183 results on '"F. ad"'
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102. Richter's building designs / designed and executed by Dr. Richter's Art Department.
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F. Ad. Richter & Co. and F. Ad. Richter & Co.
103. Richter's designs for architectural models : no. 2 new series (first standard for building with stones of the large caliber / composed and executed by Dr. Richter's Art Department, Rudolstadt, Thuringia = Richters Bauvorlagen : No. 2 neue Folge (erste stufe für das Bauen mit Grosskaliber-Steinen) / entworfen und ausgeführt in Dr. Richters Kunst-Anstalt, Rudolstadt, Thüringen.
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F. Ad. Richter & Co. and F. Ad. Richter & Co.
104. Anchor stone building box. Anker Steinbaukasten. No. 8A.
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F. Ad. Richter & Co. and F. Ad. Richter & Co.
105. Richter's Landhaus-Baukasten. Nr. 301 = Boîte de construction, 'maison de campagne' = Richter's landhuis bouwdoozen = Richter's country house building box = Richter's landsted-byggekasse.
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F. Ad. Richter & Co. and F. Ad. Richter & Co.
106. Orion.
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F. Ad. Richter & Co. and F. Ad. Richter & Co.
107. Richter's anchor blocks fortress series.
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F. Ad. Richter & Co. and F. Ad. Richter & Co.
108. Anchor stone building box. Anker-Steinbaukasten.
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F. Ad. Richter & Co. and F. Ad. Richter & Co.
109. Anchor stone building box. Anker Steinbaukasten.
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F. Ad. Richter & Co. and F. Ad. Richter & Co.
110. Anchor bridges. to be used in connection with Anchor blocks no. 6.
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F. Ad. Richter & Co. and F. Ad. Richter & Co.
111. Richter's Anker-Täfelchenlegen. 2 = Richter's 'Anchor' tablet laying = Richter's pose-tablettes à l'ancre.
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F. Ad. Richter & Co. and F. Ad. Richter & Co.
112. Richter's designs for architectural models : no. 4 new series : second standard for building with stones of the large caliber / composed and executed by Dr. Richter's Art Department, Rudolstadt, Thuringia = Richters Bauvorlagen : No. 4 neue Folge : zweite Stufe für das Bauen mit Grosskaliber-Steinen / entworfen und ausgeführt in Dr. Richters Kunst-Anstalt, Rudolstadt, Thüringen.
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F. Ad. Richter & Co. and F. Ad. Richter & Co.
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Designs to accompany "Anchor Blocks" no. 4 (2A).
113. Anker Steinbaukasten aus der Fabrik von F. Ad. Richter & Cie., Hofliefenanten S.M. des Kaisers von Osterreich, London New York Rudolstadt Olten Rotterdam = Anchor stone building box, sole manufacturers F. Ad. Richter & Co. by appointment to H.M. the Emperor of Austria, London New York Rudolstadt.
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F. Ad. Richter & Co. and F. Ad. Richter & Co.
114. Richter's popular Eagle Blocks : stone building box, 3 colors.
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F. Ad. Richter & Co. and F. Ad. Richter & Co.
115. Orion.
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F. Ad. Richter & Co. and F. Ad. Richter & Co.
116. Anchor mosaic game / manufactured by F. Ad. Richter & Co., Rudolstadt, Nuremberg ... New York, 310 Broadway = Anker mosaic Spiel / aus der Fabrik F. Ad. Richter & Co., Rudolstadt, Nürnberg ... New York, 310 Broadway.
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F. Ad. Richter & Co. and F. Ad. Richter & Co.
117. THE WORLD BANK STUDY OF AFRICAN AGRICULTURE: SOME INITIAL ASPECTS
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McLougiilin, Peter F. Ad., primary
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- 1964
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118. Disseminated nontuberculous infections with Mycobacterium genavense during sarcoidosis
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H. Dumouchel-Champagne, C. Charlier-Woerther, A. Boibieux, M. Ffrench, G. Carret, C. Chidiac, D. Peyramond, and F. Ader
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Cell-mediated immune defect ,Mycobacterium genavense ,sarcoidosis ,Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 - Abstract
Sarcoidosis is a chronic disease characterised by the development and accumulation of granulomas in multiple organs. We report two observations of disseminated Mycobacterium genavense infection in patients with proven sarcoidosis. High fever and abdominal pain appeared at 8 and 18 months following the initiation of immunosuppressive therapy. Abdominal computed tomography scans of the patients showed diffuse mesenteric lymphadenitis and splenomegaly. The diagnosis was obtained on bone marrow specimens for both patients with numerous acid-fast bacteria at direct examination and positive specific mycobacterial identification by nucleic acid amplification test. Despite prompt antimycobacterial therapy, occurrence of complications (peritonitis post-splenectomy surgery and lung carcinoma) resulted in a fatal outcome for both patients. These cases highlight that opportunistic infections like M. genavense or other nontuberculous mycobacterial infections should be considered for long-standing immunocompromised patients with sarcoidosis.
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- 2009
119. Requirement for ω and (ω–1)-hydroxylations of fatty acids by human cytochromes P450 2E1 and 4A11
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F. Adas, J.P. Salaün, F. Berthou, D. Picart, B. Simon, and Y. Amet
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CYP4A11 ,CYP2E1 ,ω and (ω–1)-hydroxylation ,cytochrome b5 ,human liver microsomes ,Biochemistry ,QD415-436 - Abstract
Human liver microsomes and recombinant human P450 have been used as enzyme source in order to better understand the requirement for the optimal rate of ω and (ω–1)-hydroxylations of fatty acids by cytochromes P450 2E1 and 4A. Three parameters were studied: alkyl chain length, presence and configuration of double bond(s) in the alkyl chain, and involvement of carboxylic function in the fatty acid binding inside the access channel of P450 active site. The total rate of metabolite formation decreased when increasing the alkyl chain length of saturated fatty acids (from C12 to C16), while no hydroxylated metabolite was detected when liver microsomes were incubated with stearic acid. However, unsaturated fatty acids, such as oleic, elaidic and linoleic acids, were ω and (ω–1)-hydroxylated with an efficiency at least similar to palmitic acid. The (ω–1)/ω ratio decreased from 2.8 to 1 with lauric, myristic and palmitic acids as substrates, while the reverse was observed for unsaturated C18 fatty acids which are mainly ω-hydroxylated, except for elaidic acid showing a metabolic profile quite similar to those of saturated fatty acids. The double bond configuration did not significantly modify the ability of hydroxylation of fatty acid, while the negatively charged carboxylic group allowed a configuration energetically favourable for ω and (ω–1)-hydroxylation inside the access channel of active site.—Adas, F., J.P. Salaün, F. Berthou, D. Picart, B. Simon, and Y. Amet. Requirement for ω and (ω–1)-hydroxylations of fatty acids by human cytochromes P450 2E1 and 4A11. J. Lipid Res. 1999. 40: 1990–1997.
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- 1999
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120. THE WORLD BANK STUDY OF AFRICAN AGRICULTURE: SOME INITIAL ASPECTS
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Peter F. Ad. McLougiilin
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Economics and Econometrics ,Agriculture ,business.industry ,Development economics ,Economics ,business ,General Business, Management and Accounting - Published
- 1964
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121. Effecten van internationale overnames op aandelenrendementen
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F. Adriaanse, A. Corhay, and A. Tourani Rad
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Business ,HF5001-6182 ,Business mathematics. Commercial arithmetic. Including tables, etc. ,HF5691-5716 - Published
- 1996
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122. Christian music in contemporary Africa: a re-examination of its essentials
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F. Adedeji
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Biblical Music ,Christian Music ,Church Music ,Music And Theology ,Practical Theology ,BV1-5099 ,Moral theology ,BV4625-4780 - Abstract
Christian music all over Africa (be it liturgical church music or gospel), in contemporary times has become so popular and well grown howbeit in divergent dimensions. As a result, there have been questions, debates and confusions both by insiders and outsiders of the Christian faith on what exactly constitutes Christian music. There then arises the need to theorise the fundamentals of Christian music, exhuming the Biblical, musical and socio-cultural basis for its performance practices. This article examines various principles that should guide contemporary Christian musicianship, especially as contained in the Scriptures; arguing that the practice of Christian music cannot be divorced from Bible even when the principles of musical sound organisation and the socio-cultural needs of the society have to be observed. The tension created by the superimposition of the three is also resolved. This article is therefore theoretical and prescriptive in focus and depth as it offers to the African audience the paradigms for understanding the art, gives guidance to the practitioners, and supplies scholarly information to the scholars and observers of Christian studies in general. The article concludes by recommending the indispensability of Biblical standards and skilful originality/artistry in contemporary Christian musicianship.
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- 2007
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123. Assessment of the Intermittent Preventive Treatment for Prevention of malaria in pregnancy (IPTp)
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U.A. Katsayal, S.K. Musa, A.A. Otu, I.H. Suleiman, and F. Adiri
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Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Published
- 2014
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124. Photo-production of ψ(2 S) mesons at HERA
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Adloff, C., Aid, S., Anderson, M., Andreev, V., Andrieu, B., Arkadov, V., Arndt, C., Ayyaz, I., Babaev, A., Bähr, J., Bán, J., Baranov, P., Barrelet, E., Barschke, R., Bartel, W., Bassler, U., Beck, M., Behrend, H.-J., Beier, C., Belousov, A., Berger, Ch., Bernardi, G., Bertrand-Coremans, G., Beyer, R., Biddulph, P., Bizot, J.C., Borras, K., Boudry, V., Bourov, S., Braemer, A., Braunschweig, W., Brisson, V., Brown, D.P., Brückner, W., Bruel, P., Bruncko, D., Brune, C., Bürger, J., Büsser, F.W., Buniatian, A., Burke, S., Buschhorn, G., Calvet, D., Campbell, A.J., Carli, T., Charlet, M., Clarke, D., Clerbaux, B., Cocks, S., Contreras, J.G., Cormack, C., Coughlan, J.A., Cousinou, M.-C., Cox, B.E., Cozzika, G., Cussans, D.G., Cvach, J., Dagoret, S., Dainton, J.B., Dau, W.D., Daum, K., David, M., De Roeck, A., De Wolf, E.A., Delcourt, B., Dirkmann, M., Dixon, P., Dlugosz, W., Donovan, K.T., Dowell, J.D., Droutskoi, A., Ebert, J., Ebert, T.R., Eckerlin, G., Efremenko, V., Egli, S., Eichler, R., Eisele, F., Eisenhandler, E., Elsen, E., Erdmann, M., Fahr, A.B., Favart, L., Fedotov, A., Felst, R., Feltesse, J., Ferencei, J., Ferrarotto, F., Flamm, K., Fleischer, M., Flieser, M., Flügge, G., Fomenko, A., Formánek, J., Foster, J.M., Franke, G., Gabathuler, E., Gabathuler, K., Gaede, F., Garvey, J., Gayler, J., Gebauer, M., Gerhards, R., Glazov, A., Goerlich, L., Gogitidze, N., Goldberg, M., Gonzalez-Pineiro, B., Gorelov, I., Grab, C., Grässler, H., Greenshaw, T., Griffiths, R.K., Grindhammer, G., Gruber, A., Gruber, C., Hadig, T., Haidt, D., Hajduk, L., Haller, T., Hampel, M., Haynes, W.J., Heinemann, B., Heinzelmann, G., Henderson, R.C.W., Hengstmann, S., Henschel, H., Heremans, R., Herynek, I., Hewitt, K., Hiller, K.H., Hilton, C.D., Hladký, J., Höppner, M., Hoffmann, D., Holtom, T., Horisberger, R., Hudgson, V.L., Hütte, M., Ibbotson, M., İşsever, Ç., Itterbeck, H., Jacquet, M., Jaffre, M., Janoth, J., Jansen, D.M., Jönsson, L., Johnson, D.P., Jung, H., Kalmus, P.I.P., Kander, M., Kant, D., Kathage, U., Katzy, J., Kaufmann, H.H., Kaufmann, O., Kausch, M., Kazarian, S., Kenyon, I.R., Kermiche, S., Keuker, C., Kiesling, C., Klein, M., Kleinwort, C., Knies, G., Köhne, J.H., Kolanoski, H., Kolya, S.D., Korbel, V., Kostka, P., Kotelnikov, S.K., Krämerkämper, T., Krasny, M.W., Krehbiel, H., Krücker, D., Küpper, A., Küster, H., Kuhlen, M., Kurča, T., Laforge, B., Lahmann, R., Landon, M.P.J., Lange, W., Langenegger, U., Lebedev, A., Lehner, F., Lemaitre, V., Levonian, S., Lindstroem, M., Lipinski, J., List, B., Lobo, G., Lopez, G.C., Lubimov, V., Lüke, D., Lytkin, L., Magnussen, N., Mahlke-Krüger, H., Malinovski, E., Maraček, R., Marage, P., Marks, J., Marshall, R., Martens, J., Martin, G., Martin, R., Martyn, H.-U., Martyniak, J., Maxfield, S.J., McMahon, S.J., Mehta, A., Meier, K., Merkel, P., Metlica, F., Meyer, A., Meyer, H., Meyer, J., Meyer, P.-O., Migliori, A., Mikocki, S., Milstead, D., Moeck, J., Moreau, F., Morris, J.V., Mroczko, E., Müller, D., Müller, K., Murı́n, P., Nagovizin, V., Nahnhauer, R., Naroska, B., Naumann, Th., Négri, I., Newman, P.R., Newton, D., Nguyen, H.K., Nicholls, T.C., Niebergall, F., Niebuhr, C., Niedzballa, Ch., Niggli, H., Nowak, G., Nunnemann, T., Oberlack, H., Olsson, J.E., Ozerov, D., Palmen, P., Panaro, E., Panitch, A., Pascaud, C., Passaggio, S., Patel, G.D., Pawletta, H., Peppel, E., Perez, E., Phillips, J.P., Pieuchot, A., Pitzl, D., Pöschl, R., Pope, G., Povh, B., Rabbertz, K., Reimer, P., Rick, H., Riess, S., Rizvi, E., Robmann, P., Roosen, R., Rosenbauer, K., Rostovtsev, A., Rouse, F., Royon, C., Rüter, K., Rusakov, S., Rybicki, K., Sankey, D.P.C., Schacht, P., Scheins, J., Schiek, S., Schleif, S., von Schlippe, W., Schmidt, D., Schmidt, G., Schoeffel, L., Schöning, A., Schröder, V., Schuhmann, E., Schultz-Coulon, H.-C., Schwab, B., Sefkow, F., Semenov, A., Shekelyan, V., Sheviakov, I., Shtarkov, L.N., Siegmon, G., Siewert, U., Sirois, Y., Skillicorn, I.O., Sloan, T., Smirnov, P., Smith, M., Solochenko, V., Soloviev, Y., Specka, A., Spiekermann, J., Spielman, S., Spitzer, H., Squinabol, F., Steffen, P., Steinberg, R., Steinhart, J., Stella, B., Stellberger, A., Stiewe, J., Stolze, K., Straumann, U., Struczinski, W., Sutton, J.P., Swart, M., Tapprogge, S., Taševský, M., Tchernyshov, V., Tchetchelnitski, S., Theissen, J., Thompson, G., Thompson, P.D., Tobien, N., Todenhagen, R., Truöl, P., Tsipolitis, G., Turnau, J., Tzamariudaki, E., Uelkes, P., Usik, A., Valkár, S., Valkárová, A., Vallée, C., Van Esch, P., Van Mechelen, P., Vandenplas, D., Vazdik, Y., Verrecchia, P., Villet, G., Wacker, K., Wagener, A., Wagener, M., Wallny, R., Walter, T., Waugh, B., Weber, G., Weber, M., Wegener, D., Wegner, A., Wengler, T., Werner, M., West, L.R., Wiesand, S., Wilksen, T., Willard, S., Winde, M., Winter, G.-G., Wittek, C., Wobisch, M., Wollatz, H., Wünsch, E., Žáček, J., Zálešák, J., Zarbock, D., Zhang, Z., Zhokin, A., Zini, P., Zomer, F., Zsembery, J., and ZurNedden, M.
- Published
- 1998
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125. Low Q 2 jet production at HERA and virtual photon structure
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Adloff, C., Aid, S., Anderson, M., Andreev, V., Andrieu, B., Arkadov, V., Arndt, C., Ayyaz, I., Babaev, A., Bähr, J., Bán, J., Baranov, P., Barrelet, E., Barschke, R., Bartel, W., Bassler, U., Beck, M., Behrend, H.-J., Beier, C., Belousov, A., Berger, Ch., Bernardi, G., Bertrand-Coremans, G., Beyer, R., Biddulph, P., Bizot, J.C., Borras, K., Botterweck, F., Boudry, V., Bourov, S., Braemer, A., Braunschweig, W., Brisson, V., Brown, D.P., Brückner, W., Bruel, P., Bruncko, D., Brune, C., Bürger, J., Büsser, F.W., Buniatian, A., Burke, S., Buschhorn, G., Calvet, D., Campbell, A.J., Carli, T., Charlet, M., Clarke, D., Clerbaux, B., Cocks, S., Contreras, J.G., Cormack, C., Coughlan, J.A., Cousinou, M.-C., Cox, B.E., Cozzika, G., Cussans, D.G., Cvach, J., Dagoret, S., Dainton, J.B., Dau, W.D., Daum, K., David, M., De Roeck, A., De Wolf, E.A., Delcourt, B., Dirkmann, M., Dixon, P., Dlugosz, W., Donovan, K.T., Dowell, J.D., Droutskoi, A., Ebert, J., Ebert, T.R., Eckerlin, G., Efremenko, V., Egli, S., Eichler, R., Eisele, F., Eisenhandler, E., Elsen, E., Erdmann, M., Fahr, A.B., Favart, L., Fedotov, A., Felst, R., Feltesse, J., Ferencei, J., Ferrarotto, F., Flamm, K., Fleischer, M., Flieser, M., Flügge, G., Fomenko, A., Formánek, J., Foster, J.M., Franke, G., Gabathuler, E., Gabathuler, K., Gaede, F., Garvey, J., Gayler, J., Gebauer, M., Gerhards, R., Glazov, A., Goerlich, L., Gogitidze, N., Goldberg, M., Gonzalez-Pineiro, B., Gorelov, I., Grab, C., Grässler, H., Greenshaw, T., Griffiths, R.K., Grindhammer, G., Gruber, A., Gruber, C., Hadig, T., Haidt, D., Hajduk, L., Haller, T., Hampel, M., Haynes, W.J., Heinemann, B., Heinzelmann, G., Henderson, R.C.W., Hengstmann, S., Henschel, H., Herynek, I., Hess, M.F., Hewitt, K., Hiller, K.H., Hilton, C.D., Hladký, J., Höppner, M., Hoffmann, D., Holtom, T., Horisberger, R., Hudgson, V.L., Hütte, M., Ibbotson, M., İşsever, Ç., Itterbeck, H., Jacquet, M., Jaffre, M., Janoth, J., Jansen, D.M., Jönsson, L., Johnson, D.P., Jung, H., Kalmus, P.I.P., Kander, M., Kant, D., Kathage, U., Katzy, J., Kaufmann, H.H., Kaufmann, O., Kausch, M., Kazarian, S., Kenyon, I.R., Kermiche, S., Keuker, C., Kiesling, C., Klein, M., Kleinwort, C., Knies, G., Köhne, J.H., Kolanoski, H., Kolya, S.D., Korbel, V., Kostka, P., Kotelnikov, S.K., Krämerkämper, T., Krasny, M.W., Krehbiel, H., Krücker, D., Küpper, A., Küster, H., Kuhlen, M., Kurča, T., Laforge, B., Lahmann, R., Landon, M.P.J., Lange, W., Langenegger, U., Lebedev, A., Lehner, F., Lemaitre, V., Levonian, S., Lindstroem, M., Lipinski, J., List, B., Lobo, G., Lopez, G.C., Lubimov, V., Lüke, D., Lytkin, L., Magnussen, N., Mahlke-Krüger, H., Malinovski, E., Maraček, R., Marage, P., Marks, J., Marshall, R., Martens, J., Martin, G., Martin, R., Martyn, H.-U., Martyniak, J., Mavroidis, T., Maxfield, S.J., McMahon, S.J., Mehta, A., Meier, K., Merkel, P., Metlica, F., Meyer, A., Meyer, H., Meyer, J., Meyer, P.-O., Migliori, A., Mikocki, S., Milstead, D., Moeck, J., Moreau, F., Morris, J.V., Mroczko, E., Müller, D., Müller, K., Murı́n, P., Nagovizin, V., Nahnhauer, R., Naroska, B., Naumann, Th., Négri, I., Newman, P.R., Newton, D., Nguyen, H.K., Nicholls, T.C., Niebergall, F., Niebuhr, C., Niedzballa, Ch., Niggli, H., Nowak, G., Nunnemann, T., Oberlack, H., Olsson, J.E., Ozerov, D., Palmen, P., Panaro, E., Panitch, A., Pascaud, C., Passaggio, S., Patel, G.D., Pawletta, H., Peppel, E., Perez, E., Phillips, J.P., Pieuchot, A., Pitzl, D., Pöschl, R., Pope, G., Povh, B., Rabbertz, K., Reimer, P., Rick, H., Riess, S., Rizvi, E., Robmann, P., Roosen, R., Rosenbauer, K., Rostovtsev, A., Rouse, F., Royon, C., Rüter, K., Rusakov, S., Rybicki, K., Sankey, D.P.C., Schacht, P., Scheins, J., Schiek, S., Schleif, S., Schleper, P., von Schlippe, W., Schmidt, D., Schmidt, G., Schoeffel, L., Schöning, A., Schröder, V., Schuhmann, E., Schultz-Coulon, H.-C., Schwab, B., Sefkow, F., Semenov, A., Shekelyan, V., Sheviakov, I., Shtarkov, L.N., Siegmon, G., Siewert, U., Sirois, Y., Skillicorn, I.O., Sloan, T., Smirnov, P., Smith, M., Solochenko, V., Soloviev, Y., Specka, A., Spiekermann, J., Spielman, S., Spitzer, H., Squinabol, F., Steffen, P., Steinberg, R., Steinhart, J., Stella, B., Stellberger, A., Stiewe, J., Stolze, K., Straumann, U., Struczinski, W., Sutton, J.P., Swart, M., Tapprogge, S., Taševský, M., Tchernyshov, V., Tchetchelnitski, S., Theissen, J., Thompson, G., Thompson, P.D., Tobien, N., Todenhagen, R., Truöl, P., Zálešák, J., Tsipolitis, G., Turnau, J., Tzamariudaki, E., Uelkes, P., Usik, A., Valkár, S., Valkárová, A., Vallée, C., Van Esch, P., Van Mechelen, P., Vandenplas, D., Vazdik, Y., Verrecchia, P., Villet, G., Wacker, K., Wagener, A., Wagener, M., Wallny, R., Walter, T., Waugh, B., Weber, G., Weber, M., Wegener, D., Wegner, A., Wengler, T., Werner, M., West, L.R., Wiesand, S., Wilksen, T., Willard, S., Winde, M., Winter, G.-G., Wittek, C., Wobisch, M., Wollatz, H., Wünsch, E., Žáček, J., Zarbock, D., Zhang, Z., Zhokin, A., Zini, P., Zomer, F., Zsembery, J., and ZurNedden, M.
- Published
- 1997
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126. Is risk-taking in talented junior tennis players related to overuse injuries?
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Van der Sluis A, Brink MS, Pluim B, Verhagen EA, Elferink-Gemser MT, and Visscher C
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- Adolescent, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Athletic Injuries epidemiology, Cumulative Trauma Disorders epidemiology, Risk-Taking, Tennis injuries
- Abstract
Overuse injuries are a serious problem in junior tennis. Gaining insight in age-specific risk factors can contribute to prevention. The developmental cognitive processes that take place during adolescence make talented players more inclined to take risks. This may be even more pronounced in the high performance culture in which they move. Therefore, this study focuses on the relationship between risk-taking and overuse injuries in talented tennis players. Seventy-three talented tennis players (45 boys and 28 girls, age 11-14 years) were monitored for 32 weeks, using the Oslo Sports Trauma Research Centre Questionnaire on Health Problems. Risk-taking was measured at the start of the season with the Iowa Gambling Task. Linear regression analyses were executed to predict (a) overuse injuries, (b) time loss overuse injuries and (c) overuse severity, by risk-taking, exposure time, and injury history. In boys, risk-taking contributed significantly to time loss overuse injuries [F(1,39) = 7.764, P = 0.008, R
2 = 0.15] and to overuse severity [F(1,39) = 5.683, P = 0.022, with an R2 of 0.13] In girls, time loss overuse injuries [F(1,23) = 6.889, P = 0.018, R2 = 0.20] and overuse severity [F(1,23) = 7.287, P = 0.013, R2 = 0.24] were predicted by exposure time. Coaches and trainers should be aware that talented male tennis players who are inclined to take risks, are more likely to maintain risky behavioral patterns related to overuse injuries., (© 2016 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)- Published
- 2017
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127. People are unable to recognize or report on their own eye movements.
- Author
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Clarke AD, Mahon A, Irvine A, and Hunt AR
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Photic Stimulation, Reaction Time physiology, Young Adult, Attention physiology, Awareness physiology, Eye Movements physiology, Visual Perception physiology
- Abstract
Eye movements bring new information into our visual system. The selection of each fixation is the result of a complex interplay of image features, task goals, and biases in motor control and perception. To what extent are we aware of the selection of saccades and their consequences? Here we use a converging methods approach to answer this question in three diverse experiments. In Experiment 1, participants were directed to find a target in a scene by a verbal description of it. We then presented the path the eyes took together with those of another participant. Participants could only identify their own path when the comparison scanpath was searching for a different target. In Experiment 2, participants viewed a scene for three seconds and then named objects from the scene. When asked whether they had looked directly at a given object, participants' responses were primarily determined by whether or not the object had been named, and not by whether it had been fixated. In Experiment 3, participants executed saccades towards single targets and then viewed a replay of either the eye movement they had just executed or that of someone else. Participants were at chance to identify their own saccade, even when it contained under- and overshoot corrections. The consistent inability to report on one's own eye movements across experiments suggests that awareness of eye movements is extremely impoverished or altogether absent. This is surprising given that information about prior eye movements is clearly used during visual search, motor error correction, and learning.
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- 2017
- Full Text
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128. ESC expert statement on the effects on mood of the natural cycle and progestin-only contraceptives.
- Author
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Merki-Feld GS, Apter D, Bartfai G, Grandi G, Haldre K, Lech M, Lertxundi R, Lete I, Lobo Abascal P, Raine S, Roumen F, Serfaty D, Shulman LP, Skouby S, and Bitzer J
- Subjects
- Affect, Contraceptives, Oral, Hormonal pharmacology, Female, Humans, Hydrocortisone analysis, Levonorgestrel pharmacology, Progestins pharmacology, Women's Health, Contraceptives, Oral, Hormonal adverse effects, Depression chemically induced, Levonorgestrel adverse effects, Progestins adverse effects
- Abstract
Hormonal fluctuations during the natural cycle, as well as progestins used for hormonal contraception, can exert effects on mood especially in vulnerable women. Negative effects of levonorgestrel-releasing intrauterine contraception on mood are rare.
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- 2017
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129. Human visual search behaviour is far from ideal.
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Nowakowska A, Clarke AD, and Hunt AR
- Subjects
- Biological Evolution, Fixation, Ocular, Humans, Photic Stimulation, Eye Movements, Vision, Ocular
- Abstract
Evolutionary pressures have made foraging behaviours highly efficient in many species. Eye movements during search present a useful instance of foraging behaviour in humans. We tested the efficiency of eye movements during search using homogeneous and heterogeneous arrays of line segments. The search target is visible in the periphery on the homogeneous array, but requires central vision to be detected on the heterogeneous array. For a compound search array that is heterogeneous on one side and homogeneous on the other, eye movements should be directed only to the heterogeneous side. Instead, participants made many fixations on the homogeneous side. By comparing search of compound arrays to an estimate of search performance based on uniform arrays, we isolate two contributions to search inefficiency. First, participants make superfluous fixations, sacrificing speed for a perceived (but not actual) gain in response certainty. Second, participants fixate the homogeneous side even more frequently than predicted by inefficient search of uniform arrays, suggesting they also fail to direct fixations to locations that yield the most new information., (© 2017 The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2017
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130. Inefficient search strategies in simulated hemianopia.
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Nowakowska A, Clarke AD, Sahraie A, and Hunt AR
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Young Adult, Eye Movements physiology, Hemianopsia physiopathology, Pattern Recognition, Visual physiology, Visual Fields physiology
- Abstract
We investigated whether healthy participants can spontaneously adopt effective eye movement strategies to compensate for information loss similar to that experienced by patients with damage to visual cortex (hemianopia). Visual information in 1 hemifield was removed or degraded while participants searched for an emotional face among neutral faces or a line tilted 45° to the right among lines of varying degree of tilt. A bias to direct saccades toward the sighted field was observed across all 4 experiments. The proportion of saccades directed toward the "blind" field increased with the amount of information available in that field, suggesting fixations are driven toward salient visual stimuli rather than toward locations that maximize information gain. In Experiments 1 and 2, the sighted-field bias had a minimal impact on search efficiency, because the target was difficult to find. However, the sighted-field bias persisted even when the target was visually distinct from the distractors and could easily be detected in the periphery (Experiments 3 and 4). This surprisingly inefficient search behavior suggests that eye movements are biased to salient visual stimuli even when it comes at a clear cost to search efficiency, and efficient strategies to compensate for visual deficits are not spontaneously adopted by healthy participants. (PsycINFO Database Record, ((c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved).)
- Published
- 2016
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131. Human search for a target on a textured background is consistent with a stochastic model.
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Clarke AD, Green P, Chantler MJ, and Hunt AR
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Photic Stimulation, Young Adult, Cues, Fixation, Ocular physiology, Saccades physiology, Visual Perception physiology
- Abstract
Previous work has demonstrated that search for a target in noise is consistent with the predictions of the optimal search strategy, both in the spatial distribution of fixation locations and in the number of fixations observers require to find the target. In this study we describe a challenging visual-search task and compare the number of fixations required by human observers to find the target to predictions made by a stochastic search model. This model relies on a target-visibility map based on human performance in a separate detection task. If the model does not detect the target, then it selects the next saccade by randomly sampling from the distribution of saccades that human observers made. We find that a memoryless stochastic model matches human performance in this task. Furthermore, we find that the similarity in the distribution of fixation locations between human observers and the ideal observer does not replicate: Rather than making the signature doughnut-shaped distribution predicted by the ideal search strategy, the fixations made by observers are best described by a central bias. We conclude that, when searching for a target in noise, humans use an essentially random strategy, which achieves near optimal behavior due to biases in the distributions of saccades we have a tendency to make. The findings reconcile the existence of highly efficient human search performance with recent studies demonstrating clear failures of optimality in single and multiple saccade tasks.
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- 2016
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132. Gray Matter Involvement in Radiologically Isolated Syndrome.
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Labiano-Fontcuberta A, Mato-Abad V, Álvarez-Linera J, Hernández-Tamames JA, Martínez-Ginés ML, Aladro Y, Ayuso L, Domingo-Santos Á, and Benito-León J
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Syndrome, Brain Diseases pathology, Gray Matter pathology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, White Matter pathology
- Abstract
The unanticipated magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) detection in the brain of asymptomatic subjects of white matter lesions suggestive of multiple sclerosis has recently been named as radiologically isolated syndrome (RIS). The pathophysiological processes of RIS remain largely unknown and questions as to whether gray matter alterations actually occur in this entity are yet to be investigated in more detail. By means of a 3 T multimodal MRI approach, we searched for cortical and deep gray matter changes in a cohort of RIS patients. Seventeen RIS patients, 17 clinically isolated syndrome (CIS) patients (median disease duration from symptom onset = 12 months), and 17 healthy controls underwent MRI and neuropsychological testing. Normalized deep gray matter volumes and regional cortical thickness were assessed using FreeSurfer. SIENAX was used to obtain normalized global and cortical brain volumes. Voxelwise morphometry analysis was performed by using SPM8 software to localize regions of brain tissue showing significant changes of fractional anisotropy or mean diffusivity. Although no differences were observed between CIS and healthy controls groups, RIS patients showed significantly lower normalized cortical volume (673 ± 27.07 vs 641 ± 35.88 [cm³ × 10³, Tukey P test = 0.009) and mean thalamic volume (0.0051 ± 0.4 vs 0.0046 ± 0.4 mm, P = 0.014) compared with healthy controls. RIS patients also showed significant thinning in a number of cortical areas, that were primarily distributed in frontal and temporal lobes (P < 0.05, uncorrected). Strong correlations were observed between T2-white matter lesion volume and regional cortical thickness (rho spearman ranging from 0.60 to 0.80). Our data suggest that white matter lesions on T2-weighted images are not the only hallmark of RIS. Future longitudinal studies with larger samples are warranted to better clarify the effect of RIS-related white matter lesions on gray matter tissue., Competing Interests: The authors have no funding and conflicts of interest.
- Published
- 2016
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133. Failure of Intuition When Choosing Whether to Invest in a Single Goal or Split Resources Between Two Goals.
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Clarke AD and Hunt AR
- Subjects
- Decision Making, Humans, Task Performance and Analysis, Choice Behavior, Intuition
- Abstract
In a series of related experiments, we asked people to choose whether to split their attention between two equally likely potential tasks or to prioritize one task at the expense of the other. In such a choice, when the tasks are easy, the best strategy is to prepare for both of them. As difficulty increases beyond the point at which people can perform both tasks accurately, they should switch strategy and focus on one task at the expense of the other. Across three very different tasks (target detection, throwing, and memory), none of the participants switched their strategy at the correct point. Moreover, the majority consistently failed to modify their strategy in response to changes in task difficulty. This failure may have been related to uncertainty about their own ability, because in a version of the experiment in which there was no uncertainty, participants uniformly switched at an optimal point., (© The Author(s) 2015.)
- Published
- 2016
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134. Giving Good Directions: Order of Mention Reflects Visual Salience.
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Clarke AD, Elsner M, and Rohde H
- Abstract
In complex stimuli, there are many different possible ways to refer to a specified target. Previous studies have shown that when people are faced with such a task, the content of their referring expression reflects visual properties such as size, salience, and clutter. Here, we extend these findings and present evidence that (i) the influence of visual perception on sentence construction goes beyond content selection and in part determines the order in which different objects are mentioned and (ii) order of mention influences comprehension. Study 1 (a corpus study of reference productions) shows that when a speaker uses a relational description to mention a salient object, that object is treated as being in the common ground and is more likely to be mentioned first. Study 2 (a visual search study) asks participants to listen to referring expressions and find the specified target; in keeping with the above result, we find that search for easy-to-find targets is faster when the target is mentioned first, while search for harder-to-find targets is facilitated by mentioning the target later, after a landmark in a relational description. Our findings show that seemingly low-level and disparate mental "modules" like perception and sentence planning interact at a high level and in task-dependent ways.
- Published
- 2015
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135. Effect of Functional Bread Rich in Potassium, γ-Aminobutyric Acid and Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors on Blood Pressure, Glucose Metabolism and Endothelial Function: A Double-blind Randomized Crossover Clinical Trial.
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Becerra-Tomás N, Guasch-Ferré M, Quilez J, Merino J, Ferré R, Díaz-López A, Bulló M, Hernández-Alonso P, Palau-Galindo A, and Salas-Salvadó J
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Biomarkers blood, Blood Glucose metabolism, Blood Pressure physiology, Bread, Cross-Over Studies, Double-Blind Method, Endothelium, Vascular physiology, Female, Humans, Hypertension blood, Hypertension physiopathology, Male, Middle Aged, Severity of Illness Index, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult, Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors, Food, Fortified, Hypertension diet therapy, Potassium, gamma-Aminobutyric Acid
- Abstract
Because it has been suggested that food rich in γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) or angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor (ACEI) peptides have beneficial effects on blood pressure (BP) and other cardiovascular risk factors, we tested the effects of low-sodium bread, but rich in potassium, GABA, and ACEI peptides on 24-hour BP, glucose metabolism, and endothelial function.A randomized, double-blind, crossover trial was conducted in 30 patients with pre or mild-to-moderate hypertension, comparing three 4-week nutritional interventions separated by 2-week washout periods. Patients were randomly assigned to consume 120 g/day of 1 of the 3 types of bread for each nutritional intervention: conventional wheat bread (CB), low-sodium wheat bread enriched in potassium (LSB), and low-sodium wheat bread rich in potassium, GABA, and ACEI peptides (LSB + G). For each period, 24-hour BP measurements, in vivo endothelial function, and biochemical samples were obtained.After LSB + G consumption, 24-hour ambulatory BP underwent a nonsignificant greater reduction than after the consumption of CB and LSB (0.26 mm Hg in systolic BP and -0.63 mm Hg in diastolic BP for CB; -0.71 mm Hg in systolic BP and -1.08 mm Hg in diastolic BP for LSB; and -0.75 mm Hg in systolic BP and -2.12 mm Hg in diastolic BP for LSB + G, respectively). Diastolic BP at rest decreased significantly during the LSB + G intervention, although there were no significant differences in changes between interventions. There were no significant differences between interventions in terms of changes in in vivo endothelial function, glucose metabolism, and peripheral inflammatory parameters.Compared with the consumption of CB or LSB, no greater beneficial effects on 24-hour BP, endothelial function, or glucose metabolism were demonstrated after the consumption of LSB + G in a population with pre or mild-to-moderate hypertension. Further studies are warranted to clarify the effect of GABA on BP, preferably using a specific design for noninferiority trials and ambulatory BP monitoring as a measure of BP.This study was registered at Current Controlled Trials as ISRCTN31436822.
- Published
- 2015
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136. VEP Responses to Op-Art Stimuli.
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O'Hare L, Clarke AD, and Pollux PM
- Subjects
- Eye Movements, Humans, Contrast Sensitivity, Evoked Potentials, Visual, Pattern Recognition, Visual
- Abstract
Several types of striped patterns have been reported to cause adverse sensations described as visual discomfort. Previous research using op-art-based stimuli has demonstrated that spurious eye movement signals can cause the experience of illusory motion, or shimmering effects, which might be perceived as uncomfortable. Whilst the shimmering effects are one cause of discomfort, another possible contributor to discomfort is excessive neural responses: As striped patterns do not have the statistical redundancy typical of natural images, they are perhaps unable to be encoded efficiently. If this is the case, then this should be seen in the amplitude of the EEG response. This study found that stimuli that were judged to be most comfortable were also those with the lowest EEG amplitude. This provides some support for the idea that excessive neural responses might also contribute to discomfort judgements in normal populations, in stimuli controlled for perceived contrast.
- Published
- 2015
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137. Association between human papillomavirus and Epstein - Barr virus DNA and gene promoter methylation of RB1 and CDH1 in the cervical lesions: a transversal study.
- Author
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McCormick TM, Canedo NH, Furtado YL, Silveira FA, de Lima RJ, Rosman AD, Almeida Filho GL, and Carvalho Mda G
- Subjects
- Antigens, CD, Cadherins metabolism, Case-Control Studies, DNA (Cytosine-5-)-Methyltransferase 1, DNA (Cytosine-5-)-Methyltransferases genetics, DNA (Cytosine-5-)-Methyltransferases metabolism, Disease Progression, Epigenesis, Genetic, Epstein-Barr Virus Infections virology, Female, Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic, Herpesvirus 4, Human pathogenicity, Host-Pathogen Interactions, Human Papillomavirus DNA Tests, Humans, Neoplasm Grading, Papillomaviridae pathogenicity, Papillomavirus Infections virology, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Retinoblastoma Protein metabolism, Squamous Intraepithelial Lesions of the Cervix enzymology, Squamous Intraepithelial Lesions of the Cervix pathology, Squamous Intraepithelial Lesions of the Cervix virology, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms enzymology, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms pathology, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms virology, Uterine Cervical Dysplasia enzymology, Uterine Cervical Dysplasia pathology, Uterine Cervical Dysplasia virology, Cadherins genetics, DNA Methylation, DNA, Viral genetics, Epstein-Barr Virus Infections genetics, Herpesvirus 4, Human genetics, Papillomaviridae genetics, Papillomavirus Infections genetics, Promoter Regions, Genetic, Retinoblastoma Protein genetics, Squamous Intraepithelial Lesions of the Cervix genetics, Uterine Cervical Neoplasms genetics, Uterine Cervical Dysplasia genetics
- Abstract
Background: Human papillomavirus (HPV) inactivates the retinoblastoma 1 (RB1) gene by promoter methylation and reduces cellular E-cadherin expression by overexpression of DNA methyltransferase 1 (DNMT1). The Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is an oncogenic virus that may be related to cervical carcinogenesis. In gastric cancer, it has been demonstrated that E-cadherin gene (CDH1) hypermethylation is associated with DNMT1 overexpression by EBV infection. Our aim was to analyze the gene promoter methylation frequency of RB1 and CDH1 and verify the association between that methylation frequency and HPV and EBV infection in cervical lesions., Methods: Sixty-five samples were obtained from cervical specimens: 15 normal cervices, 17 low-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions (LSIL), 15 high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions (HSIL), and 18 cervical cancers. HPV and EBV DNA testing was performed by PCR, and the methylation status was verified by MSP., Results: HPV frequency was associated with cervical cancer cases (p = 0.005) but not EBV frequency (p = 0.732). Viral co-infection showed a statistically significant correlation with cancer (p = 0.027). No viral infection was detected in 33.3% (5/15) of controls. RB1 methylated status was associated with cancer (p = 0.009) and HPV infection (p = 0.042). CDH1 methylation was not associated with cancer (p = 0.181). Controls and LSIL samples did not show simultaneous methylation, while both genes were methylated in 27.8% (5/18) of cancer samples. In the presence of EBV, CDH1 methylation was present in 27.8% (5/18) of cancer samples. Only cancer cases presented RB1 promoter methylation in the presence of HPV and EBV (33.3%)., Conclusions: The methylation status of both genes increased with disease progression. With EBV, RB1 methylation was a tumor-associated event because only the cancer group presented methylated RB1 with HPV infection. HPV infection was shown to be significantly correlated with cancer conditions. The global methylation frequency was higher when HPV was present, showing its epigenetic role in cervical carcinogenesis. Nevertheless, EBV seems to be a cofactor and needs to be further investigated., Virtual Slides: The virtual slide(s) for this article can be found here: http://www.diagnosticpathology.diagnomx.eu/vs/1159157579149317 .
- Published
- 2015
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138. Deriving an appropriate baseline for describing fixation behaviour.
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Clarke AD and Tatler BW
- Subjects
- Attention physiology, Eye Movements physiology, Humans, Models, Theoretical, Fixation, Ocular physiology, Visual Perception physiology
- Abstract
Humans display image-independent viewing biases when inspecting complex scenes. One of the strongest such bias is the central tendency in scene viewing: observers favour making fixations towards the centre of an image, irrespective of its content. Characterising these biases accurately is important for three reasons: (1) they provide a necessary baseline for quantifying the association between visual features in scenes and fixation selection; (2) they provide a benchmark for evaluating models of fixation behaviour when viewing scenes; and (3) they can be included as a component of generative models of eye guidance. In the present study we compare four commonly used approaches to describing image-independent biases and report their ability to describe observed data and correctly classify fixations across 10 eye movement datasets. We propose an anisotropic Gaussian function that can serve as an effective and appropriate baseline for describing image-independent biases without the need to fit functions to individual datasets or subjects., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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139. Using neutron spin echo resolved grazing incidence scattering to investigate organic solar cell materials.
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Parnell AJ, Hobson A, Dalgliesh RM, Jones RA, and Dunbar AD
- Subjects
- Crystallization, Microscopy, Atomic Force methods, Fullerenes chemistry, Neutron Diffraction methods, Solar Energy
- Abstract
The spin echo resolved grazing incidence scattering (SERGIS) technique has been used to probe the length-scales associated with irregularly shaped crystallites. Neutrons are passed through two well defined regions of magnetic field; one before and one after the sample. The two magnetic field regions have opposite polarity and are tuned such that neutrons travelling through both regions, without being perturbed, will undergo the same number of precessions in opposing directions. In this case the neutron precession in the second arm is said to "echo" the first, and the original polarization of the beam is preserved. If the neutron interacts with a sample and scatters elastically the path through the second arm is not the same as the first and the original polarization is not recovered. Depolarization of the neutron beam is a highly sensitive probe at very small angles (<50 μrad) but still allows a high intensity, divergent beam to be used. The decrease in polarization of the beam reflected from the sample as compared to that from the reference sample can be directly related to structure within the sample. In comparison to scattering observed in neutron reflection measurements the SERGIS signals are often weak and are unlikely to be observed if the in-plane structures within the sample under investigation are dilute, disordered, small in size and polydisperse or the neutron scattering contrast is low. Therefore, good results will most likely be obtained using the SERGIS technique if the sample being measured consist of thin films on a flat substrate and contain scattering features that contains a high density of moderately sized features (30 nm to 5 µm) which scatter neutrons strongly or the features are arranged on a lattice. An advantage of the SERGIS technique is that it can probe structures in the plane of the sample.
- Published
- 2014
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140. The impact of attentional, linguistic, and visual features during object naming.
- Author
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Clarke AD, Coco MI, and Keller F
- Abstract
Object detection and identification are fundamental to human vision, and there is mounting evidence that objects guide the allocation of visual attention. However, the role of objects in tasks involving multiple modalities is less clear. To address this question, we investigate object naming, a task in which participants have to verbally identify objects they see in photorealistic scenes. We report an eye-tracking study that investigates which features (attentional, visual, and linguistic) influence object naming. We find that the amount of visual attention directed toward an object, its position and saliency, along with linguistic factors such as word frequency, animacy, and semantic proximity, significantly influence whether the object will be named or not. We then ask how features from different modalities are combined during naming, and find significant interactions between saliency and position, saliency and linguistic features, and attention and position. We conclude that when the cognitive system performs tasks such as object naming, it uses input from one modality to constraint or enhance the processing of other modalities, rather than processing each input modality independently.
- Published
- 2013
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141. Big Five personality and depression diagnosis, severity and age of onset in older adults.
- Author
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Koorevaar AM, Comijs HC, Dhondt AD, van Marwijk HW, van der Mast RC, Naarding P, Oude Voshaar RC, and Stek ML
- Subjects
- Age of Onset, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Anxiety Disorders psychology, Case-Control Studies, Cross-Sectional Studies, Depression epidemiology, Depression etiology, Female, Humans, Interview, Psychological, Logistic Models, Male, Middle Aged, Neuroticism, Personality Inventory, Personality Tests, Severity of Illness Index, Depression diagnosis, Depression psychology, Personality
- Abstract
Background: Personality may play an important role in late-life depression. The aim of this study is to examine the association between the Big Five personality domains and the diagnosis, severity and age of onset of late-life depression., Methods: The NEO-Five Factor Inventory (NEO-FFI) was cross-sectionally used in 352 depressed and 125 non-depressed older adults participating in the Netherlands Study of Depression in Older Persons (NESDO). Depression diagnosis was determined by the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI). Severity of depression was assessed by the Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology (IDS). Logistic and linear regression analyses were applied. Adjustments were made for sociodemographic, cognitive, health and psychosocial variables., Results: Both the presence of a depression diagnosis and severity of depression were significantly associated with higher Neuroticism (OR=1.35, 95% CI=1.28-1.43 and B=1.06, p<.001, respectively) and lower Extraversion (OR=.79, 95% CI=.75-.83; B=-.85, p<.001) and Conscientiousness (OR=.86, 95% CI=.81.-.90; B=-.86, p<.001). Earlier onset of depression was significantly associated with higher Openness (B=-.49, p=.026)., Limitations: Due to the cross-sectional design, no causal inferences can be drawn. Further, current depression may have influenced personality measures., Conclusions: This study confirms an association between personality and late-life depression. Remarkable is the association found between high Openness and earlier age of depression onset., (© 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
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142. Where's Wally: the influence of visual salience on referring expression generation.
- Author
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Clarke AD, Elsner M, and Rohde H
- Abstract
REFERRING EXPRESSION GENERATION (REG) PRESENTS THE CONVERSE PROBLEM TO VISUAL SEARCH: given a scene and a specified target, how does one generate a description which would allow somebody else to quickly and accurately locate the target?Previous work in psycholinguistics and natural language processing has failed to find an important and integrated role for vision in this task. That previous work, which relies largely on simple scenes, tends to treat vision as a pre-process for extracting feature categories that are relevant to disambiguation. However, the visual search literature suggests that some descriptions are better than others at enabling listeners to search efficiently within complex stimuli. This paper presents a study testing whether participants are sensitive to visual features that allow them to compose such "good" descriptions. Our results show that visual properties (salience, clutter, area, and distance) influence REG for targets embedded in images from the Where's Wally? books. Referring expressions for large targets are shorter than those for smaller targets, and expressions about targets in highly cluttered scenes use more words. We also find that participants are more likely to mention non-target landmarks that are large, salient, and in close proximity to the target. These findings identify a key role for visual salience in language production decisions and highlight the importance of scene complexity for REG.
- Published
- 2013
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143. The importance of an alternative for sustainability of agriculture around the periphery of the Amazon rainforest.
- Author
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Moura EG, Sena VG, Corrêa MS, and Aguiar Ad
- Subjects
- Brazil, Agriculture methods, Conservation of Natural Resources, Patents as Topic, Soil, Trees, Tropical Climate
- Abstract
The unsustainable use of the soil of the deforested area at the Amazonian border is one of the greatest threats to the rainforest, because it is the predominant cause of shifting cultivation in the region. The sustainable management of soils with low natural fertility is a major challenge for smallholder agriculture in the humid tropics. In the periphery of Brazilian Amazonia, agricultural practices that are recommended for the Brazilian savannah, such as saturating soils with soluble nutrients do not ensure the sustainability of agroecosystems. Improvements in the tilled topsoil cannot be maintained if deterioration of the porous soil structure is not prevented and nutrient losses in the root zone are not curtailed. The information gleaned from experiments affirms that in the management of humid tropical agrosystems, the processes resulting from the interaction between climatic factors and indicators of soil quality must be taken into consideration. It must be remembered that these interactions manifest themselves in ways that cannot be predicted from the paradigm established in the other region like the southeast of Brazil, which is based only on improving the chemical indicators of soil quality. The physical indicators play important role in the sustainable management of the agrosystems of the region and for these reasons must be considered. Therefore, alley cropping is a potential substitute for slash and burn agriculture in the humid tropics with both environmental and agronomic advantages, due to its ability to produce a large amount of residues on the soil surface and its effect on the increase of economic crop productivity in the long term. The article presents some promising patents on the importance of an alternative for sustainability of agriculture.
- Published
- 2013
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144. Competition between substrate-mediated π-π stacking and surface-mediated T(g) depression in ultrathin conjugated polymer films.
- Author
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Wang T, Pearson AJ, Dunbar AD, Staniec PA, Watters DC, Coles D, Yi H, Iraqi A, Lidzey DG, and Jones RA
- Abstract
We report surface and interface effects in dynamics and chain conformation in the thin film of conjugated polymer PCDTBT. To probe dynamic anomalies, we measure the glass transition temperature (T(g)) of PCDTBT films as a function of thickness, and find that there is a significant depression in T(g) for films less than 100 nm thick; a result qualitatively similar to that observed in many other polymer film systems. However, for films less than 40 nm, the T(g) converges to a constant value of 20 K below its bulk value. Grazing incidence X-ray diffraction shows depth-dependent molecular organization that is associated with the unusual thickness-dependent dynamics.
- Published
- 2012
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145. Organocatalytic synthesis of highly substituted furfuryl alcohols and amines.
- Author
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Clark JS, Boyer A, Aimon A, Engel García P, Lindsay DM, Symington AD, and Danoy Y
- Subjects
- Amines chemistry, Furans chemistry, Oxidation-Reduction, Amines chemical synthesis, Furans chemical synthesis
- Published
- 2012
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146. The effects of display time and eccentricity on the detection of amplitude and phase degradations in textured stimuli.
- Author
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Clarke AD, Green PR, and Chantler MJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Artifacts, Contrast Sensitivity physiology, Humans, Sensory Thresholds physiology, Surface Properties, Time Factors, Young Adult, Fovea Centralis physiology, Pattern Recognition, Visual physiology, Photic Stimulation methods, Vision, Ocular physiology, Visual Fields physiology
- Abstract
The amplitude and phase spectra of an image contain important information for perception, and a large body of work has investigated the effects of manipulating these spectra on the recognition or classification of image content. Here, we use a novel means of investigating sensitivity to amplitude and phase spectra properties, testing the ability of observers to detect degradations of the spectral content of synthetic images of textured surfaces that are broadband in the frequency domain. The effects of display time and retinal eccentricity on sensitivity to these two manipulations are compared using stimuli matched for difficulty of detection. We find no difference between the time courses for the detection of degradation in the two spectra; in both cases, accuracy rises above chance when display times are greater than 80 ms. Increasing retinal eccentricity to 8.7°, however, has a significantly stronger effect on the accuracy of detecting degradations of the amplitude spectrum than of the phase spectrum. Further, sensitivity to phase randomization that is restricted to low spatial frequencies is greater in the periphery (at 8.7° eccentricity) than in the fovea. These last two results imply that the fovea and periphery are specialized for the processing of phase spectrum information in distinct spatial frequency bands.
- Published
- 2012
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147. [The use of HoNOS in the treatment of patients].
- Author
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Nugter MA, Buwalda VJ, Dhondt AD, and Draisma S
- Subjects
- Aged, Female, Health Status Indicators, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Netherlands, Psychotherapy, Reproducibility of Results, Mental Disorders therapy, Mental Health Services standards, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales standards
- Abstract
Background: In order to use outcome scores for making decisions about treatment, practitioners need to know the course of scores of several groups of patients., Aim: To test the applicability of methods for computing cut-off scores and individual changes., Method: Using Health of the Nation Outcome Scales (HoNOS), we analysed repeated assessments of 699 adults and 414 elderly patients in different treatment settings., Results: Mean HoNOS scores and cut-off scores differentiated between patient groups reasonably well. Scores and threshold values for elderly patients were relatively high. The reliable change index showed few individual changes even for groups where change was expected. The effect size and the standard error of measurement were found to be more sensitive to change., Conclusion: More research is needed before the findings can be generalised.
- Published
- 2012
148. Automated evaluation of the effect of ionic liquids on catalase activity.
- Author
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Pinto PC, Costa AD, Lima JL, and Saraiva ML
- Subjects
- Automation, Laboratory instrumentation, Enzyme Inhibitors chemistry, Ionic Liquids chemistry, Toxicity Tests instrumentation, Catalase chemistry, Enzyme Inhibitors toxicity, Ionic Liquids toxicity, Toxicity Tests methods
- Abstract
An automated assay for the evaluation of the influence of ionic liquids on the activity of catalase was developed. The activity and inhibition assays were implemented in a sequential injection analysis (SIA) system and intended to contribute for the estimation of the toxicity of the tested compounds. The fast developed methodology was based on the oxidation of the non-fluorescent probe amplex red, in the presence of H₂O₂, to produce resorufin, a strong fluorescent compound. Catalase activity was monitored by the decreased of the fluorescence intensity due to the consumption of H₂O₂ by the enzyme. The activity assays were performed in strictly aqueous media and in the presence of increasing concentrations of seven commercially available ionic liquids and sodium azide, a strong inhibitor of catalase. IC₅₀ values between 0.15 and 2.77 M were obtained for the tested compounds, revealing distinct inhibitory effects. This allowed us to perform some considerations about the toxicity of the tested cations and anions. The developed SIA methodology showed to be robust and exhibited good repeatability in all the assay conditions. On the other hand, it proved to be in good agreement with the actual concerns of "Green Chemistry" since it involved the consumption of less than 200 μL of reagents and the production of only 1.7 mL of effluent (per cycle) and at the same time reduced the operator exposure resulting in increased environmental and human safety., (Copyright © 2010. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
149. Detection of volatile organic compounds using porphyrin derivatives.
- Author
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Dunbar AD, Brittle S, Richardson TH, Hutchinson J, and Hunter CA
- Abstract
Seven different porphyrin compounds have been investigated as colorimetric gas sensors for a wide range of volatile organic compounds. The porphyrins examined were the free base and Mg, Sn, Zn, Au, Co, and Mn derivatives of 5,10,15,20-tetrakis[3,4-bis(2-ethylhexyloxy)phenyl]-21H,23H-porphine. Chloroform solutions of these materials were prepared and changes in their absorption spectra induced by exposure to various organic compounds measured. The porphyrins that showed strong responses in solution were selected, and Langmuir-Blodgett films were prepared and exposed to the corresponding analytes. This was done to determine whether they are useful materials for solid state thin film colorimetric vapor sensors. Porphyrins that readily coordinate extra ligands are shown to be suitable materials for colorimetric volatile organic compound detectors. However, porphyrins that already have bound axial ligands when synthesized only show a sensor response to those analytes that can substitute these axial ligands. The Co porphyrin displays a considerably larger response than the other porphyrins investigated which is attributed to a switch between Co(II) and Co(III) resulting in a large spectral change.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
150. Depletion of PCBM at the cathode interface in P3HT/PCBM thin films as quantified via neutron reflectivity measurements.
- Author
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Parnell AJ, Dunbar AD, Pearson AJ, Staniec PA, Dennison AJ, Hamamatsu H, Skoda MW, Lidzey DG, and Jones RA
- Subjects
- Electrodes, Microscopy, Atomic Force, Neutrons, Solar Energy, Fullerenes chemistry, Thiophenes chemistry
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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