7,584 results on '"Van Etten, A"'
Search Results
52. The SpaceNet Multi-Temporal Urban Development Challenge
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Van Etten, Adam and Hogan, Daniel
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Building footprints provide a useful proxy for a great many humanitarian applications. For example, building footprints are useful for high fidelity population estimates, and quantifying population statistics is fundamental to ~1/4 of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals Indicators. In this paper we (the SpaceNet Partners) discuss efforts to develop techniques for precise building footprint localization, tracking, and change detection via the SpaceNet Multi-Temporal Urban Development Challenge (also known as SpaceNet 7). In this NeurIPS 2020 competition, participants were asked identify and track buildings in satellite imagery time series collected over rapidly urbanizing areas. The competition centered around a brand new open source dataset of Planet Labs satellite imagery mosaics at 4m resolution, which includes 24 images (one per month) covering ~100 unique geographies. Tracking individual buildings at this resolution is quite challenging, yet the winning participants demonstrated impressive performance with the newly developed SpaceNet Change and Object Tracking (SCOT) metric. This paper details the top-5 winning approaches, as well as analysis of results that yielded a handful of interesting anecdotes such as decreasing performance with latitude., Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures. To appear in PMLR Post Proceedings for the Competition Track at NeurIPS 2020. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2102.04420
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- 2021
53. The Multi-Temporal Urban Development SpaceNet Dataset
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Van Etten, Adam, Hogan, Daniel, Martinez-Manso, Jesus, Shermeyer, Jacob, Weir, Nicholas, and Lewis, Ryan
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Satellite imagery analytics have numerous human development and disaster response applications, particularly when time series methods are involved. For example, quantifying population statistics is fundamental to 67 of the 231 United Nations Sustainable Development Goals Indicators, but the World Bank estimates that over 100 countries currently lack effective Civil Registration systems. To help address this deficit and develop novel computer vision methods for time series data, we present the Multi-Temporal Urban Development SpaceNet (MUDS, also known as SpaceNet 7) dataset. This open source dataset consists of medium resolution (4.0m) satellite imagery mosaics, which includes 24 images (one per month) covering >100 unique geographies, and comprises >40,000 km2 of imagery and exhaustive polygon labels of building footprints therein, totaling over 11M individual annotations. Each building is assigned a unique identifier (i.e. address), which permits tracking of individual objects over time. Label fidelity exceeds image resolution; this "omniscient labeling" is a unique feature of the dataset, and enables surprisingly precise algorithmic models to be crafted. We demonstrate methods to track building footprint construction (or demolition) over time, thereby directly assessing urbanization. Performance is measured with the newly developed SpaceNet Change and Object Tracking (SCOT) metric, which quantifies both object tracking as well as change detection. We demonstrate that despite the moderate resolution of the data, we are able to track individual building identifiers over time. This task has broad implications for disaster preparedness, the environment, infrastructure development, and epidemic prevention., Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures, 3 tables
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- 2021
54. Temporal Ordering of Biomarkers in Dutch-Type Hereditary Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy
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Koemans, Emma A., Rasing, Ingeborg, Voigt, Sabine, van Harten, Thijs W., van der Zwet, Reinier G.J., Kaushik, Kanishk, Schipper, Manon R., van der Weerd, Nelleke, van Zwet, Erik W., van Etten, Ellis S., van Osch, Matthias J.P., Kuiperij, Bea, Verbeek, Marcel M., Terwindt, Gisela M., Greenberg, Steven M., van Walderveen, Marianne A.A., and Wermer, Marieke J.H.
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- 2024
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55. The impact of Rhodiola rosea on biomarkers of diabetes, inflammation, and microbiota in a leptin receptor-knockout mouse model
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Jafari, Mahtab, Juanson Arabit, Jasmin Grace, Courville, Robert, Kiani, Dara, Chaston, John M, Nguyen, Cindy Duy, Jena, Nilamani, Liu, Zhong-Ying, Tata, Prasanthi, and Van Etten, Richard A
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Diabetes ,Nutrition ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Animals ,Biomarkers ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 2 ,Inflammation ,Mice ,Mice ,Knockout ,Microbiota ,Plant Extracts ,Receptors ,Leptin ,Rhodiola - Abstract
Type 2 diabetes is the most prevalent endocrine disease in the world, and recently the gut microbiota have become a potential target for its management. Recent studies have illustrated that this disease may predispose individuals to certain microbiome compositions, and treatments like metformin have been shown to change gut microbiota and their associated metabolic pathways. However, given the limitations and side effects associated with pharmaceuticals currently being used for therapy of diabetes, there is a significant need for alternative treatments. In this study, we investigated the effects of a root extract from Rhodiola rosea in a Leptin receptor knockout (db/db) mouse model of type 2 diabetes. Our previous work showed that Rhodiola rosea had anti-inflammatory and gut microbiome-modulating properties, while extending lifespan in several animal models. In this study, treatment with Rhodiola rosea improved fasting blood glucose levels, altered the response to exogenous insulin, and decreased circulating lipopolysaccharide and hepatic C-reactive protein transcript levels. We hypothesize that these changes may in part reflect the modulation of the microbiota, resulting in improved gut barrier integrity and decreasing the translocation of inflammatory biomolecules into the bloodstream. These findings indicate that Rhodiola rosea is an attractive candidate for further research in the management of type 2 diabetes.
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- 2022
56. Total energy expenditure is repeatable in adults but not associated with short-term changes in body composition
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Rimbach, Rebecca, Yamada, Yosuke, Sagayama, Hiroyuki, Ainslie, Philip N, Anderson, Lene F, Anderson, Liam J, Arab, Lenore, Baddou, Issaad, Bedu-Addo, Kweku, Blaak, Ellen E, Blanc, Stephane, Bonomi, Alberto G, Bouten, Carlijn VC, Bovet, Pascal, Buchowski, Maciej S, Butte, Nancy F, Camps, Stefan GJA, Close, Graeme L, Cooper, Jamie A, Das, Sai Krupa, Dugas, Lara R, Ekelund, Ulf, Entringer, Sonja, Forrester, Terrence, Fudge, Barry W, Goris, Annelies H, Gurven, Michael, Hambly, Catherine, El Hamdouchi, Asmaa, Hoos, Marije B, Hu, Sumei, Joonas, Noorjehan, Joosen, Annemiek M, Katzmarzyk, Peter, Kempen, Kitty P, Kimura, Misaka, Kraus, William E, Kushner, Robert F, Lambert, Estelle V, Leonard, William R, Lessan, Nader, Martin, Corby K, Medin, Anine C, Meijer, Erwin P, Morehen, James C, Morton, James P, Neuhouser, Marian L, Nicklas, Theresa A, Ojiambo, Robert M, Pietiläinen, Kirsi H, Pitsiladis, Yannis P, Plange-Rhule, Jacob, Plasqui, Guy, Prentice, Ross L, Rabinovich, Roberto A, Racette, Susan B, Raichlen, David A, Ravussin, Eric, Reynolds, Rebecca M, Roberts, Susan B, Schuit, Albertine J, Sjödin, Anders M, Stice, Eric, Urlacher, Samuel S, Valenti, Giulio, Van Etten, Ludo M, Van Mil, Edgar A, Wells, Jonathan CK, Wilson, George, Wood, Brian M, Yanovski, Jack, Yoshida, Tsukasa, Zhang, Xueying, Murphy-Alford, Alexia J, Loechl, Cornelia U, Luke, Amy H, Rood, Jennifer, Schoeller, Dale A, Westerterp, Klaas R, Wong, William W, Speakman, John R, and Pontzer, Herman
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Nutrition ,Pediatric ,Clinical Research ,Obesity ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Adipose Tissue ,Adult ,Bayes Theorem ,Body Composition ,Child ,Databases ,Factual ,Energy Metabolism ,Female ,Humans ,Isotope Labeling ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Water ,Weight Gain ,IAEA DLW Database Consortium - Abstract
Low total energy expenditure (TEE, MJ/d) has been a hypothesized risk factor for weight gain, but repeatability of TEE, a critical variable in longitudinal studies of energy balance, is understudied. We examine repeated doubly labeled water (DLW) measurements of TEE in 348 adults and 47 children from the IAEA DLW Database (mean ± SD time interval: 1.9 ± 2.9 y) to assess repeatability of TEE, and to examine if TEE adjusted for age, sex, fat-free mass, and fat mass is associated with changes in weight or body composition. Here, we report that repeatability of TEE is high for adults, but not children. Bivariate Bayesian mixed models show no among or within-individual correlation between body composition (fat mass or percentage) and unadjusted TEE in adults. For adults aged 20-60 y (N = 267; time interval: 7.4 ± 12.2 weeks), increases in adjusted TEE are associated with weight gain but not with changes in body composition; results are similar for subjects with intervals >4 weeks (N = 53; 29.1 ± 12.8 weeks). This suggests low TEE is not a risk factor for, and high TEE is not protective against, weight or body fat gain over the time intervals tested.
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- 2022
57. Glacier ice archives nearly 15,000-year-old microbes and phages
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Zhong, Zhi-Ping, Tian, Funing, Roux, Simon, Gazitúa, M Consuelo, Solonenko, Natalie E, Li, Yueh-Fen, Davis, Mary E, Van Etten, James L, Mosley-Thompson, Ellen, Rich, Virginia I, Sullivan, Matthew B, and Thompson, Lonnie G
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Microbiology ,Biological Sciences ,Infectious Diseases ,Climate Action ,Bacteria ,Bacteriophages ,Ice Cover ,Metagenomics ,Microbiota ,Guliya ice cap ,Mountain glacier ice ,Surface decontamination ,Ice microbes ,Ice viruses ,Methylobacterium ,Sphingomonas ,Janthinobacterium ,Ecology ,Medical Microbiology ,Evolutionary biology - Abstract
BackgroundGlacier ice archives information, including microbiology, that helps reveal paleoclimate histories and predict future climate change. Though glacier-ice microbes are studied using culture or amplicon approaches, more challenging metagenomic approaches, which provide access to functional, genome-resolved information and viruses, are under-utilized, partly due to low biomass and potential contamination.ResultsWe expand existing clean sampling procedures using controlled artificial ice-core experiments and adapted previously established low-biomass metagenomic approaches to study glacier-ice viruses. Controlled sampling experiments drastically reduced mock contaminants including bacteria, viruses, and free DNA to background levels. Amplicon sequencing from eight depths of two Tibetan Plateau ice cores revealed common glacier-ice lineages including Janthinobacterium, Polaromonas, Herminiimonas, Flavobacterium, Sphingomonas, and Methylobacterium as the dominant genera, while microbial communities were significantly different between two ice cores, associating with different climate conditions during deposition. Separately, ~355- and ~14,400-year-old ice were subject to viral enrichment and low-input quantitative sequencing, yielding genomic sequences for 33 vOTUs. These were virtually all unique to this study, representing 28 novel genera and not a single species shared with 225 environmentally diverse viromes. Further, 42.4% of the vOTUs were identifiable temperate, which is significantly higher than that in gut, soil, and marine viromes, and indicates that temperate phages are possibly favored in glacier-ice environments before being frozen. In silico host predictions linked 18 vOTUs to co-occurring abundant bacteria (Methylobacterium, Sphingomonas, and Janthinobacterium), indicating that these phages infected ice-abundant bacterial groups before being archived. Functional genome annotation revealed four virus-encoded auxiliary metabolic genes, particularly two motility genes suggest viruses potentially facilitate nutrient acquisition for their hosts. Finally, given their possible importance to methane cycling in ice, we focused on Methylobacterium viruses by contextualizing our ice-observed viruses against 123 viromes and prophages extracted from 131 Methylobacterium genomes, revealing that the archived viruses might originate from soil or plants.ConclusionsTogether, these efforts further microbial and viral sampling procedures for glacier ice and provide a first window into viral communities and functions in ancient glacier environments. Such methods and datasets can potentially enable researchers to contextualize new discoveries and begin to incorporate glacier-ice microbes and their viruses relative to past and present climate change in geographically diverse regions globally. Video Abstract.
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- 2021
58. Physical activity and fat-free mass during growth and in later life
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Westerterp, Klaas R, Yamada, Yosuke, Sagayama, Hiroyuki, Ainslie, Philip N, Andersen, Lene F, Anderson, Liam J, Arab, Lenore, Baddou, Issaad, Bedu-Addo, Kweku, Blaak, Ellen E, Blanc, Stephane, Bonomi, Alberto G, Bouten, Carlijn VC, Bovet, Pascal, Buchowski, Maciej S, Butte, Nancy F, Camps, Stefan GJA, Close, Graeme L, Cooper, Jamie A, Das, Sai K, Cooper, Richard, Dugas, Lara R, Ekelund, Ulf, Entringer, Sonja, Forrester, Terrence, Fudge, Barry W, Goris, Annelies H, Gurven, Michael, Hambly, Catherine, Hamdouchi, Asmaa El, Hoos, Marije B, Hu, Sumei, Joonas, Noorjehan, Joosen, Annemiek M, Katzmarzyk, Peter, Kempen, Kitty P, Kimura, Misaka, Kraus, William E, Kushner, Robert F, Lambert, Estelle V, Leonard, William R, Lessan, Nader, Martin, Corby K, Medin, Anine C, Meijer, Erwin P, Morehen, James C, Morton, James P, Neuhouser, Marian L, Nicklas, Theresa A, Ojiambo, Robert M, Pietiläinen, Kirsi H, Pitsiladis, Yannis P, Plange-Rhule, Jacob, Plasqui, Guy, Prentice, Ross L, Rabinovich, Roberto A, Racette, Susan B, Raichlen, David A, Ravussin, Eric, Reynolds, Rebecca M, Roberts, Susan B, Schuit, Albertine J, Sjödin, Anders M, Stice, Eric, Urlacher, Samuel S, Valenti, Giulio, Van Etten, Ludo M, Van Mil, Edgar A, Wells, Jonathan CK, Wilson, George, Wood, Brian M, Yanovski, Jack, Yoshida, Tsukasa, Zhang, Xueying, Murphy-Alford, Alexia J, Loechl, Cornelia U, Luke, Amy H, Pontzer, Herman, Rood, Jennifer, Schoeller, Dale A, Wong, William W, Speakman, John R, Branth, Stefan, Colbert, Lisa H, De Bruin, Niels C, Dutman, Alice E, Elmståhl, Sölve, Fogelholm, Mikael, Harris, Tamara, Heijligenberg, Rik, Jorgensen, Hans U, Larsson, Christel L, Rothenberg, Elisabet M, McCloskey, Margaret, Meijer, Gerwin A, Pannemans, Daphne L, Schulz, Sabine, Van den Berg-Emons, Rita, Van Gemert, Wim G, and Wilhelmine, W
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Prevention ,Aging ,Clinical Research ,Nutrition ,Adipose Tissue ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Body Composition ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Energy Metabolism ,Exercise ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Young Adult ,physical activity level ,age ,energy expenditure ,body composition ,doubly labeled water ,International Atomic Energy Agency Doubly Labeled Water database group ,Engineering ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Nutrition & Dietetics - Abstract
BackgroundPhysical activity may be a way to increase and maintain fat-free mass (FFM) in later life, similar to the prevention of fractures by increasing peak bone mass.ObjectivesA study is presented of the association between FFM and physical activity in relation to age.MethodsIn a cross-sectional study, FFM was analyzed in relation to physical activity in a large participant group as compiled in the International Atomic Energy Agency Doubly Labeled Water database. The database included 2000 participants, age 3-96 y, with measurements of total energy expenditure (TEE) and resting energy expenditure (REE) to allow calculation of physical activity level (PAL = TEE/REE), and calculation of FFM from isotope dilution.ResultsPAL was a main determinant of body composition at all ages. Models with age, fat mass (FM), and PAL explained 76% and 85% of the variation in FFM in females and males
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- 2021
59. The Diagnostic Value of Biomarkers in Acute Mesenteric Ischaemia Is Insufficiently Substantiated: A Systematic Review
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Blauw, Juliëtte T.M., Metz, Flores M., Nuzzo, Alexandre, van Etten - Jamaludin, Faridi S., Brusse-Keiser, Marjolein, Boermeester, Marja A., Peppelenbosch, Maikel, and Geelkerken, Robert H.
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- 2024
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60. Dirigent isoflavene-forming PsPTS2: 3D structure, stereochemical, and kinetic characterization comparison with pterocarpan-forming PsPTS1 homolog in pea
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Meng, Qingyan, Moinuddin, Syed G.A., Celoy, Rhodesia M., Smith, Clyde A., Young, Robert P., Costa, Michael A., Freeman, Rachel A., Fukaya, Masashi, Kim, Doo Nam, Cort, John R., Hawes, Martha C., van Etten, Hans D., Pandey, Pankaj, Chittiboyina, Amar G., Ferreira, Daneel, Davin, Laurence B., and Lewis, Norman G.
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- 2024
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61. The use of adjunctive mechanical dilation at the time of induction termination and adverse health outcomes: a systematic review
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Premkumar, Ashish, Manthena, Vanya, Vuppaladhadiam, Lahari, Van Etten, Kelly, McLaren, Hillary, and Grobman, William A.
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- 2024
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62. Cost-effectiveness of home-based screening of the general population for albuminuria to prevent progression of cardiovascular and kidney disease
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Pouwels, Xavier G.L.V., van Mil, Dominique, Kieneker, Lyanne M., Boersma, Cornelis, van Etten, Ronald W., Evers-Roeten, Birgitte, Heerspink, Hiddo J.L., Hemmelder, Marc H., Langelaan, Marloes L.P., Thelen, Marc H.M., Gansevoort, Ron T., and Koffijberg, Hendrik
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- 2024
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63. ClimMob: Software to support experimental citizen science in agriculture
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Quirós, Carlos, de Sousa, Kauê, Steinke, Jonathan, Madriz, Brandon, Laporte, Marie-Angélique, Arnaud, Elizabeth, Manners, Rhys, Ortiz-Crespo, Berta, Müller, Anna, and van Etten, Jacob
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- 2024
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64. The FLY-project: study protocol for mixed methods research to explore the complex social dynamics of sustainable food-related lifestyles in youth in practical education
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Soraya van Etten, Lonneke Jansen, Michèlle Bal, Brian J. Dermody, Eggo Müller, John de Wit, and Marijn Stok
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Food ,Sustainability ,Behaviour change ,COM-B model ,Adolescents ,Socio-economic position ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,TX341-641 ,Food processing and manufacture ,TP368-456 ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Background The present-day food system is a key driver of climate change and biodiversity loss, making it imperative for populations to shift towards more sustainable diets. The involvement of youth in this transition is vital because they are in a formative period where their identities, values, and norms, including their food behaviours, are being shaped. Special attention should be paid to youth in practical education because they are often overlooked in existing studies, yet evidence suggests they may lack the necessary resources to support dietary changes, resulting in lower levels of pro-environmental food-related behaviours. The aim of the FLY (Food-related Lifestyles in Youth) project is to study how sustainable food-related lifestyles and underlying factors develop in early adolescence, particularly in Dutch youth in practical education, how these spread in social networks, and to develop community-level intervention strategies to support youths’ transition to sustainable food-related behaviours. Methods/design The FLY-project adopts a mixed-method approach. First, two literature reviews are conducted. A systematic review assesses how capabilities, opportunities and motivation are associated with sustainable food behaviours in youth, and how these elements interrelate in determining sustainable food-related lifestyles. A scoping review studies community-level interventions that target sustainable and healthy food-related behaviours. Second, focus groups are conducted to explore the barriers and facilitating factors concerning capabilities, opportunities, and motivations that Dutch youth in practical-level education experience to transition to more sustainable food-related lifestyles. Third, a cohort survey study is conducted to track the dynamic interplay between capabilities, opportunities, motivation, and changes in specific sustainable food behaviours over time, and to assess the diffusion of sustainable food-related lifestyles via social (media) networks. Fourth, an experimental research programme tests promising intervention approaches, some of which are co-created with youth, targeting relevant underlying factors. Discussion This paper describes the rationale, conceptual framework, design and methods of the FLY-project. The FLY-project contributes to an understanding of underlying factors of sustainable food-related behaviours in adolescence and results in a multi-component intervention toolkit, with a particular focus on youth in practical education programmes.
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- 2023
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65. Regional covariance of white matter hyperintensity volume patterns associated with hippocampal volume in healthy aging
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Emily J. Van Etten, Pradyumna K. Bharadwaj, Matthew D. Grilli, David A. Raichlen, Georg A. Hishaw, Matthew J. Huentelman, Theodore P. Trouard, and Gene E. Alexander
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regional white matter hyperintensity volume ,hippocampal volume ,brain aging ,subjective memory complaints ,scaled subprofile model ,multivariate analyses ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Hippocampal volume is particularly sensitive to the accumulation of total brain white matter hyperintensity volume (WMH) in aging, but how the regional distribution of WMH volume differentially impacts the hippocampus has been less studied. In a cohort of 194 healthy older adults ages 50–89, we used a multivariate statistical method, the Scaled Subprofile Model (SSM), to (1) identify patterns of regional WMH differences related to left and right hippocampal volumes, (2) examine associations between the multimodal neuroimaging covariance patterns and demographic characteristics, and (3) investigate the relation of the patterns to subjective and objective memory in healthy aging. We established network covariance patterns of regional WMH volume differences associated with greater left and right hippocampal volumes, which were characterized by reductions in left temporal and right parietal WMH volumes and relative increases in bilateral occipital WMH volumes. Additionally, we observed lower expression of these hippocampal-related regional WMH patterns were significantly associated with increasing age and greater subjective memory complaints, but not objective memory performance in this healthy older adult cohort. Our findings indicate that, in cognitively healthy older adults, left and right hippocampal volume reductions were associated with differences in the regional distribution of WMH volumes, which were exacerbated by advancing age and related to greater subjective memory complaints. Multivariate network analyses, like SSM, may help elucidate important early effects of regional WMH volume on brain and cognitive aging in healthy older adults.
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- 2024
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66. Tailored anticoagulant treatment after a first venous thromboembolism: protocol of the Leiden Thrombosis Recurrence Risk Prevention (L-TRRiP) study - cohort-based randomised controlled trial
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Saskia le Cessie, Nick van Es, Michiel Coppens, Karina Meijer, Suzanne C Cannegieter, Saskia Middeldorp, Menno V Huisman, Frederikus A Klok, Geert-Jan Geersing, Annette W G van der Velden, Elske M van den Akker-van Marle, Albert T A Mairuhu, M Elske van den Akker-van Marle, Laura M Faber, Tjerk de Nijs, Remy H H Bemelmans, Coen van Guldener, Marcel A van de Ree, Marieke J.H. Wermer, Tessa Elling, Carolien van Netten, Milou A M Stals, Rick Roos, J Louise I Burggraaf-van Delft, Nienke van Rein, Jan-Willem K van den Berg, Coty Y Bruggeman, Marissa Cloos-van Balen, Matthijs Eefting, Yvonne Ende-Verhaar, Wouter K de Jong, Fleur Kleijwegt, Ted Koster, Cees Kroon, Saskia Kuipers, Jenneke Leentjens, Dieuwke Luijten, Ilse Schrover, Janneke Swart-Heikens, Yavuz Bilgin, Marleen Goddrie, Pieter Jobse, Suzanne Jong, Brianne Murphy, Carla Boekholt, Danick Werner, Laura Kratz, Marjolein Kremers, Monique Schilders, Gideon Hajer, Bas Langeveld, Saskia Teunisse-de Recht, Annemiek Bogerd, Ymke Broers, Stan Kolman, Sanjay Sankatsing, Lenneke van Tol, Edith Beishuizen, Shantie Bharatsingh, Edith Boersma, Annemarie van der Kraan-Donker, Sabine van Arnhem, Fransien Croon-de Boer, Ad Dees, J P (Hanneke) van Embden, Roxane Heller, Merel Hoogendorp, Roel Jonkhoff, Roel J J M van de Laar, Corry Leunis-de Ruiter, Patricia Scherpenisse-Klopstra, Tom L H Stellema, Kim Warink, Lizanne E van den Akker, Eleonora C Camilleri, Tess R C Huibregtse, Ingeborg de Jonge, Ruben Y Kok, Inger N Kunnekes, Lejla Mahic, Hinke C Nagtegaal, Petra J Noordijk, Hülya Oztürk, Alexia M van der Ploeg, Vibeke Schmidt, Anne-Marie Schuitemaker, Vera C Slootweg, Mark J R Smeets, Milou Thibaudier, Marco Dam, Swopkje de Jong, Hanneke van der Velde, Evertine Abbink, Carlinda Bresser, Simone Sissing, Soerajja Bhoelan, Èmese Heijkoop, Francien Huisman, Mark Lenssen, Anja B U Makelburg, Karen H Thedinga, Marja A J Voskuilen, Femke Yspeerd, Sandra Brookman, Titia Lamberts, Inge Paas, Janneke Swart Heikens, Janneke van den Brink, Aline van de Vendel, and Ellis S. van Etten
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Medicine - Abstract
Introduction Patients with a first venous thromboembolism (VTE) are at risk of recurrence. Recurrent VTE (rVTE) can be prevented by extended anticoagulant therapy, but this comes at the cost of an increased risk of bleeding. It is still uncertain whether patients with an intermediate recurrence risk or with a high recurrence and high bleeding risk will benefit from extended anticoagulant treatment, and whether a strategy where anticoagulant duration is tailored on the predicted risks of rVTE and bleeding can improve outcomes. The aim of the Leiden Thrombosis Recurrence Risk Prevention (L-TRRiP) study is to evaluate the outcomes of tailored duration of long-term anticoagulant treatment based on individualised assessment of rVTE and major bleeding risks.Methods and analysis The L-TRRiP study is a multicentre, open-label, cohort-based, randomised controlled trial, including patients with a first VTE. We classify the risk of rVTE and major bleeding using the L-TRRiP and VTE-BLEED scores, respectively. After 3 months of anticoagulant therapy, patients with a low rVTE risk will discontinue anticoagulant treatment, patients with a high rVTE and low bleeding risk will continue anticoagulant treatment, whereas all other patients will be randomised to continue or discontinue anticoagulant treatment. All patients will be followed up for at least 2 years. Inclusion will continue until the randomised group consists of 608 patients; we estimate to include 1600 patients in total. The primary outcome is the combined incidence of rVTE and major bleeding in the randomised group after 2 years of follow-up. Secondary outcomes include the incidence of rVTE and major bleeding, functional outcomes, quality of life and cost-effectiveness in all patients.Ethics and dissemination The protocol was approved by the Medical Research Ethics Committee Leiden-Den Haag-Delft. Results are expected in 2028 and will be disseminated through peer-reviewed journals and during (inter)national conferences.Trial registration number NCT06087952.
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- 2024
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67. Referral patterns of GIST patients: data from a nationwide study
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Evelyne Roets, Nikki S. Ijzerman, Vincent K.Y. Ho, Ingrid M.E. Desar, Anna K.L. Reyners, Hans Gelderblom, Dirk J. Grünhagen, Boudewijn van Etten, Winan J. van Houdt, Winette T.A. van der Graaf, and Neeltje Steeghs
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Gastrointestinal stromal tumor ,GIST ,registry ,reference center ,systemic treatment ,mutation analysis ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Background: This study compares the characteristics, referral and treatment patterns and overall survival (OS) of gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) patients treated in reference and non-reference centers in the Netherlands. Patients and methods: This retrospective cohort study on patients diagnosed between 2016 and 2019, utilises data from the Netherlands Cancer Registry and the Dutch Nationwide Pathology Database. Patients were categorized into two groups: patients diagnosed in or referred to reference centers and patients diagnosed in non-reference centers without referral. Results: This study included 1,550 GIST patients with a median age of 67.0 in reference and 68.0 years in non-reference centers. Eighty-seven per cent of patients were diagnosed in non-reference centers, of which 36.5% (493/1,352) were referred to a reference center. Referral rates were higher for high-risk (62.2% [74/119]) and metastatic patients (67.2% [90/134]). Mutation analysis was performed in 96.9% and 87.6% of these cases in reference and in non-reference centers (p < 0.01), respectively. Systemic therapy was given in reference centers versus non-reference in 89.5% versus 82.0% (p < 0.01) of high-risk and in 94.1% versus 65.9% (p < 0.01) of metastatic patients, respectively. The proportion of positive resection margins and tumor rupture did not differ between reference and non-reference centers. Median OS was not reached. Conclusion: A substantial amount of metastatic GIST patients in non-reference centers did not receive systemic treatment. This might be due to valid reasons. However, optimisation of the referral strategy of GIST patients in the Netherlands could benefit patients. Further research is needed to explore reasons for not starting systemic treatment in metastatic GIST patients.
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- 2024
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68. RarePlanes: Synthetic Data Takes Flight
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Shermeyer, Jacob, Hossler, Thomas, Van Etten, Adam, Hogan, Daniel, Lewis, Ryan, and Kim, Daeil
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer Science - Databases - Abstract
RarePlanes is a unique open-source machine learning dataset that incorporates both real and synthetically generated satellite imagery. The RarePlanes dataset specifically focuses on the value of synthetic data to aid computer vision algorithms in their ability to automatically detect aircraft and their attributes in satellite imagery. Although other synthetic/real combination datasets exist, RarePlanes is the largest openly-available very-high resolution dataset built to test the value of synthetic data from an overhead perspective. Previous research has shown that synthetic data can reduce the amount of real training data needed and potentially improve performance for many tasks in the computer vision domain. The real portion of the dataset consists of 253 Maxar WorldView-3 satellite scenes spanning 112 locations and 2,142 km^2 with 14,700 hand-annotated aircraft. The accompanying synthetic dataset is generated via AI.Reverie's simulation platform and features 50,000 synthetic satellite images simulating a total area of 9331.2 km^2 with ~630,000 aircraft annotations. Both the real and synthetically generated aircraft feature 10 fine grain attributes including: aircraft length, wingspan, wing-shape, wing-position, wingspan class, propulsion, number of engines, number of vertical-stabilizers, presence of canards, and aircraft role. Finally, we conduct extensive experiments to evaluate the real and synthetic datasets and compare performances. By doing so, we show the value of synthetic data for the task of detecting and classifying aircraft from an overhead perspective., Comment: To appear in WACV 2021 - 11 pages
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- 2020
69. SpaceNet 6: Multi-Sensor All Weather Mapping Dataset
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Shermeyer, Jacob, Hogan, Daniel, Brown, Jason, Van Etten, Adam, Weir, Nicholas, Pacifici, Fabio, Haensch, Ronny, Bastidas, Alexei, Soenen, Scott, Bacastow, Todd, and Lewis, Ryan
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Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video Processing ,Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Within the remote sensing domain, a diverse set of acquisition modalities exist, each with their own unique strengths and weaknesses. Yet, most of the current literature and open datasets only deal with electro-optical (optical) data for different detection and segmentation tasks at high spatial resolutions. optical data is often the preferred choice for geospatial applications, but requires clear skies and little cloud cover to work well. Conversely, Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) sensors have the unique capability to penetrate clouds and collect during all weather, day and night conditions. Consequently, SAR data are particularly valuable in the quest to aid disaster response, when weather and cloud cover can obstruct traditional optical sensors. Despite all of these advantages, there is little open data available to researchers to explore the effectiveness of SAR for such applications, particularly at very-high spatial resolutions, i.e. <1m Ground Sample Distance (GSD). To address this problem, we present an open Multi-Sensor All Weather Mapping (MSAW) dataset and challenge, which features two collection modalities (both SAR and optical). The dataset and challenge focus on mapping and building footprint extraction using a combination of these data sources. MSAW covers 120 km^2 over multiple overlapping collects and is annotated with over 48,000 unique building footprints labels, enabling the creation and evaluation of mapping algorithms for multi-modal data. We present a baseline and benchmark for building footprint extraction with SAR data and find that state-of-the-art segmentation models pre-trained on optical data, and then trained on SAR (F1 score of 0.21) outperform those trained on SAR data alone (F1 score of 0.135)., Comment: To appear in CVPR EarthVision Proceedings, 10 pages, 7 figures
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- 2020
70. Severe Atypical Systemic IgA Vasculitis in an Adult Male: a Case Report and Review of Literature
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van Etten, Djimme T., Hagelstein-Rotman, M., Hagen, E. C., and Remmelts, H. H. F.
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- 2023
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71. Medication Management Performance in Parkinson’s Disease: Examination of Process Errors
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Sumida, Catherine A, Lopez, Francesca V, Van Etten, Emily J, Whiteley, Nicole, Moore, Raeanne C, Litvan, Irene, Lessig, Stephanie, Gilbert, Paul E, Schmitter-Edgecombe, Maureen, Filoteo, J Vincent, and Schiehser, Dawn M
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Dementia ,Brain Disorders ,Neurosciences ,Aging ,Parkinson's Disease ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Neurodegenerative ,Clinical Research ,Acquired Cognitive Impairment ,Neurological ,Mental health ,Adult ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,Executive Function ,Humans ,Medication Therapy Management ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Parkinson Disease ,Everyday functioning ,Parkinson's disease ,Parkinson’s disease ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences ,Clinical Psychology - Abstract
ObjectiveIndividuals with Parkinson's disease (PD) are at risk for increased medication mismanagement, which can lead to worse clinical outcomes. However, the nature of the errors (i.e., undertaking or overtaking medications) contributing to mismanagement and their relationship to cognition in PD is unknown. Therefore, this study sought to examine errors committed on the Medication Management Ability Assessment (MMAA) between PD participants with normal cognition (PD-NC) or mild cognitive impairment (PD-MCI) relative to healthy adults (HA).MethodHA (n = 74), PD-NC (n = 102), and PD-MCI (n = 45) participants were administered the MMAA to assess undertaking, overtaking, and overall errors as well as overall performance (total score). Additionally, participants were administered a comprehensive neuropsychological battery from which cognitive composites of Attention, Learning, Memory, Language, Visuospatial, and Executive Functioning were derived.ResultsSeparate negative binomial regression analyses indicated the PD-MCI group performed significantly worse overall on the MMAA (total score) and committed more undertaking and overall errors relative to HA and PD-NC. In the PD-MCI group, poorer MMAA performance was associated with worse delayed memory performance, whereas cognitive performance was not related to MMAA in HA or PC-NC.ConclusionCompared to PD and healthy adults with normal cognition, PD-MCI patients exhibited greater difficulty with medication management, particularly with undertaking medications. Poorer medication management in PD-MCI was associated with worse delayed recall. Thus, PD-MCI patients experiencing memory problems may require additional assistance with their medications. Findings have clinical relevance suggesting that objective measures of medication errors may assist clinicians in identifying PD patients needing adherence strategies.
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- 2021
72. Energy compensation and adiposity in humans
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Careau, Vincent, Halsey, Lewis G, Pontzer, Herman, Ainslie, Philip N, Andersen, Lene F, Anderson, Liam J, Arab, Lenore, Baddou, Issad, Bedu-Addo, Kweku, Blaak, Ellen E, Blanc, Stephane, Bonomi, Alberto G, Bouten, Carlijn VC, Buchowski, Maciej S, Butte, Nancy F, Camps, Stefan GJA, Close, Graeme L, Cooper, Jamie A, Das, Sai Krupa, Cooper, Richard, Dugas, Lara R, Eaton, Simon D, Ekelund, Ulf, Entringer, Sonja, Forrester, Terrence, Fudge, Barry W, Goris, Annelies H, Gurven, Michael, Hambly, Catherine, Hamdouchi, Asmaa El, Hoos, Marije B, Hu, Sumei, Joonas, Noorjehan, Joosen, Annemiek M, Katzmarzyk, Peter, Kempen, Kitty P, Kimura, Misaka, Kraus, William E, Kushner, Robert F, Lambert, Estelle V, Leonard, William R, Lessan, Nader, Martin, Corby K, Medin, Anine C, Meijer, Erwin P, Morehen, James C, Morton, James P, Neuhouser, Marian L, Nicklas, Theresa A, Ojiambo, Robert M, Pietiläinen, Kirsi H, Pitsiladis, Yannis P, Plange-Rhule, Jacob, Plasqui, Guy, Prentice, Ross L, Rabinovich, Roberto A, Racette, Susan B, Raichlen, David A, Ravussin, Eric, Reilly, John J, Reynolds, Rebecca M, Roberts, Susan B, Schuit, Albertine J, Sjödin, Anders M, Stice, Eric, Urlacher, Samuel S, Valenti, Giulio, Van Etten, Ludo M, Van Mil, Edgar A, Wells, Jonathan CK, Wilson, George, Wood, Brian M, Yanovski, Jack, Yoshida, Tsukasa, Zhang, Xueying, Murphy-Alford, Alexia J, Loechl, Cornelia U, Luke, Amy H, Rood, Jennifer, Sagayama, Hiroyuki, Schoeller, Dale A, Wong, William W, Yamada, Yosuke, Speakman, John R, and group, the IAEA DLW database
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Nutrition ,Obesity ,Clinical Research ,Oral and gastrointestinal ,Stroke ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Cancer ,Cardiovascular ,Affordable and Clean Energy ,Adiposity ,Energy Intake ,Energy Metabolism ,Humans ,IAEA DLW database group ,Homo sapiens ,activity ,basal metabolic rate ,daily energy expenditure ,energy compensation ,energy management models ,exercise ,trade-offs ,weight loss ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Understanding the impacts of activity on energy balance is crucial. Increasing levels of activity may bring diminishing returns in energy expenditure because of compensatory responses in non-activity energy expenditures.1-3 This suggestion has profound implications for both the evolution of metabolism and human health. It implies that a long-term increase in activity does not directly translate into an increase in total energy expenditure (TEE) because other components of TEE may decrease in response-energy compensation. We used the largest dataset compiled on adult TEE and basal energy expenditure (BEE) (n = 1,754) of people living normal lives to find that energy compensation by a typical human averages 28% due to reduced BEE; this suggests that only 72% of the extra calories we burn from additional activity translates into extra calories burned that day. Moreover, the degree of energy compensation varied considerably between people of different body compositions. This association between compensation and adiposity could be due to among-individual differences in compensation: people who compensate more may be more likely to accumulate body fat. Alternatively, the process might occur within individuals: as we get fatter, our body might compensate more strongly for the calories burned during activity, making losing fat progressively more difficult. Determining the causality of the relationship between energy compensation and adiposity will be key to improving public health strategies regarding obesity.
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- 2021
73. Daily energy expenditure through the human life course
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Pontzer, Herman, Yamada, Yosuke, Sagayama, Hiroyuki, Ainslie, Philip N, Andersen, Lene F, Anderson, Liam J, Arab, Lenore, Baddou, Issaad, Bedu-Addo, Kweku, Blaak, Ellen E, Blanc, Stephane, Bonomi, Alberto G, Bouten, Carlijn VC, Bovet, Pascal, Buchowski, Maciej S, Butte, Nancy F, Camps, Stefan G, Close, Graeme L, Cooper, Jamie A, Cooper, Richard, Das, Sai Krupa, Dugas, Lara R, Ekelund, Ulf, Entringer, Sonja, Forrester, Terrence, Fudge, Barry W, Goris, Annelies H, Gurven, Michael, Hambly, Catherine, Hamdouchi, Asmaa El, Hoos, Marjije B, Hu, Sumei, Joonas, Noorjehan, Joosen, Annemiek M, Katzmarzyk, Peter, Kempen, Kitty P, Kimura, Misaka, Kraus, William E, Kushner, Robert F, Lambert, Estelle V, Leonard, William R, Lessan, Nader, Martin, Corby, Medin, Anine C, Meijer, Erwin P, Morehen, James C, Morton, James P, Neuhouser, Marian L, Nicklas, Teresa A, Ojiambo, Robert M, Pietiläinen, Kirsi H, Pitsiladis, Yannis P, Plange-Rhule, Jacob, Plasqui, Guy, Prentice, Ross L, Rabinovich, Roberto A, Racette, Susan B, Raichlen, David A, Ravussin, Eric, Reynolds, Rebecca M, Roberts, Susan B, Schuit, Albertine J, Sjödin, Anders M, Stice, Eric, Urlacher, Samuel S, Valenti, Giulio, Van Etten, Ludo M, Van Mil, Edgar A, Wells, Jonathan CK, Wilson, George, Wood, Brian M, Yanovski, Jack, Yoshida, Tsukasa, Zhang, Xueying, Murphy-Alford, Alexia J, Loechl, Cornelia, Luke, Amy H, Rood, Jennifer, Schoeller, Dale A, Westerterp, Klaas R, Wong, William W, Speakman, John R, and Consortium§, IAEA DLW Database
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Aging ,Nutrition ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Basal Metabolism ,Body Composition ,Body Weight ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Energy Metabolism ,Exercise ,Female ,Humans ,Infant ,Infant ,Newborn ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Pregnancy ,Young Adult ,IAEA DLW Database Consortium ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Total daily energy expenditure ("total expenditure") reflects daily energy needs and is a critical variable in human health and physiology, but its trajectory over the life course is poorly studied. We analyzed a large, diverse database of total expenditure measured by the doubly labeled water method for males and females aged 8 days to 95 years. Total expenditure increased with fat-free mass in a power-law manner, with four distinct life stages. Fat-free mass-adjusted expenditure accelerates rapidly in neonates to ~50% above adult values at ~1 year; declines slowly to adult levels by ~20 years; remains stable in adulthood (20 to 60 years), even during pregnancy; then declines in older adults. These changes shed light on human development and aging and should help shape nutrition and health strategies across the life span.
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- 2021
74. External validation of a lung cancer-based prediction model for two-year mortality in esophageal cancer patient cohorts
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Berbée, M., Muijs, C.T., Voncken, F.E.M., Wee, L., Sosef, M., van Etten, B., van Sandick, J.W., Warmerdam, F.A.R.M., de Haan, J.J., Oldehinkel, E., van Dieren, J.M., Boersma, L., Langendijk, J.A., van der Schaaf, A., Reitsma, J.B., and Schuit, E.
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- 2024
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75. Vehicle Vectors and Traffic Patterns from Planet Imagery.
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Adam Van Etten
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- 2024
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76. Plasma amyloid beta 42 is a biomarker for patients with hereditary, but not sporadic, cerebral amyloid angiopathy
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Anna M. de Kort, H. Bea Kuiperij, Lieke Jäkel, Iris Kersten, Ingeborg Rasing, Ellis S. van Etten, Sanneke van Rooden, Matthias J. P. van Osch, Marieke J. H. Wermer, Gisela M. Terwindt, Floris H. B. M. Schreuder, Catharina J. M. Klijn, and Marcel M. Verbeek
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Cerebral amyloid angiopathy ,Hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis Dutch type ,Sporadic cerebral amyloid angiopathy ,Blood ,Biomarkers ,Diagnosis ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Abstract Background The diagnosis of probable cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) is currently mostly based on characteristics of brain MRI. Blood biomarkers would be a cost-effective, easily accessible diagnostic method that may complement diagnosis by MRI and aid in monitoring disease progression. We studied the diagnostic potential of plasma Aβ38, Aβ40, and Aβ42 in patients with hereditary Dutch-type CAA (D-CAA) and sporadic CAA (sCAA). Methods All Aβ peptides were quantified in the plasma by immunoassays in a discovery cohort (11 patients with presymptomatic D-CAA and 24 patients with symptomatic D-CAA, and 16 and 24 matched controls, respectively) and an independent validation cohort (54 patients with D-CAA, 26 presymptomatic and 28 symptomatic, and 39 and 46 matched controls, respectively). In addition, peptides were quantified in the plasma in a group of 61 patients with sCAA and 42 matched controls. We compared Aβ peptide levels between patients and controls using linear regression adjusting for age and sex. Results In the discovery cohort, we found significantly decreased levels of all Aβ peptides in patients with presymptomatic D-CAA (Aβ38: p
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- 2023
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77. Minocycline for sporadic and hereditary cerebral amyloid angiopathy (BATMAN): study protocol for a placebo-controlled randomized double-blind trial
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S. Voigt, E. A. Koemans, I. Rasing, E. S. van Etten, G. M. Terwindt, F. Baas, K. Kaushik, A. C. G. M. van Es, M. A. van Buchem, M. J. P. van Osch, M. A. A. van Walderveen, C. J. M. Klijn, M. M. Verbeek, L. van der Weerd, and M. J. H. Wermer
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Cerebral amyloid angiopathy ,Minocycline ,Dutch-type CAA ,Cerebrospinal fluid ,7T MRI ,Randomized controlled trial ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Background Cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) is a disease caused by the accumulation of the amyloid-beta protein and is a major cause of intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) and vascular dementia in the elderly. The presence of the amyloid-beta protein in the vessel wall may induce a chronic state of cerebral inflammation by activating astrocytes, microglia, and pro-inflammatory substances. Minocycline, an antibiotic of the tetracycline family, is known to modulate inflammation, gelatinase activity, and angiogenesis. These processes are suggested to be key mechanisms in CAA pathology. Our aim is to show the target engagement of minocycline and investigate in a double-blind placebo-controlled randomized clinical trial whether treatment with minocycline for 3 months can decrease markers of neuroinflammation and of the gelatinase pathway in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in CAA patients. Methods The BATMAN study population consists of 60 persons: 30 persons with hereditary Dutch type CAA (D-CAA) and 30 persons with sporadic CAA. They will be randomized for either placebo or minocycline (15 sporadic CAA/15 D-CAA minocycline, 15 sporadic CAA/15 D-CAA placebo). At t = 0 and t = 3 months, we will collect CSF and blood samples, perform a 7-T MRI, and collect demographic characteristics. Discussion The results of this proof-of-principle study will be used to assess the potential of target engagement of minocycline for CAA. Therefore, our primary outcome measures are markers of neuroinflammation (IL-6, MCP-1, and IBA-1) and of the gelatinase pathway (MMP2/9 and VEGF) in CSF. Secondly, we will look at the progression of hemorrhagic markers on 7-T MRI before and after treatment and investigate serum biomarkers. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05680389. Registered on January 11, 2023
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- 2023
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78. Seasonal seed scenario planning: co-design of a generic framework for matching seed supply and demand using seasonal climate forecasts
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Steinke, Jonathan, Ortiz-Crespo, Berta, van Etten, Jacob, Borman, Gareth Denis, Hassena, Mohammed, Kretschmer, Marlene, MacLeod, David A., and Muungani, Dean
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- 2023
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79. High protein provision of more than 1.2 g/kg improves muscle mass preservation and mortality in ICU patients: A systematic review and meta-analyses
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van Ruijven, Isabel M., Abma, José, Brunsveld-Reinders, Anja H., Stapel, Sandra N., van Etten-Jamaludin, Faridi, Boirie, Yves, Barazzoni, Rocco, and Weijs, Peter J.M.
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- 2023
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80. A standard calculation methodology for human doubly labeled water studies.
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Speakman, John R, Yamada, Yosuke, Sagayama, Hiroyuki, Berman, Elena SF, Ainslie, Philip N, Andersen, Lene F, Anderson, Liam J, Arab, Lenore, Baddou, Issaad, Bedu-Addo, Kweku, Blaak, Ellen E, Blanc, Stephane, Bonomi, Alberto G, Bouten, Carlijn VC, Bovet, Pascal, Buchowski, Maciej S, Butte, Nancy F, Camps, Stefan GJA, Close, Graeme L, Cooper, Jamie A, Creasy, Seth A, Das, Sai Krupa, Cooper, Richard, Dugas, Lara R, Ebbeling, Cara B, Ekelund, Ulf, Entringer, Sonja, Forrester, Terrence, Fudge, Barry W, Goris, Annelies H, Gurven, Michael, Hambly, Catherine, El Hamdouchi, Asmaa, Hoos, Marije B, Hu, Sumei, Joonas, Noorjehan, Joosen, Annemiek M, Katzmarzyk, Peter, Kempen, Kitty P, Kimura, Misaka, Kraus, William E, Kushner, Robert F, Lambert, Estelle V, Leonard, William R, Lessan, Nader, Ludwig, David S, Martin, Corby K, Medin, Anine C, Meijer, Erwin P, Morehen, James C, Morton, James P, Neuhouser, Marian L, Nicklas, Theresa A, Ojiambo, Robert M, Pietiläinen, Kirsi H, Pitsiladis, Yannis P, Plange-Rhule, Jacob, Plasqui, Guy, Prentice, Ross L, Rabinovich, Roberto A, Racette, Susan B, Raichlen, David A, Ravussin, Eric, Reynolds, Rebecca M, Roberts, Susan B, Schuit, Albertine J, Sjödin, Anders M, Stice, Eric, Urlacher, Samuel S, Valenti, Giulio, Van Etten, Ludo M, Van Mil, Edgar A, Wells, Jonathan CK, Wilson, George, Wood, Brian M, Yanovski, Jack, Yoshida, Tsukasa, Zhang, Xueying, Murphy-Alford, Alexia J, Loechl, Cornelia U, Melanson, Edward L, Luke, Amy H, Pontzer, Herman, Rood, Jennifer, Schoeller, Dale A, Westerterp, Klaas R, Wong, William W, and IAEA DLW database group
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IAEA DLW database group ,doubly labeled water ,free-living ,total energy expenditure ,validation - Abstract
The doubly labeled water (DLW) method measures total energy expenditure (TEE) in free-living subjects. Several equations are used to convert isotopic data into TEE. Using the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) DLW database (5,756 measurements of adults and children), we show considerable variability is introduced by different equations. The estimated rCO2 is sensitive to the dilution space ratio (DSR) of the two isotopes. Based on performance in validation studies, we propose a new equation based on a new estimate of the mean DSR. The DSR is lower at low body masses (
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- 2021
81. Task-based functional connectivity of the Useful Field of View (UFOV) fMRI task
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Kraft, Jessica N., Hausman, Hanna K., Hardcastle, Cheshire, Albizu, Alejandro, O’Shea, Andrew, Evangelista, Nicole D., Boutzoukas, Emanuel M., Van Etten, Emily J., Bharadwaj, Pradyumna K., Song, Hyun, Smith, Samantha G., DeKosky, Steven, Hishaw, Georg A., Wu, Samuel, Marsiske, Michael, Cohen, Ronald, Alexander, Gene E., Porges, Eric, and Woods, Adam J.
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- 2023
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82. Sharon Van Etten
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Yanya, Nilüfer and Van Etten, Sharon
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- 2022
83. ASO Author Reflections: A Systematic Review on Predictive Immune and Metabolic Biomarkers to Predict Clinical and Pathological Response in Esophageal Cancer
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Wang, H. H., Steffens, E. N., Kats-Ugurlu, G., van Etten, B., Burgerhof, J. G. M., Hospers, G. A. P., and Plukker, J. T. M.
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- 2024
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84. Fluid biomarkers in cerebral amyloid angiopathy
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Seyed Mehrdad Savar, Bin Ma, Eugene Hone, Farzana Jahan, Shaun Markovic, Steve Pedrini, Soudabeh Shemehsavar, Vandhana Easwaran, Kevin Taddei, Samantha Gardener, Jasmeer P. Chhatwal, Ellis S. van Etten, Matthias J. P. van Osch, Daniel Clarke, Anastazija Gnjec, Mark A. van Buchem, Marieke J. H. Wermer, Graeme J. Hankey, Steven M. Greenberg, Ralph N. Martins, and Hamid R. Sohrabi
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cerebral amyloid angiopathy ,amyloid beta ,familial cerebral amyloid angiopathy ,differential diagnosis ,fluid biomarkers ,surrogate endpoints ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) is a type of cerebrovascular disorder characterised by the accumulation of amyloid within the leptomeninges and small/medium-sized cerebral blood vessels. Typically, cerebral haemorrhages are one of the first clinical manifestations of CAA, posing a considerable challenge to the timely diagnosis of CAA as the bleedings only occur during the later disease stages. Fluid biomarkers may change prior to imaging biomarkers, and therefore, they could be the future of CAA diagnosis. Additionally, they can be used as primary outcome markers in prospective clinical trials. Among fluid biomarkers, blood-based biomarkers offer a distinct advantage over cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers as they do not require a procedure as invasive as a lumbar puncture. This article aimed to provide an overview of the present clinical data concerning fluid biomarkers associated with CAA and point out the direction of future studies. Among all the biomarkers discussed, amyloid β, neurofilament light chain, matrix metalloproteinases, complement 3, uric acid, and lactadherin demonstrated the most promising evidence. However, the field of fluid biomarkers for CAA is an under-researched area, and in most cases, there are only one or two studies on each of the biomarkers mentioned in this review. Additionally, a small sample size is a common limitation of the discussed studies. Hence, it is hard to reach a solid conclusion on the clinical significance of each biomarker at different stages of the disease or in various subpopulations of CAA. In order to overcome this issue, larger longitudinal and multicentered studies are needed.
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- 2024
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85. Road Network and Travel Time Extraction from Multiple Look Angles with SpaceNet Data
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Van Etten, Adam, Shermeyer, Jacob, Hogan, Daniel, Weir, Nicholas, and Lewis, Ryan
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Identification of road networks and optimal routes directly from remote sensing is of critical importance to a broad array of humanitarian and commercial applications. Yet while identification of road pixels has been attempted before, estimation of route travel times from overhead imagery remains a novel problem, particularly for off-nadir overhead imagery. To this end, we extract road networks with travel time estimates from the SpaceNet MVOI dataset. Utilizing the CRESIv2 framework, we demonstrate the ability to extract road networks in various observation angles and quantify performance at 27 unique nadir angles with the graph-theoretic APLS_length and APLS_time metrics. A minimal gap of 0.03 between APLS_length and APLS_time scores indicates that our approach yields speed limits and travel times with very high fidelity. We also explore the utility of incorporating all available angles during model training, and find a peak score of APLS_time = 0.56. The combined model exhibits greatly improved robustness over angle-specific models, despite the very different appearance of road networks at extremely oblique off-nadir angles versus images captured from directly overhead., Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures. To appear at the 2020 IEEE International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium
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- 2020
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86. Optimal experimental design for mathematical models of haematopoiesis.
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Lomeli, Luis Martinez, Iniguez, Abdon, Tata, Prasanthi, Jena, Nilamani, Liu, Zhong-Ying, Van Etten, Richard, Lander, Arthur D, Shahbaba, Babak, Lowengrub, John S, and Minin, Vladimir N
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Animals ,Bayes Theorem ,Cell Division ,Hematopoiesis ,Models ,Biological ,Research Design ,Bayesian analysis ,differential equations ,feedback and feedforward regulation ,haematopoiesis ,stem cells ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Generic health relevance ,stat.ME ,q-bio.QM ,stat.AP ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
The haematopoietic system has a highly regulated and complex structure in which cells are organized to successfully create and maintain new blood cells. It is known that feedback regulation is crucial to tightly control this system, but the specific mechanisms by which control is exerted are not completely understood. In this work, we aim to uncover the underlying mechanisms in haematopoiesis by conducting perturbation experiments, where animal subjects are exposed to an external agent in order to observe the system response and evolution. We have developed a novel Bayesian hierarchical framework for optimal design of perturbation experiments and proper analysis of the data collected. We use a deterministic model that accounts for feedback and feedforward regulation on cell division rates and self-renewal probabilities. A significant obstacle is that the experimental data are not longitudinal, rather each data point corresponds to a different animal. We overcome this difficulty by modelling the unobserved cellular levels as latent variables. We then use principles of Bayesian experimental design to optimally distribute time points at which the haematopoietic cells are quantified. We evaluate our approach using synthetic and real experimental data and show that an optimal design can lead to better estimates of model parameters.
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- 2021
87. Interrogating the molecular genetics of chronic myeloproliferative malignancies for personalized management in 2021
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Mughal, Tariq I, Psaila, Bethan, DeAngelo, Daniel J, Saglio, Giuseppe, Van Etten, Richard A, and Radich, Jerald P
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Molecular Biology ,Myeloproliferative Disorders ,Neoplasms ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Immunology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Published
- 2021
88. Climate predicts wildland fire extent across China
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Shabbir, Ali Hassan, Ji, Jie, Groninger, John W., Gueye, Ghislain N., Knouft, Jason H., van Etten, Eddie J.B., and Zhang, Jiquan
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- 2023
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89. What are Normal Defecation Patterns in Healthy Children up to Four Years of Age? A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
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Baaleman, Desiree F., Wegh, Carrie A.M., de Leeuw, Tessa J.M., van Etten – Jamaludin, Faridi S., Vaughan, Elaine E., Schoterman, Margriet H.C., Belzer, Clara, Smidt, Hauke, Tabbers, Merit M., Benninga, Marc A., and Koppen, Ilan J.N.
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- 2023
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90. Participation rate and yield of two home-based screening methods to detect increased albuminuria in the general population in the Netherlands (THOMAS): a prospective, randomised, open-label implementation study
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van Mil, Dominique, Kieneker, Lyanne M, Evers-Roeten, Birgitte, Thelen, Marc H M, de Vries, Hanne, Hemmelder, Marc H, Dorgelo, Annemiek, van Etten, Ronald W, Heerspink, Hiddo J L, and Gansevoort, Ron T
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- 2023
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91. City-Scale Road Extraction from Satellite Imagery v2: Road Speeds and Travel Times
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Van Etten, Adam
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Automated road network extraction from remote sensing imagery remains a significant challenge despite its importance in a broad array of applications. To this end, we explore road network extraction at scale with inference of semantic features of the graph, identifying speed limits and route travel times for each roadway. We call this approach City-Scale Road Extraction from Satellite Imagery v2 (CRESIv2), Including estimates for travel time permits true optimal routing (rather than just the shortest geographic distance), which is not possible with existing remote sensing imagery based methods. We evaluate our method using two sources of labels (OpenStreetMap, and those from the SpaceNet dataset), and find that models both trained and tested on SpaceNet labels outperform OpenStreetMap labels by greater than 60%. We quantify the performance of our algorithm with the Average Path Length Similarity (APLS) and map topology (TOPO) graph-theoretic metrics over a diverse test area covering four cities in the SpaceNet dataset. For a traditional edge weight of geometric distance, we find an aggregate of 5% improvement over existing methods for SpaceNet data. We also test our algorithm on Google satellite imagery with OpenStreetMap labels, and find a 23% improvement over previous work. Metric scores decrease by only 4% on large graphs when using travel time rather than geometric distance for edge weights, indicating that optimizing routing for travel time is feasible with this approach., Comment: In Proceedings WACV 2020. 8 pages, 11 figures, 5 appendices. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1904.09901
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- 2019
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92. City-scale Road Extraction from Satellite Imagery
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Van Etten, Adam
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
Automated road network extraction from remote sensing imagery remains a significant challenge despite its importance in a broad array of applications. To this end, we leverage recent open source advances and the high quality SpaceNet dataset to explore road network extraction at scale, an approach we call City-scale Road Extraction from Satellite Imagery (CRESI). Specifically, we create an algorithm to extract road networks directly from imagery over city-scale regions, which can subsequently be used for routing purposes. We quantify the performance of our algorithm with the APLS and TOPO graph-theoretic metrics over a diverse 608 square kilometer test area covering four cities. We find an aggregate score of APLS = 0.73, and a TOPO score of 0.58 (a significant improvement over existing methods). Inference speed is 160 square kilometers per hour on modest hardware. Finally, we demonstrate that one can use the extracted road network for any number of applications, such as optimized routing., Comment: 6 pages, 9 figures, 5 tables
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- 2019
93. SpaceNet MVOI: a Multi-View Overhead Imagery Dataset
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Weir, Nicholas, Lindenbaum, David, Bastidas, Alexei, Van Etten, Adam, McPherson, Sean, Shermeyer, Jacob, Kumar, Varun, and Tang, Hanlin
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Detection and segmentation of objects in overheard imagery is a challenging task. The variable density, random orientation, small size, and instance-to-instance heterogeneity of objects in overhead imagery calls for approaches distinct from existing models designed for natural scene datasets. Though new overhead imagery datasets are being developed, they almost universally comprise a single view taken from directly overhead ("at nadir"), failing to address a critical variable: look angle. By contrast, views vary in real-world overhead imagery, particularly in dynamic scenarios such as natural disasters where first looks are often over 40 degrees off-nadir. This represents an important challenge to computer vision methods, as changing view angle adds distortions, alters resolution, and changes lighting. At present, the impact of these perturbations for algorithmic detection and segmentation of objects is untested. To address this problem, we present an open source Multi-View Overhead Imagery dataset, termed SpaceNet MVOI, with 27 unique looks from a broad range of viewing angles (-32.5 degrees to 54.0 degrees). Each of these images cover the same 665 square km geographic extent and are annotated with 126,747 building footprint labels, enabling direct assessment of the impact of viewpoint perturbation on model performance. We benchmark multiple leading segmentation and object detection models on: (1) building detection, (2) generalization to unseen viewing angles and resolutions, and (3) sensitivity of building footprint extraction to changes in resolution. We find that state of the art segmentation and object detection models struggle to identify buildings in off-nadir imagery and generalize poorly to unseen views, presenting an important benchmark to explore the broadly relevant challenge of detecting small, heterogeneous target objects in visually dynamic contexts., Comment: Accepted into IEEE International Conference on Computer Vision (ICCV) 2019
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- 2019
- Full Text
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94. Specific, targetable interactions with the microenvironment influence imatinib-resistant chronic myeloid leukemia
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Kumar, Rahul, Pereira, Raquel S, Zanetti, Costanza, Minciacchi, Valentina R, Merten, Maximilian, Meister, Melanie, Niemann, Julian, Dietz, Marina S, Rüssel, Nina, Schnütgen, Frank, Tamai, Minori, Akahane, Koshi, Inukai, Takeshi, Oellerich, Thomas, Kvasnicka, Hans Michael, Pfeifer, Heike, Nicolini, Franck E, Heilemann, Mike, Van Etten, Richard A, and Krause, Daniela S
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Cancer ,Stem Cell Research ,Hematology ,Rare Diseases ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Animals ,Drug Resistance ,Neoplasm ,Fibronectins ,Focal Adhesion Protein-Tyrosine Kinases ,Fusion Proteins ,bcr-abl ,Humans ,Imatinib Mesylate ,Imidazoles ,Integrin beta3 ,Leukemia ,Myelogenous ,Chronic ,BCR-ABL Positive ,Mice ,Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases ,Pyridazines ,Clinical Sciences ,Immunology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Clinical sciences ,Oncology and carcinogenesis - Abstract
Therapy resistance in leukemia may be due to cancer cell-intrinsic and/or -extrinsic mechanisms. Mutations within BCR-ABL1, the oncogene giving rise to chronic myeloid leukemia (CML), lead to resistance to tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI), and some are associated with clinically more aggressive disease and worse outcome. Using the retroviral transduction/transplantation model of CML and human cell lines we faithfully recapitulate accelerated disease course in TKI resistance. We show in various models, that murine and human imatinib-resistant leukemia cells positive for the oncogene BCR-ABL1T315I differ from BCR-ABL1 native (BCR-ABL1) cells with regards to niche location and specific niche interactions. We implicate a pathway via integrin β3, integrin-linked kinase (ILK) and its role in deposition of the extracellular matrix (ECM) protein fibronectin as causative of these differences. We demonstrate a trend towards a reduced BCR-ABL1T315I+ tumor burden and significantly prolonged survival of mice with BCR-ABL1T315I+ CML treated with fibronectin or an ILK inhibitor in xenogeneic and syngeneic murine transplantation models, respectively. These data suggest that interactions with ECM proteins via the integrin β3/ILK-mediated signaling pathway in BCR-ABL1T315I+ cells differentially and specifically influence leukemia progression. Niche targeting via modulation of the ECM may be a feasible therapeutic approach to consider in this setting.
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- 2020
95. Progression of cerebral amyloid angiopathy: a pathophysiological framework
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Koemans, Emma A, Chhatwal, Jasmeer P, van Veluw, Susanne J, van Etten, Ellis S, van Osch, Matthias J P, van Walderveen, Marianne A A, Sohrabi, Hamid R, Kozberg, Mariel G, Shirzadi, Zahra, Terwindt, Gisela M, van Buchem, Mark A, Smith, Eric E, Werring, David J, Martins, Ralph N, Wermer, Marieke J H, and Greenberg, Steven M
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- 2023
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96. Local recurrence in primary localised resected gastrointestinal stromal tumours: A registry observational national cohort study including 912 patients
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Bleckman, Roos F., Roets, Evelyne, IJzerman, Nikki S., Mohammadi, Mohammed, Bonenkamp, Han J.J., Gelderblom, Hans, Mathijssen, Ron H.J., Steeghs, Neeltje, Reyners, Anna K.L., and van Etten, Boudewijn
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- 2023
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97. Risk and location of distant metastases in patients with locally advanced rectal cancer after total neoadjuvant treatment or chemoradiotherapy in the RAPIDO trial
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Bahadoer, Renu R., Hospers, Geke A.P., Marijnen, Corrie A.M., Peeters, Koen C.M.J., Putter, Hein, Dijkstra, Esmée A., Kranenbarg, Elma Meershoek-Klein, Roodvoets, Annet G.H., van Etten, Boudewijn, Nilsson, Per J., Glimelius, Bengt, and van de Velde, Cornelis J.H.
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- 2023
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98. Revisiting the adequacy of the economic policy narrative underpinning the Green Revolution
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van Etten, Jacob
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- 2022
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99. Microstructural white matter integrity in relation to vascular reactivity in Dutch-type hereditary cerebral amyloid angiopathy
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Schipper, Manon R, Vlegels, Naomi, van Harten, Thijs W, Rasing, Ingeborg, Koemans, Emma A, Voigt, Sabine, Luca, Alberto de, Kaushik, Kanishk, van Etten, Ellis S, van Zwet, Erik W, Terwindt, Gisela M, Biessels, Geert Jan, van Osch, Matthias JP, van Walderveen, Marianne AA, and Wermer, Marieke JH
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- 2023
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100. The value of post-operative chemotherapy after chemoradiotherapy in patients with high-risk locally advanced rectal cancer—results from the RAPIDO trial
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Dijkstra, E.A., Zwart, W.H., Nilsson, P.J., Putter, H., Roodvoets, A.G.H., Meershoek-Klein Kranenbarg, E., Frödin, J.E., Nygren, P., Østergaard, L., Kersten, C., Verbiené, I., Cervantes, A., Hendriks, M.P., Capdevila, J., Edhemovic, I., van de Velde, C.J.H., Marijnen, C.A.M., van Etten, B., Hospers, G.A.P., and Glimelius, B.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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