3,141 results on '"Ford, David"'
Search Results
2. Experimental Framework for Generating Reliable Ground Truth for Laryngeal Spatial Segmentation Tasks
- Author
-
Ghasemzadeh, Hamzeh, Ford, David S., Powell, Maria E., and Deliyski, Dimitar D.
- Subjects
Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video Processing - Abstract
Objective: The validity of objective measures derived from high-speed videoendoscopy (HSV) depends, among other factors, on the validity of spatial segmentation. Evaluation of the validity of spatial segmentation requires the existence of reliable ground truths. This study presents a framework for creating reliable ground truth with sub-pixel resolution and then evaluates its performance. Method: The proposed framework is a three-stage process. First, three laryngeal imaging experts performed the spatial segmentation task. Second, regions with high discrepancies between experts were determined and then overlaid onto the segmentation outcomes of each expert. The marked HSV frames from each expert were randomly assigned to the two remaining experts, and they were tasked to make proper adjustments and modifications to the initial segmentation within disparity regions. Third, the outcomes of this reconciliation phase were analyzed again and regions with continued high discrepancies were identified and adjusted based on the consensus among the three experts. This three-stage framework was tested using a custom graphical user interface that allowed precise piece-wise linear segmentation of the vocal fold edges. Inter-rate reliability of segmentation was evaluated using 12 HSV recordings. 10% of the frames from each HSV file were randomly selected to assess the intra-rater reliability. Result and conclusion: The reliability of spatial segmentation progressively improved as it went through the three stages of the framework. The proposed framework generated highly reliable and valid ground truths for evaluating the validity of automated spatial segmentation methods.
- Published
- 2024
3. Liquid Scripture: The Bible in a Digital World by Jeffrey S. Siker (review)
- Author
-
Ford, David
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. A Rapid Electronic Cognitive Assessment Measure for Multiple Sclerosis: Validation of Cognitive Reaction, an Electronic Version of the Symbol Digit Modalities Test
- Author
-
Middleton, Rod M, Pearson, Owen R, Ingram, Gillian, Craig, Elaine M, Rodgers, William J, Downing-Wood, Hannah, Hill, Joseph, Tuite-Dalton, Katherine, Roberts, Christopher, Watson, Lynne, Ford, David V, and Nicholas, Richard
- Subjects
Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
BackgroundIncorporating cognitive testing into routine clinical practice is a challenge in multiple sclerosis (MS), given the wide spectrum of both cognitive and physical impairments people can have and the time that testing requires. Shortened paper and verbal assessments predominate but still are not used routinely. Computer-based tests are becoming more widespread; however, changes in how a paper test is implemented can impact what exactly is being assessed in an individual. The Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SDMT) is one validated test that forms part of the cognitive batteries used in MS and has some computer-based versions. We developed a tablet-based SDMT variant that has the potential to be ultimately deployed to patients’ own devices. ObjectiveThis paper aims to develop, validate, and deploy a computer-based SDMT variant, the Cognition Reaction (CoRe) test, that can reliably replicate the characteristics of the paper-based SDMT. MethodsWe carried out analysis using Pearson and intraclass correlations, as well as a Bland-Altman comparison, to examine consistency between the SDMT and CoRe tests and for test-retest reliability. The SDMT and CoRe tests were evaluated for sensitivity to disability levels and age. A novel metric in CoRe was found: question answering velocity could be calculated. This was evaluated in relation to disability levels and age for people with MS and compared with a group of healthy control volunteers. ResultsSDMT and CoRe test scores were highly correlated and consistent with 1-month retest values. Lower scores were seen in patients with higher age and some effect was seen with increasing disability. There was no learning effect evident. Question answering velocity demonstrated a small increase in speed over the 90-second duration of the test in people with MS and healthy controls. ConclusionsThis study validates a computer-based alternative to the SDMT that can be used in clinics and beyond. It enables accurate recording of elements of cognition relevant in MS but offers additional metrics that may offer further value to clinicians and people with MS.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Toward a Risk-Utility Data Governance Framework for Research Using Genomic and Phenotypic Data in Safe Havens: Multifaceted Review
- Author
-
Jones, Kerina, Daniels, Helen, Heys, Sharon, Lacey, Arron, and Ford, David V
- Subjects
Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
BackgroundResearch using genomic data opens up new insights into health and disease. Being able to use the data in association with health and administrative record data held in safe havens can multiply the benefits. However, there is much discussion about the use of genomic data with perceptions of particular challenges in doing so safely and effectively. ObjectiveThis study aimed to work toward a risk-utility data governance framework for research using genomic and phenotypic data in an anonymized form for research in safe havens. MethodsWe carried out a multifaceted review drawing upon data governance arrangements in published research, case studies of organizations working with genomic and phenotypic data, public views and expectations, and example studies using genomic and phenotypic data in combination. The findings were contextualized against a backdrop of legislative and regulatory requirements and used to create recommendations. ResultsWe proposed recommendations toward a risk-utility model with a flexible suite of controls to safeguard privacy and retain data utility for research. These were presented as overarching principles aligned to the core elements in the data sharing framework produced by the Global Alliance for Genomics and Health and as practical control measures distilled from published literature and case studies of operational safe havens to be applied as required at a project-specific level. ConclusionsThe recommendations presented can be used to contribute toward a proportionate data governance framework to promote the safe, socially acceptable use of genomic and phenotypic data in safe havens. They do not purport to eradicate risk but propose case-by-case assessment with transparency and accountability. If the risks are adequately understood and mitigated, there should be no reason that linked genomic and phenotypic data should not be used in an anonymized form for research in safe havens.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Toward an Ethically Founded Framework for the Use of Mobile Phone Call Detail Records in Health Research
- Author
-
Jones, Kerina Helen, Daniels, Helen, Heys, Sharon, and Ford, David Vincent
- Subjects
Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Data derived from the plethora of networked digital devices hold great potential for public benefit. Among these, mobile phone call detail records (CDRs) present novel opportunities for research and are being used in a variety of health geography studies. Research suggests that the public is amenable to the use of anonymized CDRs for research; however, further work is needed to show that such data can be used appropriately. This study works toward an ethically founded data governance framework with social acceptability. Using a multifaceted approach, this study draws upon data governance arrangements in published health research using CDRs, with a consideration of public views and the public’s information expectations from mobile network operators, and data use scenarios of CDRs in health research. The findings were considered against a backdrop of legislative and regulatory requirements. CDRs can be used at various levels of data and geographic granularity and may be integrated with additional, publicly available or restricted datasets. As such, there may be a significant risk of identity disclosure, which must be mitigated with proportionate control measures. An indicative relative risk of the disclosure model is proposed to aid this process. Subsequently, a set of recommendations is presented, including the need for greater transparency, accountability, and incorporation of public views for social acceptability. This study addresses the need for greater clarity and consistency in data governance for CDRs in health research. While recognizing the need to protect commercial interests, we propose that these recommendations be used to contribute toward an ethically founded practical framework to promote the safe, socially acceptable use of CDR data for public benefit. This pattern needs to be repeated for the appropriate use of new and emerging data types from other networking devices and the wider internet of things.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Public Views on Using Mobile Phone Call Detail Records in Health Research: Qualitative Study
- Author
-
Jones, Kerina Helen, Daniels, Helen, Heys, Sharon, and Ford, David Vincent
- Subjects
Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
BackgroundMobile phone call detail records (CDRs) are increasingly being used in health research. The location element in CDRs is used in various health geographic studies, for example, to track population movement and infectious disease transmission. Vast volumes of CDRs are held by multinational organizations, which may make them available for research under various data governance regimes. However, there is an identified lack of public engagement on using CDRs for health research to contribute to an ethically founded framework. ObjectiveThis study aimed to explore public views on the use of call detail records in health research. MethodsViews on using CDRs in health research were gained via a series of three public workshops (N=61) informed by a pilot workshop of 25 people. The workshops included an initial questionnaire to gauge participants’ prior views, discussion on health research using CDRs, and a final questionnaire to record workshop outcome views. The resulting data were analyzed for frequencies and emerging themes. ResultsAt the outset, most participants (66%, 40/61) knew that location data were collected by operators, but only 3% (2/61) knew they were being used for health research. Initially, the majority of the participants (62%, 38/61) was content for their anonymous CDRs to be used, and this increased (80%, 49/61) after the discussion explained that safeguards were in place. Participants highlighted that terms and conditions should be clearer, as should information to phone users on data collection, privacy safeguards, sharing, and uses in research. ConclusionsThis is the first known study exploring public views of using mobile phone CDRs in health research. It revealed a lack of knowledge among the public on uses of CDRs and indicated that people are generally amenable to the use of anonymized data for research, but they want to be properly informed and safeguarded. We recommend that public views be incorporated into an ethically founded framework for the use of CDRs in health research to promote awareness and social acceptability in data use.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Challenges and Potential Opportunities of Mobile Phone Call Detail Records in Health Research: Review
- Author
-
Jones, Kerina Helen, Daniels, Helen, Heys, Sharon, and Ford, David Vincent
- Subjects
Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
BackgroundCall detail records (CDRs) are collected by mobile network operators in the course of providing their service. CDRs are increasingly being used in research along with other forms of big data and represent an emerging data type with potential for public good. Many jurisdictions have infrastructures for health data research that could benefit from the integration of CDRs with health data. ObjectiveThe objective of this study was to review how CDRs have been used in health research and to identify challenges and potential opportunities for their wider use in conjunction with health data. MethodsA literature review was conducted using structured search terms making use of major search engines. Initially, 4066 items were identified. Following screening, 46 full text articles were included in the qualitative synthesis. Information extracted included research topic area, population of study, datasets used, information governance and ethical considerations, study findings, and data limitations. ResultsThe majority of published studies were focused on low-income and middle-income countries. Making use of the location element in CDRs, studies often modeled the transmission of infectious diseases or estimated population movement following natural disasters with a view to implementing interventions. CDRs were used in anonymized or aggregated form, and the process of gaining regulatory approvals varied with data provider and by jurisdiction. None included public views on the use of CDRs in health research. ConclusionsDespite various challenges and limitations, anonymized mobile phone CDRs have been used successfully in health research. The use of aggregated data is a safeguard but also a further limitation. Greater opportunities could be gained if validated anonymized CDRs were integrated with routine health records at an individual level, provided that permissions and safeguards could be put in place. Further work is needed, including gaining public views, to develop an ethically founded framework for the use of CDRs in health research.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The interrelationship between purchasing and marketing
- Author
-
Ford, David, primary
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Career Development and Black Men
- Author
-
Beauduy, Guy J., Jr., Wright, Ryan, Ford, David Julius, Jr., Mack, Clifford H., Jr., and Folkes, Marcus
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. A common framework for health data governance standards
- Author
-
Torabi, Fatemeh, Squires, Emma, Orton, Chris, Heys, Sharon, Ford, David, Lyons, Ronan A., and Thompson, Simon
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. From amorphous to defined: Balancing risks in evolutionary acquisition
- Author
-
Dillard, John T., Col, Ret and Ford, David N.
- Subjects
PROCUREMENT - Defense Dept - United States - Methodology ,RISK - Methodology - Abstract
illus por tab bibliog
- Published
- 2009
13. Modeling the performance and risks of evolutionary acquisition
- Author
-
Ford, David N. and Dillard, John, Col, Ret
- Subjects
PROCUREMENT - Defense Dept - United States - Methodology ,RESOURCE MANAGEMENT - Methodology ,MANAGEMENT IMPROVEMENT - Methodology - Abstract
illus chart tab bibliog
- Published
- 2009
14. Sphingosine kinases regulate ER contacts with late endocytic organelles and cholesterol trafficking
- Author
-
Palladino, Elisa ND, Bernas, Tytus, Green, Christopher D, Weigel, Cynthia, Singh, Sandeep K, Senkal, Can E, Martello, Andrea, Kennelly, John P, Bieberich, Erhard, Tontonoz, Peter, Ford, David A, Milstien, Sheldon, Eden, Emily R, and Spiegel, Sarah
- Subjects
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Underpinning research ,Generic health relevance ,Ceramides ,Cholesterol ,Endoplasmic Reticulum ,Isoenzymes ,Liposomes ,Lysophospholipids ,Phosphatidylserines ,Sphingolipids ,Sphingosine ,Aster-B/GRAMD1b ,cholesterol ,membrane contact sites ,sphingolipids ,sphingosine kinase - Abstract
Membrane contact sites (MCS), close membrane apposition between organelles, are platforms for interorganellar transfer of lipids including cholesterol, regulation of lipid homeostasis, and co-ordination of endocytic trafficking. Sphingosine kinases (SphKs), two isoenzymes that phosphorylate sphingosine to the bioactive sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P), have been implicated in endocytic trafficking. However, the physiological functions of SphKs in regulation of membrane dynamics, lipid trafficking and MCS are not known. Here, we report that deletion of SphKs decreased S1P with concomitant increases in its precursors sphingosine and ceramide, and markedly reduced endoplasmic reticulum (ER) contacts with late endocytic organelles. Expression of enzymatically active SphK1, but not catalytically inactive, rescued the deficit of these MCS. Although free cholesterol accumulated in late endocytic organelles in SphK null cells, surprisingly however, cholesterol transport to the ER was not reduced. Importantly, deletion of SphKs promoted recruitment of the ER-resident cholesterol transfer protein Aster-B (also called GRAMD1B) to the plasma membrane (PM), consistent with higher accessible cholesterol and ceramide at the PM, to facilitate cholesterol transfer from the PM to the ER. In addition, ceramide enhanced in vitro binding of the Aster-B GRAM domain to phosphatidylserine and cholesterol liposomes. Our study revealed a previously unknown role for SphKs and sphingolipid metabolites in governing diverse MCS between the ER network and late endocytic organelles versus the PM to control the movement of cholesterol between distinct cell membranes.
- Published
- 2022
15. Using options to manage dynamic uncertainty in acquisition projects
- Author
-
Ceylan, Kagan and Ford, David N.
- Subjects
RISK ,MANAGEMENT ,PROCUREMENT - Defense Dept - United States ,PROGRAM PLANNING - Organization - Abstract
por bibliog
- Published
- 2002
16. How uncertain and observable are marine ecosystem indicators in shelf seas?
- Author
-
Skákala, Jozef, Ford, David, Fowler, Alison, Lea, Dan, Martin, Matthew J., and Ciavatta, Stefano
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Impact of extreme climatic events on unionid mussels in a subtropical river basin
- Author
-
Tarter, Alison A., Ford, David F., Symonds, Daniel E., Ford, Neil B., and Schwalb, Astrid N.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Lack of regional pathways impact on surgical delay: Analysis of the Orthopaedic Trauma Hospital Outcomes–Patient Operative Delays (ORTHOPOD) study
- Author
-
Stevenson, Iain, Yoong, Andrel, Rankin, Iain, Dixon, James, Lim, Jun Wei, Sattar, Mariam, McDonald, Stephen, Scott, Sharon, Davies, Helen, Jones, Louise, Nolan, Michelle, McGinty, Rebecca, Stevenson, Helene, Bowe, David, Sim, Francis, Vun, James, Strain, Ritchie, Giannoudis, Vasileios, Talbot, Christopher, Gunn, Christopher, Le, Ha Phuong Do, Bradley, Matthew, Lloyd, William, Hanratty, Brian, Lim, Yizhe, Brookes-Fazakerley, Steven, Varasteh, Amir, Francis, Jonathan, Choudhry, Nameer, Malik, Sheraz, Vats, Amit, Evans, Ashish, Garner, Madeleine, King, Stratton, Zbaeda, Mohamed, Diamond, Owen, Baker, Gavin, Napier, Richard, Guy, Stephen, McCauley, Gordon, King, Samuel, Edwards, Gray, Lin, Benjamin, Davoudi, Kaveh, Haines, Samuel, Raghuvanshi, Manav, Buddhdev, Pranai, Karam, Edward, Nimmyel, Enoch, Ekanem, George, Lateef, Razaq, Jayadeep, JS, Crowther, Ian, Mazur, Karolina, Hafiz, Nauman, Khan, Umair, Chettiar, Krissen, Ibrahim, Amr, Gopal, Prasanth, Tse, Shannon, Lakshmipathy, Raj, Towse, Claudia, Al-Musawi, Hashim, Walmsley, Matthew, Aspinall, Will, Metcalfe, James, Moosa, Aliabbas, Crome, George, Abdelmonem, Mohamed, Lakpriya, Sathya, Hawkins, Amanda, Waugh, Dominic, Kennedy, Matthew, Elsagheir, Mohamed, Kieffer, Will, Oyekan, Adekinte, Collis, Justin, Raad, Marjan, Raut, Pramin, Baker, Markus, Gorvett, Alexander, Gleeson, Hannah, Fahmy, John, Walters, Sam, Tinning, Craig, Chaturvedi, Abhishek, Russell, Heather, Alsawada, Osama, Sinnerton, Robert, Crane, Evan, Warwick, Catherine, Dimascio, Lucia, Ha, Taegyeong Tina, King, Thomas, Engelke, Daniel, Chan, Matthew, Gopireddy, Rajesh, Deo, Sunny, Vasarhelyi, Ferenc, Jhaj, Jasmeet, Dogramatzis, Kostas, McCartney, Sarah, Ardolino, Toni, Fraig, Hossam, Hiller-Smith, Ryan, Haughton, Benjamin, Greenwood, Heather, Stephenson, Nicola, Chong, Yuki, Sleat, Graham, Saedi, Farid, Gouda, Joe, Ravi, Sanjeev Musuvathy, Henari, Shwan, Imam, Sam, Howell, Charles, Theobald, Emma, Wright, Jan, Cormack, Jonathan, Borja, Karlou, Wood, Sandy, Khatri, Amulya, Bretherton, Chris, Tunstall, Charlotte, Lowery, Kathryn, Holmes, Benjamin, Nichols, Jennifer, Bashabayev, Beibit, Wildin, Clare, Sofat, Rajesh, Thiagarajan, Aarthi, Abdelghafour, Karim, Nicholl, James, Abdulhameed, Ahmed, Duke, Kathryn, Maling, Lucy, McCann, Matthew, Masud, Saqib, Marshman, James, Moreau, Joshua, Cheema, Kanwalnaini, Rageeb, Peter Morad, Mirza, Yusuf, Kelly, Andrew, Hassan, Abdul, Christie, Alexander, Davies, Angharad, Tang, Cary, Frostick, Rhiannon, Pemmaraju, Gopalakrishna, Handford, Charles, Chauhan, Govind, Dong, Huan, Choudri, Mohammed Junaid, Loveday, David, Bawa, Akshdeep, Baldwick, Cheryl, Roberton, Andrew, Burden, Eleanor, Nagi, Sameer, Johnson-Lynn, Sarah, Guiot, Luke, Kostusiak, Milosz, Appleyard, Thomas, Mundy, Gary, Basha, Amr, Abdeen, Bashar, Robertson-Smith, Bill, Hussainy, Haydar Al, Reed, Mike, Jamalfar, Aral, Flintoft, Emily, McGovern, Julia, Alcock, Liam, Koziara, Michal, Ollivere, Benjamin, Zheng, Amy, Atia, Fady, Goff, Thomas, Slade, Henry, Teoh, Kar, Shah, Nikhil, Al-Obaedi, Ossama, Jamal, Bilal, Bell, Stuart, Macey, Alistair, Brown, Cameron, Simpson, Cameron, Alho, Roberto, Wilson, Victoria, Lewis, Charlotte, Blyth, Daniel, Chapman, Laura, Woods, Lisa, Katmeh, Rateb, Pasapula, Chandra, Youssef, Hesham, Tan, Jerry, Famure, Steven, Grazette, Andrew, Lloyd, Adam, Beaven, Alastair, Jackowski, Anna, Piper, Dani, Lotfi, Naeil, Chakravarthy, Jagannath, Elzawahry, Ahmed, Trew, Christopher, Neo, Chryssa, Elamin-Ahmed, Hussam, Ashwood, Neil, Wembridge, Kevin, Eyre-Brook, Alistair, Greaves, Amy, Watts, Anna, Stedman, Tobias, Ker, Andrew, Wong, Li Siang, Fullarton, Mairi, Phelan, Sean, Choudry, Qaisar, Qureshi, Alham, Moulton, Lawrence, Cadwallader, Craig, Jenvey, Cara, Aqeel, Aqeel, Francis, Daniel, Simpson, Robin, Phillips, Jon, Matthews, Edward, Thomas, Ellen, Williams, Mark, Jones, Robin, White, Tim, Ketchen, Debbie, Bell, Katrina, Swain, Keri, Chitre, Amol, Lum, Joann, Syam, Kevin, Dupley, Leanne, O'Brien, Sarah, Ford, David, Chapman, Taya, Zahra, Wajiha, Guryel, Enis, McLean, Elizabeth, Dhaliwal, Kawaljit, Regan, Nora, Berstock, James, Deano, Krisna, Donovan, Richard, Blythe, Andrew, Salmon, Jennifer, Craig, Julie, Hickland, Patrick, Matthews, Scott, Brown, William, Borland, Steven, Aminat, Akinsemoyin, Stamp, Gregory, Zaheen, Humayoon, Jaibaji, Monketh, Egglestone, Anthony, Sampalli, Sridhar Rao, Goodier, Henry, Gibb, Julia, Islam, Saad, Ranaboldo, Tom, Theivendran, Kanthan, Bond, Georgina, Richards, Joanna, Sanghera, Ranjodh, Robinson, Karen, Fong, Angus, Tsang, Bonita, Dalgleish, James, McGregor-Riley, Jonathan, Barkley, Sarah, Eardley, William, Elhassan, Almutasim, Tyas, Ben, Chandler, Henry, McVie, James, Wei, Nicholas, Negus, Oliver, Baldock, Thomas, Ravi, Kuppuswamy, Qazzaz, Layth, Mohamed, Muawia, Sivayoganthan, Sriharan, Poole, William, Slade, George, Beaumont, Hugo, Beaumont, Oliver, Taha, Rowa, Lever, Caroline, Sood, Abhay, Moss, Maximillian, Khatir, Mohammed, Trompeter, Alex, Jeffers, Aisha, Brookes, Charlotte, Dadabhoy, Maria, Bhattacharya, Rajarshi, Singh, Abhinav, Beer, Alexander, Hodgson, Harry, Rahman, Kashed, Barter, Reece, Mackinnon, Thomas, Frasquet-Garcia, Antonio, Aldarragi, Ameer, Warner, Christian, Pantelides, Christopher, Attwood, Joseph, Al-Uzri, Muntadhir, Qaoud, Qaiys Abu, Green, Stephen, Osborne, Alex, Griffiths, Alexandra, Emmerson, Benjamin, Slater, Duncan, Altahoo, Hasan, Scott, Helen, Rowland, David, O'Donnell, Janine, Edwards, Taff, Hafez, Ahmed, Khan, Basharat, Crane, Emily, Axenciuc, Rostislav, Al-Habsi, Ruqaiya, McAlinden, Gavan, Sterne, Jonathan, Wong, Matthew Lynch, Patil, Sunit, Ridha, Ali, Rasidovic, Damir, Searle, Henry, Choudhry, Jamaal, Farhan-Alanie, Muhamed M, Tanagho, Andy, Sharma, Sidharth, Thomas, Suresh, Smith, Ben, McMullan, Mark, Winstanley, Robert, Mirza, Saqeb, Hamlin, Katharine, Elgayar, Lugman, Larsen, Matthew P, Eissa, Mohamed, Stevens, Samuel, Hopper, Graeme P, Fang Soh, Terrence Chi, Doorgakant, Ashtin, Yogeswaran, Apimaan, Myatt, Darren, Mahon, Joseph, Ward, Nicholas, Reid, Susan, Deierl, Krisztian, Brogan, Declan, Little, Max, Deakin, Sue, Baines, Elliott, Jones, Georgie, Boulton, Helen, Douglas, Trixie, Jeyaseelan, Lucky, Abdale, Abdirizak, Islam, Aminul, Atkinson, Kate V, Mohamedfaris, Khalid, Mmerem, Kingsley, Jamal, Shazil, Wharton, Danielle, Rana, Anurag, McAllister, Ross, Sasi, Sijith, Thomas, Terin, Pillai, Anand, Flaherty, David, Khan, Munir, Akkena, Sudheer, Shandala, Yaseen, Lankester, Benedict, Hainsworth, Louis, Ahmed, Hussam Elamin, Walshaw, Thomas, Walker, Reece, and Eardley, William G.P.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Lipid biology of plasmalogen-derived halolipids: Signature molecules of myeloperoxidase and eosinophil peroxidase activity
- Author
-
McGuffee, Reagan M., Hadfield, Christy M., and Ford, David A.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Education Law Notes - Term 3, 2024
- Author
-
Ford, David
- Subjects
Students -- Safety and security measures -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Computers and children -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Charter schools -- Government finance -- Laws, regulations and rules -- Evaluation ,Social media -- Usage -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Smart phones -- Usage -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Charities -- Taxation -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Government regulation ,Smart phone ,Business, international ,New South Wales. Education Act 1990 - Abstract
It was wonderful to have many of you join us in person and online for our Charity Law Day last month. Stephanie McLuckie spoke that day on the challenges faced [...]
- Published
- 2024
21. Ube4A maintains metabolic homeostasis and facilitates insulin signaling in vivo
- Author
-
Mukherjee, Sandip, Chakraborty, Molee, Msengi, Eliwaza N., Haubner, Jake, Zhang, Jinsong, Jellinek, Matthew J., Carlson, Haley L., Pyles, Kelly, Ulmasov, Barbara, Lutkewitte, Andrew J., Carpenter, Danielle, McCommis, Kyle S., Ford, David A., Finck, Brian N., Neuschwander-Tetri, Brent A., and Chakraborty, Anutosh
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Sale of cigarettes to school children aged 14 and 15 years in New Zealand
- Author
-
Ford, David J, Scragg, Robert, and Weir, Janie
- Published
- 1997
23. Mixed Metal Oxide W-TiO2 Nanopowder for Environmental Process: Synergy of Adsorption and Photocatalysis
- Author
-
Khley Cheng, Socheata Heng, Siteng Tieng, Ford David, Sarah Dine, Oriana Haddad, Christophe Colbeau-Justin, Mamadou Traore, and Andrei Kanaev
- Subjects
W-TiO2 nanopowder ,adsorption ,photocatalysis ,UV-A ,sunlight ,synergy between processes ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
A mixed metal oxide W-TiO2 nanopowder photocatalyst was prepared by using the sol–gel method with a broad range of elemental compositions x = CW/(CW + CTi), including TiO2 and WO3. The material was structurally characterized and evaluated in adsorption and photocatalytic processes by testing its removal capacity of a representative pollutant methylene blue (MB) in aqueous solutions and under UV-A and sunlight illuminations. The nanopowders appeared to be more effective adsorbents than pure TiO2 and WO3 materials, showing a maximum at 15 mol% W, which was set as the tungsten solubility limit in anatase titania. At the same time, the photocatalytic decomposition of MB peaked at 2 mol% W. The examination of different compositions showed that the most effective MB removal took place at 15 mol% W, which was attributed to the combined action of adsorption and heterogeneous photocatalysis. Moreover, MB decomposition under sunlight was stronger than under UV-A, suggesting photocatalyst activation by visible light. The pollutant removal efficiency of the material with 15 mol% W was enhanced by a factor of ~10 compared to pure TiO2 at the beginning of the process, which shows its high potential for use in depollution processes in emergency cases of a great pollutant leak. As a result, a Wx=0.15-TiO2 catalyst could be of high interest for wastewater purification in industrial plants.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. A national survey of cigarette smoking in fourth-form school children in New Zealand
- Author
-
Ford, David J
- Published
- 1995
25. ORthopaedic trauma hospital outcomes - Patient operative delays (ORTHOPOD) Study: The management of day-case orthopaedic trauma in the United Kingdom
- Author
-
Stevenson, Iain, Yoong, Andrel, Rankin, Iain, Dixon, James, Lim, Jun Wei, Sattar, Mariam, McDonald, Stephen, Scott, Sharon, Davies, Helen, Jones, Louise, Nolan, Michelle, McGinty, Rebecca, Stevenson, Helene, Bowe, David, Sim, Francis, Vun, James, Strain, Ritchie, Giannoudis, Vasileios, Talbot, Christopher, Gunn, Christopher, Le, Ha Phuong Do, Bradley, Matthew, Lloyd, William, Hanratty, Brian, Lim, Yizhe, Brookes-Fazakerley, Steven, Varasteh, Amir, Francis, Jonathan, Choudhry, Nameer, Malik, Sheraz, Vats, Amit, Evans, Ashish, Garner, Madeleine, King, Stratton, Zbaeda, Mohamed, Diamond, Owen, Baker, Gavin, Napier, Richard, Guy, Stephen, McCauley, Gordon, King, Samuel, Edwards, Gray, Lin, Benjamin, Davoudi, Kaveh, Haines, Samuel, Raghuvanshi, Manav, Buddhdev, Pranai, Karam, Edward, Nimmyel, Enoch, Ekanem, George, Lateef, Razaq, Jayadeep, JS, Crowther, Ian, Mazur, Karolina, Hafiz, Nauman, Khan, Umair, Chettiar, Krissen, Ibrahim, Amr, Gopal, Prasanth, Tse, Shannon, Lakshmipathy, Raj, Towse, Claudia, Al-Musawi, Hashim, Walmsley, Matthew, Aspinall, Will, Metcalfe, James, Moosa, Aliabbas, Crome, George, Abdelmonem, Mohamed, Lakpriya, Sathya, Hawkins, Amanda, Waugh, Dominic, Kennedy, Matthew, Elsagheir, Mohamed, Kieffer, Will, Oyekan, Adekinte, Collis, Justin, Raad, Marjan, Raut, Pramin, Baker, Markus, Gorvett, Alexander, Gleeson, Hannah, Fahmy, John, Walters, Sam, Tinning, Craig, Chaturvedi, Abhishek, Russell, Heather, Alsawada, Osama, Sinnerton, Robert, Crane, Evan, Warwick, Catherine, Dimascio, Lucia, Ha, Taegyeong Tina, King, Thomas, Engelke, Daniel, Chan, Matthew, Gopireddy, Rajesh, Deo, Sunny, Vasarhelyi, Ferenc, Jhaj, Jasmeet, Dogramatzis, Kostas, McCartney, Sarah, Ardolino, Toni, Fraig, Hossam, Hiller-Smith, Ryan, Haughton, Benjamin, Greenwood, Heather, Stephenson, Nicola, Chong, Yuki, Sleat, Graham, Saedi, Farid, Gouda, Joe, Ravi, Sanjeev Musuvathy, Henari, Shwan, Imam, Sam, Howell, Charles, Theobald, Emma, Wright, Jan, Cormack, Jonathan, Borja, Karlou, Wood, Sandy, Khatri, Amulya, Bretherton, Chris, Tunstall, Charlotte, Lowery, Kathryn, Holmes, Benjamin, Nichols, Jennifer, Bashabayev, Beibit, Wildin, Clare, Sofat, Rajesh, Thiagarajan, Aarthi, Abdelghafour, Karim, Nicholl, James, Abdulhameed, Ahmed, Duke, Kathryn, Maling, Lucy, McCann, Matthew, Masud, Saqib, Marshman, James, Moreau, Joshua, Cheema, Kanwalnaini, Rageeb, Peter Morad, Mirza, Yusuf, Kelly, Andrew, Hassan, Abdul, Christie, Alexander, Davies, Angharad, Tang, Cary, Frostick, Rhiannon, Pemmaraju, Gopalakrishna, Handford, Charles, Chauhan, Govind, Dong, Huan, Choudri, Mohammed Junaid, Loveday, David, Bawa, Akshdeep, Baldwick, Cheryl, Roberton, Andrew, Burden, Eleanor, Nagi, Sameer, Johnson-Lynn, Sarah, Guiot, Luke, Kostusiak, Milosz, Appleyard, Thomas, Mundy, Gary, Basha, Amr, Abdeen, Bashar, Robertson-Smith, Bill, Hussainy, Haydar Al, Reed, Mike, Jamalfar, Aral, Flintoft, Emily, McGovern, Julia, Alcock, Liam, Koziara, Michal, Ollivere, Benjamin, Zheng, Amy, Atia, Fady, Goff, Thomas, Slade, Henry, Teoh, Kar, Shah, Nikhil, Al-Obaedi, Ossama, Jamal, Bilal, Bell, Stuart, Macey, Alistair, Brown, Cameron, Simpson, Cameron, Alho, Roberto, Wilson, Victoria, Lewis, Charlotte, Blyth, Daniel, Chapman, Laura, Woods, Lisa, Katmeh, Rateb, Pasapula, Chandra, Youssef, Hesham, Tan, Jerry, Famure, Steven, Grazette, Andrew, Lloyd, Adam, Beaven, Alastair, Jackowski, Anna, Piper, Dani, Lotfi, Naeil, Chakravarthy, Jagannath, Elzawahry, Ahmed, Trew, Christopher, Neo, Chryssa, Elamin-Ahmed, Hussam, Ashwood, Neil, Wembridge, Kevin, Eyre-Brook, Alistair, Greaves, Amy, Watts, Anna, Stedman, Tobias, Ker, Andrew, Wong, Li Siang, Fullarton, Mairi, Phelan, Sean, Choudry, Qaisar, Qureshi, Alham, Moulton, Lawrence, Cadwallader, Craig, Jenvey, Cara, Aqeel, Aqeel, Francis, Daniel, Simpson, Robin, Phillips, Jon, Matthews, Edward, Thomas, Ellen, Williams, Mark, Jones, Robin, White, Tim, Ketchen, Debbie, Bell, Katrina, Swain, Keri, Chitre, Amol, Lum, Joann, Syam, Kevin, Dupley, Leanne, O'Brien, Sarah, Ford, David, Chapman, Taya, Zahra, Wajiha, Guryel, Enis, McLean, Elizabeth, Dhaliwal, Kawaljit, Regan, Nora, Berstock, James, Deano, Krisna, Donovan, Richard, Blythe, Andrew, Salmon, Jennifer, Craig, Julie, Hickland, Patrick, Matthews, Scott, Brown, William, Borland, Steven, Aminat, Akinsemoyin, Stamp, Gregory, Zaheen, Humayoon, Jaibaji, Monketh, Egglestone, Anthony, Sampalli, Sridhar Rao, Goodier, Henry, Gibb, Julia, Islam, Saad, Ranaboldo, Tom, Theivendran, Kanthan, Bond, Georgina, Richards, Joanna, Sanghera, Ranjodh, Robinson, Karen, Fong, Angus, Tsang, Bonita, Dalgleish, James, McGregor-Riley, Jonathan, Barkley, Sarah, Eardley, William, Elhassan, Almutasim, Tyas, Ben, Chandler, Henry, McVie, James, Wei, Nicholas, Negus, Oliver, Baldock, Thomas, Ravi, Kuppuswamy, Qazzaz, Layth, Mohamed, Muawia, Sivayoganthan, Sriharan, Poole, William, Slade, George, Beaumont, Hugo, Beaumont, Oliver, Taha, Rowa, Lever, Caroline, Sood, Abhay, Moss, Maximillian, Khatir, Mohammed, Trompeter, Alex, Jeffers, Aisha, Brookes, Charlotte, Dadabhoy, Maria, Bhattacharya, Rajarshi, Singh, Abhinav, Beer, Alexander, Hodgson, Harry, Rahman, Kashed, Barter, Reece, Mackinnon, Thomas, Frasquet-Garcia, Antonio, Aldarragi, Ameer, Warner, Christian, Pantelides, Christopher, Attwood, Joseph, Al-Uzri, Muntadhir, Qaoud, Qaiys Abu, Green, Stephen, Osborne, Alex, Griffiths, Alexandra, Emmerson, Benjamin, Slater, Duncan, Altahoo, Hasan, Scott, Helen, Rowland, David, O'Donnell, Janine, Edwards, Taff, Hafez, Ahmed, Khan, Basharat, Crane, Emily, Axenciuc, Rostislav, Al-Habsi, Ruqaiya, McAlinden, Gavan, Sterne, Jonathan, Wong, Matthew Lynch, Patil, Sunit, Ridha, Ali, Rasidovic, Damir, Searle, Henry, Choudhry, Jamaal, Farhan-Alanie, Muhamed M, Tanagho, Andy, Sharma, Sidharth, Thomas, Suresh, Smith, Ben, McMullan, Mark, Winstanley, Robert, Mirza, Saqeb, Hamlin, Katharine, Elgayar, Lugman, Larsen, Matthew P, Eissa, Mohamed, Stevens, Samuel, Hopper, Graeme P, Fang Soh, Terrence Chi, Doorgakant, Ashtin, Yogeswaran, Apimaan, Myatt, Darren, Mahon, Joseph, Ward, Nicholas, Reid, Susan, Deierl, Krisztian, Brogan, Declan, Little, Max, Deakin, Sue, Baines, Elliott, Jones, Georgie, Boulton, Helen, Douglas, Trixie, Jeyaseelan, Lucky, Abdale, Abdirizak, Islam, Aminul, Atkinson, Kate V, Mohamedfaris, Khalid, Mmerem, Kingsley, Jamal, Shazil, Wharton, Danielle, Rana, Anurag, McAllister, Ross, Sasi, Sijith, Thomas, Terin, Pillai, Anand, Flaherty, David, Khan, Munir, Akkena, Sudheer, Shandala, Yaseen, Lankester, Benedict, Hainsworth, Louis, Baldock, Thomas E., Walshaw, Thomas, Walker, Reece, and Eardley, William P.G.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. A national initiative in data science for health: an evaluation of the UK Farr Institute
- Author
-
Hemingway, H, Lyons, R, Li, Q, Buchan, I, Ainsworth, J, Pell, J, Morris, A, Barnes, Michael R, Bedford, Helen, Bennie, Marion, Blandford, Ann, Briggs, Andy, Brocklehurst, Peter, Brophy, Sinead, Brown, Gavin, Burton, Paul, Butler, Christopher, Capewell, Simon, Carpenter, James, Carroll, John, Cassell, Jackie A, Castillo, Fortunato, Catchpole, Mike, Caulfield, Mark, Colhoun, Helen, Coveney, Peter, Cunningham-Burley, Sarah, Custovic, Adnan, Deanfield, John, Denaxas, Spiros, Dennis, Michael, Dezateux, Carol, Dibben, Chris, Diggle, Peter, Dixon, Will, Dunn, Graham, Emam, Khaled El, Fone, David, Ford, David, Ford, Ian, Frank, John, Freemantle, Nick, Gabbe, Belinda, Gallacher, John, Gibson, Martin, Gilbert, Ruth, Gissler, Mika, Goble, Carol, Goldberg, Andy, Gravenor, Mike, Gunnell, David, Hannaford, Phil, Hayward, Andrew, Hickman, Matthew, Hingorani, Aroon, Holm, Soren, Holman, Cashel, John, Gareth, John, Ann, Jones, Kerina, Kalra, Dipak, Laurie, Graeme, Lewis, Shon, Lloyd, Keith, Lowe, Sarah, McCowan, Colin, Macleod, John, Martin, Richard M, Moore, Anthony, Moore, Laurence, Nazareth, Irwin, Nenadic, Goran, Paranjothy, Shantini, Parmar, Max, Pebody, Richard, Petersen, Steffen, Petersen, Irene, Pillay, Deenan, Preen, David, Pickett, Kate, Pritchard-Jones, Kathy, Przulj, Natasa, Renehan, Andrew, Roberts, Stephen, Robson, John, Rodgers, Sarah, Rossor, Martin, Russell, Ian, Shawe-Taylor, John, Sheikh, Aziz, Siebert, Stefan, Snooks, Helen, Sperrin, Matthew, Stephenson, Judith, Sullivan, Frank, Taylor, Chris, Taylor, Paul, Timmis, Adam, and Ward, Hester JT
- Subjects
Information and Computing Sciences ,Library and Information Studies ,Health Sciences ,Generic health relevance ,Health sciences ,Human society ,Information and computing sciences - Abstract
ObjectiveTo evaluate the extent to which the inter-institutional, inter-disciplinary mobilisation of data and skills in the Farr Institute contributed to establishing the emerging field of data science for health in the UK.Design and outcome measuresWe evaluated evidence of six domains characterising a new field of science:defining central scientific challenges,demonstrating how the central challenges might be solved,creating novel interactions among groups of scientists,training new types of experts,re-organising universities,demonstrating impacts in society.We carried out citation, network and time trend analyses of publications, and a narrative review of infrastructure, methods and tools.SettingFour UK centres in London, North England, Scotland and Wales (23 university partners), 2013-2018.Results1. The Farr Institute helped define a central scientific challenge publishing a research corpus, demonstrating insights from electronic health record (EHR) and administrative data at each stage of the translational cycle in 593 papers with at least one Farr Institute author affiliation on PubMed. 2. The Farr Institute offered some demonstrations of how these scientific challenges might be solved: it established the first four ISO27001 certified trusted research environments in the UK, and approved more than 1000 research users, published on 102 unique EHR and administrative data sources, although there was no clear evidence of an increase in novel, sustained record linkages. The Farr Institute established open platforms for the EHR phenotyping algorithms and validations (>70 diseases, CALIBER). Sample sizes showed some evidence of increase but remained less than 10% of the UK population in primary care-hospital care linked studies. 3.The Farr Institute created novel interactions among researchers: the co-author publication network expanded from 944 unique co-authors (based on 67 publications in the first 30 months) to 3839 unique co-authors (545 papers in the final 30 months). 4. Training expanded substantially with 3 new masters courses, training >400 people at masters, short-course and leadership level and 48 PhD students. 5. Universities reorganised with 4/5 Centres established 27 new faculty (tenured) positions, 3 new university institutes. 6. Emerging evidence of impacts included: > 3200 citations for the 10 most cited papers and Farr research informed eight practice-changing clinical guidelines and policies relevant to the health of millions of UK citizens.ConclusionThe Farr Institute played a major role in establishing and growing the field of data science for health in the UK, with some initial evidence of benefits for health and healthcare. The Farr Institute has now expanded into Health Data Research (HDR) UK but key challenges remain including, how to network such activities internationally.
- Published
- 2020
27. Cost benefit of pharmacy audit and nonrestrictive antibiotic policy
- Author
-
Ware, Gail J and Ford, David J
- Published
- 1993
28. The Gospel of John
- Author
-
Ford, David F., primary
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Reforming Cambodian Universities: Building Best Practice at the Royal University of Phnom Penh
- Author
-
Chet, Chealy, Ford, David, Ahrens, Luise, Maclean, Rupert, Series Editor, Symaco, Lorraine Pe, Series Editor, Adamson, Bob, Editorial Board Member, Baker, Robyn, Editorial Board Member, Crossley, Michael, Editorial Board Member, Jagannathan, Shanti, Editorial Board Member, Kitamura, Yuto, Editorial Board Member, Power, Colin, Editorial Board Member, Thaman, Konai Helu, Editorial Board Member, Bray, Mark, Advisory Editor, Cheng, Yin Cheong, Advisory Editor, Fien, John, Advisory Editor, Huong, Pham Lan, Advisory Editor, Lee, Chong-Jae, Advisory Editor, Mar, Naing Yee, Advisory Editor, Masters, Geoff, Advisory Editor, Pavlova, Margarita, Advisory Editor, Walsh, Max, Advisory Editor, de Zoysa, Uchita, Advisory Editor, McNamara, Vincent, editor, and Hayden, Martin, editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Glorification and the Life of Faith (Soteriology and Doxology)
- Author
-
Cocksworth, Ashley, Ford, David F.
- Published
- 2023
31. Enhancing Hepatic MBOAT7 Expression in Mice With Nonalcoholic Steatohepatitis
- Author
-
Sharpe, Martin C., Pyles, Kelly D., Hallcox, Taylor, Kamm, Dakota R., Piechowski, Michaela, Fisk, Bryan, Albert, Carolyn J., Carpenter, Danielle H., Ulmasov, Barbara, Ford, David A., Neuschwander-Tetri, Brent A., and McCommis, Kyle S.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. FRESHWATER MUSSELS (BIVALVIA: UNIONIDAE) FROM THE FALSE RIVER, POINTE COUPEE PARISH, LOUISIANA
- Author
-
Ford, David F., primary, Alley, Zachariah D., additional, Spaeth, John P., additional, Foltz, David A., additional, and Brust, Tim J., additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Western Diet-Fed, Aortic-Banded Ossabaw Swine: A Preclinical Model of Cardio-Metabolic Heart Failure.
- Author
-
Olver, T Dylan, Edwards, Jenna C, Jurrissen, Thomas J, Veteto, Adam B, Jones, John L, Gao, Chen, Rau, Christoph, Warren, Chad M, Klutho, Paula J, Alex, Linda, Ferreira-Nichols, Stephanie C, Ivey, Jan R, Thorne, Pamela K, McDonald, Kerry S, Krenz, Maike, Baines, Christopher P, Solaro, R John, Wang, Yibin, Ford, David A, Domeier, Timothy L, Padilla, Jaume, Rector, R Scott, and Emter, Craig A
- Subjects
AB ,aortic-banded ,CON ,control ,EDPVR ,end-diastolic pressure−volume relationship ,EF ,ejection fraction ,HF ,heart failure ,HFpEF ,heart failure with preserved ejection fraction ,HFrEF ,heart failure with reduced ejection fraction ,IL1RL1 ,interleukin 1 receptor-like 1 ,LV ,left ventricle ,NF ,nuclear factor ,PTX3 ,pentraxin-3 ,WD ,Western Diet ,cardio-metabolic disease ,heart failure ,integrative pathophysiology ,preclinical model of cardiovascular disease ,AB ,aortic-banded ,CON ,control ,EDPVR ,end-diastolic pressure−volume relationship ,EF ,ejection fraction ,HF ,HFpEF ,heart failure with preserved ejection fraction ,HFrEF ,heart failure with reduced ejection fraction ,IL1RL1 ,interleukin 1 receptor-like 1 ,LV ,left ventricle ,NF ,nuclear factor ,PTX3 ,pentraxin-3 ,WD ,Western Diet ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences - Abstract
The development of new treatments for heart failure lack animal models that encompass the increasingly heterogeneous disease profile of this patient population. This report provides evidence supporting the hypothesis that Western Diet-fed, aortic-banded Ossabaw swine display an integrated physiological, morphological, and genetic phenotype evocative of cardio-metabolic heart failure. This new preclinical animal model displays a distinctive constellation of findings that are conceivably useful to extending the understanding of how pre-existing cardio-metabolic syndrome can contribute to developing HF.
- Published
- 2019
34. A tragic end to overseas trip
- Author
-
Ford, David
- Subjects
School safety -- Cases -- Laws, regulations and rules ,College students -- Travel -- Death of -- Health aspects ,Private schools -- Cases -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Company legal issue ,Government regulation ,Business, international ,Victoria. Occupational Health and Safety Act 2004 - Abstract
Lachlan Cook was a student at Kilvington Grammar School who went on a three-week overseas school trip to Vietnam organised through World Challenge Expeditions during the 2019 September holidays. He [...]
- Published
- 2024
35. Education Law Notes - Term 2 2024
- Author
-
Ford, David
- Subjects
Church schools -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Youth travel programs -- International aspects -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Discrimination in education -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Private schools -- Government finance -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Religious discrimination -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Government regulation ,Business, international ,Australia. Education Act 2013 ,New South Wales. Education Act 1990 - Abstract
As we head into Winter, things are heating up in the religious discrimination space as our article about the Australian Law Reform Commission's final report into the exceptions to anti-discrimination [...]
- Published
- 2024
36. Seeking a Wiser Worldview in the Twenty-first Century: Micheal O'Siadhail's The Five Quintets (II)
- Author
-
Ford, David F
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Promoting Educational Success: Which GEAR UP Services Lead to Postsecondary Enrollment and Persistence?
- Author
-
Kim, Sanga, Bowman, Nicholas A., Ingleby, Laura, Ford, David C., and Sibaouih, Christina
- Abstract
Gaining Early Awareness and Readiness for Undergraduate Programs (GEAR UP) is a federal program designed to promote postsecondary readiness and success among low-income students. Some evidence suggests that this program promotes college enrollment and persistence, but GEAR UP may include a wide variety of services, and it is unclear which ones actually contribute to these apparent overall effects. The present study investigates this issue using doubly robust propensity score analyses to provide stronger causal conclusions. Four general service types and seven specific services were examined; the results provide important implications for GEAR UP and other programs designed to promote postsecondary attainment.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Mature Ecumenism’s Daring Future
- Author
-
Ford, David F., primary
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The evolution and phylogeny of early amniotes
- Author
-
Ford, David Paul and Benson, Roger B. J.
- Subjects
596.13 - Abstract
Amniotes comprise all mammals and reptiles, accounting for almost four fifths of all land vertebrate diversity. They share the ability to produce an amniotic egg, defined by a series of extraembryonic membranes, which serve to protect and nourish the embryo during development. Amniotes are a monophyletic group that first arose around 320 million years ago in the Carboniferous period, and soon diverged into the two crown- group clades, Synapsida, total-group mammals, and Sauropsida, total-group reptiles. The transition from a physiological reliance on wet conditions to a fully terrestrial ecology required changes in modes of respiration and locomotion, freeing early amniotes from the bauplan of non-amniote tetrapods, leading to morphological disparity that we can observe in the fossil record. The early diverging groups of amniotes retained many plesiomorphic features, with few diagnostic anatomical differences between them. One of the principle differences in morphology was the number of openings or fenestrae that evolved in the temporal region of the skull; one in synapsids and two in diapsids, a group of derived sauropsids. Although this feature has been fundamental to amniote classification for over a century, recent work has begun to question the relevance of temporal fenestration, as it is currently coded for, in amniote systematics. It is now widely accepted that patterns of temporal fenestration are highly variable in early amniotes, and fenestrae have been lost, regained or highly modified in all lineages. Parareptiles, a group considered as early diverging sauropsids in which temporal fenestrae were absent, are now recognised as possessing a wide-range of temporal openings, which may even be a synapomorphy of the group. Much of the new data on parareptiles and other early amniotes has not yet been considered in the wider context of early amniote evolution. Recent phylogenetic research has focused on resolving intra-clade affiliations rather than the interrelationships of major taxonomic groups. The relative incompleteness of existing phylogenetic character lists for early amniotes can only be remedied by detailed cross-clade assessment. One of the aims of my thesis is to compile a new character-taxon matrix, specifically designed to perform a broad-based phylogenetic analysis of early amniotes. In this thesis, I also explore the efficacy of temporal fenestration as a character in early amniote systematics. I will show that patterns of temporal fenestration among early amniotes are more variable than is implicit in the current system of coding, and that coding for the presence or absence of a 'lower' temporal opening fails basic tests of homology. I propose a series of new characters, which takes into account my observations of variation and similarity in temporal fenestration across a wide range of early amniotes. I include these new characters into my new character-taxon matrix, and compare the results against the same dataset with the traditional presence/absence coding. I conclude that my new coding, based on detailed observations of temporal morphology, can play a role in resolving the phylogeny of early amniotes. One of the earliest known diapsids, Orovenator mayorum from the lower Permian of Oklahoma, is redescribed using high-resolution μCT, revealing remarkable details of the skull anatomy. My findings are relevant to both palaeoecology (suggesting burrowing and nocturnality) and phylogeny. My research on Orovenator reveals a number of anatomical similarities with varanopids, a group typically assigned to Synapsida. Orovenator and other sauropsids share at least 16 character states with varanopids, many of which were not recognised by previous studies. These include a subnarial shelf of the premaxilla, a posterodorsal extension of the external naris, the asymmetrical bifurcation of the anterior vomer, and a prominent dorsomedial shelf of the surangular. This exceptional degree of similarity between Orovenator and vara- nopids questions our current understanding of relationships among early amniotes. I test this by including Orovenator in a phylogenetic data matrix used in an earlier study to differentiate between early diapsids and synapsids, and find a monophyletic clade of Orovenator + varanopids, within Diapsida. I therefore propose that Orovenator forms a clade with varanopids; raising questions about whether this clade belongs to Synapsida or Sauropsida. Finally, I present the results of phylogenetic analyses of my new character-taxon matrix of early amniotes, which is one of the largest and most comprehensive to date. My character list of 286 discrete characters was assembled by undertaking a compre- hensive review of key phylogenetic studies on stem- and early crown-group amniotes, and was augmented by new characters based on my examination of Orovenator mayo- rum. Since my objective was not to resolve the in-group relationships of early amniote subclades, but to resolve the relationships among higher taxonomic groups, my taxon sample of 60 taxa was focused on the basal chronologically early members of each clade. Phylogenetic analysis was performed using both maximum parsimony and Bayesian in- ference. Both methods were used in order to present a fully comprehensive series of results. My results confirm my initial hypothesis that varanopids and Orovenator mayorum form a monophyletic group. I also find this group to be positioned within Sauropsida, challenging the traditional view of varanopids as 'pelycosaur'-grade early synapsids, which was established over 75 years ago. I also find a sister group relationship between neodiapsids and parareptiles, with Captorhinidae positioned stem-ward to this group within the total-group reptiles (Sauropsida). This topology conflicts with the conventional hypothesis of captorhinids as the sister taxon to diapsids within tilia. I also find an unexpected degree of uncertainty over the affinities of caseasaurs as synapsids, stem-amniotes or stem-reptiles. A series of additional parsimony analyses were run, which included topological constraints, to compare tree lengths of alternative phylogenetic hypotheses. Pairwise Templeton tests were used to statistically compare the topologically-constrained analyses to the most parsimonious trees. My results have implications for hypotheses concerning the transition between 'pelycosaur'-grade synapsids of the early Permian and therapsid-grade synapsids of the middle Permian, and on patterns of evolution of temporal fenestration in early amniotes.
- Published
- 2018
40. A Cohort Comparison Study on Women in Threatened Preterm Labor Given Nifedipine or Nifedipine and Salbutamol Tocolysis in Air Medical Retrieval
- Author
-
Spring Walsh, Breeanna, Gardiner, Fergus W., Bloxsome, Dianne, Ford, David, Mills, Brennen W., and Laws, Simon M.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The impact of ocean biogeochemistry on physics and its consequences for modelling shelf seas
- Author
-
Skákala, Jozef, Bruggeman, Jorn, Ford, David, Wakelin, Sarah, Akpınar, Anıl, Hull, Tom, Kaiser, Jan, Loveday, Benjamin R., O’Dea, Enda, Williams, Charlotte A.J., and Ciavatta, Stefano
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. African American male counseling students' lived experiences with counseling faculty.
- Author
-
Brown, Joel J., Guth, Lorraine J., and Ford, David Julius
- Subjects
PREVENTION of racism ,AFRICAN Americans ,QUALITATIVE research ,RESEARCH funding ,PSYCHOLOGY of men ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ALLIED health personnel ,STUDENTS ,EXPERIENCE ,THEMATIC analysis ,RACE ,STUDENT attitudes ,COUNSELING ,TEACHER-student relationships ,PHENOMENOLOGY ,SOCIAL isolation - Abstract
Racism and its effects adversely affect the experiences of Black males within higher education. Despite efforts to address racial and gender gaps, Black males remain grossly underrepresented within counselor training programs. They report feeling isolated and experience relational challenges. In this phenomenological study of 10 African American male counseling students' interactions with counseling faculty, several themes related to their racial identity surfaced from the data. Implications for counselor educators and counselor education programs are offered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Immediate Effects of Semi-Occluded Vocal Tract Exercises on Acoustic, Auditory-Perceptual, and Self-Perceptual Measures of Voice Production.
- Author
-
Ford, David S., Hunter, Eric J., and Deliyski, Dimitar D.
- Subjects
- *
VOCAL cord physiology , *EXERCISE , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *VOICE disorder treatment , *WATER , *AUDITORY perception , *HUMAN voice , *SELF-perception ,PHYSIOLOGICAL aspects of speech - Abstract
Introduction: This study examined the immediate acoustic, auditory-perceptual, and self-perceptual effects of two semi-occluded vocal tract exercises (SOVTs): straw phonation and straw phonation into a cup of water, delivered in a remote setting. Method: Thirty-six participants (19 females and 17 males) completed a baseline battery of acoustic recordings, followed by one of two SOVTs, and an identical post-task battery. The procedure repeated itself to include the other SOVT. Participants were also asked to rate their self-perceived vocal effort and quality following each condition. Recordings were presented to three expert listeners for completion of auditory-perceptual analysis. Results: Acoustically, a significant decrease in shimmer was noted following straw phonation. Auditory-perceptual analysis revealed a significant increase in the perception of strain following straw phonation into a cup of water. While no significant differences were found between SOVT tasks in self-perception of vocal effort, a significant increase in self-perception of vocal loudness was reported following straw phonation into a cup of water. Conclusion: SOVTs have a varied, yet significant short-term impact across acoustic, auditory-perceptual, and self-perceptual measures of voice production. Straw phonation provided consistently significant acoustic results, with nearly every variable improving to some degree. Results also support the notion that shimmer is an acoustic measure that is particularly susceptible to change following modest manipulation. These results, in addition to the auditory-perceptual and self-perceptual findings, have a direct impact on how SOVTs are being used clinically and may generalize to inform the way voice metrics are collected and analyzed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. The Salve and the Sting of Religion/Spirituality in Queer and Transgender BIPOC
- Author
-
Ford, David, Nadal, Kevin L., editor, and Scharrón-del Río, María R., editor
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. And the Category Is…Queer Father Realness: Queer Black Male Mentors and the 'Fathering' of Straight Black Male Students
- Author
-
Seaberry, Michael, Stroud, Brandon Jamaal, Ford, David Julius, Jr., Murti, Lata, editor, and Flores, Glenda M., editor
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Integrating Evidenced-Based Counseling Interventions into Employee Development and Training: A Narrative Discussion on Counseling Professionals and Business Owners Working Together to Better Serve the Employee and Workplace Environment
- Author
-
McCarthy, Melissa G. and Ford, David Julius
- Abstract
This conceptual article outlines a framework and proposes theorical evidence for integrating evidenced-based counseling interventions into employee training and development. An introduction to Cognitive Behavior Therapy (CBT) techniques and tools will be presented and proposed as an enhancement to current employee training and development in support of an employers' efforts to promote positive job behavior outcomes and overall job satisfaction. The conceptual article will advocate for counseling professionals and business owners to collaborate to not only better serve the employee and workplace environment, but to bridge the gap between research and practice.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Aster Proteins Facilitate Nonvesicular Plasma Membrane to ER Cholesterol Transport in Mammalian Cells
- Author
-
Sandhu, Jaspreet, Li, Shiqian, Fairall, Louise, Pfisterer, Simon G, Gurnett, Jennifer E, Xiao, Xu, Weston, Thomas A, Vashi, Dipti, Ferrari, Alessandra, Orozco, Jose L, Hartman, Celine L, Strugatsky, David, Lee, Stephen D, He, Cuiwen, Hong, Cynthia, Jiang, Haibo, Bentolila, Laurent A, Gatta, Alberto T, Levine, Tim P, Ferng, Annie, Lee, Richard, Ford, David A, Young, Stephen G, Ikonen, Elina, Schwabe, John WR, and Tontonoz, Peter
- Subjects
Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,Biological Sciences ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Underpinning research ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Aetiology ,Generic health relevance ,3T3 Cells ,Animals ,Biological Transport ,CD36 Antigens ,CHO Cells ,Carrier Proteins ,Cell Line ,Cell Membrane ,Cholesterol ,Cholesterol ,HDL ,Cricetulus ,Endoplasmic Reticulum ,Humans ,Membrane Proteins ,Mice ,Mice ,Inbred C57BL ,Mitochondrial Membranes ,Sequence Alignment ,Sterols ,HDL metabolism ,LXR ,SR-BI ,SREBP ,cholesterol ,membrane contact sites ,nonvesicular transport ,steroidogenesis ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Developmental Biology ,Biological sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences - Abstract
The mechanisms underlying sterol transport in mammalian cells are poorly understood. In particular, how cholesterol internalized from HDL is made available to the cell for storage or modification is unknown. Here, we describe three ER-resident proteins (Aster-A, -B, -C) that bind cholesterol and facilitate its removal from the plasma membrane. The crystal structure of the central domain of Aster-A broadly resembles the sterol-binding fold of mammalian StARD proteins, but sequence differences in the Aster pocket result in a distinct mode of ligand binding. The Aster N-terminal GRAM domain binds phosphatidylserine and mediates Aster recruitment to plasma membrane-ER contact sites in response to cholesterol accumulation in the plasma membrane. Mice lacking Aster-B are deficient in adrenal cholesterol ester storage and steroidogenesis because of an inability to transport cholesterol from SR-BI to the ER. These findings identify a nonvesicular pathway for plasma membrane to ER sterol trafficking in mammals.
- Published
- 2018
48. NanoSIMS Analysis of Intravascular Lipolysis and Lipid Movement across Capillaries and into Cardiomyocytes
- Author
-
He, Cuiwen, Weston, Thomas A, Jung, Rachel S, Heizer, Patrick, Larsson, Mikael, Hu, Xuchen, Allan, Christopher M, Tontonoz, Peter, Reue, Karen, Beigneux, Anne P, Ploug, Michael, Holme, Andrea, Kilburn, Matthew, Guagliardo, Paul, Ford, David A, Fong, Loren G, Young, Stephen G, and Jiang, Haibo
- Subjects
Cardiovascular ,Animals ,CD36 Antigens ,Capillaries ,Deuterium ,Endothelial Cells ,Lipid Droplets ,Lipolysis ,Lipoproteins ,Mice ,Mice ,Inbred C57BL ,Mitochondria ,Myocytes ,Cardiac ,Spectrometry ,Mass ,Secondary Ion ,Triglycerides ,NanoSIMS ,chylomicrons ,electron microscopy ,fatty acids ,lipoprotein lipase ,triglycerides ,Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,Medical Biochemistry and Metabolomics ,Endocrinology & Metabolism - Abstract
The processing of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins (TRLs) in capillaries provides lipids for vital tissues, but our understanding of TRL metabolism is limited, in part because TRL processing and lipid movement have never been visualized. To investigate the movement of TRL-derived lipids in the heart, mice were given an injection of [2H]triglyceride-enriched TRLs, and the movement of 2H-labeled lipids across capillaries and into cardiomyocytes was examined by NanoSIMS. TRL processing and lipid movement in tissues were extremely rapid. Within 30 s, TRL-derived lipids appeared in the subendothelial spaces and in the lipid droplets and mitochondria of cardiomyocytes. Enrichment of 2H in capillary endothelial cells was not greater than in cardiomyocytes, implying that endothelial cells may not be a control point for lipid movement into cardiomyocytes. Remarkably, a deficiency of the putative fatty acid transport protein CD36, which is expressed highly in capillary endothelial cells, did not impede entry of TRL-derived lipids into cardiomyocytes.
- Published
- 2018
49. Phospholipid Remodeling and Cholesterol Availability Regulate Intestinal Stemness and Tumorigenesis
- Author
-
Wang, Bo, Rong, Xin, Palladino, Elisa ND, Wang, Jiafang, Fogelman, Alan M, Martín, Martín G, Alrefai, Waddah A, Ford, David A, and Tontonoz, Peter
- Subjects
Nutrition ,Cancer ,Digestive Diseases ,Stem Cell Research - Nonembryonic - Non-Human ,Stem Cell Research ,1-Acylglycerophosphocholine O-Acyltransferase ,Animals ,Biosynthetic Pathways ,Carcinogenesis ,Cell Proliferation ,Cholesterol ,Intestines ,Mice ,Organoids ,Phospholipids ,Stem Cells ,cholesterol ,intestinal stem cell ,phospholipid ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Adequate availability of cellular building blocks, including lipids, is a prerequisite for cellular proliferation, but excess dietary lipids are linked to increased cancer risk. Despite these connections, specific regulatory relationships between membrane composition, intestinal stem cell (ISC) proliferation, and tumorigenesis are unclear. We reveal an unexpected link between membrane phospholipid remodeling and cholesterol biosynthesis and demonstrate that cholesterol itself acts as a mitogen for ISCs. Inhibition of the phospholipid-remodeling enzyme Lpcat3 increases membrane saturation and stimulates cholesterol biosynthesis, thereby driving ISC proliferation. Pharmacologic inhibition of cholesterol synthesis normalizes crypt hyperproliferation in Lpcat3-deficient organoids and mice. Conversely, increasing cellular cholesterol content stimulates crypt organoid growth, and providing excess dietary cholesterol or driving endogenous cholesterol synthesis through SREBP-2 expression promotes ISC proliferation in vivo. Finally, disruption of Lpcat3-dependent phospholipid and cholesterol homeostasis dramatically enhances tumor formation in Apcmin mice. These findings identify a critical dietary-responsive phospholipid-cholesterol axis regulating ISC proliferation and tumorigenesis.
- Published
- 2018
50. A review on models and simulations of membrane formation via phase inversion processes
- Author
-
Tang, Yuanhui, Lin, Yakai, Ford, David M., Qian, Xianghong, Cervellere, M. Rosario, Millett, Paul C., and Wang, Xiaolin
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.