affects patient outcomes and whether it can serve as a prognostic tool for non-viral HCC. We conducted a study on tissue samples from 35 HCC patients who had undergone resection at Pilsen University Hospital. SnoRA12, snoRA47, snoRA80E, and snoRD126 were studied by quantitative real-time PCR (qRT-PCR) in tumor and non-tumor adjacent tissue (NTAT) samples. Kaplan-Meier analysis was performed to assess the association of snoRNAs expression levels with patient outcomes: time to recurrence (TTR), disease-free survival (DFS) and overall survival (OS). In tumor tissues, snoRA12, snoRA47 and snoRA80E were upregulated, while snoRD-126 was downregulated compared to NTAT. Low expression of snoRA47 and snoRD126 in patients was associated with longer TTR and DFS. The individual expression of snoRA12 and snoRA80E did not show associations with TTR and DFS. However, a combination of medium expression of snoRD126 and snoRA80E was associated with longer TTR and DFS, while high and low expressions of the combined snoRA126 and snoRA80E showed no significant association with TTR, DFS, and OS. Conversely, a combination of high expression of snoRA12 and snoRD126 was associated with shorter TTR. In conclusion, the results indicate that snoRA47 and snoRD126 exhibit good prognostic power specifically for non-viral related HCC. Both snoRA47 and snoRD126 showed favorable prognostication in single and combined analysis when assessing patient outcomes. Also, in combination analysis, snoRA80E and snoRA12 showed favorable prognosis, but not alone.
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- 2024
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23. Microbial Metagenomes Across a Complete Phytoplankton Bloom Cycle: High-Resolution Sampling Every 4 Hours Over 22 Days
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Nunn, Brook L., Timmins-Schiffman, Emma, Mudge, Miranda C., Plubell, Deanna L., Chebli, Gabriella, Kubanek, Julia, Riffle, Michael, Noble, William S., Harvey, Elizabeth, Nunn, Tasman A., Huntemann, Marcel, Clum, Alicia, Foster, Brian, Foster, Bryce, Roux, Simon, Palaniappan, Krishnaveni, Mukherjee, Supratim, Reddy, T. B. K., Daum, Chris, Copeland, Alex, Chen, I-Min A., Ivanova, Natalia N., Kyrpides, Nikos C., Glavina del Rio, Tijana, and Eloe-Fadrosh, Emiley A.
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- 2024
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24. Coassembly and binning of a twenty-year metagenomic time-series from Lake Mendota
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Oliver, Tiffany, Varghese, Neha, Roux, Simon, Schulz, Frederik, Huntemann, Marcel, Clum, Alicia, Foster, Brian, Foster, Bryce, Riley, Robert, LaButti, Kurt, Egan, Robert, Hajek, Patrick, Mukherjee, Supratim, Ovchinnikova, Galina, Reddy, T. B. K., Calhoun, Sara, Hayes, Richard D., Rohwer, Robin R., Zhou, Zhichao, Daum, Chris, Copeland, Alex, Chen, I-Min A., Ivanova, Natalia N., Kyrpides, Nikos C., Mouncey, Nigel J., del Rio, Tijana Glavina, Grigoriev, Igor V., Hofmeyr, Steven, Oliker, Leonid, Yelick, Katherine, Anantharaman, Karthik, McMahon, Katherine D., Woyke, Tanja, and Eloe-Fadrosh, Emiley A.
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- 2024
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25. Factors associated with a history of critical wandering among Medic-Alert subscribers
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Cruz, Antonio Miguel, Perez, Hector, Rutledge, Emily, Daum, Christine, and Liu, Lili
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- 2024
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- View/download PDF
26. CryoEM reveals the structure of an archaeal pilus involved in twitching motility
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Gaines, Matthew C., Sivabalasarma, Shamphavi, Isupov, Michail N., Haque, Risat Ul, McLaren, Mathew, Hanus, Cyril, Gold, Vicki A. M., Albers, Sonja-Verena, and Daum, Bertram
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- 2024
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27. Validation of the Korean version of the Summated Xerostomia Inventory among older adults residing in nursing homes
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Moon, SeolHwa, Oh, Eunmi, Chung, Daum, Choi, Rina, and Hong, Gwi-Ryung Son
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- 2024
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28. Prognostic role of macrophages and mast cells in the microenvironment of hepatocellular carcinoma after resection
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Ali, Esraa, Červenková, Lenka, Pálek, Richard, Ambrozkiewicz, Filip, Hošek, Petr, Daum, Ondrej, Liška, Václav, Hemminki, Kari, and Trailin, Andriy
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- 2024
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29. Establishing altruistic ethics to use technology for Social Welfare—How Japan manages Web3 and self-sovereign identity in local communities
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Kim, Daum and Kokuryo, Jiro
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- 2024
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30. Genomes of multicellular algal sisters to land plants illuminate signaling network evolution
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Feng, Xuehuan, Zheng, Jinfang, Irisarri, Iker, Yu, Huihui, Zheng, Bo, Ali, Zahin, de Vries, Sophie, Keller, Jean, Fürst-Jansen, Janine M. R., Dadras, Armin, Zegers, Jaccoline M. S., Rieseberg, Tim P., Dhabalia Ashok, Amra, Darienko, Tatyana, Bierenbroodspot, Maaike J., Gramzow, Lydia, Petroll, Romy, Haas, Fabian B., Fernandez-Pozo, Noe, Nousias, Orestis, Li, Tang, Fitzek, Elisabeth, Grayburn, W. Scott, Rittmeier, Nina, Permann, Charlotte, Rümpler, Florian, Archibald, John M., Theißen, Günter, Mower, Jeffrey P., Lorenz, Maike, Buschmann, Henrik, von Schwartzenberg, Klaus, Boston, Lori, Hayes, Richard D., Daum, Chris, Barry, Kerrie, Grigoriev, Igor V., Wang, Xiyin, Li, Fay-Wei, Rensing, Stefan A., Ben Ari, Julius, Keren, Noa, Mosquna, Assaf, Holzinger, Andreas, Delaux, Pierre-Marc, Zhang, Chi, Huang, Jinling, Mutwil, Marek, de Vries, Jan, and Yin, Yanbin
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- 2024
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31. How do coffee farmers engage with digital technologies? A capabilities perspective
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Hidalgo, Francisco, Birkenberg, Athena, Daum, Thomas, Bosch, Christine, and Quiñones-Ruiz, Xiomara F.
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- 2024
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32. Measurement of the 1-jettiness event shape observable in deep-inelastic electron-proton scattering at HERA
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H1 Collaboration, V. Andreev, M. Arratia, A. Baghdasaryan, A. Baty, K. Begzsuren, A. Bolz, V. Boudry, G. Brandt, D. Britzger, A. Buniatyan, L. Bystritskaya, A. J. Campbell, K. B. Cantun Avila, K. Cerny, V. Chekelian, Z. Chen, J. G. Contreras, J. Cvach, J. B. Dainton, K. Daum, A. Deshpande, C. Diaconu, A. Drees, G. Eckerlin, S. Egli, E. Elsen, L. Favart, A. Fedotov, J. Feltesse, M. Fleischer, A. Fomenko, C. Gal, J. Gayler, L. Goerlich, N. Gogitidze, M. Gouzevitch, C. Grab, T. Greenshaw, G. Grindhammer, D. Haidt, R. C. W. Henderson, J. Hessler, J. Hladký, D. Hoffmann, R. Horisberger, T. Hreus, F. Huber, P. M. Jacobs, M. Jacquet, T. Janssen, A. W. Jung, J. Katzy, C. Kiesling, M. Klein, C. Kleinwort, H. T. Klest, S. Kluth, R. Kogler, P. Kostka, J. Kretzschmar, D. Krücker, K. Krüger, M. P. J. Landon, W. Lange, P. Laycock, S. H. Lee, S. Levonian, W. Li, J. Lin, K. Lipka, B. List, J. List, B. Lobodzinski, O. R. Long, E. Malinovski, H.-U. Martyn, S. J. Maxfield, A. Mehta, A. B. Meyer, J. Meyer, S. Mikocki, V. M. Mikuni, M. M. Mondal, K. Müller, B. Nachman, Th. Naumann, P. R. Newman, C. Niebuhr, G. Nowak, J. E. Olsson, D. Ozerov, S. Park, C. Pascaud, G. D. Patel, E. Perez, A. Petrukhin, I. Picuric, D. Pitzl, R. Polifka, S. Preins, V. Radescu, N. Raicevic, T. Ravdandorj, D. Reichelt, P. Reimer, E. Rizvi, P. Robmann, R. Roosen, A. Rostovtsev, M. Rotaru, D. P. C. Sankey, M. Sauter, E. Sauvan, S. Schmitt, B. A. Schmookler, G. Schnell, L. Schoeffel, A. Schöning, S. Schumann, F. Sefkow, S. Shushkevich, Y. Soloviev, P. Sopicki, D. South, A. Specka, M. Steder, B. Stella, L. Stöcker, U. Straumann, C. Sun, T. Sykora, P. D. Thompson, F. Torales Acosta, D. Traynor, B. Tseepeldorj, Z. Tu, G. Tustin, A. Valkárová, C. Vallée, P. van Mechelen, D. Wegener, E. Wünsch, J. Žáček, J. Zhang, Z. Zhang, R. Žlebčík, H. Zohrabyan, and F. Zomer
- Subjects
Astrophysics ,QB460-466 ,Nuclear and particle physics. Atomic energy. Radioactivity ,QC770-798 - Abstract
Abstract The H1 Collaboration reports the first measurement of the 1-jettiness event shape observable $$\tau _1^b$$ τ 1 b in neutral-current deep-inelastic electron-proton scattering (DIS). The observable $$\tau _1^b$$ τ 1 b is equivalent to a thrust observable defined in the Breit frame. The data sample was collected at the HERA ep collider in the years 2003–2007 with center-of-mass energy of $$\sqrt{s}=319\,\textrm{GeV} $$ s = 319 GeV , corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 351.1 $$\textrm{pb}^{-1}$$ pb - 1 . Triple differential cross sections are provided as a function of $$\tau _1^b$$ τ 1 b , event virtuality $$Q^{2}$$ Q 2 , and inelasticity y, in the kinematic region $$Q^{2} >150\,\textrm{GeV}^2 $$ Q 2 > 150 GeV 2 . Single differential cross sections are provided as a function of $$\tau _1^b$$ τ 1 b in a limited kinematic range. Double differential cross sections are measured, in contrast, integrated over $$\tau _1^b$$ τ 1 b and represent the inclusive neutral-current DIS cross section measured as a function of $$Q^{2}$$ Q 2 and y. The data are compared to a variety of predictions and include long-standing and more recent Monte Carlo event generators, predictions in fixed-order perturbative QCD where calculations up to $$\mathcal {O}(\alpha _\textrm{s} ^3)$$ O ( α s 3 ) are available for $$\tau _1^b$$ τ 1 b or inclusive DIS, and resummed predictions at next-to-leading logarithmic accuracy matched to fixed order predictions at $$\mathcal {O}(\alpha _\textrm{s} ^2)$$ O ( α s 2 ) . These comparisons reveal sensitivity of the 1-jettiness observable to QCD parton shower and resummation effects, as well as the modeling of hadronization and fragmentation. Within their range of validity, the fixed-order predictions provide a good description of the data. Monte Carlo event generators are predictive over the full measured range and hence their underlying models and parameters can be constrained by comparing to the presented data.
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- 2024
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33. Observation and differential cross section measurement of neutral current DIS events with an empty hemisphere in the Breit frame
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H1 Collaboration, V. Andreev, M. Arratia, A. Baghdasaryan, A. Baty, K. Begzsuren, A. Bolz, V. Boudry, G. Brandt, D. Britzger, A. Buniatyan, L. Bystritskaya, A. J. Campbell, K. B. Cantun Avila, K. Cerny, V. Chekelian, Z. Chen, J. G. Contrera, J. Cvach, J. B. Dainton, K. Daum, A. Deshpande, C. Diaconu, A. Drees, G. Eckerlin, S. Egli, E. Elsen, L. Favart, A. Fedotov, J. Feltesse, M. Fleischer, A. Fomenko, C. Gal, J. Gayler, L. Goerlich, N. Gogitidze, M. Gouzevitch, C. Grab, T. Greenshaw, G. Grindhammer, D. Haidt, R. C. W. Henderson, J. Hessler, J. Hladký, D. Hoffmann, R. Horisberger, T. Hreus, F. Huber, P. M. Jacobs, M. Jacquet, T. Janssen, A. W. Jung, J. Katzy, C. Kiesling, M. Klein, C. Kleinwort, H. T. Klest, S. Kluth, R. Kogler, P. Kostka, J. Kretzschmar, D. Krücker, K. Krüger, M. P. J. Landon, W. Lange, P. Laycock, S. H. Lee, S. Levonian, W. Li, J. Lin, K. Lipka, B. List, J. List, B. Lobodzinski, O. R. Long, E. Malinovski, H. U. Martyn, S. J. Maxfield, A. Mehta, A. B. Meyer, J. Meyer, S. Mikocki, V. M. Mikuni, M. M. Mondal, K. Müller, B. Nachman, Th. Naumann, P. R. Newman, C. Niebuhr, G. Nowak, J. E. Olsson, D. Ozerov, S. Park, C. Pascaud, G. D. Patel, E. Perez, A. Petrukhin, I. Picuric, D. Pitzl, R. Polifka, S. Preins, V. Radescu, N. Raicevic, T. Ravdandorj, D. Reichelt, P. Reimer, E. Rizvi, P. Robmann, R. Roosen, A. Rostovtsev, M. Rotaru, D. P. C. Sankey, M. Sauter, E. Sauvan, S. Schmitt, B. A. Schmookler, G. Schnell, L. Schoeffel, A. Schöning, S. Schumann, F. Sefkow, S. Shushkevich, Y. Soloviev, P. Sopicki, D. South, A. Specka, M. Steder, B. Stella, L. Stöcker, U. Straumann, C. Sun, T. Sykora, P. D. Thompson, F. Torales Acosta, D. Traynor, B. Tseepeldorj, Z. Tu, G. Tustin, A. Valkárová, C. Vallée, P. van Mechelen, D. Wegener, E. Wünsch, J. Žáček, J. Zhang, Z. Zhang, R. Žlebčík, H. Zohrabyan, and F. Zomer
- Subjects
Astrophysics ,QB460-466 ,Nuclear and particle physics. Atomic energy. Radioactivity ,QC770-798 - Abstract
Abstract The Breit frame provides a natural frame to analyze lepton–proton scattering events. In this reference frame, the parton model hard interactions between a quark and an exchanged boson defines the coordinate system such that the struck quark is back-scattered along the virtual photon momentum direction. In Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD), higher order perturbative or non-perturbative effects can change this picture drastically. As Bjorken-x decreases below one half, a rather peculiar event signature is predicted with increasing probability, where no radiation is present in one of the two Breit-frame hemispheres and all emissions are to be found in the other hemisphere. At higher orders in $$\alpha _{s}$$ α s or in the presence of soft QCD effects, predictions of the rate of these events are far from trivial, and that motivates measurements with real data. We report on the first observation of the empty current hemisphere events in electron–proton collisions at the HERA collider using data recorded with the H1 detector at a center-of-mass energy of 319 GeV. The fraction of inclusive neutral-current DIS events with an empty hemisphere is found to be $$0.0112 \pm 3.9\%_\text {stat} \pm 4.5\%_{\text {syst}} \pm 1.6\%_{\text {mod}}$$ 0.0112 ± 3.9 % stat ± 4.5 % syst ± 1.6 % mod in the selected kinematic region of $$150
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- 2024
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34. Factors associated with a history of critical wandering among Medic-Alert subscribers
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Antonio Miguel Cruz, Hector Perez, Emily Rutledge, Christine Daum, and Lili Liu
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Cognitive impairment ,Alzheimer's disease ,Missing incident ,Classification ,Logistics regression ,Geriatrics ,RC952-954.6 - Abstract
Abstract Background Critical wandering occurs when an individual living with dementia leaves a location and is unaware of place or time. Critical wandering incidents are expected to increase with the growing prevalence of persons living with dementia worldwide. We investigated the association between demographic, psychopathological, and environmental factors and a history of critical wandering among Medic-Alert subscribers, both with and without dementia. Methods Our retrospective study included data of 25,785 Canadian Medic-Alert subscribers who were aged 40 years or older. We used multivariable logistic regression analysis to examine the associations between a history of critical wandering and dementia status as psychopathological independent variable, controlled by demographic (age, ethnic background, sex at birth, Canadian languages spoken) and environmental (living arrangement, population density) factors. Results The overall study sample comprised of mainly older adults (77.4%). Medic-Alert subscribers who were older, male sex at birth, living with dementia, of a minority ethnic group and who did not have proficiency in an official Canadian language had a higher likelihood of a history of critical wandering. Residing in an urban environment, in an institution or with a family member, were environmental factors associated with a higher likelihood of a history of critical wandering. Conclusions People living with dementia experience a higher likelihood of a history of critical wandering compared to those without dementia. Medic-Alert and similar organizations can develop algorithms based on the associated factors that can be used to flag risks of critical wandering. This can inform preventative strategies at the individual and community levels.
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- 2024
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35. CryoEM reveals the structure of an archaeal pilus involved in twitching motility
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Matthew C. Gaines, Shamphavi Sivabalasarma, Michail N. Isupov, Risat Ul Haque, Mathew McLaren, Cyril Hanus, Vicki A. M. Gold, Sonja-Verena Albers, and Bertram Daum
- Subjects
Science - Abstract
Abstract Amongst the major types of archaeal filaments, several have been shown to closely resemble bacterial homologues of the Type IV pili (T4P). Within Sulfolobales, member species encode for three types of T4P, namely the archaellum, the UV-inducible pilus system (Ups) and the archaeal adhesive pilus (Aap). Whereas the archaellum functions primarily in swimming motility, and the Ups in UV-induced cell aggregation and DNA-exchange, the Aap plays an important role in adhesion and twitching motility. Here, we present a cryoEM structure of the Aap of the archaeal model organism Sulfolobus acidocaldarius. We identify the component subunit as AapB and find that while its structure follows the canonical T4P blueprint, it adopts three distinct conformations within the pilus. The tri-conformer Aap structure that we describe challenges our current understanding of pilus structure and sheds new light on the principles of twitching motility.
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- 2024
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36. Measurement of the 1-jettiness event shape observable in deep-inelastic electron-proton scattering at HERA
- Author
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Andreev, V., Arratia, M., Baghdasaryan, A., Baty, A., Begzsuren, K., Bolz, A., Boudry, V., Brandt, G., Britzger, D., Buniatyan, A., Bystritskaya, L., Campbell, A. J., Avila, K. B. Cantun, Cerny, K., Chekelian, V., Chen, Z., Contreras, J. G., Cvach, J., Dainton, J. B., Daum, K., Deshpande, A., Diaconu, C., Drees, A., Eckerlin, G., Egli, S., Elsen, E., Favart, L., Fedotov, A., Feltesse, J., Fleischer, M., Fomenko, A., Gal, C., Gayler, J., Goerlich, L., Gogitidze, N., Gouzevitch, M., Grab, C., Greenshaw, T., Grindhammer, G., Haidt, D., Henderson, R. C. W., Hessler, J., Hladký, J., Hoffmann, D., Horisberger, R., Hreus, T., Huber, F., Jacobs, P. M., Jacquet, M., Janssen, T., Jung, A. W., Katzy, J., Kiesling, C., Klein, M., Kleinwort, C., Klest, H. T., Kluth, S., Kogler, R., Kostka, P., Kretzschmar, J., Krücker, D., Krüger, K., Landon, M. P. J., Lange, W., Laycock, P., Lee, S. H., Levonian, S., Li, W., Lin, J., Lipka, K., List, B., List, J., Lobodzinski, B., Long, O. R., Malinovski, E., Martyn, H.-U., Maxfield, S. J., Mehta, A., Meyer, A. B., Meyer, J., Mikocki, S., Mikuni, V. M., Mondal, M. M., Müller, K., Nachman, B., Naumann, Th., Newman, P. R., Niebuhr, C., Nowak, G., Olsson, J. E., Ozerov, D., Park, S., Pascaud, C., Patel, G. D., Perez, E., Petrukhin, A., Picuric, I., Pitzl, D., Polifka, R., Preins, S., Radescu, V., Raicevic, N., Ravdandorj, T., Reichelt, D., Reimer, P., Rizvi, E., Robmann, P., Roosen, R., Rostovtsev, A., Rotaru, M., Sankey, D. P. C., Sauter, M., Sauvan, E., Schmitt, S., Schmookler, B. A., Schnell, G., Schoeffel, L., Schöning, A., Schumann, S., Sefkow, F., Shushkevich, S., Soloviev, Y., Sopicki, P., South, D., Specka, A., Steder, M., Stella, B., Stöcker, L., Straumann, U., Sun, C., Sykora, T., Thompson, P. D., Torales Acosta, F., Traynor, D., Tseepeldorj, B., Tu, Z., Tustin, G., Valkárová, A., Vallée, C., Mechelen, P. van, Wegener, D., Wünsch, E., Žáček, J., Zhang, J., Zhang, Z., Žlebčík, R., Zohrabyan, H., and Zomer, F.
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- 2024
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- View/download PDF
37. Observation and differential cross section measurement of neutral current DIS events with an empty hemisphere in the Breit frame
- Author
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Andreev, V., Arratia, M., Baghdasaryan, A., Baty, A., Begzsuren, K., Bolz, A., Boudry, V., Brandt, G., Britzger, D., Buniatyan, A., Bystritskaya, L., Campbell, A. J., Avila, K. B. Cantun, Cerny, K., Chekelian, V., Chen, Z., Contrera, J. G., Cvach, J., Dainton, J. B., Daum, K., Deshpande, A., Diaconu, C., Drees, A., Eckerlin, G., Egli, S., Elsen, E., Favart, L., Fedotov, A., Feltesse, J., Fleischer, M., Fomenko, A., Gal, C., Gayler, J., Goerlich, L., Gogitidze, N., Gouzevitch, M., Grab, C., Greenshaw, T., Grindhammer, G., Haidt, D., Henderson, R. C. W., Hessler, J., Hladký, J., Hoffmann, D., Horisberger, R., Hreus, T., Huber, F., Jacobs, P. M., Jacquet, M., Janssen, T., Jung, A. W., Katzy, J., Kiesling, C., Klein, M., Kleinwort, C., Klest, H. T., Kluth, S., Kogler, R., Kostka, P., Kretzschmar, J., Krücker, D., Krüger, K., Landon, M. P. J., Lange, W., Laycock, P., Lee, S. H., Levonian, S., Li, W., Lin, J., Lipka, K., List, B., List, J., Lobodzinski, B., Long, O. R., Malinovski, E., Martyn, H. U., Maxfield, S. J., Mehta, A., Meyer, A. B., Meyer, J., Mikocki, S., Mikuni, V. M., Mondal, M. M., Müller, K., Nachman, B., Naumann, Th., Newman, P. R., Niebuhr, C., Nowak, G., Olsson, J. E., Ozerov, D., Park, S., Pascaud, C., Patel, G. D., Perez, E., Petrukhin, A., Picuric, I., Pitzl, D., Polifka, R., Preins, S., Radescu, V., Raicevic, N., Ravdandorj, T., Reichelt, D., Reimer, P., Rizvi, E., Robmann, P., Roosen, R., Rostovtsev, A., Rotaru, M., Sankey, D. P. C., Sauter, M., Sauvan, E., Schmitt, S., Schmookler, B. A., Schnell, G., Schoeffel, L., Schöning, A., Schumann, S., Sefkow, F., Shushkevich, S., Soloviev, Y., Sopicki, P., South, D., Specka, A., Steder, M., Stella, B., Stöcker, L., Straumann, U., Sun, C., Sykora, T., Thompson, P. D., Acosta, F. Torales, Traynor, D., Tseepeldorj, B., Tu, Z., Tustin, G., Valkárová, A., Vallée, C., van Mechelen, P., Wegener, D., Wünsch, E., Žáček, J., Zhang, J., Zhang, Z., Žlebčík, R., Zohrabyan, H., and Zomer, F.
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- 2024
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38. Financing Climate-Smart Agriculture: a case study from the Indo-Gangetic Plains
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Villalba, Roberto, Joshi, Garima, Daum, Thomas, and Venus, Terese E.
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- 2024
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39. Time-of-flight spectroscopy of ultracold neutrons at the PSI UCN source
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Bison, G., Chen, W., Chiu, P. -J., Daum, M., Doorenbos, C. B., Kirch, K., Kletzl, V., Lauss, B., Pais, D., Rienäcker, I., Schmidt-Wellenburg, P., and Zsigmond, G.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The ultracold neutron (UCN) source at the Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI) provides high intensities of storable neutrons for fundamental physics experiments. The neutron velocity spectrum parallel to the beamline axis was determined by time-of-flight spectroscopy using a neutron chopper. In particular, the temporal evolution of the spectrum during neutron production and UCN storage in the source storage volume was investigated and compared to Monte Carlo simulation results. A softening of the measured spectrum from a mean velocity of 7.7(1) m s$^{-1}$ to 5.1(1) m s$^{-1}$ occurred within the first 30 s after the proton beam pulse had impinged on the spallation target. A spectral hardening was observed over longer time scales of one measurement day, consistent with the effect of surface degradation of the solid deuterium moderator.
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- 2023
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40. Measuring Theory of Mind: a preliminary analysis of a novel linguistically simple and tablet-based measure for children
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Franziska Baumeister, Pauline Wolfer, Sümeyra Sahbaz, Nicola Rudelli, Marine Capallera, Moritz M. Daum, Andrea C. Samson, Grace Corrigan, Letitia Naigles, and Stephanie Durrleman
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Theory of Mind ,measurement ,children ,autism ,validation ,psychometric properties ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
This study introduces a novel linguistically simple, tablet-based, behavioral Theory of Mind (ToM) measure, designed for neurotypical (NT) and autistic children aged 4–10 years. A synthesis of five comprehensive reviews of existing ToM measures revealed significant gaps in their designs; the weaknesses include a mismatch between the operational and conceptual definition of ToM, high verbal demands in most measures, materials that are minimally interesting for children, and often a lack of psychometric evaluations. These findings call into question the suitability of most of the currently available ToM measures used in children, both with and without developmental disorders, such as children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). For example, the assessment of ToM in children with ASD may require reduced reliance on complex language or social interaction that can be part of the diagnostic criteria of the condition. This newly designed ToM measure, developed in line with the “Standards for Educational and Psychological Testing” of the American Educational Research Association, is linguistically simple, tablet-based, suitable for children with ASD, and is available in English, German, French, Italian, and Spanish. With a sample of 234 participants, including 152 NT children and 82 children with ASD between 4 and 10 years of age, the new ToM measure's psychometric properties were preliminarily evaluated. Descriptive statistics, measures of internal consistency, inter-item correlation, and validity checks were conducted in both groups. Further inspections of the measure's scale- and item-level characteristics were conducted with the help of exploratory factor analyses (EFA), and item response theory (IRT) within the NT children's group. These preliminary evaluations suggest that the newly developed ToM measure possesses good psychometric properties and is both accessible and engaging for children. Further investigation with a larger group of participants is necessary to reinforce these initial results. This will allow item- and scale-level assessments within a wider range of autistic children. For this purpose, the task will be made freely available to the scientific community.
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- 2024
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41. The determinants of unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) adoption and status quo of UAV-based pattern management in Chinese agriculture: insights from expert interviews
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Xiuhao Quan, Zhichong Wang, Thomas Daum, Xiongkui He, and Reiner Doluschitz
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Agriculture ,Agricultural industries ,HD9000-9495 - Abstract
In China, unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) are increasingly used for broadcast application of agricultural inputs such as pesticides, fertilizers, and seeds. UAVs have the potential for site-specific precision agriculture, facilitating precise management of fertilization, plant protection, and irrigation to reduce environmental footprint of farming. There has been research on the use of UAVs in agriculture, but less is known about UAV-based precision agriculture, particularly pattern management. To close these research gaps, this paper conducted structured in-depth interviews with 18 experts from various fields related to UAVs in Chinese agriculture to study the status quo, drivers, and barriers of adopting UAVs, focusing on UAV-based precision agriculture, particularly pattern management. The results show that the adoption of UAVs in China is influenced by farmers’ production characteristics, farmers’ perceptions about UAVs, and social factors. UAV-based precision agriculture is at the initial stage in China, and the promotion of this approach still needs to overcome technical barriers such as improving the accuracy of crop measurements, developing real-time UAV positioning systems, and enhancing the response time of variable-rate spraying systems, as well as socio-economic barriers like farmers’ limited UAV-related knowledge, small farm sizes, and lack of technical assistance.
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- 2024
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42. Validation of the Korean version of the Summated Xerostomia Inventory among older adults residing in nursing homes
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SeolHwa Moon, Eunmi Oh, Daum Chung, Rina Choi, and Gwi-Ryung Son Hong
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Validity ,Reliability ,Xerostomia ,Older adults ,Nursing home ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Xerostomia is commonly experienced by older individuals. We sought to develop and evaluate the reliability and validity of the Korean version of the Summated Xerostomia Inventory (K-SXI) among older adults residing in long-term care facilities (LTCFs) in Korea. Methods In this secondary data analysis study using cross-sectional data, a cross-cultural adaptation process was conducted for the Korean version before data collection. Data collection was conducted from July 2021 to January 2022, targeting 544 older adults in 16 LTCFs. Data analysis included intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) for test–retest reliability, and Cronbach’s α for internal consistency reliability. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses were used to verify construct and convergent validity. Test–retest analysis was performed 6 weeks after baseline. Convergent and concurrent validities were assessed with age group and the xerostomia standard single question, respectively. Results A total of 544 older adults participated in this study. The mean of total K-SXI score was 11.70 (standard deviation, 4.96) points. The ICC value was calculated to be 0.90, and Cronbach’s α of K-SXI was 0.92. Exploratory factor analysis revealed a single factor, explaining 74.8% of the total variance, however, some goodness-of-fit indices of the single factor model were found to be unsuitable in confirmatory factor analysis. The convergent and concurrent validity were supported. Conclusion The present study provides evidence supporting the validity and reliability of the K-SXI for measuring xerostomia in institutionalized older adults in Korea.
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- 2024
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43. The Prevalence of Missing Incidents and Their Antecedents Among Older Adult MedicAlert Subscribers: Retrospective Descriptive Study
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Antonio Miguel-Cruz, Hector Perez, Yoojin Choi, Emily Rutledge, Christine Daum, and Lili Liu
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Geriatrics ,RC952-954.6 - Abstract
BackgroundWith the population aging, the number of people living with dementia is expected to rise, which, in turn, is expected to lead to an increase in the prevalence of missing incidents due to critical wandering. However, the estimated prevalence of missing incidents due to dementia is inconclusive in some jurisdictions and overlooked in others. ObjectiveThe aims of the study were to examine (1) the demographic, psychopathological, and environmental antecedents to missing incidents due to critical wandering among older adult MedicAlert Foundation Canada (hereinafter MedicAlert) subscribers; and (2) the characteristics and outcomes of the missing incidents. MethodsThis study used a retrospective descriptive design. The sample included 434 older adult MedicAlert subscribers involved in 560 missing incidents between January 2015 and July 2021. ResultsThe sample was overrepresented by White older adults (329/425, 77.4%). MedicAlert subscribers reported missing were mostly female older adults (230/431, 53.4%), living in urban areas with at least 1 family member (277/433, 63.8%). Most of the MedicAlert subscribers (345/434, 79.5%) self-reported living with dementia. MedicAlert subscribers went missing most frequently from their private homes in the community (96/143, 67.1%), traveling on foot (248/270, 91.9%) and public transport (12/270, 4.4%), during the afternoon (262/560, 46.8%) and evening (174/560, 31.1%). Most were located by first responders (232/486, 47.7%) or Good Samaritans (224/486, 46.1%). Of the 560 missing incidents, 126 (22.5%) were repeated missing incidents. The mean time between missing incidents was 11 (SD 10.8) months. Finally, the majority of MedicAlert subscribers were returned home safely (453/500, 90.6%); and reports of harm, injuries (46/500, 9.2%), and death (1/500, 0.2%) were very low. ConclusionsThis study provides the prevalence of missing incidents from 1 database source. The low frequency of missing incidents may not represent populations that are not White. Despite the low number of missing incidents, the 0.2% (1/500) of cases resulting in injuries or death are devastating experiences that may be mitigated through prevention strategies.
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- 2024
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44. Simply the green: Urban refuges
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Berger, Johanna L., Daum, Sonja N.K., and Hartlieb, Margarita
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- 2024
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45. The small membrane protein CcoS is involved in cofactor insertion into the cbb3-type cytochrome c oxidase
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Rauch, Juna, Kurscheidt, Katharina, Shen, Kai-Wei, Andrei, Andreea, Daum, Noel, Öztürk, Yavuz, Melin, Frederic, Layer, Gunhild, Hellwig, Petra, Daldal, Fevzi, and Koch, Hans-Georg
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- 2025
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46. Silicon Savannah and smallholder farming: How can digitalization contribute to sustainable agricultural transformation in Africa?
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Njuguna, Evelyne, Daum, Thomas, Birner, Regina, and Mburu, John
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- 2025
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47. Avoiding unintentional injuries from household chemicals: Comparing the appeal to children from the perspectives of children, caregivers, and experts
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Bosshart, Noah, Bearth, Angela, Stutz, Sandro E., Wermelinger, Stephanie, Daum, Moritz M., and Siegrist, Michael
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- 2025
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48. Migrating Software Systems Toward Post-Quantum Cryptography-A Systematic Literature Review
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Christian Nather, Daniel Herzinger, Stefan-Lukas Gazdag, Jan-Philipp Steghofer, Simon Daum, and Daniel Loebenberger
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Migration ,post-quantum cryptography ,quantum-safe ,transition ,Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering ,TK1-9971 - Abstract
Networks such as the Internet are essential for our connected world. Quantum computing threatens its fundamental security mechanisms. Therefore, a migration to post-quantum-cryptography (PQC) is necessary for networks and their components. Currently, there is little knowledge on how such migrations should be structured and implemented in practice. Our systematic literature review addresses migration approaches for IP networks towards PQC. It surveys papers about the migration process and exemplary real-world software system migrations. On the process side, we found that terminology, migration steps, and roles are not defined precisely or consistently across the literature. Still, we identified four major phases and appropriate substeps which we matched with also emerging archetypes of roles. In terms of real-world migrations, we see that reports used several different PQC implementations and hybrid solutions for migrations of systems belonging to a wide range of system types. Across all papers we noticed three major challenges for adopters: missing experience of PQC and a high realization effort, concerns about the security of the upcoming system, and finally, high complexity. Our findings indicate that recent standardization efforts already push quantum-safe networking forward. However, the literature is still not in consensus about definitions and best practices. Implementations are mostly experimental and not necessarily practical, leading to an overall chaotic situation. To better grasp this fast moving field of (applied) research, our systematic literature review provides a comprehensive overview of its current state and serves as a starting point for delving into the matter of PQC migration.
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- 2024
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49. Prognostic role of macrophages and mast cells in the microenvironment of hepatocellular carcinoma after resection
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Esraa Ali, Lenka Červenková, Richard Pálek, Filip Ambrozkiewicz, Petr Hošek, Ondrej Daum, Václav Liška, Kari Hemminki, and Andriy Trailin
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Hepatocellular carcinoma ,Tumor-infiltrating macrophages ,Mast cells ,Inner margin ,Peritumor area ,Disease-free survival ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background The prognostic significance of mast cells and different phenotypes of macrophages in the microenvironment of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) following resection is unclear. We aimed in this study to assess the local distribution of infiltrating macrophages and mast cells of specific phenotypes in tissues of HCC and to evaluate their prognostic values for survival of post-surgical patients. Methods The clinicopathological and follow-up data of 70 patients with HCC, who underwent curative resection of tumor from 1997 to 2019, were collected. The infiltration of CD68+ and CD163+ macrophages and CD117+ mast cells was assessed immunohistochemically in representative resected specimens of HCC and adjacent tissues. The area fraction (AF) of positively stained cells was estimated automatically using QuPath image analysis software in several regions, such as tumor center (TC), inner margin (IM), outer margin (OM), and peritumor (PT) area. The prognostic significance of immune cells, individually and in associations, for time to recurrence (TTR), disease-free survival (DFS), and overall survival (OS) was evaluated using Kaplan-Meier and Cox regression analyses. Results High AF of CD68+ macrophages in TC and IM and high AF of mast cells in IM and PT area were associated with a longer DFS. High AF of CD163+ macrophages in PT area correlated with a shorter DFS. Patients from CD163TChigh & CD68TClow group had a shorter DFS compared to all the rest of the groups, and cases with CD163IMlow & CD68IMhigh demonstrated significantly longer DFS compared to low AF of both markers. Patients from CD68IMhigh & CD163PTlow group, CD117IMhigh & CD163PTlow group, and CD117PThigh & CD163PTlow group had a significantly longer DFS compared to all other combinations of respective cells. Conclusions The individual prognostic impact of CD68+ and CD163+ macrophages and mast cells in the microenvironment of HCC after resection depends on their abundance and location, whereas the cumulative impact is built upon combination of different cell phenotypes within and between regions.
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- 2024
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50. Active learning for extracting surgomic features in robot-assisted minimally invasive esophagectomy: a prospective annotation study
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Brandenburg, Johanna M., Jenke, Alexander C., Stern, Antonia, Daum, Marie T. J., Schulze, André, Younis, Rayan, Petrynowski, Philipp, Davitashvili, Tornike, Vanat, Vincent, Bhasker, Nithya, Schneider, Sophia, Mündermann, Lars, Reinke, Annika, Kolbinger, Fiona R., Jörns, Vanessa, Fritz-Kebede, Fleur, Dugas, Martin, Maier-Hein, Lena, Klotz, Rosa, Distler, Marius, Weitz, Jürgen, Müller-Stich, Beat P., Speidel, Stefanie, Bodenstedt, Sebastian, and Wagner, Martin
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- 2023
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