1,875 results on '"P. DEJONG"'
Search Results
352. Putting Technologies Used for Clinical Care and Education in Context
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Hilty, Donald M. and DeJong, Sandra
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- 2018
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353. Prognostic factors of disease-free and overall survival in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma undergoing partial hepatectomy in curative intent
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Lurje, Georg, Bednarsch, Jan, Czigany, Zoltan, Amygdalos, Iakovos, Meister, Franziska, Schöning, Wenzel, Ulmer, Tom Florian, Foerster, Martin, Dejong, Cornelis, and Neumann, Ulf Peter
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- 2018
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354. Interdepartmental Spread of Innovations: A Multicentre Study of the Enhanced Recovery After Surgery Programme
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de Groot, Jeanny J. A., Maessen, José M. C., Dejong, Cornelis H. C., Winkens, Bjorn, Kruitwagen, Roy F. P. M., Slangen, Brigitte F. M., van der Weijden, Trudy, and on behalf of all the members of the study group
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- 2018
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355. Oligometastasierung beim kolorektalen Karzinom – moderne Therapiekonzepte
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Binnebösel, M., Lambertz, A., Dejong, K., and Neumann, U. P.
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- 2018
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356. A qualitative study exploring child marriage practices among Syrian conflict-affected populations in Lebanon
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Rima Mourtada, Jennifer Schlecht, and Jocelyn DeJong
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Conflict ,Displacement ,Syrian refugees ,Early marriage ,Child marriage ,Lebanon ,Special situations and conditions ,RC952-1245 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract Background Recent reports have suggested that child marriage among Syrians may be increasing as a result of displacement and conflict. This study sought to gather qualitative data about the factors that promote child marriage practices among Syrian refugees in Al Marj area in the Bekaa valley, Lebanon, where the majority of Syrian refugees have settled in Lebanon. The second aim of this study was to generate recommendations on how to mitigate the drivers and consequences of child marriage practices based on the findings. Methods Eight focus group discussions were conducted separately with married and unmarried young women and mothers and fathers of married and unmarried women. Furthermore, researchers conducted 11 key informant interviews with service providers and stakeholders to understand how conflict and displacement influenced marriage practices of Syrian refugees in Al Marj community. Results Although child marriage was a common practice in pre-conflict Syria, new factors seem to contribute to a higher risk of child marriage among Syrian refugees in Lebanon. Respondents cited conflict- and displacement-related safety issues and feeling of insecurity, the worsening of economic conditions, and disrupted education for adolescent women as driving factors. Service providers, young women, and parents also reported changes in some marriage practices, including a shorter engagement period, lower bride price, change in cousin marriage practices, and a reduced age at marriage. Conclusions Recommendations for interventions to mitigate the drivers of child marriage and its negative consequences should be built on a clear understanding of the local refugee context and the drivers of child marriage in refugee settings. Interventions should involve multiple stakeholders, they should be adjusted to target each specific context, age group and marital status. For these interventions to be effective, they should be addressed concurrently, and they should be delivered in a culturally sensitive and practical manner.
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- 2017
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357. Young lives disrupted: gender and well-being among adolescent Syrian refugees in Lebanon
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Jocelyn DeJong, Farah Sbeity, Jennifer Schlecht, Manale Harfouche, Rouham Yamout, Fouad M. Fouad, Seema Manohar, and Courtland Robinson
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Refugee ,Adolescent ,Youth ,Gender ,Reproductive health ,Well being ,Special situations and conditions ,RC952-1245 ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract Background The conflict in Syria that began in 2011 has resulted in the exodus of over 5 million Syrian refugees to neighbouring countries, with more than one million refugees currently registered by UNHCR in Lebanon. While some are living in tented settlements, the majority are living in strained conditions in rented accommodation or collective shelters in the Bekaa Valley next to Syria. Adolescents are particularly vulnerable in any crisis. In 2013–4, the American University in Beirut in collaboration with the Women’s Refugee Commission, Johns Hopkins and Save the Children, sought to understand the specific experiences of very young adolescents, those 10–14 years of age, in this protracted crisis context. Methods The study was conducted in 2014 in Barelias and Qabelias – two urban areas located close to each other in the Beka’a valley that has a large concentration of Syrian refugees. Focus group discussions (FGDs), including community mapping and photo elicitation, were conducted with 10–12 and 13–14 year old Syrian refugee adolescents, in order to obtain information about their experiences and perspectives. FGDs were also implemented with 15–16 year old Syrian refugees and separately also with adult refugees, to consider their perspectives on the needs and risks of these adolescents. Results A total of 16 FGD (8 for each sex, with 6–9 participants in each) were conducted in Arabic across the two sites, with 59 female participants and 59 male participants. The experiences and risks faced by these adolescents were significantly impacted by economic strain and loss of educational opportunities during displacement, and only a minority of adolescents in the study reported attending school. Additionally, on-going protection risks for girls were felt to be higher due to the crisis and displacement. In Lebanon this has resulted in increased risks of child marriage and limitations in mobility for adolescent girls. Adolescents, themselves expressed tensions with their Lebanese counterparts and feared verbal attacks and beatings from school-aged Lebanese male youth. Conclusions Families and adolescents have been dramatically affected by the conflict in Syria, and the resulting forced displacement. The loss of educational opportunities is perhaps the most significant effect, with long-term devastating outcomes. Additionally, the futures of Syrian girls are deeply affected by new protection concerns, particularly as they are exposed to an unfamiliar and more liberal society in Lebanon. Child marriage and limitations in their mobility – particularly for girls - are presented by families as coping strategies to these risks. Programming is needed to ensure sustained education access for all adolescents, and to educate very young adolescents and their parents on managing their own health and well-being, given the multiple strains. More effort is needed to encourage positive interaction between adolescent Lebanese and adolescent Syrian refugees.
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- 2017
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358. Enteroendocrine L Cells Sense LPS after Gut Barrier Injury to Enhance GLP-1 Secretion
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Lorène J. Lebrun, Kaatje Lenaerts, Dorien Kiers, Jean-Paul Pais de Barros, Naig Le Guern, Jiri Plesnik, Charles Thomas, Thibaut Bourgeois, Cornelis H.C. Dejong, Matthijs Kox, Inca H.R. Hundscheid, Naim Akhtar Khan, Stéphane Mandard, Valérie Deckert, Peter Pickkers, Daniel J. Drucker, Laurent Lagrost, and Jacques Grober
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Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Summary: Glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) is a hormone released from enteroendocrine L cells. Although first described as a glucoregulatory incretin hormone, GLP-1 also suppresses inflammation and promotes mucosal integrity. Here, we demonstrate that plasma GLP-1 levels are rapidly increased by lipopolysaccharide (LPS) administration in mice via a Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4)-dependent mechanism. Experimental manipulation of gut barrier integrity after dextran sodium sulfate treatment, or via ischemia/reperfusion experiments in mice, triggered a rapid rise in circulating GLP-1. This phenomenon was detected prior to measurable changes in inflammatory status and plasma cytokine and LPS levels. In human subjects, LPS administration also induced GLP-1 secretion. Furthermore, GLP-1 levels were rapidly increased following the induction of ischemia in the human intestine. These findings expand traditional concepts of enteroendocrine L cell biology to encompass the sensing of inflammatory stimuli and compromised mucosal integrity, linking glucagon-like peptide secretion to gut inflammation. : Lebrun et al. demonstrate that enteroendocrine L cells sense lipopolysaccharides (pro-inflammatory bacterial compounds) after gut injury and respond by secreting glucagon-like peptide 1. These findings expand concepts of L cell function to include roles as both a nutrient and pathogen sensor, linking glucagon-like peptide secretion to gut inflammation. Keywords: glucagon-like peptide 1, lipopolysaccharides, enteroendocrine cells, TLR4, gut injury, intestinal ischemia, inflammation
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- 2017
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359. Comparative analysis of chemical similarity methods for modular natural products with a hypothetical structure enumeration algorithm
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Michael A. Skinnider, Chris A. Dejong, Brian C. Franczak, Paul D. McNicholas, and Nathan A. Magarvey
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Chemical similarity ,Natural products ,Chemical fingerprints ,Chemical structure enumeration ,Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Abstract Natural products represent a prominent source of pharmaceutically and industrially important agents. Calculating the chemical similarity of two molecules is a central task in cheminformatics, with applications at multiple stages of the drug discovery pipeline. Quantifying the similarity of natural products is a particularly important problem, as the biological activities of these molecules have been extensively optimized by natural selection. The large and structurally complex scaffolds of natural products distinguish their physical and chemical properties from those of synthetic compounds. However, no analysis of the performance of existing methods for molecular similarity calculation specific to natural products has been reported to date. Here, we present LEMONS, an algorithm for the enumeration of hypothetical modular natural product structures. We leverage this algorithm to conduct a comparative analysis of molecular similarity methods within the unique chemical space occupied by modular natural products using controlled synthetic data, and comprehensively investigate the impact of diverse biosynthetic parameters on similarity search. We additionally investigate a recently described algorithm for natural product retrobiosynthesis and alignment, and find that when rule-based retrobiosynthesis can be applied, this approach outperforms conventional two-dimensional fingerprints, suggesting it may represent a valuable approach for the targeted exploration of natural product chemical space and microbial genome mining. Our open-source algorithm is an extensible method of enumerating hypothetical natural product structures with diverse potential applications in bioinformatics.
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- 2017
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360. Colonic infusions of short-chain fatty acid mixtures promote energy metabolism in overweight/obese men: a randomized crossover trial
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Emanuel E. Canfora, Christina M. van der Beek, Johan W. E. Jocken, Gijs H. Goossens, Jens J. Holst, Steven W. M. Olde Damink, Kaatje Lenaerts, Cornelis H. C. Dejong, and Ellen E. Blaak
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Short-chain fatty acids (SCFA), formed by microbial fermentation, are believed to be involved in the aetiology of obesity and diabetes. This study investigated the effects of colonic administration of physiologically relevant SCFA mixtures on human substrate and energy metabolism. In this randomized, double-blind, crossover study, twelve normoglycaemic men (BMI 25–35 kg/m2) underwent four investigational days, during which SCFA mixtures (200 mmol/L) high in either acetate (HA), propionate (HP), butyrate (HB) or placebo (PLA) were rectally administered during fasting and postprandial conditions (oral glucose load). Before and for two hours after colonic infusions, indirect calorimetry was performed and blood samples were collected. All three SCFA mixtures increased fasting fat oxidation (P
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- 2017
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361. Minimally invasive versus open distal pancreatectomy (LEOPARD): study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
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Thijs de Rooij, Jony van Hilst, Jantien A. Vogel, Hjalmar C. van Santvoort, Marieke T. de Boer, Djamila Boerma, Peter B. van den Boezem, Bert A. Bonsing, Koop Bosscha, Peter-Paul Coene, Freek Daams, Ronald M. van Dam, Marcel G. Dijkgraaf, Casper H. van Eijck, Sebastiaan Festen, Michael F. Gerhards, Bas Groot Koerkamp, Jeroen Hagendoorn, Erwin van der Harst, Ignace H. de Hingh, Cees H. Dejong, Geert Kazemier, Joost Klaase, Ruben H. de Kleine, Cornelis J. van Laarhoven, Daan J. Lips, Misha D. Luyer, I. Quintus Molenaar, Vincent B. Nieuwenhuijs, Gijs A. Patijn, Daphne Roos, Joris J. Scheepers, George P. van der Schelling, Pascal Steenvoorde, Rutger-Jan Swijnenburg, Jan H. Wijsman, Moh’d Abu Hilal, Olivier R. Busch, Marc G. Besselink, and for the Dutch Pancreatic Cancer Group
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Minimally invasive ,Laparoscopic ,Robot-assisted ,Distal pancreatectomy ,Pancreatic surgery ,Pancreatic cancer ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Background Observational cohort studies have suggested that minimally invasive distal pancreatectomy (MIDP) is associated with better short-term outcomes compared with open distal pancreatectomy (ODP), such as less intraoperative blood loss, lower morbidity, shorter length of hospital stay, and reduced total costs. Confounding by indication has probably influenced these findings, given that case-matched studies failed to confirm the superiority of MIDP. This accentuates the need for multicenter randomized controlled trials, which are currently lacking. We hypothesize that time to functional recovery is shorter after MIDP compared with ODP even in an enhanced recovery setting. Methods LEOPARD is a randomized controlled, parallel-group, patient-blinded, multicenter, superiority trial in all 17 centers of the Dutch Pancreatic Cancer Group. A total of 102 patients with symptomatic benign, premalignant or malignant disease will be randomly allocated to undergo MIDP or ODP in an enhanced recovery setting. The primary outcome is time (days) to functional recovery, defined as all of the following: independently mobile at the preoperative level, sufficient pain control with oral medication alone, ability to maintain sufficient (i.e. >50%) daily required caloric intake, no intravenous fluid administration and no signs of infection. Secondary outcomes are operative and postoperative outcomes, including clinically relevant complications, mortality, quality of life and costs. Discussion The LEOPARD trial is designed to investigate whether MIDP reduces the time to functional recovery compared with ODP in an enhanced recovery setting. Trial registration Dutch Trial Register, NTR5188 . Registered on 9 April 2015
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- 2017
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362. Homicidal abuse of young children: A historical perspective
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Rudy J Castellani, Joyce L deJong, and Carl J Schmidt
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Abusive head trauma ,child abuse ,homicide ,infanticide ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
The past 50 years has seen a heightened awareness of abusive injury patterns and increased concern for the plight of children victimized by their caregivers. Murder of the young, however, has been embedded in society since the beginning of recorded time. Indeed, nature provides abundant examples of infanticide in lower animals, raising the question of whether exploitation, apathy, and violence toward children are on some level evolutionarily conserved. In human antiquity, selective killing of females, the illegitimate, and the malformed, killing by ritualistic sacrifice or to conserve resources was carried out with impunity. The middle ages and later saw a decline in these practices albeit limited. One hundred years into the industrial revolution, with harsh child labor in public view, legal remedies were sought to protect children but with little effect. The domestic abuse of children was not addressed until a pivotal 19th-century case, in which the rights of animals were invoked to intervene on behalf of a child. In the 20th century, physicians began to look closely at anatomical findings; patterns due to trauma, especially inflicted trauma, began to emerge. “Battered child syndrome” was followed by “shaken baby syndrome,” the latter prompted by the recurrent findings of subdural hematoma, retinal hemorrhages, and brain injury with the absence of impact injuries and no plausible accidental or natural disease explanation. In the 21st century, high-quality studies and an emphasis on evidenced-based medicine substantiated the existence of injury patterns resulting from homicidal violence. However, progress has been uneven. A case of child abuse that reached the US Supreme Court resulted in an ill-cited dissent that seems to have amplified an already toxic medicolegal environment, perhaps unjustifiably. The difficulties in balancing the welfare of society with that of caregivers in the aftermath of homicidal abuse will no doubt continue.
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- 2017
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363. Hedgehog proteins and parathyroid hormone‐related protein are involved in intervertebral disc maturation, degeneration, and calcification
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Frances C. Bach, Kim M. deRooij, Frank M. Riemers, Joseph W. Snuggs, Willem A. M. deJong, Ying Zhang, Laura B. Creemers, Danny Chan, Christine Le Maitre, and Marianna A. Tryfonidou
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calcification ,IHH ,IVD ,PTHrP ,SHH ,Orthopedic surgery ,RD701-811 - Abstract
Abstract Parathyroid hormone‐related protein (PTHrP) and hedgehog signaling play an important role in chondrocyte development, (hypertrophic) differentiation, and/or calcification, but their role in intervertebral disc (IVD) degeneration is unknown. Better understanding their involvement may provide therapeutic clues for low back pain due to IVD degeneration. Therefore, this study aimed to explore the role of PTHrP and hedgehog proteins in postnatal canine and human IVDs during the aging/degenerative process. The expression of PTHrP, hedgehog proteins and related receptors was studied during the natural loss of the notochordal cell (NC) phenotype during IVD maturation using tissue samples and de‐differentiation in vitro and degeneration by real‐time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT‐qPCR) and immunohistochemistry. Correlations between their expression and calcification levels (Alizarin Red S staining) were determined. In addition, the effect of PTHrP and hedgehog proteins on canine and human chondrocyte‐like cells (CLCs) was determined in vitro focusing on the propensity to induce calcification. The expression of PTHrP, its receptor (PTHR1) and hedgehog receptors decreased during loss of the NC phenotype. N‐terminal (active) hedgehog (Indian hedgehog/Sonic hedgehog) protein expression did not change during maturation or degeneration, whereas expression of PTHrP, PTHR1 and hedgehog receptors increased during IVD degeneration. Hedgehog and PTHR1 immunopositivity were increased in nucleus pulposus tissue with abundant vs no/low calcification. In vitro, hedgehog proteins facilitated calcification in CLCs, whereas PTHrP did not affect calcification levels. In conclusion, hedgehog and PTHrP expression is present in healthy and degenerated IVDs. Hedgehog proteins had the propensity to induce calcification in CLCs from degenerated IVDs, indicating that in the future, inhibiting hedgehog signaling could be an approach to inhibit calcification during IVD degeneration.
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- 2019
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364. Crop and Soil Responses to On-Farm Conservation Tillage Practices in the Upper Midwest
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Aaron Lee M. Daigh, Jodi DeJong-Hughes, Dorian H. Gatchell, Nathan E. Derby, Rashad Alghamdi, Zachery R. Leitner, Abbey Wick, and Umesh Acharya
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Agriculture ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
In the US upper Midwest, the narrow growing season causes many farmers to presume yield losses when reducing tillage. The purpose of this study was to determine how four production-scale tillage systems affected residue cover, stand populations, crop yields, and soil chemical, biological, and physical properties. Tillage systems (chisel plow, fall strip-till with shanks, spring strip-till with coulters, and shallow vertical till) were continued for 4 yr. Tillage effects within a site were few and mixed (0.17–0.36 Mg ha difference), whereas site effects were common (0.50–3.00 Mg ha difference). Among 19 soil properties, only fungal/bacteria ratios differed among strip-till with shanks (0.078) and strip-till with coulters (0.066) at one site. Our results suggest that many farmers’ concerns about using conservation tillage practices do not necessarily translate into yield losses when compared to standard chisel plow practices. Economics and the level of erosion control among the tillage practices compared here, rather than yield alone, should guide farmer preferences.
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- 2019
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365. Almond Fruit Drop Patterns under Mediterranean Conditions
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Jaume Lordan, Lourdes Zazurca, Mercè Rovira, Laura Torguet, Ignasi Batlle, Theodore DeJong, and Xavier Miarnau
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biennial bearing ,bloom ,cultivar ,fruit set ,pruning ,rootstock ,Agriculture (General) ,S1-972 - Abstract
Almond is an important tree nut crop worldwide, and planted areas have been increasing year after year. While self-fertility is one of the key factors when it comes to improved almond productivity of new cultivars, yield is also affected by the number of flowers produced, pollination, fruit set, fruit drop, and fruit weight. Almond fruit drop patterns of 20 Mediterranean almond cultivars were studied over three years. In addition, fruit drop patterns of two scion cultivars ‘Marinada’ and ‘Vairo’ budded onto eight to 10 different rootstocks managed with three different pruning strategies were studied for two years. Cumulative flower and fruit drop ranged from 50% to 90% among cultivars and treatments, and there were up to four fruit drop events during the growing season, the main one occurring from 20–60 days from full bloom (DFFB). Subsequent drops were at 100 DFFB, 120–140 DFFB, and the last one at 160–180 DFFB. The later drops were less apparent. In general, about half of the cumulative drop was comprised of buds and flowers, and the remaining percentage was fruit that dropped 20 or more days after full bloom. Furthermore, different fruit drop patterns were observed depending on the cultivar. For late- and extra-late flowering cultivars, cumulative fruit drop began to decrease earlier, with most of the drops occurred already at full bloom, whereas the opposite was observed for the early flowering cultivars. Rootstocks also had an important effect on the fruit drop pattern, with different effects depending on the scion cultivar. Tree management, such as type of pruning, also had an important effect on the rate of fruit drop and cumulative drop. Therefore, each combination of cultivar × rootstock × pruning type will require different strategies in order to reduce the fruit drop and optimize crop loads.
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- 2021
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366. Youth Oppression as a Technology of Colonialism: Conceptual Frameworks and Possibilities for Social Justice Education Praxis
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DeJong, Keri and Love, Barbara J.
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In this article, we conceptualize youth oppression as a social justice issue using SJE frameworks including Adams' levels of oppression, Bell's defining features of oppression, Hardiman et al.'s matrix of oppression, Young's Five Faces, and Love's internalized oppression. We examine youth as a social identity group, and youth oppression as a mechanism through which the roles of dominant and subordinate are installed on all humans, and through which we are socialized to participate in the maintenance and perpetuation of other forms of oppression. This conceptualization of youth oppression is rooted in examination of discourses that create childhood as a subordinate social status in relation to adults, and parallels with certain discourses of colonialism. Examination of parallels between discourses that create childhood and some of the discourses of colonialism illuminate youth oppression as a technology of colonialism. Colonialism, a complex oppressive system operating on multiple levels, maintains unequal, hierarchical relationships. Examining colonialism provides a lens through which to view the broader systemic and global connections that formulate oppression. The relationships within which youth oppression occurs often obscures these systemic, multi-level global connections. We propose youth oppression as a generative theme in social justice praxis. Implications include transforming how we conceptualize, contextualize, and strategize SJE praxis, and changing how we think about the oppression of humans and possibilities for liberation.
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- 2015
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367. A Kinect based vibrotactile feedback system to assist the visually impaired.
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Kumar Yelamarthi, Brian P. DeJong, and Kevin Laubhan
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- 2014
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368. The Importance of Time and Place: Nutrient Composition and Utilization of Seasonal Pollens by European Honey Bees (Apis mellifera L.)
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Gloria DeGrandi-Hoffman, Vanessa Corby-Harris, Mark Carroll, Amy L. Toth, Stephanie Gage, Emily Watkins deJong, Henry Graham, Mona Chambers, Charlotte Meador, and Bethany Obernesser
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Apis mellifera nutrition ,nutrients in pollen ,fat body ,hypopharyngeal glands ,hex 70 ,hex 110 ,Science - Abstract
Honey bee colonies have a yearly cycle that is supported nutritionally by the seasonal progression of flowering plants. In the spring, colonies grow by rearing brood, but in the fall, brood rearing declines in preparation for overwintering. Depending on where colonies are located, the yearly cycle can differ especially in overwintering activities. In temperate climates of Europe and North America, colonies reduce or end brood rearing in the fall while in warmer climates bees can rear brood and forage throughout the year. To test the hypothesis that nutrients available in seasonal pollens and honey bee responses to them can differ we analyzed pollen in the spring and fall collected by colonies in environments where brood rearing either stops in the fall (Iowa) or continues through the winter (Arizona). We fed both types of pollen to worker offspring of queens that emerged and open mated in each type of environment. We measured physiological responses to test if they differed depending on the location and season when the pollen was collected and the queen line of the workers that consumed it. Specifically, we measured pollen and protein consumption, gene expression levels (hex 70, hex 110, and vg) and hypopharyngeal gland (HPG) development. We found differences in macronutrient content and amino and fatty acids between spring and fall pollens from the same location and differences in nutrient content between locations during the same season. We also detected queen type and seasonal effects in HPG size and differences in gene expression between bees consuming spring vs. fall pollen with larger HPG and higher gene expression levels in those consuming spring pollen. The effects might have emerged from the seasonal differences in nutritional content of the pollens and genetic factors associated with the queen lines we used.
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- 2021
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369. Diverting the Gila : The Pima Indians and the Florence-Casa Grande Project, 1916–1928
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DeJong, David H. and DeJong, David H.
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- 2021
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370. Psychometric Validation of the Dutch Version of the Desire Thinking Questionnaire (DTQ-D)
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Markus, Wiebren, Burk, William J., de Weert-van Oene, Gerdien H., Engel, Carmen, Becker, Eni S., and DeJong, Cornelis A. J.
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Abstract.Desire thinking refers to verbal and imaginal elaboration of a desired target. It predicts escalations in craving intensity and subsequent alcohol use. This article aimed to determine the psychometric properties of the Dutch version of the Desire Thinking Questionnaire (DTQ-D). In Study 1, a confirmatory factor analysis provided support for the original two-factor solution, achieved with adequate internal consistency. The DTQ-D demonstrated partial invariance over time. In Study 2, convergent validity with measures of craving was demonstrated. Discriminant validity with measures of severity of alcohol use and perseverative thinking was satisfactory. Concurrent validity was established by comparing three distinctive groups of alcohol users with increasing levels of drinking: a normative and an out- and in-patient sample. The normative group scored significantly lower on the DTQ-D than the clinical groups. Within the normative sample a low and higher at-risk drinking group could be distinguished. Overall, the DTQ-D possesses reasonable psychometric properties for use with alcohol-drinking samples. However, additional psychometric evaluation in larger clinical samples as well as in other addictions is warranted.
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- 2024
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371. Family Support Services and Reported Parent Coping Among Caregivers of Children with Emotional, Behavioral, or Developmental Disorders
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Graaf, Genevieve, Hughes, Phillip M., deJong, Neal A., and Thomas, Kathleen C.
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- 2024
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372. Investigating Ammonium By-product Removal for Ureolytic Bio-cementation Using Meter-scale Experiments
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Lee, Minyong, Gomez, Michael G., San Pablo, Alexandra C. M., Kolbus, Colin M., Graddy, Charles M. R., DeJong, Jason T., and Nelson, Douglas C.
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- 2019
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373. Genetic characterization of worldwide Prunus domestica (plum) germplasm using sequence-based genotyping
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Zhebentyayeva, Tetyana, Shankar, Vijay, Scorza, Ralph, Callahan, Ann, Ravelonandro, Michel, Castro, Sarah, DeJong, Theodore, Saski, Christopher A., and Dardick, Chris
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- 2019
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374. Biogeochemical Changes During Bio-cementation Mediated by Stimulated and Augmented Ureolytic Microorganisms
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Gomez, Michael G., Graddy, Charles M. R., DeJong, Jason T., and Nelson, Douglas C.
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- 2019
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375. Running gait adaptations among adolescent runners with soft tissue impairments following lateral ankle sprains.
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DeJong Lempke, Alexandra F., Meehan, William P., and Whitney, Kristin E.
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RUNNING injuries ,ANKLE injuries ,GAIT in humans ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,TEENAGERS ,BODY mass index ,SPORTS injuries - Abstract
Background: Lateral ankle sprains (LAS) frequently lead to residual soft tissue impairments, often attributed to biomechanical dysfunction during movement. Objective: To compare running biomechanics between adolescent runners with soft tissue pathologies following LAS (injured) and healthy runners (control) and between limbs. Design: Retrospective cohort study. Setting: Hospital‐affiliated sports injury prevention center. Participants: Twenty‐five adolescent runners with a history of LAS and current ankle impingement or tendinopathy (23 female, 2 male; age: 15 ± 2 years; body mass index [BMI]: 19.5 ± 2.5 kg/m2; symptom duration: 1.1 ± 0.9 years), and 23 healthy controls without any LAS history (19 female, 4 male; age: 15 ± 1 years; BMI: 19.2 ± 2.7 kg/m2) were included in this study. Interventions: All participants completed a clinical gait assessment in which they ran at a self‐selected speed on a force‐plate instrumented treadmill, while two video cameras recorded two‐dimensional sagittal and coronal views. Main Outcome Measures: Foot rotation, step width, contact time, and cadence were compared between groups and limbs (involved, uninvolved [or "better" for bilateral cases]) using a multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA). Rearfoot landing and foot strike type were compared between groups and limbs using a chi‐square analysis. Results: The injured group had significantly increased step width (F = 4.71, p =.04; mean difference [MD] with SE: 1.5 [0.7] cm) compared to controls. The injured groups' involved limb had longer contact time (F = 4.62, p =.03; MDgroup: 12 [7] ms, MDlimb: 22 [11] ms) with more internal foot rotation (F = 14.60, p <.001; MDgroup: 2.2 [1.2] degrees, MDlimb: 4.2 [1.3] degrees) compared to controls and their contralateral limb. There were no significant differences for cadence (F = 2.43, p =.13; MD: 4 [3] steps/min), foot landing (X2 = 1.28, p =.53), or foot strike (X2 = 1.24, p =.54). Conclusions: Spatiotemporal and kinematic running adaptations may predispose young runners with initial LAS to secondary soft tissue dysfunction due to loss of stability from ligamentous structures and an overreliance on myotendinous control. Clinicians may consider targeting these maladaptations during gait‐training interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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376. "I Just Wanted Nothing More Than to Get in a Real Shower": Patient Experience of the Inpatient Wait for a Heart Transplant.
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SALERNO, COLBY, PACK, QUINN R., JURKOWSKI, BRIANA, MCANALLY, KYLE, DEJONG, CHRISTENE, AHMAD, FARAZ S., and LAGU, TARA
- Abstract
Patients waiting for heart transplant may be hospitalized for weeks to months before undergoing transplantation. This high-stress period is further complicated by restrictions of daily privileges including diet, rooming, access to the outdoors, and hygiene (eg, limited in ability to shower). However, there is a paucity of research on the experience of this waiting period. We sought to describe the inpatient experience among patients awaiting heart transplantation and to better understand the needs of inpatients waiting for heart transplant. We conducted in-depth, semistructured phone interviews with a purposeful sample of patients who received a heart transplant in the past 10 years and waited in the hospital for at least 2 weeks before surgery. Using the prior literature, the lived experience of the lead author, and input from qualitative experts, we developed an interview guide. Interviews were recorded, transcribed, and analyzed in an iterative process until theoretical saturation was achieved. A 3-person coding team identified, discussed, and reconciled emergent themes. We conducted interviews with 15 patients. Overarching themes included food, hygiene, relationship with health care professionals, living environment, and stressors. Patients reported that strong bonds were formed between the patients and the staff, and the overwhelming majority only had positive comments about these relationships. However, many expressed negative comments about the experience of the food and limitations in personal hygiene. Other stressors included the unknown length of the waiting period, lack of communication about position on the transplant list, worry about family, and concerns that their life must be saved by the death of another. Many participants described that they would benefit from more interaction with recent heart transplant recipients. Hospitals and care units have the opportunity to make small changes that could greatly benefit the experience of waiting for a heart transplant, as well as the experience of hospitalization more generally. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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377. Adolescent and young adult hip and knee strength profiles relate to running gait biomechanics.
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DeJong Lempke, Alexandra F., Hunt, Danielle L., Dawkins, Corey, Stracciolini, Andrea, Kocher, Mininder S., d'Hemecourt, Pierre A., and Whitney, Kristin E.
- Abstract
Compare and assess relationships between strength and running biomechanics among healthy adolescents and young adult males and females. Retrospective cohort. Clinic. 802 healthy participants (570 F, 232 M; 16.6 ± 2.3 years). Mass-normalized knee flexor and extensor strength, hip adductor and abductor strength, hamstrings-to-quadriceps (H:Q), and abductor-to-adductor (Abd:Add) ratios were obtained using hand-held dynamometry. Mass-normalized peak vertical ground reaction force (vGRF), %stance, cadence, and stride length were obtained using an instrumented treadmill. Multivariate analyses of variance were used to compare strength and biomechanics across ages and sexes. Linear regressions were used to assess the relationships between strength and biomechanics, accounting for speed, age, and sex. Independent t-tests were used to compare strength between strength ratio profiles. Strength and running biomechanics significantly differed between sexes (p-range: <0.001–0.05) and age groups (p-range: <0.001–0.02). Strength and strength ratios were significantly associated with increased cadence (p-range:0.001–0.04) and stride lengths (p-range:0.004–0.03), and decreased vGRF (p < 0.001). Lower H:Q ratios had significantly lower strength measures (p < 0.001). Higher Abd:Add ratios had significantly increased abductor strength (p < 0.001). Strength and running biomechanics differed by sexes and ages. Hip and knee strength and strength ratios were related to select spatiotemporal and kinetic biomechanical features. • Proximal strength measures related to running biomechanics among healthy young runners. • Increased thigh and hip strength were associated with increased cadence and stride lengths. • Increased thigh and hip strength were associated with lower peak vertical ground reaction forces. • Relative strength ratios between force couples related to spatiotemporal running outcomes. • These findings may serve as a basis for comparison for young runners with lower extremity injuries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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378. Adolescent exercise‐related lower leg pain musculotendinous characteristics.
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DeJong Lempke, Alexandra F., Jackson, Sarah, Stracciolini, Andrea, D'Hemecourt, Pierre A., Meehan, William P., and Whitney, Kristin E.
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LEG pain ,SPORTS injuries ,LEG injuries ,PATELLAR tendon ,ACHILLES tendon ,TIBIALIS anterior - Abstract
Background: Exercise‐related lower leg pain (ERLLP) is one of the most common injuries among adolescent runners; however, there is limited information available on lower extremity musculotendinous characteristics in relationship to injury. Ultrasound imaging has previously been used to evaluate musculotendinous structures among adults with chronic lower limb injuries. Similar measurement approaches may be adopted to assess young runners with ERLLP. Objective: To compare ultrasound‐derived lower extremity musculotendinous thickness, echogenicity, and muscle fiber pennation angles between adolescent runners with and without ERLLP. Design: Cross‐sectional design. Setting: Hospital‐affiliated sports injury prevention center. Participants: Twenty‐eight adolescent runners with (N = 14) and without ERLLP (N = 14). Interventions: Runners' patellar and Achilles tendons, and tibialis anterior, medial gastrocnemius, abductor hallicus, and flexor digitorum brevis muscles were assessed with ultrasound imaging using standardized procedures. Main Outcome Measures: Separate repeated measures multivariate analyses of covariance (covariate: gender) were used to compare groups and limbs for mass‐normalized musculotendinous thickness, musculotendinous echogenicity, and extrinsic ankle muscle fiber pennation angles. Results: The adolescent ERLLP group had reduced average muscle size for all structures except the tibialis anterior compared to the uninjured group (mean difference [MD] range: −0.12–0.49 mm/kg; p range:.002–.05), and reduced average medial gastrocnemius pennation angles on their case limb compared to their contralateral limb and the uninjured group (MD range: −3.7–6.4°; p <.001). The ERLLP group additionally had reduced average patellar and Achilles tendon size (MD range: −0.14–−0.15 mm/kg; p range:.02–.03), and lower Achilles tendon echogenicity compared to uninjured counterparts (MD: −18; p =.02). Conclusions: Adolescent runners with ERLLP exhibited morphological musculotendinous changes that may occur either as a result of or as a contributing factor to pain and persistent dysfunction. The findings highlight key targets for rehabilitation for young, injured runners, particularly intrinsic foot muscle strengthening. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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379. Yield in almond is related more to the abundance of flowers than the relative number of flowers that set fruit
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Sergio Tombesi, Bruce D. Lampinen, Samuel Metcalf, and Theodore M. DeJong
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Plant Science and Plant Products ,horticulture ,spur dynamics ,flowering ,almond ,Agriculture - Abstract
Almond tree yield is a function of the number of flowers on a tree and the percentage of flowers that set fruit. Almonds are borne on spurs (short proleptic shoots that can have both leaves and flowers). Almond tree spur dynamics research has documented that previous year spur leaf area is a predictive parameter for year-to-year spur survival, spur flowering and to a lesser extent spur fruiting, while previous year fruit bearing has a negative impact on subsequent year flowering. However, a question remained about whether yields are more dependent on flower numbers or relative fruit set of the flowers that are present. The aim of the present work was to compare the importance of flower abundance with that of relative fruit set in determining the productivity of a population of tagged spurs in almond trees over a 6-year period. Overall tree yield among years was more sensitive to total number of flowers on a tree rather than relative fruit set. These results emphasize the importance of maintaining large populations of healthy flowering spurs for sustained high production in almond orchards.
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- 2016
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380. Transparency, corporate governance and firm performance in The Netherlands
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Henry van Beusichem, Abe de Jong, Douglas DeJong, and Gerard Mertens
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Business ,HF5001-6182 ,Business mathematics. Commercial arithmetic. Including tables, etc. ,HF5691-5716 - Abstract
We explore the relations between transparency, corporate governance, and performance for Dutch exchange-listed firms over 1997-2007. Our measure for transparency is based on annual report information. In 2005 a new accounting standard (IFRS) became mandatory and applicable to the annual reports of Dutch listed firms. We investigate the effects of IFRS by comparing pre and post IFRS periods. We find that under IFRS transparency has increased substantially, and that the determinants of transparency have also changed. Pre-IFRS, disclosure is mainly driven by firm size, leverage and protective preference shares. Post-IFRS, we observe very little variation in disclosure practices.
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- 2016
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381. AN AUTOMATIC METHOD FOR GEOMETRIC SEGMENTATION OF MASONRY ARCH BRIDGES FOR STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING PURPOSES
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B. Riveiro, M. DeJong, and B. Conde
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Technology ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 ,Applied optics. Photonics ,TA1501-1820 - Abstract
Despite the tremendous advantages of the laser scanning technology for the geometric characterization of built constructions, there are important limitations preventing more widespread implementation in the structural engineering domain. Even though the technology provides extensive and accurate information to perform structural assessment and health monitoring, many people are resistant to the technology due to the processing times involved. Thus, new methods that can automatically process LiDAR data and subsequently provide an automatic and organized interpretation are required. This paper presents a new method for fully automated point cloud segmentation of masonry arch bridges. The method efficiently creates segmented, spatially related and organized point clouds, which each contain the relevant geometric data for a particular component (pier, arch, spandrel wall, etc.) of the structure. The segmentation procedure comprises a heuristic approach for the separation of different vertical walls, and later image processing tools adapted to voxel structures allows the efficient segmentation of the main structural elements of the bridge. The proposed methodology provides the essential processed data required for structural assessment of masonry arch bridges based on geometric anomalies. The method is validated using a representative sample of masonry arch bridges in Spain.
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- 2016
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382. What can and can't we say about indirect land‐use change in Brazil using an integrated economic – land‐use change model?
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Judith A. Verstegen, Floor van derHilst, Geert Woltjer, Derek Karssenberg, Steven M. deJong, and André P. C. Faaij
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biofuel ,Brazil ,error propagation ,indirect land‐use change ,land‐use change ,modelling ,Renewable energy sources ,TJ807-830 ,Energy industries. Energy policy. Fuel trade ,HD9502-9502.5 - Abstract
Abstract It is commonly recognized that large uncertainties exist in modelled biofuel‐induced indirect land‐use change, but until now, spatially explicit quantification of such uncertainties by means of error propagation modelling has never been performed. In this study, we demonstrate a general methodology to stochastically calculate direct and indirect land‐use change (dLUC and iLUC) caused by an increasing demand for biofuels, with an integrated economic – land‐use change model. We use the global Computable General Equilibrium model MAGNET, connected to the spatially explicit land‐use change model PLUC. We quantify important uncertainties in the modelling chain. Next, dLUC and iLUC projections for Brazil up to 2030 at different spatial scales and the uncertainty herein are assessed. Our results show that cell‐based (5 × 5 km2) probabilities of dLUC range from 0 to 0.77, and of iLUC from 0 to 0.43, indicating that it is difficult to project exactly where dLUC and iLUC will occur, with more difficulties for iLUC than for dLUC. At country level, dLUC area can be projected with high certainty, having a coefficient of variation (cv) of only 0.02, while iLUC area is still uncertain, having a cv of 0.72. The latter means that, considering the 95% confidence interval, the iLUC area in Brazil might be 2.4 times as high or as low as the projected mean. Because this confidence interval is so wide that it is likely to straddle any legislation threshold, our opinion is that threshold evaluation for iLUC indicators should not be implemented in legislation. For future studies, we emphasize the need for provision of quantitative uncertainty estimates together with the calculated LUC indicators, to allow users to evaluate the reliability of these indicators and the effects of their uncertainty on the impacts of land‐use change, such as greenhouse gas emissions.
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- 2016
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383. Comparative analysis of chemical similarity methods for modular natural products with a hypothetical structure enumeration algorithm
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Skinnider, Michael A., Dejong, Chris A., Franczak, Brian C., McNicholas, Paul D., and Magarvey, Nathan A.
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- 2017
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384. J. B. S. Haldane and ЛысеHкOвщиHа (Lysenkovschina)
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Dejong-Lambert, William
- Published
- 2017
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385. Dynamic response of masonry arch with geometrical irregularities subjected to a pulse-type ground motion
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Severini, L., Cavalagli, N., DeJong, M., and Gusella, V.
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- 2017
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386. Vibration modes and equivalent models for flexible rocking structures
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Acikgoz, Sinan and DeJong, Matthew J.
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- 2017
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387. Explanation-based learning in infancy
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Baillargeon, Renée and DeJong, Gerald F.
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- 2017
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388. On the reproducibility of expert-operated and robotic ultrasound acquisitions
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Kojcev, Risto, Khakzar, Ashkan, Fuerst, Bernhard, Zettinig, Oliver, Fahkry, Carole, DeJong, Robert, Richmon, Jeremy, Taylor, Russell, Sinibaldi, Edoardo, and Navab, Nassir
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- 2017
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389. Whole-volume vs. segmental CT texture analysis of the liver to assess metachronous colorectal liver metastases
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Beckers, R. C. J., Beets-Tan, R. G. H., Schnerr, R. S., Maas, M., da Costa Andrade, L. A., Beets, G. L., Dejong, C. H., Houwers, J. B., and Lambregts, D. M. J.
- Published
- 2017
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390. Honey bee gut microbial communities are robust to the fungicide Pristine® consumed in pollen
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DeGrandi-Hoffman, Gloria, Corby-Harris, Vanessa, DeJong, Emily Watkins, Chambers, Mona, and Hidalgo, Geoffrey
- Published
- 2017
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391. Design and Analysis of a Four-Pendulum Omnidirectional Spherical Robot
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DeJong, Brian P., Karadogan, Ernur, Yelamarthi, Kumar, and Hasbany, James
- Published
- 2017
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392. Increases in leaf nitrogen concentration and leaf area did not enhance spur survival and return bloom in almonds (Prunus dulcis [Mill.] DA Webb)
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Saa, Sebastian, Fernández, Eduardo, Muhammad, Saiful, Río, Andres Olivos-Del, DeJong, Theodore M., Laca, Emilio, and Brown, Patrick
- Published
- 2017
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393. Parents’ Primary Professional Sources of Parenting Advice Moderate Predictors of Parental Attitudes toward Corporal Punishment
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Taylor, Catherine A., McKasson, Sarah, Hoy, Guenevere, and DeJong, William
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- 2017
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394. Human splanchnic amino-acid metabolism
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Neis, Evelien P. J. G., Sabrkhany, S., Hundscheid, I., Schellekens, D., Lenaerts, K., Olde Damink, S. W., Blaak, E. E., Dejong, C. H. C., and Rensen, Sander S.
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- 2017
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395. Human Tissue-Resident Memory T Cells in the Maternal–Fetal Interface. Lost Soldiers or Special Forces?
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Caitlin S. DeJong, Nicholas J. Maurice, Stephen A. McCartney, and Martin Prlic
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tissue-resident memory T cells ,placenta ,maternal–fetal interface ,MHC class I/II ,Cytology ,QH573-671 - Abstract
The immune system plays a critical role during pregnancy, but the specific mechanisms and immune cell function needed to support pregnancy remain incompletely understood. Despite decades of research efforts, it is still unclear how the immune system maintains tolerance of fetal-derived tissues, which include most cells of the placenta and of course the fetus itself, without forfeiting the ability to protect against harmful infections. T cells recognize antigen in the context of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) encoded proteins, but classical MHC class I and II expression are diminished in fetal-derived cells. Can T cells present at the maternal–fetal interface (MFI) protect these cells from infection? Here we review what is known in regard to tissue-resident memory T (Trm) cells at the MFI. We mainly focus on how Trm cells can contribute to protection in the context of the unique features of the MFI, such as limited MHC expression as well as the temporary nature of the MFI, that are not found in other tissues.
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- 2020
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396. A Systematic Review of Interventions Used to Treat Catatonic Symptoms in People with Autistic Spectrum Disorders
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DeJong, Hannah, Bunton, Penny, and Hare, Dougal J.
- Abstract
A systematic review was conducted to examine the efficacy of a range of treatments for autistic catatonia. The review identified 22 relevant papers, reporting a total of 28 cases including both adult and paediatric patients. Treatment methods included electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), medication, behavioural and sensory interventions. Quality assessment found the standard of the existing literature to be generally poor, with particular limitations in treatment description and outcome measurement. There is some limited evidence to support the use of ECT, high dose lorazepam and behavioural interventions for people with autistic catatonia. However, there is a need for controlled, high-quality trials. Reporting of side effects and adverse events should also be improved, in order to better evaluate the safety of these treatments.
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- 2014
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397. A Course-Based Research Experience: How Benefits Change with Increased Investment in Instructional Time
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Shaffer, Christopher D., Alvarez, Consuelo J., Bednarski, April E., Dunbar, David, Goodman, Anya L., Reinke, Catherine, Rosenwald, Anne G., Wolyniak, Michael J., Bailey, Cheryl, Barnard, Daron, Bazinet, Christopher, Beach, Dale L., Bedard, James E. J., Bhalla, Satish, Braverman, John, Burg, Martin, Chandrasekaran, Vidya, Chung, Hui-Min, Clase, Kari, DeJong, Randall J., DiAngelo, Justin R., Du, Chunguang, Eckdahl, Todd T., Eisler, Heather, Emerson, Julia A., Frary, Amy, Frohlich, Donald, Gosser, Yuying, Govind, Shubha, Haberman, Adam, Hark, Amy T., Hauser, Charles, Hoogewerf, Arlene, Hoopes, Laura L. M., Howell, Carina E., Johnson, Diana, Jones, Christopher J., Kadlec, Lisa, Kaehler, Marian, Key, S. Catherine Silver, Kleinschmit, Adam, Kokan, Nighat P., Kopp, Olga, Kuleck, Gary, Leatherman, Judith, Lopilato, Jane, MacKinnon, Christy, Martinez-Cruzado, Juan Carlos, McNeil, Gerard, Mel, Stephanie, Mistry, Hemlata, Nagengast, Alexis, Overvoorde, Paul, Paetkau, Don W., Parrish, Susan, Peterson, Celeste N., Preuss, Mary, Reed, Laura K., Revie, Dennis, Robic, Srebrenka, Roecklein-Canfield, Jennifer, Rubin, Michael R., Saville, Kenneth, Schroeder, Stephanie, Sharif, Karim, Shaw, Mary, Skuse, Gary, Smith, Christopher D., Smith, Mary A., Smith, Sheryl T., Spana, Eric, Spratt, Mary, Sreenivasan, Aparna, Stamm, Joyce, Szauter, Paul, Thompson, Jeffrey S., Wawersik, Matthew, Youngblom, James, Zhou, Leming, Mardis, Elaine R., Buhler, Jeremy, Leung, Wilson, Lopatto, David, and Elgin, Sarah C. R.
- Abstract
There is widespread agreement that science, technology, engineering, and mathematics programs should provide undergraduates with research experience. Practical issues and limited resources, however, make this a challenge. We have developed a bioinformatics project that provides a course-based research experience for students at a diverse group of schools and offers the opportunity to tailor this experience to local curriculum and institution-specific student needs. We assessed both attitude and knowledge gains, looking for insights into how students respond given this wide range of curricular and institutional variables. While different approaches all appear to result in learning gains, we find that a significant investment of course time is required to enable students to show gains commensurate to a summer research experience. An alumni survey revealed that time spent on a research project is also a significant factor in the value former students assign to the experience one or more years later. We conclude: 1) implementation of a bioinformatics project within the biology curriculum provides a mechanism for successfully engaging large numbers of students in undergraduate research; 2) benefits to students are achievable at a wide variety of academic institutions; and 3) successful implementation of course-based research experiences requires significant investment of instructional time for students to gain full benefit. [Contains 82 pages of Supplemental Material, which can be found at: http://www.lifescied.org/content/suppl/2014/02/12/13.1.111.DC1.html.]
- Published
- 2014
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398. Design of a High-Power Test Model of the PEP-II RF Cavity
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Schwarz, H.D., Bell, R.A., Hodgson, J.A., Judkins, J.G., Ko, K., Kroll, N., Ng, C.K., Pendleton, R.P., Skarpaas, K., Lambertson, G., Rimmer, R.A., deJong, M.S., Tran-Ngoc, T., Adams, F.P., Lipsett, M.G., and Mellors, W.
- Published
- 1993
399. Spatial Response of Near-Surface Soil Water Contents to Newly Imposed Soil Management
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Aaron L. M. Daigh, Upasana Ghosh, Jodi DeJong-Hughes, and Robert Horton
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Agriculture ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Near-surface soil water content (SWC) and its spatial patterns are important for landscape hydrological responses to precipitation as well as our ability to remotely sense and model such responses. Our objective was to measure and evaluate near-surface SWC semivariograms of agricultural fields with newly imposed (i.e.,
- Published
- 2018
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400. Alcohol brand use of youth-appealing advertising and consumption by youth and adults
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Alisa A. Padon, Rajiv N. Rimal, Michael Siegel, William DeJong, Timothy S. Naimi, and David H. JernFigan
- Subjects
marketing ,alcohol ,media effects ,underage drinking ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Background: Youth exposure to alcohol marketing has been shown to be an important contributor to the problem of underage drinking in the U.S. More work is needed on identifying and minimizing content with particular appeal to youth. Design and Methods: We tested the association between the youth-appeal of marketing content of televised alcohol advertisements and the brand-specific alcohol consumption of both underage youth and adults. We used existing data from three sources: a brand-specific alcohol consumption survey among underage youth (N=1032), a brand-specific alcohol consumption survey among adults (N ~13,000), and an analysis of content appealing to youth (CAY) in a sample of televised alcohol advertisements (n=96) aired during the youth survey. The association between CAY scores for the 96 alcohol ads and youth (age 13-20) versus adult (age 21+) consumption of those ads’ brands was tested through bivariate and multivariate models. Results: Brand CAY scores were (a) positively associated with brand-specific youth consumption after controlling for adult brand consumption; (b) positively associated with a ratio of youth-toadult brand-specific consumption; and (c) not associated with adult brand consumption. Conclusions: Alcohol brands with youth-appealing advertising are consumed more often by youth than adults, indicating that these ads may be more persuasive to relatively younger audiences, and that youth are not simply mirroring adult consumption patterns in their choice of brands. Future research should consider the content of alcohol advertising when testing marketing effects on youth drinking, and surveillance efforts might focus on brands popular among youth.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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