8,004 results on '"Brown, P R"'
Search Results
352. The reward positivity is sensitive to affective liking
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Brown, Darin R., Jackson, Trevor C. J., and Cavanagh, James F.
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- 2022
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353. Unveiling the microstructural evolution of carbon fibers derived from polyamide-6
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Love-Baker, Cole A., Harrell, Timothy M., Scherschel, Alexander, Gao, Zan, Song, Ningning, Brown, Kenneth R., Vautard, Frederic, Ivanov, Ilia, Klett, James, and Li, Xiaodong
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- 2023
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354. The smallest interacting universe
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Zini, Modjtaba Shokrian, Brown, Adam R., and Freedman, Michael
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- 2023
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355. Periodic optical variability and debris accretion in white dwarfs: a test for a causal connection
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Hallakoun, Na'ama, Maoz, Dan, Agol, Eric, Brown, Warren R., Dufour, Patrick, Farihi, Jay, Gänsicke, Boris T., Kilic, Mukremin, Kosakowski, Alekzander, Loeb, Abraham, Mazeh, Tsevi, and Mullally, Fergal
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Recent Kepler photometry has revealed that about half of white dwarfs (WDs) have periodic, low-level (~ 1e-4 - 1e-3), optical variations. Hubble Space Telescope (HST) ultraviolet spectroscopy has shown that up to about one half of WDs are actively accreting rocky planetary debris, as evidenced by the presence of photospheric metal absorption lines. We have obtained HST ultraviolet spectra of seven WDs that have been monitored for periodic variations, to test the hypothesis that these two phenomena are causally connected, i.e. that the optical periodic modulation is caused by WD rotation coupled with an inhomogeneous surface distribution of accreted metals. We detect photospheric metals in four out of the seven WDs. However, we find no significant correspondence between the existence of optical periodic variability and the detection of photospheric ultraviolet absorption lines. Thus the null hypothesis stands, that the two phenomena are not directly related. Some other source of WD surface inhomogeneity, perhaps related to magnetic field strength, combined with the WD rotation, or alternatively effects due to close binary companions, may be behind the observed optical modulation. We report the marginal detection of molecular hydrogen in WD J1949+4734, only the fourth known WD with detected H_2 lines. We also re-classify J1926+4219 as a carbon-rich He-sdO subdwarf., Comment: MNRAS, in press
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- 2017
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356. The Thin-Wall Approximation in Vacuum Decay: a Lemma
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Brown, Adam R.
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High Energy Physics - Theory - Abstract
The 'thin-wall approximation' gives a simple estimate of the decay rate of an unstable quantum field. Unfortunately, the approximation is uncontrolled. In this paper I show that there are actually two different thin-wall approximations and that they bracket the true decay rate: I prove that one is an upper bound and the other a lower bound. In the thin-wall limit, the two approximations converge. In the presence of gravity, a generalization of this lemma provides a simple sufficient condition for non-perturbative vacuum instability., Comment: technically contains 2 lemmas
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- 2017
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357. Kondo-Resonance Mediated Metal-Insulator Transition in GaAs Embedded with Erbium Arsenide Quantum Dots
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Zhang, W-D., Brown, E. R., Feldman, A. D., Harvey, T. E., and Mirin, R. P.
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Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons - Abstract
We report anomalous critical transport behavior in a GaAs structure containing a dense array of ErAs quantum dots. The structure displays a voltage (electric field)-controlled insulator-to-metal transition and strong hysteresis in the Kondo-like current-vs-temperature characteristic, with critical temperatures as high as 50 K. We attribute this behavior to a strong distributed Kondo resonance between the quantum dots after the Coulomb blockade of the array is lifted. This is consistent with a high sensitivity of the phase transition to a small external magnetic field that we have observed in the Voigt configuration, and a phenomenological model based on the RKKY interaction within a quantum dot and the cooperative Kondo-resonance amongst quantum dots., Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures
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- 2017
358. Simulating the performance of a distance-3 surface code in a linear ion trap
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Trout, Colin J., Li, Muyuan, Gutierrez, Mauricio, Wu, Yukai, Wang, Sheng-Tao, Duan, Luming, and Brown, Kenneth R
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Quantum Physics - Abstract
We explore the feasibility of implementing a small surface code with 9 data qubits and 8 ancilla qubits, commonly referred to as surface-17, using a linear chain of 171Yb+ ions. Two-qubit gates can be performed between any two ions in the chain with gate time increasing linearly with ion distance. Measurement of the ion state by fluorescence requires that the ancilla qubits be physically separated from the data qubits to avoid errors on the data due to scattered photons. We minimize the time required to measure one round of stabilizers by optimizing the mapping of the two-dimensional surface code to the linear chain of ions. We develop a physically motivated Pauli error model that allows for fast simulation and captures the key sources of noise in an ion trap quantum computer including gate imperfections and ion heating. Our simulations showed a consistent requirement of a two-qubit gate fidelity of > 99.9% for logical memory to have a better fidelity than physical two-qubit operations. Finally, we perform an analysis on the error subsets from the importance sampling method used to approximate the logical error rates in this paper to gain insight into which error sources are particularly detrimental to error correction.
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- 2017
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359. Optimized Surface Code Communication in Superconducting Quantum Computers
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Javadi-Abhari, Ali, Gokhale, Pranav, Holmes, Adam, Franklin, Diana, Brown, Kenneth R., Martonosi, Margaret, and Chong, Frederic T.
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Quantum Physics - Abstract
Quantum computing (QC) is at the cusp of a revolution. Machines with 100 quantum bits (qubits) are anticipated to be operational by 2020 [googlemachine,gambetta2015building], and several-hundred-qubit machines are around the corner. Machines of this scale have the capacity to demonstrate quantum supremacy, the tipping point where QC is faster than the fastest classical alternative for a particular problem. Because error correction techniques will be central to QC and will be the most expensive component of quantum computation, choosing the lowest-overhead error correction scheme is critical to overall QC success. This paper evaluates two established quantum error correction codes---planar and double-defect surface codes---using a set of compilation, scheduling and network simulation tools. In considering scalable methods for optimizing both codes, we do so in the context of a full microarchitectural and compiler analysis. Contrary to previous predictions, we find that the simpler planar codes are sometimes more favorable for implementation on superconducting quantum computers, especially under conditions of high communication congestion., Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, The 50th Annual IEEE/ACM International Symposium on Microarchitecture
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- 2017
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360. Robust two-qubit gates in a linear ion crystal using a frequency-modulated driving force
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Leung, Pak Hong, Landsman, Kevin A., Figgatt, Caroline, Linke, Norbert M., Monroe, Christopher, and Brown, Kenneth R.
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Physics - Atomic Physics ,Quantum Physics - Abstract
In an ion trap quantum computer, collective motional modes are used to entangle two or more qubits in order to execute multi-qubit logical gates. Any residual entanglement between the internal and motional states of the ions results in loss of fidelity, especially when there are many spectator ions in the crystal. We propose using a frequency-modulated (FM) driving force to minimize such errors. In simulation, we obtained an optimized FM two-qubit gate that can suppress errors to less than 0.01\% and is robust against frequency drifts over $\pm$1 kHz. Experimentally, we have obtained a two-qubit gate fidelity of $98.3(4)\%$, a state-of-the-art result for two-qubit gates with 5 ions.
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- 2017
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361. Magnetothermodynamics: Measuring equations of state in a relaxed magnetohydrodynamic plasma
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Kaur, M., Barbano, L. J., Suen-Lewis, E. M., Shrock, J. E., Light, A. D., Schaffner, D. A., and Brown, M. R.
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Physics - Plasma Physics - Abstract
We report the first measurements of equations of state of a fully relaxed magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) laboratory plasma. Parcels of magnetized plasma, called Taylor states, are formed in a coaxial magnetized plasma gun, and are allowed to relax and drift into a closed flux conserving volume. Density, ion temperature, and magnetic field are measured as a function of time as the Taylor states compress and heat. The theoretically predicted MHD and double adiabatic equations of state are compared to experimental measurements. We find that the MHD equation of state is inconsistent with our data., Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures
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- 2017
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362. Discovery of a Detached, Eclipsing 40 min Period Double White Dwarf Binary and a Friend: Implications for He+CO White Dwarf Mergers
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Brown, Warren R., Kilic, Mukremin, Kosakowski, Alekzander, and Gianninas, A.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We report the discovery of two detached double white dwarf (WD) binaries, SDSS J082239.546+304857.19 and SDSS J104336.275+055149.90, with orbital periods of 40 and 46 min, respectively. The 40 min system is eclipsing; it is composed of a 0.30 Msun and a 0.52 Msun WD. The 46 min system is a likely LISA verification binary. The short 20 Myr and ~34 Myr gravitational wave merger times of the two binaries imply that many more such systems have formed and merged over the age of the Milky Way. We update the estimated Milky Way He+CO WD binary merger rate and affirm our previously published result: He+CO WD binaries merge at a rate at least 40 times greater than the formation rate of stable mass-transfer AM~CVn binaries, and so the majority must have unstable mass-transfer. The implication is that spin-orbit coupling in He+CO WD mergers is weak, or perhaps nova-like outbursts drive He+CO WDs into merger as proposed by Shen., Comment: 11 pages, accepted to ApJ
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- 2017
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363. A Gemini Snapshot Survey for Double Degenerates
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Kilic, Mukremin, Brown, Warren R., Gianninas, A., Curd, Brandon, Bell, Keaton J., and Prieto, Carlos Allende
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results from a Gemini snapshot radial-velocity survey of 44 low-mass white dwarf candidates selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey spectroscopy. To find sub-hour orbital period binary systems, our time-series spectroscopy had cadences of 2 to 8 min over a period of 20-30 min. Through follow-up observations at Gemini and the MMT, we identify four double degenerate binary systems with periods ranging from 53 min to 7 h. The shortest period system, SDSS J123549.88+154319.3, was recently identified as a subhour period detached binary by Breedt and collaborators. Here we refine the orbital and physical parameters of this system. High-speed and time domain survey photometry observations do not reveal eclipses or other photometric effects in any of our targets. We compare the period distribution of these four systems with the orbital period distribution of known double white dwarfs; the median period decreases from 0.64 to 0.24 d for $M=0.3-0.5 M_{\odot}$ to $M<0.3 M_{\odot}$ white dwarfs. However, we do not find a statistically significant correlation between the orbital period and white dwarf mass., Comment: MNRAS, in press
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- 2017
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364. Hyperinflation
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Brown, Adam R.
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High Energy Physics - Theory ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
A model of cosmological inflation is proposed in which field space is a hyperbolic plane. The inflaton never slow-rolls, and instead orbits the bottom of the potential, buoyed by a centrifugal force. Though initial velocities redshift away during inflation, in negatively curved spaces angular momentum naturally starts exponentially large and remains relevant throughout. Quantum fluctuations produce perturbations that are adiabatic and approximately scale invariant; strikingly, in a certain parameter regime the perturbations can grow double-exponentially during horizon crossing., Comment: published as "Hyperbolic Inflation"
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- 2017
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365. Reassigning the CaH$^+$ 1$^{1}\Sigma\rightarrow$ 2$^{1}\Sigma$ vibronic transition with CaD$^+$
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Condoluci, John, Janardan, Smitha, Calvin, Aaron T., Rugango, Rene, Shu, Gang, and Brown, Kenneth R.
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Physics - Atomic Physics ,Physics - Chemical Physics - Abstract
We observe vibronic transitions in CaD$^+$ between the 1$^{1}\Sigma$ and 2$^{1}\Sigma$ electronic states by resonance enhanced multiphoton photodissociation spectroscopy in a Coulomb crystal. The vibronic transitions are compared with previous measurements on CaH$^+$. The result is a revised assignment of the CaH$^+$ vibronic levels and a disagreement with CASPT2 theoretical calculations by approximately 700 cm$^{-1}$., Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, comments welcome
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- 2017
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366. The Physical Nature of Subdwarf A Stars: White Dwarf Impostors
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Brown, Warren R., Kilic, Mukremin, and Gianninas, A.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We address the physical nature of subdwarf A-type (sdA) stars and their possible link to extremely low mass (ELM) white dwarfs (WDs). The two classes of objects are confused in low-resolution spectroscopy. However, colors and proper motions indicate that sdA stars are cooler and more luminous, and thus larger in radius, than published ELM WDs. We demonstrate that surface gravities derived from pure hydrogen models suffer a systematic ~1 dex error for sdA stars, likely explained by metal line blanketing below 9000 K. A detailed study of five eclipsing binaries with radial velocity orbital solutions and infrared excess establishes that these sdA stars are metal-poor ~1.2 Msun main sequence stars with ~0.8 Msun companions. While WDs must exist at sdA temperatures, only ~1% of a magnitude-limited sdA sample should be ELM WDs. We conclude that the majority of sdA stars are metal-poor A-F type stars in the halo, and that recently discovered pulsating ELM WD-like stars with no obvious radial velocity variations may be SX Phe variables, not pulsating WDs., Comment: 17 pages, ApJ accepted
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- 2017
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367. Fault Tolerance with Bare Ancillae for a [[7,1,3]] Code
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Li, Muyuan, Gutiérrez, Mauricio, David, Stanley E., Hernandez, Alonzo, and Brown, Kenneth R.
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Quantum Physics - Abstract
We present a [[7, 1, 3]] quantum error-correcting code that is able to achieve fault-tolerant syndrome measurement using one ancillary qubit per stabilizer for an error model of independent single-qubit Pauli errors. All single-qubit Pauli errors on the ancillary qubits propagate to form exclusively correctable errors on the data qubits. The situation changes for error models with two-qubit Pauli errors. We compare the level-1 logical error rates under two noise models: the standard Pauli symmetric depolarizing error model and an anisotropic error model. The anisotropic model is motivated by control errors on two-qubit gates commonly applied to trapped ion qubits. We find that one ancillary qubit per syndrome measurement is sufficient for fault-tolerance for the anisotropic error, but is not sufficient for the standard depolarizing errors. We then show how to achieve fault tolerance for the standard depolarizing errors by adding flag qubits to check for errors on select ancilary qubits. Our results on this [[7, 1, 3]] code demonstrates how physically motivated noise models may simplify fault-tolerent protocols.
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- 2017
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368. Irreducible polynomials over finite fields produced by composition of quadratics
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Heath-Brown, D. R. and Micheli, Giacomo
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Mathematics - Number Theory - Abstract
For a set $S$ of quadratic polynomials over a finite field, let $C$ be the (infinite) set of arbitrary compositions of elements in $S$. In this paper we show that there are examples with arbitrarily large $S$ such that every polynomial in $C$ is irreducible. As a second result, we give an algorithm to determine whether all the elements in $C$ are irreducible, using only $O( \#S (\log q)^3 q^{1/2} )$ operations.
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- 2017
369. Iteration of Quadratic Polynomials Over Finite Fields
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Heath-Brown, D. R.
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Mathematics - Number Theory ,Primary: 11T06 Secondary: 11A51, 37P05 - Abstract
For a finite field of odd cardinality $q$, we show that the sequence of iterates of $aX^2+c$, starting at $0$, always recurs after $O(q/\log\log q)$ steps. For $X^2+1$ the same is true for any starting value. We suggest that the traditional "Birthday Paradox" model is inappropriate for iterates of $X^3+c$, when $q$ is 2 mod 3., Comment: This revision acknowledges prior work by Juul, Kurlberg, Madhu and Tucker, and by Shao, proving results that are closely related to those of the current paper
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- 2017
370. The Second Law of Quantum Complexity
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Brown, Adam R. and Susskind, Leonard
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High Energy Physics - Theory ,General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology ,Quantum Physics - Abstract
We give arguments for the existence of a thermodynamics of quantum complexity that includes a "Second Law of Complexity". To guide us, we derive a correspondence between the computational (circuit) complexity of a quantum system of $K$ qubits, and the positional entropy of a related classical system with $2^K$ degrees of freedom. We also argue that the kinetic entropy of the classical system is equivalent to the Kolmogorov complexity of the quantum Hamiltonian. We observe that the expected pattern of growth of the complexity of the quantum system parallels the growth of entropy of the classical system. We argue that the property of having less-than-maximal complexity (uncomplexity) is a resource that can be expended to perform directed quantum computation. Although this paper is not primarily about black holes, we find a surprising interpretation of the uncomplexity-resource as the accessible volume of spacetime behind a black hole horizon., Comment: v2: minor improvements
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- 2017
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371. Examiner-examinee gender concordance does not impact ratings on the American Board of Surgery Vascular Surgery Certifying Examination.
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Li, Ruojia Debbie, Barry, Carol, Ibanez Moreno, Beatriz, Brown, Kellie R., Chaer, Rabih, Huber, Thomas S., Jones, Andrew, Lee, Jason T., Perler, Bruce A., Sheahan III, Malachi G., and Aulivola, Bernadette
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Implicit bias is a potential factor in the severity of examinee rating during oral examinations. Ratings may be impacted by examinee characteristics, such as gender, that are independent of examinee knowledge base, clinical judgment, or test-taking ability. The effects of examiner-examinee gender concordance in the Vascular Surgery Certifying Examination (VCE) have not been previously studied. We explored whether examiner ratings and likelihood of passing the examination were influenced by gender concordance among examiners and examinees. Data collected from examinees who first attempted the VCE between 2018 and 2023 were analyzed. There were 1005 examinees (69.3% male and 30.1% female) and 121 examiners (71.9% male, and 28.1% female). Linear mixed-effects models and generalized linear mixed-effects models were used to evaluate the effects of examinee and examiner gender on VCE ratings and likelihood of passing the examination. Examiner-examinee gender concordance had no significant impact on examiner ratings or likelihood of passing the examination. In addition, examinee gender alone had no significant impact on VCE rating or pass rates. Only Vascular Qualifying Examination scores explained more than 1% of the variance in total VCE scores for the gender model (F (1, 1003.5) = 71.08, P <.01, R
2 = 3%). Vascular Qualifying Examination scores were positively related to total VCE scores. Although implicit bias has the potential to impact examiner scoring, there is no evidence that this is the case with respect to gender in the VCE of the American Board of Surgery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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372. Incidence of Hypertriglyceridemia in Patients on Propofol, Clevidipine, or Both.
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Johns, Christopher B., Fleming, Travis W., Brown, Skyler R., Black, Rebekah B., and Rowe, A. Shaun
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- 2024
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373. Development of Two-Step Method for Fast Chloride MSR Neutronics.
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Lawson, Kyra and Brown, Nicholas R.
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This work presents neutronics models of a small and large fast-spectrum molten chloride-salt reactor. The models are similar to designs being pursued by industry, and they may serve as generic preconceptual and simplified neutronics models that provide information for decision making in licensing-related areas. The two models were created using Serpent, a Monte Carlo neutron transport code, and Moltres, a neutron diffusion core simulator tool. Specifically, this study focused on exploring the applicability of diffusion theory to fast molten salt reactor (MSR) models, the capabilities of an open-source, MSR-oriented simulation tool (Moltres), and optimal energy-group structures. The proposed two-step method involves group-constant generation with Serpent and a multigroup diffusion solution by Moltres. Three energy-group structures were applied. The accuracy of the solutions was determined through comparisons between the two-step and Monte Carlo flux and multiplication factor solutions. The findings indicated diffusion theory captures neutronics with minimal error for the large MSR and yielded best results with the 27-group structure. The 27-group structure yielded an average group flux error below 2% and k
eff agreement between diffusion and transport solutions within 30 pcm. The accuracy of the two-step method decreased for the very small (high-leakage) fast chloride MSR, but the neutronics were captured acceptably well with the 33-group structure. In addition to exploring the capabilities of Moltres, this work contributes to the sparse literature involving open-source models of fast-spectrum MSRs. Future work is noted as expanding the capabilities of the neutronics models to incorporate thermal hydraulics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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374. Surveillance of Feral Swine (Sus scrofa ) in the Western USA for Antibodies to Vesicular Stomatitis Virus, 2013–21.
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Haynes, Ellen, Cleveland, Christopher A., Brown, Vienna R., Pelzel-McCluskey, Angela M., Tell, Rachel M., and Stallknecht, David E.
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Vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) outbreaks periodically occur in livestock in the western US and are thought to originate from outside this country. Feral swine (Sus scrofa) have been identified as an amplifying host for vesicular stomatitis New Jersey virus (VSNJV) and have been used to better understand the epidemiology of this virus through serosurveillance. This study aimed to determine if antibodies to vesicular stomatitis Indiana virus (VSIV) and VSNJV were present in feral swine in the western US and to determine if seropositive animals were associated with areas of previously detected VSV in livestock. A total of 4,541 feral swine samples was tested using virus neutralization (VN); samples exhibiting neutralizing activity against one or more of the viruses were confirmed using competitive ELISA (cELISA). Eight sera exhibited neutralizing activity by VN assay and a single serum sample from an animal from Kinney County, Texas sampled in December 2019 tested positive for antibodies to VSIV by cELISA. This finding is supported by a local outbreak of VSIV in horses in the same county in June 2019. The low prevalence of antibodies against VSNJV and VSIV was unexpected but indicates that feral swine in the western US do not represent an endemic reservoir for either of these viruses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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375. Multiphysics Analysis of PLOFC and DLOFC Accidents in the HTGR-TR.
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Berens, Annie, Meehan, Nicholas, Fox, Mason, Lindsay, Isabelle, and Brown, Nicholas R.
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High-temperature, gas-cooled reactors (HTGRs) are promising advanced reactor designs. Leveraging passive safety features, higher core outlet temperatures, previous commercial operational experience, and potential coupling with nonelectrical systems, HTGRs present many advantages over traditional light water reactors and other advanced reactor designs. The High-Temperature, Gas-Cooled Test Reactor (HTGR-TR) is a point design developed by Idaho National Laboratory as a response to the need for the expansion of U.S. test reactor capabilities. The HTGR-TR was designed to serve as a test reactor for Generation-IV small modular prismatic block HTGRs and to provide irradiation data, two crucial contributions to the development of advanced reactors. As in any reactor design, it is necessary to understand the behavior of the reactor during accident scenarios to determine the overall safety of the design. Pressurized loss of forced cooling (PLOFC) and depressurized loss of forced cooling (DLOFC) are two accidents that can occur in HTGRs and that present challenges to decay heat removal. In order to understand the behavior of the fuel during these accidents, the resulting mechanical behavior and fission product migration in the fuel are evaluated. Using the HTGR-TR design, which utilizes tristructural isotropic (TRISO) fuel, a multiphysics analysis during the PLOFC and DLOFC transients was performed. This study utilizes neutronics, thermal hydraulics, and fuel performance modeling to analyze the behavior of TRISO particles during steady-state operation and the described transients. This analysis aims to characterize the hoop stress and strain during the transients, as well as predict fission product migration and radiological release. Due to the startup conditions of the HTGR-TR, the silicon carbide (SiC) layer for both of the transients and steady-state conditions are initially in compression for both the hoop stress and strain. The DLOFC transient at the beginning of cycle was the most challenging overall to the fuel, having the closest to tensile behavior and the closest to tensile strain. Because the integrity of the SiC layer was not challenged during any of the transients, the release of
90 Sr and137 Cs was found to be negligible. The PLOFC transient at the end of cycle resulted in the largest110m Ag release and subsequent radioactivity increase. However, the increase in radioactivity was minor when compared to typical operating conditions due to the relatively large diffusivity of110m Ag though SiC at normal operating temperatures. Highlights include Neutronics and thermal-hydraulic modeling generating steady-state and transient conditions for use in fuel performance analysis.2. Detailed BISON analysis demonstrating the excellent performance of TRISO fuel during PLOFC and DLOFC transients.3. Fuel behavior showing negligible fission product release. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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376. Students' Motivations, Value, and Decision to Participate in Service-Learning at the National FFA Days of Service
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Roberts, Richie, Terry, Robert, Brown, Nicholas R., and Ramsey, Jon W.
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As agricultural educators continue to seek methods of instruction to make learning impactful for students, service-learning has emerged as a desirable technique for meeting these educational objectives. A gap in the agricultural education literature exists, however, in terms of describing whether these learning experiences motivate students intrinsically. This investigation sought to describe FFA members' level of intrinsic motivation resulting from participation in a service-learning activity, specifically the 2013 National FFA Days of Service. Deci and Ryan's Self-Determination Theory (SDT) served as the theoretical base for understanding FFA members intrinsic motivation through three empirically based constructs--interest, value, and perceived choice. Results from the study indicate FFA members were interested in and valued their service-learning experience; however, they had varied views in terms of their choice to participate. Findings also indicate a congruency between tenets of service-learning and axioms of SDT. We, therefore, offer the Intrinsic Service Learning Model in hopes of assisting practitioners of this pedagogical technique with delivering an intrinsically motivated service-learning experience for agricultural education students.
- Published
- 2016
377. Assessment Practices for Advancing Transfer Student Success: Collaborating for Educational Change
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Association of American Colleges and Universities, Brown, Gary R., and Rhodes, Terrel L.
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America's institutions of higher education have been challenged to develop new strategies to improve the success of all students. With more and more students attending multiple institutions, improving the transfer process is key to ensuring all students succeed. AAC&U launched the Quality Collaboratives (QC) project in 2011 with support from Lumina Foundation and the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation in order to find ways to make transfer between institutions easier and more efficient and, more importantly, to make students' achievement of important learning outcomes, as measured by authentic assessments, the central metric that should guide transfer. Lumina's recently developed Degree Qualifications Profile (DQP) was an important tool in this larger movement away from credits as proxies for student learning toward a system in which genuine proficiency is the measure of student progress and success. The DQP is a framework describing the essential learning outcomes that both employers and faculty claim as critical for college graduates and the levels of achievement on these outcomes that students should be able to demonstrate at the associate, baccalaureate, and master's degree levels (see page 22, below). As part of AAC&U's Liberal Education and America's Promise (LEAP) signature initiative to ensure that all college students in the United States receive a liberal education, the QC project brought together twenty campuses and nine state university systems or state higher education commissions to collaborate and develop models that placed assessment of student learning at the center of the transfer process. This brief folio along with its more in-depth companion volume, "Collaboration for Student Transfer: A Nationwide Degree Qualifications Profile Experiment," describe ways to refocus student transfer on demonstrated student learning proficiencies as a primary basis for transfer student success. It is designed to help institutions interested in building successful cross-institutional collaborations to use the DQP to develop new approaches to advancing transfer student success and to assessing student learning. It begins with a flow chart that summarizes the main components of the successful cross-institutional collaborations that were developed by the QC institutions. The folio then charts key action steps in the process flow chart and lessons learned by these institutions through their implementation of these kinds of collaborative projects. [For a related report, see ED569339.]
- Published
- 2016
378. What Tutors Bring to Course Design: Introducing Political and Policy Theories to Disengaged Students
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Brown, Prudence R.
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This article provides a case study of tutor's reflection on practice leading to a different approach to teaching an introductory course on politics and policy at a major Australian university, aimed at better reaching disengaged students. The overhaul led to higher levels of constructive student engagement in the tutorials, resulting in improved student and learning outcomes. Tutors, with their broad face-to-face and individual contact, have the means to assess student engagement and understanding in ways not always available to lecturers. As such, they can support holistic curriculum development if they are seen as relevant stakeholders in this process. The article demonstrates the value of seeing tutorials and tutors as an integral consideration in curriculum development.
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- 2020
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379. Transition-Related Social Support of High School Students with Emotional and Behavioral Disorders
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Yeager, Kristopher Hawk, Morgan, Joseph John, Brown, Monica R., Higgins, Kyle, and Jackson, Iesha
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This article explores the roles of potential transition team members as expressed by students via a social support survey and semi-structured interviews. The sample included eight male students with EBD served primarily in self-contained special education settings at three high schools. Results from the survey indicated that students received most support from teachers and close friends even though support from parents was rated as most important. Additional themes emerged from interviews, including the overarching theme that students tended to prefer support from individuals who were caring, motivational, and personal. In many cases, students had negative perceptions or limited interaction with potential transition team members. Implications for practice and future research related to student-centered planning and stakeholder coordination are discussed.
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- 2020
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380. Omission and Othering: Constructing Autism on Community College Websites
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Nachman, Brett Ranon and Brown, Kirsten R.
- Abstract
Students with autism attend two-year colleges at a significantly greater rate than four-year institutions. As these prospective and current students engage with two-year colleges, websites are an important digital platform to assess inclusivity and campus climate. The digital environment is particularly important because many autistic individuals prefer to engage in written communication. We employed a critical content analysis to understand the digital campus climate at public two-year colleges (n = 94) by analyzing website content that colleges use to describe autism. Findings show that the digital campus climate was unwelcoming for the vast majority of prospective and current students with autism. Autism was omitted from 29.8% of institutional websites. Colleges located in the eastern or western areas of the United States had lower rates of omission. When references to autism were present, website content used medical and legal language to depict autistic students as deficient. Institutional websites othered students by objectifying autism and using volunteer or charity work to frame autism as outside of normalcy. Text written by autistic people (students, alumni, staff, or organizations) was absent from all but one institutions' website. Implications for practitioners include addressing institutionalized ableism by modifying websites to include autism-specific content, removing deficit narratives, and amplifying autistic agency by including material written by autistic individuals.
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- 2020
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381. Ableism and Assessment: Including Students with Disabilities
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Brown, Kirsten R. and Broido, Ellen M.
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In this chapter, we address accessibility of assessment. We focus on the process of assessment and offer guidelines for practitioners to consider as they design and implement assessments, analyze data, and use assessment data to make decisions. We explore these considerations through examples from recent multi-institutional studies.
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- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
382. The Community Engaged Physician: Teaching Social Accountability through Interprofessional Teamwork and Service-Learning
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Whisenant, Ebony B., Garba, Nana Aisha, Schneider, Gregory W., Camps-Romero, Eduardo, Lage, Onelia G., Pedoussaut, Maryse, Brown, David R., and Greer, Pedro J.
- Abstract
This chapter describes the goals and structure of a service-learning experience integrated into a medical education curriculum. The curricular innovation fosters student understanding of social accountability, interprofessional teamwork as well as social determinants of health and can serve as an educational model for training future providers.
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- 2020
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- View/download PDF
383. A Rapid Protocol for Generating Arthropod DNA Barcodes Suitable for Use with Undergraduate Students
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Brown, Grant R., Dagen, Claire, O'Donnell, Ben Reilly, and Graves, Jeff A.
- Abstract
We provide a protocol for rapid DNA extraction from spiders suitable for undergraduate practical sessions. Students who were previously naïve to the theory and laboratory technique of DNA barcoding were successfully able to extract and recover 29 DNA sequences from 16 species of small spiders in the family Linyphiidae. We anticipate that with careful selection of specimens, undergraduate students could participate in sessions which both benefit their professional development and further taxonomic understanding across a variety of organisms.
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- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
384. A T cell inflammatory phenotype is associated with autoimmune toxicity of the PI3K inhibitor duvelisib in chronic lymphocytic leukemia
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Gadi, Deepti, Griffith, Alec, Tyekucheva, Svitlana, Wang, Zixu, Rai, Vanessa, Vartanov, Alexander, Thrash, Emily, Fernandes, Stacey M., Lehmberg, Timothy Z., Lee, Brandon, Martindale, Stephen P., Machado, John-Hanson, Odejide, Oreofe, Armand, Philippe, Fisher, David C., Arnason, Jon, Davids, Matthew S., Lederer, James A., and Brown, Jennifer R.
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- 2022
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- View/download PDF
385. Policy inaction meets policy learning: four moments of non-implementation
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Brown, Prudence R. and Stark, Alastair
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- 2022
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386. Abuse-Deterrent Opioids: A Survey of Physician Beliefs, Behaviors, and Psychology
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Dasgupta, Nabarun, Brown, John R., Nocera, Maryalice, Lazard, Allison, Slavova, Svetla, and Freeman, Patricia R.
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- 2022
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387. Conservation agriculture practices have changed habitat use by rodent pests: implications for management of feral house mice
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Ruscoe, Wendy A., Brown, Peter R., Henry, Steve, van de Weyer, Nikki, Robinson, Freya, Hinds, Lyn A., and Singleton, Grant R.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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388. Cryptanalysis of 'MAKE'
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Brown Daniel R. L., Koblitz Neal, and LeGrow Jason T.
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public key cryptography ,key exchange ,matrix-based ,cryptanalysis ,94a60 ,11t71 ,15b33 ,Mathematics ,QA1-939 - Abstract
Rahman and Shpilrain proposed a Diffie–Hellman style key exchange based on a semidirect product of n×nn\times n-matrices over a finite field. We show that, using public information, an adversary can recover the agreed upon secret key by solving a system of n2{n}^{2} linear equations.
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- 2022
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389. Improvement in Parameters of Hematologic and Immunologic Function and Patient Well-being in the Phase III RESONATE Study of Ibrutinib Versus Ofatumumab in Patients With Previously Treated Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia/Small Lymphocytic Lymphoma
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Barrientos, Jacqueline C, O’Brien, Susan, Brown, Jennifer R, Kay, Neil E, Reddy, Nishitha M, Coutre, Steven, Tam, Constantine, Mulligan, Stephen, Jaeger, Ulrich, Devereux, Stephen, Pocock, Christopher, Robak, Tadeusz, Schuster, Stephen J, Schuh, Anna, Gill, Devinder, Bloor, Adrian, Dearden, Claire, Moreno, Carol, Cull, Gavin, Hamblin, Mike, Jones, Jeffrey A, Eckert, Karl, Solman, Isabelle G, Suzuki, Samuel, Hsu, Emily, James, Danelle F, Byrd, John C, and Hillmen, Peter
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Orphan Drug ,Lymphoma ,Cancer ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Rare Diseases ,Clinical Research ,Hematology ,Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Biomarkers ,Erythrocyte Indices ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Humans ,Leukemia ,Lymphocytic ,Chronic ,B-Cell ,Leukocyte Count ,Male ,Patient Acceptance of Health Care ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,Quality of Life ,Recurrence ,Symptom Assessment ,Treatment Outcome ,Bruton's tyrosine kinase ,Disease-related symptoms ,Fatigue ,Quality of life ,Relapsed/refractory CLL/SLL ,Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Oncology and carcinogenesis - Abstract
BackgroundIbrutinib compared with ofatumumab significantly improves progression-free and overall survival in patients with previously treated chronic lymphocytic leukemia/small lymphocytic lymphoma (CLL/SLL).Patients and methodsMeasures of well-being were assessed in RESONATE, where previously treated patients with CLL/SLL were randomized to receive ibrutinib 420 mg/day (n = 195) or ofatumumab (n = 196) for up to 24 weeks. Endpoints included hematologic function, Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-Fatigue (FACIT-F), disease-related symptoms, European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaires Core 30 (EORTC QLQ-C30), and medical resource utilization.ResultsWith up to 24 months' follow-up (median, 16.4 months), 79% of cytopenic patients showed sustained hematologic improvement (82% with improved platelet count, 69% with improved hemoglobin) on ibrutinib versus 43% on ofatumumab (P < .0001). Higher rates of clinically meaningful improvement were demonstrated with ibrutinib versus ofatumumab for FACIT-F and EORTC global health. Greater improvement was observed in disease-related weight loss, fatigue, night sweats, and abdominal discomfort with ibrutinib versus ofatumumab. Hospitalizations in the first 30 days occurred less frequently with ibrutinib than ofatumumab (0.087 vs. 0.184 events/patient; P = .0198). New-onset diarrhea was infrequent with ibrutinib after the first 6 months (47% at ≤6 months vs. 5% at 12-18 months). With ibrutinib, grade ≥ 3 hypertension occurred in 6%, grade ≥ 3 atrial fibrillation in 4%, major hemorrhage in 2%, and tumor lysis syndrome in 1% of patients.ConclusionIbrutinib led to significant improvements in hematologic function and disease symptomatology versus ofatumumab, and can restore quality of life while prolonging survival in relapsed/refractory CLL/SLL.
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- 2018
390. HIV vaccine candidate activation of hypoxia and the inflammasome in CD14+ monocytes is associated with a decreased risk of SIVmac251 acquisition
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Vaccari, Monica, Fourati, Slim, Gordon, Shari N, Brown, Dallas R, Bissa, Massimilano, Schifanella, Luca, Silva de Castro, Isabela, Doster, Melvin N, Galli, Veronica, Omsland, Maria, Fujikawa, Dai, Gorini, Giacomo, Liyanage, Namal PM, Trinh, Hung V, McKinnon, Katherine M, Foulds, Kathryn E, Keele, Brandon F, Roederer, Mario, Koup, Richard A, Shen, Xiaoying, Tomaras, Georgia D, Wong, Marcus P, Munoz, Karissa J, Gach, Johannes S, Forthal, Donald N, Montefiori, David C, Venzon, David J, Felber, Barbara K, Rosati, Margherita, Pavlakis, George N, Rao, Mangala, Sekaly, Rafick-Pierre, and Franchini, Genoveffa
- Subjects
Medical Microbiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Immunology ,Vaccine Related (AIDS) ,Genetics ,Vaccine Related ,Immunization ,Prevention ,HIV/AIDS ,Good Health and Well Being ,AIDS Vaccines ,Animals ,Antibody Formation ,Biomarkers ,CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes ,Hypoxia ,Inflammasomes ,Inflammation ,Killer Cells ,Natural ,Lipopolysaccharide Receptors ,Macaca mulatta ,Monocytes ,Receptors ,CCR5 ,Risk Factors ,Simian Immunodeficiency Virus ,T-Lymphocytes ,Helper-Inducer ,Vaccines ,DNA ,Simian immunodeficiency virus ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
Qualitative differences in the innate and adaptive responses elicited by different HIV vaccine candidates have not been thoroughly investigated. We tested the ability of the Aventis Pasteur live recombinant canarypox vector (ALVAC)-SIV, DNA-SIV and Ad26-SIV vaccine prime modalities together with two ALVAC-SIV + gp120 protein boosts to reduce the risk of SIVmac251 acquisition in rhesus macaques. We found that the DNA and ALVAC prime regimens were effective, but the Ad26 prime was not. The activation of hypoxia and the inflammasome in CD14+CD16- monocytes, gut-homing CCR5-negative CD4+ T helper 2 (TH2) cells and antibodies to variable region 2 correlated with a decreased risk of SIVmac251 acquisition. By contrast, signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 activation in CD16+ monocytes was associated with an increased risk of virus acquisition. The Ad26 prime regimen induced the accumulation of CX3CR1+CD163+ macrophages in lymph nodes and of long-lasting CD4+ TH17 cells in the gut and lungs. Our data indicate that the selective engagement of monocyte subsets following a vaccine prime influences long-term immunity, uncovering an unexpected association of CD14+ innate monocytes with a reduced risk of SIVmac251 acquisition.
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- 2018
391. Proteasomal degradation of the histone acetyl transferase p300 contributes to beta-cell injury in a diabetes environment.
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Ruiz, Lucie, Gurlo, Tatyana, Ravier, Magalie A, Wojtusciszyn, Anne, Mathieu, Julia, Brown, Matthew R, Broca, Christophe, Bertrand, Gyslaine, Butler, Peter C, Matveyenko, Aleksey V, Dalle, Stéphane, and Costes, Safia
- Subjects
Animals ,Mice ,Inbred C57BL ,Humans ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Melatonin ,Proteasome Endopeptidase Complex ,Glucose ,Receptors ,Melatonin ,Histones ,RNA ,Messenger ,Inflammation Mediators ,Cytokines ,Signal Transduction ,Apoptosis ,Acetylation ,Male ,Insulin-Secreting Cells ,E1A-Associated p300 Protein ,Proteolysis ,Diabetes ,Genetics ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Metabolic and Endocrine ,Mice ,Inbred C57BL ,Receptors ,RNA ,Messenger ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Biochemistry and Cell Biology - Abstract
In type 2 diabetes, amyloid oligomers, chronic hyperglycemia, lipotoxicity, and pro-inflammatory cytokines are detrimental to beta-cells, causing apoptosis and impaired insulin secretion. The histone acetyl transferase p300, involved in remodeling of chromatin structure by epigenetic mechanisms, is a key ubiquitous activator of the transcriptional machinery. In this study, we report that loss of p300 acetyl transferase activity and expression leads to beta-cell apoptosis, and most importantly, that stress situations known to be associated with diabetes alter p300 levels and functional integrity. We found that proteasomal degradation is the mechanism subserving p300 loss in beta-cells exposed to hyperglycemia or pro-inflammatory cytokines. We also report that melatonin, a hormone produced in the pineal gland and known to play key roles in beta-cell health, preserves p300 levels altered by these toxic conditions. Collectively, these data imply an important role for p300 in the pathophysiology of diabetes.
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- 2018
392. THz Imaging System for in vivo Human Cornea
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Sung, Shijun, Selvin, Skyler, Bajwa, Neha, Chantra, Somporn, Nowroozi, Bryan, Garritano, James, Goell, Jacob, Li, Alexander D, Deng, Sophie X, Brown, Elliott R, Grundfest, Warren S, and Taylor, Zachary D
- Subjects
Communications Engineering ,Engineering ,Atomic ,Molecular and Optical Physics ,Physical Sciences ,Biomedical Imaging ,Bioengineering ,Eye Disease and Disorders of Vision ,4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,Eye ,Biological and medical imaging ,clinical instruments ,medical diagnostics ,terahertz (THz) imaging of cornea ,THz imaging of cornea ,Optical Physics ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Communications engineering ,Atomic ,molecular and optical physics - Abstract
Terahertz (THz) imaging of corneal tissue water content (CTWC) is a proposed method for early, accurate detection and study of corneal diseases. Despite promising results from ex vivo and in vivo cornea studies, interpretation of the reflectivity data is confounded by the contact between corneal tissue and rigid dielectric window used to flatten the imaging field. This work develops a novel imaging system and image reconstruction methods specifically for nearly spherical targets such as human cornea. A prototype system was constructed using a 650 GHz multiplier source and Schottky diode detector. Resolution and imaging field strength measurement from characterization targets correlate well with those predicted by the quasioptical theory and physical optics analysis. Imaging experiments with corneal phantoms and ex vivo corneas demonstrate the hydration sensitivity of the imaging system and reliable measurement of CTWC. We present successful acquisition of non-contact THz images of in vivo human cornea, and discuss strategies for optimizing the imaging system design for clinical use.
- Published
- 2018
393. Novel genetic associations for blood pressure identified via gene-alcohol interaction in up to 570K individuals across multiple ancestries.
- Author
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Feitosa, Mary F, Kraja, Aldi T, Chasman, Daniel I, Sung, Yun J, Winkler, Thomas W, Ntalla, Ioanna, Guo, Xiuqing, Franceschini, Nora, Cheng, Ching-Yu, Sim, Xueling, Vojinovic, Dina, Marten, Jonathan, Musani, Solomon K, Li, Changwei, Bentley, Amy R, Brown, Michael R, Schwander, Karen, Richard, Melissa A, Noordam, Raymond, Aschard, Hugues, Bartz, Traci M, Bielak, Lawrence F, Dorajoo, Rajkumar, Fisher, Virginia, Hartwig, Fernando P, Horimoto, Andrea RVR, Lohman, Kurt K, Manning, Alisa K, Rankinen, Tuomo, Smith, Albert V, Tajuddin, Salman M, Wojczynski, Mary K, Alver, Maris, Boissel, Mathilde, Cai, Qiuyin, Campbell, Archie, Chai, Jin Fang, Chen, Xu, Divers, Jasmin, Gao, Chuan, Goel, Anuj, Hagemeijer, Yanick, Harris, Sarah E, He, Meian, Hsu, Fang-Chi, Jackson, Anne U, Kähönen, Mika, Kasturiratne, Anuradhani, Komulainen, Pirjo, Kühnel, Brigitte, Laguzzi, Federica, Luan, Jian'an, Matoba, Nana, Nolte, Ilja M, Padmanabhan, Sandosh, Riaz, Muhammad, Rueedi, Rico, Robino, Antonietta, Said, M Abdullah, Scott, Robert A, Sofer, Tamar, Stančáková, Alena, Takeuchi, Fumihiko, Tayo, Bamidele O, van der Most, Peter J, Varga, Tibor V, Vitart, Veronique, Wang, Yajuan, Ware, Erin B, Warren, Helen R, Weiss, Stefan, Wen, Wanqing, Yanek, Lisa R, Zhang, Weihua, Zhao, Jing Hua, Afaq, Saima, Amin, Najaf, Amini, Marzyeh, Arking, Dan E, Aung, Tin, Boerwinkle, Eric, Borecki, Ingrid, Broeckel, Ulrich, Brown, Morris, Brumat, Marco, Burke, Gregory L, Canouil, Mickaël, Chakravarti, Aravinda, Charumathi, Sabanayagam, Ida Chen, Yii-Der, Connell, John M, Correa, Adolfo, de Las Fuentes, Lisa, de Mutsert, Renée, de Silva, H Janaka, Deng, Xuan, Ding, Jingzhong, Duan, Qing, Eaton, Charles B, and Ehret, Georg
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InterAct Consortium ,Humans ,Hypertension ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Cohort Studies ,Pedigree ,Alcohol Drinking ,Blood Pressure ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Middle Aged ,Continental Population Groups ,Female ,Male ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Young Adult ,Gene-Environment Interaction ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Heavy alcohol consumption is an established risk factor for hypertension; the mechanism by which alcohol consumption impact blood pressure (BP) regulation remains unknown. We hypothesized that a genome-wide association study accounting for gene-alcohol consumption interaction for BP might identify additional BP loci and contribute to the understanding of alcohol-related BP regulation. We conducted a large two-stage investigation incorporating joint testing of main genetic effects and single nucleotide variant (SNV)-alcohol consumption interactions. In Stage 1, genome-wide discovery meta-analyses in ≈131K individuals across several ancestry groups yielded 3,514 SNVs (245 loci) with suggestive evidence of association (P < 1.0 x 10-5). In Stage 2, these SNVs were tested for independent external replication in ≈440K individuals across multiple ancestries. We identified and replicated (at Bonferroni correction threshold) five novel BP loci (380 SNVs in 21 genes) and 49 previously reported BP loci (2,159 SNVs in 109 genes) in European ancestry, and in multi-ancestry meta-analyses (P < 5.0 x 10-8). For African ancestry samples, we detected 18 potentially novel BP loci (P < 5.0 x 10-8) in Stage 1 that warrant further replication. Additionally, correlated meta-analysis identified eight novel BP loci (11 genes). Several genes in these loci (e.g., PINX1, GATA4, BLK, FTO and GABBR2) have been previously reported to be associated with alcohol consumption. These findings provide insights into the role of alcohol consumption in the genetic architecture of hypertension.
- Published
- 2018
394. Somatic cell fate maintenance in mouse fetal testes via autocrine/paracrine action of AMH and activin B
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Rodriguez, Karina F., Brown, Paula R., Amato, Ciro M., Nicol, Barbara, Liu, Chia-Feng, Xu, Xin, and Yao, Humphrey Hung-Chang
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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395. An intrinsic temporal order of c-JUN N-terminal phosphorylation regulates its activity by orchestrating co-factor recruitment
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Waudby, Christopher A., Alvarez-Teijeiro, Saul, Josue Ruiz, E., Suppinger, Simon, Pinotsis, Nikos, Brown, Paul R., Behrens, Axel, Christodoulou, John, and Mylona, Anastasia
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- 2022
- Full Text
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396. Inferring mammalian tissue-specific regulatory conservation by predicting tissue-specific differences in open chromatin
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Kaplow, Irene M., Schäffer, Daniel E., Wirthlin, Morgan E., Lawler, Alyssa J., Brown, Ashley R., Kleyman, Michael, and Pfenning, Andreas R.
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- 2022
- Full Text
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397. Ad libitum consumption of protein- or peptide-sucrose solutions stimulates egg formation by prolonging the vitellogenic phase of oogenesis in anautogenous mosquitoes
- Author
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Harrison, Ruby E., Chen, Kangkang, South, Lilith, Lorenzi, Ange, Brown, Mark R., and Strand, Michael R.
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- 2022
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398. Multi-level cellular and functional annotation of single-cell transcriptomes using scPipeline
- Author
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Mikolajewicz, Nicholas, Gacesa, Rafael, Aguilera-Uribe, Magali, Brown, Kevin R., Moffat, Jason, and Han, Hong
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
399. Early IFN-β administration protects cigarette smoke exposed mice against lethal influenza virus infection without increasing lung inflammation
- Author
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Wu, Wenxin, Tian, Lili, Zhang, Wei, Booth, J. Leland, Ritchey, Jerry William, Wu, Shuhua, Xu, Chao, Brown, Brent R., and Metcalf, Jordan P.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
400. Adaptation to genome decay in the structure of the smallest eukaryotic ribosome
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Nicholson, David, Salamina, Marco, Panek, Johan, Helena-Bueno, Karla, Brown, Charlotte R., Hirt, Robert P., Ranson, Neil A., and Melnikov, Sergey V.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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