2,139 results on '"Chin, M"'
Search Results
2. Semen microbiota are dramatically altered in men with abnormal sperm parameters
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Vadim Osadchiy, Andre Belarmino, Reza Kianian, John T. Sigalos, Jacob S. Ancira, Trisha Kanie, Sarah F. Mangum, Craig D. Tipton, Tung-Chin M. Hsieh, Jesse N. Mills, and Sriram V. Eleswarapu
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract There has recently been an explosion of studies implicating the human microbiome in playing a critical role in many disease and wellness states. The etiology of abnormal semen analysis (SA) parameters is not identified in 30% of cases; investigations involving the semen microbiome may bridge this gap. Here, we explore the relationship between the semen microbiome and alterations of sperm parameters. We recruited men presenting for fertility evaluation or vasectomy consultation with proven biological paternity. SA and next generation sequencing was performed. Differential abundance testing using Analysis of composition of Microbiota with Bias Correction (ANCOM-BC) was performed along with canonical correlational analysis for microbial community profiling. Men with abnormal (N = 27) sperm motility showed a higher abundance of Lactobacillus iners compared to those with normal (N = 46) sperm motility (mean proportion 9.4% versus 2.6%, p = 0.046). This relationship persisted on canonical correlational analysis (r = 0.392, p = 0.011). Men with abnormal sperm concentration (N = 20) showed a higher abundance of Pseudomonas stutzeri (2.1% versus 1.0%, p = 0.024) and Pseudomonas fluorescens (0.9% versus 0.7%, p = 0.010), but a lower abundance of Pseudomonas putida (0.5% versus 0.8%, p = 0.020), compared to those with normal sperm concentration (N = 53). Major limitations are related to study design (cross-sectional, observational). Our results suggest that a small group of microorganisms may play a critical role in observed perturbations of SA parameters. Some of these microbes, most notably Lactobacillus iners, have been described extensively within other, fertility-related, contexts, whereas for others, this is the first report where they have potentially been implicated. Advances in our understanding of the semen microbiome may contribute to potentially new therapeutic avenues for correcting impairments in sperm parameters and improving male fertility.
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- 2024
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3. Urine microbes and predictive metagenomic profiles associate with abnormalities in sperm parameters: implications for male subfertility
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Osadchiy, Vadim, Belarmino, Andre, Kianian, Reza, Sigalos, John T., Furtado, Thiago P., Ancira, Jacob S., Kanie, Trisha, Mangum, Sarah F., Tipton, Craig D., Hsieh, Tung-Chin M., Mills, Jesse N., and Eleswarapu, Sriram V.
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- 2024
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4. Neutron capture cross section measurement of 238U at the n TOF CERN facility with C6D6 scintillation detectors in the energy region from 1 eV to 700 keV
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Collaboration, n_TOF, Mingrone, F., Massimi, C., Vannini, G., Colonna, N., Gunsing, F., Žugec, P., Altstadt, S., Andrzejewski, J., Audouin, L., Barbagallo, M., Bécares, V., Bečvář, F., Belloni, F., Berthoumieux, E., Billowes, J., Bosnar, D., Brugger, M., Calviani, M., Calviño, F., Cano-Ott, D., Carrapiço, C., Cerutti, F., Chiaveri, E., Chin, M., Cortés, G., Cortés-Giraldo, M. A., Diakaki, M., Domingo-Pardo, C., Duran, I., Dressler, R., Eleftheriadis, C., Ferrari, A., Fraval, K., Ganesan, S., García, A. R., Giubrone, G., Gonçalves, I. F., González-Romero, E., Griesmayer, E., Guerrero, C., Hernández-Prieto, A., Jenkins, D. G., Jericha, E., Kadi, Y., Käppeler, F., Karadimos, D., Kivel, N., Koehler, P., Kokkoris, M., Krtička, 1 M., Kroll, J., Lampoudis, C., Langer, C., Leal-Cidoncha, E., Lederer, C., Leeb, H., Leong, L. S., Meo, S. Lo, Losito, R., Mallick, A., Manousos, A., Marganiec, J., Martínez, T., Mastinu, P. F., Mastromarco, M., Mendoza, E., Mengoni, A., Milazzo, P. M., Mirea, M., Mondalaers, W., Paradela, C., Pavlik, A., Perkowski, J., Plompen, A., Praena, J., Quesada, J. M., Rauscher, T., Reifarth, R., Riego, A., Robles, M. S., Rubbia, C., Sabaté-Gilarte, M., Sarmento, R., Saxena, A., Schillebeeckx, P., Schmidt, S., Schumann, D., Tagliente, G., Tain, J. L., Tarrío, D., Tassan-Got, L., Tsinganis, A., Valenta, S., Variale, V., Vaz, P., Ventura, A., Vermeulen, M. J., Vlachoudis, V., Vlastou, R., Wallner, A., Ware, T., Weigand, M., Weiß, C., and Wright, T.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The aim of this work is to provide a precise and accurate measurement of the 238U(n,g) reaction cross section in the energy region from 1 eV to 700 keV. This reaction is of fundamental importance for the design calculations of nuclear reactors, governing the behaviour of the reactor core. In particular, fast reactors, which are experiencing a growing interest for their ability to burn radioactive waste, operate in the high energy region of the neutron spectrum. In this energy region most recent evaluations disagree due to inconsistencies in the existing measurements of up to 15%. In addition, the assessment of nuclear data uncertainty performed for innovative reactor systems shows that the uncertainty in the radiative capture cross-section of 238U should be further reduced to 1-3% in the energy region from 20 eV to 25 keV. To this purpose, addressed by the Nuclear Energy Agency as a priority nuclear data need, complementary experiments, one at the GELINA and two at the n_TOF facility, were proposed and carried out within the 7th Framework Project ANDES of the European Commission. The results of one of these 238U(n,g) measurements performed at the n_TOF CERN facility are presented in this work. The gamma-ray cascade following the radiative neutron capture has been detected exploiting a setup of two C6D6 liquid scintillators. Resonance parameters obtained from this work are on average in excellent agreement with the ones reported in evaluated libraries. In the unresolved resonance region, this work yields a cross section in agreement with evaluated libraries up to 80 keV, while for higher energies our results are significantly higher., Comment: 15 pages, 10 captioned figures
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- 2016
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5. PD53-05 CRITICAL DIFFERENCES IN SEMEN AND URINE MICROBIOME MANIFEST IN MEN WITH ABNORMAL SPERM PARAMETERS
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Osadchiy, Vadim, primary, Belarmino, Andre, additional, Kianian, Reza, additional, Sigalos, John T., additional, Furtado, Thiago P., additional, Ancira, Jacob S., additional, Kanie, Trisha, additional, Magnum, Sarah F., additional, Tipton, Craig D., additional, Hsieh, Tung-Chin M., additional, Mills, Jesse N., additional, and Eleswarapu, Sriram V., additional
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- 2024
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6. One size does not fit all: variations by ethnicity in demographic characteristics of men seeking fertility treatment across North America
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Chen, Andrew B., Jarvi, Keith A., Lajkosz, Katherine, Smith, James F., Lo, Kirk C., Grober, Ethan D., Lau, Susan, Bieniek, Jared M., Brannigan, Robert E., Chow, Victor D.W., Domes, Trustin, Dupree, James M., Goldstein, Marc, Hedges, Jason C., Hotaling, James M., Ko, Edmund Y., Kolettis, Peter N., Nangia, Ajay K., Sandlow, Jay I., Shin, David, Spitz, Aaron, Trussell, J.C., Zeitlin, Scott I., Zini, Armand S., Fisher, Marc A., Walsh, Thomas J., Hsieh, Tung-Chin M., Fuchs, Eugene F., and Samplaski, Mary K.
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- 2021
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7. Engineering the structural and electronic phases of MoTe2 through W substitution
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Rhodes, D., Chenet, D. A., Janicek, B. E., Nyby, C., Lin, Y., Jin, W., Edelberg, D., Mannebach, E., Finney, N., Antony, A., Schiros, T., Klarr, T., Mazzoni, A., Chin, M., Chiu, Y. -c, Zheng, W., Zhang, Q. R., Ernst, F., Dadap, J. I., Tong, X., Ma, J., Lou, R., Wang, S., Qian, T., Ding, H., Osgood Jr, R. M., Paley, D. W., Lindenberg, A. M., Huang, P. Y., Pasupathy, A. N., Dubey, M., Hone, J., and Balicas, L.
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Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
MoTe$_2$ is an exfoliable transition metal dichalcogenide (TMD) which crystallizes in three symmetries, the semiconducting trigonal-prismatic $2H-$phase, the semimetallic $1T^{\prime}$ monoclinic phase, and the semimetallic orthorhombic $T_d$ structure. The $2H-$phase displays a band gap of $\sim 1$ eV making it appealing for flexible and transparent optoelectronics. The $T_d-$phase is predicted to possess unique topological properties which might lead to topologically protected non-dissipative transport channels. Recently, it was argued that it is possible to locally induce phase-transformations in TMDs, through chemical doping, local heating, or electric-field to achieve ohmic contacts or to induce useful functionalities such as electronic phase-change memory elements. The combination of semiconducting and topological elements based upon the same compound, might produce a new generation of high performance, low dissipation optoelectronic elements. Here, we show that it is possible to engineer the phases of MoTe$_2$ through W substitution by unveiling the phase-diagram of the Mo$_{1-x}$W$_x$Te$_2$ solid solution which displays a semiconducting to semimetallic transition as a function of $x$. We find that only $\sim 8$ \% of W stabilizes the $T_d-$phase at room temperature. Photoemission spectroscopy, indicates that this phase possesses a Fermi surface akin to that of WTe$_2$., Comment: 10 paged, 5 pages, supplementary information not included
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- 2016
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8. Integral measurement of the $^{12}$C(n,p)$^{12}$B reaction up to 10 GeV
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Žugec, P., Colonna, N., Bosnar, D., Ventura, A., Mengoni, A., Altstadt, S., Andrzejewski, J., Audouin, L., Barbagallo, M., Bécares, V., Bečvář, F., Belloni, F., Berthoumieux, E., Billowes, J., Boccone, V., Brugger, M., Calviani, M., Calviño, F., Cano-Ott, D., Carrapiço, C., Cerutti, F., Chiaveri, E., Chin, M., Cortés, G., Cortés-Giraldo, M. A., Cosentino, L., Diakaki, M., Domingo-Pardo, C., Dressler, R., Duran, I., Eleftheriadis, C., Ferrari, A., Finocchiaro, P., Fraval, K., Ganesan, S., García, A. R., Giubrone, G., Gómez-Hornillos, M. B., Gonçalves, I. F., González-Romero, E., Griesmayer, E., Guerrero, C., Gunsing, F., Gurusamy, P., Heinitz, S., Jenkins, D. G., Jericha, E., Käppeler, F., Karadimos, D., Kivel, N., Kokkoris, M., Krtička, M., Kroll, J., Langer, C., Lederer, C., Leeb, H., Leong, L. S., Meo, S. Lo, Losito, R., Manousos, A., Marganiec, J., Martínez, T., Massimi, C., Mastinu, P., Mastromarco, M., Mendoza, E., Milazzo, P. M., Mingrone, F., Mirea, M., Mondalaers, W., Musumarra, A., Paradela, C., Pavlik, A., Perkowski, J., Plompen, A., Praena, J., Quesada, J., Rauscher, T., Reifarth, R., Riego, A., Roman, F., Rubbia, C., Sarmento, R., Saxena, A., Schillebeeckx, P., Schmidt, S., Schumann, D., Tagliente, G., Tain, J. L., Tarrío, D., Tassan-Got, L., Tsinganis, A., Valenta, S., Vannini, G., Variale, V., Vaz, P., Versaci, R., Vermeulen, M. J., Vlachoudis, V., Vlastou, R., Wallner, A., Ware, T., Weigand, M., Weiß, C., and Wright, T.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The integral measurement of the $^{12}$C(n,p)$^{12}$B reaction was performed at the neutron time of flight facility n_TOF at CERN. The total number of $^{12}$B nuclei produced per neutron pulse of the n_TOF beam was determined using the activation technique in combination with a time of flight technique. The cross section is integrated over the n_TOF neutron energy spectrum from reaction threshold at 13.6 MeV to 10 GeV. Having been measured up to 1 GeV on basis of the $^{235}$U(n,f) reaction, the neutron energy spectrum above 200 MeV has been reevaluated due to the recent extension of the cross section reference for this particular reaction, which is otherwise considered a standard up to 200 MeV. The results from the dedicated GEANT4 simulations have been used to evaluate the neutron flux from 1 GeV up to 10 GeV. The experimental results related to the $^{12}$C(n,p)$^{12}$B reaction are compared with the evaluated cross sections from major libraries and with the predictions of different GEANT4 models, which mostly underestimate the $^{12}$B production. On the contrary, a good reproduction of the integral cross section derived from measurements is obtained with TALYS-1.6 calculations, with optimized parameters., Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures, 3 tables
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- 2016
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9. Zebrafish tsc1 and cxcl12a increase susceptibility to mycobacterial infection.
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Wright, K, Han, DJ, Song, R, de Silva, K, Plain, KM, Purdie, AC, Shepherd, A, Chin, M, Hortle, E, Wong, JJ-L, Britton, WJ, Oehlers, SH, Wright, K, Han, DJ, Song, R, de Silva, K, Plain, KM, Purdie, AC, Shepherd, A, Chin, M, Hortle, E, Wong, JJ-L, Britton, WJ, and Oehlers, SH
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Regulation of host miRNA expression is a contested node that controls the host immune response to mycobacterial infection. The host must counter subversive efforts of pathogenic mycobacteria to launch a protective immune response. Here, we examine the role of miR-126 in the zebrafish-Mycobacterium marinum infection model and identify a protective role for infection-induced miR-126 through multiple effector pathways. We identified a putative link between miR-126 and the tsc1a and cxcl12a/ccl2/ccr2 signalling axes resulting in the suppression of non-tnfa expressing macrophage accumulation at early M. marinum granulomas. Mechanistically, we found a detrimental effect of tsc1a expression that renders zebrafish embryos susceptible to higher bacterial burden and increased cell death via mTOR inhibition. We found that macrophage recruitment driven by the cxcl12a/ccl2/ccr2 signalling axis was at the expense of the recruitment of classically activated tnfa-expressing macrophages and increased cell death around granulomas. Together, our results delineate putative pathways by which infection-induced miR-126 may shape an effective immune response to M. marinum infection in zebrafish embryos.
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- 2024
10. Supportive care 2030 movement: towards unifying ambitions for global excellence in supportive cancer care—an international Delphi study
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Chan, R, Knowles, R, Ashbury, F, Bowen, J, Chan, A, Chin, M, Olver, I, Taylor, C, Tinianov, S, Alberti, P, Bossi, P, Brito-Dellan, N, Cooksley, T, Crawford, G, Dixit, N, Fitch, M, Freedman, J, Ginex, P, Hart, N, Hertz, D, Jefford, M, Koczwara, B, Naito, T, Orsey, A, Ruhlmann, C, Tsoukalas, N, van den Hurk, C, Van Sebille, Y, Wardill, H, Scotte, F, Lustberg, M, Chan, Raymond Javan, Knowles, Reegan, Ashbury, Fredrick D., Bowen, Joanne, Chan, Alexandre, Chin, Melissa, Olver, Ian, Taylor, Carolyn, Tinianov, Stacey, Alberti, Paola, Bossi, Paolo, Brito-Dellan, Norman, Cooksley, Tim, Crawford, Gregory Brian, Dixit, Niharika, Fitch, Margaret I., Freedman, Jason L., Ginex, Pamela K., Hart, Nicolas H., Hertz, Daniel L., Jefford, Michael, Koczwara, Bogda, Naito, Tateaki, Orsey, Andrea Dahlman, Ruhlmann, Christina H., Tsoukalas, Nikolaos, van den Hurk, Corina, Van Sebille, Ysabella, Wardill, Hannah Rose, Scotte, Florian, Lustberg, Maryam, Chan, R, Knowles, R, Ashbury, F, Bowen, J, Chan, A, Chin, M, Olver, I, Taylor, C, Tinianov, S, Alberti, P, Bossi, P, Brito-Dellan, N, Cooksley, T, Crawford, G, Dixit, N, Fitch, M, Freedman, J, Ginex, P, Hart, N, Hertz, D, Jefford, M, Koczwara, B, Naito, T, Orsey, A, Ruhlmann, C, Tsoukalas, N, van den Hurk, C, Van Sebille, Y, Wardill, H, Scotte, F, Lustberg, M, Chan, Raymond Javan, Knowles, Reegan, Ashbury, Fredrick D., Bowen, Joanne, Chan, Alexandre, Chin, Melissa, Olver, Ian, Taylor, Carolyn, Tinianov, Stacey, Alberti, Paola, Bossi, Paolo, Brito-Dellan, Norman, Cooksley, Tim, Crawford, Gregory Brian, Dixit, Niharika, Fitch, Margaret I., Freedman, Jason L., Ginex, Pamela K., Hart, Nicolas H., Hertz, Daniel L., Jefford, Michael, Koczwara, Bogda, Naito, Tateaki, Orsey, Andrea Dahlman, Ruhlmann, Christina H., Tsoukalas, Nikolaos, van den Hurk, Corina, Van Sebille, Ysabella, Wardill, Hannah Rose, Scotte, Florian, and Lustberg, Maryam
- Abstract
Background Supportive care to ensure optimal quality of life is an essential component of cancer care and symptom control across the lifespan. Ongoing advances in cancer treatment, increasing toxicity from many novel treatment regimes, and variations in access to care and cancer outcomes across the globe and resource settings present significant challenges for supportive care delivery. To date, no overarching framework has been developed to guide supportive care development worldwide. As an initial step of the Multinational Association of Supportive Care in Cancer (MASCC) Supportive Care 2030 Movement, we developed a targeted, unifying set of ambition statements to envision the future of supportive cancer care. Methods From September 2022 until June 2023, we used a modified Delphi methodology to develop and attain consensus about ambition statements related to supportive cancer care. Leaders of MASCC Study Groups were invited to participate in an Expert Panel for the first two Delphi rounds (and a preliminary round to suggest potential ambition statements). Patient Advocates then examined and provided input regarding the ambition statements. Findings Twenty-seven Expert Panelists and 11 Patient Advocates participated. Consensus was attained on 13 ambition statements, with two sub-statements. The ambition statements addressed global standards for guideline development and implementation, coordinated and individualized care, dedicated supportive oncology services, self-management, needs for screening and actions, patient education, behavioral support, financial impact minimization, comprehensive survivorship care, and timely palliative care, reflecting collaboration, coordination and team-based approach across all levels. Interpretation This study is the first to develop shared ambitions for the future of supportive cancer care on a global level. These ambition statements can facilitate a coordinated, resource-stratified, and person-centered approach and inform resear
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- 2024
11. Putting Green BIM in Practice – Optimizing the Application of Building Information Model For Green Building Assessments.
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Lo, T, Au, I, Liu, P, Ng, R C W, Ho, M, and Chin, M
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- 2024
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12. High accuracy determination of the $^{238}$U/$^{235}$U fission cross section ratio up to $\sim$1 GeV at n_TOF (CERN)
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Paradela, C., Calviani, M., Tarrío, D., Leal-Cidoncha, E., Leong, L. S., Tassan-Got, L., Naour, C. Le, Duran, I., Colonna, N., Audouin, L., Mastromarco, M., Meo, S. Lo, Ventura, A., Altstadt, S., Andrzejewski, J., Barbagallo, M., Bécares, V., Bečvář, F., Belloni, F., Berthoumieux, E., Billowes, J., Boccone, V., Bosnar, D., Brugger, M., Calviño, F., Cano-Ott, D., Carrapiço, C., Cerutti, F., Chiaveri, E., Chin, M., Cortés, G., Cortés-Giraldo, M. A., Cosentino, L., Diakaki, M., Domingo-Pardo, C., Dressler, R., Eleftheriadis, C., Ferrari, A., Finocchiaro, P., Fraval, K., Ganesan, S., García, A. R., Giubrone, G., Gómez-Hornillos, M. B., Gonçalves, I. F., González-Romero, E., Griesmayer, E., Guerrero, C., Gunsing, F., Gurusamy, P., Heinitz, S., Jenkins, D. G., Jericha, E., Käppeler, F., Karadimos, D., Kivel, N., Kokkoris, M., Krtička, M., Kroll, J., Langer, C., Lederer, C., Leeb, H., Losito, R., Manousos, A., Marganiec, J., Martínez, T., Massimi, C., Mastinu, P., Mendoza, E., Mengoni, A., Milazzo, P. M., Mingrone, F., Mirea, M., Mondalaers, W., Musumarra, A., Pavlik, A., Perkowski, J., Plompen, A., Praena, J., Quesada, J., Rauscher, T., Reifarth, R., Riego, A., Roman, F., Rubbia, C., Sarmento, R., Saxena, A., Schillebeeckx, P., Schmidt, S., Schumann, D., Tagliente, G., Tain, J. L., Tsinganis, A., Valenta, S., Vannini, G., Variale, V., Vaz, P., Versaci, R., Vermeulen, M. J., Vlachoudis, V., Vlastou, R., Wallner, A., Ware, T., Weigand, M., Weiß, C., Wright, T., and Žugec, P.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The $^{238}$U to $^{235}$U fission cross section ratio has been determined at n_TOF up to $\sim$1 GeV, with two different detection systems, in different geometrical configurations. A total of four datasets have been collected and compared. They are all consistent to each other within the relative systematic uncertainty of 3-4%. The data collected at n_TOF have been suitably combined to yield a unique fission cross section ratio as a function of the neutron energy. The result confirms current evaluations up to 200 MeV. A good agreement is also observed with theoretical calculations based on the INCL++/Gemini++ combination up to the highest measured energy. The n_TOF results may help solving a long-standing discrepancy between the two most important experimental dataset available so far above 20 MeV, while extending the neutron energy range for the first time up to $\sim$1 GeV.
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- 2014
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13. Measurement of the $^{12}$C($n,p$)$^{12}$B cross section at n_TOF (CERN) by in-beam activation analysis
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Žugec, P., Colonna, N., Bosnar, D., Mengoni, A., Altstadt, S., Andrzejewski, J., Audouin, L., Barbagallo, M., Bécares, V., Bečvář, F., Belloni, F., Berthoumieux, E., Billowes, J., Boccone, V., Brugger, M., Calviani, M., Cano-Ott, F. Calviño D., Carrapiço, C., Cerutti, F., Chiaveri, E., Chin, M., Cortés, G., Cortés-Giraldo, M. A., Cosentino, L., Diakaki, M., Domingo-Pardo, C., Dressler, R., Duran, I., Eleftheriadis, C., Ferrari, A., Finocchiaro, P., Fraval, K., Ganesan, S., García, A. R., Giubrone, G., Gómez-Hornillos, M. B., Gonçalves, I. F., González-Romero, E., Griesmayer, E., Guerrero, C., Gunsing, F., Gurusamy, P., Heinitz, S., Jenkins, D. G., Jericha, E., Käppeler, F., Karadimos, D., Kivel, N., Kokkoris, M., Krtička, M., Kroll, J., Langer, C., Lederer, C., Leeb, H., Leong, L. S., LoMeo, S., Losito, R., Manousos, A., Marganiec, J., Martínez, T., Massimi, C., Mastinu, P., Mastromarco, M., Mendoza, E., Milazzo, P. M., Mingrone, F., Mirea, M., Mondalaers, W., Musumarra, A., Paradela, C., Pavlik, A., Perkowski, J., Plompen, A., Praena, J., Quesada, J., Rauscher, T., Reifarth, R., Riego, A., Roman, F., Rubbia, C., Sarmento, R., Saxena, A., Schillebeeckx, P., Schmidt, S., Schumann, D., Tagliente, G., Tain, J. L., Tarrío, D., Tassan-Got, L., Tsinganis, A., Valenta, S., Vannini, G., Variale, V., Vaz, P., Ventura, A., Versaci, R., Vermeulen, M. J., Vlachoudis, V., Vlastou, R., Wallner, A., Ware, T., Weigand, M., Weiß, C., and Wright, T.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The integral cross section of the $^{12}$C($n,p$)$^{12}$B reaction has been determined for the first time in the neutron energy range from threshold to several GeV at the n_TOF facility at CERN. The measurement relies on the activation technique, with the $\beta$-decay of $^{12}$B measured over a period of four half-lives within the same neutron bunch in which the reaction occurs. The results indicate that model predictions, used in a variety of applications, are mostly inadequate. The value of the integral cross section reported here can be used as a benchmark for verifying or tuning model calculations., Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures
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- 2014
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14. GEANT4 simulation of the neutron background of the C$_6$D$_6$ set-up for capture studies at n_TOF
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collaboration, n_TOF, Žugec, P., Colonna, N., Bosnar, D., Altstadt, S., Andrzejewski, J., Audouin, L., Barbagallo, M., Bécares, V., Bečvář, F., Belloni, F., Berthoumieux, E., Billowes, J., Boccone, V., Brugger, M., Calviani, M., Calviño, F., Cano-Ott, D., Carrapiço, C., Cerutti, F., Chiaveri, E., Chin, M., Cortés, G., Cortés-Giraldo, M. A., Diakaki, M., Domingo-Pardo, C., Dressler, R., Duran, I., Dzysiuk, N., Eleftheriadis, C., Ferrari, A., Fraval, K., Ganesan, S., García, A. R., Giubrone, G., Gómez-Hornillos, M. B., Gonçalves, I. F., González-Romero, E., Griesmayer, E., Guerrero, C., Gunsing, F., Gurusamy, P., Heinitz, S., Jenkins, D. G., Jericha, E., Kadi, Y., Käppeler, F., Karadimos, D., Kivel, N., Koehler, P., Kokkoris, M., Krtička, M., Kroll, J., Langer, C., Lederer, C., Leeb, H., Leong, L. S., Meo, S. Lo, Losito, R., Manousos, A., Marganiec, J., Martìnez, T., Massimi, C., Mastinu, P. F., Mastromarco, M., Meaze, M., Mendoza, E., Mengoni, A., Milazzo, P. M., Mingrone, F., Mirea, M., Mondalaers, W., Paradela, C., Pavlik, A., Perkowski, J., Plompen, A., Praena, J., Quesada, J. M., Rauscher, T., Reifarth, R., Riego, A., Roman, F., Rubbia, C., Sarmento, R., Saxena, A., Schillebeeckx, P., Schmidt, S., Schumann, D., Tagliente, G., Tain, J. L., Tarrío, D., Tassan-Got, L., Tsinganis, A., Valenta, S., Vannini, G., Variale, V., Vaz, P., Ventura, A., Versaci, R., Vermeulen, M. J., Vlachoudis, V., Vlastou, R., Wallner, A., Ware, T., Weigand, M., Weiß, C., and Wright, T.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The neutron sensitivity of the C$_6$D$_6$ detector setup used at n_TOF for capture measurements has been studied by means of detailed GEANT4 simulations. A realistic software replica of the entire n_TOF experimental hall, including the neutron beam line, sample, detector supports and the walls of the experimental area has been implemented in the simulations. The simulations have been analyzed in the same manner as experimental data, in particular by applying the Pulse Height Weighting Technique. The simulations have been validated against a measurement of the neutron background performed with a $^\mathrm{nat}$C sample, showing an excellent agreement above 1 keV. At lower energies, an additional component in the measured $^\mathrm{nat}$C yield has been discovered, which prevents the use of $^\mathrm{nat}$C data for neutron background estimates at neutron energies below a few hundred eV. The origin and time structure of the neutron background have been derived from the simulations. Examples of the neutron background for two different samples are demonstrating the important role of accurate simulations of the neutron background in capture cross section measurements.
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- 2014
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15. $^{62}$Ni($n,\gamma$) and $^{63}$Ni($n,\gamma$) cross sections measured at n_TOF/CERN
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Lederer, C., Massimi, C., Berthoumieux, E., Colonna, N., Dressler, R., Guerrero, C., Gunsing, F., Käppeler, F., Kivel, N., Pignatari, M., Reifarth, R., Schumann, D., Wallner, A., Altstadt, S., Andriamonje, S., Andrzejewski, J., Audouin, L., Barbagallo, M., Becares, V., Becvar, F., Belloni, F., Berthier, B., Billowes, J., Boccone, V., Bosnar, D., Brugger, M., Calviani, M., Calvino, F., Cano-Ott, D., Carrapico, C., Cerutti, F., Chiaveri, E., Chin, M., Cortes, G., Cortes-Giraldo, M. A., Dillmann, I., Domingo-Pardo, C., Duran, I., Dzysiuk, N., Eleftheriadis, C., Fernandez-Ordonez, M., Ferrari, A., Fraval, K., Ganesan, S., Garcıa, A. R., Giubrone, G., Gomez-Hornillos, M. B., Goncalves, I. F., Gonzalez-Romero, E., Gramegna, F., Griesmayer, E., Gurusamy, P., Harrisopulos, S., Heil, M., Ioannides, K., Jenkins, D. G., Jericha, E., Kadi, Y., Karadimos, D., Korschinek, G., Krticka, M., Kroll, J., Langer, C., Lebbos, E., Leeb, H., Leong, L. S., Losito, R., Lozano, M., Manousos, A., Marganiec, J., Marrone, S., Martinez, T., Mastinu, P. F., Mastromarco, M., Meaze, M., Mendoza, E., Mengoni, A., Milazzo, P. M., Mingrone, F., Mirea, M., Mondalaers, W., Paradela, C., Pavlik, A., Perkowski, J., Plag, R., Plompen, A., Praena, J., Quesada, J. M., Rauscher, T., Riego, A., Roman, F., Rubbia, C., Sarmento, R., Schillebeeckx, P., Schmidt, S., Tagliente, G., Tain, J. L., Tarrıo, D., Tassan-Got, L., Tsinganis, A., Tlustos, L., Valenta, S., Vannini, G., Variale, V., Vaz, P., Ventura, A., Vermeulen, M. J., Versaci, R., Vlachoudis, V., Vlastou, R., Ware, T., Weigand, M., Weiß, C., Wright, T. J., and Zugec, P.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The cross section of the $^{62}$Ni($n,\gamma$) reaction was measured with the time-of-flight technique at the neutron time-of-flight facility n_TOF at CERN. Capture kernels of 42 resonances were analyzed up to 200~keV neutron energy and Maxwellian averaged cross sections (MACS) from $kT=5-100$ keV were calculated. With a total uncertainty of 4.5%, the stellar cross section is in excellent agreement with the the KADoNiS compilation at $kT=30$ keV, while being systematically lower up to a factor of 1.6 at higher stellar temperatures. The cross section of the $^{63}$Ni($n,\gamma$) reaction was measured for the first time at n_TOF. We determined unresolved cross sections from 10 to 270 keV with a systematic uncertainty of 17%. These results provide fundamental constraints on $s$-process production of heavier species, especially the production of Cu in massive stars, which serve as the dominant source of Cu in the solar system.
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- 2014
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16. Experimental neutron capture data of $^{58}$Ni from the CERN n_TOF facility
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collaboration, n_TOF, Žugec, P., Barbagallo, M., Colonna, N., Bosnar, D., Altstadt, S., Andrzejewski, J., Audouin, L., Bécares, V., Bečvář, F., Belloni, F., Berthoumieux, E., Billowes, J., Boccone, V., Brugger, M., Calviani, M., Calviño, F., Cano-Ott, D., Carrapiço, C., Cerutti, F., Chiaveri, E., Chin, M., Cortés, G., Cortés-Giraldo, M. A., Diakaki, M., Domingo-Pardo, C., Duran, I., Dzysiuk, N., Eleftheriadis, C., Ferrari, A., Fraval, K., Ganesan, S., García, A. R., Giubrone, G., Gómez-Hornillos, M. B., Gonçalves, I. F., González-Romero, E., Griesmayer, E., Guerrero, C., Gunsing, F., Gurusamy, P., Jenkins, D. G., Jericha, E., Kadi, Y., Käppeler, F., Karadimos, D., Koehler, P., Kokkoris, M., Krtička, M., Kroll, J., Langer, C., Lederer, C., Leeb, H., Leong, L. S., Losito, R., Manousos, A., Marganiec, J., Martìnez, T., Massimi, C., Mastinu, P. F., Mastromarco, M., Meaze, M., Mendoza, E., Mengoni, A., Milazzo, P. M., Mingrone, F., Mirea, M., Mondalaers, W., Paradela, C., Pavlik, A., Perkowski, J., Pignatari, M., Plompen, A., Praena, J., Quesada, J. M., Rauscher, T., Reifarth, R., Riego, A., Roman, F., Rubbia, C., Sarmento, R., Schillebeeckx, P., Schmidt, S., Tagliente, G., Tain, J. L., Tarrío, D., Tassan-Got, L., Tsinganis, A., Valenta, S., Vannini, G., Variale, V., Vaz, P., Ventura, A., Versaci, R., Vermeulen, M. J., Vlachoudis, V., Vlastou, R., Wallner, A., Ware, T., Weigand, M., Weiß, C., and Wright, T.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The $^{58}$Ni $(n,\gamma)$ cross section has been measured at the neutron time of flight facility n_TOF at CERN, in the energy range from 27 meV up to 400 keV. In total, 51 resonances have been analyzed up to 122 keV. Maxwellian averaged cross sections (MACS) have been calculated for stellar temperatures of kT$=$5-100 keV with uncertainties of less than 6%, showing fair agreement with recent experimental and evaluated data up to kT = 50 keV. The MACS extracted in the present work at 30 keV is 34.2$\pm$0.6$_\mathrm{stat}\pm$1.8$_\mathrm{sys}$ mb, in agreement with latest results and evaluations, but 12% lower relative to the recent KADoNIS compilation of astrophysical cross sections. When included in models of the s-process nucleosynthesis in massive stars, this change results in a 60% increase of the abundance of $^{58}$Ni, with a negligible propagation on heavier isotopes. The reason is that, using both the old or the new MACS, 58Ni is efficiently depleted by neutron captures., Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, 5 tables
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- 2014
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17. Comparison of contact metals evaporated onto monolayer molybdenum disulfide.
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Mazzoni, A., Burke, R., Chin, M., Najmaei, S., Dubey, M., Goldsman, N., and Daniels, K.
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CHEMICAL vapor deposition ,FIELD-effect devices ,MONOMOLECULAR films ,FIELD-effect transistors ,MOLYBDENUM disulfide ,MOLYBDENUM sulfides ,METALS - Abstract
Understanding and improving the contact resistance of two-dimensional materials for the fabrication of next-generation devices is of vital importance to be able to fully utilize the new physics available in these materials. In this work, eight different contact metals (Ag, Au, Cr, Cu, In, Mo, Ni, and Ti) have been investigated using the same sample of monolayer MoS
2 . Through the fabrication and testing of multiple, identically sized field-effect transistor devices per contact metal, we compensate for large variability in electrical properties of as-grown chemical vapor deposition MoS2 and deduce the relative performance of each metal. The general trend of lower work function metals having lower contact resistance holds with In, Ag, and Ti performing the best of the metals tested. Our results are compatible with recent research suggesting that the contact resistance in undoped, monolayer MoS2 is dominated by a lateral junction resistance, and we provide context for how this manifests in device-to-device variation. Multiple orders of magnitude differences in contact resistance are observed between metals and can be explained by this lateral barrier operating in the thermionic-field emission regime. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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18. Widespread biomass burning smoke throughout the remote troposphere
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Schill, G. P., Froyd, K. D., Bian, H., Kupc, A., Williamson, C., Brock, C. A., Ray, E., Hornbrook, R. S., Hills, A. J., Apel, E. C., Chin, M., Colarco, P. R., and Murphy, D. M.
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- 2020
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19. Extended calibration range for prompt photon emission in ion beam irradiation
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Bellini, F., Boehlen, T. T., Chin, M. P. W., Collamati, F., De Lucia, E., Faccini, R., Ferrari, A., Lanza, L., Mancini-Terraciano, C., Marafini, M., Mattei, I., Morganti, S., Ortega, P. G., Patera, V., Piersanti, L., Russomando, A., Sala, P. R., Sarti, A., Sciubba, A., Camillocci, E. Solfaroli, and Voena, C.
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Physics - Medical Physics ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
Monitoring the dose delivered during proton and carbon ion therapy is still a matter of research. Among the possible solutions, several exploit the measurement of the single photon emission from nuclear decays induced by the irradiation. To fully characterize such emission the detectors need development, since the energy spectrum spans the range above the MeV that is not traditionally used in medical applications. On the other hand, a deeper understanding of the reactions involving gamma production is needed in order to improve the physic models of Monte Carlo codes, relevant for an accurate prediction of the prompt-gamma energy spectrum.This paper describes a calibration technique tailored for the range of energy of interest and reanalyzes the data of the interaction of a 80MeV/u fully stripped carbon ion beam with a Poly-methyl methacrylate target. By adopting the FLUKA simulation with the appropriate calibration and resolution a significant improvement in the agreement between data and simulation is reported., Comment: 4 pages, 7 figures, Submitted to JINST
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- 2013
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20. Neutron capture cross section of unstable 63Ni: implications for stellar nucleosynthesis
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Lederer, C., Massimi, C., Altstadt, S., Andrzejewski, J., Audouin, L., Barbagallo, M., Bécares, V., Bevá, F., Belloni, F., Berthoumieux, E., Billowes, J., Boccone, V., Bosnar, D., Brugger, M., Calviani, M., Calviño, F., Cano-Ott, D., Carrapiço, C., Cerutti, F., Chiaveri, E., Chin, M., Colonna, N., Cortés, G., Cortés-Giraldo, M. A., Diakaki, M., Domingo-Pardo, C., Duran, I., Dressler, R., Dzysiuk, N., Eleftheriadis, C., Ferrari, A., Fraval, K., Ganesan, S., García, A. R., Giubrone, G., Gómez-Hornillos, M. B., Gonçalves, I. F., González-Romero, E., Griesmayer, E., Guerrero, C., Gunsing, F., Gurusamy, P., Jenkins, D. G., Jericha, E., Kadi, Y., Käppeler, F., Karadimos, D., Kivel, N., Koehler, P., Kokkoris, M., Korschinek, G., Krtika, M., Kroll, J., Langer, C., Leeb, H., Leong, L. S., Losito, R., Manousos, A., Marganiec, J., Martínez, T., Mastinu, P. F., Mastromarco, M., Meaze, M., Mendoza, E., Mengoni, A., Milazzo, P. M., Mingrone, F., Mirea, M., Mondelaers, W., Paradela, C., Pavlik, A., Perkowski, J., Pignatari, M., Plompen, A., Praena, J., Quesada, J. M., Rauscher, T., Reifarth, R., Riego, A., Roman, F., Rubbia, C., Sarmento, R., Schillebeeckx, P., Schmidt, S., Schumann, D., Tagliente, G., Tain, J. L., Tarrío, D., Tassan-Got, L., Tsinganis, A., Valenta, S., Vannini, G., Variale, V., Vaz, P., Ventura, A., Versaci, R., Vermeulen, M. J., Vlachoudis, V., Vlastou, R., Wallner, A., Ware, T., Weigand, M., Weiß, C., Wright, T. J., and Zugec, P.
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Nuclear Experiment ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The $^{63}$Ni($n, \gamma$) cross section has been measured for the first time at the neutron time-of-flight facility n\_TOF at CERN from thermal neutron energies up to 200 keV. In total, capture kernels of 12 (new) resonances were determined. Maxwellian Averaged Cross Sections were calculated for thermal energies from kT = 5 keV to 100 keV with uncertainties around 20%. Stellar model calculations for a 25 M$_\odot$ star show that the new data have a significant effect on the $s$-process production of $^{63}$Cu, $^{64}$Ni, and $^{64}$Zn in massive stars, allowing stronger constraints on the Cu yields from explosive nucleosynthesis in the subsequent supernova.
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- 2013
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21. Reproductive endocrinologists are the gatekeepers for male infertility care in North America: results of a North American survey on the referral patterns and characteristics of men presenting to male infertility specialists for infertility investigations
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Samplaski, Mary K., Smith, James F., Lo, Kirk C., Hotaling, James M., Lau, Susan, Grober, Ethan D., Trussell, J.C., Walsh, Thomas J., Kolettis, Peter N., Chow, Victor D.W., Zini, Armand S., Spitz, Aaron, Fischer, Marc A., Domes, Trustin, Zeitlin, Scott I., Fuchs, Eugene F., Hedges, Jason C., Sandlow, Jay I., Brannigan, Robert E., Dupree, James M., Goldstein, Marc, Ko, Edmund Y., Hsieh, Tung-Chin M., Bieniek, Jared M., Shin, David, Nangia, Ajay K., and Jarvi, Keith A.
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- 2019
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22. Rivaroxaban or aspirin for patent foramen ovale and embolic stroke of undetermined source: a prespecified subgroup analysis from the NAVIGATE ESUS trial
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Abdelhamid, N, Abdul Rahman, D, Abdul-Saheb, M, Abreu, P, Abroskina, M, Abu Ahmad, F, Accassat, S, Acciaresi, M, Adami, A, Ahmad, N, Ahmed, F, Alberto Hawkes, M, Alemseged, F, Ali, A, Altavilla, R, Alwis, L, Amarenco, P, Amaro, S, Amaya Sanchez, LE, Amelia Pinto, A, Ameriso, SF, Amin, H, Amino, T, Amjad, AK, Anagnostou, E, Andersen, G, Anderson, C, Anderson, DC, Andrea Falco, M, Andres Mackinnon, F, Andreu, D, Androulakis, M, Angel Gamero, M, Angel Saredo, G, Angeles Diaz, R, Angels Font, M, Anticoli, S, Arauz, A, Arauz Gongora, AA, Araya, P, Arenillas Lara, JF, Arias Rivas, S, Arnold, M, Augustin, S, Avelar, W, Azevedo, E, Babikian, V, Bacellar, A, Badalyan, K, Bae, HJ, Baez Martinez, EM, Bagelmann, H, Bailey, P, Bak, Z, Baker, M, Balazs, A, Baldaranov, D, Balogun, I, Balueva, T, Bankuti, Z, Bar, M, Baranowska, A, Bardutzky, J, Barker Trejo, S, Barlinn, J, Baronnet, F, Barroso, C, Barteys, M, Bartolottiova, T, Barulin, A, Bas, M, Bashir, S, Basile, V, Bathe-Peters, R, Bathula, R, Batista, C, Batur Caglayan, H, Baumgartner, P, Bazan, R, Bazhenova, O, Beaudry, M, Beer, J, Behnam, Y, Beilei, C, Beinlich, A, Bejot, Y, Belkin, A, Benavente, OR, Benjamin, A, Berardi, V, Bereczki, D, Berkowitz, SD, Berlingieri, J, Berrios, W, Berrouschot, J, Bhandari, M, Bhargavah, M, Bicker, H, Bicsak, T, Bilik, M, Bindila, D, Birchenall, J, Birnbaum, L, Black, T, Blacker, D, Blacquiere, D, Blanc-Labarre, C, Blank, C, Blazejewska-Hyzorek, B, Bloch, S, Bodiguel, E, Bogdanov, E, Boos, L, Borcsik, L, Bornstein, N, Bouly, S, Braga, G, Bragado, I, Bravi, MC, Brokalaki, C, Brola, W, Brouns, R, Bruce, D, Brzoska-Mizgalska, J, Buck, B, Buksinska-Lisik, M, Burke, J, Burn, M, Bustamante, G, Cabrejo, L, Cai, K, Cajaraville, S, Calejo, M, Calvet, D, Campillo, J, Campos Costa, E, Camps, P, Can Alaydin, H, Candeloro, E, Canepa, C, Cantu Brito, CG, Cappellari, M, Carcel, C, Cardona Portela, P, Cardoso, F, Carek, M, Carletti, M, Carlos Portilla, J, Caruso, P, Casado-Naranjo, I, Castellini, P, Castro, D, Castro Meira, F, Cavallini, A, Cayuela Caudevilla, N, Cenciarelli, S, Cereda, C, Cerrone, P, Chakrabarti, A, Chaloulos-Iakovidis, P, Chamorro, A, Chandrasena, D, Chang, DI, Che, C, Chembala, J, Chen, J, Chen, Z, Chen, T, Chen, H, Chen, X, Chen, G, Chen, L, Chen, S, Cheripelli, B, Chin, M, Chiquete Anaya, E, Chorazy, M, Christensen, H, Christensen, T, Christian, L, Chu, F, Chung, CS, Clark, W, Clarke, R, Claverie, S, Clemente Agostoni, E, Clissold, B, Coelho, J, Cohen, D, Colakoglu, S, Collas, D, Condurso, R, Connolly, SJ, Consoli, D, Constantin, C, Constantino Silva, AB, Contardo, L, Corlobe, A, Correia, M, Correia, C, Cortijo Garcia, E, Coull, B, Coutts, S, Coveney, S, Cras, P, Crols, R, Crozier, S, Csanyi, A, Csiba, L, Csontos, K, Csuha, R, Cui, L, Cunha, L, Curtze, S, Czerska, M, Czlonkowska, A, Czurko, M, Czuryszkiewicz, M, Dagnino, M, Dai, C, Daineko, A, Dalek, G, Damgaard, D, Danese, A, Dani, K, Danku, V, Dario Toledo, W, Dávalos, A, De Havenon, A, De Keyser, J, De Klippel, N, De La Torre, J, De Pauw, A, De Smedt, A, De Torres, R, De Vries Basson, MM, Dearborn, J, Deganutto, R, Degeorgia, M, Deguchi, I, Del Giudice, A, Delcourt, C, Delgado-Mederos, R, Della Marca, G, Delpont, B, Deltour, S, Demets, DL, Dennis, M, Desai, J, Devine, J, Dhollander, I, Di Mascio, MT, Diaconu, M, Diaz Otero, F, Dietzel, J, Diez-Tejedor, E, Ding, N, Ding, J, Diomedi, M, Dioszeghy, P, Distefano, M, Domigo, V, Dorodnicov, E, Dossi, D, Doubal, F, Druzenko, I, Du, P, Du, J, Duman, T, Duodu, Y, Dutta, D, Dylewicz, L, Eckstein, J, Ehrensperger, E, Ehrlich, S, Einer Allende, G, Elena Halac, B, Elyas, S, Endres, M, Engelbrecht, JM, Engelter, S, Epinat, M, Eren, F, Esbjornsson, M, Escribano, B, Escudero, I, Esisi, B, Essa, B, Esterbauer, M, Evans, N, Eveson, D, Fabio, S, Fang, L, Fanta, S, Fares, M, Fatar, M, Faust, K, Favate, A, Fazekas, F, Federica Denaro, M, Fedin, A, Felipe Amaya, P, Feng, J, Ferencova, K, Fernanda Gilli, M, Fernandez, MD, Fernandez Pirrone, PN, Fernandez Vera, J, Ferrari, J, Ferreira, A, Ferreira Junior, G, Fidler, M, Field, D, Field, T, Figueroa, C, Fiksa, J, Filipov, A, Firstenfeld, A, Fisch, L, Fischer, U, Fisselier, M, Fiszer, U, Fluri, F, Fortea, G, Fotherby, K, Fraczek, A, France, E, Freitas, G, Frey, S, Frick, M, Friedman, A, Friedrich, M, Frisullo, G, Fryze, W, Fuentes Gimeno, B, Fujigasaki, H, Fukuyama, K, Furlan, A, Furlanis, G, Furnace, J, Gabriel, M, Gabriel Reich, E, Gagliardi, RJ, Galati, F, Galli Giqueauk, E, Gallina, A, Gallinella, E, Gallo, J, Gangadharan, S, Gao, Y, Garcia Lopez, R, Garcia Pastor, A, Garcia Sanchez, SM, Garnauf, M, Garnier, P, Gasecki, D, Gasic, K, Gasiorek, K, Gasser, S, Gaugg, M, Gebreyohanns, M, Gebura, K, Geng, J, Geniz Clavijo, M, Georg Haeusler, K, Geran, R, Geremek, M, Gerocs, Z, Ghia, D, Giannandrea, D, Giatsidis, F, Gien Lopez, JA, Gil Nunez, A, Gimenez, L, Giralt, E, Glabinski, A, Gladstone, D, Gliem, M, Gluszkiewicz, M, Goddeau, R, Gogoleva, E, Gokce, M, Goldemund, D, Golikov, K, Gomes Neto, A, Gomez Schneider, M, Gomez-Choco, M, Gomis, M, Gongora-Rivera, JF, Gonysheva, Y, Gonzalez, L, Gonzalez Toledo, ME, Gottschal, M, Gozdzik, I, Grabowski, S, Graf, S, Green, D, Greer, D, Gregorio, T, Greisenegger, S, Greshnova, I, Griebe, M, Grzesik, M, Guan, J, Guarda, S, Gueguen, A, Guidoux, C, Guillermo Povedano, P, Guillon, B, Guiraudg, V, Gunathilagan, G, Guryanova, N, Gusev, V, Gustavo Persi, G, Gutiérrez, R, Guyler, P, Gyuker, N, Hachinski, V, Hajas, A, Hallevi, H, Hankey, G, Hankey, GJ, Hanouskova, L, Hao, L, Haraguchi, K, Haralur Sreekantaiah, Y, Haratz, S, Hargroves, D, Harkness, K, Harmel, P, Harrasser, M, Hart, RG, Harvey, M, Hasan, R, Hasegawa, Y, Hassan, A, Hattori, M, Hatzitolios, A, Hauk, M, Hayashi, T, Hayhoe, H, Hedna, VS, Heine, M, Held, V, Hellwig, S, Henkner, J, Henninger, N, Hermans, S, Hernandez, J, Herrero, D, Hervieu-Begue, M, Herzig, R, Hicken, L, Hieber, M, Hill, M, Hirose, M, Hobeanu, MC, Hobson, B, Hochstetter, M, Hoe Heo, J, Hoffmann, M, Holmstedt, C, Hon, P, Hong, KS, Honma, Y, Horev, A, Horgan, G, Horvath, L, Horvath, M, Hoyer, C, Huang, D, Huang, H, Huber, B, Huhtakangas, J, Hussain, M, Igarashi, S, Iglesias Mohedano, AM, Ignacio Tembl, J, Impellizzeri, M, Inanc, Y, Ioli, P, Irina Aniculaesei, A, Ishida, K, Itabashi, R, Iversen, H, Jagolino, A, Jakab, K, Jander, S, Janka, H, Jankovych, J, Jansen, J, Jasek, L, Javier Alet, M, Javor, L, Jin, X, Jing, P, Joachim, B, Joan Macleod, M, Johnson, M, Jose Martin, J, Joyner, C, Judit Szabo, K, Jun-Oconnell, A, Jura, R, Kaczorowska, B, Kadlcikova, J, Kahles, T, Kakaletsis, N, Kakuk, I, Kalinowska, K, Kaminska, K, Kaneko, C, Kanellos, I, Kapeller, P, Kapica-Topczewska, K, Karasz, O, Karlinski, M, Karlsson, JE, Kasa, K, Kashaeva, E, Kasner, SE, Kaste, M, Kasza, J, Katalin Iljicsov, A, Katsurayama, M, Kaur, S, Kawanishi, M, Kaygorodtseva, S, Ke, K, Kei, A, Keilitz, J, Kellner, J, Kelly, P, Kelly, S, Kemlink, D, Kerekgyarto, M, Keskinarkaus, I, Khairutdinova, D, Khanna, A, Khaw, A, Kholopov, M, Khoumri, C, Kirpicheva, S, Kirshner, H, Kitagawa, K, Kittner, S, Kivioja, R, Klein, F, Kleindorfer, D, Kleinig, T, Klivenyi, P, Knecht, S, Kobayashi, Y, Kobayashi, A, Koch, M, Koehler, L, Koivu, M, Kolianov, V, Koltsov, I, Kondo, T, Konkov, I, Kopecky, S, Korompoki, E, Korpela, J, Kosarz-Lanczek, K, Koutroubi, A, Kovacs, K, Kovacs, T, Kovacs, H, Kowalczyk, K, Kowalska, M, Krajickova, D, Kral, M, Krarup Hansen, C, Kraska, J, Krebs, S, Krejci, V, Kremer, C, Kreuzpointer, R, Krzyzanowska, M, Kucken, D, Kulakowska, A, Kunzmann, J, Kurenkova, N, Kuris, A, Kurkowska-Jastrzebska, I, Kurtenkova, N, Kurushina, O, Kusnick, G, Kustova, M, Kuwashiro, T, Kwan Cha, J, Lago, A, Lagutenko, M, Lajos, B, Lambeck, J, Lamy, C, Landolfi, A, Lanfranconi, S, Lang, W, Lara Lezama, LB, Lara Rodriguez, B, Largo, T, Lasek-Bal, A, Latte, L, Lauer, V, Lavados, P, Le Bouc, R, Leal Cantu, R, Lechner, H, Lecouturier, K, Leder, S, Lee, J, Lee, BC, Leger, A, Leira, E, Leisse, I, Leker, R, Lembo, G, Lenskaya, L, Leyden, J, Li, G, Li, M, Li, S, Li, J, Liamis, G, Liang, H, Liang, Z, Ligot, N, Lin, H, Lindert, R, Lindgren, A, Linna, M, Litwin, T, Liu, K, Liu, X, Llull, L, Lohninger, B, Longoni, M, Loomis, C, Lopes, D, Lopez Fernandez, M, Lopez Garza, N, Lord, A, Louw, S, Lovasz, R, Lowenkopf, T, Lu, Z, Lubke-Detring, SC, Luder, R, Lujan, S, Luo, B, Lupinogina, L, Luschin, G, Lutsep, H, Lvova, A, Ly, J, Grosse, G.M., Ma, H, Ma, C, Machado, M, Machado, C, Macher, S, Machetanz, J, Macian-Montoro, F, Mackey, E, Mackey, A, Maclean, G, Maestre-Moreno, J, Magadan, A, Magyar, T, Mahagney, A, Majid, A, Majjhoo, A, Makaritsis, K, Mandzia, J, Mangas Guijarro, M, Mangion, D, Manios, E, Mann, S, Manning, L, Manno, C, Manuel Garcia, J, Maqueda, V, Mar Castellanos, M, Mar Freijo, M, Marando, C, Marcela Lepera, S, Marcos Couto, J, Maria Bruera, G, Maria Greco, L, Maria Lorenzo, A, Maria Obmann, S, Maria Roa, A, Marini, C, Marinkovic, I, Mario Sumay, G, Mario Torres, C, Marko, M, Markova, S, Markus, H, Marsh, R, Marsili, E, Marta Esnaola, M, Marta Moreno, J, Marti-Fabregas, J, Martina Angelocola, S, Martínez Sánchez, P, Martinez-Majander, N, Martins, S, Marzelik, O, Mastrocola, S, Matamala, G, Matoltsy, A, Matosevic, B, Matsumoto, S, Maud, A, Mauri Cabdevila, G, May, Z, Mayasi, Y, Mayr, A, Mazzoli, T, Mcarthur, K, Mccullough, L, Medina Pech, CE, Medlin, F, Mehdiratta, M, Mehta, S, Mehta, D, Mehta, B, Melis, M, Melnikova, E, Mendez, B, Mendonca, T, Mengual Chirifie, JJ, Menon, N, Mensch, A, Meseguer, E, Messe, S, Metcalf, K, Meyer, N, Michas, F, Micheletti, N, Mikulik, R, Milionis, H, Miller, B, Milling, T, Minelli, C, Minhas, J, Minns, M, Mircea, D, Mishra, S, Mismas, A, Mistri, A, Mitrovic, N, Miyake, H, Modrau, B, Moey, A, Molina, C, Molina, J, Molis, A, Moller, J, Molnar, S, Moniche, F, Monosi, C, Monzani, V, Moonis, M, Morais, R, Morales, L, Morales, A, Morar-Precup, D, Moreton, F, Moro, C, Morozova, E, Morton, M, Morvan, T, Morvan, E, Motko, T, Mowla, A, Mozhejko, E, Muddegowda, G, Mudhar, O, Mueller, T, Muhl, C, Muir, KW, Mundl, H, Munoz, S, Murphy, C, Murphy, S, Murtuzova, A, Musuka, T, Mutzenbach, J, Myint, M, Mysliwy, W, Naccarato, M, Naeije, G, Nagakane, Y, Natarajan, I, Navaratnam, D, Nave, A, Nazliel, B, Nedeltchev, K, Nel, J, Nell, H, Nemeth, R, Nemeth, L, Neto, O, Ng, K, Ngeh, J, Nicolas Chialvo, L, Nieminen, T, Nikkanen, M, Nikl, J, Nikoforova, M, Nishino, S, Nishiyama, Y, Njovane, X, Nogawa, S, Nombela, F, Norrving, B, Nosek, K, Nowak, B, Nowakowska-Sledz, E, Ntaios, G, Numminen, H, Nunez, F, Obadia, M, Oberndorfer, S, Obrezan, A, Ochiai, J, Oczkowski, W, O'Donnell, MJ, Odyniec, A, Oh, K, Ohira, M, Okamoto, Y, Okpala, M, Okubo, S, Olah, L, Olavarria, V, Oleszek, J, Onat Demirci, N, Ondar, V, Ongun, G, Ooyama, K, Orosz, V, Ortiz, R, Osseby, G, Österlund-Tauriala, E, Ovesen, C, Ozcekic Demirhan, S, Ozdoba-Rot, J, Ozturk, S, Ozyurt, E, Pablo Grecco, M, Pablo Povedano, G, Paciaroni, M, Padiglioni, C, Pagola, J, Palasik, W, Panczel, G, Panos, L, Papadopoulos, G, Papadopoulou, E, Papagiannis, A, Papavasileiou, V, Papina, M, Pardo De Donlebun, JR, Parisi, V, Park, JM, Pasten, J, Patel, N, Pavlik, O, Pawelczyk, M, Peacock, WF, Pei, H, Peisker, T, Pena Sedna, LF, Penn, A, Pentek, S, Pepper, E, Pereira, L, Perera, K, Perez, Y, Perez, S, Perez Leguizamon, P, Pernicka, M, Perry, R, Persico, A, Pesant, Y, Peska, S, Peters, D, Peters, G, Pettigrew, L, Phan, T, Philippi, S, Phinney, T, Pico, F, Pidal, A, Piechowski-Jozwiak, B, Pieroni, A, Pineiro, S, Piras, V, Pizova, N, Polanco, J, Polin, M, Polyakov, A, Polychronopoulou, E, Polymeris, A, Popov, D, Poppe, A, Postorino, P, Pozzerese, C, Pradhan, M, Prats, L, Prazdnichkova, E, Prendl, B, Pretorius, M, Profice, P, Prokopenko, S, Pudov, E, Pujol Lereis, V, Punzo Bravo, G, Purroy, F, Qiu, J, Qu, X, Quenardelle, V, Quesada Garcia, H, Radrizzani, L, Radtke, A, Raffelsberger, T, Ramirez Moreno, JM, Ramos-Estebanez, C, Rani, A, Rapantova, P, Rashed, K, Rasheed Nihara, A, Rasmussen, J, Redondo Robles, L, Reif, M, Reiner, P, Rekova, P, Renu, A, Repetto, M, Reyes, P, Reyes Morales, S, Rha, JH, Ribeiro, J, Ricci, S, Richard, C, Rigual, R, Rinaldi, C, Riveira Rodriguez, C, Rizzato, B, Robinson, TG, Rocco, A, Rodrigues, M, Rodriguez, G, Rodriguez Campello, A, Rodriguez Lucci, F, Rodriguez Yanez, M, Roesler, C, Roffe, C, Roine, R, Roine, S, Roldan, A, Romana Pezzella, F, Romano, M, Roos, JS, Rosso, C, Rostrup Kruuse, C, Roth, Y, Roukens, R, Roveri, L, Rozanski, D, Rozniecki, J, Rozsa, C, Rudilosso, S, Ruiz Ares, G, Ruiz Franco, A, Rum, G, Ruuskanen, J, Rybinnik, I, Ryota, K, Saarinen, J, Saavedra, V, Sabben, C, Sabet, A, Sagris, D, Sahlas, J, Sakai, N, Salamanca, P, Salgado, P, Salig, S, Salletmayr, T, Salnikov, M, Samoshkina, O, Samson, Y, Sanak, D, Sànchez Cerón, M, Santalucia, P, Santamaria Cadavid, M, Santiago, P, Santo, G, Sanz Cuesta, B, Sargento, J, Sarraj, A, Sas, K, Sas, A, Satoshi, O, Satsoglou, S, Sattar, N, Savitz, S, Savopoulos, C, Saw, J, Sawicka, M, Sawyer, R, Scandura, T, Schillinger, N, Schindler, J, Schlachetzki, F, Schneider, I, Schuppner, R, Schurig, J, Schwarzbach, CJ, Sebejova, M, Seidel, G, Sekaran, L, Selcuk, D, Selvarajah, J, Semerano, A, Semjen, J, Semushina, D, Sen, S, Seok Park, M, Serena, J, Serhat Tokgoz, O, Serles, W, Serrano, F, Sevin, M, Seynaeve, L, Shah, S, Shamalov, N, Shang, T, Sharma, M, Sharrief, A, Shazam Hussain, M, Shchukin, I, Shen, W, Shepeleva, E, Shinsuke, I, Shmonin, A, Shoamanesh, A, Shuaib, A, Shulga, A, Sibolt, G, Sibon, I, Sicilia, I, Siebert, M, Sieczkowska, E, Sila, C, Silva, AA, Silva, D, Silva, P, Silva, Y, Silvestrini, M, Simony, Z, Simpkins, A, Singh, B, Sinha, D, Sipos, I, Skoda, O, Skowron, P, Skowronska, M, Sliwinska, B, Slonkova, J, Smolkin, A, Smyth, A, Sobolewski, P, Sobota, A, Sohn, SI, Soldatov, M, Solganov, I, Soloveva, L, Solovyeva, E, Sonntag, N, Soors, P, Sorgun, M, Soriano, C, Spence, D, Spengos, K, Sposato, L, Staaf, G, Stadler, K, Stakhovskaya, L, Stamatelopoulos, K, Steinert, S, Stetkarova, I, Stiehm, M, Stocker, R, Stoinski, J, Stoll, A, Stotts, G, Stumpp, A, Sucapane, P, Suenaga, T, Sun, X, Sundararajan, S, Sung Kim, J, Suzuki, H, Svaneborg, N, Szasz, G, Szczuchniak, W, Szczyrba, S, Szegedi, N, Szekely, A, Szewczyk, Z, Szilagyi, G, Szlufik, S, Szoboszlai, K, Szpisjak, L, Sztajzel, R, Sztriha, L, Ta Wil, SE, Taggeselle, J, Takamatsu, K, Takao, M, Taki, W, Takizawa, S, Talahma, M, Tamayo, A, Tan, J, Tanne, D, Tapanainen, A, Tapiola, T, Tarasiuk, J, Tatlisumak, T, Tayal, A, Tcvetkova, S, Teal, P, Tejada Garcia, J, Tejada Meza, H, Tenora, D, Terceno, M, Terentiou, A, Tezcan, S, Thaler, D, Thomson, A, Thouvenot, E, Tiainen, M, Timberg, I, Timsit, S, Tinchon, A, Tirschwell, D, Togay Isikay, C, Tokunaga, K, Tolino, M, Toloza, C, Tomelleri, G, Tomoyuki, K, Tomppo, LM, Tong, Z, Tong, L, Toni, D, Torres, J, Tossavainen, C, Toth, G, Tountopoulou, A, Touze, E, Tovar, M, Toyoda, K, Trillo, S, Trommer, A, Tropepi, D, Tryambake, D, Tu, H, Tuetuencue, S, Tumova, R, Tumpula, O, Turc, G, Tutaj, A, Tynkkynen, J, Uchiyama, S, Uchwat, U, Uhrinyakova, L, Ulku Acar, R, Uluduz Ugurlu, D, Urra, X, Urui, S, Usero Ruiz, M, Vaclavik, D, Vahedi, K, Valikovics, A, Valpas, J, Van Acker, P, Van Daele, W, Vanderschueren, G, Vanina Jure, L, Varela, R, Varga, Z, Varvat, J, Varvyanskaya, N, Vasco Salgado, A, Vasko, P, Vass, L, Vassilopoulou, S, Vastagh, I, Vazquez, P, Vecsei, L, Veltkamp, R, Venti, M, Verdugo, M, Verocai, V, Veronica Marroquin, M, Veronica Simonsini, C, Veverka, T, Vigl, M, Vila, A, Vilar, C, Villanueva Osorio, JA, Virta, J, Vitkova, E, Voglsperger, B, Volna, J, Von Weitzel-Mudersbach, PA, Vora, N, Voznyuk, I, Wach-Klink, A, Wacongne, A, Walters, D, Wang, Y, Wang, J, Wang, L, Wang, X, Wang, W, Wang, N, Wang, D, Wang, H, Warnack, W, Wartenberg, K, Waters, R, Waters, M, Webb, T, Weber, J, Weiss, G, Weissenborn, K, Weitz, JI, Weller, B, Wen, G, Weng, G, Werner, P, Werring, D, Wester, P, Whiteley, W, Whiting, R, Wijeratne, T, Willems, C, Wilson, L, Wilson, C, Winder, T, Windt, J, Winkler, A, Winska-Tereszkiewicz, A, Wisniewska, A, Wittayer, M, Wlodek, A, Wojnarowska-Arendt, A, Wolf, M, Wolff, V, Wolter, C, Wong, A, Wook Nah, H, Worthmann, H, Wu, W, Wu, S, Wunderlich, S, Wurzinger, H, Wyse, DG, Xiao, B, Xiaopeng, W, Ximenez-Carrillo, A, Xiong, L, Xiong, Y, Xiong, W, Xu, Y, Xu, J, Xu, Z, Yalo, B, Yamada, T, Yamasaki, M, Yang, L, Yang, Y, Yang, X, Yang, Q, Yang, B, Yang, J, Yasuhiro, I, Yee Lam, M, Yegappan, C, Yip, S, Ylikallio, E, Ylikotila, P, Yongwon Jin, A, Yoon, BW, Yoshida, Y, Yperzeele, L, Yuan, H, Yuasa, H, Zalewska, J, Zanferrari, C, Zapata, E, Zboznovits, D, Zelenka, I, Zhang, C, Zhang, B, Zhang, S, Zhang, M, Zhang, X, Zhang, J, Zhao, L, Zhirnova, O, Zhou, L, Zielinska-Turek, J, Zinchenko, I, Ziomek, M, Zitzmann, A, Zweifler, R, Zwiernik, J, Kasner, Scott E, Swaminathan, Balakumar, Lavados, Pablo, Sharma, Mukul, Muir, Keith, Veltkamp, Roland, Ameriso, Sebastian F, Endres, Matthias, Lutsep, Helmi, Messé, Steven R, Spence, J David, Nedeltechev, Krassen, Perera, Kanjana, Santo, Gustavo, Olavarria, Veronica, Lindgren, Arne, Bangdiwala, Shrikant, Shoamanesh, Ashkan, Berkowitz, Scott D, Mundl, Hardi, Connolly, Stuart J, and Hart, Robert G
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- 2018
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23. The AeroCom evaluation and intercomparison of organic aerosol in global models
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Tsigaridis, K, Daskalakis, N, Kanakidou, M, Adams, PJ, Artaxo, P, Bahadur, R, Balkanski, Y, Bauer, SE, Bellouin, N, Benedetti, A, Bergman, T, Berntsen, TK, Beukes, JP, Bian, H, Carslaw, KS, Chin, M, Curci, G, Diehl, T, Easter, RC, Ghan, SJ, Gong, SL, Hodzic, A, Hoyle, CR, Iversen, T, Jathar, S, Jimenez, JL, Kaiser, JW, Kirkevåg, A, Koch, D, Kokkola, H, Lee, YH, Lin, G, Liu, X, Luo, G, Ma, X, Mann, GW, Mihalopoulos, N, Morcrette, J-J, Müller, J-F, Myhre, G, Myriokefalitakis, S, Ng, NL, O'Donnell, D, Penner, JE, Pozzoli, L, Pringle, KJ, Russell, LM, Schulz, M, Sciare, J, Seland, Ø, Shindell, DT, Sillman, S, Skeie, RB, Spracklen, D, Stavrakou, T, Steenrod, SD, Takemura, T, Tiitta, P, Tilmes, S, Tost, H, van Noije, T, van Zyl, PG, von Salzen, K, Yu, F, Wang, Z, Zaveri, RA, Zhang, H, Zhang, K, Zhang, Q, and Zhang, X
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Aging ,Climate Action ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Atmospheric Sciences ,Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences - Abstract
This paper evaluates the current status of global modeling of the organic aerosol (OA) in the troposphere and analyzes the differences between models as well as between models and observations. Thirty-one global chemistry transport models (CTMs) and general circulation models (GCMs) have participated in this intercomparison, in the framework of AeroCom phase II. The simulation of OA varies greatly between models in terms of the magnitude of primary emissions, secondary OA (SOA) formation, the number of OA species used (2 to 62), the complexity of OA parameterizations (gas-particle partitioning, chemical aging, multiphase chemistry, aerosol microphysics), and the OA physical, chemical and optical properties. The diversity of the global OA simulation results has increased since earlier AeroCom experiments, mainly due to the increasing complexity of the SOA parameterization in models, and the implementation of new, highly uncertain, OA sources. Diversity of over one order of magnitude exists in the modeled vertical distribution of OA concentrations that deserves a dedicated future study. Furthermore, although the OA / OC ratio depends on OA sources and atmospheric processing, and is important for model evaluation against OA and OC observations, it is resolved only by a few global models. The median global primary OA (POA) source strength is 56 Tg a-1 (range 34-144 Tg a-1) and the median SOA source strength (natural and anthropogenic) is 19 Tg a-1 (range 13-121 Tg a-1). Among the models that take into account the semi-volatile SOA nature, the median source is calculated to be 51 Tg a-1 (range 16-121 Tg a-1), much larger than the median value of the models that calculate SOA in a more simplistic way (19 Tg a-1; range 13-20 Tg a-1, with one model at 37 Tg a-1). The median atmospheric burden of OA is 1.4 Tg (24 models in the range of 0.6-2.0 Tg and 4 between 2.0 and 3.8 Tg), with a median OA lifetime of 5.4 days (range 3.8-9.6 days). In models that reported both OA and sulfate burdens, the median value of the OA/sulfate burden ratio is calculated to be 0.77; 13 models calculate a ratio lower than 1, and 9 models higher than 1. For 26 models that reported OA deposition fluxes, the median wet removal is 70 Tg a-1 (range 28-209 Tg a-1), which is on average 85% of the total OA deposition. Fine aerosol organic carbon (OC) and OA observations from continuous monitoring networks and individual field campaigns have been used for model evaluation. At urban locations, the model-observation comparison indicates missing knowledge on anthropogenic OA sources, both strength and seasonality. The combined model-measurements analysis suggests the existence of increased OA levels during summer due to biogenic SOA formation over large areas of the USA that can be of the same order of magnitude as the POA, even at urban locations, and contribute to the measured urban seasonal pattern. Global models are able to simulate the high secondary character of OA observed in the atmosphere as a result of SOA formation and POA aging, although the amount of OA present in the atmosphere remains largely underestimated, with a mean normalized bias (MNB) equal to -0.62 (-0.51) based on the comparison against OC (OA) urban data of all models at the surface, -0.15 (+0.51) when compared with remote measurements, and -0.30 for marine locations with OC data. The mean temporal correlations across all stations are low when compared with OC (OA) measurements: 0.47 (0.52) for urban stations, 0.39 (0.37) for remote stations, and 0.25 for marine stations with OC data. The combination of high (negative) MNB and higher correlation at urban stations when compared with the low MNB and lower correlation at remote sites suggests that knowledge about the processes that govern aerosol processing, transport and removal, on top of their sources, is important at the remote stations. There is no clear change in model skill with increasing model complexity with regard to OC or OA mass concentration. However, the complexity is needed in models in order to distinguish between anthropogenic and natural OA as needed for climate mitigation, and to calculate the impact of OA on climate accurately.
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- 2014
24. Accelerating Direct Normalization Data Acquisition in PET Imaging with Deep Learning
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Jafaritadi, M., primary, Groll, A., additional, Chin, M., additional, Chinn, G., additional, Fisher, J., additional, Innes, D., additional, and Levin, C. S., additional
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- 2023
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25. Noise Mitigation for a Short Axial Field of View Brain PET Insert Prototype Using Deep Learning
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Nazari Farsani, S., primary, Jafaritadi, M., additional, Fisher, J., additional, Groll, A., additional, Chin, M., additional, Chinn, G., additional, Khalighi, M., additional, Zaharchuk, G., additional, and Levin, C. S., additional
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- 2023
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26. Mortality in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is unrelated to genotype
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Bonaventura, J, primary, Rowin, E J, additional, Chin, M T, additional, Puchnerova, V, additional, Polakova, E, additional, Macek Jr, M, additional, Koethe, B, additional, Veselka, J, additional, Maron, B J, additional, and Maron, M S, additional
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- 2023
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27. Prescriptive Analytics of a Surface Safety Valve at the Edge
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Gharib, H., additional, Whitehead, M., additional, Chin, M., additional, and Flesher, H., additional
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- 2023
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28. 709 Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of oral prednisone as adjunctive treatment in pulmonary exacerbations in cystic fibrosis (PIPE Study)
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Waters, V., primary, Shaw, M., additional, Quon, B., additional, Tullis, E., additional, Solomon, M., additional, Rayment, J., additional, Lavoie, A., additional, Tse, S., additional, Daigneault, P., additional, Bilodeau, L., additional, Price, A., additional, Nicholson, M., additional, Chin, M., additional, Parkins, M., additional, McKinney, M., additional, Tam, J., additional, Perrem, L., additional, Stanojevic, S., additional, Grasemann, H., additional, and Ratjen, F., additional
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- 2023
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29. A Subsidized and Culturally-adapted Community Supported Agriculture Program to Improve Diet of Chinese Immigrant Communities
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Chan, S., primary, Dowd, L., additional, Mei, S., additional, Hughes, M., additional, Barth, K., additional, Chin, M., additional, Wang, J., additional, LeCroy, M., additional, and Yi, S., additional
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- 2023
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30. Roman Power and the Memorial Turn in Civic Honourability in Western Asia Minor, ca 85 BCE-14 CE
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Chin, M
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History ,Classics - Abstract
The honours granted by Hellenistic poleis to their benefactors long formed a means of creating ideological distance, integrating the power of kings and powerful outsiders, while maintaining civic agency and autonomy. Did this change under the rule of Rome? This article suggests that the civic honours for Roman officials, and later for the emperor, contributed over the 1st century BCE to a gradual development in mindset towards the honouring of local citizens in western Asia Minor, by which the traditional aims of exemplarity and social replication came to be overshadowed, if never replaced, by that of individual commemoration. It argues that this happened over two main phases in the period 85 BCE to 14 CE. In the first, the benefactions and honours of Roman officials as representatives of civic interests intruded upon those of civic notables, resulting in an elevation in the honorific status of the latter, and a tendency to emphasise the memorability of their achievements. The subsequent onset of the principate and imperial cult imposed a limit to local honorific status, and encouraged the articulation of internal honorific hierarchies among civic notables through honorific titles and claims to familial primacy, accentuating interest in representing individuality, to the diminution of imitability.
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- 2023
31. Source attributions of pollution to the Western Arctic during the NASA ARCTAS field campaign
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Bian, H., Colarco, P. R, Chin, M., Chen, G., Rodriguez, J. M, Liang, Q., Blake, D., Chu, D. A, da Silva, A., Darmenov, A. S, Diskin, G., Fuelberg, H. E, Huey, G., Kondo, Y., Nielsen, J. E, Pan, X., and Wisthaler, A.
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Aerosol Optical Depth ,Carbon-Monoxide ,Air-Pollution ,Black Carbon ,Organic Aerosol ,Model ,Transport ,Aircraft ,Troposphere ,Emissions - Published
- 2013
32. A two‐decade population‐based study on the effect of hypertension in the general population with obesity in the United States
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Gwyneth Kong, Yip H. Chin, Jieyu Lim, Cheng H. Ng, Shankar Kannan, Bryan Chong, Chaoxing Lin, Kai E. Chan, Vickram V. Anand, Ethan C. Z. Lee, Shaun Loong, Zhen Y. Wong, Chin M. Khoo, Mark Muthiah, Roger Foo, Georgios K. Dimitriadis, Gemma A. Figtree, Yibin Wang, Mark Chan, and Nicholas W. S. Chew
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Nutrition and Dietetics ,Endocrinology ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Medicine (miscellaneous) - Published
- 2023
33. PUMPING THE BRAKES: EXAMINING THE IMPACT OF CEO POLITICAL IDEOLOGY DIVERGENCE ON FIRM RESPONSES.
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SEMADENI, MATTHEW, CHIN, M. K., and KRAUSE, RYAN
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CHIEF executive officers ,IDEOLOGY ,INDIVIDUAL differences ,BUSINESS enterprises ,POLITICAL attitudes ,DECISION making ,CORPORATE profits - Abstract
Research on CEO political ideology has demonstrated the construct's impact on many firm outcomes. Yet, political ideology does not exist in a vacuum; beyond representing a CEO's values, political ideology also affects the CEO's perception of the political environment. It remains unclear how a difference between the national political climate and the CEO's own political ideology might affect strategic decision-making. Applying upper echelons and threat response perspectives, we propose that divergence between the national political climate and the CEO's own ideology provokes a threat response, leading CEOs to cut research and development spending and increase retained earnings. We then examine two boundary conditions for this relationship. First, we propose that CEO wealth tied to the firm in the form of vested stock options will increase the perceived threat of ideology divergence, strengthening the threat response. Second, we propose that industry regulation will dampen the threat perceived from divergence, as well as hindering the CEO's ability to respond to the threat at all, because of greater stability and lower discretion, respectively. We test these predictions on a sample of Standard & Poor's 500 CEOs from 2004 to 2017 and find support for our hypothesized relationships. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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34. Reactive nitrogen, ozone and ozone production in the Arctic troposphere and the impact of stratosphere-troposphere exchange
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Liang, Q, Rodriguez, JM, Douglass, AR, Crawford, JH, Olson, JR, Apel, E, Bian, H, Blake, DR, Brune, W, Chin, M, Colarco, PR, Da Silva, A, Diskin, GS, Duncan, BN, Huey, LG, Knapp, DJ, Montzka, DD, Nielsen, JE, Pawson, S, Riemer, DD, Weinheimer, AJ, and Wisthaler, A
- Subjects
Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Atmospheric Sciences - Abstract
We use aircraft observations obtained during the Arctic Research of the Composition of the Troposphere from Aircraft and Satellites (ARCTAS) mission to examine the distributions and source attributions of O 3 and NO y in the Arctic and sub-Arctic region. Using a number of marker tracers, we distinguish various air masses from the background troposphere and examine their contributions to NO x, O 3, and O 3 production in the Arctic troposphere. The background Arctic troposphere has a mean O 3 of ∼60 ppbv and NO x of ∼25 pptv throughout spring and summer with CO decreasing from ∼145 ppbv in spring to ∼100 ppbv in summer. These observed mixing ratios are not notably different from the values measured during the 1988 ABLE-3A and the 2002 TOPSE field campaigns despite the significant changes in emissions and stratospheric ozone layer in the past two decades that influence Arctic tropospheric composition. Air masses associated with stratosphere-troposphere exchange are present throughout the mid and upper troposphere during spring and summer. These air masses, with mean O 3 concentrations of 140-160 ppbv, are significant direct sources of O 3 in the Arctic troposphere. In addition, air of stratospheric origin displays net O 3 formation in the Arctic due to its sustainable, high NO x (75 pptv in spring and 110 pptv in summer) and NO y (∼800 pptv in spring and ∼1100 pptv in summer). The air masses influenced by the stratosphere sampled during ARCTAS-B also show conversion of HNO 3 to PAN. This active production of PAN is the result of increased degradation of ethane in the stratosphere-troposphere mixed air mass to form CH 3CHO, followed by subsequent formation of PAN under high NO x conditions. These findings imply that an adequate representation of stratospheric NO y input, in addition to stratospheric O 3 influx, is essential to accurately simulate tropospheric Arctic O 3, NO x and PAN in chemistry transport models. Plumes influenced by recent anthropogenic and biomass burning emissions observed during ARCTAS show highly elevated levels of hydrocarbons and NO y (mostly in the form of NO x and PAN), but do not contain O 3 higher than that in the Arctic tropospheric background except some aged biomass burning plumes sampled during spring. Convection and/or lightning influences are negligible sources of O 3 in the Arctic troposphere but can have significant impacts in the upper troposphere in the continental sub-Arctic during summer. © 2011 Author(s).
- Published
- 2011
35. Global dust model intercomparison in AeroCom phase I
- Author
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Huneeus, N., Schulz, M., Balkanski, Y., Griesfeller, J., Prospero, J., Kinne, S., Bauer, S., Boucher, O., Chin, M., Dentener, F., Diehl, T., Easter, R., Fillmore, D., Ghan, S., Ginoux, P., Grini, A., Horowitz, L., Koch, D., Krol, M. C, Landing, W., Liu, X., Mahowald, N., Miller, R., Morcrette, J.-J., Myhre, G., Penner, J., Perlwitz, J., Stier, P., Takemura, T., and Zender, C. S
- Subjects
General-circulation model ,atmospheric iron deposition ,last glacial maximum ,mineral dust ,aerosol direct ,tropospheric chemistry ,optical-properties ,Goddard-Institute ,North-Atlantic ,sulfur cycle - Abstract
This study presents the results of a broad intercomparison of a total of 15 global aerosol models within the AeroCom project. Each model is compared to observations related to desert dust aerosols, their direct radiative effect, and their impact on the biogeochemical cycle, i.e., aerosol optical depth (AOD) and dust deposition. Additional com parisons to Angstrom exponent (AE), coarse mode AOD and dust surface concentrations are included to extend the assessment of model performance and to identify common biases present in models. These data comprise a benchmark dataset that is proposed for model inspection and future dust model development. There are large differences among the global models that simulate the dust cycle and its impact on climate. In general, models simulate the climatology of vertically integrated parameters (AOD and AE) within a factor of two whereas the total deposition and surface concentration are reproduced within a factor of 10. In addition, smaller mean normalized bias and root mean square errors are obtained for the climatology of AOD and AE than for total deposition and surface concentration. Characteristics of the datasets used and their uncertainties may influence these differences. Large uncertainties still exist with respect to the deposition fluxes in the southern oceans. Further measurements and model studies are necessary to assess the general model performance to reproduce dust deposition in ocean regions sensible to iron contributions. Models overestimate the wet deposition in regions dominated by dry deposition. They generally simulate more realistic surface concentration at stations downwind of the main sources than at remote ones. Most models simulate the gradient in AOD and AE between the different dusty regions. However the seasonality and magnitude of both variables is better simulated at African stations than Middle East ones. The models simulate the offshore transport of West Africa throughout the year but they overestimate the AOD and they transport too fine particles. The models also reproduce the dust transport across the Atlantic in the summer in terms of both AOD and AE but not so well in winter-spring nor the southward displacement of the dust cloud that is responsible of the dust transport into South America. Based on the dependency of AOD on aerosol burden and size distribution we use model bias with respect to AOD and AE to infer the bias of the dust emissions in Africa and the Middle East. According to this analysis we suggest that a range of possible emissions for North Africa is 400 to 2200 Tg yr(-1) and in the Middle East 26 to 526 Tg yr(-1)
- Published
- 2011
36. CEO POLITICAL IDEOLOGIES AND PAY EGALITARIANISM WITHIN TOP MANAGEMENT TEAMS
- Author
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CHIN, M. K. and SEMADENI, MATTHEW
- Published
- 2017
37. Nuclear Data for the Thorium Fuel Cycle and the Transmutation of Nuclear Waste
- Author
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Gunsing, F., Altstadt, S., Andrzejewski, J., Audouin, L., Barbagallo, M., Bécares, V., Bečvář, F., Belloni, F., Berthoumieux, E., Billowes, J., Boccone, V., Bosnar, D., Brugger, M., Calviani, M., Calviño, F., Cano-Ott, D., Carrapiço, C., Cerutti, F., Chiaveri, E., Chin, M., Colonna, N., Cortés, G., Cortés-Giraldo, M. A., Diakaki, M., Domingo-Pardo, C., Duran, I., Dressler, R., Eleftheriadis, C., Fraval, K., Ferrari, A., Ganesan, S., Garcìa, A. R., Giubrone, G., Gonçalves, I. F., González-Romero, E., Griesmayer, E., Guerrero, C., Hernández-Prieto, A., Jenkins, D. G., Jericha, E., Kadi, Y., Käppeler, F., Karadimos, D., Kivel, N., Koehler, P., Kokkoris, M., Krtička, M., Kroll, J., Lampoudis, C., Langer, C., Leal-Cidoncha, E., Lederer, C., Leeb, H., Leong, L. S., Losito, R., Mallick, A., Manousos, A., Marganiec, J., Martìnez, T., Massimi, C., Mastinu, P. F., Mastromarco, M., Mendoza, E., Mengoni, A., Milazzo, P. M., Mingrone, F., Mirea, M., Mondalaers, W., Paradela, C., Pavlik, A., Perkowski, J., Plompen, A., Praena, J., Quesada, J. M., Rauscher, T., Reifarth, R., Riego, A., Robles, M. S., Rubbia, C., Sabaté-Gilarte, M., Sarmento, R., Saxena, A., Schillebeeckx, P., Schmidt, S., Schumann, D., Tagliente, G., Tain, J. L., Tarrìo, D., Tassan-Got, L., Tsinganis, A., Vannini, G., Variale, V., Vaz, P., Ventura, A., Vermeulen, M. J., Valenta, S., Vlachoudis, V., Vlastou, R., Wallner, A., Ware, T., Weigand, M., Weiß, C., Wright, T., Žugec, P., Revol, Jean-Pierre, editor, Bourquin, Maurice, editor, Kadi, Yacine, editor, Lillestol, Egil, editor, de Mestral, Jean-Christophe, editor, and Samec, Karel, editor
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Status of the top-off upgrade of the ALS
- Author
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Steier, C, Bailey, B, Baptiste, K, Barry, W, Biocca, A, Byrne, W, Chin, M, Donahue, R, Duarte, R, Fahmie, M, Gath, B, Jacobson, S, Julian, J, Jung, JY, Kwiatkowski, S, Marks, S, Mueller, R, Nishimura, H, Oneill, J, Prestemon, S, Robin, D, Rossi, S, Sannibale, F, Scarvie, T, Schlueter, R, Shuman, D, Stover, G, Timossi, C, Warwick, T, Weber, J, and Williams, E
- Abstract
The Advanced Light Source is currently being upgraded for top-off operation. This major facility upgrade will provide an improvement in brightness from soft x-ray undulators of about one order of magnitude and keep the ALS competitive with the newest intermediate energy light sources. Major components of the upgrade include making the booster synchrotron capable of full energy operation, radiation safety studies, improvements to interlocks and collimation systems, diagnostics upgrades as well as emittance improvements in the main storage ring. Most hardware necessary as part of the upgrade has been installed and commissioned. The radiation safety studies are making good progress and have passed a first outside peer review succesfully. ©2007 IEEE.
- Published
- 2007
39. Status of the Top-Off Upgrade of the ALS**This work was supported by the Director, Office of Science, U. S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC02–05CH11231
- Author
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Steier, C, Bailey, B, Baptiste, K, Barry, W, Biocca, A, Byrne, W, Chin, M, Donahue, R, Duarte, R, Fahmie, M, Gath, B, Jacobson, S, Julian, J, Jung, JY, Kwiatkowski, S, Marks, S, Mueller, R, Nishimura, H, ONeill, J, Prestemon, S, Robin, D, Rossi, S, Sannibale, F, Scarvie, T, Schlueter, R, Shuman, D, Stover, G, Timossi, C, Warwick, T, Weber, J, and Williams, E
- Subjects
Affordable and Clean Energy - Abstract
The Advanced Light Source is currently being upgraded for top-off operation. This major facility upgrade will provide an improvement in brightness from soft x-ray undulators of about one order of magnitude and keep the ALS competitive with the newest intermediate energy light sources. Major components of the upgrade include making the booster synchrotron capable of full energy operation, radiation safety studies, improvements to interlocks and collimation systems, diagnostics upgrades as well as emittance improvements in the main storage ring. Most hardware necessary as part of the upgrade has been installed and commissioned. The radiation safety studies are making good progress and have passed a first outside peer review succesfully. ©2007 IEEE.
- Published
- 2007
40. Some observations on koina and monetary economy in Hellenistic Asia Minor
- Author
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Chin, M
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,Archeology ,History ,Classics - Abstract
The koina of pre-Roman Asia Minor, comprising several major organisations along its western and southern coasts like the koina of Athena Ilias, the Lesbians, the Ionians, the Chrysaorians, and the Lykians, present a collection of federal states less well understood than better documented koina in mainland Greece. This paper highlights the regional characteristics of these Anatolian koina by examining their monetary and political economies. It first suggests that federalising behaviour in Hellenistic western Asia Minor tended to be centred on regional sanctuaries and festivals, and less involved in the formation of cohesive political institutions through federal law-making or military mobilisation. This also had the effect that they present the impression of being monetarily ‘light’, as is explained in the second section, because they were not by and large fiscally cohesive, or had close oversight of monetary supply, with the notable exception of the Lykian league – taxation was not hugely intrusive or extensive, and little federal coinage was produced. The last two sections consider this ‘lightness’ as a function of the regional specificities of political and economic power in the region, suggesting that koina functioned parasitically as organisations ensconced between imperial states and civic communities, both reflecting and shaping the dominant role in the region of these two types of polity in the Hellenistic period.
- Published
- 2023
41. DNA methylation controls the timing of astrogliogenesis through regulation of JAK-STAT signaling
- Author
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Fan, Guoping, Martinowich, K, Chin, M H, He, F, Fouse, S D, Hutnick, L, Hattori, D, Ge, W H, Shen, Y, Hao, W, ten Hoeve, J, Shuai, K, and Sun, Y E
- Subjects
Dnmt1 ,CpG methylation ,neural differentiation ,STAT1 ,chromatin remodeling ,MeCP2 ,histone modification ,mouse - Abstract
DNA methylation is a major epigenetic factor that has been postulated to regulate cell lineage differentiation. We report here that conditional gene deletion of the maintenance DNA methyltransferase I (Dnmt1) in neural progenitor cells (NPCs) results in DNA hypomethylation and precocious astroglial differentiation. The developmentally regulated demethylation of astrocyte marker genes as well as genes encoding the crucial components of the gliogenic JAK-STAT pathway is accelerated in Dnmt1(-/-) NPCs. Through a chromatin remodeling process, demethylation of genes in the JAK-STAT pathway leads to an enhanced activation of STATs, which in turn triggers astrocyte differentiation. Our study suggests that during the neurogenic period, DNA methylation inhibits not only astroglial marker genes but also genes that are essential for JAK-STAT signaling. Thus, demethylation of these two groups of genes and subsequent elevation of STAT activity are key mechanisms that control the timing and magnitude of astroglial differentiation.
- Published
- 2005
42. PEP-II Transverse Feedback Electronics Upgrade
- Author
-
Weber, J., Chin, M., Doolittle, L., and Akre, R.
- Subjects
Instrumentation -- other ,PEP-II transverse feedback embedded - Abstract
The PEP-II B Factory at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC) requires an upgrade of the transverse feedback system electronics. The new electronics require 12-bit resolution and a minimum sampling rate of 238 Msps. A Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) is used to implement the feedback algorithm. The FPGA also contains an embedded PowerPC 405 (PPC-405) processor to run control system interface software for data retrieval, diagnostics, and system monitoring. The design of this system is based on the Xilinx(R) ML300 Development Platform, a circuit board set containing an FPGA with an embedded processor, a large memory bank, and other peripherals. This paper discusses the design of a digital feedback system based on an FPGA with an embedded processor. Discussion will include specifications, component selection, and integration with the ML300 design.
- Published
- 2005
43. EXPRESS: Different Strokes for Different Folks: The Moderating Effect of Top Managers’ Political Ideologies on the Efficacy of TMT Vertical Pay Disparities
- Author
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Chin, M. K., primary, Acharya, Abhijith, additional, and Devers, Cynthia, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. ALS Superbend Magnet Performance
- Author
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Marks, S, Zbasnik, J, Byrne, W, Calais, D, Chin, M, DeMarco, R, Fahmie, M, Geyer, A, Krupnick, J, Ottens, F, Paterson, J A, Pipersky, P, Robin, D S, Schlueter, R D, Steier, C, and Wandesforde, A
- Published
- 2001
45. Neutron-induced fission cross sections of Th-232 and U-233 up to 1 GeV using parallel plate avalanche counters at the CERN n_TOF facility
- Author
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Tarrío, Diego, Tassan-Got, L., Duran, I., Leong, L. S., Paradela, C., Audouin, L., Leal-Cidoncha, E., Le Naour, C., Caamano, M., Ventura, A., Altstadt, S., Andrzejewski, J., Barbagallo, M., Becares, V., Becvar, F., Belloni, F., Berthoumieux, E., Billowes, J., Boccone, V., Bosnar, D., Brugger, M., Calviani, M., Calvino, F., Cano-Ott, D., Carrapico, C., Cerutti, F., Chiaveri, E., Chin, M., Colonna, N., Cortes, G., Cortes-Giraldo, M. A., Diakaki, M., Domingo-Pardo, C., Dzysiuk, N., Eleftheriadis, C., Ferrari, A., Fraval, K., Ganesan, S., Garcia, A. R., Giubrone, G., Gomez-Hornillos, M. B., Goncalves, I. F., Gonzalez-Romero, E., Griesmayer, E., Guerrero, C., Gunsing, F., Gurusamy, P., Jenkins, D. G., Jericha, E., Kadi, Y., Kaeppeler, F., Karadimos, D., Koehler, P., Kokkoris, M., Krticka, M., Kroll, J., Langer, C., Lederer, C., Leeb, H., Losito, R., Manousos, A., Marganiec, J., Martinez, T., Massimi, C., Mastinu, P. F., Mastromarco, M., Meaze, M., Mendoza, E., Mengoni, A., Milazzo, P. M., Mingrone, F., Mirea, M., Mondalaers, W., Pavlik, A., Perkowski, J., Plompen, A., Praena, J., Quesada, J. M., Rauscher, T., Reifarth, R., Riego, A., Robles, M. S., Roman, F., Rubbia, C., Sarmento, R., Schillebeeckx, P., Schmidt, S., Tagliente, G., Tain, J. L., Tsinganis, A., Valenta, S., Vannini, G., Variale, V., Vaz, P., Versaci, R., Vermeulen, M. J., Vlachoudis, V., Vlastou, R., Wallner, A., Ware, T., Weigand, M., Weiss, C., Wright, T. J., Zugec, P., Tarrío, Diego, Tassan-Got, L., Duran, I., Leong, L. S., Paradela, C., Audouin, L., Leal-Cidoncha, E., Le Naour, C., Caamano, M., Ventura, A., Altstadt, S., Andrzejewski, J., Barbagallo, M., Becares, V., Becvar, F., Belloni, F., Berthoumieux, E., Billowes, J., Boccone, V., Bosnar, D., Brugger, M., Calviani, M., Calvino, F., Cano-Ott, D., Carrapico, C., Cerutti, F., Chiaveri, E., Chin, M., Colonna, N., Cortes, G., Cortes-Giraldo, M. A., Diakaki, M., Domingo-Pardo, C., Dzysiuk, N., Eleftheriadis, C., Ferrari, A., Fraval, K., Ganesan, S., Garcia, A. R., Giubrone, G., Gomez-Hornillos, M. B., Goncalves, I. F., Gonzalez-Romero, E., Griesmayer, E., Guerrero, C., Gunsing, F., Gurusamy, P., Jenkins, D. G., Jericha, E., Kadi, Y., Kaeppeler, F., Karadimos, D., Koehler, P., Kokkoris, M., Krticka, M., Kroll, J., Langer, C., Lederer, C., Leeb, H., Losito, R., Manousos, A., Marganiec, J., Martinez, T., Massimi, C., Mastinu, P. F., Mastromarco, M., Meaze, M., Mendoza, E., Mengoni, A., Milazzo, P. M., Mingrone, F., Mirea, M., Mondalaers, W., Pavlik, A., Perkowski, J., Plompen, A., Praena, J., Quesada, J. M., Rauscher, T., Reifarth, R., Riego, A., Robles, M. S., Roman, F., Rubbia, C., Sarmento, R., Schillebeeckx, P., Schmidt, S., Tagliente, G., Tain, J. L., Tsinganis, A., Valenta, S., Vannini, G., Variale, V., Vaz, P., Versaci, R., Vermeulen, M. J., Vlachoudis, V., Vlastou, R., Wallner, A., Ware, T., Weigand, M., Weiss, C., Wright, T. J., and Zugec, P.
- Abstract
The neutron-induced fission cross sections of Th-232 and U-233 were measured relative to U-235 in a wide neutron energy range up to 1 GeV (and from fission threshold in the case of Th-232, and from 0.7 eV in case of U-233), using the white-spectrum neutron source at the CERN Neutron Time-of-Flight (n_TOF) facility. Parallel plate avalanche counters (PPACs) were used, installed at the Experimental Area 1 (EAR1), which is located at 185 m from the neutron spallation target. The anisotropic emission of fission fragments were taken into account in the detection efficiency by using, in the case of U-233, previous results available in EXFOR, whereas in the case of Th-232 these data were obtained from our measurement, using PPACs and targets tilted 45 degrees with respect to the neutron beam direction. Finally, the obtained results are compared with past measurements and major evaluated nuclear data libraries. Calculations using the high-energy reaction models INCL++ and ABLA07 were performed and some of their parameters were modified to reproduce the experimental results. At high energies, where no other neutron data exist, our results are compared with experimental data on proton-induced fission. Moreover, the dependence of the fission cross section at 1 GeV with the fissility parameter of the target nucleus is studied by combining those ( p, f) data with our (n, f) data on Th-232 and U-233 and on other isotopes studied earlier at n_TOF using the same experimental setup.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Strong transient magnetic fields induced by THz-driven plasmons in graphene disks
- Author
-
Han, J. W., Sai, P., But, D., (0000-0001-7253-4579) Uykur, E., (0000-0002-8090-9198) Winnerl, S., Kumar, G., Chin, M. L., Myers-Ward, R. L., Dejarld, M. T., Daniels, K. M., Murphy, T. E., Knap, W., Mittendorff, M., Han, J. W., Sai, P., But, D., (0000-0001-7253-4579) Uykur, E., (0000-0002-8090-9198) Winnerl, S., Kumar, G., Chin, M. L., Myers-Ward, R. L., Dejarld, M. T., Daniels, K. M., Murphy, T. E., Knap, W., and Mittendorff, M.
- Abstract
Strong circularly polarized excitation opens up the possibility to generate and control effective magnetic fields in solid state systems, e.g., via the optical inverse Faraday effect or the phonon inverse Faraday effect. While these effects rely on material properties that can be tailored only to a limited degree, plasmonic resonances can be fully controlled by choosing proper dimensions and carrier concentrations. Plasmon resonances provide new degrees of freedom that can be used to tune or enhance the light-induced magnetic field in engineered metamaterials. Here we employ graphene disks to demonstrate light-induced transient magnetic fields from a plasmonic circular current with extremely high efficiency. The effective magnetic field at the plasmon resonance frequency of the graphene disks (3.5 THz) is evidenced by a strong (~1°) ultrafast Faraday rotation (~ 20 ps). In accordance with reference measurements and simulations, we estimated the strength of the induced magnetic field to be on the order of 0.7 T under a moderate pump fluence of about 440 nJ cm-2.
- Published
- 2023
47. UNPACKING POLITICAL IDEOLOGY: CEO SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC IDEOLOGIES, STRATEGIC DECISION-MAKING PROCESSES, AND CORPORATE ENTREPRENEURSHIP.
- Author
-
CHIN, M. K., ZHANG, STEPHEN X., JAHANSHAHI, ASGHAR AFSHAR, and NADKARNI, SUCHETA
- Subjects
IDEOLOGY ,CHIEF executive officers ,DECISION making in business ,POLITICAL psychology ,CONSERVATISM - Abstract
We integrate political psychology and upper echelons research to introduce an alternative conceptualization of executive political ideology by separating the two distinct ideologies: social and economic. We theorize and test how the two ideologies exert distinct effects on a critical strategic outcome: corporate entrepreneurship. We examine this contention in Iran, a political context that sharply deviates from the exclusively studied U.S. context. We find that social and economic conservatism exert opposing effects on corporate entrepreneurship through distinct strategic decision-making processes; CEO social conservatism positively affects corporate entrepreneurship by promoting intuitive strategic decision-making, whereas CEO economic conservatism negatively affects corporate entrepreneurship by impairing cooperative strategic decision-making. These results highlight the need to separate social and economic ideologies, especially in non-U.S. contexts, and inform the underlying strategic decision-making processes through which executive ideology shapes strategic behaviors. The promising results also underscore the importance of examining the strategic implications of executive political ideology in diverse political contexts that differ from the U.S. context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. A Temperature-Dependent Competitive Kinetics Study of the Aqueous-Phase Reactions of OH Radicals with Formate, Formic Acid, Acetate, Acetic Acid, and Hydrated Formaldehyde
- Author
-
Chin, M., primary and Wine, P.H., additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. A two‐decade population‐based study on the effect of hypertension in the general population with obesity in the United States
- Author
-
Kong, Gwyneth, primary, Chin, Yip H., additional, Lim, Jieyu, additional, Ng, Cheng H., additional, Kannan, Shankar, additional, Chong, Bryan, additional, Lin, Chaoxing, additional, Chan, Kai E., additional, Anand, Vickram V., additional, Lee, Ethan C. Z., additional, Loong, Shaun, additional, Wong, Zhen Y., additional, Khoo, Chin M., additional, Muthiah, Mark, additional, Foo, Roger, additional, Dimitriadis, Georgios K., additional, Figtree, Gemma A., additional, Wang, Yibin, additional, Chan, Mark, additional, and Chew, Nicholas W. S., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Neutron-induced fission cross sections of Th232 and U233 up to 1 GeV using parallel plate avalanche counters at the CERN n_TOF facility
- Author
-
Tarrío, D, Tassan-Got, L, Duran, I, Leong, L S, Paradela, C, Audouin, L, Leal-Cidoncha, E, Le Naour, C, Caamaño, M, Ventura, A, Altstadt, S, Andrzejewski, J, Barbagallo, M, Bécares, V, Becvár, F, Belloni, F, Berthoumieux, E, Billowes, J, Boccone, V, Bosnar, D, Brugger, M, Calviani, M, Calviño, F, Cano-Ott, D, Carrapiço, C, Cerutti, F, Chiaveri, E, Chin, M, Colonna, N, Cortés, G, Cortés-Giraldo, M A, Diakaki, M, Domingo-Pardo, C, Dzysiuk, N, Eleftheriadis, C, Ferrari, A, Fraval, K, Ganesan, S, García, A R, Giubrone, G, Gómez-Hornillos, M B, Gonçalves, I F, González-Romero, E, Griesmayer, E, Guerrero, C, Gunsing, F, Gurusamy, P, Jenkins, D G, Jericha, E, Kadi, Y, Käppeler, F, Karadimos, D, Koehler, P, Kokkoris, M, Krticka, M, Kroll, J, Langer, C, Lederer, C, Leeb, H, Losito, R, Manousos, A, Marganiec, J, Martínez, T, Massimi, C, Mastinu, P F, Mastromarco, M, Meaze, M, Mendoza, E, Mengoni, A, Milazzo, P M, Mingrone, F, Mirea, M, Mondalaers, W, Pavlik, A, Perkowski, J, Plompen, A, Praena, J, Quesada, J M, Rauscher, T, Reifarth, R, Riego, A, Robles, M S, Roman, F, Rubbia, C, Sarmento, R, Schillebeeckx, P, Schmidt, S, Tagliente, G, Tain, J L, Tsinganis, A, Valenta, S, Vannini, G, Variale, V, Vaz, P, Versaci, R, Vermeulen, M J, Vlachoudis, V, Vlastou, R, Wallner, A, Ware, T, Weigand, M, Weiß, C, Wright, T J, and Žugec, P
- Subjects
Nuclear Physics - Experiment - Abstract
The neutron-induced fission cross sections of Th232 and U233 were measured relative to U235 in a wide neutron energy range up to 1 GeV (and from fission threshold in the case of Th232, and from 0.7 eV in case of U233), using the white-spectrum neutron source at the CERN Neutron Time-of-Flight (n_TOF) facility. Parallel plate avalanche counters (PPACs) were used, installed at the Experimental Area 1 (EAR1), which is located at 185 m from the neutron spallation target. The anisotropic emission of fission fragments were taken into account in the detection efficiency by using, in the case of U233, previous results available in EXFOR, whereas in the case of Th232 these data were obtained from our measurement, using PPACs and targets tilted 45∘ with respect to the neutron beam direction. Finally, the obtained results are compared with past measurements and major evaluated nuclear data libraries. Calculations using the high-energy reaction models INCL++ and ABLA07 were performed and some of their parameters were modified to reproduce the experimental results. At high energies, where no other neutron data exist, our results are compared with experimental data on proton-induced fission. Moreover, the dependence of the fission cross section at 1 GeV with the fissility parameter of the target nucleus is studied by combining those (p,f) data with our (n,f) data on Th232 and U233 and on other isotopes studied earlier at n_TOF using the same experimental setup.
- Published
- 2023
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