396 results on '"Wagner, Laura"'
Search Results
2. What does the public think about language science?
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Wagner, Laura, Patson, Nikole D., and Awani, Sumurye
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- 2022
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3. From the Other Side of the Sea: Rasanblaj/Reassembling Haitian Radio Archives of Exile
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Wagner, Laura and Legros, Ayanna
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- 2022
4. Evaluation of a host-protein signature score for differentiating between bacterial and viral infections: real-life evidence from a German tertiary hospital
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Wagner, Laura, Schneider, Heike, Luppa, Peter B., Schröder, Kathrin, Wantia, Nina, Querbach, Christiane, Jeske, Samuel D., Lahmer, Tobias, Rothe, Kathrin, Dibos, Miriam, Voit, Florian, Erber, Johanna, Spinner, Christoph D., Schneider, Jochen, and Triebelhorn, Julian
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- 2024
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5. Ethical, Legal, and Social Issues Related to the Inclusion of Individuals With Intellectual Disabilities in Electronic Health Record Research: Scoping Review
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Raspa, Melissa, Moultrie, Rebecca, Wagner, Laura, Edwards, Anne, Andrews, Sara, Frisch, Mary Katherine, Turner-Brown, Lauren, and Wheeler, Anne
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Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
BackgroundData from electronic health records (EHRs) are increasingly used in the field of genetic research to further precision medicine initiatives. However, many of these efforts exclude individuals with intellectual disabilities, which often stem from genetic conditions. To include this important subpopulation in EHR research, important ethical, legal, and social issues should be considered. ObjectiveThe goal of this study was to review prior research to better understand what ethical, legal, and social issues may need further investigation when considering the research use of EHRs for individuals with genetic conditions that may result in intellectual disability. This information will be valuable in developing methods and best practices for involving this group in research given they are considered a vulnerable population that may need special research protections. MethodsWe conducted a scoping review to examine issues related to the use of EHRs for research purposes and those more broadly associated with genetic research. The initial search yielded a total of 460 unique citations. We used an evaluative coding process to determine relevancy for inclusion. ResultsThis approach resulted in 59 articles in the following areas: informed consent, privacy and security, return of results, and vulnerable populations. The review included several models of garnering informed consent in EHR or genetic research, including tiered or categorical, blanket or general, open, and opt-out models. Second, studies reported on patients’ concerns regarding the privacy and security of EHR or genetic data, such as who has access, type of data use in research, identifiability, and risks associated with privacy breach. The literature on return of research results using biospecimens examined the dissension in the field, particularly when sharing individualized genetic results. Finally, work involving vulnerable populations highlighted special considerations when conducting EHR or genetic research. ConclusionsThe results frame important questions for researchers to consider when designing EHR studies, which include individuals with intellectual disabilities, including appropriate safeguards and protections.
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- 2020
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6. Is doxycycline post-exposure prophylaxis being utilised in Germany? Insights from an online survey among German men who have sex with men
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Wagner, Laura, Boesecke, Christoph, Baumgarten, Axel, Scholten, Stefan, Schellberg, Sven, Hoffmann, Christian, Audebert, Franz, Noe, Sebastian, Erber, Johanna, Lee, Marcel, Triebelhorn, Julian, Schneider, Jochen, Spinner, Christoph D., and Voit, Florian
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- 2024
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7. Implementation of Mental Health Huddles on Dementia Care Units
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Wagner, Laura M., Huijbregts, Maria, Sokoloff, Lisa G., Wisniewski, Renee, Walsh, Leenah, Feldman, Sid, and Conn, David K.
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- 2014
8. Diverging responses to natural and anthropogenic habitats in aftrotropical birds and butterflies
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Habel, Jan Christian, Mulwa, Moses, Wagner, Laura, Schmitt, Thomas, Teucher, Mike, and Ulrich, Werner
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- 2024
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9. Global Health: Why Cultural Perceptions, Social Representations, and Biopolitics Matter (review)
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Wagner, Laura
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- 2010
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10. Volunteers’ Experiences Visiting the Cognitively Impaired in Nursing Homes: A Friendly Visiting Program
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Damianakis, Thecla, Wagner, Laura M, Bernstein, Syrelle, and Marziali, Elsa
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- 2008
11. “A place where I have lost and made friends”: A photovoice study on adolescents’ perspectives on health in a new residential development area in Munich, Germany
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Voss, Stephan, Bauer, Julia, Jung-Sievers, Caroline, Moore, Graham, Rehfuess, Eva, Wagner, Laura Corinna, and Coenen, Michaela
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- 2024
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12. Immunogenicity and safety of an 18-month booster dose of the VLA15 Lyme borreliosis vaccine candidate after primary immunisation in healthy adults in the USA: results of the booster phase of a randomised, controlled, phase 2 trial
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Ghadge, Santhosh Kumar, Schneider, Martina, Dubischar, Katrin, Wagner, Laura, Kadlecek, Vera, Obersriebnig, Michaela, Hochreiter, Romana, Klingler, Anton, Larcher-Senn, Julian, Derhaschnig, Ulla, Bender, Wolfgang, Eder-Lingelbach, Susanne, and Bézay, Nicole
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- 2024
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13. Optimisation of dose level and vaccination schedule for the VLA15 Lyme borreliosis vaccine candidate among healthy adults: two randomised, observer-blind, placebo-controlled, multicentre, phase 2 studies
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Bézay, Nicole, Wagner, Laura, Kadlecek, Vera, Obersriebnig, Michaela, Wressnigg, Nina, Hochreiter, Romana, Schneider, Martina, Dubischar, Katrin, Derhaschnig, Ulla, Klingler, Anton, Larcher-Senn, Julian, Eder-Lingelbach, Susanne, and Bender, Wolfgang
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- 2024
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14. Neural indices of heritable impulsivity: Impact of the COMT Val158Met polymorphism on frontal beta power during early motor preparation
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Happer, Joseph P., Beaton, Lauren E., Wagner, Laura C., Hodgkinson, Colin A., Goldman, David, and Marinkovic, Ksenija
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- 2024
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15. Direct Care Workers are the Foundation of a Dementia-Capable Workforce
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Scales, Kezia and Wagner, Laura M
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- 2023
16. Measurement of circulating viral antigens post-SARS-CoV-2 infection in a multicohort study
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Abraham, Rachael, Ager, Arijan, Aguilar, Franchesca A., Ahmadi-Izad, Ghazal, Ahmed, Dilshad R., Alvarez, Alicarmen, Anderson, Blake, Asencios, Walter D., Atha, Mary, Beaty, Casey L., Bedi, Brahmchetna, Berry, Jasmine A., Boone, Donchel, Bower, Mary, Bremner, James D., Brent, Corbin, Brown-Smith, Ke'Ara, Bull, Rachel, Bush, Patricia A., Capo, Gustavo, Carl-Igwe, Kelechi, Chitadze, Calista, Chukwumerije, Nachi, Clyburn, Erna, Collins, Shelby, Costello, Julie, Couture, Grace, Craft, Angel, Cribbs, Sushma K., Cui, Xiangqin, Dandy, Annette, Rio, Carlos del, Jasarevic, Rijalda, Detelich, Joshua F., Dixon, Cartia, Dow, Jeanne, Doyle, D'Andrea, Elchommali, Jannah, Ibeawuchi, Carmel, Elsey, Imani, Fineman, Rebecca, Francis, Anyssa G., Franks, Nicole, Gallini, Julia, Gander, Jennifer C., Gray, Natalie, Grimes, Ash, Gutter, Evan, Han, Jenny E., Hang, Tina P., Harding, Jess, Hernandez, Liliana, Hewitt, Lauren N., Holloway, Carla, Hudgins, Alex F., Huerta, Christopher, Ifejika, Cynthia, Ingram, Ketteria D., Javia, Vidhi N., Jeter, Mykayla, Johnson, Brandi, Joseph, Yasha, Juarez, Monica, Kajan, Dana, Khalil, Lana, Kirkpatrick, Caitlin M., Kleinhenz, Dean, Kolailat, Imanii, Koumanelis, Athena, Koumanelis, Alexandra, Kozoman, Rebecca, Krishnan, Shilpa, Lainez, Jordi, Lawrence, Brianna, Lee, Matthew A., Leon, Jose D., Lew, Valerie, Lewis, Kennedy C., Litvack, Matthew, Maroney, Mara, Maier, Cheryl L., Makkaoui, Nour, Marconi, Vincent C., Martin, Christopher F., Martinez, Monica, Mbogo, Loice, McCaslin, Atuarra, McIntyre, Jerrod, Moanna, Abeer, Montoya, Miranda, Morales, Elena, Moran, Caitlin A., Morgan-Billingslea, Jan, Murray, Calista, Nelson, Roslin, Neuman, Robert B., Nguyen, Tran, Ofotokun, Ighovwerha, Ojemakinde, Elizabeth I., Ojoawo, Bukkie, Osinski, Eileen, Oviedo, Sofia, Panganiban, Bernadine, Paredes-Gaitan, Yolanda, Patzer, Rachel E., Pemu, Priscilla, Prude, Michael, Rahman, Kazi, Ramakrishnan, Grace, Rebolledo, Paulina A., Roberts, Marjorie, Robinson, Keysha, Rogers, Chantrice, Rouphael, Nadine G., Searles, Charles, Shah, Anand, Segall, Marni, Shaw, Renata M., Silva, Ruvina, Simpson, Cheryl, Simpson-Derrell, Krystal, Sirajud-Deen, Talib, Smith, Veronica E., Stringer, Andre, Stroud, Jacob, Suthar, Mehul S., Sylber, Cory, Sylvera, Ashley, Tanner, Tehquin, Teunis, Larissa J., Tolbert, Maliya, Thomas, Kodasha M., Thompson, Sierra G., Titanji, Kehmia, Toy, Christopher, Traenkner, Jessica, Truong, Alex, Unterberger, Kristen, Vaccarino, Viola, Varney, Kris, Vyas, Kartavya, Vyas, Kurt, Walker, Tiffany A., Walkow, Max, Wang, Dongli, Wesley, Tamara, Wiley, Zanthia, Wimberly, Erika, Winston, Juton R., Winter, Terra J., Wongtrakool, Cherry, Aikawa, Masanori, Alba, George A., Aung, Taing N., Baden, Lindsey, Baslet, Gaston, Bassett, Ingrid V., Bennett, Lindsey, Bhattacharyya, Shamik, Blazey-Martin, Deborah, Buring, Julie, Cagnina, Rebecca E., Chen, Li Qing, Clark, Cheryl R., Cohen, Pieter, Collier, Ai-Ris, Czeisler, Charles, Duffy, Elizabeth, Estill, Peter, Fong, Tamara, Gay, Elizabeth, Ghamloush, Maher, Ginns, Leo C., Haack, Monika, Haas, Jennifer, Hamburg, Naomi, Hauser, Kristine S., John, Janice, Jordan, Michael, Juelg, Boris D., Kanjilal, Diane G., Kim, Arthur Y., Klerman, Elizabeth B., Kobayashi, Misaki ., Kogelman, Laura, Lamas, Daniela, Levy, Bruce D., Levy-Carrick, Nomi, Lewis, Gregory, Maley, Jason H., Manson, JoAnn, Marathe, Jai G., Mullington, Janet M., O'Connor, George T., Ojikutu, Bisola, Perlis, Roy, Quintana, Yuri, Redline, Susan, Remis, Elijah J., Rosand, Jonathan, Sesso, Howard D., Shaughnessy, Lynn, Shepherd, Fitzgerald M., Solomon, Scott, Sparks, Jeffrey A., Spencer, Lia L., Stephenson, Kathryn, Systrom, David, Thomas, Robert J., Min Thu, Phyo Phyo, Ticotsky, Amberly, Torres, Robert, Wallace, Zachary S., Walt, David, Ward, Honorine D., Washko, George, Whittelsey, Maureen, Wiener, Rebecca, Williams, Charles T., Xerras, Dean, Zhang, Haihua, Zionts, Danielle, Armstrong, Donna, Binkley, Susan E., Blackwell, Kenneth, Brown, Todd, Carton, Thomas W., Causey, Annalia, Cook, Felice, Daniel, Casey L., Datri, Paula, Domingo, Julio, Donahue, Conner, Eady, Maitlyn, Edberg, Jeffrey, Erdmann, Nathaniel, Fuloria, Jyotsna, Garcia-McClaney, Noah, Garner, Melissa, Gillespie, Mark, Gray, Brandon, Hagensee, Michael, Hall, Wanda, Hansel, Jamie, Hart, Cady, Hebson, Camden L., Hidalgo, Bertha, Holtzapfel, Kaylen, Jinright, Alexis, Judd, Suzanne E., Kennedy, Teri, Kirkwood, Leigh, Leggio, Cathryn, Levitan, Emily B., Maier, Megan, McCormack, Patricia, Miele, Lucio, Mitchell, Kevin, Montgomery, Aoyjai, Peralta-Carcelen, Myriam, Perkins, Allen, Pilco, Juan P., Powell, Leigh, Shevin, Rachael, Skipworth, Sidney, Spurgeon, Leah, Sutherland, Erica, Tita, Alan T., Trauth, Amber, Trotter, Siobhan, Van Deerlin, Alexander, Ware, Gregory, Weiser, Sharon, Wilson, Rosanne, Woodruff, Dana, Wu, Jing, Young, Madeline, Alemu, Mhret, Anderson, Jordan, Ashktorab, Hassan, Brim, Hassan, Chang, Linda, Chauhan, Mahak, Cho, Sung, Durrani, Saima, Gentil, Monique P., Goodman, Karli, Laiyemo, Adeyinka O., Lanke, Gandi, Lebron, Ralph, Maheshwari, Anurag, Mehari, Alem, Nezamloo, Ali, Ngwa, Julius, Njoku, Noelle, Ok, Jina, Sherif, Zaki A., Solemani, Akbar, Thuluvath, Paul, To, Chau, Spikes, Leslie A., James, Judith A., Luciano Roman, Carlos A., Chow, Dominic C., Marshall, Gailen D., Dickinson, John D., Hoover, Susan E., Warren, David E., Emery, Ivette F., Sukhera, Fatima I., Rosen, Clifford J., Greenway, Frank L., Hodder, Sally L., Shikuma, Cecilia M., VanWagoner, Timothy M., Bardes, James M., Kirwan, John P., Wood, Jeremy P., Whiteheart, Sidney W., Shellito, Judd, Roelke, Theresa, Black, Lora, Tjarks, Brian, Fonseca, Vivian, Gupta, Shaveeta, Longo, Michele, Yang, Mei, MarGangcuangco, Louis, Bengtson, Charles, Castro, Mario, Howard, Theresa, Garvy, Beth, Simmons, Christopher, Garla, Vishnu, Kuebler, Joy, Nandi, Utsav, Vasey, Andrew, Bogie, Amanda, Scott, James, Frontera, Sigrid Perez, Bagur, Jorge Santana, Dominique-Villanueva, Daphne, Juskowich, Joy, Reece, Rebecca, Sarwari, Arif, Aponte-Soto, Lisa, Adams, Dara, Baker, Aileen, Barbera, Sunni, Basu, Sanjib, Bleasdale, Susan, Bolliger, Dawn, Boyd, Andrew D., Boyineni, Jerusha, Breiter, Taylor, Brown, Daniel, Buhimschi, Irina A., Carrithers, Michael D., Certa, Marta, Chalamalla, Rashmika, Chebrolu, Praneeth, Chestek, David, Chessier, Erica, Cook, Judith A., Cranford, Savannah, Curry, Hannah L., Darbar, Dawood, Dasgupta, Raktima, Blakley, Felicia Davis, DeLisa, Julie A., Del Rios, Marina, Diaz, Maya Z., Diviak, Kathleen R., Dixon, Jennifer, Donlon, Meghan F., Donohue, Sarah E., Dworkin, Mark S., Edmonds, Sherrie, Ellison, Angela, Everett, Emily, Flanigan, Clarie, Freedman, Michael B., Gale, Lisa, Gerald, Lynn B., Giles, Wayne H., Gordon, Howard S., Hafner, John, Hammad, Bayan, Hanson, Keith A., Harris, Pastor C., Hartwig, Kimberly, Hasek, Sharon, Hasse, Wendy, Hendrickson, Monica, Hobbs, Brianna, Hryniewicka, Martyna, Hammerl, Savannah, Hutton, Robert, Ibanez, Alejandra L., Illendula, Sai D., Ismail, Nahed, Jain, Akash, Jennette, Kyle J., Kadubek, Grace, Kent, Denise, Kotini-Shah, Pavitra, Kelly, Sara W., Kent, Denise A., Kim, Keri S., Kindred, Elijah, Klein, Jonathan D., Krishnan, Jerry A., Large, Lucia, Lash, James ., Lin, Janet Y., Lu, Jun, Mahamed, Abeer M., Maholovich, Phoebe, Malchenko, Sergey, Martinez, Miriam, Mauntel-Medici, Cammeo, Madineni, Abhigna, McCauley, Mark, Menchaca, Martha, Mermelstein, Robin, Moreno, David J., Morrissy, Liam, Muramatsu, Naoko, Musick, Hugh, Noland, Seth, Norwick, Lourdes, Novak, Richard M., Olds, Lela, Ortiz, Marilyn, Patel, Khushboo, Perez, Nicolas L., Pliskin, Neil H., Pope, Sam, Prabhakar, Bellur S., Prasad, Bharati, Predki, Barbara, Prendergast, Heather M., Quigley, John G., Ramchandran, Ramaswamy, Ramirez, Ana, Rappe, Sarah, Rehman, Jalees, Rolon, Cesar, Rowley, Matthew, Rudraraju, Gowrisree, Rutherfoord, Melissa, Sader, Samer B., Sculley, Jennifer A., Smith-Mack, Jerisha, Swearingen, Peyton, Stewart de Ramirez, Sarah A., Sudhindra, Praveen, Sun, Jun, Tartt, Nancy, Terlinde, Tracy, Thompson, Tiffany, Vanden Hoek, Terry L., Kelly, Sara Warfield, Villanueva, Laura, Welter, Hannah, Woolley, Brittany, Yazici, Cemal, Charney, Alexander W., Kovatch, Patricia, Merad, Miriam, Nadkarni, Girish N., Wisnivesky, Juan P., Aberg, Judith A., Ascolillo, Steven, Assenso, Esther, Bagiella, Emilia, Bartram, Logan, Becker, Jacqueline, Beckmann, Noam D., Bendl, Ashley, Chen, Benjamin K., Civil, Alyssa, Dhar, Kaberi, Evo-Ortega, Lorraine, Fierer, Daniel, Gallagher, Emily J., Garcia-Sastre, Adolfo, Gnjatic, Sacha, Guliyeva, Sabina, Harvey-Ingram, Lori, Herrera-Moreno, Julia, Hill, Matthew, Horowitz, Carol R., Jackson, Rachel, Kastrat, Din, Lala-Trindade, Anu, Lin, Jenny, Macaluso, Nick, Marcon, Kathryn, Meyer, Dara, Morinigo, Janice, Natelson, Benjamin H., Nussenzweig, Maya, Padua, Tiffani, Putrino, David, Quazi, Nawreen, Ramos, Michelle, Richardson, Lynne, Russo, Scott, Seifert, Alan C., Serri, Abdullah, Walker, Jordan, Yee, Michell, Adolphi, Natalie L., Alekhina, Natalya, Archuleta, David A., Barlocker, Jackson, Bateman, Lucinda, Bradfute, Steven B., Brito, Rebecca, Bryan, Tanner W., Buck, Kaitlin E., Davis, Debra, Deakyne Davies, Sara J., Decker, Lauren A., Elifritz, Jamie, Erlandson, Kristine M., Facelli, Julio C., Fudge, Harrison Z., Tran, Huong, Pitch, Chloe, Feuerriegel, Elen M., Ford, Isaac, Friedman, Naomi P., Garcia-Soberanez, Noella D., Gardner, Edward M., Stringham, Caitlyn, Ling, Leah, Gebremariam, Tewodros H., Gentry, Frederick D., Gouripeddi, Ramkiran, Graham, Paige, Gronert, Eve G., Harkins, Michelle S., Hawkins, Kellie L., Hess, Rachel, Johnny, Jace D., Johnson, Brandon M., Jolley, Sarah E., Lloyd, Jennifer, Ludwig, Katelyn R., Martinez, Noah I., McCandless, Sean A., Montoya, Lorenzo A., Oakes, Judy L., Parada, Alisha N., Quinn, Davin K., Raissy, Hengameh, Ramos, Alfredo, Reid, Kayleigh M., Reusch, Jane E., Sheehan, Elyce B., Sokol, Ron J., Treacher, Irena S., Trinity, Joel D., Truong, Dongngan T., West, Shelby C., Molden, Joie, Sharareh, Nasser, Weaver, Lisa J., Spivak, Adam M., Brown, Jeanette P., Shah, Kevin S., Pace, Laura A., Scholand, Mary Beth, Velinder, Matt, Cortez, Melissa, Morimoto, Sarah Shizuko, Vernon, Suzanne D., Lu, Yue, Owen, Megan, Hermansen, Jessica A., Lindsay, Ashton M., Donohue, Dagny K., Garg, Lohit, Wodushek, Thomas, Higgins, Janine, Lockie, Tim, Brightman, Marisa, Thurman, Brook, Powell, Jenny M., Freston, Dylan C., Medina, Juliemar C., Aguirre, Bailee, Anderson, Jeff, Bair, Tami, Bosh, Lindsay, Evans, Lorlie, Garrett, Chase, Harris, Dixie, Herrera, Katherine, Horne, Benjamin D., Juan, James, Knight, Stacey, Knowlton, Kirk, Leither, Lindsay, Maestas, Heather, May, Heidi T., Najarian, Gabriel, Woller, Scott C., Zubal, Shyanne, Jensen, McKenna M., Webb, Tiaura, Iverson, Leslie, Ayache, Mirna, Baloi, Alexis, Barnboym, Emma, Boldt, Nicholas, Bukulmez, Hulya, Chesnick, Hailey, Conrad, Ann, Consolo, Mary, Curtis, Lynette, D’anza, Brian, DiFrancesco, Kathryn, Edminston, Marissa, Eteshola, Ebenezer, Gallagher, Michelle, Gibson, Kelly S., Gordesky, Larraine, Greenwood, Carla, Haghiac, Maricela, Harris, Paul, Hernandez, Carla, Iqbal, Shirin, Kaelber, David C., Kaufman, Elizabeth S., Kennedy, Olivia, Labbato, Danielle, Lengu, Ketrin, Levert, Antonio, Levin, Jennifer, Lowenthal, Rebecca, Mackin, Bridget, Malakooti, Shahdi K., McComsey, Grace A., Minium, Judy, Mouchati, Christian, Oleson, Christine, Pearman, Ann, Hershey, Morgan, Rivera, Amanda, Rodgers, Michael, Rodgers, Theresa, Roy, Arnab, Russ, Kris, Scott, Sarah, Sheth, Niyati, Singer, Nora G., Smith, Beth, Smith, Cheryl, Stancin, Terry, Temple, Daniel, Tribout, Megan, Weinberger, Elisheva, Zhang, David, Zisis, Sokratis N., Atieh, Ornina, Yendewa, George, Baissary, Jhony, Pettinato, KImberly, Lim, Joaquin, Jacob, Joshua, Adams, Cara, Tejani, Viral, Algren, Heather A., Alicic, Radica, Baxter, Joni, Brennan, Conor, Caudill, Antonina, Chen, Peter, Chopra, Tananshi, Chu, Helen Y., Del Alcazar, James, Duven, Alexandria M., Edmark, Rick, Emerson, Sarah, Goldman, Jason D., Gutierrez, Vanessa, Hadlock, Jennifer, Harteloo, Alex, Heath, James R., Hood, Susan, Jackman, Susan, Kaneko, John, Kemp, Megan, Kim, Christina, Kuykendall, Kelli, Li, Sarah, Logue, Jennifer K., Magis, Andrew T., Manner, Paula, Mason, Carly, McCaffrey, Kathryn, McDonald, Connor, McDonald, Dylan, Murray, Kim M., Nackviseth, Callista, Nguyen, Helen, Parimon, Tanyalak, Poussier, Rachel, Rowen, Lee, Satira, Richard, Torbati, Sam, Tuttle, Katherine R., Wallick, Julie A., Yuan, Dan, Watanabe, Kino, Wilcox, Lauren E., Contreras, Fatima, Dahlke, Lea, Gudipudi, Lasya, Modes, Matthew, Muttera, Nicole, Salinas, Nancy, Tadeo, Josie, White, Shane, Alvarado, Stephanie, Anderson, Reed, Arellanes, Azaneth, Barajas, Rose A., Chauhan, Suneet P., Clarke, Geoffrey D., Farner, Cheryl E., Fischer, Melinda S., Goldberg, Mark P., Hasbani, Keren, Hastings, Gabrielyd, Heard, Patricia, Herrera, Italia, Infante, Edgar, Johnson, Hillary, Jones, Johnnie, Kellogg, Dean L., Kraig, Ellen, Longoria, Lisa, Nambiar, Anoop M., Okafor, Emeka, Paredes, Claudia C., Patterson, Thomas F., Patterson, Jan E., Pinones, Alexis, Potter, Jennifer S., Reeves, W.B., Saade, George R., Salehi, Marzieh, Scholler, Irma, Seshadri, Sudha, Shah, Dimpy P., Shah, Pankil, Sharma, Kumar, Sharma, Kavita, Soileau, Bridgette, Solis, Pamela, Stoebner, Carmen, Sullivan, Michael, Taylor, Barbara S., Tragus, Robin, Tsevat, Joel, Verduzco-Gutierrez, Monica, Ahuja, Neera, Blish, Catherine A., Blomkalns, Andra L., Bonilla, Hector, Brotherton, Richard, Clinton, Kimberly, Dingankar, Vaidehi, Geng, Linda N., Go, Minjoung, Haddad, Francois, Jagannathan, Prasanna, Jamero, Christopher, Jee, Kathryn, Jia, Xiaolin K., Khurana, Naresh, Kumar, Andre, Maldonado, Yvonne, Miglis, Mitchell G., O'Conor, Ellen, Olszewski, Kelly, Pathak, Divya, Quintero, Orlando, Scott, Jake, Singh, Upinder, Urdaneta, Alfredo E., Utz, Paul J., Varkey, Mary R., Saperia, Corey, Autry, Lynn, Bime, Christian, Borwege, Sabine, Copeland, Jacquelynn, DiLise-Russo, Marjorie, Ernst, Kacey C., Esquivel, Denise R., Fadden, Susan, Gomez, Isaias, Grischo, Garrett, Hansen, Lillian, Harris, David T., Harris, Stefanie, Hartley, William, Hernandez, Michael, Hillier, Leah, Hsu, Harvey, Hughes, Trina, Ismail, Hira, Iusim, Stephanie, James, Michelle, Kala, Mrinalini, Karnafel, Maria, Kim, Daniel, Knox, Kenneth S., Koleski, Alison, LaFleur, Bonnie, Lambert, Brenda, LaRue, Sicily, Lee-Iannotti, Joyce K., Lieberman, David, Lutrick, Karen, Merchant, Nirav, Morton, Christopher, Mosier, Jarrod M., Murthy, Ganesh, Nikolich, Janko Z., Olorunnisola, Toluwanimi, Parthasarathy, Sairam, Peralta, Jeanette, Pilling, William, Pogreba-Brown, Kristen, Reiman, Eric M., Rischard, Franz P., Ryan, Lee T., Smith, Terry, Snyder, Manuel, Soto, Francisco, Subbian, Vignesh, Suhr, Kyle, Unzek, Samuel, Vadovicky, Sheila, Velarde, Deanna, Veres, Sharry, Wilson, Cathleen, Anderson, Grace, Anglin, Khamal, Argueta, Urania, Asare, Kofi, Buitrago, Melissa, Chang Song, Celina, Clark, Alexus, Conway, Emily, Deeks, Steven G., Del Castillo, Nicole, Deswal, Monika, Durstenfeld, Matthew S., Eilkhani, Elnaz, Eun, Avery, Fehrman, Emily, Figueroa, Tony, Flores, Diana, Grebe, Halle, Henrich, Timothy J., Hoh, Rebecca, Hsue, Priscilla, Huang, Beatrice, Ibrahim, Rania, Kelly, John D., Kerbleski, Marian, Kirtikar, Raushun, Lew, Megan T., Lombardo, James, Lopez, Monica, Luna, Michael, Marquez, Carina, Martin, Jeffrey N., Munter, Sadie, Ngo, Lynn, Peluso, Michael J., Pineda-Ramirez, Jesus, Rhoads, Kim, Rodriguez, Antonio, Romero, Justin, Ryder, Dylan, So, Matthew, Somsouk, Ma, Tai, Viva, Tran, Brandon, Uy, Julian, Valdivieso, Daisy, Verma, Deepshika, Williams, Meghann, Zamora, Andhy, Newman, Lisa T., Abella, Julie, Barnette, Quinn, Bevc, Christine, Beverly, Jennifer, Ceger, Patricia, Croxford, Julie, Enger, Mike, Fain, Katie, Farris, Tonya, Hanlon, Sean, Hines, David, Johnson-Lawrence, Vicki, Jordan, Kevin, Lefebvre, Craig, Linas, Beth, Luukinen, Bryan, Mandal, Meisha, McKoy, Nikki J., Nance, Susan, Pasquarelli, Demian, Quiner, Claire, Sembajwe, Rita, Shaw, Gwendolyn, Thornburg, Vanessa, Tosco, Kendall, Wright, Hannah, Gross, Rachel S., Hochman, Judith S., Horwitz, Leora I., Katz, Stuart D., Troxel, Andrea B., Adler, Lenard, Akinbo, Precious, Almenana, Ramona, Aschalew, Malate, Balick, Lara, Bello, Ola, Bhuiyan, Sultana, Blachman, Nina, Branski, Ryan, Briscoe, Jasmine, Brosnahan, Shari, Bueler, Elliott, Burgos, Yvette, Caplin, Nina, Chaplin, Domonique, Chen, Yu, Cheng, Shen, Choe, Peter, Choi, Jess, Chung, Alicia, Church, Richard, Cobos, Stanley, Croft, Nakia, Irving, Angelique Cruz, Del Boccio, Phoebe, Díaz, Iván, Divers, Jasmin, Doshi, Vishal, Dreyer, Benard, Ebel, Samantha, Esquenazi-Karonika, Shari, Faustin, Arline, Febres, Elias, Fine, Jeffrey, Fink, Sandra, Freeland, Catherine, Frontera, Jennifer, Gallagher, Richard, Gonzalez-Duarte, Alejandra, Gross, Rachel, Hasson, Denise, Hill, Sophia, Hochman, Judith, Horwitz, Leora, Hossain, Jennifer, Islam, Shahidul, Jean, Christina Saint, Johnson, Stephen, Kansal, Neha, Katz, Stuart, Kenney, Rachel, Kershner, Tammy, Kewlani, Deepshikha, Kwak, Judy, Lamendola-Essel, Michelle F., Laury, Sarah, Laynor, Gregory, Lei, Lei, Leon, Terry, Linton, Janelle, Logan, Max, Malik, Nadia, Mamistvalova, Lia, Mandel, Hannah, Maranga, Gabrielle, Mattoo, Aprajita, Mei, Tony, Mendelsohn, Alan, Mercier, Emmanuelle, Vernetti, Patricio Millar, Miller, Marc, Mitchell, Maika, Moreira, Andre, Mudumbi, Praveen C., Nahin, Erica, Nair, Nandini, Nekulak, Joseph, Owens, Kellie, Parent, Brendan, Patibandla, Nandan, Petrov, Peter, Postelnicu, Radu, Pratt, Francesca, Randall, Isabelle, Rao, Priyatha, Rapkiewicz, Amy, Rizzo, JohnRoss, Rosas, Johana, Rose, Chelsea, Saint-Jean, Christina, Santacatterina, Michelle, Shah, Binita, Shaukat, Aasma, Simon, Naomi, Simsir, Aylin, Stinson, Miranda, Tang, Wenfei, Tatapudi, Vasishta, Thawani, Sujata, Thomas, Mary, Thorpe, Lorna, Tom, MeeLee, Treiha, Ethan, Troxel, Andrea, Truong, Jennifer, Udosen, Mmekom, Valencia, Carlos, Velazquez-Perez, Jessica, Vernetti, Patricio M., Vidal, Crystal, Viswanathan, Anand, Willerford, Amy, Williams, Natasha, Wong, Crystal, Wood, Marion J., Wuller, Shannon, Yin, Shonna H., Young, Chloe, Zaretsky, Jonah, Zavlunova, Susanna, Ahirwar, Shreya, Ahmed, Shifa, Ainsworth, Layne L., Atchley-Challenner, Rachel, Avilach, Paul, Balan, Trisha T., Benik, Nicholas, Benoit, Barbara, Bind, Marie-Abèle C., Bonaventura, William J., Boutin, Natalie, Brion, Beverly, Cagan, Andrew, Cai, Tianrun, Cao, Tingyi, Castro, Victor M., Cerretani, Xander R., Chan, James G., Cheng, David, Chibnik, Lori B., Ciriello, Mark, Costenbader, Karen, Dimitrov, Dimitar S., Estiri, Hossein, Fayad, Maria, Feldman, Candace H., Foulkes, Andrea, Gainer, Vivian, Ghosh, Bhaswati, Gollub, Randy, Guan, Zoe, Harris, Alan, Helmer, Karl, Hendrix, Andrew, Holzbach, Ana, Huang, Weixing, Karlson, Elizabeth W., Kaufman, Daniel, Keogh, Diane, Kerr, James D., Klann, Jeffrey G., Krishnamoorthy, Aparna, Lasky-Su, Jessica A., Liao, Katherine P., MacFadden, Doug, Maram, Anupama, Martel, Megan W., Mendis, Michael, Metta, Reeta, Monteiro, Jonathan, Morales, Eduardo, Morse, Richard E., Murphy, Shawn, Nazaire, Marc-Danie, Neils, Gregory, Nguyen, Amber N., Norman, James, Paik, Henry H., Pant, Deepti, Park, HeeKyong, Rabideau, Dustin J., Reeder, Harrison T., Rossi-Roh, Kathleen, Santacroce, Leah M., Schlepphorst, Katherine, Schulte, Carolin, Selvaggi, Caitlin A., Shinnick, Daniel J., Simons, William, Simpson, Lynn A., St. Jean Flanders, Mary L., Strasser, Zachary, Thakrar, Mansi R., Thaweethai, Tanayott, Thorn, Madeleine, Trewett, Philip, Van Fleet, Dustin, Wagholikar, Kavishwar B., Wang, Taowei D., Wattanasin, Nich, Weber, Griffin, Williams, Michael A., Zhang, Ren Zhe, Cicek, Mine, Chang, Nancy, Wirkus, Samantha, Zahnle, Nicole, Flotte, Thomas J., Frisch, Erika, Boysen, Erik M., Welch, Gary, Akintonwa, Teresa, Blancero, Frank, Brown, Heather-Elizabeth, Carmilani, Megan, Cerda, Marta, Clash, Victor H., Copeland, Debra, Hall, Yvonka, kevin kondo, Lerma, Lydia, Lindsay, Jacqui, Marti, Heather, Maughan, Christine, Minor, Tony, Taylor, Brittany, Vincent, Hyatt, Zissis, Mike, Anderson, Brett, Bardhan, Sujata, Castro-Baucom, Leah, Chisolm, Deena, Corchado, Claudia, Damian, April Joy, Daniel, Casey, DasGupta, Soham, Dehority, Walter, Feldman, Candace, Fessel, Josh, Rosas, Lisa Goldman, Horowitz, Carol, Khullar, Dhruv, Lopez, Keila, McDonald Pinkett, Shelly, Myaskovsky, Larissa, Regino, Lidia, St John Thomas, Gelise, Stewart de Ramirez, Sarah, Vangeepuram, Nita, Walden, Anita, Williams, Neely, Yin, Shonna, Burton, Phoebe, Catallozzi, Marina, Clark, Cheryl, Dworetzky, Beth, Edwards, Belinda, Ferrer, Robert L., Judd, Suzanne, Rothman, Russell, Wagner, Laura, Wallace, Ann, Adams, Sonseeahray (Ray), Aragon, Leyna, Bander, Bryan, Bishof, Karyn, Brooks, Gail, Carignan, Etienne, Coombs, Krista, Davis, Hannah, Blakley, Felicia D., Diggs, Marissa, Brown, Heather E., Favors, Umar, Fields, Whitney, Fisher, Liza, Fitzgerald, Megan, Gaffney, Alicia, Witvliet, Margot Gage, Garcia, Roberto, Gustafson, Tyler, Guthe, Nick, Holmes, Verna, Hornig, Mady, Hornig, Maxwell, Jefferson, Wendy, Kochis, Nancy, Kondo, Kevin, Lam, Julie, Lawrence, Fadwa, Letts, Rebecca, Lewis, Juan, Lopez, Silcia, Martinez, Thomas, McCorkell, Lisa, McGrath, Rebecca, Minor, Thomas T., Moore, Charita, Nguyen, Kian, Nichols, Lauren, O'Brien, Lisa, Olson, Holly, Peddie, Aimee, Perlowski, Alice, Lorenzo, Elizabeth P., Prentiss, Lisa, Raytselis, Nadia, Rochez, Nitza, Rockwell, Megan, Rutter, Jacqueline, Seibert, Elle, Sekar, Anisha, Smith, Chimere, Stiles, Lauren, Taylor, Emily, Thompson, Julie, Trapp, Stephen, Valdiva, Stephen, Wilensky, Rochelle, Williams, Melissa, Dawson, Kay W., Wylam, Andrew, Swank, Zoe, Borberg, Ella, Chen, Yulu, Senussi, Yasmeen, Chalise, Sujata, Manickas-Hill, Zachary, Yu, Xu G., Li, Jonathan Z., Alter, Galit, Kelly, J. Daniel, Goldberg, Sarah A., Talla, Aarthi, Li, Xiaojun, Skene, Peter, Bumol, Thomas F., Torgerson, Troy R., Czartoski, Julie L., McElrath, M. Juliana, and Walt, David R.
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- 2024
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17. Analysis of School-Day Disruption of Administering School-Located Vaccination to Children in Three Local Areas, 2012-2013 School Year
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Yarnoff, Ben, Wagner, Laura Danielle, Honeycutt, Amanda A., and Vogt, Tara M.
- Abstract
The purpose of this study was to determine the amount of time elementary and middle-school students spend away from the classroom and clinic time required to administer vaccines in school-located vaccination (SLV) clinics. We conducted a time study and estimated average time away from class and time to administer vaccine by health department (HD), student grade level, vaccine type, and vaccination process for SLV clinics during the 2012-2013 school year. Average time away from classroom was 10 min (sample: 688 students, 15 schools, three participating HD districts). Overall, time to administer intranasally administered influenza vaccine was nearly half the time to administer injected vaccine (52.5 vs. 101.7 s) (sample: 330 students, two HDs). SLV administration requires minimal time outside of class for elementary and middle-school students. SLV clinics may be an efficient way to administer catch-up vaccines to children who missed routine vaccinations during the coronavirus disease-2019 pandemic.
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- 2023
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18. Health Insurance Matters: Insurance Coverage and Health Service Use Among Direct Care Workers in the United States
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McCall, Stephen, Scales, Kezia, and Wagner, Laura M.
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- 2024
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19. Can you teach me how to open the box?: Examining young children’s teaching behavior toward adults with and without disabilities
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Walton, Katherine M., Borowy, Alayna R., Fecher, Madison L., and Wagner, Laura
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- 2024
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20. Design of a Multicenter Randomized Controlled Trial comparing the effectiveness of shared decision making versus motivational interviewing plus cognitive behavioral therapy for voluntary opioid tapering: The INSPIRE study protocol
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Edlund, Mark J., Thomas, Sonia M., Wagner, Laura K., Thompson, Jessica E., Wu, Li-Tzy, Dolor, Rowena J., Chelminski, Paul R., Ives, Timothy J., Archer, Kristin R., Dewey, Charlene M., Sullivan, Mark D., and McCormack, Lauren A.
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- 2024
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21. Development of the Syntax-Discourse Interface (review)
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Wagner, Laura
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- 2002
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22. Mapping access to meaning in adolescents with autism: Atypical lateralization and spatiotemporal patterns as a function of language ability
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You, Yuqi, Correas, Angeles, White, David R., Wagner, Laura C., Jao Keehn, R.Joanne, Rosen, Burke Q., Alemu, Kalekirstos, Müller, Ralph-Axel, and Marinkovic, Ksenija
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- 2023
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23. Naturalistic Use of Aspect Morphology in Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing Children
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Bowdrie, Kristina, Holt, Rachael Frush, Blank, Andrew, and Wagner, Laura
- Abstract
Grammatical morphology often links small acoustic forms to abstract semantic domains. Deaf and hard-of-hearing (DHH) children have reduced access to the acoustic signal and frequently have delayed acquisition of grammatical morphology (e.g., Tomblin, Harrison, Ambrose, Walker, Oleson & Moeller, 2015). This study investigated the naturalistic use of aspectual morphology in DHH children to determine if they organize this semantic domain as normal hearing (NH) children have been found to do. Thirty DHH children (M = 6;8) and 29 NH children (M = 5;11) acquiring English participated in a free-play session and their tokens of perfective (simple past) and imperfective ("-ing") morphology were coded for the lexical aspect of the predicate they marked. Both groups showed established prototype effects, favoring perfective + telic and imperfective + atelic pairings over perfective + atelic and perfective + atelic ones. Thus, despite reduced access to the acoustic signal, this DHH group was unimpaired for aspectual organization.
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- 2021
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24. Evaluation of an Ecological Model for Work-Related Musculoskeletal Disorders
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Kyung, Minjung, Wagner, Laura, Lee, Soo-Jeong, and Hong, OiSaeng
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- 2023
- Full Text
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25. Are Criminals Better Lie Detectors? Investigating Offenders' Abilities in the Context of Deception Detection
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Schindler, Simon, Wagner, Laura K., Reinhard, Marc-André, Ruhara, Nico, Pfattheicher, Stefan, and Nitschke, Joachim
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The present research examined lie detection abilities of a rarely investigated group, namely offenders. Results of the studies conducted thus far indicated a better performance of offenders compared to non-offenders when discriminating between true and false messages. With two new studies, we aimed at replicating offenders' superior abilities in the context of deception detection. Results of Study 1 (N = 76 males), in contrast, revealed that offenders were significantly worse at accurately classifying true and false messages compared to non-offenders (students). Results of Study 2 (N = 175 males) revealed that offenders' discrimination performance was not significantly different compared to non-offenders (clinic staff). An internal meta-analysis yielded no significant difference between offenders and non-offenders, questioning the generalizability of previous findings.
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- 2021
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26. Beyond Cation Disorder: Site Symmetry‐Tuned Optoelectronic Properties of the Ternary Nitride Photoabsorber ZrTaN3.
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Sirotti, Elise, Wagner, Laura I., Jiang, Chang‐Ming, Eichhorn, Johanna, Munnik, Frans, Streibel, Verena, Schilcher, Maximilian J., März, Benjamin, Hegner, Franziska S., Kuhl, Matthias, Höldrich, Theresa, Müller‐Caspary, Knut, Egger, David A., and Sharp, Ian D.
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- *
ORBITAL hybridization , *SEMICONDUCTOR synthesis , *CONDUCTION bands , *VALENCE bands , *ENERGY conversion - Abstract
Ternary nitrides are rapidly emerging as promising compounds for optoelectronic and energy conversion applications, yet comparatively little of this vast composition space has been explored. Furthermore, the crystal structures of these compounds can exhibit a significant amount of disorder, the consequences of which are not yet well understood. Here, the deposition of bixbyite‐type ZrTaN3 thin films is demonstrated by reactive magnetron co‐sputtering and observed semiconducting character, with a strong optical absorption onset at 1.8 eV and significant photoactivity, with prospective application as functional photoanodes. It is found that Wyckoff‐site occupancy of cations is a critical factor in determining these beneficial optoelectronic properties. First‐principles calculations show that cation disorder leads to minor deviations in the total energy but modulates the bandgap by 0.5 eV, changing orbital hybridization of valence and conduction band states. In addition to demonstrating that ZrTaN3 is a promising visible light‐absorbing semiconductor and active photoanode material, the findings provide important insights regarding the role of cation ordering on the electronic structure of ternary semiconductors. In particular, it is shown that not only cation order, but also the cationic Wyckoff site occupancy has a substantial impact on key optoelectronic properties, which can guide future design and synthesis of advanced semiconductors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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27. Beyond Cation Disorder: Site Symmetry‐Tuned Optoelectronic Properties of the Ternary Nitride Photoabsorber ZrTaN3.
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Sirotti, Elise, Wagner, Laura I., Jiang, Chang‐Ming, Eichhorn, Johanna, Munnik, Frans, Streibel, Verena, Schilcher, Maximilian J., März, Benjamin, Hegner, Franziska S., Kuhl, Matthias, Höldrich, Theresa, Müller‐Caspary, Knut, Egger, David A., and Sharp, Ian D.
- Subjects
ORBITAL hybridization ,SEMICONDUCTOR synthesis ,CONDUCTION bands ,VALENCE bands ,ENERGY conversion - Abstract
Ternary nitrides are rapidly emerging as promising compounds for optoelectronic and energy conversion applications, yet comparatively little of this vast composition space has been explored. Furthermore, the crystal structures of these compounds can exhibit a significant amount of disorder, the consequences of which are not yet well understood. Here, the deposition of bixbyite‐type ZrTaN3 thin films is demonstrated by reactive magnetron co‐sputtering and observed semiconducting character, with a strong optical absorption onset at 1.8 eV and significant photoactivity, with prospective application as functional photoanodes. It is found that Wyckoff‐site occupancy of cations is a critical factor in determining these beneficial optoelectronic properties. First‐principles calculations show that cation disorder leads to minor deviations in the total energy but modulates the bandgap by 0.5 eV, changing orbital hybridization of valence and conduction band states. In addition to demonstrating that ZrTaN3 is a promising visible light‐absorbing semiconductor and active photoanode material, the findings provide important insights regarding the role of cation ordering on the electronic structure of ternary semiconductors. In particular, it is shown that not only cation order, but also the cationic Wyckoff site occupancy has a substantial impact on key optoelectronic properties, which can guide future design and synthesis of advanced semiconductors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Impact of Defects and Disorder on the Stability of Ta3N5 Photoanodes.
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Wolz, Lukas M., Grötzner, Gabriel, Rieth, Tim, Wagner, Laura I., Kuhl, Matthias, Dittloff, Johannes, Zhou, Guanda, Santra, Saswati, Streibel, Verena, Munnik, Frans, Sharp, Ian D., and Eichhorn, Johanna
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OXIDATION of water ,POINT defects ,THIN films ,CHARGE injection ,OXIDATION - Abstract
The photoelectrochemical performance of Ta3N5 photoanodes is strongly impacted by the presence of shallow and deep defects within the bandgap. However, the role of such states in defining stability under operational conditions is not well understood. Here, a highly controllable synthesis approach is used to create homogenous Ta3N5 thin films with tailored defect concentrations to establish the relationship between atomic‐scale point defects and macroscale stability. Reduced oxygen contents increase long‐range structural order but lead to high concentrations of deep‐level states, while higher oxygen contents result in reduced structural order but beneficially passivate deep‐level defects. Despite the different defect properties, the synthesized photoelectrodes degrade similarly under water oxidation conditions due to the formation of a surface oxide layer that blocks interfacial hole injection and accelerates charge recombination. In contrast, under ferrocyanide oxidation conditions, it is found that Ta3N5 films with high oxygen concentrations exhibit long‐term stability, whereas those possessing lower oxygen contents and higher deep‐level defect concentrations rapidly degrade. These results indicate that deep‐level defects result in rapid trapping of photocarriers and surface oxidation but that shallow oxygen donors can be introduced into Ta3N5 to enable kinetic stabilization of the interface. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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29. LINAS‐Score: prognostic model for mortality assessment in patients with cirrhotic liver and infected ascites.
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Würstle, Silvia, Schneider, Tillman, Karapetyan, Siranush, Hapfelmeier, Alexander, Isaakidou, Andriana, Studen, Fabian, Schmid, Roland M., von Delius, Stephan, Rothe, Kathrin, Burgkart, Rainer, Obermeier, Andreas, Triebelhorn, Julian, Erber, Johanna, Voit, Florian, Geisler, Fabian, Spinner, Christoph D., Schneider, Jochen, and Wagner, Laura
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RECEIVER operating characteristic curves ,CIRRHOSIS of the liver ,PROGNOSTIC models ,RANDOM forest algorithms ,REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Background and Aim: Patients with liver cirrhosis often face a grave threat from infected ascites (IA). However, a well‐established prognostic model for this complication has not been established in routine clinical practice. Therefore, we aimed to assess mortality risk in patients with liver cirrhosis and IA. Methods: We conducted a retrospective study across three tertiary hospitals, enrolling 534 adult patients with cirrhotic liver and IA, comprising 465 with spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP), 34 with bacterascites (BA), and 35 with secondary peritonitis (SP). To determine the attributable mortality risk linked to IA, these patients were matched with 122 patients with hydropic decompensated liver cirrhosis but without IA. Clinical, laboratory, and microbiological parameters were assessed for their relation to mortality using univariable analyses and a multivariable random forest model (RFM). Least absolute shrinkage and selection operator (Lasso) regression model was used to establish an easy‐to‐use mortality prediction score. Results: The in‐hospital mortality risk was highest for SP (39.0%), followed by SBP (26.0%) and BA (25.0%). Besides illness severity markers, microbiological parameters, such as Candida spp., were identified as the most significant indicators for mortality. The Lasso model determined 15 parameters with corresponding scores, yielding good discriminatory power (area under the receiver operating characteristics curve = 0.89). Counting from 0 to 83, scores of 20, 40, 60, and 80 corresponded to in‐hospital mortalities of 3.3%, 30.8%, 85.2%, and 98.7%, respectively. Conclusion: We developed a promising mortality prediction score for IA, highlighting the importance of microbiological parameters in conjunction with illness severity for assessing patient outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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30. Early Vocabulary Profiles of Young Deaf Children Who Use Cochlear Implants
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Jung, Jongmin, Reed, Jessa, Wagner, Laura, Stephens, Julie, Warner-Czyz, Andrea D., Uhler, Kristin, and Houston, Derek
- Abstract
Purpose: This study examined vocabulary profiles in young cochlear implant (CI) recipients and in children with normal hearing (NH) matched on receptive vocabulary size to improve our understanding of young CI recipients' acquisition of word categories (e.g., common nouns or closed-class words). Method: We compared receptive and expressive vocabulary profiles between young CI recipients (n = 48; mean age at activation = 15.61 months, SD = 4.20) and children with NH (n = 48). The two groups were matched on receptive vocabulary size as measured by the MacArthur-Bates Communicative Development Inventories (Fenson et al., 2006): Words and Gestures form. The CI group had, on average, 8.98 months of hearing experience. The mean chronological age at completing the MacArthur-Bates Communicative Development Inventories was 23.99 months (SD = 5.14) for the CI group and 13.72 months (SD = 1.50) for the NH group. Results: The CI group had a larger expressive vocabulary size than the receptive vocabulary size-matched NH group. The larger expressive vocabulary size was associated with the group difference in social words but not with common nouns. The analyses for predicate words and closed-class words included only children who produced the target categories. The CI group had a larger proportion of predicate words than the NH group, but no difference was found in closed-class words in expressive vocabulary. Conclusions: Differences found in expressive vocabulary profiles may be affected by spoken vocabulary size and their age. A further examination is warranted using language samples to understand the effect of language input on children's vocabulary profiles.
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- 2020
- Full Text
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31. The Development of Sociolinguistic Competence across the Lifespan: Three Domains of Regional Dialect Perception
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Dossey, Ellen, Clopper, Cynthia G., and Wagner, Laura
- Abstract
This study investigated the developmental trajectories of three perceptual domains related to regional dialect competence: the linguistic domain, tested through an intelligibility in noise task; the objective indexical domain, tested through locality judgments and a free classification task; and the subjective indexical domain, tested through smart and friendly judgments. To allow direct comparison across domains, participants aged 4-71 years (N = 302) completed all tasks with the same talkers from four regional dialects of American English. The results demonstrated that development in each of these domains is protracted, with changes occurring as late as early adulthood. However, the developmental trajectories for each task and the connections between them differed significantly among the stimulus dialects. These dialect-specific patterns suggest that dialect perception requires extensive exposure to variety-specific linguistic and socio-cultural information, and the lengthy timecourse of sociolinguistic development reflects the substantial exposure that is necessary to successfully integrate linguistic and social information.
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- 2020
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32. Radiation Therapy of Lymphatic Fistulae After Vascular Surgery in the Groin
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Hautmann, Matthias G., Dietl, Barbara, Wagner, Laura, Zeman, Florian, Kölbl, Oliver, Pfister, Karin, and Schierling, Wilma
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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33. On the Value of Subscription Models for Online Grocery Retail
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Wagner, Laura, Pinto, Catarina, and Amorim, Pedro
- Published
- 2021
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34. The “when” and “where” of the interplay between attentional capture and response inhibition during a Go/NoGo variant
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Happer, Joseph P., Wagner, Laura C., Beaton, Lauren E., Rosen, Burke Q., and Marinkovic, Ksenija
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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35. Associations Between Religious/Spiritual Coping and Depression Among Adults with Cystic Fibrosis: A 12-Month Longitudinal Study
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Sherman, Allen C., Simonton-Atchley, Stephanie, O’Brien, Catherine E., Campbell, Dianne, Reddy, Raghu M., Guinee, Bethany, Wagner, Laura D., and Anderson, Paula J.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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36. The Development of Regional Dialect Locality Judgments and Language Attitudes across the Life Span
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McCullough, Elizabeth A., Clopper, Cynthia G., and Wagner, Laura
- Abstract
The development of language attitudes and perception of talker regional background was investigated across the life span (N = 240, age range = 4-75 years). Participants rated 12 talkers on dimensions of geographic locality, status, and solidarity. Children could classify some dialects by locality by age 6-7 years and showed adult-like patterns by age 8 years. Children showed adult-like status ratings for some dialects by age 4-5 years but were not fully adult-like until age 12 years. Solidarity ratings were more variable and did not exhibit a clear developmental trajectory, although some adult-like patterns were in place by age 6-7 years. Locality ratings were a significant but modest predictor of attitude ratings, suggesting that geographic knowledge is one contributor to language attitudes throughout development.
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- 2019
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37. Preferences for Accessing Electronic Health Records for Research Purposes: Views of Parents Who Have a Child With a Known or Suspected Genetic Condition
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Raspa, Melissa, Paquin, Ryan S., Brown, Derek S., Andrews, Sara, Edwards, Anne, Moultrie, Rebecca, Wagner, Laura, Frisch, MaryKate, Turner-Brown, Lauren, and Wheeler, Anne C.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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38. Trajectories of intimate partner violence and their relationship to stress among young women in South Africa: An HPTN 068 study.
- Author
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Kelly, Nicole K, Bhushan, Nivedita L, Gottfredson O'Shea, Nisha, Gómez-Olivé, F Xavier, Aiello, Allison E, Wagner, Laura Danielle, Mall, Sumaya, Kahn, Kathleen, Pettifor, Audrey E, and Stoner, Marie CD
- Subjects
INTIMATE partner violence ,RESEARCH funding ,CYTOMEGALOVIRUSES ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,PSYCHOLOGY of women ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,GOVERNMENT aid ,LONGITUDINAL method ,ODDS ratio ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,PUBLIC welfare ,HERPES simplex ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,C-reactive protein ,BIOMARKERS - Abstract
Background: One in four South African women will experience intimate partner violence (IPV) in their lifetime, potentially increasing their biological stress. In South Africa, limited IPV and stress research has utilized multiple timepoints or examined modifying factors. Cash transfers (CTs) are associated with reduced IPV and stress and may be an intervention target. Aims: We used data-driven methods to identify longitudinal IPV trajectory groups among South African adolescent girls and young women (AGYW), estimate each group's association with stress, and assess modification by a CT. Methods: A total of 2,183 South African AGYW ages 13 to 24 years from the HIV Prevention Trials Network 068 study were randomized to a CT or control group. Physical IPV was measured five times (2011–2017), and stress was captured once (2018–2019). Stress measures included the Cohen Stress Scale and stress biomarkers (C-reactive protein (CRP), cytomegalovirus (CMV), herpes simplex virus type-1 (HSV-1)). Group-based trajectory modeling identified IPV trajectories; ordinal logistic regression estimated the association between trajectory group and stress. Results: A two-group quadratic trajectory model was identified (higher trajectory group = 26.7% of AGYW; lower trajectory group = 73.3%). In both groups, the probability of IPV increased from ages 13 to 17 years before declining in early adulthood. However, the higher group's probability peaked later and declined gradually. The higher trajectory group was associated with an increased odds of elevated CRP (OR: 1.41, 95% CI [1.11, 1.80]), but not with other stress measures. The CT modified the relationship with CMV: a positive association was observed among the usual care arm (OR: 1.59, 95% CI [1.11, 2.28]) but not the CT arm (OR: 0.85, 95% CI [0.61, 1.19]). Conclusions: Sustained IPV risk during adolescence was associated with elevated CRP in young adulthood. The relationship between IPV and elevated CMV was attenuated among those receiving a CT, suggesting that CTs could possibly reduce biological stress due to IPV. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Factors Associated With Reporting Attitudes of Work-Related Musculoskeletal Disorders Among Direct Care Workers in South Korea.
- Author
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Kyung, MinJung, Lee, Soo-Jeong, Wagner, Laura M., Harris-Adamson, Carisa, and Hong, OiSaeng
- Subjects
CROSS-sectional method ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,STATISTICAL correlation ,NURSING home employees ,MUSCULOSKELETAL pain ,RESEARCH funding ,MUSCULOSKELETAL system diseases ,STATISTICAL sampling ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,LONG-term health care ,PLANNED behavior theory ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,BEHAVIOR ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,WORK-related injuries ,ODDS ratio ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,INTENTION ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,DATA analysis software ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,RESIDENTIAL care ,INDUSTRIAL safety ,REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Background: Workers' reporting of work-related injuries or illnesses is important for treatment and prevention, yet research often focuses on reporting barriers. This study aimed to identify factors related to work-related musculoskeletal disorder (WRMSD) reporting attitudes and their connection to reporting intention and behavior. Methods: We analyzed data from 377 direct care workers employed in 19 long-term care facilities in South Korea. A self-administered questionnaire collected demographics, job characteristics, physical and psychosocial factors, musculoskeletal symptoms, reporting attitudes, and WRMSD reporting intentions and behavior between May and August 2022. We used a generalized linear mixed model with a random intercept by employers to identify factors influencing reporting attitudes. To explore the relationship between reporting attitude and reporting intention and behavior, simple logistic regression was also conducted. Results: We achieved an 86% response rate. The majority of the study participants were female (87.2%), married (95.9%), and non-immigrant (72.8%). Of the study participants, 48.9% had no intention to report WRMSDs, and 44.3% held negative reporting attitudes. Among 200 workers with WRMSDs, 86.5% did not report them. Attitudes were associated with work duration, safety training, management safety priority, WRMSD experience, and symptom severity and frequency. Management safety priority did not moderate this relationship. Significant links existed between attitudes and reporting intention and behavior. Conclusions/Applications to Practice: This study highlights the vital influence of workers' attitudes on reporting work-related injuries and illnesses. Occupational health providers should employ strategies, such as tailored safety training and management commitment, with a focus on addressing the unique needs of long-tenured and musculoskeletal-exposed workers. Fostering a safety culture that promotes open and timely reporting is crucial, and implementing these strategies can significantly enhance workplace safety and health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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40. Improving Intraoperative Parathyroid Hormone Specimen Handling and Processing.
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Murgatroyd, Jocelyn, Wagner, Laura M., and Duh, Quan‐Yang
- Abstract
Surgeons request intraoperative parathyroid hormone (PTH) monitoring during parathyroidectomy procedures to confirm identification of abnormal gland tissue. Generally, a 50% decrease in the baseline PTH level indicates the abnormal tissue has been removed. A delay in collecting and processing PTH blood samples can complicate intraoperative decision making and prolong the procedure. The purpose of this quality improvement project was to develop tools to facilitate the specimen management process (eg, requesting, transporting, analyzing) for PTH blood samples and decrease the average total time required for transit and assay. We implemented a two‐pronged initiative that involved improving the laboratory requisition form and creating a parathyroid tote box to contain all the needed information and supplies. The average total time for transit and assay decreased from 31.36 minutes before implementation to 22.06 minutes after implementation. Perioperative nurses expressed satisfaction with the changes and continue to use the revised process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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41. Assortment Optimization Under the Multinomial Logit Model with Utility-Based Rank Cutoffs.
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Bai, Yicheng, Feldman, Jacob, Topaloglu, Huseyin, and Wagner, Laura
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LOGISTIC regression analysis ,DISCRETE choice models ,POLYNOMIAL time algorithms ,POLYNOMIAL approximation ,NP-hard problems ,ACCOUNTING standards - Abstract
Augmenting the Modeling Power of the Multinomial Logit Model Using choice models to capture customer choice behavior has steadily become the common practice in revenue management. Discrete choice models allow one to capture the fact that customers substitute among the offered products, so if a particular product is not offered, then a portion of the customers interested in this product will substitute into a suitable available alternative. The multinomial logit model is one of the most commonly used choice models to capture customer choice in practice. This choice model is based on the utility maximization framework. A customer associates random utilities with the products, as well as the no-purchase option, in which case, the customer purchases the product with the largest utility, as long as its utility exceeds that of the no-purchase option. In "Assortment Optimization under the Multinomial Logit Model with Utility-Based Rank Cutoffs," Bai, Feldman, Topaloglu, and Wagner augment the modeling flexibility of the multinomial logit model, where a customer also leaves without a purchase if she cannot find one of her top few choices. They develop algorithms to find revenue-maximizing assortments. We study assortment optimization problems under a natural variant of the multinomial logit model where the customers are willing to focus only on a certain number of products that provide the largest utilities. In particular, each customer has a rank cutoff, characterizing the number of products that she will focus on during the course of her choice process. Given that we offer a certain assortment of products, the choice process of a customer with rank cutoff k proceeds as follows. The customer associates random utilities with all of the products as well as the no-purchase option. The customer ignores all alternatives whose utilities are not within the k largest utilities. Among the remaining alternatives, the customer chooses the available alternative that provides the largest utility. Under the assumption that the utilities follow Gumbel distributions with the same scale parameter, we provide a recursion to compute the choice probabilities. Considering the assortment optimization problem to find the revenue-maximizing assortment of products to offer, we show that the problem is NP-hard and give a polynomial time approximation scheme. Because the customers ignore the products below their rank cutoffs in our variant of the multinomial logit model, intuitively speaking, our variant captures choosier choice behavior than the standard multinomial logit model. Accordingly, we show that the revenue-maximizing assortment under our variant includes the revenue-maximizing assortment under the standard multinomial logit model, so choosier behavior leads to larger assortments offered to maximize the expected revenue. We conduct computational experiments on both synthetic and real data sets to demonstrate that incorporating rank cutoffs can yield better predictions of customer choices and yield more profitable assortment recommendations. Funding: The work of Y. Bai and H. Topaloglu was partially supported by the National Science Foundation [Grant No. CMMI-1825406]. Supplemental Material: The e-companion is available at https://doi.org/10.1287/opre.2021.0060. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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42. The influence of book sub-genre on parent-child reading interactions
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Henkaline, Kristin and Wagner, Laura
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- 2020
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43. Automatic delineation and quantification of pulmonary vascular obstruction index in patients with pulmonary embolism using Perfusion SPECT-CT: a simulation study
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Bourhis, David, Wagner, Laura, Rioult, Julien, Robin, Philippe, Le Pennec, Romain, Tromeur, Cécile, Salaün, Pierre Yves, and Le Roux, Pierre Yves
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- 2021
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44. Longitudinal associations between gratitude and depression 1 year later among adult cystic fibrosis patients
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Sherman, Allen C., Simonton-Atchley, Stephanie, O'Brien, Catherine E., Campbell, Dianne, Reddy, Raghu M., Guinee, Bethany, and Wagner, Laura D.
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Cystic fibrosis -- Psychological aspects -- Patient outcomes -- Care and treatment ,Gratitude -- Health aspects -- Psychological aspects ,Depression, Mental -- Care and treatment -- Patient outcomes ,Psychology and mental health - Abstract
Individuals with cystic fibrosis (CF) are confronted by a range of difficult physical and psychosocial sequelae. Gratitude has drawn growing attention as a psychosocial resource, but it has yet to be examined among adults with CF. The current investigation evaluated longitudinal associations between trait gratitude and subsequent outcomes from depression screening 12 months later, adjusting for disease severity (FEV.sub.1% predicted) and other significant clinical or demographic covariates. Participants were 69 adult CF patients recruited from a regional adult treatment center. They completed a validated measure of gratitude (Gratitude Questionnaire-6) at baseline and a screening measure of depression (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale) at 12-month follow-up. In a logistic regression analysis controlling for disease severity, higher levels of baseline gratitude were associated with reduced likelihood of depression caseness at 12 months (OR .83, 95% CI .73-.91, p = .001). Gratitude remained predictive after adjusting for other psychosocial resource variables (i.e., perceived social support and positive reframing coping). Findings offer an initial indication of the potential salutary role of dispositional gratitude in an understudied clinical population., Author(s): Allen C. Sherman [sup.1] , Stephanie Simonton-Atchley [sup.1] , Catherine E. O'Brien [sup.2] , Dianne Campbell [sup.3] [sup.5] , Raghu M. Reddy [sup.4] [sup.6] , Bethany Guinee [sup.2] , [...]
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- 2020
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45. Deleterious Effects of Higher Body Mass Index on Subjective and Objective Measures of Chemotherapy-Induced Peripheral Neuropathy in Cancer Survivors
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Petrovchich, Iva, Kober, Kord M., Wagner, Laura, Paul, Steven M., Abrams, Gary, Chesney, Margaret A., Topp, Kimberly, Smoot, Betty, Schumacher, Mark, Conley, Yvette P., Hammer, Marilyn, Levine, Jon D., and Miaskowski, Christine
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- 2019
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46. Is it fake? Using potentially low quality suppliers as back-up when genuine suppliers are unavailable
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Wagner, Laura, Gürbüz, Mustafa Ҫagri, and Parlar, Mahmut
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- 2019
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47. Tuning Carbon Dioxide Reduction Reaction Selectivity of Bi Single‐Atom Electrocatalysts with Controlled Coordination Environments.
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Santra, Saswati, Streibel, Verena, Wagner, Laura I., Cheng, Ningyan, Ding, Pan, Zhou, Guanda, Sirotti, Elise, Kisslinger, Ryan, Rieth, Tim, Zhang, Siyuan, and Sharp, Ian D.
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STRUCTURE-activity relationships ,SUSTAINABILITY ,ELECTROCATALYSTS ,CATALYTIC activity ,CARBON-black ,OXYGEN reduction ,CARBON dioxide reduction - Abstract
Control over product selectivity of the electrocatalytic CO2 reduction reaction (CO2RR) is a crucial challenge for the sustainable production of carbon‐based chemical feedstocks. In this regard, single‐atom catalysts (SACs) are promising materials due to their tunable coordination environments, which could enable tailored catalytic activities and selectivities, as well as new insights into structure‐activity relationships. However, direct evidence for selectivity control via systematic tuning of the SAC coordination environment is scarce. In this work, we have synthesized two differently coordinated Bi SACs anchored to the same host material (carbon black) and characterized their CO2RR activities and selectivities. We find that oxophilic, oxygen‐coordinated Bi atoms produce HCOOH, while nitrogen‐coordinated Bi atoms generate CO. Importantly, use of the same support material assured that alternation of the coordination environment is the dominant factor for controlling the CO2RR product selectivity. Overall, this work demonstrates the structure‐activity relationship of Bi SACs, which can be utilized to establish control over CO2RR product distributions, and highlights the promise for engineering atomic coordination environments of SACs to tune reaction pathways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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48. Zirconium Oxynitride Thin Films for Photoelectrochemical Water Splitting.
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Streibel, Verena, Schönecker, Johanna L., Wagner, Laura I., Sirotti, Elise, Munnik, Frans, Kuhl, Matthias, Jiang, Chang-Ming, Eichhorn, Johanna, Santra, Saswati, and Sharp, Ian D.
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- 2024
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49. Intent to stay, moral distress, and nurse practice environment among long‐term care nurses: A cross‐sectional questionnaire survey study.
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Tan, Amil Kusain, Capezuti, Elizabeth, Samuels, William Ellery, Backhaus, Ramona, and Wagner, Laura M.
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EMPLOYEE retention ,NURSES ,CROSS-sectional method ,WORK ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,PSYCHOLOGICAL distress ,CRONBACH'S alpha ,RESEARCH funding ,LONG-term health care ,WORK environment ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SAMPLE size (Statistics) ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,AGE distribution ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ETHICS ,SURVEYS ,NURSING practice ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH methodology ,NURSES' attitudes ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,FACTOR analysis ,DATA analysis software ,EXPERIENTIAL learning ,EMPLOYMENT - Abstract
Background: Many long‐term care facilities in the United States face significant problems with nurse retention and turnover. These challenges are attributed, at least in part, to moral distress and a negative nurse practice environment. Objective: The purpose of the study was divided into two parts: first, to investigate the relationships among nurse practice environment, moral distress, and intent to stay; second, to explore the potential mediating effect of the nurse practice environment on the intent to stay among those with high levels of moral distress. Design: This study was a descriptive, cross‐sectional survey using targeted sampling. Participants: A total of 215 participants completed the surveys. Participants were nationally representative of long‐term care nurses by age, years of experience, employment status, and type of health setting. Methods: This study was an online national survey of long‐term care nurses' perceptions of their intent to stay, moral distress level (Moral Distress Questionnaire), and nurse practice environment (Direct Care Staff Survey). Structural equation modeling analysis explored intent to stay, moral distress, and the nurse practice environment among long‐term care nurses. Results: The mean moral distress score was low, while the mean nurse practice environment and intent to stay scores were high. Moral distress had a significant, moderately negative association with the nurse practice environment (β = −0.41), while the nurse practice environment had a significant, moderately positive association with intent to stay (β = 0.46). The moral distress had a significant, moderately negative association with intent to stay (β = −0.20). The computed structural equation modeling suggested a partially mediated model (indirect effect = −0.19, p = 0.001). Conclusion: Since the nurse practice environment partially mediates the relationship between moral distress and intent to stay, interventions to improve the nurse practice environment are crucial to alleviating moral distress and enhancing nurses' intent to stay in their jobs, organizations, and the nursing profession. Clinical Relevance: Our study demonstrated that the nurse practice environment mediates moral distress and intent to stay.Interventions to improve the nurse practice environment are crucial to alleviating moral distress and enhancing nurses' intent to stay in their jobs, organizations, and the nursing profession. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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50. Building a more engaged scientist from the bottom up: The impact of public engagement training on undergraduate students.
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Patson, Nikole D. and Wagner, Laura
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UNDERGRADUATES , *UNDERGRADUATE programs , *PUBLIC interest - Abstract
Engaging with the public is increasingly seen as an important role of scientists. Despite that, few opportunities exist for undergraduate students to receive training in engaging with the public about science. Thus, little is known about the impact of such training on students. The goal of the current study was to investigate the impact of public engagement training on participants in a summer program for undergraduates that provides training in both research and engagement activities. The results of our interviews suggest that providing opportunities for undergraduates to engage with the public (1) has many personal, academic, and career benefits for students; (2) increases participants' interest in public engagement; and (3) may contribute to helping students develop and maintain an identity as scientists. Importantly, students from minoritized racial groups may be even more impacted by this experience. These data suggest that early experiences with public engagement may not only be an important way to increase the number of publicly engaged scientists but may also broaden participation in science. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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