2,340 results on '"Kaufman, James"'
Search Results
2. The Transformational Potential of Hidden Creativity
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Glăveanu, Vlad P., Green, Adam E., Kaufman, James C., Sternberg, Robert J., editor, and Karami, Sareh, editor
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- 2024
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3. Longitudinal biomarkers and kidney disease progression after acute kidney injury.
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Wen, Yumeng, Xu, Leyuan, Melchinger, Isabel, Thiessen-Philbrook, Heather, Moledina, Dennis G, Coca, Steven G, Hsu, Chi-Yuan, Go, Alan S, Liu, Kathleen D, Siew, Edward D, Ikizler, T Alp, Chinchilli, Vernon M, Kaufman, James S, Kimmel, Paul L, Himmelfarb, Jonathan, Cantley, Lloyd G, Parikh, Chirag R, and ASSESS-AKI Consortium
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ASSESS-AKI Consortium ,Kidney ,Animals ,Mice ,Disease Progression ,Inflammation ,Prospective Studies ,Renal Insufficiency ,Chronic ,Acute Kidney Injury ,Biomarkers ,Chronic kidney disease ,Diagnostics ,Epidemiology ,Nephrology ,Prevention ,Kidney Disease ,Clinical Research ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Renal and urogenital ,Good Health and Well Being - Abstract
BACKGROUNDLongitudinal investigations of murine acute kidney injury (AKI) suggest that injury and inflammation may persist long after the initial insult. However, the evolution of these processes and their prognostic values are unknown in patients with AKI.METHODSIn a prospective cohort of 656 participants hospitalized with AKI, we measured 7 urine and 2 plasma biomarkers of kidney injury, inflammation, and tubular health at multiple time points from the diagnosis to 12 months after AKI. We used linear mixed-effect models to estimate biomarker changes over time, and we used Cox proportional hazard regressions to determine their associations with a composite outcome of chronic kidney disease (CKD) incidence and progression. We compared the gene expression kinetics of biomarkers in murine models of repair and atrophy after ischemic reperfusion injury (IRI).RESULTSAfter 4.3 years, 106 and 52 participants developed incident CKD and CKD progression, respectively. Each SD increase in the change of urine KIM-1, MCP-1, and plasma TNFR1 from baseline to 12 months was associated with 2- to 3-fold increased risk for CKD, while the increase in urine uromodulin was associated with 40% reduced risk for CKD. The trajectories of these biological processes were associated with progression to kidney atrophy in mice after IRI.CONCLUSIONSustained tissue injury and inflammation, and slower restoration of tubular health, are associated with higher risk of kidney disease progression. Further investigation into these ongoing biological processes may help researchers understand and prevent the AKI-to-CKD transition.FUNDINGNIH and NIDDK (grants U01DK082223, U01DK082185, U01DK082192, U01DK082183, R01DK098233, R01DK101507, R01DK114014, K23DK100468, R03DK111881, K01DK120783, and R01DK093771).
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- 2023
4. Plasma Soluble Tumor Necrosis Factor Receptor Concentrations and Clinical Events After Hospitalization: Findings From the ASSESS-AKI and ARID Studies.
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Coca, Steven, Vasquez-Rios, George, Mansour, Sherry, Moledina, Dennis, Thiessen-Philbrook, Heather, Wurfel, Mark, Bhatraju, Pavan, Himmelfarb, Jonathan, Siew, Eddie, Garg, Amit, Hsu, Chi-Yuan, Kimmel, Paul, Chinchilli, Vernon, Kaufman, James, Wilson, Michelle, Banks, Rosamonde, Packington, Rebecca, McCole, Eibhlin, Kurth, Mary, Richardson, Ciaran, Go, Alan, Selby, Nicholas, Parikh, Chirag, and Liu, Kathleen
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AKI follow-up ,Acute kidney injury (AKI) ,biomarker ,end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) ,heart failure ,hospitalization ,kidney disease progression ,mortality ,prognosis ,risk stratification ,sTNFR2 ,soluble tumor necrosis factor receptor 1 (sTNFR1) ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Receptors ,Tumor Necrosis Factor ,Acute Kidney Injury ,Hospitalization ,Biomarkers ,Heart Failure - Abstract
RATIONALE & OBJECTIVE: The role of plasma soluble tumor necrosis factor receptor 1 (sTNFR1) and sTNFR2 in the prognosis of clinical events after hospitalization with or without acute kidney injury (AKI) is unknown. STUDY DESIGN: Prospective cohort. SETTING & PARTICIPANTS: Hospital survivors from the ASSESS-AKI (Assessment, Serial Evaluation, and Subsequent Sequelae of Acute Kidney Injury) and ARID (AKI Risk in Derby) studies with and without AKI during the index hospitalization who had baseline serum samples for biomarker measurements. PREDICTORS: We measured sTNFR1 and sTNFR2 from plasma samples obtained 3 months after discharge. OUTCOMES: The associations of biomarkers with longitudinal kidney disease incidence and progression, heart failure, and death were evaluated. ANALYTICAL APPROACH: Cox proportional hazard models. RESULTS: Among 1,474 participants with plasma biomarker measurements, 19% had kidney disease progression, 14% had later heart failure, and 21% died during a median follow-up of 4.4 years. For the kidney outcome, the adjusted HRs (AHRs) per doubling in concentration were 2.9 (95% CI, 2.2-3.9) for sTNFR1 and 1.9 (95% CI, 1.5-2.5) for sTNFR2. AKI during the index hospitalization did not modify the association between biomarkers and kidney events. For heart failure, the AHRs per doubling in concentration were 1.9 (95% CI, 1.4-2.5) for sTNFR1 and 1.5 (95% CI, 1.2-2.0) for sTNFR2. For mortality, the AHRs were 3.3 (95% CI, 2.5-4.3) for sTNFR1 and 2.5 (95% CI, 2.0-3.1) for sTNFR2. The findings in ARID were qualitatively similar in terms of the magnitude of association between biomarkers and outcomes. LIMITATIONS: Different biomarker platforms and AKI definitions; limited generalizability to other ethnic groups. CONCLUSIONS: Plasma sTNFR1 and sTNFR2 measured 3 months after hospital discharge were independently associated with clinical events regardless of AKI status during the index admission. sTNFR1 and sTNFR2 may assist with the risk stratification of patients during follow-up.
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- 2023
5. Meta-Intelligence: Understanding, Control, and Interactivity between Creative, Analytical, Practical, and Wisdom-Based Approaches in Problem Solving
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Sternberg, Robert J., Glaveanu, Vlad, Karami, Sareh, Kaufman, James C., Phillipson, Shane N., and Preiss, David D.
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A deeper understanding of the processes leading to problem framing and behind finding solutions to problems should help explain variability in the quality of the solutions to those problems. Using Sternberg's WICS model as the conceptual basis of problem solving, this article discusses the relations between creative, analytical, practical, and wisdom-based approaches as bases for solutions to problems. We use a construct of "meta-intelligence" to encompass understanding, control, and coordination between these constructs. We propose that constraints can act at each of three levels--individual, contextual, and interactive. Individual constraints include the metacomponents (executive processes) that underpin each of the four kinds of solutions. Contextual constraints direct which of the four approaches are preferred under what circumstances. Finally, interactive constraints involve individual and contextual constraints directly impacting each other's actions. The model of meta-intelligence and its functioning helps to explain the variability in the ways that individuals frame problems and, as a consequence, in the solutions that are found. The model of meta-intelligence also helps explain why some solutions to problems are so much more comprehensive, and often better, than others.
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- 2021
6. Dancing on an empty shore: Symbolic immortality, meaning, and being creative as doomsday approaches
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Kaufman, James C.
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- 2025
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7. Divergent semantic integration (DSI): Extracting creativity from narratives with distributional semantic modeling
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Johnson, Dan R., Kaufman, James C., Baker, Brendan S., Patterson, John D., Barbot, Baptiste, Green, Adam E., van Hell, Janet, Kennedy, Evan, Sullivan, Grace F., Taylor, Christa L., Ward, Thomas, and Beaty, Roger E.
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- 2023
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8. Considerations in Controlling for Urine Concentration for Biomarkers of Kidney Disease Progression After Acute Kidney Injury
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Wen, Yumeng, Thiessen-Philbrook, Heather, Moledina, Dennis G, Kaufman, James S, Reeves, W Brian, Ghahramani, Nasrollah, Ikizler, T Alp, Go, Alan S, Liu, Kathleen D, Siew, Eddie D, Himmelfarb, Jonathan, Kimmel, Paul L, Hsu, Chi-yuan, and Parikh, Chirag R
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Kidney Disease ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Renal and urogenital ,Good Health and Well Being ,acute kidney injury ,biomarker ,chronic kidney disease ,urine concentration ,urine creatinine ,urine osmolarity ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
IntroductionBiomarkers of acute kidney injury (AKI) are often indexed to urine creatinine (UCr) or urine osmolarity (UOsm) to control for urine concentration. We evaluated how these approaches affect the biomarker-outcome association in patients with AKI.MethodsThe Assessment, Serial Evaluation, and Subsequent Sequelae in Acute Kidney Injury Study was a cohort of hospitalized patients with and without AKI between 2009 and 2015. Using Cox proportional hazards regression, we assessed the associations and predictions (C-statistics) of urine biomarkers with a composite outcome of incident chronic kidney disease (CKD) and CKD progression. We used 4 approaches to account for urine concentration: indexing and adjusting for UCr and UOsm.ResultsAmong 1538 participants, 769 (50%) had AKI and 300 (19.5%) developed composite CKD outcome at median follow-up of 4.7 years. UCr and UOsm during hospitalization were inversely associated with the composite CKD outcome. The associations and predictions with CKD were significantly strengthened after indexing or adjusting for UCr or UOsm for urine kidney injury molecule-1 (KIM-1), interleukin-18 (IL-18), and monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1) in patients with AKI. There was no significant improvement with indexing or adjusting UCr or UOsm for albumin, neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL), and chitinase 3-like 1 (YKL-40). Uromodulin's (UMOD) inverse association with the outcome was significantly blunted after indexing but not adjusting for UCr or UOsm.ConclusionUCr and UOsm during hospitalization are inversely associated with development and progression of CKD. Indexing or adjusting for UCr or UOsm strengthened associations and improved predictions for CKD for only some biomarkers. Incorporating urinary concentration should be individualized for each biomarker in research and clinical applications.
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- 2022
9. The Assessment of Creativity for People with Autism Spectrum Disorder
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Maykel, Cheryl and Kaufman, James C.
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The term "creativity" can conjure various ideas and meanings. It's no surprise that methods for measuring such a concept vary widely and are not without controversy. This is particularly true among people with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), who are a unique yet incredibly diverse group of individuals. This article provides an overview of the assessment of creativity among individuals with ASD. Findings among studies that have sought to determine whether individuals with ASD are more or less creative than their neurotypical peers are mixed, yet the authors propose that intentional development of creativity in all youth, including those with ASD, can be beneficial.
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- 2023
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10. Taking Inventory of the Creative Behavior Inventory: An Item Response Theory Analysis of the CBI
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Rodriguez, Rebekah M., Silvia, Paul J., Kaufman, James C., Reiter-Palmon, Roni, and Puryear, Jeb S.
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The original 90-item Creative Behavior Inventory (CBI) was a landmark self-report scale in creativity research, and the 28-item brief form developed nearly 20 years ago continues to be a popular measure of everyday creativity. Relatively little is known, however, about the psychometric properties of this widely used scale. In the current research, we conduct a detailed psychometric investigation into the 28-item CBI by applying methods from item response theory using a sample of 2,082 adults. Our investigation revealed several strengths of the current scale: excellent reliability, suitable dimensionality, appropriate item difficulty, and reasonably good item discrimination. Several areas for improvement were highlighted as well: (1) the four-point response scale should have fewer options; (2) a handful of items showed gender-based differential item functioning, indicating some gender bias; and (3) local dependence statistics revealed clusters of items that are redundant and could be trimmed. These analyses support the continued use of the CBI for assessing engagement in everyday creative behaviors but suggest that the CBI could benefit from thoughtful revision.
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- 2023
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11. Creativity with 6 Degrees of Freedom: Feasibility Study of Visual Creativity Assessment in Virtual Reality
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Barbot, Baptiste, Kaufman, James C., and Myszkowski, Nils
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Immersive virtual reality (IVR) takes advantage of exponential growth in our technological abilities to offer an array of new forms of entertainment, learning opportunities, and even psychological interventions and assessments. The field of creativity is a driving force in both large-scale innovations and everyday progress, and imbedding creativity assessment in IVR programs has important practical implications for future research and interventions in this field. Creativity assessment, however, tends to either rely on traditional concepts or newer, yet cumbersome methods. Can creativity be measured within IVR? This study introduces the VIVA, a new IVR-based visual arts creativity assessment paradigm in which user create 3D drawings in response to a prompt. Productions are then rated with modern extensions of a classic product-based approach to creativity assessment. A sample of 67 adults completed the VIVA, further scored using item-response modeling. Results demonstrated the strong psychometric properties of the VIVA assessment, including its structural validity, internal reliability, and criterion validity with relevant criterion measures. Together, this study established a solid proof-of-concept of the feasibility of measuring creativity in IVR. We conclude by discussing directions for future studies and the broader importance and impact of this line of work for the field of creativity and virtual reality.
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- 2023
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12. A Mirror to the World: Art, Creativity, and Racial Bias
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Jackson, Barbara-Shae, Luria, Sarah R., Kaufman, James C., Glaveanu, Vlad Petre, Series Editor, Wagoner, Brady, Series Editor, Preiss, David D., editor, Singer, Marcos, editor, and Kaufman, James C., editor
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- 2023
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13. Intelligence and Wisdom’s Role in Moral Versus Amoral Creativity
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Kapoor, Hansika, Henderson, Simon, Kaufman, James C., Sternberg, Robert J., editor, Kaufman, James C., editor, and Karami, Sareh, editor
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- 2023
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14. Acute Kidney Injury, Systemic Inflammation and Long-term Cognitive Function: ASSESS-AKI
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Bhatraju, Pavan K., Zelnick, Leila R., Stanaway, Ian B., Ikizler, T. Alp, Menez, Steven, Chinchilli, Vernon M., Coca, Steve G., Kaufman, James S., Kimmel, Paul L., Parikh, Chirag R., Go, Alan S., Siew, Edward D., Wurfel., Mark M., and Himmelfarb, Jonathan
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- 2024
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15. Measuring self-beliefs of creativity and well-being
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Holinger, Molly and Kaufman, James C.
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- 2024
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16. What's Your Motivation?
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Kaufman, James C., primary and Rowe, Dana P., additional
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- 2023
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17. Biomarkers of eGFR decline after cardiac surgery in children: findings from the ASSESS-AKI study
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de Fontnouvelle, Christina, Zappitelli, Michael, Thiessen-Philbrook, Heather R., Jia, Yaqi, Kimmel, Paul L., Kaufman, James S., and Devarajan, Prasad
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Heart -- Surgery ,Acute renal failure -- Risk factors -- Diagnosis ,Biological markers -- Analysis ,Health - Abstract
Background Children who require surgery for congenital heart disease have increased risk for long-term chronic kidney disease (CKD). Clinical factors as well as urine biomarkers of tubular health and injury may help improve the prognostication of estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) decline. Methods We enrolled children from 1 month to 18 years old undergoing cardiac surgery in the ASSESS-AKI cohort. We used mixed-effect models to assess the association between urinary biomarkers (log2-transformed uromodulin, NGAL, KIM-1, IL-18, L-FABP) measured 3 months after cardiac surgery and cyanotic heart disease with the rate of eGFR decline at annual in-person visits over 4 years. Results Of the 117 children enrolled, 30 (24%) had cyanotic heart disease. During 48 months of follow-up, the median eGFR in the subgroup of children with cyanotic heart disease was lower at all study visits as compared with children with acyanotic heart disease (p = 0.01). In the overall cohort, lower levels of both urine uromodulin and IL-18 after discharge were associated with eGFR decline. After adjustment for age, RACHS-1 surgical complexity score, proteinuria, and eGFR at the 3-month study visit, lower concentrations of urine uromodulin and IL-18 were associated with a monthly decline in eGFR (uromodulin [beta] = 0.04 (95% CI: 0.00-0.09; p = 0.07) IL-18 [beta] = 0.07 (95% CI: 0.01-0.13; p = 0.04), ml/min/1.73 m.sup.2 per month). Conclusions At 3 months after cardiac surgery, children with lower urine uromodulin and IL-18 concentrations experienced a significantly faster decline in eGFR. Children with cyanotic heart disease had a lower median eGFR at all time points but did not experience faster eGFR decline. Graphical abstract, Author(s): Christina de Fontnouvelle [sup.1] , Michael Zappitelli [sup.2] , Heather R. Thiessen-Philbrook [sup.3] , Yaqi Jia [sup.3] , Paul L. Kimmel [sup.4] , James S. Kaufman [sup.5] , Prasad [...]
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- 2023
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18. Creativity in the age of generative AI
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Rafner, Janet, Beaty, Roger E., Kaufman, James C., Lubart, Todd, and Sherson, Jacob
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- 2023
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19. Adaptive Epidemic Forecasting and Community Risk Evaluation of COVID-19
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Gopalakrishnan, Vishrawas, Navalekar, Sayali, Ding, Pan, Hooley, Ryan, Miller, Jacob, Srinivasan, Raman, Deshpande, Ajay, Liu, Xuan, Bianco, Simone, and Kaufman, James H.
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Computer Science - Computers and Society ,Computer Science - Machine Learning ,34B60, 35Q99 ,I.2.1 ,I.6.0 - Abstract
Pandemic control measures like lock-down, restrictions on restaurants and gatherings, social-distancing have shown to be effective in curtailing the spread of COVID-19. However, their sustained enforcement has negative economic effects. To craft strategies and policies that reduce the hardship on the people and the economy while being effective against the pandemic, authorities need to understand the disease dynamics at the right geo-spatial granularity. Considering factors like the hospitals' ability to handle the fluctuating demands, evaluating various reopening scenarios, and accurate forecasting of cases are vital to decision making. Towards this end, we present a flexible end-to-end solution that seamlessly integrates public health data with tertiary client data to accurately estimate the risk of reopening a community. At its core lies a state-of-the-art prediction model that auto-captures changing trends in transmission and mobility. Benchmarking against various published baselines confirm the superiority of our forecasting algorithm. Combined with the ability to extend to multiple client-specific requirements and perform deductive reasoning through counter-factual analysis, this solution provides actionable insights to multiple client domains ranging from government to educational institutions, hospitals, and commercial establishments., Comment: 9 pages, 11 figures
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- 2021
20. Building off Creativity to Move from Gifted to Gifting
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Glaveanu, Vlad and Kaufman, James C.
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What is the aim of giftedness? Is the goal to narrow in on the gifts of a select few or to nurture everyone's gifts such that they may be exchanged with each other? Drawing from creativity theory, we emphasize the possible interactive element of giftedness. Current paradigms risk ignoring hidden creativities and for potential to remain in the shadows. Is the promise of one possible eminent creator worth thousands of everyday creators? Do we need to make such a choice? By fostering perspective-taking and other collaborative skills, we may try to have it all.
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- 2022
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21. Body mass index and chronic kidney disease outcomes after acute kidney injury: a prospective matched cohort study
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MacLaughlin, Helen L, Pike, Mindy, Selby, Nicholas M, Siew, Edward, Chinchilli, Vernon M, Guide, Andrew, Stewart, Thomas G, Himmelfarb, Jonathan, Go, Alan S, Parikh, Chirag R, Ghahramani, Nasrollah, Kaufman, James, Ikizler, T Alp, and Robinson-Cohen, Cassianne
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Epidemiology ,Health Sciences ,Kidney Disease ,Prevention ,Nutrition ,Clinical Research ,Obesity ,Renal and urogenital ,Good Health and Well Being ,Acute Kidney Injury ,Aged ,Body Mass Index ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Prospective Studies ,Renal Insufficiency ,Chronic ,ASSESS-AKI Study Investigators ,Body mass index ,Kidney ,Mortality ,Clinical Sciences ,Urology & Nephrology ,Clinical sciences ,Health services and systems ,Nursing - Abstract
BackgroundAcute kidney injury (AKI) and obesity are independent risk factors for chronic kidney disease (CKD). This study aimed to determine if obesity modifies risk for CKD outcomes after AKI.MethodsThis prospective multisite cohort study followed adult survivors after hospitalization, with or without AKI. The primary outcome was a combined CKD event of incident CKD, progression of CKD and kidney failure, examined using time-to-event Cox proportional hazards models, adjusted for diabetes status, age, pre-existing CKD, cardiovascular disease status and intensive care unit admission, and stratified by study center. Body mass index (BMI) was added as an interaction term to examine effect modification by body size.ResultsThe cohort included 769 participants with AKI and 769 matched controls. After median follow-up of 4.3 years, among AKI survivors, the rate of the combined CKD outcome was 84.7 per1000-person-years with BMI ≥30 kg/m2, 56.4 per 1000-person-years with BMI 25-29.9 kg/m2, and 72.6 per 1000-person-years with BMI 20-24.9 kg/m2. AKI was associated with a higher risk of combined CKD outcomes; adjusted-HR 2.43 (95%CI 1.87-3.16), with no evidence that this was modified by BMI (p for interaction = 0.3). After adjustment for competing risk of death, AKI remained associated with a higher risk of the combined CKD outcome (subdistribution-HR 2.27, 95%CI 1.76-2.92) and similarly, there was no detectable effect of BMI modifying this risk.ConclusionsIn this post-hospitalization cohort, we found no evidence for obesity modifying the association between AKI and development or progression of CKD.
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- 2021
22. Achieved blood pressure post-acute kidney injury and risk of adverse outcomes after AKI: A prospective parallel cohort study.
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McCoy, Ian, Brar, Sandeep, Liu, Kathleen D, Go, Alan S, Hsu, Raymond K, Chinchilli, Vernon M, Coca, Steven G, Garg, Amit X, Himmelfarb, Jonathan, Ikizler, T Alp, Kaufman, James, Kimmel, Paul L, Lewis, Julie B, Parikh, Chirag R, Siew, Edward D, Ware, Lorraine B, Zeng, Hui, Hsu, Chi-Yuan, and Assessment, Serial Evaluation, and Subsequent Sequelae in Acute Kidney Injury (ASSESS-AKI) study investigators
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Assessment ,Serial Evaluation ,and Subsequent Sequelae in Acute Kidney Injury (ASSESS-AKI) study investigators ,AKI ,blood pressure ,hypertension ,Kidney Disease ,Cardiovascular ,Clinical Research ,Patient Safety ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,2.4 Surveillance and distribution ,Renal and urogenital ,Urology & Nephrology ,Clinical Sciences - Abstract
BackgroundThere has recently been considerable interest in better understanding how blood pressure should be managed after an episode of hospitalized AKI, but there are scant data regarding the associations between blood pressure measured after AKI and subsequent adverse outcomes. We hypothesized that among AKI survivors, higher blood pressure measured three months after hospital discharge would be associated with worse outcomes. We also hypothesized these associations between blood pressure and outcomes would be similar among those who survived non-AKI hospitalizations.MethodsWe quantified how systolic blood pressure (SBP) observed three months after hospital discharge was associated with risks of subsequent hospitalized AKI, loss of kidney function, mortality, and heart failure events among 769 patients in the prospective ASSESS-AKI cohort study who had hospitalized AKI. We repeated this analysis among the 769 matched non-AKI ASSESS-AKI enrollees. We then formally tested for AKI interaction in the full cohort of 1538 patients to determine if these associations differed among those who did and did not experience AKI during the index hospitalization.ResultsAmong 769 patients with AKI, 42 % had subsequent AKI, 13 % had loss of kidney function, 27 % died, and 18 % had heart failure events. SBP 3 months post-hospitalization did not have a stepwise association with the risk of subsequent AKI, loss of kidney function, mortality, or heart failure events. Among the 769 without AKI, there was also no stepwise association with these risks. In formal interaction testing using the full cohort of 1538 patients, hospitalized AKI did not modify the association between post-discharge SBP and subsequent risks of adverse clinical outcomes.ConclusionsContrary to our first hypothesis, we did not observe that higher stepwise blood pressure measured three months after hospital discharge with AKI was associated with worse outcomes. Our data were consistent with our second hypothesis that the association between blood pressure measured three months after hospital discharge and outcomes among AKI survivors is similar to that observed among those who survived non-AKI hospitalizations.
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- 2021
23. Unbound: The Relationship among Creativity, Moral Foundations, and Dark Personality
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Kapoor, Hansika and Kaufman, James C.
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Creativity, and more recently dark creativity, have yet to be studied in relation to moral foundations, especially against the background of dark traits. This study identified moral foundations that predicted creativity, particularly malevolent creativity, after accounting for Dark Triad/Tetrad traits. Data (N = 529, M[subscript age] = 20.10 years, SD = 4.55) on self-reported creativity, personality, and moral foundations were collected. Results indicated that lower concerns for binding foundations (loyalty, authority, and purity) explained creativity, especially malevolent creativity. In contrast, higher concern for individualizing foundations (care and fairness) predicted creativity, whereas lower regard for these morals predicted malevolent creativity. Planned mediations indicated that lower concerns for all foundations explained greater malevolent creativity due to higher dark personality dispositions. Limitations and implications are discussed.
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- 2022
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24. I Didn't Have Time! A Qualitative Exploration of Misbehaviors in Academic Contexts
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Kapoor, Hansika, Inamdar, Vedika, and Kaufman, James C.
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Students display resistance, including academic dishonesty, at all educational levels. In the present study, we qualitatively examined the extent and incidence of academic misbehaviors by 101 US college students (M[subscript age] = 22.98 years, SD = 6.70). Using a combination of self-reported closed- and open-ended questions, we developed a multi-faceted understanding of how students perceived their own classroom misbehaviors to avoid work as being original, clever, deceptive, and unethical. Questions pertaining to possible prevention, impact on grade, and repetition of the misbehavior were also included. Further, environmental contributors of such behavior were explored, inclusive of the teacher, curriculum, larger school/institutional reasons, peers, and out-of-school issues. Thematic analyses identified distinct themes related to each factor, with poor time management emerging as a salient antecedent across factors. The present study also reviews and provides strategies to improve time management among students to mitigate future instances of academic misbehavior.
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- 2022
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25. Are Observational Reports on the Association of Dialysate Sodium with Mortality Enough to Change Practice? Perspective from the RESOLVE Study Team
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Smyth, Brendan, Krishnasamy, Rathika, Jardine, Meg, Jardine, Meg, Hawley, Carmel, Jha, Vivekanand, Walsh, Mike, Li, Zuo, Wanner, Christoph, Bavanandan, Sunita, Wheeler, David C., Perkovic, Vlado, Rossignol, Patrick, Clark, Chevon, Kaufman, James, Khan, Behram Ali, Smyth, Brendan, Krishnasamy, Rathika, Bassi, Abhinav, Pinter, Jule, Dempsey, Erika, and Solano, Nuria Zamora
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- 2024
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26. The ASSESS-AKI Study found urinary epidermal growth factor is associated with reduced risk of major adverse kidney events
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Menez, Steven, Wen, Yumeng, Xu, Leyuan, Moledina, Dennis G., Thiessen-Philbrook, Heather, Hu, David, Obeid, Wassim, Bhatraju, Pavan K., Ikizler, T. Alp, Siew, Edward D., Chinchilli, Vernon M., Garg, Amit X., Go, Alan S., Liu, Kathleen D., Kaufman, James S., Kimmel, Paul L., Himmelfarb, Jonathan, Coca, Steven G., Cantley, Lloyd G., and Parikh, Chirag R.
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- 2023
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27. Monitoring the microbiome for food safety and quality using deep shotgun sequencing.
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Beck, Kristen L, Haiminen, Niina, Chambliss, David, Edlund, Stefan, Kunitomi, Mark, Huang, B Carol, Kong, Nguyet, Ganesan, Balasubramanian, Baker, Robert, Markwell, Peter, Kawas, Ban, Davis, Matthew, Prill, Robert J, Krishnareddy, Harsha, Seabolt, Ed, Marlowe, Carl H, Pierre, Sophie, Quintanar, André, Parida, Laxmi, Dubois, Geraud, Kaufman, James, and Weimer, Bart C
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In this work, we hypothesized that shifts in the food microbiome can be used as an indicator of unexpected contaminants or environmental changes. To test this hypothesis, we sequenced the total RNA of 31 high protein powder (HPP) samples of poultry meal pet food ingredients. We developed a microbiome analysis pipeline employing a key eukaryotic matrix filtering step that improved microbe detection specificity to >99.96% during in silico validation. The pipeline identified 119 microbial genera per HPP sample on average with 65 genera present in all samples. The most abundant of these were Bacteroides, Clostridium, Lactococcus, Aeromonas, and Citrobacter. We also observed shifts in the microbial community corresponding to ingredient composition differences. When comparing culture-based results for Salmonella with total RNA sequencing, we found that Salmonella growth did not correlate with multiple sequence analyses. We conclude that microbiome sequencing is useful to characterize complex food microbial communities, while additional work is required for predicting specific species' viability from total RNA sequencing.
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- 2021
28. Biomarkers of inflammation and repair in kidney disease progression
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Puthumana, Jeremy, Thiessen-Philbrook, Heather, Xu, Leyuan, Coca, Steven G, Garg, Amit X, Himmelfarb, Jonathan, Bhatraju, Pavan K, Ikizler, Talat Alp, Siew, Edward, Ware, Lorraine B, Liu, Kathleen D, Go, Alan S, Kaufman, James S, Kimmel, Paul L, Chinchilli, Vernon M, Cantley, Lloyd, and Parikh, Chirag R
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Kidney Disease ,Clinical Research ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,Aetiology ,Renal and urogenital ,Acute Kidney Injury ,Aged ,Animals ,Biomarkers ,Chemokine CCL2 ,Chitinase-3-Like Protein 1 ,Disease Models ,Animal ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Glomerular Filtration Rate ,Humans ,Inflammation ,Male ,Mice ,Middle Aged ,Renal Insufficiency ,Chronic ,Chronic kidney disease ,Clinical practice ,Molecular diagnosis ,Nephrology ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Immunology - Abstract
INTRODUCTIONAcute kidney injury and chronic kidney disease (CKD) are common in hospitalized patients. To inform clinical decision making, more accurate information regarding risk of long-term progression to kidney failure is required.METHODSWe enrolled 1538 hospitalized patients in a multicenter, prospective cohort study. Monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 (MCP-1/CCL2), uromodulin (UMOD), and YKL-40 (CHI3L1) were measured in urine samples collected during outpatient follow-up at 3 months. We followed patients for a median of 4.3 years and assessed the relationship between biomarker levels and changes in estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) over time and the development of a composite kidney outcome (CKD incidence, CKD progression, or end-stage renal disease). We paired these clinical studies with investigations in mouse models of renal atrophy and renal repair to further understand the molecular basis of these markers in kidney disease progression.RESULTSHigher MCP-1 and YKL-40 levels were associated with greater eGFR decline and increased incidence of the composite renal outcome, whereas higher UMOD levels were associated with smaller eGFR declines and decreased incidence of the composite kidney outcome. A multimarker score increased prognostic accuracy and reclassification compared with traditional clinical variables alone. The mouse model of renal atrophy showed greater Ccl2 and Chi3l1 mRNA expression in infiltrating macrophages and neutrophils, respectively, and evidence of progressive renal fibrosis compared with the repair model. The repair model showed greater Umod expression in the loop of Henle and correspondingly less fibrosis.CONCLUSIONSBiomarker levels at 3 months after hospitalization identify patients at risk for kidney disease progression.FUNDINGNIH.
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- 2021
29. A prospective cohort study of acute kidney injury and kidney outcomes, cardiovascular events, and death.
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Ikizler, T Alp, Parikh, Chirag R, Himmelfarb, Jonathan, Chinchilli, Vernon M, Liu, Kathleen D, Coca, Steven G, Garg, Amit X, Hsu, Chi-Yuan, Siew, Edward D, Wurfel, Mark M, Ware, Lorraine B, Faulkner, Georgia Brown, Tan, Thida C, Kaufman, James S, Kimmel, Paul L, Go, Alan S, and ASSESS-AKI Study Investigators
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ASSESS-AKI Study Investigators ,Kidney ,Humans ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Glomerular Filtration Rate ,Aftercare ,Patient Discharge ,Risk Factors ,Prospective Studies ,Adult ,Acute Kidney Injury ,acute kidney injury ,acute renal failure ,cardiovascular disease ,chronic kidney disease ,heart failure ,mortality ,Cardiovascular ,Clinical Research ,Kidney Disease ,Aging ,Renal and urogenital ,Urology & Nephrology ,Clinical Sciences - Abstract
Acute kidney injury (AKI) has been reported to be associated with excess risks of death, kidney disease progression and cardiovascular events although previous studies have important limitations. To further examine this, we prospectively studied adults from four clinical centers surviving three months and more after hospitalization with or without AKI who were matched on center, pre-admission CKD status, and an integrated priority score based on age, prior cardiovascular disease or diabetes mellitus, preadmission estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) and treatment in the intensive care unit during the index hospitalization between December 2009-February 2015, with follow-up through November 2018. All participants had assessments of kidney function before (eGFR) and at three months and annually (eGFR and proteinuria) after the index hospitalization. Associations of AKI with outcomes were examined after accounting for pre-admission and three-month post-discharge factors. Among 769 AKI (73% Stage 1, 14% Stage 2, 13% Stage 3) and 769 matched non-AKI adults, AKI was associated with higher adjusted rates of incident CKD (adjusted hazard ratio 3.98, 95% confidence interval 2.51-6.31), CKD progression (2.37,1.28-4.39), heart failure events (1.68, 1.22-2.31) and all-cause death (1.78, 1.24-2.56). AKI was not associated with major atherosclerotic cardiovascular events in multivariable analysis (0.95, 0.70-1.28). After accounting for degree of kidney function recovery and proteinuria at three months after discharge, the associations of AKI with heart failure (1.13, 0.80-1.61) and death (1.29, 0.84-1.98) were attenuated and no longer significant. Thus, assessing kidney function recovery and proteinuria status three months after AKI provides important prognostic information for long-term clinical outcomes.
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- 2021
30. Phylogenetic and Biogeographic Patterns of Vibrio parahaemolyticus Strains from North America Inferred from Whole-Genome Sequence Data.
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Miller, John J, Weimer, Bart C, Timme, Ruth, Lüdeke, Catharina HM, Pettengill, James B, Bandoy, DJ Darwin, Weis, Allison M, Kaufman, James, Huang, B Carol, Payne, Justin, Strain, Errol, and Jones, Jessica L
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Microbiology ,Biological Sciences ,Genetics ,Vaccine Related ,Digestive Diseases ,Biotechnology ,Infectious Diseases ,Life Below Water ,Animals ,Biological Monitoring ,Genes ,Bacterial ,Genome ,Bacterial ,Humans ,North America ,Ostreidae ,Phylogeny ,Vibrio Infections ,Vibrio parahaemolyticus ,Virulence ,Whole Genome Sequencing ,MLST ,phylogenetics ,genomics ,kSNP ,cluster analysis ,Medical microbiology - Abstract
Vibrio parahaemolyticus is the most common cause of seafood-borne illness reported in the United States. The draft genomes of 132 North American clinical and oyster V. parahaemolyticus isolates were sequenced to investigate their phylogenetic and biogeographic relationships. The majority of oyster isolate sequence types (STs) were from a single harvest location; however, four were identified from multiple locations. There was population structure along the Gulf and Atlantic Coasts of North America, with what seemed to be a hub of genetic variability along the Gulf Coast, with some of the same STs occurring along the Atlantic Coast and one shared between the coastal waters of the Gulf and those of Washington State. Phylogenetic analyses found nine well-supported clades. Two clades were composed of isolates from both clinical and oyster sources. Four were composed of isolates entirely from clinical sources, and three were entirely from oyster sources. Each single-source clade consisted of one ST. Some human isolates lack tdh, trh, and some type III secretion system (T3SS) genes, which are established virulence genes of V. parahaemolyticus Thus, these genes are not essential for pathogenicity. However, isolates in the monophyletic groups from clinical sources were enriched in several categories of genes compared to those from monophyletic groups of oyster isolates. These functional categories include cell signaling, transport, and metabolism. The identification of genes in these functional categories provides a basis for future in-depth pathogenicity investigations of V. parahaemolyticusIMPORTANCEVibrio parahaemolyticus is the most common cause of seafood-borne illness reported in the United States and is frequently associated with shellfish consumption. This study contributes to our knowledge of the biogeography and functional genomics of this species around North America. STs shared between the Gulf Coast and the Atlantic seaboard as well as Pacific waters suggest possible transport via oceanic currents or large shipping vessels. STs frequently isolated from humans but rarely, if ever, isolated from the environment are likely more competitive in the human gut than other STs. This could be due to additional functional capabilities in areas such as cell signaling, transport, and metabolism, which may give these isolates an advantage in novel nutrient-replete environments such as the human gut.
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- 2021
31. Kaufman Domains of Creativity Scale: Relationship to Occupation and Measurement Invariance across Gender
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Miroshnik, Kirill G., Shcherbakova, Olga V., and Kaufman, James C.
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Kaufman Domains of Creativity Scale (K-DOCS) is a self-report of creative behavior in five distinct domains. The present study aims to translate K-DOCS into Russian and evaluate its psychometric properties. The psychometric analysis was performed on a sample of adults recruited through Yandex Toloka (N = 1011; M[subscript age] = 35.94, SD[subscript age] = 10.95) from various regions of Russia and Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) countries. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses indicated that the model with five correlated factors showed the best fit to empirical data. All factors demonstrated good internal consistency and moderate test-retest reliability. The correlation and hierarchical regression analyses for K-DOCS factors, creative achievements by CBI (Creative Behavior Inventory), and personality traits by BFI-2 (Big Five Inventory -- 2) yielded evidence for an adequate level of convergent and discriminant validity. We also examined differences across K-DOCS factors among occupations defined by Holland's typology and attempted to investigate K-DOCS measurement invariance across gender. As a result, we obtained evidence supporting the construct validity of K-DOCS and established its partial measurement invariance across gender. The current study shows that Russian K-DOCS has satisfactory psychometric properties and can serve as a trusted guide into various manifestations of humans' creative behavior.
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- 2022
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32. The Creativity Advantage
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Kaufman, James C.
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- 2023
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33. Integrated Analysis of Blood and Urine Biomarkers to Identify Acute Kidney Injury Subphenotypes and Associations With Long-term Outcomes
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Bhatraju, Pavan K., Prince, David K., Mansour, Sherry, Ikizler, T. Alp, Siew, Edward D., Chinchilli, Vernon M., Garg, Amit X., Go, Alan S., Kaufman, James S., Kimmel, Paul L., Coca, Steve G., Parikh, Chirag R., Wurfel, Mark M., and Himmelfarb, Jonathan
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- 2023
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34. IBM Functional Genomics Platform, A Cloud-Based Platform for Studying Microbial Life at Scale
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Seabolt, Edward E., Nayar, Gowri, Krishnareddy, Harsha, Agarwal, Akshay, Beck, Kristen L., Terrizzano, Ignacio, Kandogan, Eser, Roth, Mary, Mukherjee, Vandana, and Kaufman, James H.
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Quantitative Biology - Quantitative Methods ,Computer Science - Databases - Abstract
The rapid growth in biological sequence data is revolutionizing our understanding of genotypic diversity and challenging conventional approaches to informatics. With the increasing availability of genomic data, traditional bioinformatic tools require substantial computational time and the creation of ever-larger indices each time a researcher seeks to gain insight from the data. To address these challenges, we pre-computed important relationships between biological entities spanning the Central Dogma of Molecular Biology and captured this information in a relational database. The database can be queried across hundreds of millions of entities and returns results in a fraction of the time required by traditional methods. In this paper, we describe \textit{IBM Functional Genomics Platform} (formerly known as OMXWare), a comprehensive database relating genotype to phenotype for bacterial life. Continually updated, IBM Functional Genomics Platform today contains data derived from 200,000 curated, self-consistently assembled genomes. The database stores functional data for over 68 million genes, 52 million proteins, and 239 million domains with associated biological activity annotations from Gene Ontology, KEGG, MetaCyc, and Reactome. IBM Functional Genomics Platform maps all of the many-to-many connections between each biological entity including the originating genome, gene, protein, and protein domain. Various microbial studies, from infectious disease to environmental health, can benefit from the rich data and connections. We describe the data selection, the pipeline to create and update the IBM Functional Genomics Platform, and the developer tools (Python SDK and REST APIs) which allow researchers to efficiently study microbial life at scale.
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- 2019
35. Creativity and Emotion
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Ivcevic, Zorana, primary, Lin, Shengjie, additional, Kaufman, James C., additional, and Hoffmann, Jessica D., additional
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- 2023
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36. Everyday Creativity as a Pathway to Meaning and Well-Being
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Holinger, Molly, primary and Kaufman, James C., additional
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- 2023
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37. A Mirror to the World: Art, Creativity, and Racial Bias
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Jackson, Barbara-Shae, primary, Luria, Sarah R., additional, and Kaufman, James C., additional
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- 2023
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38. Conclusion
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Kapoor, Hansika, primary and Kaufman, James C., additional
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- 2023
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39. Creativity, morality, and the AMORAL model
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Kapoor, Hansika, primary and Kaufman, James C., additional
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- 2023
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40. Contributors
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Alvarico, Erin, primary, Ambrose, Don, additional, Barnes, Jennifer L., additional, Beaudoin, Gregory, additional, Black, Jessica E., additional, Chen, Chen, additional, Cockrell, Natalie F., additional, Cropley, David, additional, Dong, Xiaowei, additional, Dow, Gayle T., additional, Eskander, Sawsan, additional, Fisher, Nicholas, additional, Harden, Paul, additional, Henderson, Simon, additional, Kapoor, Hansika, additional, Kaufman, James C., additional, Levine, Samuel, additional, Li, Wanlu, additional, Mitchell, Kevin S., additional, Monteiro, Bronwyn, additional, Pizarro, David A., additional, Qin, Xin, additional, Reiter-Palmon, Roni, additional, Sarnecky, Katie, additional, Schrier, Karen, additional, Shaenfield, Alyssa, additional, Shen, Wangbing, additional, Šolcová, Iva Poláčková, additional, Sternberg, Robert J., additional, Trnka, Radek, additional, Vincent, Lynne C., additional, Walczyk, Jeffrey J., additional, Wang, Manyi, additional, West, Bryan, additional, Yuan, Yuan, additional, and Zhai, Yimeng, additional
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- 2023
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41. A Propulsion Perspective on Creative Contributions
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Sternberg, Robert J., Kaufman, James C., Pretz, Jean E., Lebuda, Izabela, Section editor, and Glăveanu, Vlad Petre, editor
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- 2022
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42. A Brief History of IQ Testing: Fixed vs. Malleable Intelligence
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Kaufman, Alan S., Choi, Dowon, Kapoor, Hansika, Kaufman, James C., Sternberg, Robert J., editor, and Preiss, David D., editor
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- 2022
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43. Creativity in the Classroom: Advice for Best Practices
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Cotter, Katherine N., Beghetto, Ronald A., Kaufman, James C., Tan, Ai-Girl, Series Editor, Lubart, Todd, editor, Botella, Marion, editor, Bourgeois -Bougrine, Samira, editor, Caroff, Xavier, editor, Guegan, Jerome, editor, Mouchiroud, Christophe, editor, Nelson, Julien, editor, and Zenasni, Franck, editor
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- 2022
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44. Respecting the Invisible: Transactional and Transformational Approaches to Giftedness
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Choi, Dowon, Kaufman, James C., Sternberg, Robert J, editor, Ambrose, Don, editor, and Karami, Sareh, editor
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- 2022
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45. Norming the Muses: Establishing the Psychometric Properties of the Kaufman Domains of Creativity Scale
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Kapoor, Hansika, Reiter-Palmon, Roni, and Kaufman, James C.
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The Kaufman Domains of Creativity Scale (K-DOCS; Kaufman, J. C. (2012). Counting the muses: Development of the Kaufman domains of creativity scale (K-DOCS). Psychology of Aesthetics, Creativity, and the Arts, 6(4), 298-308. doi:10.1037/a0029751) is a self-report assessment of five creative domains: Everyday, Scholarly, Performance, Scientific, and Artistic. This investigation was designed to reassess the factor structure of the K-DOCS, examine its measurement invariance across men and women, and develop norms across the five domains. Data on 22,013 American participants who had completed the assessment as part of past or ongoing studies between 2012 and 2020 were collated across multiple samples. Confirmatory factor analyses indicated that both five- and nine-factor solutions had superior fit compared to a one-factor solution. The models were also gender invariant, indicating that creative domains were assessed similarly across male and female samples. Norms across gender and age-groups were provided to enable future comparisons in research settings; it is not recommended to use these norms in clinical or diagnostic contexts. The investigation concluded that the K-DOCS is a robust psychometric tool for the self-assessment of creativity across domains.
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- 2021
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46. Exploring the Creativity Potential of ADHD Students in Engineering Programs
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Zaghi, Arash Esmaili, Reis, Sally M., Renzulli, Joseph S., and Kaufman, James C.
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A critical need exists in engineering education to draw on the non-traditional divergent thinking and risk-taking necessary for making radical technological breakthroughs. Literature suggests that individuals with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) characteristics demonstrate unparalleled creativity and risk-taking potential. While this group of students may offer significant benefits to the advancement of the nation, they are currently significantly underrepresented in engineering programs because of the major academic and emotional challenges that the rigidly structured engineering programs impose on them. Funded by the Division of Engineering Education and Centers of the National Science Foundation, this study is aimed at understanding creative potential and challenges of engineering students with ADHD characteristics. A cohort of 18 female and 36 male undergraduate students were recruited from the School of Engineering at the University of Connecticut (n=54). To quantify the level of ADHD-related characteristics and the creative potential of the participants, the investigators administered Brown ADD Scales for Adults and Torrance Test of Creative Thinking (TTCT) Figural Form A, respectively. A 40-question instrument was designed and administered to understand the learning styles, the perception of current engineering programs in terms of rewarding creativity and risk-taking, and the difficulties of the participants in engineering programs. It was found that there is a statistically significant positive correlation between the Brown total score and the Creativity Index (r=.45, p=.001). Among Brown subscale scores, attention was found to have the largest correlation with the Creativity Index. There were positive significant correlations with the Creativity Index and all of the Brown subscales except for memory. The Brown scores were found to have positive significant correlations with three of the TTCT sub-categories: fluency, originality, and resistance to premature closure. A negative correlation exists between the GPA and total Brown score, suggesting weaker academic accomplishments of students with ADHD characteristics. GPA showed no correlation with the Creativity Index, suggesting a lack of creativity appreciation in current engineering programs. The Mann-Whitney test on survey questions revealed that students with a higher Brown t-score are significantly more willing to take a chance in which they may fail in order to pursue innovation. This study found that only three of the eighteen students who are formally diagnosed with ADHD are receiving services from the Center of Students with Disabilities CSD. It is expected that the outcomes of this study lead to a paradigm shift in how these individuals are perceived by both our society and our engineering educational system. The knowledge generated through this study will help to identify the academic struggles of this group of students and facilitate development of specialized education programs that foster largely unrecognized talents and unique potential of this underrepresented population.
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- 2017
47. Measuring Creative Writing with the Storyboard Task: The Role of Effort and Story Length
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Taylor, Christa L., Kaufman, James C., and Barbot, Baptiste
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The present study examines effort in narrative creative writing (operationalized as time-on-task) using a new assessment approach, the storyboard task. Participants (N = 125) completed alternate forms of the storyboard task in two sessions five weeks apart. They also completed measures of divergent thinking and self-reported ideational behavior. Time-on-task, story length, and rated creativity scores were obtained for the participants' stories. The storyboard task demonstrated good alternate form reliability and convergent validity with the criterion measures. Although time-on-task was strongly, positively associated with creativity scores, this relationship was confounded by the contribution of story length. Relationships amongst these variables were similar when creativity was rated by novice raters using a rubric or experienced raters using the consensual assessment technique. Additionally, story length and time-on-task were moderately correlated with the external criterion measures of creativity. Thus, the strong associations between rated creativity, story length, and time in creative writing raise important issues and avenues for future research, and results for the storyboard task suggest that it is a valuable assessment of narrative creative writing.
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- 2021
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48. Values across Creative Domains
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Taylor, Christa L. and Kaufman, James C.
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Past research has demonstrated that the hierarchical value structures of creative individuals differ systematically from their less creative counterparts. However, earlier studies used a global creativity score, which is inconsistent with both creativity's movement toward a domain-specific viewpoint, and Lebedeva et al.'s 2019 study suggests the relationship between values and the frequency of creative behaviors differs by domain. We conducted two studies to determine if different creative domains are associated with distinct value hierarchies in creative ability, self-perception, and achievement. Study 1 (N = 156) examined whether Schwartz's core values demonstrated a different pattern of correlations with verbal versus visual creative performance, assessed with story and drawing tasks. Study 2 (N = 492) examined the pattern of values across a broader set of domains (i.e., artistic, everyday/self, science, performance, and scholarly), assessed using measures of creative self-concept and self-reported creative achievement. The value hierarchies associated with each of the domains were not consistent with each other or with the findings of past studies. The implications of these results for creative domain specificity and motivation are discussed.
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- 2021
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49. Are Cheaters Common or Creative?: Person-Situation Interactions of Resistance in Learning Contexts
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Kapoor, Hansika and Kaufman, James C.
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Students display resistance in the classroom in numerous ways, often in the form of academic misconduct. Some argue that resistance can reflect cleverness and creativity, rather than apathy. This investigation aimed to develop a psychometric tool to examine classroom resistance as well as identify individual and situational determinants of the same. Data from 853 participants (M[subscript age] = 19.36 years, SD = 1.93) was collected on measures of resistance behaviors in educational contexts and their environmental contributors, creativity, personality, and deception. Further, participants indicated their frequency of resistance across two time periods: kindergarten through middle school, and high school through college. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses identified a robust three-factor structure for the Classroom Resistance Scale, comprising Test-Oriented Cheating, Blatant Academic Dishonesty, and Unethical Shortcuts. The person-situation analysis indicated that students who engaged in resistance shared some consistent characteristics: they were more likely to be closed to new experiences, unimaginative, more extraverted, and highly influenced by their peers. Moreover, the frequency of classroom resistance increased in higher grades as compared to lower ones. Implications of spillover effects of academic dishonesty into the workplace are discussed, in addition to suggestions for future research.
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- 2021
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50. What Is Creativity in Education? A Qualitative Study of International Curricula
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Patston, Timothy J., Kaufman, James C., Cropley, Arthur J., and Marrone, Rebecca
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The concept of "creativity" as a desirable attribute within education is long-standing. The fields of education and creativity have developed, and periodically intersected with, government reports, policies, commentaries, and advice. Recently, an increasing number of countries have emphasized creativity in their official curricula. However, the journey from openly acknowledging the importance of creativity to systematically and purposefully supporting its promotion in the classroom is a long one. The research reported in this article focuses on what might be regarded as the first step in this journey: school curriculum. This article analyzes curricula in 12 countries and asks three key questions: if and how creativity is defined, where is it placed in the curriculum, and what concrete advice is provided for teachers? Despite widespread interest and a productive field of research in creativity, our examination reveals little support for teachers to turn policy into practice.
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- 2021
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