488 results on '"Dunn, Robert P."'
Search Results
2. The ManhattAnt: identification, distribution, and colony structure of a new pest in New York City, Lasius emarginatus
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Kennett, Samantha M., Seifert, Bernard, Dunn, Robert R., Pierson, Todd W., and Penick, Clint A.
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- 2024
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3. Artificial intelligence reveals past climate extremes by reconstructing historical records
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Plésiat, Étienne, Dunn, Robert J. H., Donat, Markus G., and Kadow, Christopher
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- 2024
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4. Green spaces provide substantial but unequal urban cooling globally
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Li, Yuxiang, Svenning, Jens-Christian, Zhou, Weiqi, Zhu, Kai, Abrams, Jesse F., Lenton, Timothy M., Ripple, William J., Yu, Zhaowu, Teng, Shuqing N., Dunn, Robert R., and Xu, Chi
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- 2024
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5. Comparing gene expression profiles of adults with isolated spinal tuberculosis to disseminated spinal tuberculosis identified by 18FDG-PET/CT at time of diagnosis, 6- and 12-months follow-up: classifying clinical stages of spinal tuberculosis and monitoring treatment response (Spinal TB X cohort study)
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Scherer, Julian, Mukasa, Sandra L., Wolmarans, Karen, Guler, Reto, Kotze, Tessa, Song, Taeksun, Dunn, Robert, Laubscher, Maritz, Pape, Hans-Christoph, Held, Michael, and Thienemann, Friedrich
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- 2024
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6. Asymmetric magma plumbing system beneath Axial Seamount based on full waveform inversion of seismic data
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Yang, Jidong, Zhu, Hejun, Zhao, Zeyu, Huang, Jianping, Lumley, David, Stern, Robert J., Dunn, Robert A., Arnulf, Adrien F., and Ma, Jianwei
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- 2024
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7. Electric field-enhanced backscatter interferometry detection for capillary electrophoresis
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De Silva, Miyuru and Dunn, Robert C.
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- 2024
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8. The awareness of operating theater professionals to the carbon footprint of their surgical activities: a binational survey on 301 healthcare workers
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Marie-Hardy, Laura and Dunn, Robert
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- 2024
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9. Global Inequality in Cooling from Urban Green Spaces and its Climate Change Adaptation Potential
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Li, Yuxiang, Svenning, Jens-Christian, Zhou, Weiqi, Zhu, Kai, Abrams, Jesse F., Lenton, Timothy M., Teng, Shuqing N., Dunn, Robert R., and Xu, Chi
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Statistics - Applications - Abstract
Heat extremes are projected to severely impact humanity and with increasing geographic disparities. Global South countries are more exposed to heat extremes and have reduced adaptation capacity. One documented source of such adaptation inequality is a lack of resources to cool down indoor temperatures. Less is known about the capacity to ameliorate outdoor heat stress. Here, we assess global inequality in green infrastructure, on which urban residents critically rely to ameliorate lethal heat stress outdoors. We use satellite-derived indicators of land surface temperature and urban green space area to quantify the daytime cooling capacity of urban green spaces in the hottest months across ~500 cities with population size over 1 million per city globally. Our results show a striking contrast with an about two-fold lower cooling capacity in Global South cities compared to the Global North (2.1 degrees Celsius vs. 3.8 degrees Celsius). A similar gap occurs for the cooling adaptation benefits received by an average urban resident (Global South 1.9 degrees Celsius vs. North 3.6 degrees Celsius), i.e., accounting for relative spatial distributions of people and urban green spaces. This cooling adaptation inequality is attributed to the discrepancies in urban green space quantity and quality between Global North and South cities, jointly shaped by natural and socioeconomic factors. Our analyses suggest vast potential for enhancing outdoor cooling adaptation while reducing its global inequality through expanding and optimizing urban green infrastructure., Comment: 56 pages, 28 figures
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- 2023
10. Hydrothermal flow and serpentinization in oceanic core complexes controlled by mafic intrusions
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Jian, Hanchao, Canales, J. Pablo, Dunn, Robert, and Nedimović, Mladen R.
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- 2024
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11. Disseminated Histoplasmosis in Central California Seen in an Immunocompromised Patient.
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Ghadiya, Kishan, Dunn, Robert, Singh, Gurpal, Lai, Hobart, and Garcia-Pacheco, Ralph
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Infectious Diseases ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,California ,HIV ,Histoplasma capsulatum ,bone marrow involvement ,coccidioidomycosis ,disseminated ,granulomatous hepatitis ,histoplasmosis ,immunocompromised - Abstract
Histoplasma capsulatum is a dimorphic fungus found in certain parts of North, Central, and South America. Transmission is primarily through airborne inoculation from inhaled fungal microconidia. Histoplasmosis is typically a self-limited mycosis; however, in patients with immunodeficiency, disseminated disease can occur and may lead to high disease burden. This report studies a case of disseminated histoplasmosis in a patient newly diagnosed with human immunodeficiency virus. His presentation on admission was consistent with infectious pulmonary granulomatous disease, and further imaging and laboratory results showed evidence of multi-organ involvement. It is likely his presentation in Central California was a reactivation infection after inoculation in Central America many years ago.
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- 2023
12. Searching and Sorting Algorithms for Quantum Annealing Computers
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Dunn, Robert A.
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Quantum Physics - Abstract
Algorithms for searching and sorting data sets on quantum annealing systems are presented. Search algorithms for unordered data sets are developed. A sorting algorithm for data sets is provided, with a consideration of sort stability. Scalability of the algorithms, considering both the number of qubits required and the qubit connectivity, is characterized as a function of problem size., Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures
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- 2022
13. Controls on spatial variation in porewater methane concentrations across United States tidal wetlands
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Koontz, Erika L., Parker, Sarah M., Stearns, Alice E., Roberts, Brian J., Young, Caitlin M., Windham-Myers, Lisamarie, Oikawa, Patricia Y., Megonigal, J. Patrick, Noyce, Genevieve L., Buskey, Edward J., Derby, R. Kyle, Dunn, Robert P., Ferner, Matthew C., Krask, Julie L., Marconi, Christina M., Savage, Kelley B., Shahan, Julie, Spivak, Amanda C., St. Laurent, Kari A., Argueta, Jacob M., Baird, Steven J., Beheshti, Kathryn M., Crane, Laura C., Cressman, Kimberly A., Crooks, Jeffrey A., Fernald, Sarah H., Garwood, Jason A., Goldstein, Jason S., Grothues, Thomas M., Habeck, Andrea, Lerberg, Scott B., Lucas, Samantha B., Marcum, Pamela, Peter, Christopher R., Phipps, Scott W., Raposa, Kenneth B., Rovai, Andre S., Schooler, Shon S., Twilley, Robert R., Tyrrell, Megan C., Uyeda, Kellie A., Wulfing, Sophie H., Aman, Jacob T., Giacchetti, Amanda, Cross-Johnson, Shelby N., and Holmquist, James R.
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- 2024
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14. Juvenile Brown Shrimp (Farfantepenaeus aztecus) Use of Salt Marsh Intertidal Creeks as Nursery Habitat
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Glover, Kaitlin M., Kimball, Matthew E., Pfirrmann, Bruce W., Pelton, Mary Margaret, and Dunn, Robert P.
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- 2023
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15. Quantifying the human cost of global warming
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Lenton, Timothy M., Xu, Chi, Abrams, Jesse F., Ghadiali, Ashish, Loriani, Sina, Sakschewski, Boris, Zimm, Caroline, Ebi, Kristie L., Dunn, Robert R., Svenning, Jens-Christian, and Scheffer, Marten
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- 2023
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16. The global distribution of known and undiscovered ant biodiversity
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Kass, Jamie M, Guénard, Benoit, Dudley, Kenneth L, Jenkins, Clinton N, Azuma, Fumika, Fisher, Brian L, Parr, Catherine L, Gibb, Heloise, Longino, John T, Ward, Philip S, Chao, Anne, Lubertazzi, David, Weiser, Michael, Jetz, Walter, Guralnick, Robert, Blatrix, Rumsaïs, Lauriers, James Des, Donoso, David A, Georgiadis, Christos, Gomez, Kiko, Hawkes, Peter G, Johnson, Robert A, Lattke, John E, MacGown, Joe A, Mackay, William, Robson, Simon, Sanders, Nathan J, Dunn, Robert R, and Economo, Evan P
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Life Below Water ,Animals ,Ants ,Biodiversity ,Ecosystem ,Invertebrates ,Phylogeny ,Vertebrates - Abstract
Invertebrates constitute the majority of animal species and are critical for ecosystem functioning and services. Nonetheless, global invertebrate biodiversity patterns and their congruences with vertebrates remain largely unknown. We resolve the first high-resolution (~20-km) global diversity map for a major invertebrate clade, ants, using biodiversity informatics, range modeling, and machine learning to synthesize existing knowledge and predict the distribution of undiscovered diversity. We find that ants and different vertebrate groups have distinct features in their patterns of richness and rarity, underscoring the need to consider a diversity of taxa in conservation. However, despite their phylogenetic and physiological divergence, ant distributions are not highly anomalous relative to variation among vertebrate clades. Furthermore, our models predict that rarity centers largely overlap (78%), suggesting that general forces shape endemism patterns across taxa. This raises confidence that conservation of areas important for small-ranged vertebrates will benefit invertebrates while providing a "treasure map" to guide future discovery.
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- 2022
17. Site- and species-specific metal concentrations, mobility, and bioavailability in sediment, flora, and fauna of a southeastern United States salt marsh
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Donaher, Sarah E., Estes, Shanna L., Dunn, Robert P., Gonzales, Annelise K., Powell, Brian A., and Martinez, Nicole E.
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- 2024
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18. HHV-8-Associated Multicentric Castleman Disease, a Diagnostic Challenge in a Patient With Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome and Fever
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Dunn, Robert, Jariwal, Roopam, Venter, Frederick, Mishra, Shikha, Bhandohal, Janpreet, Cobos, Everado, and Heidari, Arash
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Medical Microbiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Pain Research ,Orphan Drug ,Hematology ,Infectious Diseases ,Rare Diseases ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Cancer ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Infection ,Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome ,Castleman Disease ,Fever ,Herpesvirus 8 ,Human ,Humans ,HHV-8 ,multicentric Castleman disease ,AIDS ,immunocompromised ,lymphoproliferative - Abstract
Patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) are at an increased susceptibility to pathogens and associated malignancies which can present with a unique constellation of symptoms. In this article, we describe a case of Castleman disease in a patient with AIDS, nonadherent with antiretroviral therapy (ART), who presented with fevers, constant abdominal pain, nausea, and vomiting. After an extensive work up, a lymph node biopsy confirmed a diagnosis of human herpesvirus-8 (HHV-8)-associated multicentric Castleman disease. Patients presenting with AIDS and fever have broad differential diagnoses; therefore, reaching a diagnosis as rare as Castleman disease can be challenging. HHV-8 has a propensity to CD20 positive B cells, which allows rituximab to be an effect treatment.
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- 2022
19. Cellular Automata on Quantum Annealing Systems
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Dunn, Robert A.
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Quantum Physics - Abstract
We present herein an introduction to implementing 2-color cellular automata on quantum annealing systems, such as the D-Wave quantum computer. We show that implementing nearest-neighbor cellular automata is possible. We present an implementation of Wolfram's cellular automata Rule 110, which has previously been shown to be a universal Turing machine, as a QUBO suitable for use on quantum annealing systems. We demonstrate back-propagation of cellular automata rule sets to determine initial cell states for a desired later system state. We show 2-D 2-color cellular automata, such as Conway's Game of Life, can be expressed for quantum annealing systems., Comment: 21 pages, 11 figures
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- 2021
20. Phylogenomics reveals the history of host use in mosquitoes
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Soghigian, John, Sither, Charles, Justi, Silvia Andrade, Morinaga, Gen, Cassel, Brian K., Vitek, Christopher J., Livdahl, Todd, Xia, Siyang, Gloria-Soria, Andrea, Powell, Jeffrey R., Zavortink, Thomas, Hardy, Christopher M., Burkett-Cadena, Nathan D., Reeves, Lawrence E., Wilkerson, Richard C., Dunn, Robert R., Yeates, David K., Sallum, Maria Anice, Byrd, Brian D., Trautwein, Michelle D., Linton, Yvonne-Marie, Reiskind, Michael H., and Wiegmann, Brian M.
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- 2023
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21. From polyps to pixels: understanding coral reef resilience to local and global change across scales
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Donovan, Mary K., Alves, Catherine, Burns, John, Drury, Crawford, Meier, Ouida W., Ritson-Williams, Raphael, Cunning, Ross, Dunn, Robert P., Goodbody-Gringley, Gretchen, Henderson, Leslie M., Knapp, Ingrid S. S., Levy, Joshua, Logan, Cheryl A., Mudge, Laura, Sullivan, Chris, Gates, Ruth D., and Asner, Gregory P.
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- 2023
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22. Global forensic geolocation with deep neural networks
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Grantham, Neal S., Reich, Brian J., Laber, Eric B., Pacifici, Krishna, Dunn, Robert R., Fierer, Noah, Gebert, Matthew, Allwood, Julia S., and Faith, Seth A.
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Statistics - Machine Learning ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
An important problem in forensic analyses is identifying the provenance of materials at a crime scene, such as biological material on a piece of clothing. This procedure, known as geolocation, is conventionally guided by expert knowledge of the biological evidence and therefore tends to be application-specific, labor-intensive, and subjective. Purely data-driven methods have yet to be fully realized due in part to the lack of a sufficiently rich data source. However, high-throughput sequencing technologies are able to identify tens of thousands of microbial taxa using DNA recovered from a single swab collected from nearly any object or surface. We present a new algorithm for geolocation that aggregates over an ensemble of deep neural network classifiers trained on randomly-generated Voronoi partitions of a spatial domain. We apply the algorithm to fungi present in each of 1300 dust samples collected across the continental United States and then to a global dataset of dust samples from 28 countries. Our algorithm makes remarkably good point predictions with more than half of the geolocation errors under 100 kilometers for the continental analysis and nearly 90% classification accuracy of a sample's country of origin for the global analysis. We suggest that the effectiveness of this model sets the stage for a new, quantitative approach to forensic geolocation.
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- 2019
23. Larval dispersal in a changing ocean with an emphasis on upwelling regions
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Bashevkin, Samuel M, Dibble, Connor D, Dunn, Robert P, Hollarsmith, Jordan A, Ng, Gabriel, Satterthwaite, Erin V, and Morgan, Steven G
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Climate Action ,Life Below Water ,Ecological Applications ,Ecology ,Zoology - Abstract
Dispersal of benthic species in the sea is mediated primarily through small, vulnerable larvae that must survive minutes to months as members of the plankton community while being transported by strong, dynamic currents. As climate change alters ocean conditions, the dispersal of these larvae will be affected, with pervasive ecological and evolutionary consequences. We review the impacts of oceanic changes on larval transport, physiology, and behavior. We then discuss the implications for population connectivity and recruitment and evaluate life history strategies that will affect susceptibility to the effects of climate change on their dispersal patterns, with implications for understanding selective regimes in a future ocean. We find that physical oceanographic changes will impact dispersal by transporting larvae in different directions or inhibiting their movements while changing environmental factors, such as temperature, pH, salinity, oxygen, ultraviolet radiation, and turbidity, will affect the survival of larvae and alter their behavior. Reduced dispersal distance may make local adaptation more likely in well-connected populations with high genetic variation while reduced dispersal success will lower recruitment with implications for fishery stocks. Increased dispersal may spur adaptation by increasing genetic diversity among previously disconnected populations as well as increasing the likelihood of range expansions. We hypothesize that species with planktotrophic (feeding), calcifying, or weakly swimming larvae with specialized adult habitats will be most affected by climate change. We also propose that the adaptive value of retentive larval behaviors may decrease where transport trajectories follow changing climate envelopes and increase where transport trajectories drive larvae toward increasingly unsuitable conditions. Our holistic framework, combined with knowledge of regional ocean conditions and larval traits, can be used to produce powerful predictions of expected impacts on larval dispersal as well as the consequences for connectivity, range expansion, or recruitment. Based on our findings, we recommend that future studies take a holistic view of dispersal incorporating biological and oceanographic impacts of climate change rather than solely focusing on oceanography or physiology. Genetic and paleontological techniques can be used to examine evolutionary impacts of altered dispersal in a future ocean, while museum collections and expedition records can inform modern-day range shifts.
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- 2020
24. Experimental laboratory tests of short-term habitat selection by hatchery-reared juvenile red drum (Sciaenops ocellatus)
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Pfirrmann, Bruce W., Dunn, Robert P., Kimball, Matthew E., and Levesque, Erin M.
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- 2023
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25. Conspecific cues, not starvation, mediate barren urchin response to predation risk
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Knight, Christopher J., Dunn, Robert P., and Long, Jeremy D.
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- 2022
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26. A nonparametric spatial test to identify factors that shape a microbiome
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Singh, Susheela P., Staicu, Ana-Maria, Dunn, Robert R., Fierer, Noah, and Reich, Brian J.
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Statistics - Methodology - Abstract
The advent of high-throughput sequencing technologies has made data from DNA material readily available, leading to a surge of microbiome-related research establishing links between markers of microbiome health and specific outcomes. However, to harness the power of microbial communities we must understand not only how they affect us, but also how they can be influenced to improve outcomes. This area has been dominated by methods that reduce community composition to summary metrics, which can fail to fully exploit the complexity of community data. Recently, methods have been developed to model the abundance of taxa in a community, but they can be computationally intensive and do not account for spatial effects underlying microbial settlement. These spatial effects are particularly relevant in the microbiome setting because we expect communities that are close together to be more similar than those that are far apart. In this paper, we propose a flexible Bayesian spike-and-slab variable selection model for presence-absence indicators that accounts for spatial dependence and cross-dependence between taxa while reducing dimensionality in both directions. We show by simulation that in the presence of spatial dependence, popular distance-based hypothesis testing methods fail to preserve their advertised size, and the proposed method improves variable selection. Finally, we present an application of our method to an indoor fungal community found with homes across the contiguous United States., Comment: 26 pages, 4 figures
- Published
- 2018
27. Azteca ants maintain unique microbiomes across functionally distinct nest chambers
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Lucas, Jane M, Madden, Anne A, Penick, Clint A, Epps, Mary Jane, Marting, Peter R, Stevens, Julia L, Fergus, Daniel J, Dunn, Robert R, and Meineke, Emily K
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Climate Change Impacts and Adaptation ,Biological Sciences ,Ecology ,Microbiology ,Environmental Sciences ,Infectious Diseases ,Prevention ,Infection ,Animals ,Ants ,Bacteria ,Cecropia Plant ,Fungi ,Microbiota ,Reproduction ,Azteca ,Cecropia ,microbe ,microbiome ,myrmecophyte ,Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Agricultural ,veterinary and food sciences ,Biological sciences ,Environmental sciences - Abstract
The microbiome of built structures has considerable influence over an inhabitant's well-being, yet the vast majority of research has focused on human-built structures. Ants are well-known architects, capable of constructing elaborate dwellings, the microbiome of which is underexplored. Here, we explore the bacterial and fungal microbiomes in functionally distinct chambers within and outside the nests of Azteca alfari ants in Cecropia peltata trees. We predicted that A. alfari colonies (1) maintain distinct microbiomes within their nests compared to the surrounding environment, (2) maintain distinct microbiomes among nest chambers used for different functions, and (3) limit both ant and plant pathogens inside their nests. In support of these predictions, we found that internal and external nest sampling locations had distinct microbial communities, and A. alfari maintained lower bacterial richness in their 'nurseries'. While putative animal pathogens were suppressed in chambers that ants actively inhabited, putative plant pathogens were not, which does not support our hypothesis that A. alfari defends its host trees against microbial antagonists. Our results show that ants influence microbial communities inside their nests similar to studies of human homes. Unlike humans, ants limit the bacteria in their nurseries and potentially prevent the build-up of insect-infecting pathogens. These results highlight the importance of documenting how indoor microbiomes differ among species, which might improve our understanding of how to promote indoor health in human dwellings.
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- 2019
28. Transient dynamics during kelp forest recovery from fishing across multiple trophic levels
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Dunn, Robert P., Samhouri, Jameal F., and Baskett, Marissa L.
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- 2021
29. Disentangling host–microbiota complexity through hologenomics
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Alberdi, Antton, Andersen, Sandra B., Limborg, Morten T., Dunn, Robert R., and Gilbert, M. Thomas P.
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- 2022
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30. American Gut: an Open Platform for Citizen Science Microbiome Research
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McDonald, Daniel, Hyde, Embriette, Debelius, Justine W, Morton, James T, Gonzalez, Antonio, Ackermann, Gail, Aksenov, Alexander A, Behsaz, Bahar, Brennan, Caitriona, Chen, Yingfeng, Goldasich, Lindsay DeRight, Dorrestein, Pieter C, Dunn, Robert R, Fahimipour, Ashkaan K, Gaffney, James, Gilbert, Jack A, Gogul, Grant, Green, Jessica L, Hugenholtz, Philip, Humphrey, Greg, Huttenhower, Curtis, Jackson, Matthew A, Janssen, Stefan, Jeste, Dilip V, Jiang, Lingjing, Kelley, Scott T, Knights, Dan, Kosciolek, Tomasz, Ladau, Joshua, Leach, Jeff, Marotz, Clarisse, Meleshko, Dmitry, Melnik, Alexey V, Metcalf, Jessica L, Mohimani, Hosein, Montassier, Emmanuel, Navas-Molina, Jose, Nguyen, Tanya T, Peddada, Shyamal, Pevzner, Pavel, Pollard, Katherine S, Rahnavard, Gholamali, Robbins-Pianka, Adam, Sangwan, Naseer, Shorenstein, Joshua, Smarr, Larry, Song, Jin, Spector, Timothy, Swafford, Austin D, Thackray, Varykina G, Thompson, Luke R, Tripathi, Anupriya, Vázquez-Baeza, Yoshiki, Vrbanac, Alison, Wischmeyer, Paul, Wolfe, Elaine, Zhu, Qiyun, Mann, Allison E, Amir, Amnon, Frazier, Angel, Martino, Cameron, Lebrilla, Carlito, Lozupone, Catherine, Lewis, Cecil M, Raison, Charles, Zhang, Chi, Lauber, Christian L, Warinner, Christina, Lowry, Christopher A, Callewaert, Chris, Bloss, Cinnamon, Willner, Dana, Galzerani, Daniela Domingos, Gonzalez, David J, Mills, David A, Chopra, Deepak, Gevers, Dirk, Berg-Lyons, Donna, Sears, Dorothy D, Wendel, Doug, Lovelace, Elijah, Pierce, Emily, TerAvest, Emily, Bolyen, Evan, Bushman, Frederic D, Wu, Gary D, Church, George M, Saxe, Gordon, Holscher, Hanna D, Ugrina, Ivo, German, J Bruce, Caporaso, J Gregory, Wozniak, Jacob M, Kerr, Jacqueline, Ravel, Jacques, Lewis, James D, Suchodolski, Jan S, Jansson, Janet K, Hampton-Marcell, Jarrad T, and Bobe, Jason
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Microbiology ,Biological Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Medical Biochemistry and Metabolomics ,Human Genome ,Microbiome ,Genetics ,Clinical Research ,4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies ,citizen science ,microbiome ,American Gut Consortium - Abstract
Although much work has linked the human microbiome to specific phenotypes and lifestyle variables, data from different projects have been challenging to integrate and the extent of microbial and molecular diversity in human stool remains unknown. Using standardized protocols from the Earth Microbiome Project and sample contributions from over 10,000 citizen-scientists, together with an open research network, we compare human microbiome specimens primarily from the United States, United Kingdom, and Australia to one another and to environmental samples. Our results show an unexpected range of beta-diversity in human stool microbiomes compared to environmental samples; demonstrate the utility of procedures for removing the effects of overgrowth during room-temperature shipping for revealing phenotype correlations; uncover new molecules and kinds of molecular communities in the human stool metabolome; and examine emergent associations among the microbiome, metabolome, and the diversity of plants that are consumed (rather than relying on reductive categorical variables such as veganism, which have little or no explanatory power). We also demonstrate the utility of the living data resource and cross-cohort comparison to confirm existing associations between the microbiome and psychiatric illness and to reveal the extent of microbiome change within one individual during surgery, providing a paradigm for open microbiome research and education. IMPORTANCE We show that a citizen science, self-selected cohort shipping samples through the mail at room temperature recaptures many known microbiome results from clinically collected cohorts and reveals new ones. Of particular interest is integrating n = 1 study data with the population data, showing that the extent of microbiome change after events such as surgery can exceed differences between distinct environmental biomes, and the effect of diverse plants in the diet, which we confirm with untargeted metabolomics on hundreds of samples.
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- 2018
31. Dual detection high-speed capillary electrophoresis for simultaneous serum protein analysis and immunoassays
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Opallage, Prabhavie M., De Silva, Miyuru, and Dunn, Robert C.
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- 2022
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32. Creativity and Collaboration: Using CALL to Facilitate International Collaboration for Online Journalism at a Model United Nations Event
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Sheehan, Mark D., Thorpe, Todd, and Dunn, Robert
- Abstract
Much has been gained over the years in various educational fields that have taken advantage of CALL. In many cases, CALL has facilitated learning and provided teachers and students access to materials and tools that would have remained out of reach were it not for technology. Nonetheless, there are still cases where a lack of funding or access to CALL tools prevents teachers and students from reaping the benefits of CALL. Furthermore, in countries inundated by technology, opportunities for students to create and collaborate using CALL may get lost amid the noise of the latest program, or the trendiest learning tools. The project described in this article involves students in a different way to use CALL for learning; it has them work together using technology, troubleshooting problems, and creating online news stories. This article describes a digital journalism simulation called JUEMUN Journalism. JUEMUN, the Japan English University Model United Nations, is an annual event that brings together students from around the globe to participate in a Model United Nations (MUN). A component of this event includes teams of journalists who cover the events at the MUN, and report on them in four formats: podcasts, video broadcasts, a written chronicle, and editorial cartoons. [For full proceedings, see ED564162.]
- Published
- 2015
33. Biogeographical variation in the distribution, abundance, and interactions among key species on rocky reefs of the northeast Pacific
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Jenkinson, Ryan S., Hovel, Kevin A., Dunn, Robert P., and Edwards, Matthew S.
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- 2020
34. Juvenile white shrimp (Litopenaeus setiferus) can be effectively implanted with passive integrated transponder tags
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Dunn, Robert P., Pfirrmann, Bruce W., and Kimball, Matthew E.
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- 2021
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35. Interactive effects of predator and prey harvest on ecological resilience of rocky reefs
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Dunn, Robert P, Baskett, Marissa L, and Hovel, Kevin A
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Life Below Water ,Animals ,Biomass ,Biota ,California ,Ecosystem ,Fisheries ,Food Chain ,Kelp ,Sea Urchins ,alternative stable states ,ecological resilience ,ecosystem-based fisheries management ,global sensitivity analysis ,Macrocystis pyrifera ,Mesocentrotus franciscanus ,multi-trophic level harvest ,Panulirus interruptus ,Strongylocentrotus purpuratus ,Macrocystis pyrifera ,Mesocentrotus franciscanus ,Panulirus interruptus ,Strongylocentrotus purpuratus ,Environmental Sciences ,Biological Sciences ,Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences ,Ecology - Abstract
A major goal of ecosystem-based fisheries management is to prevent fishery-induced shifts in community states. This requires an understanding of ecological resilience: the ability of an ecosystem to return to the same state following a perturbation, which can strongly depend on species interactions across trophic levels. We use a structured model of a temperate rocky reef to explore how multi-trophic level fisheries impact ecological resilience. Increasing fishing mortality of prey (urchins) has a minor effect on equilibrium biomass of kelp, urchins, and spiny lobster predators, but increases resilience by reducing the range of predator harvest rates at which alternative stable states are possible. Size-structured predation on urchins acts as the feedback maintaining each state. Our results demonstrate that the resilience of ecosystems strongly depends on the interactive effects of predator and prey harvest in multi-trophic level fisheries, which are common in marine ecosystems but are unaccounted for by traditional management.
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- 2017
36. Proximal junctional kyphosis post tuberculous spine corrective surgery in paediatric patients
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Mkize, Sandile and Dunn, Robert
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- 2021
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37. Urban warming reduces aboveground carbon storage
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Meineke, Emily, Youngsteadt, Elsa, Dunn, Robert R, and Frank, Steven D
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Life on Land ,Animals ,Carbon ,Carbon Sequestration ,Cities ,Ecosystem ,Herbivory ,Insecta ,Temperature ,Trees ,carbon storage ,climate change ,ecosystem services ,herbivory ,urban ecology ,urban heat island effect ,Biological Sciences ,Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences - Abstract
A substantial amount of global carbon is stored in mature trees. However, no experiments to date test how warming affects mature tree carbon storage. Using a unique, citywide, factorial experiment, we investigated how warming and insect herbivory affected physiological function and carbon sequestration (carbon stored per year) of mature trees. Urban warming increased herbivorous arthropod abundance on trees, but these herbivores had negligible effects on tree carbon sequestration. Instead, urban warming was associated with an estimated 12% loss of carbon sequestration, in part because photosynthesis was reduced at hotter sites. Ecosystem service assessments that do not consider urban conditions may overestimate urban tree carbon storage. Because urban and global warming are becoming more intense, our results suggest that urban trees will sequester even less carbon in the future.
- Published
- 2016
38. Optical coherence tomography imaging to analyze biofilm thickness from distal to proximal regions of the endotracheal tubes
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Dunn, Robert E, Heidari, Andrew E, Moghaddam, Samer, Zhang, Mengke, Han, Changhoon, Oh, Kyung-Jin, Leven, Steve, Brenner, Matthew, Genberg, Carl, and Chen, Zhongping
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Optical Coherence Tomography ,Endotracheal Tube ,Biofilm ,Ventilator Associated Pneumonia ,Translational ,ETT ,OCT ,VAP - Abstract
The development of nosocomial ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) has been linked to the presence of specific bacteria found in the biofilm that develops in intubated endotracheal tubes of critical care patients. Presence of biofilm has been difficult to assess clinically. Here, we use Optical coherence tomography (OCT), to visualize the biofilm at both the proximal and distal tips. Ultimately, the goal will be to determine if OCT can be a tool to visualize biofilm development and potential interventions to reduce the incidence of VAP.
- Published
- 2016
39. EXPERIMENTS REVEAL LIMITED TOP-DOWN CONTROL OF KEY HERBIVORES IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA KELP FORESTS
- Author
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Dunn, Robert P. and Hovel, Kevin A.
- Published
- 2019
40. Climate mediates the effects of disturbance on ant assemblage structure
- Author
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Gibb, Heloise, Sanders, Nathan J, Dunn, Robert R, Watson, Simon, Photakis, Manoli, Abril, Silvia, Andersen, Alan N, Angulo, Elena, Armbrecht, Inge, Arnan, Xavier, Baccaro, Fabricio B, Bishop, Tom R, Boulay, Raphael, Castracani, Cristina, Del Toro, Israel, Delsinne, Thibaut, Diaz, Mireia, Donoso, David A, Enríquez, Martha L, Fayle, Tom M, Feener, Donald H, Fitzpatrick, Matthew C, Gómez, Crisanto, Grasso, Donato A, Groc, Sarah, Heterick, Brian, Hoffmann, Benjamin D, Lach, Lori, Lattke, John, Leponce, Maurice, Lessard, Jean-Philippe, Longino, John, Lucky, Andrea, Majer, Jonathan, Menke, Sean B, Mezger, Dirk, Mori, Alessandra, Munyai, Thinandavha C, Paknia, Omid, Pearce-Duvet, Jessica, Pfeiffer, Martin, Philpott, Stacy M, de Souza, Jorge LP, Tista, Melanie, Vasconcelos, Heraldo L, Vonshak, Merav, and Parr, Catherine L
- Subjects
Life Below Water ,Animals ,Ants ,Biodiversity ,Climate ,Climate Change ,Temperature ,assemblage structure ,dominance ,global warming ,probability of interspecific encounter ,species evenness ,Biological Sciences ,Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences - Abstract
Many studies have focused on the impacts of climate change on biological assemblages, yet little is known about how climate interacts with other major anthropogenic influences on biodiversity, such as habitat disturbance. Using a unique global database of 1128 local ant assemblages, we examined whether climate mediates the effects of habitat disturbance on assemblage structure at a global scale. Species richness and evenness were associated positively with temperature, and negatively with disturbance. However, the interaction among temperature, precipitation and disturbance shaped species richness and evenness. The effect was manifested through a failure of species richness to increase substantially with temperature in transformed habitats at low precipitation. At low precipitation levels, evenness increased with temperature in undisturbed sites, peaked at medium temperatures in disturbed sites and remained low in transformed sites. In warmer climates with lower rainfall, the effects of increasing disturbance on species richness and evenness were akin to decreases in temperature of up to 9°C. Anthropogenic disturbance and ongoing climate change may interact in complicated ways to shape the structure of assemblages, with hot, arid environments likely to be at greatest risk.
- Published
- 2015
41. Continental-scale distributions of dust-associated bacteria and fungi
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Barberán, Albert, Ladau, Joshua, Leff, Jonathan W, Pollard, Katherine S, Menninger, Holly L, Dunn, Robert R, and Fierer, Noah
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Microbiology ,Biological Sciences ,Earth Sciences ,Rural Health ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,Aetiology ,Aerosols ,Air Microbiology ,Allergens ,Animals ,Atmosphere ,Bacteria ,Biodiversity ,Cities ,Dust ,Environmental Monitoring ,Feces ,Fungi ,Geography ,Humans ,Multivariate Analysis ,Oceans and Seas ,Seasons ,Skin ,Soil Microbiology ,United States ,Water Microbiology ,Wind ,aerobiology ,microbial ecology ,microbial dispersal ,urbanization ,allergens - Abstract
It has been known for centuries that microorganisms are ubiquitous in the atmosphere, where they are capable of long-distance dispersal. Likewise, it is well-established that these airborne bacteria and fungi can have myriad effects on human health, as well as the health of plants and livestock. However, we have a limited understanding of how these airborne communities vary across different geographic regions or the factors that structure the geographic patterns of near-surface microbes across large spatial scales. We collected dust samples from the external surfaces of ∼1,200 households located across the United States to understand the continental-scale distributions of bacteria and fungi in the near-surface atmosphere. The microbial communities were highly variable in composition across the United States, but the geographic patterns could be explained by climatic and soil variables, with coastal regions of the United States sharing similar airborne microbial communities. Although people living in more urbanized areas were not found to be exposed to distinct outdoor air microbial communities compared with those living in more rural areas, our results do suggest that urbanization leads to homogenization of the airborne microbiota, with more urban communities exhibiting less continental-scale geographic variability than more rural areas. These results provide our first insight into the continental-scale distributions of airborne microbes, which is information that could be used to identify likely associations between microbial exposures in outdoor air and incidences of disease in crops, livestock, and humans.
- Published
- 2015
42. Anterior-posterior view by full-body digital X-ray to rule out severe spinal injuries in Polytraumatized patients
- Author
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Häckel, Sonja, Hofmann, Elena, Anwander, Helen, Albers, Christoph E., Basedow, Jasmin, Bigdon, Sebastian F., Exadaktylos, Aristomenis K., Keel, Marius J. B., Dunn, Robert N., Maqungo, Sithombo, Benneker, Lorin M., Held, Michael, and Hoppe, Sven
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. HadISD: a quality-controlled global synoptic report database for selected variables at long-term stations from 1973--2011
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Dunn, Robert J. H., Willett, Kate M., Thorne, Peter W., Woolley, Emma V., Durre, Imke, Dai, Aiguo, Parker, David E., and Vose, Russ E.
- Subjects
Physics - Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics - Abstract
[Abridged] This paper describes the creation of HadISD: an automatically quality-controlled synoptic resolution dataset of temperature, dewpoint temperature, sea-level pressure, wind speed, wind direction and cloud cover from global weather stations for 1973--2011. The full dataset consists of over 6000 stations, with 3427 long-term stations deemed to have sufficient sampling and quality for climate applications requiring sub-daily resolution. As with other surface datasets, coverage is heavily skewed towards Northern Hemisphere mid-latitudes. The dataset is constructed from a large pre-existing ASCII flatfile data bank that represents over a decade of substantial effort at data retrieval, reformatting and provision. These raw data have had varying levels of quality control applied to them by individual data providers. The work proceeded in several steps: merging stations with multiple reporting identifiers; reformatting to netCDF; quality control; and then filtering to form a final dataset. Particular attention has been paid to maintaining true extreme values where possible within an automated, objective process. Detailed validation has been performed on a subset of global stations and also on UK data using known extreme events to help finalise the QC tests. Further validation was performed on a selection of extreme events world-wide (Hurricane Katrina in 2005, the cold snap in Alaska in 1989 and heat waves in SE Australia in 2009). Although the filtering has removed the poorest station records, no attempt has been made to homogenise the data thus far. Hence non-climatic, time-varying errors may still exist in many of the individual station records and care is needed in inferring long-term trends from these data. A version-control system has been constructed for this dataset to allow for the clear documentation of any updates and corrections in the future., Comment: Published in Climate of the Past, www.clim-past.net/8/1649/2012/. 31 pages, 23 figures, 9 pages. For data see http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/hadobs/hadisd
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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44. Photothermal Backscatter Interferometry for Enhanced Detection in Capillary Electrophoresis
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Opallage, Prabhavie M., De Silva, Miyuru, Kariuki, Stanslaus M., Raheel, Armina A., and Dunn, Robert C.
- Abstract
Refractive index (RI) detection using backscatter interferometry (BSI) enables universal detection in capillary electrophoresis (CE). BSI detection is a versatile on-capillary approach that is easily integrated with capillary or microfluidic channels, straightforward to miniaturize, and inexpensive. The focused BSI light source can also double as the excitation source for fluorescence, enabling simultaneous universal (BSI) and specific (fluorescence) signals from the same detection volume. To improve BSI detection and expand orthogonal content, we integrate photothermal absorption with BSI detection. Nonradiative relaxation of an excited analyte releases heat into the surroundings, which modifies both the local RI and conductivity (viscosity) of the analyte zone. We recently showed that the BSI signal is sensitive to both RI and conductivity, which makes photothermal absorption a promising route to signal enhancement. Here, we use coaxially delivered BSI and photothermal absorption beams to characterize BSI, photothermal BSI, and fluorescence detection using the separation of test samples. We show that photothermal absorption leads to 3 orders of magnitude improvement in BSI detection limits at the powers studied and provides new opportunities for studying binding interactions with CE.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Comparing Two Approaches for Teaching Rhythm Reading Skills to First-Grade Children: A Pilot Study
- Author
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Gauthier, Delores and Dunn, Robert E.
- Abstract
This pilot study compared two approaches for teaching rhythm reading skills to first-grade children. Two intact first-grade classes participated in six lessons focusing on simple rhythms (4 beats using eighth and quarter notes). The lessons were based on the same musical materials; only the approach was varied. After random assignment, Class 1 experienced the "Subdivision Approach" where the quarter note is the beat, and eighth notes are subdivisions of the beat. Class 2 used the "Additive Approach" where, in this case, the eighth note is the "shortest sound" and a quarter note is the equivalent of two short sounds. Pre- and posttests were administered using the respective rhythm icons, asking the children to say the rhythm syllables and do the corresponding hand movements. Within-group pre- and posttest scores showed learning took place with each method. Several t-tests showed that the Additive Approach class scored significantly higher than the Subdivision Approach class (p less than 0.001). The results of this study indicate that, for this particular set of subjects, the Additive Approach was more successful than the Subdivision Approach in this rhythm reading task. Of particular interest was the fact that the Additive Approach prepared students to more successfully decode and perform syncopated rhythms seen only in the pre- and posttest. The research approach employed appears, with modification, to be a useful one that may successfully be employed in a larger project. Although the results of this particular study cannot be generalized to a larger population, the positive results indicate that further study is merited. (Contains 5 tables and 3 figures.)
- Published
- 2004
46. Extreme AGN Feedback and Cool Core Destruction in the X-ray Luminous Galaxy Cluster MACS J1931.8-2634
- Author
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Ehlert, Steven, Allen, Steve, von der Linden, Anja, Simionescu, Aurora, Werner, Norbert, Taylor, Greg, Gentile, Gianfranco, Ebeling, Harald, Allen, Mark T, Applegate, Douglas, Dunn, Robert, Fabian, Andy, Kelly, Patrick, Million, Evan, Morris, R. Glenn, Sanders, Jeremy, and Schmidt, Robert
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on a deep, multiwavelength study of the galaxy cluster MACS J1931.8-2634 using Chandra X-ray, Subaru optical, and VLA 1.4 GHz radio data. This cluster (z=0.352) harbors one of the most X-ray luminous cool cores yet discovered, with an equivalent mass cooling rate within the central 50 kpc is approximately 700 solar masses/yr. Unique features observed in the central core of MACSJ1931.8-2634 hint to a wealth of past activity that has greatly disrupted the original cool core. We observe a spiral of relatively cool, dense, X-ray emitting gas connected to the cool core, as well as highly elongated intracluster light (ICL) surrounding the cD galaxy. Extended radio emission is observed surrounding the central AGN, elongated in the east-west direction, spatially coincident with X-ray cavities. The power input required to inflate these `bubbles' is estimated from both the X-ray and radio emission to reside between 4 and 14e45 erg/s, putting it among the most powerful jets ever observed. This combination of a powerful AGN outburst and bulk motion of the cool core have resulted in two X-ray bright ridges to form to the north and south of the central AGN at a distance of approximately 25 kpc. The northern ridge has spectral characteristics typical of cool cores and is consistent with being a remnant of the cool core after it was disrupted by the AGN and bulk motions. It is also the site of H-alpha filaments and young stars. The X-ray spectroscopic cooling rate associated with this ridge is approximately 165 solar masses/yr, which agrees with the estimate of the star formation rate from broad-band optical imaging (170 solar masses/yr). MACS J1931.8-2634 appears to harbor one of most profoundly disrupted low entropy cores observed in a cluster, and offers new insights into the survivability of cool cores in the context of hierarchical structure formation., Comment: 19 pages, 15 figures, 5 tables. Accepted by MNRAS for publication September 30 2010
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. A Global Study of the Behaviour of Black Hole X-ray Binary Discs
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Dunn, Robert, Fender, Rob, Koerding, Elmar, Belloni, Tomaso, and Merloni, Andrea
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We investigate the behaviour of the accretion discs in the outbursts of the low-mass black-hole X-ray binaries (BHXRB), an overview of which we have presented previously. Almost all of the systems in which there are sufficient observations in the most disc dominated states show a variation of the disc luminosity with temperature close to L ~\propto T^4. This in turn implies that in these states, the disc radius, R_in, and the colour correction factor, f_col, are almost constant. Deviations away from the T^4 law are observed at the beginning and end of the most disc dominated states, during the intermediate states. Although these could be explained by an inward motion of the accretion disc, they are more likely to be the result of an increase in the value of f_col as the disc fraction decreases. By comparing the expected and observed disc luminosities, we place approximate limits on the allowed distances and masses of the BHXRB system. In a number of cases, the measured distances and masses of the BHXRB system indicate that it is possible that the black hole may be spinning., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 28 pages, 5 Figures, 4 Tables. If you are interested in using any of the data in this and the previous paper, then please contact the authors
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The radio properties of a complete, X-ray selected sample of nearby, massive elliptical galaxies
- Author
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Dunn, Robert, Allen, Steve, Taylor, Greg, Shurkin, Kathleen, Gentile, Gianfranco, Fabian, Andy, and Reynolds, Chris
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We investigate the radio properties of a complete sample of nearby, massive, X-ray bright elliptical and S0 galaxies. Our sample contains 18 galaxies with ROSAT All-Sky Survey X-ray fluxes Fx_(0.1-2.4 keV) > 3 x 10^(-12) erg/s/cm^2, within a distance of 100 Mpc. For these galaxies, we have complete (18/18) VLA radio and Chandra X-ray coverage. Nuclear radio emission is detected from 17/18 of the galaxies. Ten of the galaxies exhibit extended radio emission; of these ten, all but one also exhibit clear evidence of interaction of the radio source with the surrounding, X-ray emitting gas. Among the seven galaxies with unresolved radio sources, one has clear, and one has small, cavity-like features in the Chandra X-ray images; a third has a disturbed X-ray morphology. Using a radio luminosity limit equivalent to L_(1.4 Ghz) > 10^(23) W/Hz to calculate the radio-loud fraction, we find that this misses the majority of the radio detected galaxies in the sample. We determine integrated radio-to-X-ray flux ratios for the galaxies, GRx, which are shown to span a large range (factor of 100). We calculate the mass-weighted cooling times within 1 kpc, and find hints for an anticorrelation with the radio luminosity. We also calculate limits on k/f, where k is the ratio of the total particle energy to that of relativistic electrons radiating in the range 10 MHz-10 GHz and f is the volume filling factor of the plasma in the cavity. The k/f distribution is also broad, reflecting previous results for larger galaxy clusters. Lowering the X-ray flux limit, at the expense of less complete VLA and Chandra coverage, increases the size of our sample to 42 galaxies. Nuclear radio activity is detected in at least 34/42 of this extended sample., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 19 pages, 11 Figures and 7 Tables
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. A Global Spectral Study of Black Hole X-ray Binaries
- Author
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Dunn, Robert, Fender, Rob, Koerding, Elmar, Belloni, Tomaso, and Cabanac, Clement
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
(Abridged) We report on a consistent and comprehensive spectral analysis of the X-ray emission of 25 Black Hole X-ray Binaries. All publicly available observations of the black hole binaries in the RXTE archive were analysed. Three different types of model were fitted to investigate the spectral changes occurring during an outburst. For the population, as well as each binary and each outburst from each binary, we construct two diagnostic diagrams. The Hardness Intensity/Luminosity Diagram (HID/HLD) is most useful when studying a single binary. However, to compare between different binary systems, the Disc Fraction Luminosity diagram (DFLD) is more useful. We discuss the limitations of both diagnostic diagrams for the study of the X-ray binary outbursts, and we clearly illustrate how the two diagrams map onto each other for real outburst data. We extract the peak luminosities in a single outburst, as well as the luminosities at the transitions away from- and returning to the powerlaw dominated state for each outburst. The distribution of the luminosities at the transition from the powerlaw to the disc dominated state peaks at around 0.3L_Edd, the same as the peak of the distribution of the peak luminosities in an outburst. Using the disc fraction to calculate the transition luminosities shows that the distributions of the luminosities for the transitions away from- and return to the powerlaw dominated state are both broad and appear to overlap. Finally we compare the measured X-ray luminosities with a small number of contemporaneous radio measurements. Overall this is the most comprehensive and uniform global study of black hole X-ray binaries to date., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 40 pages, 16 Figures, 4 Tables
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Temporal variability is a personalized feature of the human microbiome.
- Author
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Flores, Gilberto E, Caporaso, J Gregory, Henley, Jessica B, Rideout, Jai Ram, Domogala, Daniel, Chase, John, Leff, Jonathan W, Vázquez-Baeza, Yoshiki, Gonzalez, Antonio, Knight, Rob, Dunn, Robert R, and Fierer, Noah
- Subjects
Hand ,Forehead ,Tongue ,Feces ,Humans ,Bacteria ,Longitudinal Studies ,Genomics ,Phylogeny ,Genome ,Bacterial ,Adult ,Middle Aged ,Female ,Male ,Young Adult ,Healthy Volunteers ,Microbiota ,Bioinformatics ,Environmental Sciences ,Biological Sciences ,Information and Computing Sciences - Abstract
BackgroundIt is now apparent that the complex microbial communities found on and in the human body vary across individuals. What has largely been missing from previous studies is an understanding of how these communities vary over time within individuals. To the extent to which it has been considered, it is often assumed that temporal variability is negligible for healthy adults. Here we address this gap in understanding by profiling the forehead, gut (fecal), palm, and tongue microbial communities in 85 adults, weekly over 3 months.ResultsWe found that skin (forehead and palm) varied most in the number of taxa present, whereas gut and tongue communities varied more in the relative abundances of taxa. Within each body habitat, there was a wide range of temporal variability across the study population, with some individuals harboring more variable communities than others. The best predictor of these differences in variability across individuals was microbial diversity; individuals with more diverse gut or tongue communities were more stable in composition than individuals with less diverse communities.ConclusionsLongitudinal sampling of a relatively large number of individuals allowed us to observe high levels of temporal variability in both diversity and community structure in all body habitats studied. These findings suggest that temporal dynamics may need to be considered when attempting to link changes in microbiome structure to changes in health status. Furthermore, our findings show that, not only is the composition of an individual's microbiome highly personalized, but their degree of temporal variability is also a personalized feature.
- Published
- 2014
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