1,287 results on '"M. A. Wood"'
Search Results
102. Medical Librarian 2.0: Use of Web 2.0 Technologies in Reference Services
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M. Sandra Wood
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World Wide Web ,Web 2.0 ,Computer science - Published
- 2018
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103. Beam-target helicity asymmetry E in K0Λ and K0Σ0 photoproduction on the neutron
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P. Lenisa, M. Ungaro, D. G. Ireland, C. A. Meyer, R. Dupre, V. Crede, C.D. Bass, V. A. Nikonov, M. Battaglieri, P. Chatagnon, G. V. Fedotov, R. A. Montgomery, Ron L. Workman, R. Paremuzyan, R. A. Schumacher, C. S. Whisnant, K. P. Adhikari, A. Fradi, M. Osipenko, D. G. Jenkins, Nicholas M. Harrison, N. Markov, Martin K. Mayer, K. A. Griffioen, I. Zonta, I. J. D. MacGregor, A. Kim, H. Hakobyan, M. Khachatryan, D. Sokhan, H. S. Jo, Tim O'Connell, D. Marchand, S. Diehl, M. Bashkanov, B. McKinnon, A. I. Ostrovidov, K. Park, V. Mokeev, G. Khachatryan, L. Lanza, Eberhard Klempt, P. Collins, S. Niccolai, F. X. Girod, M. Contalbrigo, Sandra K. Johnston, P. Eugenio, T. Chetry, Volker D. Burkert, A. S. Biselli, Pawel Nadel-Turonski, M. Mirazita, J. Zhang, Rong Wang, J. W. Price, Alessandro Rizzo, S. Strauch, Iu. Skorodumina, C. Hanretty, George Davey Smith, M. Taiuti, C. Djalali, J. A. Tan, E. Golovatch, Y. G. Sharabian, M. Lowry, G. Charles, K. L. Giovanetti, I. Bedlinskiy, M. Rehfuss, K. Hicks, S. Adhikari, M. L. Kabir, M. Ehrhart, F. Sabatié, Andreas Klein, V. Laine, F. Cao, D. Adikaram, M. Guidal, W. Kim, Larry Weinstein, Z. Akbar, G. Rosner, P. Peng, C. Munoz Camacho, M. H. Wood, M. Hattawy, G. Niculescu, J. A. Fleming, I. I. Strakovsky, M. Holtrop, A. Filippi, A. D'Angelo, M. Ripani, Y. Ghandilyan, Carlos A. Salgado, B. A. Clary, A. M. Sandorfi, B. S. Ishkhanov, M. Khandaker, D. I. Sober, A. Deur, Hong Lu, Michael Paolone, D. Ho, S. Fegan, A. Celentano, R. W. Gothe, D. Heddle, Maxime Defurne, E. L. Isupov, W. Gohn, S. Boiarinov, R. De Vita, T. Kageya, L. El Fassi, N. K. Walford, R. G. Fersch, Frank Klein, P. L. Cole, Z. W. Zhao, Dustin Keller, G. Ciullo, J. P. Ball, Y. Prok, D. S. Carman, Nikos Sparveris, X. Wei, K. Hafidi, E. Voutier, A. Movsisyan, Yordanka Ilieva, L. Barion, V. P. Kubarovsky, D. Riser, A. El Alaoui, Nicholas Zachariou, O. Pogorelko, K. Livingston, H. Voskanyan, D. Protopopescu, W. J. Briscoe, E. Pasyuk, D. P. Watts, H. Egiyan, A. V. Sarantsev, and S. Chandavar
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Physics ,Strange quark ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Nuclear Theory ,Quark model ,Hyperon ,01 natural sciences ,Helicity ,Asymmetry ,Pseudoscalar meson ,Nuclear physics ,13. Climate action ,Isospin ,0103 physical sciences ,Neutron ,Nuclear Experiment ,010306 general physics ,media_common - Abstract
We report the first measurements of the E beam-target helicity asymmetry for the γn→K0Λ and K0Σ0 channels in the energy range 1.70≤W≤2.34 GeV. The CLAS system at Jefferson Lab uses a circularly polarized photon beam and a target consisting of longitudinally polarized solid molecular hydrogen deuteride with low background contamination for the measurements. The multivariate analysis method boosted decision trees is used to isolate the reactions of interest. Comparisons with predictions from the KaonMAID, SAID, and Bonn-Gatchina models are presented. These results will help separate the isospin I=0 and I=1 photocoupling transition amplitudes in pseudoscalar meson photoproduction.
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- 2018
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104. One-shot learning of view-invariant object representations in newborn chicks
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Samantha M. W. Wood and Justin N. Wood
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Cognitive science ,Linguistics and Language ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Common object ,Representation (systemics) ,Cognitive neuroscience of visual object recognition ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Recognition, Psychology ,Viewpoints ,One-shot learning ,Object (philosophy) ,Language and Linguistics ,Single view ,Animals, Newborn ,Pattern Recognition, Visual ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Visual Perception ,Animals ,Learning ,Psychology ,Chickens ,Invariant (computer science) - Abstract
Can newborn brains perform one-shot learning? To address this question, we reared newborn chicks in strictly controlled environments containing a single view of a single object, then tested their object recognition performance across 24 uniformly-spaced viewpoints. We found that chicks can build view-invariant object representations from a single view of an object: a case of one-shot learning in newborn brains. Chicks can also build the same view-invariant object representation from different views of an object, showing that newborn brains converge on common object representations from different sets of sensory inputs. Finally, by rearing chicks with larger numbers of object views, we found that chicks develop enhanced recognition for familiar views. These results illuminate the earliest stages of object recognition, revealing (1) powerful one-shot learning that builds invariant object representations from the first views of an object and (2) view-based learning that enriches object representations, producing enhanced recognition for familiar views.
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- 2018
105. Using automated controlled rearing to explore the origins of object permanence
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Justin N. Wood, Aditya Prasad, and Samantha M. W. Wood
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Object permanence ,genetic structures ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,050105 experimental psychology ,Animal model ,Memory ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Animals ,Humans ,Learning ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Vision, Ocular ,Cognitive science ,Computational neuroscience ,05 social sciences ,Infant, Newborn ,Individual development ,Recognition, Psychology ,Awareness ,Object (philosophy) ,Animals, Newborn ,Models, Animal ,Visual Perception ,Psychology ,Temporal learning ,Chickens ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
What are the origins of object permanence? Despite widespread interest in this question, methodological barriers have prevented detailed analysis of how experience shapes the development of object permanence in newborn organisms. Here, we introduce an automated controlled-rearing method for studying the emergence of object permanence in strictly controlled virtual environments. We used newborn chicks as an animal model and recorded their behavior continuously (24/7) from the onset of vision. Across four experiments, we found that object permanence can develop rapidly, within the first few days of life. This ability developed even when chicks were reared in impoverished visual environments containing no object occlusion events. Object permanence failed to develop, however, when chicks were reared in environments containing temporally non-smooth objects (objects moving on discontinuous spatiotemporal paths). These results suggest that experience with temporally smooth objects facilitates the development of object permanence, confirming a key prediction of temporal learning models in computational neuroscience.
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- 2018
106. Effects of ischemic preconditioning on economy, VO
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A E, Kilding, G M, Sequeira, and M R, Wood
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Adult ,Male ,Oxygen Consumption ,Thigh ,Athletes ,Humans ,Athletic Performance ,Energy Metabolism ,Ischemic Preconditioning ,Muscle, Skeletal - Abstract
The aim of this study was to determine the effect of ischemic preconditioning (IPC) on several measures of aerobic function and 4-km cycling time-trial performance. An acute cross-over design was adopted involving eight well-trained cyclists (age 27.0 ± 7.0 years) who completed incremental and square-wave exercise tests for determination of peak O
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- 2018
107. Using automation to combat the replication crisis: A case study from controlled-rearing studies of newborn chicks
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Samantha M. W. Wood and Justin N. Wood
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Replication crisis ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Virtual Reality ,Recognition, Psychology ,Machine learning ,computer.software_genre ,Automation ,050105 experimental psychology ,Experimenter's bias ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Animals, Newborn ,Research Design ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Visual Perception ,Measurement precision ,Animals ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,computer ,Chickens ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
The accuracy of science depends on the precision of its methods. When fields produce precise measurements, the scientific method can generate remarkable gains in knowledge. When fields produce noisy measurements, however, the scientific method is not guaranteed to work - in fact, noisy measurements are now regarded as a leading cause of the replication crisis in psychology. Scientists should therefore strive to improve the precision of their methods, especially in fields with noisy measurements. Here, we show that automation can reduce measurement error by ∼60% in one domain of developmental psychology: controlled-rearing studies of newborn chicks. Automated studies produce measurements that are 3-4 times more precise than non-automated studies and produce effect sizes that are 3-4 times larger than non-automated studies. Automation also eliminates experimenter bias and allows replications to be performed quickly and easily. We suggest that automation can be a powerful tool for improving measurement precision, producing high powered experiments, and combating the replication crisis.
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- 2018
108. Measurement of the beam asymmetry Σ and the target asymmetry T in the photoproduction of ω mesons off the proton using CLAS at Jefferson Laboratory
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William Brooks, George Davey Smith, R. A. Schumacher, A. El Alaoui, S. Stepanyan, J. Pierce, H. Y. Lu, P. Eugenio, G. Gavalian, I. Denisenko, N. Dashyan, Taya Chetry, M. Taiuti, A. Filippi, A. Fradi, D. P. Watts, K. A. Griffioen, Friedrich Klein, V. Crede, M. Khandaker, D. G. Meekins, Brian Raue, A. D'Angelo, A. V. Sarantsev, Yordanka Ilieva, Nicholas Zachariou, E. Pasyuk, V. Mokeev, V. Batourine, R. Paremuzyan, R. De Vita, N. Markov, L. Lanza, G. Rosner, E. Golovatch, K. Hicks, W. Kim, Sergey Kuleshov, M. Ripani, R. A. Montgomery, F. Sabatié, S. Niccolai, Carlos A. Salgado, C. D. Keith, Pawel Nadel-Turonski, D. G. Jenkins, Eberhard Klempt, B. A. Clary, J. Brock, Alessandro Rizzo, R. Dupre, M. Battaglieri, J. Zhang, C. Djalali, J. A. Tan, L. El Fassi, J. W. Price, S. Anefalos Pereira, K. Livingston, C. Hanretty, C. Carlin, M. Guidal, L. Guo, M. Ungaro, Gerard Gilfoyle, A. I. Ostrovidov, A. V. Anisovich, K. Park, G. Charles, G. Niculescu, V. A. Nikonov, G. Ciullo, J. P. Ball, B. Torayev, Y. Prok, F. X. Girod, M. E. McCracken, D. S. Carman, D. G. Ireland, M. Holtrop, K. Joo, I. Bedlinskiy, V. P. Kubarovsky, D. Riser, M. Osipenko, Andreas Klein, Nikos Sparveris, X. Wei, T. Mineeva, D. Sokhan, O. Pogorelko, S. Procureur, W. Gohn, A. Kim, Z. E. Meziani, W. Phelps, Volker D. Burkert, M. Bashkanov, A. S. Biselli, B. S. Ishkhanov, L. Elouadrhiri, K. L. Giovanetti, I. Balossino, S. Strauch, Michael Dugger, D. I. Sober, E. Voutier, I. I. Strakovsky, A. Movsisyan, B. McKinnon, Dustin Keller, S. Park, A. Deur, K. Hafidi, Iu. Skorodumina, Sylvester Joosten, S. Fegan, G. Khachatryan, P. L. Cole, Z. W. Zhao, E. Phelps, N. Gevorgyan, D. Protopopescu, W. J. Briscoe, C. Munoz Camacho, M. H. Wood, A. Celentano, R. W. Gothe, M. Contalbrigo, Z. Akbar, N. K. Walford, I. J. D. MacGregor, S. Adhikari, M. Hattawy, Martin K. Mayer, Y. G. Sharabian, C. Gleason, Barry Ritchie, P. Roy, C. A. Meyer, G. V. Fedotov, E. L. Isupov, S. Boiarinov, K. P. Adhikari, H. Hakobyan, and P. Lenisa
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Physics ,Particle physics ,Proton ,Meson ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Partial wave analysis ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Nuclear Theory ,Bremsstrahlung ,Observable ,7. Clean energy ,01 natural sciences ,Resonance (particle physics) ,Asymmetry ,Baryon ,Nuclear physics ,13. Climate action ,0103 physical sciences ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Nuclear Experiment ,010306 general physics ,media_common - Abstract
The photoproduction of ω mesons off the proton has been studied in the reaction γp→pω using the CEBAF Large Acceptance Spectrometer (CLAS) and the frozen-spin target in Hall B at the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility. For the first time, the target asymmetry T has been measured in photoproduction from the decay ω→π+π-π0, using a transversely polarized target with energies ranging from just above the reaction threshold up to 2.8 GeV. Significant nonzero values are observed for these asymmetries, reaching about 30-40% in the third-resonance region. New measurements for the photon-beam asymmetry Σ are also presented, which agree well with previous CLAS results and extend the world database up to 2.1 GeV. These data and additional ω photoproduction observables from CLAS were included in a partial-wave analysis within the Bonn-Gatchina framework. Significant contributions from s-channel resonance production were found in addition to t-channel exchange processes.
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- 2018
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109. In Memoriam: Peter Banks.
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Aime M. Ballard-Wood
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- 2007
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110. Monolayer-by-monolayer compositional analysis of InAs/InAsSb superlattices with cross-sectional STM
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John F. Klem, S. D. Hawkins, K. Kanedy, F. Lopez, Eric A. Shaner, M. R. Wood, M. Weimer, and Jin K. Kim
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Materials science ,Condensed matter physics ,Superlattice ,Analytical chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Heterojunction ,Classification of discontinuities ,Condensed Matter Physics ,law.invention ,Inorganic Chemistry ,Antimony ,chemistry ,Stack (abstract data type) ,law ,Monolayer ,Materials Chemistry ,Scanning tunneling microscope ,Molecular beam epitaxy - Abstract
We use cross-sectional scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) to reconstruct the monolayer-by-monolayer composition profile across a representative subset of MBE-grown InAs/InAsSb superlattice layers and find that antimony segregation frustrates the intended compositional discontinuities across both antimonide-on-arsenide and arsenide-on-antimonide heterojunctions. Graded, rather than abrupt, interfaces are formed in either case. We likewise find that the incorporated antimony per superlattice period varies measurably from beginning to end of the multilayer stack. Although the intended antimony discontinuities predict significant discrepancies with respect to the experimentally observed high-resolution x-ray diffraction spectrum, dynamical simulations based on the STM-derived profiles provide an excellent quantitative match to all important aspects of the x-ray data.
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- 2015
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111. Face recognition in newly hatched chicks at the onset of vision
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Samantha M. W. Wood and Justin N. Wood
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Male ,animal structures ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Facial recognition system ,Developmental psychology ,Newborn brain ,Ocular physiology ,Sex Factors ,Animal model ,Sex factors ,Orientation (mental) ,Animals ,Vision, Ocular ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Bayes Theorem ,Recognition, Psychology ,Animals, Newborn ,Pattern Recognition, Visual ,Face ,Face (geometry) ,embryonic structures ,Female ,Psychology ,Chickens ,Photic Stimulation ,Automated method ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
How does face recognition emerge in the newborn brain? To address this question, we used an automated controlled-rearing method with a newborn animal model: the domestic chick (Gallus gallus). This automated method allowed us to examine chicks' face recognition abilities at the onset of both face experience and object experience. In the first week of life, newly hatched chicks were raised in controlled-rearing chambers that contained no objects other than a single virtual human face. In the second week of life, we used an automated forced-choice testing procedure to examine whether chicks could distinguish that familiar face from a variety of unfamiliar faces. Chicks successfully distinguished the familiar face from most of the unfamiliar faces-for example, chicks were sensitive to changes in the face's age, gender, and orientation (upright vs. inverted). Thus, chicks can build an accurate representation of the first face they see in their life. These results show that the initial state of face recognition is surprisingly powerful: Newborn visual systems can begin encoding and recognizing faces at the onset of vision.
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- 2015
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112. Measurement of the form factors of charged kaon semileptonic decays
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V. Kozhuharov, P. Cenci, M. Valdata-Nappi, S. Venditti, M. Shieh, Jacqueline Batley, C. Cerri, G. Collazuol, Manfred Jeitler, J. Derre, N. Doble, U. Moosbrugger, S. Giudici, Roberta Arcidiacono, M. De Beer, Maulik R. Patel, M. Wache, M. Behler, Cristina Lazzeroni, Giuseppe Ruggiero, Rainer Wanke, Augusto Ceccucci, G. Bocquet, Yu. Potrebenikov, Nicola Cabibbo, B. Vallage, M. Slater, C. Cheshkov, A. A. Maier, G. Kalmus, D. T. Madigozhin, S. Goy Lopez, M. Savrie, B. Bloch-Devaux, A. Peters, Lau Gatignon, V. Falaleev, P. L. Frabetti, P. Rubin, E. Imbergamo, E. Mazzucato, A. Norton, Enrico Celeghini, G.M. Pierazzini, Cristina Biino, Ivan Mikulec, F. Costantini, B. Renk, D. Coward, M. Scarpa, Andrea Bizzeti, A. Winhart, M. Szleper, C. Morales Morales, P. F. Dalpiaz, Nicolo Cartiglia, E. C. Swallow, M. D. Wood, M. Veltri, M. Holder, H. Wahl, M. C. Petrucci, Evgueni Goudzovski, E. Iacopini, A. Michetti, Mayda Velasco, I. Polenkevich, M. Ziolkowski, Massimiliano Fiorini, M. Sozzi, M. Fidecaro, A. Nappi, Peter Zahariev Hristov, P. Marouelli, A. I. Zinchenko, C. Damiani, Evelina Gersabeck, Simone Bifani, S. A. Wotton, B. Peyaud, R. Fantechi, Vladimir Kekelidze, L. DiLella, K. Kleinknecht, Anne Dabrowski, A. Gianoli, Leander Litov, W. Baldini, G. Marel, S. Shkarovskiy, M. Markytan, M. Lenti, G. Lamanna, I. Mannelli, Marco Clemencic, Milene Calvetti, R. Winston, M. Pepe, Stoyan Stoynev, A. Gonidec, Giuseppina Anzivino, W. Kubischta, Alan W. Walker, L. Masetti, M. Hita-Hochgesand, E. Monnier, H. Dibon, T. Fonseca Martin, D. J. Munday, Mauro Piccini, S. Balev, N. A. Molokanova, M. Martini, K. Eppard, Mauro Raggi, F. Marchetto, L. Widhalm, A. Cotta Ramusino, G. Neuhofer, D.C. Cundy, F. Petrucci, J.B. Cheze, Luca Fiorini, Institut de Recherches sur les lois Fondamentales de l'Univers (IRFU), Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Université Paris-Saclay, and NA48/2
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Nuclear Theory ,S010LQM ,S010MSM ,Fixed target experiments ,Rare decay, K meson ,01 natural sciences ,S010LMM ,Physics, Particles & Fields ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Economica ,[PHYS.HEXP]Physics [physics]/High Energy Physics - Experiment [hep-ex] ,S010LAM ,Nuclear Experiment ,Physics ,Quantum chromodynamics ,form factor ,02 Physical Sciences ,Form factor (quantum field theory) ,semileptonic decay ,Kaon ,Nuclear & Particles Physics ,Fixed target experiments Rare decay ,3. Good health ,Rare decay ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Physical Sciences ,Particle Physics - Experiment ,Semileptonic decay ,Particle physics ,S010LPE ,TheoryofComputation_ANALYSISOFALGORITHMSANDPROBLEMCOMPLEXITY ,0103 physical sciences ,S010MVM ,lcsh:Nuclear and particle physics. Atomic energy. Radioactivity ,K: semileptonic decay ,010306 general physics ,01 Mathematical Sciences ,S010MVE ,S010LLM ,Science & Technology ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,hep-ex ,High Energy Physics::Phenomenology ,Ambientale ,K meson ,S010LPM ,S010LQE ,NA48 ,lcsh:QC770-798 ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,S010L0 - Abstract
A measurement of the form factors of charged kaon semileptonic decays is presented, based on $4.4 \times 10^6$ $K^\pm \to \pi^0 e^\pm \nu_e$ ($K^\pm_{e3}$) and $2.3 \times 10^6$ $K^\pm \to \pi^0 \mu^\pm \nu_{\mu}$ ($K^\pm_{\mu3}$) decays collected in 2004 by the NA48/2 experiment. The results are obtained with improved precision as compared to earlier measurements. The combination of measurements in the $K^\pm_{e3}$ and $K^\pm_{\mu3}$ modes is also presented., Comment: 20 pages , 9 figures, 5 tables
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- 2018
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113. Beyond Documentary?: Archives, Absences, and Rethinking Mexican 'Nonfiction' Film, c. 1935–1955
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David M. J. Wood
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Artifact (archaeology) ,Scholarship ,Movie theater ,History ,business.industry ,Field (Bourdieu) ,Transition (fiction) ,Media studies ,Narrative ,business ,Geopolitics ,Historical dynamics - Abstract
Mexican cinema scholarship from the 1930s to the 1950s has tended to focus its historiographic and analytical energies on the fiction feature film. Meanwhile the history of Mexican documentary film is largely unwritten or at best exceptionalist and canonical (save some notable exceptions, such as the silent period and the “new cinemas” of the 1960s and 1970s). Recent research, however, has begun to dig around the edges of established ways of conceiving and periodizing Mexican cinema, with film and media historians taking an increasing interest in previously little-known filmmakers or production agencies. This is due partly to changing relationships between scholars and archivists, and partly to an ongoing transition in the ways in which cinema and media scholarship define the criteria and limits of their objects and methodologies of study. It also responds to an ongoing dialogue between researchers and archivists that recognizes the precarious material basis of much film scholarship (the fragility of the archival artifact, the fragility of historical narratives), and seeks to address this scenario by placing non-canonical film materials center-stage. This chapter intervenes in this emerging field, asking how future research might take on board the expanding range of types and genres of moving image production, supports, and media, including cultural/geopolitical identification, to sustain a potential alternative analysis of the Mexican “documentary” or “nonfiction” tradition. This theoretical and methodological mapping will help frame future research aiming for a deeper understanding of the historical dynamics of film production in Mexico.
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- 2018
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114. Recent QCD results from the NA48/2 experiment
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Andreas Alexander Maier, M. Holder, G. Lamanna, G. Bocquet, Yu. Potrebenikov, Emmanuel Monnier, Augusto Ceccucci, Jacqueline Batley, M. Veltri, Cvetan Valeriev Cheshkov, A. I. Zinchenko, M. Vallage, C. Cerri, S. Venditti, G. Collazuol, P. F. Dalpiaz, A. Gianoli, G. Pierazzini, C. Morales Morales, I. Polenkevich, M. D. Wood, Milene Calvetti, Michal Szleper, Nicolo Cartiglia, Nicola Cabibbo, F. Petrucci, Enrico Celeghini, A. Cotta Ramusino, I. Mannelli, H. Dibon, F. Marchetto, M. Savrie, B. Bloch-Devaux, M. Wache, D. T. Madigozhin, M. Sozzi, Cristina Biino, Ivan Mikulec, L. Widhalm, S. A. Wotton, L. DiLella, M. Ziolkowski, Evgueni Goudzovski, S. Balev, M. Martini, Cristina Lazzeroni, M. C. Petrucci, Mark Slater, M. Patel, Mauro Raggi, E. Mazzucato, E. M. Gersabeck, Massimiliano Fiorini, N. Doble, R. Winston, Giuseppe Ruggiero, E. Imbergamo, L. Masetti, V. Kozhuharov, Peter Zahariev Hristov, M. Misheva, M. Valdata-Nappi, Mauro Piccini, Leander Litov, Simone Bifani, K. Kleinknecht, M. Scarpa, A. Peters, Manfred Jeitler, R. Fantechi, Vladimir Kekelidze, F. Costantini, U. Moosbrugger, P. Rubin, Stoyan Stoynev, B. Renk, D. Coward, H. Wahl, W. Kubischta, P.L. Frabetti, D. J. Munday, G. Anzivino, Mayda Velasco, M. De Beer, Anne Dabrowski, S. Shkarovskiy, T. Fonseca Martin, Andrea Bizzeti, G. Marel, E. Iacopini, G. Neuhofer, Rainer Wanke, Marco Clemencic, M. Fidecaro, C. Damiani, M. Pepe, B. Peyaud, M. Markytan, A. Winhart, M. Lenti, M. Behler, A. Gonidec, Alan W. Walker, E. C. Swallow, N. A. Molokanova, K. Eppard, A. Michetti, V. Falaleev, G.E. Kalmus, A. Nappi, S. Goy Lopez, A. Norton, P. Marouelli, W. Baldini, D. Cundy, J.B. Cheze, Luca Fiorini, P. Cenci, M. Shieh, Lau Gatignon, M. Hita-Hochgesand, J. Derre, Roberta Arcidiacono, R. Marchevski, Giuseppina Anzivino, and S. Giudici
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Quantum chromodynamics ,Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Particle physics ,Chiral perturbation theory ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,01 natural sciences ,Pion ,form factors ,rare kaon decays ,0103 physical sciences ,chiral perturbation theory ,CP violation ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,010306 general physics - Abstract
The NA48/2 experiment collected data in 2003 and 2004 with the main purpose to study direct CP violation in charged kaons decaying in three pions. Thanks to the huge statistics collected, other studies are also possible. In this paper two recent results, in the framework of QCD studies, are reported: the measurement of the K ± → π 0 e ± ν Form Factors and the first observation of the rare decay K ± → π ± π 0 e + e − .
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- 2018
115. Second-Wave Feminism
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Suzanne M. Spencer-Wood
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- 2017
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116. Firestone, Shulamith
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Suzanne M. Spencer-Wood
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- 2017
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117. Sex
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Suzanne M. Spencer-Wood
- Published
- 2017
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118. Household Production
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Suzanne M. Spencer-Wood
- Published
- 2017
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119. First Exclusive Measurement of Deeply Virtual Compton Scattering off He4 : Toward the 3D Tomography of Nuclei
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M. J. Amaryan, Laura Clark, C. Gleason, P. Lenisa, W. Phelps, H. Moutarde, X. Wei, K. A. Griffioen, B. S. Ishkhanov, K. L. Giovanetti, Taya Chetry, M. Hattawy, Hovanes Egiyan, Larry Weinstein, G. Ciullo, J. P. Ball, Y. Prok, D. S. Carman, P. Eugenio, E. Golovatch, S. Strauch, J. W. Price, Friedrich Klein, L. Guo, Alessandro Rizzo, C. Munoz Camacho, D. G. Ireland, E. Voutier, Latifa Elouadrhiri, R. De Vita, V. Crede, M. Taiuti, C. Djalali, Michael Paolone, A. Movsisyan, O. Cortes, E. L. Isupov, S. Niccolai, Z. W. Zhao, C. A. Meyer, H. Y. Lu, L. Lanza, Whitney Armstrong, A. I. Ostrovidov, K. Park, G. V. Fedotov, D. P. Watts, G. Rosner, R. A. Montgomery, A. Celentano, Martin K. Mayer, R. W. Gothe, K. Livingston, A. Deur, H. Jiang, Volker D. Burkert, A. S. Biselli, D. G. Jenkins, R. Paremuzyan, Sergey Kuleshov, M. Khachatryan, A. Simonyan, Y. Ghandilyan, V. I. Mokeev, D. Heddle, H. Hakobyan, M. H. Wood, R. Dupre, S. Boiarinov, L. Colaneri, Iu. Skorodumina, S. Adhikari, S. Anefalos Pereira, S. Fegan, Jie Zhang, I. Niculescu, F. Cao, E. Pasyuk, Nikolaos Sparveris, N. Markov, K. Hicks, D. Adikaram, B. Torayev, M. Guidal, G. Charles, F. X. Girod, Z. E. Meziani, Nicholas M. Harrison, Gerard Gilfoyle, I. Bedlinskiy, N. A. Baltzell, C. Hanretty, W. Kim, P. Nadel-Turonski, William Brooks, A. Filippi, G. D. Smith, M. Holtrop, Lorenzo Zana, G. Khachatryan, M. Battaglieri, G. Niculescu, E. Seder, R. G. Fersch, F. Sabatié, W. Gohn, P. Rossi, V. P. Kubarovsky, D. Sokhan, P. L. Cole, M. Khandaker, O. Pogorelko, D. Protopopescu, B. G. Ritchie, M. Bashkanov, R. A. Schumacher, M. Ungaro, S. M. Hughes, M. Garçon, N. Dashyan, A. D'Angelo, E. De Sanctis, Sylvester Joosten, B. McKinnon, M. E. McCracken, L. A. Net, L. El Fassi, C. Salgado, M. Osipenko, Dustin Keller, A. El Alaoui, N. K. Walford, Y. Perrin, T. Mineeva, Nicholas Zachariou, S. Bültmann, M. Mirazita, E. Phelps, K. P. Adhikari, T. A. Forest, K. Hafidi, N. Gevorgyan, I. J. D. MacGregor, V. Batourine, H. Avakian, S. Stepanyan, Y. G. Sharabian, S. Pisano, K. Joo, Simonetta Liuti, Avraham Klein, M. Contalbrigo, H. Voskanyan, A. Kim, W. J. Briscoe, A. Fradi, S. E. Kuhn, J. A. Fleming, Z. Akbar, and M. Ripani
- Subjects
Physics ,Particle physics ,Time projection chamber ,Photon ,Proton ,Meson ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Compton scattering ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Electron ,HERA ,01 natural sciences ,7. Clean energy ,Nuclear physics ,Recoil ,0103 physical sciences ,Physics::Accelerator Physics ,Nuclear Experiment ,010306 general physics - Abstract
We report on the first measurement of the beam-spin asymmetry in the exclusive process of coherent deeply virtual Compton scattering off a nucleus. The experiment uses the 6 GeV electron beam from the Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator Facility (CEBAF) accelerator at Jefferson Lab incident on a pressurized $^{4}\mathrm{He}$ gaseous target placed in front of the CEBAF Large Acceptance Spectrometer (CLAS). The scattered electron is detected by CLAS and the photon by a dedicated electromagnetic calorimeter at forward angles. To ensure the exclusivity of the process, a specially designed radial time projection chamber is used to detect the recoiling $^{4}\mathrm{He}$ nuclei. We measure beam-spin asymmetries larger than those observed on the free proton in the same kinematic domain. From these, we are able to extract, in a model-independent way, the real and imaginary parts of the only $^{4}\mathrm{He}$ Compton form factor, ${\mathcal{H}}_{A}$. This first measurement of coherent deeply virtual Compton scattering on the $^{4}\mathrm{He}$ nucleus, with a fully exclusive final state via nuclear recoil tagging, leads the way toward 3D imaging of the partonic structure of nuclei.
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- 2017
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120. The dual of the Steenrod algebra
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Grant Walker and Reginald M. W. Wood
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Algebra ,Steenrod algebra ,Cellular algebra ,DUAL (cognitive architecture) ,Mathematics - Published
- 2017
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121. Products and conjugation in A2
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Grant Walker and Reginald M. W. Wood
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- 2017
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122. Invariants and the hit problem
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Reginald M. W. Wood and Grant Walker
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Algebra ,Mathematics - Published
- 2017
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123. The cohit module Q(n)
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Grant Walker and Reginald M. W. Wood
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- 2017
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124. The Steenrod algebra A2
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Reginald M. W. Wood and Grant Walker
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Algebra ,Steenrod algebra ,Division algebra ,Mathematics - Published
- 2017
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125. The dual of the hit problem
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Reginald M. W. Wood and Grant Walker
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Computer science ,DUAL (cognitive architecture) ,Topology - Published
- 2017
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126. K(3) and Q(3) as F2GL(3)-modules
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Reginald M. W. Wood and Grant Walker
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- 2017
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127. Conjugate Steenrod squares
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Grant Walker and Reginald M. W. Wood
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Pure mathematics ,Mathematics ,Conjugate - Published
- 2017
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128. Further structure of A2
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Grant Walker and Reginald M. W. Wood
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Crystallography ,Materials science ,Structure (category theory) - Published
- 2017
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129. Stripping and nilpotence in A2
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Grant Walker and Reginald M. W. Wood
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Chromatography ,Stripping (chemistry) ,Chemistry - Published
- 2017
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130. The 2-dominance theorem
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Grant Walker and Reginald M. W. Wood
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Pure mathematics ,Factor theorem ,Picard–Lindelöf theorem ,Fundamental theorem ,Compactness theorem ,Danskin's theorem ,Brouwer fixed-point theorem ,Carlson's theorem ,Mean value theorem ,Mathematics - Published
- 2017
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131. Bounds for dim Qd(n)
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Grant Walker and Reginald M. W. Wood
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- 2017
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132. Special blocks and a basis for Q(3)
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Grant Walker and Reginald M. W. Wood
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Pure mathematics ,Basis (linear algebra) ,Mathematics - Published
- 2017
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133. Steenrod squares and the hit problem
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Reginald M. W. Wood and Grant Walker
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- 2017
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134. Idempotents and characters
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Grant Walker and Reginald M. W. Wood
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- 2017
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135. The action of GL(n) on flags
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Grant Walker and Reginald M. W. Wood
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Combinatorics ,Action (philosophy) ,FLAGS register ,Psychology - Published
- 2017
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136. The symmetric hit problem
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Reginald M. W. Wood and Grant Walker
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- 2017
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137. The Steinberg summands of P(n)
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Reginald M. W. Wood and Grant Walker
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- 2017
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138. Endomorphisms of P(n) over A2
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Reginald M. W. Wood and Grant Walker
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Pure mathematics ,Endomorphism ,Mathematics - Published
- 2017
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139. The algebraic group G(n)
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Grant Walker and Reginald M. W. Wood
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Combinatorics ,Algebraic group ,Mathematics - Published
- 2017
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140. The d-spike module J(n)
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Reginald M. W. Wood and Grant Walker
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Physics ,Spike (software development) ,Atomic physics - Published
- 2017
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141. The cyclic splitting of P(n)
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Reginald M. W. Wood and Grant Walker
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- 2017
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142. The 4-variable hit problem, I
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Grant Walker and Reginald M. W. Wood
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Variable (computer science) ,Statistics ,Mathematics - Published
- 2017
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143. The dual of the symmetric hit problem
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Grant Walker and Reginald M. W. Wood
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Physics ,DUAL (cognitive architecture) ,Topology - Published
- 2017
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144. Splitting P(n) as an A2-module
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Reginald M. W. Wood and Grant Walker
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- 2017
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145. Irreducible F2GL(n)-modules
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Grant Walker and Reginald M. W. Wood
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- 2017
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146. Polynomials and the mod 2 Steenrod Algebra
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Grant Walker and Reginald M. W. Wood
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- 2017
- Full Text
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147. Pediatric endocrine society survey of diabetes practices in the United States: What is the current state?
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S. Adhikari, Tyler Hamby, Ines Guttmann-Bauman, M. A. Wood, Paul S. Thornton, K. Rubin, and K. Reifschneider
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,media_common.quotation_subject ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Context (language use) ,Certification ,Population health ,Pediatrics ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Internal Medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Fee-for-service ,Reimbursement ,media_common ,Service (business) ,business.industry ,Disease Management ,Payment ,United States ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Family medicine ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Guideline Adherence ,Full-time equivalent ,business - Abstract
Background The Practice Management Committee (PMC) of the Pediatric Endocrine Society (PES) conducted a survey of its membership in February/March, 2016 to assess the current state of pediatric diabetes care delivery across multiple practice types in the United States. Methods The PES distributed an anonymous electronic survey (Survey Monkey) via email to its membership and requested that only one survey be completed for each practice. Results Ninety-three unique entries from the US were entered into analysis. Care is predominantly delivered by multidisciplinary teams, based at academic institutions (65.6%), with >85% of the provider types being physicians. Each 1.0 full time equivalent certified diabetes educators serves on average 367 diabetic youth. Fee-for-service remains the standard method of reimbursement with 57% of practices reporting financial loss. Survey respondents identified under-reimbursement as a major barrier to improving patient outcomes and lack of behavioral health (BH) providers as a key gap in services provided. Conclusions Our survey reveals wide variation in all aspects of pediatric diabetes care delivery in the United States. Pediatric Endocrinologists responding to the survey identified a lack of resources and the current fee for service payment model as a major impediment to practice and the lack of integrated BH staff as a key gap in service. The respondents strongly support its organizations' involvement in the dissemination of standards for care delivery and advocacy for a national payment model aligned with chronic diabetes care in the context of our emerging value-based healthcare system.
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- 2017
148. Beam-Target Helicity Asymmetry for γ[over →]n[over →]→π^{-}p in the N^{*} Resonance Region
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D, Ho, P, Peng, C, Bass, P, Collins, A, D'Angelo, A, Deur, J, Fleming, C, Hanretty, T, Kageya, M, Khandaker, F J, Klein, E, Klempt, V, Laine, M M, Lowry, H, Lu, C, Nepali, V A, Nikonov, T, O'Connell, A M, Sandorfi, A V, Sarantsev, R A, Schumacher, I I, Strakovsky, A, Švarc, N K, Walford, X, Wei, C S, Whisnant, R L, Workman, I, Zonta, K P, Adhikari, D, Adikaram, Z, Akbar, M J, Amaryan, S, Anefalos Pereira, H, Avakian, J, Ball, M, Bashkanov, M, Battaglieri, V, Batourine, I, Bedlinskiy, A, Biselli, W J, Briscoe, V D, Burkert, D S, Carman, A, Celentano, G, Charles, T, Chetry, G, Ciullo, L, Clark, L, Colaneri, P L, Cole, M, Contalbrigo, V, Crede, N, Dashyan, E, De Sanctis, R, De Vita, C, Djalali, R, Dupre, A, El Alaoui, L, El Fassi, L, Elouadrhiri, P, Eugenio, G, Fedotov, S, Fegan, R, Fersch, A, Filippi, A, Fradi, Y, Ghandilyan, G P, Gilfoyle, F X, Girod, D I, Glazier, C, Gleason, W, Gohn, E, Golovatch, R W, Gothe, K A, Griffioen, M, Guidal, L, Guo, H, Hakobyan, N, Harrison, M, Hattawy, K, Hicks, M, Holtrop, S M, Hughes, Y, Ilieva, D G, Ireland, B S, Ishkhanov, E L, Isupov, D, Jenkins, H, Jiang, H S, Jo, K, Joo, S, Joosten, D, Keller, G, Khachatryan, A, Kim, W, Kim, A, Klein, V, Kubarovsky, S V, Kuleshov, L, Lanza, P, Lenisa, K, Livingston, I J D, MacGregor, N, Markov, B, McKinnon, T, Mineeva, V, Mokeev, R A, Montgomery, A, Movsisyan, C, Munoz Camacho, G, Murdoch, S, Niccolai, G, Niculescu, M, Osipenko, M, Paolone, R, Paremuzyan, K, Park, E, Pasyuk, W, Phelps, O, Pogorelko, J W, Price, S, Procureur, D, Protopopescu, M, Ripani, D, Riser, B G, Ritchie, A, Rizzo, G, Rosner, F, Sabatié, C, Salgado, Y G, Sharabian, Iu, Skorodumina, G D, Smith, D I, Sober, D, Sokhan, N, Sparveris, S, Strauch, Ye, Tian, B, Torayev, M, Ungaro, H, Voskanyan, E, Voutier, D P, Watts, M H, Wood, N, Zachariou, J, Zhang, and Z W, Zhao
- Abstract
We report the first beam-target double-polarization asymmetries in the γ+n(p)→π^{-}+p(p) reaction spanning the nucleon resonance region from invariant mass W=1500 to 2300 MeV. Circularly polarized photons and longitudinally polarized deuterons in solid hydrogen deuteride (HD) have been used with the CEBAF Large Acceptance Spectrometer (CLAS) at Jefferson Lab. The exclusive final state has been extracted using three very different analyses that show excellent agreement, and these have been used to deduce the E polarization observable for an effective neutron target. These results have been incorporated into new partial wave analyses and have led to significant revisions for several γnN^{*} resonance photocouplings.
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- 2017
149. An evaluation of the potential drug interaction between warfarin and levothyroxine
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Thomas Delate, M. D. Wood, Daniel M. Witt, M. Clark, Nathan P. Clark, and John R. Horn
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Warfarin therapy ,Levothyroxine ,Pharmacology ,Primary outcome ,Statistical significance ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Drug Interactions ,heterocyclic compounds ,International Normalized Ratio ,cardiovascular diseases ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Warfarin dose ,Warfarin ,Anticoagulants ,Hematology ,Middle Aged ,Drug interaction ,Thyroxine ,Female ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Summary Background Drug interaction references report that initiation of levothyroxine potentiates the effects of warfarin, and recommend more frequent International Normalized Ratio (INR) monitoring, but the mechanism is not well understood. Objective To assess the impact of levothyroxine initiation on INR response. Patients/Methods A retrospective, self-controlled study was performed on patients aged ≥ 18 years receiving chronic warfarin therapy who were started on levothyroxine between 1 January 2006 and 30 June 2013, and who were followed for 90 days prior to and after levothyroxine initiation. The included patients had at least one elevated thyroid-stimulating hormone laboratory value in the pre-period, continuous warfarin therapy for 100 days prior to levothyroxine initiation, no purchases of medications known to interact with warfarin, no procedures requiring warfarin interruption, and no bleeding or thromboembolic event during the study period. The primary outcome was a comparison of the warfarin dose/INR ratio recorded before the initiation of levothyroxine with the ratio recorded during the post-period after two consecutive INRs with no warfarin dose change. Results One hundred and two patients were included in the primary outcome. The mean warfarin dose/INR ratios in the pre-period and post-period were equivalent (P = 0.825). Although the mean warfarin dose was numerically lower in the post-period than in the pre-period, this difference did not reach statistical significance (P = 0.068). Conclusion No difference in the mean warfarin dose/INR ratio before and after initiation of levothyroxine was detected. The results suggest that there is not a clinically significant interaction between warfarin and levothyroxine, and so additional monitoring may not be necessary.
- Published
- 2014
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150. Film-poetry/poetry-film in Latin America. Theories and practices: An introduction
- Author
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David M. J. Wood and Ben Bollig
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Literature ,History ,Latin Americans ,Visual Arts and Performing Arts ,Poetry ,Latin American studies ,business.industry ,Communication ,business - Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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