18,657 results on '"Lipp A"'
Search Results
202. A critique of robotics in health care
- Author
-
Maibaum, Arne, Bischof, Andreas, Hergesell, Jannis, and Lipp, Benjamin
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
203. Evaluation of autoantibodies as predictors of treatment response and immune‐related adverse events during the treatment with immune checkpoint inhibitors: A prospective longitudinal pan‐cancer study
- Author
-
Dominik A. Barth, Stefanie Stanzer, Jasmin Spiegelberg, Thomas Bauernhofer, Gudrun Absenger, Florian Posch, Rainer Lipp, Michael Halm, Joanna Szkandera, Marija Balic, Armin Gerger, Maria A. Smolle, Georg C. Hutterer, Christiane Klec, Philipp J. Jost, Julia Kargl, Martin Stradner, and Martin Pichler
- Subjects
autoimmunity ,cancer ,immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy ,immune‐related adverse events ,monoclonal antibodies ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background The presence of autoantibodies in the serum of cancer patients has been associated with immune‐checkpoint inhibitor (ICI) therapy response and immune‐related adverse events (irAEs). A prospective evaluation of different autoantibodies in different cancer entities is missing. Materials and Methods In this prospective cohort study, we included a pan‐cancer cohort of patients undergoing ICI treatment and measured a comprehensive panel of autoantibodies at treatment start and at the time point of first response evaluation. The presence and induction of autoantibodies (ANA, ENA, myositis, hepatopathy, rheumatoid arthritis) in different cancer entities were assessed and the association between autoantibodies and disease control rate (DCR), objective response rate (ORR), and progression‐free survival (PFS), as well as the development of grade 3 or higher irAEs were evaluated by logistic regression models, cox proportional hazard models, and Kaplan–Meier estimators. Results Of 44 patients with various cancer entities, neither the presence of any positive autoantibody measurement nor the presence of positive antinuclear antibodies (ANA) [≥1:80] at baseline was associated with the examined clinical endpoints (DCR, ORR, PFS) in univariable and multivariable analyses. After 8–12 weeks of ICI treatment, DCR, ORR, and PFS did not significantly differ between patients with and without any positive autoantibody measurement or positive ANA titers. The frequency of irAEs did not differ depending on autoantibody status of the patients. Conclusion Autoantibodies at treatment initiation or induction after 8–12 weeks of ICI treatment are not associated with treatment efficacy as indicated by DCR, ORR, and PFS or higher grade irAEs.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
204. A Novel Hybrid Methodology for Anomaly Detection in Time Series
- Author
-
Lejla Begic Fazlic, Ahmed Halawa, Anke Schmeink, Robert Lipp, Lukas Martin, Arne Peine, Marlies Morgen, Thomas Vollmer, Stefan Winter, and Guido Dartmann
- Subjects
Anomaly detection ,Classification ,Self Organizing Maps (SOM) ,Linear Discriminant Analysis (LDA) ,Electronic computers. Computer science ,QA75.5-76.95 - Abstract
Abstract Numerous research methods have been developed to detect anomalies in the areas of security and risk analysis. In healthcare, there are numerous use cases where anomaly detection is relevant. For example, early detection of sepsis is one such use case. Early treatment of sepsis is cost effective and reduces the number of hospital days of patients in the ICU. There is no single procedure that is sufficient for sepsis diagnosis, and combinations of approaches are needed. Detecting anomalies in patient time series data could help speed the development of some decisions. However, our algorithm must be viewed as complementary to other approaches based on laboratory values and physician judgments. The focus of this work is to develop a hybrid method for detecting anomalies that occur, for example, in multidimensional medical signals, sensor signals, or other time series in business and nature. The novelty of our approach lies in the extension and combination of existing approaches: Statistics, Self Organizing Maps and Linear Discriminant Analysis in a unique and unprecedented way with the goal of identifying different types of anomalies in real-time measurement data and defining the point where the anomaly occurs. The proposed algorithm not only has the full potential to detect anomalies, but also to find real points where an anomaly starts.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
205. Clinical, Histological, and Profibrotic Extracellular Matrix Protein Changes in a Model of Tracheal Stenosis Induced by Cervical Tracheal Autotransplantation
- Author
-
Mariana Silva-Martínez, J. Raúl Olmos-Zuñiga, Jazmin Calyeca, Matilde Baltazares-Lipp, Miguel Gaxiola-Gaxiola, Andrea Nachón-Acosta, Lya Edith Pensado-Piedra, Fortunato Juárez-Hernández, Roberto Sotelo-Robledo, Rogelio Jasso-Victoria, Antonia Luna-Flores, and Juan Carlos Vázquez-Minero
- Subjects
tracheal stenosis ,animal model ,bleomycin ,tgfβ ,extracellular matrix protein ,Surgery ,RD1-811 - Abstract
Background Tracheal stenosis (TS) is a complication of prolonged intubation, tracheotomy, and tracheal surgery that compromises the vascular supply. Animal models are essential for studying its pathophysiology and the effect of interventions. Objective To establish a TS model in rats secondary to tracheal autotransplantation with a graft submerged in bleomycin (Atx-Bleo). Additionally, to evaluate the clinical and histological changes, as well as the expression of newly formed collagen (NFC), isoforms of transforming growth factor beta (TGFβ), fibronectin (FN), elastin (ELN), integrin β1 (ITGβ1), and matrix metalloproteinase 1 (MMP1) in TS. Methods Twenty Wistar rats were divided into three groups: group I (n = 20) control; group II (n = 10) end-to-end anastomosis of the trachea (tracheoplasty); and group III (n = 10) Atx-Bleo. The animals were evaluated clinically, tomographically, macroscopically, morphometrically, and microscopically. NFC deposition, and the expression of profibrotic and antifibrotic proteins were evaluated in tracheal scars. Results All animals survived the surgical procedure and the study period. Compared with the other study groups, the Atx-Bleo group developed TS and fibrosis, exhibited higher expression of NFC, TGFβ1, TGFβ2, FN, ELN, and ITGβ1, and mild expression of TGFβ3 and MMP1 (p
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
206. Classical Molecular Dynamics Simulations of Surface Modifications Triggered by a Femtosecond Laser Pulse
- Author
-
Vladimir Lipp and Beata Ziaja
- Subjects
radiation damage ,surface processing ,femtosecond laser irradiation ,molecular dynamics ,similitude ,Engineering design ,TA174 - Abstract
This work is devoted to classical molecular dynamics simulations of surface modifications (craters) drilled by single femtosecond laser pulses in silicon and diamond, materials relevant for numerous industrial applications. We propose a methodology paving the way towards a significant decrease in the simulation computational costs, which could also enable a precise estimation of the craters’ size and shape.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
207. Spectre Attacks: Exploiting Speculative Execution
- Author
-
Kocher, Paul, Genkin, Daniel, Gruss, Daniel, Haas, Werner, Hamburg, Mike, Lipp, Moritz, Mangard, Stefan, Prescher, Thomas, Schwarz, Michael, and Yarom, Yuval
- Subjects
Computer Science - Cryptography and Security - Abstract
Modern processors use branch prediction and speculative execution to maximize performance. For example, if the destination of a branch depends on a memory value that is in the process of being read, CPUs will try guess the destination and attempt to execute ahead. When the memory value finally arrives, the CPU either discards or commits the speculative computation. Speculative logic is unfaithful in how it executes, can access to the victim's memory and registers, and can perform operations with measurable side effects. Spectre attacks involve inducing a victim to speculatively perform operations that would not occur during correct program execution and which leak the victim's confidential information via a side channel to the adversary. This paper describes practical attacks that combine methodology from side channel attacks, fault attacks, and return-oriented programming that can read arbitrary memory from the victim's process. More broadly, the paper shows that speculative execution implementations violate the security assumptions underpinning numerous software security mechanisms, including operating system process separation, static analysis, containerization, just-in-time (JIT) compilation, and countermeasures to cache timing/side-channel attacks. These attacks represent a serious threat to actual systems, since vulnerable speculative execution capabilities are found in microprocessors from Intel, AMD, and ARM that are used in billions of devices. While makeshift processor-specific countermeasures are possible in some cases, sound solutions will require fixes to processor designs as well as updates to instruction set architectures (ISAs) to give hardware architects and software developers a common understanding as to what computation state CPU implementations are (and are not) permitted to leak.
- Published
- 2018
208. Meltdown
- Author
-
Lipp, Moritz, Schwarz, Michael, Gruss, Daniel, Prescher, Thomas, Haas, Werner, Mangard, Stefan, Kocher, Paul, Genkin, Daniel, Yarom, Yuval, and Hamburg, Mike
- Subjects
Computer Science - Cryptography and Security - Abstract
The security of computer systems fundamentally relies on memory isolation, e.g., kernel address ranges are marked as non-accessible and are protected from user access. In this paper, we present Meltdown. Meltdown exploits side effects of out-of-order execution on modern processors to read arbitrary kernel-memory locations including personal data and passwords. Out-of-order execution is an indispensable performance feature and present in a wide range of modern processors. The attack works on different Intel microarchitectures since at least 2010 and potentially other processors are affected. The root cause of Meltdown is the hardware. The attack is independent of the operating system, and it does not rely on any software vulnerabilities. Meltdown breaks all security assumptions given by address space isolation as well as paravirtualized environments and, thus, every security mechanism building upon this foundation. On affected systems, Meltdown enables an adversary to read memory of other processes or virtual machines in the cloud without any permissions or privileges, affecting millions of customers and virtually every user of a personal computer. We show that the KAISER defense mechanism for KASLR has the important (but inadvertent) side effect of impeding Meltdown. We stress that KAISER must be deployed immediately to prevent large-scale exploitation of this severe information leakage.
- Published
- 2018
209. Development and Implementation of the Data Science Learning Platform for Research Physician
- Author
-
Begic Fazlic, Lejla, primary, Schacht, Marvin, additional, Morgen, Marlies, additional, Schmeink, Anke, additional, Lipp, Robert, additional, Martin, Lukas, additional, Vollmer, Thomas, additional, Winter, Stefan, additional, and Dartmann, Guido, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
210. Building Self-Efficacy, Strategy Use, and Motivation to Support Extensive Reading in Multilingual University Students
- Author
-
Lipp, Ellen
- Abstract
This pilot study examined multilingual university students' willingness to engage in voluntary extensive reading (ER) of books after they received training. The research questions were whether training appeared to promote self-efficacy, motivation for the task, use of metacognitive strategies, and independent reading. University freshmen in an ESL reading and writing course participated in the project. The ER training included: (a) framing the ER task through stories of struggle and emotional appeal, and (b) introducing independent reading strategies. Surveys were used to collect data. Findings showed that students had beliefs of self-efficacy related to English book reading after the training, and they made considerable progress in their voluntary reading by the end of the course. The strategies that students found most helpful were selecting books for themselves, keeping records of their progress, and staying focused. Participants anticipated that ER would help them with academic literacy.
- Published
- 2017
211. Non-point source fecal contamination from aging wastewater infrastructure is a primary driver of antibiotic resistance in surface waters
- Author
-
Damashek, Julian, Westrich, Jason R., McDonald, Jacob M. Bateman, Teachey, Morgan E., Jackson, Charlene R., Frye, Jonathan G., Lipp, Erin K., Capps, Krista A., and Ottesen, Elizabeth A.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
212. Angry and fearful compared to happy or neutral faces as conditional stimuli in human fear conditioning: A systematic review and meta-analysis
- Author
-
Ney, Luke J., O’Donohue, Matthew P., Lowe, Benjamin G., and Lipp, Ottmar V.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
213. Impacts of imagery-enhanced versus verbally-based cognitive behavioral group therapy on psychophysiological parameters in social anxiety disorder: Results from a randomized-controlled trial
- Author
-
McEvoy, Peter M., Hyett, Matthew P., Johnson, Andrew R., Erceg-Hurn, David M., Clarke, Patrick J.F., Kyron, Michael J., Bank, Samantha R., Haseler, Luke, Saulsman, Lisa M., Moulds, Michelle L., Grisham, Jessica R., Holmes, Emily A., Moscovitch, David A., Lipp, Ottmar V., and Rapee, Ronald M.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
214. Hedgehog Signaling in Papillary Fibroblasts Is Essential for Hair Follicle Regeneration during Wound Healing
- Author
-
Frech, Sophie, Forsthuber, Agnes, Korosec, Ana, Lipp, Katharina, Kozumov, Viktor, and Lichtenberger, Beate M.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
215. Automated Detection, Exploitation, and Elimination of Double-Fetch Bugs using Modern CPU Features
- Author
-
Schwarz, Michael, Gruss, Daniel, Lipp, Moritz, Maurice, Clémentine, Schuster, Thomas, Fogh, Anders, and Mangard, Stefan
- Subjects
Computer Science - Cryptography and Security - Abstract
Double-fetch bugs are a special type of race condition, where an unprivileged execution thread is able to change a memory location between the time-of-check and time-of-use of a privileged execution thread. If an unprivileged attacker changes the value at the right time, the privileged operation becomes inconsistent, leading to a change in control flow, and thus an escalation of privileges for the attacker. More severely, such double-fetch bugs can be introduced by the compiler, entirely invisible on the source-code level. We propose novel techniques to efficiently detect, exploit, and eliminate double-fetch bugs. We demonstrate the first combination of state-of-the-art cache attacks with kernel-fuzzing techniques to allow fully automated identification of double fetches. We demonstrate the first fully automated reliable detection and exploitation of double-fetch bugs, making manual analysis as in previous work superfluous. We show that cache-based triggers outperform state-of-the-art exploitation techniques significantly, leading to an exploitation success rate of up to 97%. Our modified fuzzer automatically detects double fetches and automatically narrows down this candidate set for double-fetch bugs to the exploitable ones. We present the first generic technique based on hardware transactional memory, to eliminate double-fetch bugs in a fully automated and transparent manner. We extend defensive programming techniques by retrofitting arbitrary code with automated double-fetch prevention, both in trusted execution environments as well as in syscalls, with a performance overhead below 1%.
- Published
- 2017
216. Another Flip in the Wall of Rowhammer Defenses
- Author
-
Gruss, Daniel, Lipp, Moritz, Schwarz, Michael, Genkin, Daniel, Juffinger, Jonas, O'Connell, Sioli, Schoechl, Wolfgang, and Yarom, Yuval
- Subjects
Computer Science - Cryptography and Security - Abstract
The Rowhammer bug allows unauthorized modification of bits in DRAM cells from unprivileged software, enabling powerful privilege-escalation attacks. Sophisticated Rowhammer countermeasures have been presented, aiming at mitigating the Rowhammer bug or its exploitation. However, the state of the art provides insufficient insight on the completeness of these defenses. In this paper, we present novel Rowhammer attack and exploitation primitives, showing that even a combination of all defenses is ineffective. Our new attack technique, one-location hammering, breaks previous assumptions on requirements for triggering the Rowhammer bug, i.e., we do not hammer multiple DRAM rows but only keep one DRAM row constantly open. Our new exploitation technique, opcode flipping, bypasses recent isolation mechanisms by flipping bits in a predictable and targeted way in userspace binaries. We replace conspicuous and memory-exhausting spraying and grooming techniques with a novel reliable technique called memory waylaying. Memory waylaying exploits system-level optimizations and a side channel to coax the operating system into placing target pages at attacker-chosen physical locations. Finally, we abuse Intel SGX to hide the attack entirely from the user and the operating system, making any inspection or detection of the attack infeasible. Our Rowhammer enclave can be used for coordinated denial-of-service attacks in the cloud and for privilege escalation on personal computers. We demonstrate that our attacks evade all previously proposed countermeasures for commodity systems., Comment: Preprint of the work accepted at the 39th IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy 2018
- Published
- 2017
217. Computing Storyline Visualizations with Few Block Crossings
- Author
-
van Dijk, Thomas C., Lipp, Fabian, Markfelder, Peter, and Wolff, Alexander
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computational Geometry ,Computer Science - Discrete Mathematics - Abstract
Storyline visualizations show the structure of a story, by depicting the interactions of the characters over time. Each character is represented by an x-monotone curve from left to right, and a meeting is represented by having the curves of the participating characters run close together for some time. There have been various approaches to drawing storyline visualizations in an automated way. In order to keep the visual complexity low, rather than minimizing pairwise crossings of curves, we count block crossings, that is, pairs of intersecting bundles of lines. Partly inspired by the ILP-based approach of Gronemann et al. [GD 2016] for minimizing the number of pairwise crossings, we model the problem as a satisfiability problem (since the straightforward ILP formulation becomes more complicated and harder to solve). Having restricted ourselves to a decision problem, we can apply powerful SAT solvers to find optimal drawings in reasonable time. We compare this SAT-based approach with two exact algorithms for block crossing minimization, using both the benchmark instances of Gronemann et al. and random instances. We show that the SAT approach is suitable for real-world instances and identify cases where the other algorithms are preferable., Comment: Appears in the Proceedings of the 25th International Symposium on Graph Drawing and Network Visualization (GD 2017)
- Published
- 2017
218. Pressure Effects on the 4f Electronic Structure of Light Lanthanides
- Author
-
Chiu, W. -T., Mortensen, D. R., Lipp, M. J., Resta, G., Jia, C., Moritz, B., Devereaux, T. P., Savrasov, S. Y., Seidler, G. T., and Scalettar, R. T.
- Subjects
Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons - Abstract
Using the satellite structure of the $L_{\gamma1}$ line in non-resonant x-ray emission spectra, we probe the high-pressure evolution of the bare 4f signature of the early light lanthanides at ambient temperature. For Ce and Pr the satellite peak experiences a sudden reduction concurrent with their respective volume collapse (VC) transitions. These new experimental results are supported by calculations using state-of-the-art extended atomic structure codes for Ce and Pr, and also for Nd, which does not exhibit a VC. Our work suggests that changes to the 4f occupation are more consistently associated with evolution of the satellite than is the reduction of the 4f moment. Indeed, we show that in the case of Ce, mixing of a higher atomic angular momentum state, driven by the increased hybridization, acts to obscure the expected satellite reduction. These measurements emphasize the importance of a unified study of a full set of microscopic observables to obtain the most discerning test of the underlying, fundamental f-electron phenomena at high pressures., Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
219. Positional information readout in $Ca^{2+}$ signaling
- Author
-
Wasnik, Vaibhav H., Lipp, Peter, and Kruse, Karsten
- Subjects
Quantitative Biology - Subcellular Processes - Abstract
Living cells respond to spatial signals. Signal transmission to the cell interior often involves the release of second messengers like $Ca^{2+}$ . They will eventually trigger a physiological response by activating kinases that in turn activate target proteins through phosphorylation. Here, we investigate theoretically how positional information can be accurately read out by protein phosphorylation in spite of rapid second messenger diffusion. We find that accuracy is increased by binding of the kinases to the cell membrane prior to phosphorylation and by increasing the rate of $Ca^{2+}$ loss from the cell interior. These findings could explain some salient features of conventional protein kinases C.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
220. KeyDrown: Eliminating Keystroke Timing Side-Channel Attacks
- Author
-
Schwarz, Michael, Lipp, Moritz, Gruss, Daniel, Weiser, Samuel, Maurice, Clémentine, Spreitzer, Raphael, and Mangard, Stefan
- Subjects
Computer Science - Cryptography and Security - Abstract
Besides cryptographic secrets, side-channel attacks also leak sensitive user input. The most accurate attacks exploit cache timings or interrupt information to monitor keystroke timings and subsequently infer typed words and sentences. Previously proposed countermeasures fail to prevent keystroke timing attacks as they do not protect keystroke processing among the entire software stack. We close this gap with KeyDrown, a new defense mechanism against keystroke timing attacks. KeyDrown injects a large number of fake keystrokes in the kernel to prevent interrupt-based attacks and Prime+Probe attacks on the kernel. All keystrokes, including fake keystrokes, are carefully propagated through the shared library in order to hide any cache activity and thus to prevent Flush+Reload attacks. Finally, we provide additional protection against Prime+Probe for password input in user space programs. We show that attackers cannot distinguish fake keystrokes from real keystrokes anymore and we evaluate KeyDrown on a commodity notebook as well as on two Android smartphones. We show that KeyDrown eliminates any advantage an attacker can gain from using interrupt or cache side-channel information.
- Published
- 2017
221. Epitaxial electrical contact to graphene on SiC
- Author
-
Quang, T. Le, Huder, L., Bregolin, F. Lipp, Artaud, A., Okuno, H., Pouget, S., Mollard, N., Lapertot, G., Jansen, A. G. M, Lefloch, F., Driessen, E. F. C, Chapelier, C., and Renard, V. T.
- Subjects
Physics - Applied Physics ,Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
Establishing good electrical contacts to nanoscale devices is a major issue for modern technology and contacting 2D materials is no exception to the rule. One-dimensional edge-contacts to graphene were recently shown to outperform surface contacts but the method remains difficult to scale up. We report a resist-free and scalable method to fabricate few graphene layers with electrical contacts in a single growth step. This method derives from the discovery reported here of the growth of few graphene layers on a metallic carbide by thermal annealing of a carbide forming metallic film on SiC in high vacuum. We exploit the combined effect of edge-contact and partially-covalent surface epitaxy between graphene and the metallic carbide to fabricate devices in which low contact-resistance and Josephson effect are observed. Implementing this approach could significantly simplify the realization of large-scale graphene circuits., Comment: supplementary information available at the publisher's site
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
222. The effect of temporal predictability on sensory gating: Cortical responses inform perception.
- Author
-
Favero, Jaspa D., Luck, Camilla, Lipp, Ottmar V., and Marinovic, Welber
- Subjects
NEURAL inhibition ,STIMULUS intensity ,ACOUSTIC intensity ,COGNITION ,ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY - Abstract
Prepulse inhibition of perceived stimulus intensity (PPIPSI) is a phenomenon where a weak stimulus preceding a stronger one reduces the perceived intensity of the latter. Previous studies have shown that PPIPSI relies on attention and is sensitive to stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA). Longer SOAs may increase conscious awareness of the impact of gating mechanisms on perception by allowing more time for attention to be directed toward relevant processing channels. In other psychophysiological paradigms, temporal predictability improves attention to task relevant stimuli and processes. We hypothesized that temporal predictability may similarly facilitate attention being directed toward the pulse and its processing in PPIPSI. To examine this, we conducted a 2 (SOA: 90 ms, 150 ms) × 2 (predictability: low, high) experiment, where participants were tasked with comparing the perceived intensity of an acoustic pulse‐alone against one preceded by a prepulse. The relationship between PPIPSI and cortical PPI (N1‐P2 inhibition) was also investigated. Significant main effects of temporal predictability, SOA, and cortical PPI were revealed. Under high temporal predictability, both SOAs (90 and 150 ms) elicited greater PPIPSI. The findings indicate that temporal predictability enhances the timely allocation of finite attentional resources, increasing PPIPSI observations by facilitating perceptual access to the gated pulse signal. Moreover, the finding that reductions in N1‐P2 magnitude by a prepulse are associated with increased probability of the participants perceiving the pulse "with prepulse" as less intense, suggests that under various experimental conditions, the link between these cortical processes and perception is similarly engaged. Consistent with other paradigms, our study reveals that temporal predictability enhances sensory gating of conscious perception, as evidenced by increased prepulse inhibition of perceived stimulus intensity (PPIPSI). This enhancement likely occurs through more efficient allocation of attention to sensory channels. Additionally, the link between N1‐P2 gating and PPIPSI suggests that the N1‐P2 response may inform perception. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
223. EzySCR: A free and easy tool for scoring event‐related skin conductance responses in the first, second, and third interval latency windows.
- Author
-
Ney, Luke J., Pardo, Jorge L., and Lipp, Ottmar V.
- Subjects
GALVANIC skin response ,PARETO analysis ,RESEARCH personnel ,DATA quality ,STATISTICAL correlation - Abstract
Skin conductance is a commonly used physiological measure during psychology experiments, such as during fear conditioning. Methods for scoring skin conductance responses (SCRs) are highly heterogeneous, though most researchers agree that manually inspected scores provide the highest quality data when compared to most available fully automated scoring methods. However, manual scoring is extremely time‐consuming. We developed a semi‐automated scoring program that reduces the time required to process SCR data at a level of quality akin to manual scoring. In contrast to all previous scoring programs, our program enables scoring of first interval response (FIR), second interval response (SIR), and third interval response (TIR) SCRs. Using interclass correlation coefficients (ICCs), Bland–Altman plots and Pareto analysis, we show here that our method is highly reliable and produces data that are almost identical to data that are manually scored and scored using LEDALAB. This software is very easy to use and is freely available to download and modify. We expect that this software will be helpful in reducing the time required to produce high quality FIR, SIR, and TIR skin conductance data for psychology researchers around the world. Existing automated methods for scoring skin conductance responses (SCRs) without manual inspection leave ambiguity whether these methods are scoring SCRs accurately. Our program automatically scores SCRs and allows rapid manual inspection of multiple response intervals for each event. This program provides an option for researchers to produce high quality SCR data in a time‐efficient manner. The program is free, easy to use, and is opensource. The program is fully validated against manually scored data and between independent raters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
224. The effect of gradual extinction training on the renewal of electrodermal conditional responses.
- Author
-
Wang, Yi, Luck, Camilla C., Waters, Allison M., Ney, Luke J., and Lipp, Ottmar V.
- Subjects
GALVANIC skin response ,CONDITIONED response ,BIOLOGICAL extinction ,EXPECTATION (Philosophy) ,RODENTS - Abstract
Extinction, the repeated presentation of a conditional stimulus (CS) without the unconditional stimulus (US), is the standard paradigm to reduce conditional responding acquired by the repeated pairing of CS and US in acquisition. However, this reduction of conditional responding is prone to relapse. In rodent fear‐conditioning, gradual extinction, the fading out of CS‐US pairings during extinction, has been shown to reduce the return of fear. The current study replicated the gradual extinction procedure in human fear conditioning and assessed whether it reduced the return of fear due to ABA renewal and reacquisition. During extinction, one group received standard extinction, a second received gradual extinction (increasing the spacing of USs presented after the 1st, 3rd, 6th, 10th, and 15th CS+ trials), and a third received reversed extinction training (decreasing the spacing of USs presented after the 1st, 6th, 10th, 13th, and 15th CS+ trials). Larger renewal and faster reacquisition of differential electrodermal responses to CS+ and CS− were expected after standard and reversed extinction than after gradual extinction training. The results were inconclusive due to the failure to find extinction of differential electrodermal responses and US expectancy ratings in both gradual and reversed extinction groups. Despite successful extinction in group standard, renewal was only observed in US expectancy. Visualization of US expectancy ratings during extinction suggested that potential identification of the US presentation patterns during extinction in the gradual and reversed groups delayed extinction learning. Return of fear after successful extinction training is a common observation with broad implications for the success of exposure‐based therapies. In rodents, gradual extinction training has been shown to reduce the return of fear. The current study will translate this approach to human fear conditioning and assess its utility to prevent the return of conditional fear due to changes in context, fear renewal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
225. The interplay of perceptual processing demands and practice in modulating voluntary and involuntary motor responses.
- Author
-
Marinovic, Welber, Nguyen, An T., Vallence, Ann‐Maree, Tresilian, James R., and Lipp, Ottmar V.
- Subjects
STARTLE reaction ,ABDUCTION (Kinesiology) ,AUDITORY perception ,VISUAL perception ,CONDITIONED response - Abstract
Understanding how sensory processing demands affect the ability to ignore task‐irrelevant, loud auditory stimuli (LAS) during a task is key to performance in dynamic environments. For example, tennis players must ignore crowd noise to perform optimally. We investigated how practice affects this ability by examining the effects of delivering LASs during preparatory phase of an anticipatory timing (AT) task on the voluntary and reflexive responses in two conditions: lower and higher visual processing loads. Twenty‐four participants (mean age = 23.1, 11 females) completed the experiment. The AT task involved synchronizing a finger abduction response with the last visual stimulus item in a sequence of four Gabor grating patches briefly flashed on screen. The lower demand condition involved only this task, and the higher demand condition required processing the orientations of the patches to report changes in the final stimulus item. Our results showed that higher visual processing demands affected the release of voluntary actions, particularly in the first block of trials. When the perceptual load was lower, responses were released earlier by the LAS compared to the high‐load condition. Practice reduced these effects largely, but high perceptual load still led to earlier action release in the second block. In contrast, practice led to more apparent facilitation of eyeblink latency in the second block. These findings indicate that a simple perceptual load manipulation can impact the execution of voluntary motor actions, particularly for inexperienced participants. They also suggest distinct movement preparation influences on voluntary and involuntary actions triggered by acoustic stimuli. Our study reveals the effects of perceptual load processing on motor preparation and execution, showing that practice reduces the interference of auditory stimuli on movement onset and force. These findings advance our understanding of cortical and subcortical mechanisms in motor control. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
226. Sphingosine kinase 2 (SphK2) depletion alters redox metabolism and enhances inflammation in a diet-induced MASH mouse model.
- Author
-
Jackson, Kaitlyn G., Zhao, Derrick, Su, Lianyong, Lipp, Marissa K., Toler, Cameron, Idowu, Michael, Yan, Qianhua, Wang, Xuan, Gurley, Emily, Wu, Nan, Puri, Puneet, Chen, Qun, Lesnefsky, Edward J., Dupree, Jeffrey L., Hylemon, Phillip B., and Zhou, Huiping
- Abstract
Background: Sphingosine-1 phosphate (S1P) is a bioactive lipid molecule that modulates inflammation and hepatic lipid metabolism in MASLD, which affects 1 in 3 people and increases the risk of liver fibrosis and hepatic cancer. S1P can be generated by 2 isoforms of sphingosine kinase (SphK). SphK1 is well-studied in metabolic diseases. In contrast, SphK2 function is not well characterized. Both sphingolipid and redox metabolism dysregulation contribute to MASLD pathologic progression. While SphK2 localizes to both the nucleus and mitochondria, its specific role in early MASH is not well defined. Methods: This study examined SphK2 depletion effects on hepatic redox metabolism, mitochondrial function, and inflammation in a 16-week western diet plus sugar water (WDSW)-induced mouse model of early MASH. Results: WDSW- SphK2
−/− mice exhibit increased hepatic lipid accumulation and hepatic redox dysregulation. In addition, mitochondria-localized cholesterol and S1P precursors were increased. We traced SphK2−/− -mediated mitochondrial electron transport chain impairment to respiratory complex-IV and found that decreased mitochondrial redox metabolism coincided with increased oxidase gene expression and oxylipin production. Consistent with this relationship, we observed pronounced increases in hepatic inflammatory gene expression, prostaglandin accumulation, and innate immune homing in WDSW- SphK2−/− mice compared to WDSW-wild-type mice. Conclusions: These studies suggest SphK2-derived S1P maintains hepatic redox metabolism and describe the potential consequences of SphK2 depletion on proinflammatory gene expression, lipid mediator production, and immune infiltration in MASH progression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
227. Nobility, Renaissance
- Author
-
Lipp, Charles, Lines, David A., Section editor, and Sgarbi, Marco, editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
228. Reducing public stigma toward individuals with psychosis across race and gender: A randomized controlled trial of young adults
- Author
-
Amsalem, Doron, Valeri, Linda, Jankowski, Samantha E., Yang, Lawrence H., Bello, Iruma, Nossel, Ilana, Malinovsky, Igor, Smith, Stephen, Ngo, Hong, Lieff, Sarah A., Pagdon, Shannon, Lipp, Amanda, Markowitz, John C., Neria, Yuval, and Dixon, Lisa B.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
229. Combining the trauma film and fear conditioning paradigms: A theoretical review and meta-analysis with relevance to PTSD
- Author
-
Ney, Luke J., Schenker, Maya, and Lipp, Ottmar V.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
230. Performing Tasks in Virtual Reality. Interplay between Realism and Visual Imagery.
- Author
-
Natalia Lipp, Pawel Strojny, Agnieszka Strojny, Slawomir Spiewak, Jan K. Argasinski, and Przemyslaw Korzeniowski
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
231. Enhancing VR Based Serious Games and Simulations Design: Bayesian Knowledge Tracing and Pattern-Based Approaches.
- Author
-
Jan K. Argasinski and Natalia Lipp
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
232. Increased cingulo-orbital connectivity is associated with violent behaviours in schizophrenia
- Author
-
Athanassiou, Maria, Dumais, Alexandre, Tikasz, Andras, Lipp, Olivier, Dubreucq, Jean-Luc, and Potvin, Stéphane
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
233. Relapse of Evaluative Learning--Evidence for Reinstatement, Renewal, but Not Spontaneous Recovery, of Extinguished Evaluative Learning in a Picture-Picture Evaluative Conditioning Paradigm
- Author
-
Luck, Camilla C. and Lipp, Ottmar V.
- Abstract
In evaluative conditioning, if one shape (conditional stimulus [CS]; CSp) is paired with pleasant unconditional stimulus (US) images and another (CSu) is paired with unpleasant US images differential CS valence and US expectancy develops, such that participants evaluate the CSp as more pleasant and more predictive of pleasant images than the CSu. This conditional CS valence and US expectancy can be reduced in an extinction procedure in which the CSs are repeatedly presented alone. We investigated whether evaluative and expectancy learning is subject to relapse (spontaneous recovery, reinstatement, and renewal) after extinction in a picture-picture evaluative conditioning paradigm. In Stream 1, after acquisition and extinction, the spontaneous recovery test was completed after a delay. During the spontaneous recovery test, conditional expectancy learning, but not conditional evaluative learning, returned. In Stream 2, the US pictures were presented in a random stream after extinction (reinstatement manipulation) which led to the return of conditional evaluative and expectancy learning. In Stream 3, after acquisition training in Context A and extinction training in Context B, conditional expectancy and evaluative learning returned when participants completed the renewal test in the acquisition context (Context A; ABA renewal). Overall, the results suggest that conditional evaluative learning is subject to reinstatement and renewal, but not to spontaneous recovery, in a picture-picture evaluative conditioning paradigm.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
234. Techno-bio-politics. On Interfacing Life with and Through Technology
- Author
-
Lipp, Benjamin and Maasen, Sabine
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
235. Effects of low-dose naltrexone on quality of life in high-grade glioma patients: a placebo-controlled, double-blind randomized trial
- Author
-
Peters, Katherine B., Affronti, Mary L., Woodring, Sarah, Lipp, Eric, Healy, Patrick, Herndon, II, James E., Miller, Elizabeth S., Freeman, Maria W., Randazzo, Dina M., Desjardins, Annick, and Friedman, Henry S.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
236. Aerosol delivery of dry powder synthetic lung surfactant to surfactant-deficient rabbits and preterm lambs on non-invasive respiratory support.
- Author
-
Walther, Frans, Gupta, Monik, Lipp, Michael, Chan, Holly, Krzewick, John, Gordon, Larry, and Waring, Alan
- Subjects
Captive Bubble Surfactometry ,Dry Powder synthetic lung surfactant ,Fourier-Transform InfraRed spectrometry ,Respiratory Distress Syndrome ,Super Mini-B ,Surfactant Protein B ,lung lavage rabbit model ,preterm lambs - Abstract
Background: The development of synthetic lung surfactant for preterm infants has focused on peptide analogues of native surfactant proteins B and C (SP-B and SP-C). Non-invasive respiratory support with nasal continuous positive airway pressure (nCPAP) may benefit from synthetic surfactant for aerosol delivery. Methods: A total of three dry powder (DP) surfactants, consisting of phospholipids and the SP-B analogue Super Mini-B (SMB), and one negative control DP surfactant without SMB, were produced with the Acorda Therapeutics ARCUS® Pulmonary Dry Powder Technology. Structure of the DP surfactants was compared with FTIR spectroscopy, in vitro surface activity with captive bubble surfactometry, and in vivo activity in surfactant-deficient adult rabbits and preterm lambs. In the animal experiments, intratracheal (IT) aerosol delivery was compared with surfactant aerosolization during nCPAP support. Surfactant dosage was 100 mg/kg of lipids and aerosolization was performed using a low flow inhaler. Results: FTIR spectra of the three DP surfactants each showed secondary structures compatible with peptide folding as an α-helix hairpin, similar to that previously noted for surface-active SMB in other lipids. The DP surfactants with SMB demonstrated in vitro surface activity
- Published
- 2019
237. Open innovation: a growth powerhouse when integrated with dynamic digital technologies
- Author
-
Lipp, Anthony, Marshall, Anthony, and Dencik, Jacob
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
238. Hybrid Public Key Encryption.
- Author
-
Richard L. Barnes, Karthikeyan Bhargavan, Benjamin Lipp 0001, and Christopher A. Wood
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
239. NFDI - Akteure und Prozesse, Erfolgsfaktoren und Herausforderungen.
- Author
-
Anne Lipp and York Sure-Vetter
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
240. Terpene emissions from boreal wetlands can initiate stronger atmospheric new particle formation than boreal forests
- Author
-
Heikki Junninen, Lauri Ahonen, Federico Bianchi, Lauriane Quéléver, Simon Schallhart, Lubna Dada, Hanna Elina Manninen, Katri Leino, Janne Lampilahti, Stephany Buenrostro Mazon, Pekka Rantala, Mari Räty, Jenni Kontkanen, Sara Negri, Diego Aliaga, Olga Garmash, Pavel Alekseychik, Helina Lipp, Kalju Tamme, Janne Levula, Mikko Sipilä, Mikael Ehn, Douglas Worsnop, Sergej Zilitinkevich, Ivan Mammarella, Janne Rinne, Timo Vesala, Tuukka Petäjä, Veli-Matti Kerminen, and Markku Kulmala
- Subjects
Geology ,QE1-996.5 ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Boreal wetlands emit terpenes which initiate atmospheric new particle formation to an even greater degree than is usually seen over boreal forests, according to direct measurements of volatile organic compounds from a Finnish wetland.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
241. Quantifying electron cascade size in various irradiated materials for free-electron laser applications
- Author
-
Vladimir Lipp, Igor Milov, and Nikita Medvedev
- Subjects
electron cascades ,x-ray free-electron lasers ,monte carlo ,photon-induced cascade ,electron transport ,Nuclear and particle physics. Atomic energy. Radioactivity ,QC770-798 ,Crystallography ,QD901-999 - Abstract
Studying electron- and X-ray-induced electron cascades in solids is essential for various research areas at free-electron laser facilities, such as X-ray imaging, crystallography, pulse diagnostics or X-ray-induced damage. To better understand the fundamental factors that define the duration and spatial size of such cascades, this work investigates the electron propagation in ten solids relevant for the applications of X-ray lasers: Au, B4C, diamond, Ni, polystyrene, Ru, Si, SiC, Si3N4 and W. Using classical Monte Carlo simulation in the atomic approximation, we study the dependence of the cascade size on the incident electron or photon energy and on the target parameters. The results show that an electron-induced cascade is systematically larger than a photon-induced cascade. Moreover, in contrast with the common assumption, the maximal cascade size does not necessarily coincide with the electron range. It was found that the cascade size can be controlled by careful selection of the photon energy for a particular material. Photon energy, just above an ionization potential, can essentially split the absorbed energy between two electrons (photo- and Auger), reducing their initial energy and thus shrinking the cascade size. This analysis suggests a way of tailoring the electron cascades for applications requiring either small cascades with a high density of excited electrons or large-spread cascades with lower electron densities.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
242. A longitudinal study to examine the influence of farming practices and environmental factors on pathogen prevalence using structural equation modeling
- Author
-
Martine Ferguson, Chiun-Kang Hsu, Christopher Grim, Michael Kauffman, Karen Jarvis, James B. Pettengill, Uma S. Babu, Lisa M. Harrison, Baoguang Li, Alice Hayford, Kannan V. Balan, Josefina P. Freeman, Gireesh Rajashekara, Erin K. Lipp, Ralph Scott Rozier, Anne Marie Zimeri, and Laurel S. Burall
- Subjects
farm management practices ,fresh produce ,Listeria ,Salmonella ,Campylobacter ,STEC ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
The contamination of fresh produce with foodborne pathogens has been an on-going concern with outbreaks linked to these commodities. Evaluation of farm practices, such as use of manure, irrigation water source, and other factors that could influence pathogen prevalence in the farming environment could lead to improved mitigation strategies to reduce the potential for contamination events. Soil, water, manure, and compost were sampled from farms in Ohio and Georgia to identify the prevalence of Salmonella, Listeria monocytogenes (Lm), Campylobacter, and Shiga-toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC), as well as Arcobacter, an emerging human pathogen. This study investigated agricultural practices to determine which influenced pathogen prevalence, i.e., the percent positive samples. These efforts identified a low prevalence of Salmonella, STEC, and Campylobacter in soil and water (< 10%), preventing statistical modeling of these pathogens. However, Lm and Arcobacter were found in soil (13 and 7%, respectively), manure (49 and 32%, respectively), and water samples (18 and 39%, respectively) at a comparatively higher prevalence, suggesting different dynamics are involved in their survival in the farm environment. Lm and Arcobacter prevalence data, soil chemical characteristics, as well as farm practices and weather, were analyzed using structural equation modeling to identify which factors play a role, directly or indirectly, on the prevalence of these pathogens. These analyses identified an association between pathogen prevalence and weather, as well as biological soil amendments of animal origin. Increasing air temperature increased Arcobacter and decreased Lm. Lm prevalence was found to be inversely correlated with the use of surface water for irrigation, despite a high Lm prevalence in surface water suggesting other factors may play a role. Furthermore, Lm prevalence increased when the microbiome’s Simpson’s Diversity Index decreased, which occurred as soil fertility increased, leading to an indirect positive effect for soil fertility on Lm prevalence. These results suggest that pathogen, environment, and farm management practices, in addition to produce commodities, all need to be considered when developing mitigation strategies. The prevalence of Arcobacter and Lm versus the other pathogens suggests that multiple mitigation strategies may need to be employed to control these pathogens.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
243. Functional and structural readouts for early detection of retinal involvement in multiple sclerosis
- Author
-
Khaldoon O. Al-Nosairy, Alexander Duscha, Henrike Buhr, Antonia Lipp, Christiane Desel, Tobias Hegelmaier, Hagen Thieme, Aiden Haghikia, and Michael B. Hoffmann
- Subjects
MS ,optic neuritis (ON) ,electroretinography (ERG) ,mfPhNR ,mfPERG ,OCT ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
IntroductionThe retina, a window into the brain, allows for the investigation of many disease-associated inflammatory and neurodegenerative changes affecting the central nervous system (CNS). Multiple sclerosis (MS), an autoimmune disease targeting the CNS, typically impacts on the visual system including the retina. Hence, we aimed to establish innovative functional retinal measures of MS-related damage, e.g., spatially resolved non-invasive retinal electrophysiology, backed by established morphological retinal imaging markers, i.e., optical coherence tomography (OCT).Methods20 healthy controls (HC) and 37 people with MS [17 without history of optic neuritis (NON) and 20 with (HON) history of optic neuritis] were included. In this work, we differentially assessed photoreceptor/bipolar cells (distal retina) and retinal ganglion cell (RGC, proximal retina) function besides structural assessment (OCT). We compared two multifocal electroretinography-based approaches, i.e., the multifocal pattern electroretinogram (mfPERG) and the multifocal electroretinogram to record photopic negative response (mfERGPhNR). Structural assessment utilized peripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer thickness (pRNFL) and macular scans to calculate outer nuclear thickness (ONL) and macular ganglion cell inner plexiform layer thickness (GCIPL). One eye was randomly selected per subject.ResultsIn NON, photoreceptor/bipolar cell layer had dysfunctional responses evidenced by reduced mfERGPhNR-N1 peak time of the summed response, but preserved structural integrity. Further, both NON and HON demonstrated abnormal RGC responses as evidenced by the photopic negative response of mfERGPhNR (mfPhNR) and mfPERG indices (P < 0.05). Structurally, only HON had thinned retina at the level of RGCs in the macula (GCIPL, P < 0.01) and the peripapillary area (pRNFL, P < 0.01). All three modalities showed good performance to differentiate MS-related damage from HC, 71–81% area under curve.ConclusionIn conclusion, while structural damage was evident mainly for HON, functional measures were the only retinal read-outs of MS-related retinal damage that were independent of optic neuritis, observed for NON. These results indicate retinal MS-related inflammatory processes in the retina prior to optic neuritis. They highlight the importance of retinal electrophysiology in MS diagnostics and its potential as a sensitive biomarker for follow-up in innovative interventions.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
244. Higher burden of cardiometabolic and socioeconomic risk factors in women with type 2 diabetes: an analysis of the Glycemic Reduction Approaches in Diabetes (GRADE) baseline cohort
- Author
-
C Wright, C Sanders, C Wilson, L Tucker, S Jones, S Douglass, C Patel, A Kumar, S Smith, A Ghosh, C Adams, R Hill, D Martin, J Hu, M Lee, N Patel, O Smith, J Cook, J Day, M Jackson, G Riera, P McGee, J Park, J Jiménez, S Yang, A Carlson, C Martin, H Liu, Y Li, A Krol, K Wright, S Golden, A Sood, J Martinez, D Sanchez, K Burton, Y Gao, S Martin, O Sanchez, C DeSouza, M Johnson, L Estrada, A Jackson, J Higgins, K Martin, J Craig, A Kuhn, L Ngo, Deborah J Wexler, R Chatterjee, E Walker, J Kerr, W Taylor, J Lim, M Perez, R Henry, Vanita R Aroda, R Fraser, Cyrus Desouza, E King, C Campbell, J González, E Diaz, P Zhang, J Marks, S Abraham, A Ross, M Khalid, T Young, J Myers, J Barzilay, B Chambers, G Montes, C Jensen, J McConnell, R Nelson, L Prosser, S Morton, M Curtis, P Wilson, L Young, M Fürst, S Warren, C Newman, S Kuo, N Rasouli, A Werner, L Morton, A Ghazi, M Salam, F Ismail-Beigi, P Kringas, C Baker, E Ellis, A Cherian, L Holloway, M Madden, B Hollis, G Fuller, B Steiner, K Stokes, R Ayala, T Lowe, K Chu, S Durán, D Dyer, A Alfred, J Leger, Nicole M Butera, T Hamilton, J Costello, E Burgess, R Garg, A Maxwell, C Stevens, W Ye, T Tran, L Fischer, M Hurtado, H Schneier, C Lund, R Lorch, M Mullen, J Bantle, K Arnold, D Wexler, A TURCHIN, MS Lee, D Howard, J Tejada, S Hernandez, Tasma Harindhanavudhi, E Schroeder, K Pham, S Kunkel, A Fagan, G Lord, H CHONG, A Smiley, E Debnam, H Petrovitch, M Bäckman, B Kauffman, V Jenkins, B Cramer, JP Crandall, MD McKee, S Behringer-Massera, J Brown-Friday, E Xhori, K Ballentine-Cargill, H Estrella, S Gonzalez de la torre, J Lukin, LS Phillips, D Olson, M Rhee, TS Raines, J Boers, C Gullett, M Maher-Albertelli, R Mungara, L Savoye, CA White, F Morehead, S Person, M Sibymon, S Tanukonda, A Balasubramanyam, R Gaba, P Hollander, E Roe, P Burt, K Chionh, C Falck-Ytter, L Sayyed Kassem, M Tiktin, T Kulow, KA Stancil, J Iacoboni, MV Kononets, L Colosimo, R Goland, J Pring, L Alfano, C Hausheer, K Gumpel, A Kirpitch, JB Green, H AbouAssi, MN Feinglos, J English Jones, RP Zimmer, BM Satterwhite, K Evans Kreider, CR Thacker, CN Mariash, KJ Mather, A Lteif, V Pirics, D Aguillar, S Hurt, R Bergenstal, T Martens, J Hyatt, H Willis, W Konerza, K Kleeberger, R Passi, S Fortmann, M Herson, K Mularski, H Glauber, J Prihoda, B Ash, C Carlson, PA Ramey, E Schield, B Torgrimson-Ojerio, E Panos, S Sahnow, K Bays, K Berame, D Ghioni, J Gluth, K Schell, J Criscola, C Friason, S Nazarov, N Rassouli, R Puttnam, B Ojoawo, C Sanders-Jones, Z El-Haqq, A Kolli, J Meigs, A Dushkin, G Rocchio, M Yepes, H Dulin, M Cayford, A DeManbey, M Hillard, N Thangthaeng, L Gurry, R Kochis, E Raymond, V Ripley, V Aroda, A Loveland, M Hamm, HJ Florez, WM Valencia, S Casula, L Oropesa-Gonzalez, L Hue, AK Riccio Veliz, R Nieto-Martinez, M Gutt, A Ahmann, D Aby-Daniel, F Joarder, V Morimoto, C Sprague, D Yamashita, N Cady, N Rivera-Eschright, P Kirchhoff, B Morales Gomez, J Adducci, A Goncharova, SH Hox, M Matwichyna, NO Bermudez, L Broadwater, RR Ishii, DS Hsia, WT Cefalu, FL Greenway, C Waguespack, N Haynes, A Thomassie, B Bourgeois, C Hazlett, S Mudaliar, S Boeder, J Pettus, D Garcia-Acosta, S Maggs, C DeLue, E Castro, J Krakoff, JM Curtis, T Killean, E Joshevama, K Tsingine, T Karshner, J Albu, FX Pi-Sunyer, S Frances, C Maggio, J Bastawrose, X Gong, MA Banerji, D Lorber, NM Brown, DH Josephson, LL Thomas, M Tsovian, MH Jacobson, MM Mishko, MS Kirkman, JB Buse, J Dostou, K Bergamo, A Goley, JF Largay, S Guarda, J Cuffee, D Culmer, H Almeida, S Coffer, L Kiker, K Josey, WT Garvey, A Agne, S McCullars, RM Cohen, MC Rogge, K Kersey, S Lipp, MB Vonder Meulen, C Underkofler, S Steiner, E Cline, WH Herman, R Pop-Busui, MH Tan, A Waltje, A Katona, L Goodhall, R Eggleston, K Whitley, S Bule, N Kessler, E LaSalle, ER Seaquist, A Bantle, T Harindhanavudhi, B Redmon, M Coe, M Mech, A Taddese, L Lesne, L Kuechenmeister, V Shivaswamy, AL Morales, K Seipel, J Eggert, R Tillson, DS Schade, A Adolphe, M Burge, E Duran-Valdez, P August, MG Rodriguez, O Griffith, A Naik, Barbara I Gulanski, Heidi Krause-Steinrauf, Judith H Lichtman, Jennifer B Green, Colleen E Suratt, Hiba AbouAssi, Andrew J Ahmann, E Gonzalez Hattery, A Ideozu, G McPhee, SA Khan, JB Kimpel, HM Ismail, ME Larkin, M Magee, A Ressing, L Manandhar, F Mwicigi, V Lagari-Libhaber, A Cuadot, YJ Kendal, B Veciana, G Fry, A Dragg, B Gildersleeve, J Arceneaux, M Pavlionis, A Stallings, S Machineni, AL Cherrington, MCR Lawson, C Adkins, T Onadeko, M Razzaghi, C Lyon, R Penaloza, WI Sivitz, LK Knosp, S Bojescu, S Burbach, A Bancroft, FA Jamaleddin Ahmad, D Hernandez McGinnis, B Pucchetti, E Scripsick, A Zamorano, RA DeFronzo, E Cersosimo, M Abdul-Ghani, C Triplitt, D Juarez, RI Garza, H Verastiqui, C Puckett, P Raskin, C Rhee, LF Jordan, S Sao, L Osornio Walker, L Schnurr-Breen, RB Kreymer, D Sturgess, KM Utzschneider, SE Kahn, L Alarcon-Casas Wright, EJ Boyko, EC Tsai, DL Trence, S Trikudanathan, BN Fattaleh, BK Montgomery, KM Atkinson, A Kozedub, T Concepcion, C Moak, N Prikhodko, S Rhothisen, TA Elasy, L Shackelford, R Goidel, N Hinkle, C Lovell, J Lipps Hogan, JB McGill, T Schweiger, S Kissel, C Recklein, MJ Clifton, W Tamborlane, A Camp, B Gulanski, SE Inzucchi, M Alguard, P Gatcomb, K Lessard, L Iannone, A Montosa, E Magenheimer, J Fradkin, HB Burch, AA Bremer, DM Nathan, JM Lachin, H Krause-Steinrauf, N Younes, I Bebu, N Butera, CJ Buys, MR Gramzinski, SD Hall, E Kazemi, E Legowski, C Suratt, M Tripputi, A Arey, J Bethepu, P Mangat Dhaliwal, E Mesimer, M Steffes, J Seegmiller, A Saenger, V Arends, D Gabrielson, T Conner, J Huminik, A Scrymgeour, EZ Soliman, Y Pokharel, ZM Zhang, L Keasler, S Hensley, R Mihalcea, DJ Min, V Perez-Rosas, K Resnicow, H Shao, J Luchsinger, S Assuras, E Groessl, F Sakha, N Hillery, BM Everett, I Abdouch, G Bahtiyar, P Brantley, FE Broyles, G Canaris, P Copeland, JJ Craine, WL Fein, A Gliwa, L Hope, R Meiners, V Meiners, H O’Neal, JE Park, A Sacerdote, E Sledge, L Soni, J Steppel-Reznik, B Brooks-Worrell, CS Hampe, JP Palmer, A Shojaie, L Doner Lotenberg, JM Gallivan, and DM Tuncer
- Subjects
Diseases of the endocrine glands. Clinical endocrinology ,RC648-665 - Abstract
Introduction Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is a powerful risk factor for cardiovascular disease (CVD), conferring a greater relative risk in women than men. We sought to examine sex differences in cardiometabolic risk factors and management in the contemporary cohort represented by the Glycemia Reduction Approaches in Diabetes: A Comparative Effectiveness Study (GRADE).Research design and methods GRADE enrolled 5047 participants (1837 women, 3210 men) with T2DM on metformin monotherapy at baseline. The current report is a cross-sectional analysis of baseline data collected July 2013 to August 2017.Results Compared with men, women had a higher mean body mass index (BMI), greater prevalence of severe obesity (BMI≥40 kg/m2), higher mean LDL cholesterol, greater prevalence of low HDL cholesterol, and were less likely to receive statin treatment and achieve target LDL, with a generally greater prevalence of these risk factors in younger women. Women with hypertension were equally likely to achieve blood pressure targets as men; however, women were less likely to receive ACE inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers. Women were more likely to be divorced, separated or widowed, and had fewer years of education and lower incomes.Conclusions This contemporary cohort demonstrates that women with T2DM continue to have a greater burden of cardiometabolic and socioeconomic risk factors than men, particularly younger women. Attention to these persisting disparities is needed to reduce the burden of CVD in women.Trial registration number ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01794143)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
245. Die Wirkung von MOOCs und iMooX.at aus Sicht von Kursersteller:innen
- Author
-
Martin Ebner, Sarah Edelsbrunner, Maria Haas, Katharina Hohla-Sejkora, Philipp Leitner, Silvia Lipp, Bettina Mair, Sandra Schön, Iris Steinkellner, Ivana Stojcevic, and Charlotte Zwiauer
- Subjects
Education - Abstract
iMooX.at wird im Rahmen des Projekts „MooX – Die MOOC-Plattform als Service für alle österreichischen Universitäten“ (2020–2023) als nationale Plattform für Hochschulen ausgebaut. Im Beitrag werden bisherige Ergebnisse und Wirkungen des Projekts dargestellt. So wurden bereits 70 MOOCs durchgeführt (geplant waren 33). In problemzentrierten Interviews mit fünf Kursersteller:innen wurden zudem Wirkungen von MOOCs und iMooX.at als Plattform gesammelt. Kursersteller:innen bestätigen in einer Online-Befragung (n=17) im hohen Maße, dass iMooX.at zur Verbreitung von OER beiträgt und positive Wirkungen für unterschiedliche Gruppen hat. Dieses Projekt wurde am 1. Juni 2023 im Rahmen einer Online-Veranstaltung des BMBWF präsentiert. Die Präsentationsunterlagen finden Sie hier.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
246. Erfahrungen bei Studienstart und Aktivitäten der Universitäten zu MOOCs in Österreich
- Author
-
Martin Ebner, Bettina Mair, Walther Nagler, Sandra Schön, Iris Steinkellner, Ivana Stojcevic, and Silvia Lipp
- Subjects
Education - Abstract
Im Beitrag werden die Verbreitung und Nutzung von „Massive Open Online Courses“ (MOOCs) an österreichischen Hochschulen aus der Perspektive von Studierenden und Universitäten skizziert. Dazu wurden zwei Analysen durchgeführt. (1) Zum einen wurden Studienanfänger:innen der TU Graz zu ihren Erfahrungen mit Online-Kursen befragt (N=1.207). Die Ergebnisse zeigen einen deutlichen Zuwachs der Online-Lernvorerfahrungen, insbesondere im Vergleich vor und nach COVID-19. Zum anderen erfolgte (2) eine Analyse der aktuellen Leistungsvereinbarungen aller öffentlichen österreichischen Universitäten. Die Nennung der Begriffe MOOCs bzw. iMooX.at in mehr als der Hälfte der Leistungsvereinbarungen verdeutlicht den zunehmenden Stellenwert von MOOCs.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
247. Single crystal toroidal diamond anvils for high pressure experiments beyond 5 megabar.
- Author
-
Jenei, Zs, O'Bannon, EF, Weir, ST, Cynn, H, Lipp, MJ, and Evans, WJ
- Abstract
Static compression experiments over 4 Mbar are rare, yet critical for developing accurate fundamental physics and chemistry models, relevant to a range of topics including modeling planetary interiors. Here we show that focused ion beam crafted toroidal single-crystal diamond anvils with ~9.0 μm culets are capable of producing pressures over 5 Mbar. The toroidal surface prevents gasket outflow and provides a means to stabilize the central culet. We have reached a maximum pressure of ~6.15 Mbar using Re as in situ pressure marker, a pressure regime typically accessed only by double-stage diamond anvils and dynamic compression platforms. Optimizing single-crystal diamond anvil design is key for extending the pressure range over which studies can be performed in the diamond anvil cell.
- Published
- 2018
248. Heterogeneity within the PF-EPN-B ependymoma subgroup
- Author
-
Cavalli, Florence MG, Hübner, Jens-Martin, Sharma, Tanvi, Luu, Betty, Sill, Martin, Zapotocky, Michal, Mack, Stephen C, Witt, Hendrik, Lin, Tong, Shih, David JH, Ho, Ben, Santi, Mariarita, Emery, Lyndsey, Hukin, Juliette, Dunham, Christopher, McLendon, Roger E, Lipp, Eric S, Gururangan, Sridharan, Grossbach, Andrew, French, Pim, Kros, Johan M, van Veelen, Marie-Lise C, Rao, Amulya A Nageswara, Giannini, Caterina, Leary, Sarah, Jung, Shin, Faria, Claudia C, Mora, Jaume, Schüller, Ulrich, Alonso, Marta M, Chan, Jennifer A, Klekner, Almos, Chambless, Lola B, Hwang, Eugene I, Massimino, Maura, Eberhart, Charles G, Karajannis, Matthias A, Lu, Benjamin, Liau, Linda M, Zollo, Massimo, Ferrucci, Veronica, Carlotti, Carlos, Tirapelli, Daniela PC, Tabori, Uri, Bouffet, Eric, Ryzhova, Marina, Ellison, David W, Merchant, Thomas E, Gilbert, Mark R, Armstrong, Terri S, Korshunov, Andrey, Pfister, Stefan M, Taylor, Michael D, Aldape, Kenneth, Pajtler, Kristian W, Kool, Marcel, and Ramaswamy, Vijay
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Cancer Genomics ,Genetics ,Rare Diseases ,Human Genome ,Biotechnology ,Precision Medicine ,Brain Cancer ,Cancer ,Brain Disorders ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Age Factors ,Child ,Cohort Studies ,DNA Copy Number Variations ,DNA Methylation ,Ependymoma ,Female ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Humans ,Infratentorial Neoplasms ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Male ,Microarray Analysis ,Middle Aged ,Young Adult ,Posterior fossa ,Subgrouping ,PFB ,PFA ,Clustering ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
Posterior fossa ependymoma comprise three distinct molecular variants, termed PF-EPN-A (PFA), PF-EPN-B (PFB), and PF-EPN-SE (subependymoma). Clinically, they are very disparate and PFB tumors are currently being considered for a trial of radiation avoidance. However, to move forward, unraveling the heterogeneity within PFB would be highly desirable. To discern the molecular heterogeneity within PFB, we performed an integrated analysis consisting of DNA methylation profiling, copy-number profiling, gene expression profiling, and clinical correlation across a cohort of 212 primary posterior fossa PFB tumors. Unsupervised spectral clustering and t-SNE analysis of genome-wide methylation data revealed five distinct subtypes of PFB tumors, termed PFB1-5, with distinct demographics, copy-number alterations, and gene expression profiles. All PFB subtypes were distinct from PFA and posterior fossa subependymomas. Of the five subtypes, PFB4 and PFB5 are more discrete, consisting of younger and older patients, respectively, with a strong female-gender enrichment in PFB5 (age: p = 0.011, gender: p = 0.04). Broad copy-number aberrations were common; however, many events such as chromosome 2 loss, 5 gain, and 17 loss were enriched in specific subtypes and 1q gain was enriched in PFB1. Late relapses were common across all five subtypes, but deaths were uncommon and present in only two subtypes (PFB1 and PFB3). Unlike the case in PFA ependymoma, 1q gain was not a robust marker of poor progression-free survival; however, chromosome 13q loss may represent a novel marker for risk stratification across the spectrum of PFB subtypes. Similar to PFA ependymoma, there exists a significant intertumoral heterogeneity within PFB, with distinct molecular subtypes identified. Even when accounting for this heterogeneity, extent of resection remains the strongest predictor of poor outcome. However, this biological heterogeneity must be accounted for in future preclinical modeling and personalized therapies.
- Published
- 2018
249. Characterisation of the HEXITEC[formula omitted] X-ray spectroscopic imaging detector incorporating through-silicon via (TSV) technology
- Author
-
Veale, M.C., Booker, P., Church, I., Jones, L.L., Lipp, J., Schneider, A., Seller, P., Wilson, M.D., Chsherbakov, I., Kolesnikova, I., Lozinskaya, A., Novikov, V., Tolbanov, O., Tyazhev, A., and Zarubin, A.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
250. Neural prediction errors depend on how an expectation was formed
- Author
-
Saurels, Blake W., Frommelt, Tonya, Yarrow, Kielan, Lipp, Ottmar V., and Arnold, Derek H.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.