3,152 results on '"Ellison, David"'
Search Results
2. Correction: Forest Owner Attitudes Toward Climate-Proof Forest Management in Sweden and the Netherlands—Between Forest Strategies and Practical Measures
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Sikkema, Richard, Wilhelmsson, Erik, Ellison, David, and Petersson, Hans
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- 2024
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3. Forest Owner Attitudes Toward Climate-Proof Forest Management in Sweden and the Netherlands—Between Forest Strategies and Practical Measures
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Sikkema, Richard, Wilhelmsson, Erik, Ellison, David, and Petersson, Hans
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- 2024
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4. 19 Shriek and Hum: Industrial Noise and Productivity
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Ellison, David, primary
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- 2024
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5. TADIL: Task-Agnostic Domain-Incremental Learning Through Task-ID Inference Using Transformer Nearest-Centroid Embeddings
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Bravo-Rocca, Gusseppe, Liu, Peini, Guitart, Jordi, Dholakia, Ajay, Ellison, David, Goos, Gerhard, Series Editor, Hartmanis, Juris, Founding Editor, Bertino, Elisa, Editorial Board Member, Gao, Wen, Editorial Board Member, Steffen, Bernhard, Editorial Board Member, Yung, Moti, Editorial Board Member, Antonacopoulos, Apostolos, editor, Chaudhuri, Subhasis, editor, Chellappa, Rama, editor, Liu, Cheng-Lin, editor, Bhattacharya, Saumik, editor, and Pal, Umapada, editor
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- 2025
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6. Histone serotonylation regulates ependymoma tumorigenesis
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Chen, Hsiao-Chi, He, Peihao, McDonald, Malcolm, Williamson, Michael R., Varadharajan, Srinidhi, Lozzi, Brittney, Woo, Junsung, Choi, Dong-Joo, Sardar, Debosmita, Huang-Hobbs, Emmet, Sun, Hua, Ippagunta, Siri M., Jain, Antrix, Rao, Ganesh, Merchant, Thomas E., Ellison, David W., Noebels, Jeffrey L., Bertrand, Kelsey C., Mack, Stephen C., and Deneen, Benjamin
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- 2024
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7. Comparison of DNA methylation based classification models for precision diagnostics of central nervous system tumors
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Tran, Quynh T., Breuer, Alex, Lin, Tong, Tatevossian, Ruth, Allen, Sariah J., Clay, Michael, Furtado, Larissa V., Chen, Mark, Hedges, Dale, Michael, Tylman, Robinson, Giles, Northcott, Paul, Gajjar, Amar, Azzato, Elizabeth, Shurtleff, Sheila, Ellison, David W., Pounds, Stanley, and Orr, Brent A.
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- 2024
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8. Concurrent ependymal and ganglionic differentiation in a subset of supratentorial neuroepithelial tumors with EWSR1-PLAGL1 rearrangement
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Lee, Julieann C., Koo, Selene C., Furtado, Larissa V., Breuer, Alex, Eldomery, Mohammad K., Bag, Asim K., Stow, Pat, Rose, Gary, Larkin, Trisha, Sances, Rick, Kleinschmidt-DeMasters, Bette K., Bodmer, Jenna L., Willard, Nicholas, Gokden, Murat, Dahiya, Sonika, Roberts, Kaleigh, Bertrand, Kelsey C., Moreira, Daniel C., Robinson, Giles W., Mo, Jun Qin, Ellison, David W., and Orr, Brent A.
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- 2024
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9. Author Correction: Cancer-associated DDX3X mutations drive stress granule assembly and impair global translation
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Valentin-Vega, Yasmine A., Wang, Yong-Dong, Parker, Matthew, Patmore, Deanna M., Kanagaraj, Anderson, Moore, Jennifer, Rusch, Michael, Finkelstein, David, Ellison, David W., Gilbertson, Richard J., Zhang, Jinghui, Kim, Hong Joo, and Taylor, J. Paul
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- 2024
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10. Klotho is highly expressed in the chief sites of regulated potassium secretion, and it is stimulated by potassium intake
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Jung, Hyun Jun, Pham, Truyen D., Su, Xiao-Tong, Grigore, Teodora Veronica, Hoenderop, Joost G., Olauson, Hannes, Wall, Susan M., Ellison, David H., Welling, Paul A., and Al-Qusairi, Lama
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- 2024
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11. TADIL: Task-Agnostic Domain-Incremental Learning through Task-ID Inference using Transformer Nearest-Centroid Embeddings
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Bravo-Rocca, Gusseppe, Liu, Peini, Guitart, Jordi, Dholakia, Ajay, and Ellison, David
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Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Machine Learning (ML) models struggle with data that changes over time or across domains due to factors such as noise, occlusion, illumination, or frequency, unlike humans who can learn from such non independent and identically distributed data. Consequently, a Continual Learning (CL) approach is indispensable, particularly, Domain-Incremental Learning. In this paper, we propose a novel pipeline for identifying tasks in domain-incremental learning scenarios without supervision. The pipeline comprises four steps. First, we obtain base embeddings from the raw data using an existing transformer-based model. Second, we group the embedding densities based on their similarity to obtain the nearest points to each cluster centroid. Third, we train an incremental task classifier using only these few points. Finally, we leverage the lightweight computational requirements of the pipeline to devise an algorithm that decides in an online fashion when to learn a new task using the task classifier and a drift detector. We conduct experiments using the SODA10M real-world driving dataset and several CL strategies. We demonstrate that the performance of these CL strategies with our pipeline can match the ground-truth approach, both in classical experiments assuming task boundaries, and also in more realistic task-agnostic scenarios that require detecting new tasks on-the-fly, Comment: An early version of this work was presented at CVPR 2023, LXAI Workshop
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- 2023
12. Albert Camus the Algerian: Colonialism, Terrorism, Justice (review)
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Ellison, David R
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- 2008
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13. L'Héritage de Proust
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Ellison, David R
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- 2007
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14. Benchmarking Generative AI Performance Requires a Holistic Approach
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Dholakia, Ajay, Ellison, David, Hodak, Miro, Dutta, Debojyoti, Binnig, Carsten, Goos, Gerhard, Series Editor, Hartmanis, Juris, Founding Editor, Bertino, Elisa, Editorial Board Member, Gao, Wen, Editorial Board Member, Steffen, Bernhard, Editorial Board Member, Yung, Moti, Editorial Board Member, Nambiar, Raghunath, editor, and Poess, Meikel, editor
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- 2024
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15. Benchmarking Large Language Models: Opportunities and Challenges
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Hodak, Miro, Ellison, David, Van Buren, Chris, Jiang, Xiaotong, Dholakia, Ajay, Goos, Gerhard, Series Editor, Hartmanis, Juris, Founding Editor, Bertino, Elisa, Editorial Board Member, Gao, Wen, Editorial Board Member, Steffen, Bernhard, Editorial Board Member, Yung, Moti, Editorial Board Member, Nambiar, Raghunath, editor, and Poess, Meikel, editor
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- 2024
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16. Proust: Philosophy of the Novel , and: Postmodern Proust (review)
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Ellison, David R.
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- 2009
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17. Switching Checkerboards
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Ellison, David, Jouve, Bertrand, and Stone, Lewi
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Mathematics - Combinatorics - Abstract
In order to study $\mathbf{M}(R,C)$, the set of binary matrices with fixed row and column sums $R$ and $C$, we consider sub-matrices of the form $\begin{pmatrix} 1 & 0 \\ 0 & 1 \end{pmatrix}$ and $\begin{pmatrix} 0 & 1 \\ 1 & 0 \end{pmatrix}$, called positive and negative checkerboard respectively. We define an oriented graph of matrices $G(R,C)$ with vertex set $\mathbf{M}(R,C)$ and an arc from $\mathbf{A}$ to $\mathbf{A'}$ indicates you can reach $\mathbf{A'}$ by switching a negative checkerboard in $\mathbf{A}$ to positive. We show that $G(R,C)$ is a directed acyclic graph and identify classes of matrices which constitute unique sinks and sources of $G(R,C)$. Given $\mathbf{A},\mathbf{A'}\in\mathbf{M}(R,C)$, we give necessary conditions and sufficient conditions on $\mathbf{M}=\mathbf{A'}-\mathbf{A}$ for the existence of a directed path from $\mathbf{A}$ to $\mathbf{A'}$. We then consider the special case of $\mathbf{M}(\mathcal D)$, the set of adjacency matrices of graphs with fixed degree distribution $\mathcal D$. We define $G(\mathcal D)$ accordingly by switching negative checkerboards in symmetric pairs. We show that $Z_2$, an approximation of the spectral radius $\lambda_1$ based on the second Zagreb index, is non-decreasing along arcs of $G(\mathcal D)$. Also, $\ll$ reaches its maximum in $\mathbf{M}(\mathcal D)$ at a sink of $G(\mathcal D)$. We provide simulation results showing that applying successive positive switches to an Erd\H os-R\'enyi graph can significantly increase $\lambda_1$.
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- 2022
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18. Phase II study of alisertib as a single agent for treating recurrent or progressive atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumor.
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Upadhyaya, Santhosh, Campagne, Olivia, Billups, Catherine, Orr, Brent, Onar-Thomas, Arzu, Tatevossian, Ruth, Mostafavi, Roya, Myers, Jason, Vinitsky, Anna, Moreira, Daniel, Lindsay, Holly, Kilburn, Lindsay, Baxter, Patricia, Smith, Amy, Crawford, John, Partap, Sonia, Bendel, Anne, Aguilera, Dolly, Nichols, Kim, Rampersaud, Evadnie, Ellison, David, Klimo, Paul, Patay, Zoltan, Robinson, Giles, Broniscer, Alberto, Stewart, Clinton, Wetmore, Cynthia, and Gajjar, Amar
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Aurora kinase A ,alisertib ,alisertib pharmacokinetics ,atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumor ,Child ,Humans ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Rhabdoid Tumor ,Azepines ,Pyrimidines ,Central Nervous System Neoplasms ,Aurora Kinase A ,Protein Kinase Inhibitors - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recurrent atypical teratoid/rhabdoid tumor (AT/RT) is, most often, a fatal pediatric malignancy with limited curative options. METHODS: We conducted a phase II study of Aurora kinase A inhibitor alisertib in patients aged 12 months. PFS did not differ by AT/RT molecular groups. Neutropenia was the most common adverse effect (n = 23/30, 77%). The 22 patients who received liquid formulation had a higher mean maximum concentration (Cmax) of 10.1 ± 3.0 µM and faster time to Cmax (Tmax = 1.2 ± 0.7 h) than those who received tablets (Cmax = 5.7 ± 2.4 µM, Tmax = 3.4 ± 1.4 h). CONCLUSIONS: Although the study did not meet predetermined efficacy end point, single-agent alisertib was well tolerated by children with recurrent AT/RT, and SD or PR was observed in approximately a third of the patients.
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- 2023
19. Human-in-the-loop online multi-agent approach to increase trustworthiness in ML models through trust scores and data augmentation
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Bravo-Rocca, Gusseppe, Liu, Peini, Guitart, Jordi, Dholakia, Ajay, Ellison, David, and Hodak, Miroslav
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Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Multiagent Systems - Abstract
Increasing a ML model accuracy is not enough, we must also increase its trustworthiness. This is an important step for building resilient AI systems for safety-critical applications such as automotive, finance, and healthcare. For that purpose, we propose a multi-agent system that combines both machine and human agents. In this system, a checker agent calculates a trust score of each instance (which penalizes overconfidence and overcautiousness in predictions) using an agreement-based method and ranks it; then an improver agent filters the anomalous instances based on a human rule-based procedure (which is considered safe), gets the human labels, applies geometric data augmentation, and retrains with the augmented data using transfer learning. We evaluate the system on corrupted versions of the MNIST and FashionMNIST datasets. We get an improvement in accuracy and trust score with just few additional labels compared to a baseline approach., Comment: Extended version of short paper accepted at IEEE COMPSAC 2022
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- 2022
20. Molecular classification and outcome of children with rare CNS embryonal tumors: results from St. Jude Childrens Research Hospital including the multi-center SJYC07 and SJMB03 clinical trials.
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Liu, Anthony, Dhanda, Sandeep, Lin, Tong, Sioson, Edgar, Vasilyeva, Aksana, Gudenas, Brian, Tatevossian, Ruth, Jia, Sujuan, Neale, Geoffrey, Bowers, Daniel, Hassall, Tim, Partap, Sonia, Crawford, John, Chintagumpala, Murali, Bouffet, Eric, McCowage, Geoff, Broniscer, Alberto, Qaddoumi, Ibrahim, Armstrong, Greg, Wright, Karen, Upadhyaya, Santhosh, Vinitsky, Anna, Tinkle, Christopher, Lucas, John, Chiang, Jason, Indelicato, Daniel, Sanders, Robert, Klimo, Paul, Boop, Frederick, Merchant, Thomas, Ellison, David, Northcott, Paul, Orr, Brent, Zhou, Xin, Onar-Thomas, Arzu, Gajjar, Amar, and Robinson, Giles
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Brain Neoplasms ,Central Nervous System Neoplasms ,Child ,Forkhead Transcription Factors ,Glioblastoma ,Hospitals ,Humans ,Neoplasms ,Germ Cell and Embryonal ,Neuroectodermal Tumors ,Primitive - Abstract
Methylation profiling has radically transformed our understanding of tumors previously called central nervous system primitive neuro-ectodermal tumors (CNS-PNET). While this marks a momentous step toward defining key differences, reclassification has thrown treatment into disarray. To shed light on response to therapy and guide clinical decision-making, we report outcomes and molecular features of children with CNS-PNETs from two multi-center risk-adapted studies (SJMB03 for patients ≥ 3 years; SJYC07 for patients
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- 2022
21. Orienteering problem with time-windows and updating delay
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Demange, Marc, Ellison, David, and Jouve, Bertrand
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Computer Science - Discrete Mathematics - Abstract
The Orienteering Problem with Time Window and Delay (\OPTiWinD) is a variant of the online orienteering problem. A series of requests appear in various locations while a vehicle moves within the territory to serve them. Each request has a time window during which it can be served and a weight which describes its importance. There is also a minimum delay $T$ between successive requests. The objective is to find a path for the vehicles that maximises the sum of the weights of the requests served. We further assume that the length of each time window is equal to the diameter of the territory. We study the optimal performance and competitive ratio for the set of instances with $n$ requests. We obtain complete resolution for $T$ at least half of the diameter, small values of $T$ or small values of $n$, as well as partial results in the remaining cases.
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- 2022
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22. Intracranial mesenchymal tumors with FET‐CREB fusion are composed of at least two epigenetic subgroups distinct from meningioma and extracranial sarcomas
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Sloan, Emily A, Gupta, Rohit, Koelsche, Christian, Chiang, Jason, Villanueva‐Meyer, Javier E, Alexandrescu, Sanda, Eschbacher, Jennifer M, Wang, Wesley, Mafra, Manuela, Din, Nasir Ud, Carr‐Boyd, Emily, Watson, Michael, Punsoni, Michael, Oviedo, Angelica, Gilani, Ahmed, Kleinschmidt‐DeMasters, Bette K, Coss, Dylan J, Lopes, M Beatriz, Reddy, Alyssa, Mueller, Sabine, Cho, Soo‐Jin, Horvai, Andrew E, Lee, Julieann C, Pekmezci, Melike, Tihan, Tarik, Bollen, Andrew W, Rodriguez, Fausto J, Ellison, David W, Perry, Arie, von Deimling, Andreas, Chang, Susan M, Berger, Mitchel S, and Solomon, David A
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Brain Cancer ,Neurosciences ,Pediatric ,Cancer ,Clinical Research ,Brain Disorders ,Human Genome ,Genetics ,Rare Diseases ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Biomarkers ,Tumor ,Brain Neoplasms ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Epigenesis ,Genetic ,Epigenomics ,Hemangioma ,Histiocytoma ,Malignant Fibrous ,Humans ,Meningeal Neoplasms ,Meningioma ,Oncogene Proteins ,Fusion ,RNA-Binding Protein EWS ,Soft Tissue Neoplasms ,Young Adult ,angiomatoid fibrous histiocytoma ,ATF1 ,brain tumor ,clear cell sarcoma ,CREB1 ,CREM ,EWSR1 ,intracranial mesenchymal tumor with FET-CREB fusion ,intracranial myxoid mesenchymal tumor ,molecular neuropathology ,sarcoma ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
'Intracranial mesenchymal tumor, FET-CREB fusion-positive' occurs primarily in children and young adults and has previously been termed intracranial angiomatoid fibrous histiocytoma (AFH) or intracranial myxoid mesenchymal tumor (IMMT). Here we performed genome-wide DNA methylation array profiling of 20 primary intracranial mesenchymal tumors with FET-CREB fusion to further study their ontology. These tumors resolved into two distinct epigenetic subgroups that were both divergent from all other analyzed intracranial neoplasms and soft tissue sarcomas, including meningioma, clear cell sarcoma of soft tissue (CCS), and AFH of extracranial soft tissue. The first subgroup (Group A, 16 tumors) clustered nearest to but independent of solitary fibrous tumor and AFH of extracranial soft tissue, whereas the second epigenetic subgroup (Group B, 4 tumors) clustered nearest to but independent of CCS and also lacked expression of melanocytic markers (HMB45, Melan A, or MITF) characteristic of CCS. Group A tumors most often occurred in adolescence or early adulthood, arose throughout the neuroaxis, and contained mostly EWSR1-ATF1 and EWSR1-CREB1 fusions. Group B tumors arose most often in early childhood, were located along the cerebral convexities or spinal cord, and demonstrated an enrichment for tumors with CREM as the fusion partner (either EWSR1-CREM or FUS-CREM). Group A tumors more often demonstrated stellate/spindle cell morphology and hemangioma-like vasculature, whereas Group B tumors more often demonstrated round cell or epithelioid/rhabdoid morphology without hemangioma-like vasculature, although robust comparison of these clinical and histologic features requires future study. Patients with Group B tumors had inferior progression-free survival relative to Group A tumors (median 4.5 vs. 49 months, p = 0.001). Together, these findings confirm that intracranial AFH-like neoplasms and IMMT represent histologic variants of a single tumor type ('intracranial mesenchymal tumor, FET-CREB fusion-positive') that is distinct from meningioma and extracranial sarcomas. Additionally, epigenomic evaluation may provide important prognostic subtyping for this unique tumor entity.
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- 2022
23. Beckett's Proust/Deleuze's Proust (review)
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Ellison, David
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- 2011
24. Cover Image
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Su, Xiao-Tong, Reyes, Jeremiah V., Lackey, Anne E., Demirci, Hasan, Bachmann, Sebastian, Maeoka, Yujiro, Cornelius, Ryan J., McCormick, James A., Yang, Chao-Ling, Jung, Hyun Jun, Welling, Paul A., Nelson, Jonathan W., and Ellison, David H.
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- 2024
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25. Scanflow: A multi-graph framework for Machine Learning workflow management, supervision, and debugging
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Bravo-Rocca, Gusseppe, Liu, Peini, Guitart, Jordi, Dholakia, Ajay, Ellison, David, Falkanger, Jeffrey, and Hodak, Miroslav
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Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence - Abstract
Machine Learning (ML) is more than just training models, the whole workflow must be considered. Once deployed, a ML model needs to be watched and constantly supervised and debugged to guarantee its validity and robustness in unexpected situations. Debugging in ML aims to identify (and address) the model weaknesses in not trivial contexts. Several techniques have been proposed to identify different types of model weaknesses, such as bias in classification, model decay, adversarial attacks, etc., yet there is not a generic framework that allows them to work in a collaborative, modular, portable, iterative way and, more importantly, flexible enough to allow both human- and machine-driven techniques. In this paper, we propose a novel containerized directed graph framework to support and accelerate end-to-end ML workflow management, supervision, and debugging. The framework allows defining and deploying ML workflows in containers, tracking their metadata, checking their behavior in production, and improving the models by using both learned and human-provided knowledge. We demonstrate these capabilities by integrating in the framework two hybrid systems to detect data drift distribution which identify the samples that are far from the latent space of the original distribution, ask for human intervention, and whether retrain the model or wrap it with a filter to remove the noise of corrupted data at inference time. We test these systems on MNIST-C, CIFAR-10-C, and FashionMNIST-C datasets, obtaining promising accuracy results with the help of human involvement.
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- 2021
26. Early rhombic lip Protogenin+ve stem cells in a human-specific neurovascular niche initiate and maintain group 3 medulloblastoma
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Visvanathan, Abhirami, Saulnier, Olivier, Chen, Chuan, Haldipur, Parthiv, Orisme, Wilda, Delaidelli, Alberto, Shin, Seungmin, Millman, Jake, Bryant, Andrew, Abeysundara, Namal, Wu, Xujia, Hendrikse, Liam D., Patil, Vikas, Bashardanesh, Zahedeh, Golser, Joseph, Livingston, Bryn G., Nakashima, Takuma, Funakoshi, Yusuke, Ong, Winnie, Rasnitsyn, Alexandra, Aldinger, Kimberly A., Richman, Cory M., Van Ommeren, Randy, Lee, John J.Y., Ly, Michelle, Vladoiu, Maria C., Kharas, Kaitlin, Balin, Polina, Erickson, Anders W., Fong, Vernon, Zhang, Jiao, Suárez, Raúl A., Wang, Hao, Huang, Ning, Pallota, Jonelle G., Douglas, Tajana, Haapasalo, Joonas, Razavi, Ferechte, Silvestri, Evelina, Sirbu, Olga, Worme, Samantha, Kameda-Smith, Michelle M., Wu, Xiaochong, Daniels, Craig, MichaelRaj, Antony K., Bhaduri, Aparna, Schramek, Daniel, Suzuki, Hiromichi, Garzia, Livia, Ahmed, Nabil, Kleinman, Claudia L., Stein, Lincoln D., Dirks, Peter, Dunham, Christopher, Jabado, Nada, Rich, Jeremy N., Li, Wei, Sorensen, Poul H., Wechsler-Reya, Robert J., Weiss, William A., Millen, Kathleen J., Ellison, David W., Dimitrov, Dimiter S., and Taylor, Michael D.
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- 2024
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27. Enriched Single-Nucleus RNA-Sequencing Reveals Unique Attributes of Distal Convoluted Tubule Cells
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Su, Xiao-Tong, Reyes, Jeremiah V., Lackey, Anne E., Demirci, Hasan, Bachmann, Sebastian, Maeoka, Yujiro, Cornelius, Ryan J., McCormick, James A., Yang, Chao-Ling, Jung, Hyun Jun, Welling, Paul A., Nelson, Jonathan W., and Ellison, David H.
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- 2024
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28. Oh, the shame of it: The trap of rational recreation
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Ellison, David
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- 2023
29. More the Merrier: Comparative Evaluation of TPCx-AI and MLPerf Benchmarks for AI
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Liu Olesiuk, Yingrui, Hodak, Miro, Ellison, David, Dholakia, Ajay, Goos, Gerhard, Founding Editor, Hartmanis, Juris, Founding Editor, Bertino, Elisa, Editorial Board Member, Gao, Wen, Editorial Board Member, Steffen, Bernhard, Editorial Board Member, Yung, Moti, Editorial Board Member, Nambiar, Raghunath, editor, and Poess, Meikel, editor
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- 2023
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30. Benchmarking Considerations for Trustworthy and Responsible AI (Panel)
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Dholakia, Ajay, Ellison, David, Hodak, Miro, Dutta, Debojyoti, Goos, Gerhard, Founding Editor, Hartmanis, Juris, Founding Editor, Bertino, Elisa, Editorial Board Member, Gao, Wen, Editorial Board Member, Steffen, Bernhard, Editorial Board Member, Yung, Moti, Editorial Board Member, Nambiar, Raghunath, editor, and Poess, Meikel, editor
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- 2023
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31. Spatiotemporal modeling of molecular holograms
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Qiu, Xiaojie, Zhu, Daniel Y., Lu, Yifan, Yao, Jiajun, Jing, Zehua, Min, Kyung Hoi, Cheng, Mengnan, Pan, Hailin, Zuo, Lulu, King, Samuel, Fang, Qi, Zheng, Huiwen, Wang, Mingyue, Wang, Shuai, Zhang, Qingquan, Yu, Sichao, Liao, Sha, Liu, Chao, Wu, Xinchao, Lai, Yiwei, Hao, Shijie, Zhang, Zhewei, Wu, Liang, Zhang, Yong, Li, Mei, Tu, Zhencheng, Lin, Jinpei, Yang, Zhuoxuan, Li, Yuxiang, Gu, Ying, Ellison, David, Chen, Ao, Liu, Longqi, Weissman, Jonathan S., Ma, Jiayi, Xu, Xun, Liu, Shiping, and Bai, Yinqi
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- 2024
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32. Switching checkerboards in (0,1)-matrices
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Ellison, David, Jouve, Bertrand, and Stone, Lewi
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- 2024
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33. The 2021 WHO Classification of Tumors of the Central Nervous System: a summary
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Louis, David N, Perry, Arie, Wesseling, Pieter, Brat, Daniel J, Cree, Ian A, Figarella-Branger, Dominique, Hawkins, Cynthia, Ng, HK, Pfister, Stefan M, Reifenberger, Guido, Soffietti, Riccardo, von Deimling, Andreas, and Ellison, David W
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Brain Disorders ,Cancer ,Brain Cancer ,Rare Diseases ,Neurosciences ,Brain ,Central Nervous System ,Central Nervous System Neoplasms ,Humans ,Pathology ,Molecular ,World Health Organization ,brian tumor ,central nervous system ,classification ,diagnosis ,brain tumor ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis - Abstract
The fifth edition of the WHO Classification of Tumors of the Central Nervous System (CNS), published in 2021, is the sixth version of the international standard for the classification of brain and spinal cord tumors. Building on the 2016 updated fourth edition and the work of the Consortium to Inform Molecular and Practical Approaches to CNS Tumor Taxonomy, the 2021 fifth edition introduces major changes that advance the role of molecular diagnostics in CNS tumor classification. At the same time, it remains wedded to other established approaches to tumor diagnosis such as histology and immunohistochemistry. In doing so, the fifth edition establishes some different approaches to both CNS tumor nomenclature and grading and it emphasizes the importance of integrated diagnoses and layered reports. New tumor types and subtypes are introduced, some based on novel diagnostic technologies such as DNA methylome profiling. The present review summarizes the major general changes in the 2021 fifth edition classification and the specific changes in each taxonomic category. It is hoped that this summary provides an overview to facilitate more in-depth exploration of the entire fifth edition of the WHO Classification of Tumors of the Central Nervous System.
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- 2021
34. Intracranial mesenchymal tumor with FET-CREB fusion-A unifying diagnosis for the spectrum of intracranial myxoid mesenchymal tumors and angiomatoid fibrous histiocytoma-like neoplasms.
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Sloan, Emily A, Chiang, Jason, Villanueva-Meyer, Javier E, Alexandrescu, Sanda, Eschbacher, Jennifer M, Wang, Wesley, Mafra, Manuela, Ud Din, Nasir, Carr-Boyd, Emily, Watson, Michael, Punsoni, Michael, Oviedo, Angelica, Gilani, Ahmed, Kleinschmidt-DeMasters, Bette K, Coss, Dylan J, Lopes, M Beatriz, Raffel, Corey, Berger, Mitchel S, Chang, Susan M, Reddy, Alyssa, Ramani, Biswarathan, Ferris, Sean P, Lee, Julieann C, Hofmann, Jeffrey W, Cho, Soo-Jin, Horvai, Andrew E, Pekmezci, Melike, Tihan, Tarik, Bollen, Andrew W, Rodriguez, Fausto J, Ellison, David W, Perry, Arie, and Solomon, David A
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CREB ,EWSR1 ,angiomatoid fibrous histiocytoma ,brain tumor ,intracranial myxoid mesenchymal tumor ,molecular neuropathology ,sarcoma ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences - Abstract
Intracranial mesenchymal tumors with FET-CREB fusions are a recently described group of neoplasms in children and young adults characterized by fusion of a FET family gene (usually EWSR1, but rarely FUS) to a CREB family transcription factor (ATF1, CREB1, or CREM), and have been variously termed intracranial angiomatoid fibrous histiocytoma or intracranial myxoid mesenchymal tumor. The clinical outcomes, histologic features, and genomic landscape are not well defined. Here, we studied 20 patients with intracranial mesenchymal tumors proven to harbor FET-CREB fusion by next-generation sequencing (NGS). The 16 female and four male patients had a median age of 14 years (range 4-70). Tumors were uniformly extra-axial or intraventricular and located at the cerebral convexities (n = 7), falx (2), lateral ventricles (4), tentorium (2), cerebellopontine angle (4), and spinal cord (1). NGS demonstrated that eight tumors harbored EWSR1-ATF1 fusion, seven had EWSR1-CREB1, four had EWSR1-CREM, and one had FUS-CREM. Tumors were uniformly well circumscribed and typically contrast enhancing with solid and cystic growth. Tumors with EWSR1-CREB1 fusions more often featured stellate/spindle cell morphology, mucin-rich stroma, and hemangioma-like vasculature compared to tumors with EWSR1-ATF1 fusions that most often featured sheets of epithelioid cells with mucin-poor collagenous stroma. These tumors demonstrated polyphenotypic immunoprofiles with frequent positivity for desmin, EMA, CD99, MUC4, and synaptophysin, but absence of SSTR2A, myogenin, and HMB45 expression. There was a propensity for local recurrence with a median progression-free survival of 12 months and a median overall survival of greater than 60 months, with three patients succumbing to disease (all with EWSR1-ATF1 fusions). In combination with prior case series, this study provides further insight into intracranial mesenchymal tumors with FET-CREB fusion, which represent a distinct group of CNS tumors encompassing both intracranial myxoid mesenchymal tumor and angiomatoid fibrous histiocytoma-like neoplasms.
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- 2021
35. DNA-methylation subgroups carry no prognostic significance in ATRT-SHH patients in clinical trial cohorts
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Tran, Quynh T., Upadhyaya, Santhosh A., Billups, Catherine A., Onar-Thomas, Arzu, Alom, Md. Zahangir, Carey, Steven S., Robinson, Giles W., Ellison, David W., Gajjar, Amar, and Orr, Brent A.
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Relevance of Molecular Groups in Children with Newly Diagnosed Atypical Teratoid Rhabdoid Tumor: Results from Prospective St. Jude Multi-institutional Trials.
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Upadhyaya, Santhosh, Robinson, Giles, Onar-Thomas, Arzu, Orr, Brent, Johann, Pascal, Wu, Gang, Billups, Catherine, Tatevossian, Ruth, Dhanda, Sandeep, Srinivasan, Ashok, Broniscer, Alberto, Qaddoumi, Ibrahim, Vinitsky, Anna, Armstrong, Gregory, Bendel, Anne, Hassall, Tim, Partap, Sonia, Fisher, Paul, Crawford, John, Chintagumpala, Murali, Bouffet, Eric, Gururangan, Sridharan, Mostafavi, Roya, Sanders, Robert, Klimo, Paul, Patay, Zoltan, Indelicato, Daniel, Nichols, Kim, Boop, Frederick, Merchant, Thomas, Kool, Marcel, Ellison, David, and Gajjar, Amar
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Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols ,Biomarkers ,Tumor ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,DNA Copy Number Variations ,DNA Methylation ,Diagnosis ,Differential ,Disease Management ,Disease Susceptibility ,Female ,Germ-Line Mutation ,Humans ,Infant ,Male ,Mutation ,Prognosis ,Rhabdoid Tumor ,SMARCB1 Protein ,Teratoma ,Treatment Outcome - Abstract
PURPOSE: Report relevance of molecular groups to clinicopathologic features, germline SMARCB1/SMARCA4 alterations (GLA), and survival of children with atypical teratoid rhabdoid tumor (ATRT) treated in two multi-institutional clinical trials. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Seventy-four participants with newly diagnosed ATRT were treated in two trials: infants (SJYC07: age < 3 years; n = 52) and children (SJMB03: age 3-21 years; n = 22), using surgery, conventional chemotherapy (infants), or dose-dense chemotherapy with autologous stem cell rescue (children), and age- and risk-adapted radiotherapy [focal (infants) and craniospinal (CSI; children)]. Molecular groups ATRT-MYC (MYC), ATRT-SHH (SHH), and ATRT-TYR (TYR) were determined from tumor DNA methylation profiles. RESULTS: Twenty-four participants (32%) were alive at time of analysis at a median follow-up of 8.4 years (range, 3.1-14.1 years). Methylation profiling classified 64 ATRTs as TYR (n = 21), SHH (n = 30), and MYC (n = 13), SHH group being associated with metastatic disease. Among infants, TYR group had the best overall survival (OS; P = 0.02). However, outcomes did not differ by molecular groups among infants with nonmetastatic (M0) disease. Children with M0 disease and
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- 2021
37. Empagliflozin in Heart Failure: Regional Nephron Sodium Handling Effects
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Rao, Veena S., Ivey-Miranda, Juan B., Cox, Zachary L., Moreno-Villagomez, Julieta, Maulion, Christopher, Bellumkonda, Lavanya, Chang, John, Field, M. Paul, Wiederin, Daniel R., Butler, Javed, Collins, Sean P., Turner, Jeffrey M., Wilson, F. Perry, Inzucchi, Silvio E., Wilcox, Christopher S., Ellison, David H., and Testani, Jeffrey M.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Clinical Outcomes and Patient-Matched Molecular Composition of Relapsed Medulloblastoma.
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Kumar, Rahul, Smith, Kyle, Deng, Maximilian, Terhune, Colt, Robinson, Giles, Orr, Brent, Liu, Anthony, Lin, Tong, Billups, Catherine, Chintagumpala, Murali, Bowers, Daniel, Hassall, Timothy, Hansford, Jordan, Khuong-Quang, Dong, Crawford, John, Bendel, Anne, Gururangan, Sridharan, Schroeder, Kristin, Bouffet, Eric, Bartels, Ute, Fisher, Michael, Cohn, Richard, Partap, Sonia, Kellie, Stewart, McCowage, Geoffrey, Paulino, Arnold, Rutkowski, Stefan, Fleischhack, Gudrun, Dhall, Girish, Klesse, Laura, Leary, Sarah, Nazarian, Javad, Kool, Marcel, Wesseling, Pieter, Ryzhova, Marina, Zheludkova, Olga, Golanov, Andrey, McLendon, Roger, Packer, Roger, Dunham, Christopher, Hukin, Juliette, Fouladi, Maryam, Faria, Claudia, Pimentel, Jose, Walter, Andrew, Jabado, Nada, Cho, Yoon-Jae, Perreault, Sebastien, Croul, Sidney, Zapotocky, Michal, Hawkins, Cynthia, Tabori, Uri, Taylor, Michael, Pfister, Stefan, Klimo, Paul, Boop, Frederick, Ellison, David, Merchant, Thomas, Onar-Thomas, Arzu, Korshunov, Andrey, Jones, David, Gajjar, Amar, Ramaswamy, Vijay, and Northcott, Paul
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Biomarkers ,Tumor ,Cerebellar Neoplasms ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,DNA Methylation ,Disease Progression ,Epigenome ,Epigenomics ,Female ,High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing ,Humans ,Infant ,Male ,Medulloblastoma ,Neoplasm Recurrence ,Local ,Retreatment ,Time Factors ,Treatment Outcome - Abstract
PURPOSE: We sought to investigate clinical outcomes of relapsed medulloblastoma and to compare molecular features between patient-matched diagnostic and relapsed tumors. METHODS: Children and infants enrolled on either SJMB03 (NCT00085202) or SJYC07 (NCT00602667) trials who experienced medulloblastoma relapse were analyzed for clinical outcomes, including anatomic and temporal patterns of relapse and postrelapse survival. A largely independent, paired molecular cohort was analyzed by DNA methylation array and next-generation sequencing. RESULTS: A total of 72 of 329 (22%) SJMB03 and 52 of 79 (66%) SJYC07 patients experienced relapse with significant representation of Group 3 and wingless tumors. Although most patients exhibited some distal disease (79%), 38% of patients with sonic hedgehog tumors experienced isolated local relapse. Time to relapse and postrelapse survival varied by molecular subgroup with longer latencies for patients with Group 4 tumors. Postrelapse radiation therapy among previously nonirradiated SJYC07 patients was associated with long-term survival. Reirradiation was only temporizing for SJMB03 patients. Among 127 patients with patient-matched tumor pairs, 9 (7%) experienced subsequent nonmedulloblastoma CNS malignancies. Subgroup (96%) and subtype (80%) stabilities were largely maintained among the remainder. Rare subgroup divergence was observed from Group 4 to Group 3 tumors, which is coincident with genetic alterations involving MYC, MYCN, and FBXW7. Subgroup-specific patterns of alteration were identified for driver genes and chromosome arms. CONCLUSION: Clinical behavior of relapsed medulloblastoma must be contextualized in terms of up-front therapies and molecular classifications. Group 4 tumors exhibit slower biological progression. Utility of radiation at relapse is dependent on patient age and prior treatments. Degree and patterns of molecular conservation at relapse vary by subgroup. Relapse tissue enables verification of molecular targets and identification of occult secondary malignancies.
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- 2021
39. Clear cell meningiomas are defined by a highly distinct DNA methylation profile and mutations in SMARCE1
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Sievers, Philipp, Sill, Martin, Blume, Christina, Tauziede-Espariat, Arnault, Schrimpf, Daniel, Stichel, Damian, Reuss, David E, Dogan, Helin, Hartmann, Christian, Mawrin, Christian, Hasselblatt, Martin, Stummer, Walter, Schick, Uta, Hench, Jürgen, Frank, Stephan, Ketter, Ralf, Schweizer, Leonille, Schittenhelm, Jens, Puget, Stéphanie, Brandner, Sebastian, Jaunmuktane, Zane, Küsters, Benno, Abdullaev, Zied, Pekmezci, Melike, Snuderl, Matija, Ratliff, Miriam, Herold-Mende, Christel, Unterberg, Andreas, Aldape, Kenneth, Ellison, David W, Wesseling, Pieter, Reifenberger, Guido, Wick, Wolfgang, Perry, Arie, Varlet, Pascale, Pfister, Stefan M, Jones, David TW, von Deimling, Andreas, and Sahm, Felix
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Human Genome ,Brain Disorders ,Pediatric ,Cancer ,Genetics ,Rare Diseases ,Brain Cancer ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Brain Neoplasms ,Child ,Chromosomal Proteins ,Non-Histone ,Cohort Studies ,DNA Methylation ,DNA Mutational Analysis ,DNA ,Neoplasm ,DNA-Binding Proteins ,Disease Progression ,Epigenesis ,Genetic ,Female ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Humans ,Immunohistochemistry ,Male ,Meningioma ,Mutation ,Neoplasm Recurrence ,Local ,Treatment Outcome ,Young Adult ,Brain tumor ,Clear cell ,SMARCE1 ,DNA methylation profile ,German Consortium “Aggressive Meningiomas” ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
Clear cell meningioma represents an uncommon variant of meningioma that typically affects children and young adults. Although an enrichment of loss-of-function mutations in the SMARCE1 gene has been reported for this subtype, comprehensive molecular investigations are lacking. Here we describe a molecularly distinct subset of tumors (n = 31), initially identified through genome-wide DNA methylation screening among a cohort of 3093 meningiomas, of which most were diagnosed histologically as clear cell meningioma. This cohort was further supplemented by an additional 11 histologically diagnosed clear cell meningiomas for analysis (n = 42). Targeted DNA sequencing revealed SMARCE1 mutations in 33/34 analyzed samples, accompanied by a nuclear loss of expression determined via immunohistochemistry and a decreased SMARCE1 transcript expression in the tumor cells. Analysis of time to progression or recurrence of patients within the clear cell meningioma group (n = 14) in comparison to those with meningioma WHO grade 2 (n = 220) revealed a similar outcome and support the assignment of WHO grade 2 to these tumors. Our findings indicate the existence of a highly distinct epigenetic signature of clear cell meningiomas, separate from all other variants of meningiomas, with recurrent mutations in the SMARCE1 gene. This suggests that these tumors may arise from a different precursor cell population than the broad spectrum of the other meningioma subtypes.
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- 2021
40. NRG Oncology/NSABP B-47 menstrual history study: impact of adjuvant chemotherapy with and without trastuzumab
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Ganz, Patricia A, Cecchini, Reena S, Fehrenbacher, Louis, Geyer, Charles E, Rastogi, Priya, Crown, John P, Thirlwell, Michael P, Ellison, David M, Boileau, Jean-Francois, Flynn, Patrick J, Jeong, Jong-Hyeon, Mamounas, Eleftherios P, and Wolmark, Norman
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Reproductive Medicine ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Contraception/Reproduction ,Breast Cancer ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Estrogen ,Clinical Research ,Cancer ,Prevention ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Good Health and Well Being ,Clinical sciences ,Oncology and carcinogenesis ,Epidemiology - Abstract
The NRG Oncology/NSABP B-47 menstrual history (MH) study examined trastuzumab effects on menstrual status and associated circulating reproductive hormones. MH was evaluated by questions related to hysterectomy, oophorectomy, and reported menstrual changes. Pre/perimenopausal women were assessed at entry, 3, 6, 12, 18, 24, 30, and 36 months. Consenting women had estradiol and FSH measurement at entry, 3, 6, 12, 18, and 24 months. Logistic regression determined predictors of amenorrhea and hormone levels at 12, 24, and 36 months. Between 2/8/2011 and 2/10/2015, 3270 women with node-positive/high-risk node-negative HER2-low breast cancer were enrolled. There were 1,458 women enrolled in the MH study; 1231 consented to baseline blood samples. Trastuzumab did not contribute to a higher amenorrhea rate. Amenorrhea predictors were consistent with earlier studies; however, to our knowledge, this is the largest prospective study to include serial reproductive hormone measurements to 24 months and clinical amenorrhea reports to 36 months. These data can help to counsel patients regarding premature menopause risk.
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- 2021
41. Wrestling with a landscape : a photographic, practice-led, research study incorporating and investigating archival images of the traditional costume of the English regional folk sport of Cumberland and Westmorland Wrestling
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Ellison, David, McBrinn, Joseph, and Fleming, Karen
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Embroidery ,Arts and Crafts ,Lakeland Revival ,Cumbria ,North England - Abstract
This practice-led, research PhD uses ethnographic research methods in photography to interrogate the embroidered motifs of homemade wrestling costume. Photographic portraits and documentary landscapes explore the inherent invention of this English costume. Delving deeper into the invention of tradition, the costume and wrestlers themselves uncover the signs and symbols of place, creating an alternative narrative to the English Lake District. It is intended, through a dialogue between photography and the sport of Cumberland and Westmorland Wrestling, that a cultural understanding of photographic representations can be raised to a higher level of significance. The uniquely embroidered costumes of the sport and sites of practice in northern England present a dichotomy and a paradox between the ‘post-industrial’ landscape of Cumbria and the ‘protected’ Lake District National Park. The spectacle of wrestlers involved in the 'performance of tradition' in intricately embroidered costumes, depicting symbols of pre-industry in the English Lake District on post-industrial sites, is the focus for this research. The outcomes of this research widen the legacy of the Arts and Crafts Movement in the English Lake District. Additionally, the wrestling costume is imagined as an abstract symbol of modernity that interrelates the maker and the depiction of a regional identity. Archival photography of the sport is presented in the thesis itself and as part of a photographic publication – the culmination of practice-led research charting the evolution of Cumberland and Westmorland Wrestling costume to further critique and reframe the theories relating to the invention of tradition, antiquity of dress and a re-alignment to a regional perspective. The contribution to knowledge is brought together as part of a multi-disciplined book, TEK HOD: Embroidered Wrestlers of the North, that is a 12-year research project which includes an essay by fashion writer, Lou Stoppard that critically underpins a series of portraits of wrestlers and costumes alongside action photographs of the sport which depict the picturesque and post-industrial landscapes of Northern England. This research links - like no other publication - embroidery, history, and sport into a contemporary framework.
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- 2020
42. Online Firefighting on Grids
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Demange, Marc, Ellison, David, and Gentilini, Raffaella
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Computer Science - Discrete Mathematics ,Mathematics - Combinatorics - Abstract
The Firefighter Problem (FP) is a graph problem originally introduced in 1995 to model the spread of a fire in a graph, which has attracted considerable attention in the literature. The goal is to devise a strategy to employ a given sequence of firefighters on strategic points in the graph in order to contain efficiently the fire (which spreads from each unprotected vertex to all of it neighbours on successive time steps). Recently, an online version of FP---where the number of firefighters available at each turn are revealed in real-time--- has been introduced in the literature and studied on trees. In this paper, we consider the online containment of fire on square grids. In particular, we provide a set of sufficient conditions that allow to solve the online version of the firefighting problem on infinite square grids, illustrating the corresponding fire containment strategies.
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- 2019
43. Firefighting on Trees
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Coupechoux, Pierre, Demange, Marc, Ellison, David, and Jouve, Bertrand
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Computer Science - Data Structures and Algorithms ,Computer Science - Computational Complexity - Abstract
In the Firefighter problem, introduced by Hartnell in 1995, a fire spreads through a graph while a player chooses which vertices to protect in order to contain it. In this paper, we focus on the case of trees and we consider as well the Fractional Firefighter game where the amount of protection allocated to a vertex lies between 0 and 1. While most of the work in this area deals with a constant amount of firefighters available at each turn, we consider three research questions which arise when including the sequence of firefighters as part of the instance. We first introduce the online version of both Firefighter and Fractional Firefighter, in which the number of firefighters available at each turn is revealed over time. We show that a greedy algorithm on finite trees is 1/2-competitive for both online versions, which generalises a result previously known for special cases of Firefighter. We also show that the optimal competitive ratio of online Firefighter ranges between 1/2 and the inverse of the golden ratio. Next, given two firefighter sequences, we discuss sufficient conditions for the existence of an infinite tree that separates them, in the sense that the fire can be contained with one sequence but not with the other. To this aim, we study a new purely numerical game called targeting game. Finally, we give sufficient conditions for the fire to be contained, expressed as the asymptotic comparison of the number of firefighters and the size of the tree levels.
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- 2019
44. cIMPACT‐NOW update 6: new entity and diagnostic principle recommendations of the cIMPACT‐Utrecht meeting on future CNS tumor classification and grading
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Louis, David N, Wesseling, Pieter, Aldape, Kenneth, Brat, Daniel J, Capper, David, Cree, Ian A, Eberhart, Charles, Figarella‐Branger, Dominique, Fouladi, Maryam, Fuller, Gregory N, Giannini, Caterina, Haberler, Christine, Hawkins, Cynthia, Komori, Takashi, Kros, Johan M, Ng, HK, Orr, Brent A, Park, Sung‐Hye, Paulus, Werner, Perry, Arie, Pietsch, Torsten, Reifenberger, Guido, Rosenblum, Marc, Rous, Brian, Sahm, Felix, Sarkar, Chitra, Solomon, David A, Tabori, Uri, Bent, Martin J, Deimling, Andreas, Weller, Michael, White, Valerie A, and Ellison, David W
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Cancer ,Rare Diseases ,Central Nervous System Neoplasms ,Humans ,Neoplasm Grading ,brain tumors ,central nervous system ,classification ,neoplasms ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
cIMPACT-NOW (the Consortium to Inform Molecular and Practical Approaches to CNS Tumor Taxonomy) was established to evaluate and make practical recommendations on recent advances in the field of CNS tumor classification, particularly in light of the rapid progress in molecular insights into these neoplasms. For Round 2 of its deliberations, cIMPACT-NOW Working Committee 3 was reconstituted and convened in Utrecht, The Netherlands, for a meeting designed to review putative new CNS tumor types in advance of any future World Health Organization meeting on CNS tumor classification. In preparatory activities for the meeting and at the actual meeting, a list of possible entities was assembled and each type and subtype debated. Working Committee 3 recommended that a substantial number of newly recognized types and subtypes should be considered for inclusion in future CNS tumor classifications. In addition, the group endorsed a number of principles-relating to classification categories, approaches to classification, nomenclature, and grading-that the group hopes will also inform the future classification of CNS neoplasms.
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- 2020
45. Germline Elongator mutations in Sonic Hedgehog medulloblastoma.
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Robinson, Giles, Gudenas, Brian, Smith, Kyle, Forget, Antoine, Kojic, Marija, Garcia-Lopez, Jesus, Hadley, Jennifer, Hamilton, Kayla, Indersie, Emilie, Buchhalter, Ivo, Kerssemakers, Jules, Jäger, Natalie, Sharma, Tanvi, Rausch, Tobias, Kool, Marcel, Sturm, Dominik, Jones, David, Vasilyeva, Aksana, Tatevossian, Ruth, Neale, Geoffrey, Lombard, Bérangère, Loew, Damarys, Nakitandwe, Joy, Rusch, Michael, Bowers, Daniel, Bendel, Anne, Partap, Sonia, Chintagumpala, Murali, Crawford, John, Gottardo, Nicholas, Smith, Amy, Dufour, Christelle, Rutkowski, Stefan, Eggen, Tone, Wesenberg, Finn, Kjaerheim, Kristina, Feychting, Maria, Lannering, Birgitta, Schüz, Joachim, Johansen, Christoffer, Andersen, Tina, Röösli, Martin, Kuehni, Claudia, Grotzer, Michael, Remke, Marc, Puget, Stéphanie, Pajtler, Kristian, Milde, Till, Witt, Olaf, Ryzhova, Marina, Korshunov, Andrey, Orr, Brent, Ellison, David, Brugieres, Laurence, Lichter, Peter, Nichols, Kim, Gajjar, Amar, Wainwright, Brandon, Ayrault, Olivier, Korbel, Jan, Northcott, Paul, Pfister, Stefan, and Waszak, Sebastian
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Cerebellar Neoplasms ,Child ,Female ,Germ-Line Mutation ,Humans ,Male ,Medulloblastoma ,Pedigree ,RNA ,Transfer ,Transcriptional Elongation Factors - Abstract
Cancer genomics has revealed many genes and core molecular processes that contribute to human malignancies, but the genetic and molecular bases of many rare cancers remains unclear. Genetic predisposition accounts for 5 to 10% of cancer diagnoses in children1,2, and genetic events that cooperate with known somatic driver events are poorly understood. Pathogenic germline variants in established cancer predisposition genes have been recently identified in 5% of patients with the malignant brain tumour medulloblastoma3. Here, by analysing all protein-coding genes, we identify and replicate rare germline loss-of-function variants across ELP1 in 14% of paediatric patients with the medulloblastoma subgroup Sonic Hedgehog (MBSHH). ELP1 was the most common medulloblastoma predisposition gene and increased the prevalence of genetic predisposition to 40% among paediatric patients with MBSHH. Parent-offspring and pedigree analyses identified two families with a history of paediatric medulloblastoma. ELP1-associated medulloblastomas were restricted to the molecular SHHα subtype4 and characterized by universal biallelic inactivation of ELP1 owing to somatic loss of chromosome arm 9q. Most ELP1-associated medulloblastomas also exhibited somatic alterations in PTCH1, which suggests that germline ELP1 loss-of-function variants predispose individuals to tumour development in combination with constitutive activation of SHH signalling. ELP1 is the largest subunit of the evolutionarily conserved Elongator complex, which catalyses translational elongation through tRNA modifications at the wobble (U34) position5,6. Tumours from patients with ELP1-associated MBSHH were characterized by a destabilized Elongator complex, loss of Elongator-dependent tRNA modifications, codon-dependent translational reprogramming, and induction of the unfolded protein response, consistent with loss of protein homeostasis due to Elongator deficiency in model systems7-9. Thus, genetic predisposition to proteome instability may be a determinant in the pathogenesis of paediatric brain cancers. These results support investigation of the role of protein homeostasis in other cancer types and potential for therapeutic interference.
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- 2020
46. Risk-adapted therapy and biological heterogeneity in pineoblastoma: integrated clinico-pathological analysis from the prospective, multi-center SJMB03 and SJYC07 trials
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Liu, Anthony PY, Gudenas, Brian, Lin, Tong, Orr, Brent A, Klimo, Paul, Kumar, Rahul, Bouffet, Eric, Gururangan, Sridharan, Crawford, John R, Kellie, Stewart J, Chintagumpala, Murali, Fisher, Michael J, Bowers, Daniel C, Hassall, Tim, Indelicato, Daniel J, Onar-Thomas, Arzu, Ellison, David W, Boop, Frederick A, Merchant, Thomas E, Robinson, Giles W, Northcott, Paul A, and Gajjar, Amar
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Pediatric Cancer ,Genetics ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Biotechnology ,Pediatric ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Cancer ,Adolescent ,Age Factors ,Brain Neoplasms ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Cohort Studies ,DNA Methylation ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Pineal Gland ,Pinealoma ,Proto-Oncogene Mas ,Risk Factors ,Survival Rate ,Young Adult ,Pineoblastoma ,Clinical trial ,Molecular subgroups ,DICER1 ,MicroRNA processing ,FOXR2 ,Neurosciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
Pineoblastoma is a rare embryonal tumor of childhood that is conventionally treated with high-dose craniospinal irradiation (CSI). Multi-dimensional molecular evaluation of pineoblastoma and associated intertumoral heterogeneity is lacking. Herein, we report outcomes and molecular features of children with pineoblastoma from two multi-center, risk-adapted trials (SJMB03 for patients ≥ 3 years; SJYC07 for patients
- Published
- 2020
47. Randomized Trial on the Effect of Oral Potassium Chloride Supplementation on the Thiazide-Sensitive Sodium Chloride Cotransporter in Healthy Adults
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Wu, Aihua, Wolley, Martin J., Mayr, Hannah L., Cheng, Lei, Cowley, Diane, Li, Bo, Campbell, Katrina L., Terker, Andrew S., Ellison, David H., Welling, Paul A., Fenton, Robert A., and Stowasser, Michael
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Everyone is a Winner: Interpreting MLPerf Inference Benchmark Results
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Hodak, Miro, Ellison, David, Dholakia, Ajay, Goos, Gerhard, Founding Editor, Hartmanis, Juris, Founding Editor, Bertino, Elisa, Editorial Board Member, Gao, Wen, Editorial Board Member, Steffen, Bernhard, Editorial Board Member, Woeginger, Gerhard, Editorial Board Member, Yung, Moti, Editorial Board Member, Nambiar, Raghunath, editor, and Poess, Meikel, editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Failure of human rhombic lip differentiation underlies medulloblastoma formation
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Hendrikse, Liam D., Haldipur, Parthiv, Saulnier, Olivier, Millman, Jake, Sjoboen, Alexandria H., Erickson, Anders W., Ong, Winnie, Gordon, Victor, Coudière-Morrison, Ludivine, Mercier, Audrey L., Shokouhian, Mohammad, Suárez, Raúl A., Ly, Michelle, Borlase, Stephanie, Scott, David S., Vladoiu, Maria C., Farooq, Hamza, Sirbu, Olga, Nakashima, Takuma, Nambu, Shohei, Funakoshi, Yusuke, Bahcheli, Alec, Diaz-Mejia, J. Javier, Golser, Joseph, Bach, Kathleen, Phuong-Bao, Tram, Skowron, Patryk, Wang, Evan Y., Kumar, Sachin A., Balin, Polina, Visvanathan, Abhirami, Lee, John J. Y., Ayoub, Ramy, Chen, Xin, Chen, Xiaodi, Mungall, Karen L., Luu, Betty, Bérubé, Pierre, Wang, Yu C., Pfister, Stefan M., Kim, Seung-Ki, Delattre, Olivier, Bourdeaut, Franck, Doz, François, Masliah-Planchon, Julien, Grajkowska, Wieslawa A., Loukides, James, Dirks, Peter, Fèvre-Montange, Michelle, Jouvet, Anne, French, Pim J., Kros, Johan M., Zitterbart, Karel, Bailey, Swneke D., Eberhart, Charles G., Rao, Amulya A. N., Giannini, Caterina, Olson, James M., Garami, Miklós, Hauser, Peter, Phillips, Joanna J., Ra, Young S., de Torres, Carmen, Mora, Jaume, Li, Kay K. W., Ng, Ho-Keung, Poon, Wai S., Pollack, Ian F., López-Aguilar, Enrique, Gillespie, G. Yancey, Van Meter, Timothy E., Shofuda, Tomoko, Vibhakar, Rajeev, Thompson, Reid C., Cooper, Michael K., Rubin, Joshua B., Kumabe, Toshihiro, Jung, Shin, Lach, Boleslaw, Iolascon, Achille, Ferrucci, Veronica, de Antonellis, Pasqualino, Zollo, Massimo, Cinalli, Giuseppe, Robinson, Shenandoah, Stearns, Duncan S., Van Meir, Erwin G., Porrati, Paola, Finocchiaro, Gaetano, Massimino, Maura, Carlotti, Carlos G., Faria, Claudia C., Roussel, Martine F., Boop, Frederick, Chan, Jennifer A., Aldinger, Kimberly A., Razavi, Ferechte, Silvestri, Evelina, McLendon, Roger E., Thompson, Eric M., Ansari, Marc, Garre, Maria L., Chico, Fernando, Eguía, Pilar, Pérezpeña, Mario, Morrissy, A. Sorana, Cavalli, Florence M. G., Wu, Xiaochong, Daniels, Craig, Rich, Jeremy N., Jones, Steven J. M., Moore, Richard A., Marra, Marco A., Huang, Xi, Reimand, Jüri, Sorensen, Poul H., Wechsler-Reya, Robert J., Weiss, William A., Pugh, Trevor J., Garzia, Livia, Kleinman, Claudia L., Stein, Lincoln D., Jabado, Nada, Malkin, David, Ayrault, Olivier, Golden, Jeffrey A., Ellison, David W., Doble, Brad, Ramaswamy, Vijay, Werbowetski-Ogilvie, Tamra E., Suzuki, Hiromichi, Millen, Kathleen J., and Taylor, Michael D.
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Geographic and Temporal Trends in COVID-Associated Acute Kidney Injury in the National COVID Cohort Collaborative
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Yoo, Yun J., Wilkins, Kenneth J., Alakwaa, Fadhl, Liu, Feifan, Torre-Healy, Luke A., Krichevsky, Spencer, Hong, Stephanie S., Sakhuja, Ankit, Potu, Chetan K., Saltz, Joel H., Saran, Rajiv, Zhu, Richard L., Setoguchi, Soko, Kane-Gill, Sandra L., Mallipattu, Sandeep K., He, Yongqun, Ellison, David H., Byrd, James B., Parikh, Chirag R., Moffitt, Richard A., and Koraishy, Farrukh M.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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