260,132 results on '"Knight BE"'
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2. Orthodontic root resorption associated with surgical adjunctive procedures for accelerating tooth movement: a systematic review of randomised controlled trials
- Author
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Shukla Khilan, Currell Scott Derek, Knight Beau, Baghaie Hooman, Nikolarakos Dimitrios, and Dreyer Craig
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Dentistry ,RK1-715 - Abstract
The present systematic review assesses the literature which identifies an association between surgical adjunctive procedures for accelerating tooth movement (SAPATM) during orthodontic therapy and orthodontically induced external root resorption (OIERR). By determining the level of association, the results may provide clinical evidence for minimising the deleterious effects of orthodontic tooth movement.
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. CFD-based design optimization of a 5 kW ducted hydrokinetic turbine with practical constraints
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Park, Jeongbin, Mangano, Marco, Seraj, Sabet, Pacini, Bernardo, Liao, Yingqian, Knight, Bradford G., Naik, Kartik, Maki, Kevin J., Martins, Joaquim R. R. A., Sun, Jing, and Pan, Yulin
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Physics - Fluid Dynamics - Abstract
Ducted hydrokinetic turbines enhance energy-harvesting efficiency by better conditioning the flow to the blades, which may yield higher power output than conventional freestream turbines for the same reference area. In this work, we present a ducted hydrokinetic turbine design obtained by simultaneously optimizing the duct, blade, and hub geometries. Our optimization framework combines a CFD solver, an adjoint solver, and a gradient-based optimizer to efficiently explore a large design space, together with a feature-based parameterization method to handle the complex geometry. Practical geometrical constraints ensure the manufacturability of the duct in terms of a minimum thickness and the housing of a 5 kW generator within the hub. The optimization converges to a short, thin duct with a rounded leading edge and an elongated hub protruding the duct inlet. The optimized ducted turbine achieves up to 50% efficiency when evaluated by RANS/URANS solvers despite a bulky hub, outperforming the 45% efficiency of the freestream Bahaj turbine featuring the same hub. This work showcases the effectiveness of CFD-based optimization in advancing ducted turbine designs and demonstrates the hydrodynamic benefits of a ducted configuration, paving the way for future research and real-world applications., Comment: This work was supported by the US Department of Energy under the award "RAFT: Reconfigurable Array of High-Efficiency Ducted Turbines for Hydrokinetic Energy Harvesting" (Award No. DE-AR0001438)
- Published
- 2024
4. The Volatile Composition and Activity Evolution of Main-Belt Comet 358P/PANSTARRS
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Hsieh, Henry H., Noonan, John W., Kelley, Michael S. P., Bodewits, Dennis, Pittichova, Jana, Thirouin, Audrey, Micheli, Marco, Knight, Matthew M., Bannister, Michele T., Chandler, Colin O., Holt, Carrie E., Hopkins, Matthew J., Kim, Yaeji, Moskovitz, Nicholas A., Oldroyd, William J., Patterson, Jack, Sheppard, Scott S., Tan, Nicole, Trujillo, Chadwick A., and Ye, Quanzhi
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the detection of water vapor associated with main-belt comet 358P/PANSTARRS on UT 2024 January 8-9 using the NIRSPEC instrument aboard JWST. We derive a water production rate of Q(H2O)=(5.0+/-0.2)x10^25 molecules/s, marking only the second direct detection of sublimation products of any kind from a main-belt comet, after 238P/Read. Similar to 238P, we find a remarkable absence of hypervolatile species, finding Q(CO2)<7.6x10^22 molecules/s, corresponding to Q(CO2)/Q(H2O)<0.2%. Upper limits on CH3OH and CO emission are also estimated. Photometry from ground-based observations show that the dust coma brightened and faded slowly over ~250 days in 2023-2024, consistent with photometric behavior observed in 2012-2013, but also indicate a ~2.5x decline in the dust production rate between these two periods. Dynamical dust modeling shows that the coma's morphology as imaged by JWST's NIRCAM instrument on 2023 November 22 can be reproduced by asymmetric dust emission from a nucleus with a mid-range obliquity (~80 deg) with a steady-state mass loss rate of ~0.8 kg/s. Finally, we find similar Afrho-to-gas ratios of log10(Afrho/Q(H2O))=-24.8+/-0.2 for 358P and log10(Afrho/QH2O)=-24.4+/-0.2 for 238P, suggesting that Afrho could serve as an effective proxy for estimating water production rates in other active main-belt comets. The confirmation of water vapor outgassing in both main-belt comets observed by JWST to date reinforces the use of recurrent activity near perihelion as an indicator of sublimation-driven activity in active asteroids., Comment: 32 pages, 13 figures. Accepted for publication in The Planetary Science Journal
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- 2024
5. Rubin ToO 2024: Envisioning the Vera C. Rubin Observatory LSST Target of Opportunity program
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Andreoni, Igor, Margutti, Raffaella, Banovetz, John, Greenstreet, Sarah, Hebert, Claire-Alice, Lister, Tim, Palmese, Antonella, Piranomonte, Silvia, Smartt, S. J., Smith, Graham P., Stein, Robert, Ahumada, Tomas, Anand, Shreya, Auchettl, Katie, Bannister, Michele T., Bellm, Eric C., Bloom, Joshua S., Bolin, Bryce T., Bom, Clecio R., Brethauer, Daniel, Brucker, Melissa J., Buckley, David A. H., Chandra, Poonam, Chornock, Ryan, Christensen, Eric, Cooke, Jeff, Corsi, Alessandra, Coughlin, Michael W., Cuevas-Otahola, Bolivia, Filippo, D'Ammando, Dai, Biwei, Dhawan, S., Filippenko, Alexei V., Foley, Ryan J., Franckowiak, Anna, Gomboc, Andreja, Gompertz, Benjamin P., Guy, Leanne P., Hazra, Nandini, Hernandez, Christopher, Hosseinzadeh, Griffin, Hussaini, Maryam, Ibrahimzade, Dina, Izzo, Luca, Jones, R. Lynne, Kang, Yijung, Kasliwal, Mansi M., Knight, Matthew, Kunnumkai, Keerthi, Lamb, Gavin P, LeBaron, Natalie, Lejoly, Cassandra, Levan, Andrew J., MacBride, Sean, Mallia, Franco, Malz, Alex I., Miller, Adam A., Mora, J. C., Narayan, Gautham, J., Nayana A., Nicholl, Matt, Nichols, Tiffany, Oates, S. R., Panayada, Akshay, Ragosta, Fabio, Ribeiro, Tiago, Ryczanowski, Dan, Sarin, Nikhil, Schwamb, Megan E., Sears, Huei, Seligman, Darryl Z., Sharma, Ritwik, Shrestha, Manisha, Simran, Stroh, Michael C., Terreran, Giacomo, Thakur, Aishwarya Linesh, Trivedi, Aum, Tyson, J. Anthony, Utsumi, Yousuke, Verma, Aprajita, Villar, V. Ashley, Volk, Kathryn, Vyas, Meet J., Wasserman, Amanda R., Wheeler, J. Craig, Yoachim, Peter, Zegarelli, Angela, and Bianco, Federica
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST) at Vera C. Rubin Observatory is planned to begin in the Fall of 2025. The LSST survey cadence has been designed via a community-driven process regulated by the Survey Cadence Optimization Committee (SCOC), which recommended up to 3% of the observing time to carry out Target of Opportunity (ToO) observations. Experts from the scientific community, Rubin Observatory personnel, and members of the SCOC were brought together to deliver a recommendation for the implementation of the ToO program during a workshop held in March 2024. Four main science cases were identified: gravitational wave multi-messenger astronomy, high energy neutrinos, Galactic supernovae, and small potentially hazardous asteroids possible impactors. Additional science cases were identified and briefly addressed in the documents, including lensed or poorly localized gamma-ray bursts and twilight discoveries. Trigger prioritization, automated response, and detailed strategies were discussed for each science case. This document represents the outcome of the Rubin ToO 2024 workshop, with additional contributions from members of the Rubin Science Collaborations. The implementation of the selection criteria and strategies presented in this document has been endorsed in the SCOC Phase 3 Recommendations document (PSTN-056). Although the ToO program is still to be finalized, this document serves as a baseline plan for ToO observations with the Rubin Observatory.
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- 2024
6. Simultaneous Optical and X-ray Detection of a Thermonuclear Burst in the 2024 Outburst of EXO 0748-676
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Knight, Amy H., Rhodes, Lauren, Buisson, Douglas J. K., Matthews, James H., Segura, Noel Castro, Ingram, Adam, Middleton, Matthew, and Roberts, Timothy P.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The neutron star low-mass X-ray binary, EXO 0748--676, recently returned to outburst after a $\sim$ 16 year-long quiescence. Since its return, there has been a global effort to capture the previously unseen rise of the source and to understand its somewhat early return to outburst, as it is typical for a source to spend longer in quiescence than in outburst. Here, we report on the simultaneous optical and X-ray detection of a type I X-ray burst, captured by XMM-Newton during a DDT observation on 30th June 2024. The data show 3 X-ray eclipses consistent with the known ephemeris and one type I X-ray burst at 60492.309 MJD. The X-ray burst is reprocessed into the optical band and captured by XMM-Newton's Optical Monitor during a 4399 s exposure with the B filter in image + fast mode. We determine that the optical peak lags the X-ray peak by 4.46 $\pm$ 1.71s. The optical and X-ray rise times are similar, but the optical decay timescale is shorter than the X-ray decay timescale. The reprocessing site is likely within a few light seconds of the X-ray emitting region, so the companion star, accretion disc and ablated material are all plausible., Comment: 6 Pages, 3 Figures, Accepted for Publication in MNRAS Letters
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- 2024
7. Conformal-in-the-Loop for Learning with Imbalanced Noisy Data
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Graham-Knight, John Brandon, Fayyad, Jamil, Bayasi, Nourhan, Lasserre, Patricia, and Najjaran, Homayoun
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Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Class imbalance and label noise are pervasive in large-scale datasets, yet much of machine learning research assumes well-labeled, balanced data, which rarely reflects real world conditions. Existing approaches typically address either label noise or class imbalance in isolation, leading to suboptimal results when both issues coexist. In this work, we propose Conformal-in-the-Loop (CitL), a novel training framework that addresses both challenges with a conformal prediction-based approach. CitL evaluates sample uncertainty to adjust weights and prune unreliable examples, enhancing model resilience and accuracy with minimal computational cost. Our extensive experiments include a detailed analysis showing how CitL effectively emphasizes impactful data in noisy, imbalanced datasets. Our results show that CitL consistently boosts model performance, achieving up to a 6.1% increase in classification accuracy and a 5.0 mIoU improvement in segmentation. Our code is publicly available: CitL., Comment: Under Review
- Published
- 2024
8. A multiscale method for data collected from network edges via the line graph
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Cao, Dingjia, Knight, Marina I., and Nason, Guy P.
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Statistics - Methodology ,Statistics - Applications - Abstract
Data collected over networks can be modelled as noisy observations of an unknown function over the nodes of a graph or network structure, fully described by its nodes and their connections, the edges. In this context, function estimation has been proposed in the literature and typically makes use of the network topology such as relative node arrangement, often using given or artificially constructed node Euclidean coordinates. However, networks that arise in fields such as hydrology (for example, river networks) present features that challenge these established modelling setups since the target function may naturally live on edges (e.g., river flow) and/or the node-oriented modelling uses noisy edge data as weights. This work tackles these challenges and develops a novel lifting scheme along with its associated (second) generation wavelets that permit data decomposition across the network edges. The transform, which we refer to under the acronym LG-LOCAAT, makes use of a line graph construction that first maps the data in the line graph domain. We thoroughly investigate the proposed algorithm's properties and illustrate its performance versus existing methodologies. We conclude with an application pertaining to hydrology that involves the denoising of a water quality index over the England river network, backed up by a simulation study for a river flow dataset.
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- 2024
9. The Hong-Ou-Mandel effect is really odd
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Alsing, Paul M., Birrittella, Richard J., Gerry, Christopher C., Mimih, Jihane, and Knight, Peter L.
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Quantum Physics ,Physics - Optics - Abstract
When quantum state amplitudes interfere, surprising non-classical features emerge which emphasis the roles of indistinguishability and discreteness in quantum mechanics. A famous example in quantum optics is the Hong Ou Mandel interference effect,a major ingredient in current quantum information processing using photonics. Traditionally the HOM features interference between amplitudes for two one-photon number states. Surprisingly, interference can be manifested when one amplitude represents that most classical of light field states, the coherent state, provided the partner state is non-classical (eg a single photon state or an odd photon number state). Imposing such nonclassical features on an otherwise classical state is the focus of this article. Recently, the HOM effect has been generalized to the multi-photon case, termed the extended HOM effect by the authors.The implication of the extended HOM effect is that if an odd parity state, comprising only odd numbers of photons, enters one input port of a 50:50 beam splitter, then regardless of the state entering the other input port, be it pure or mixed, there will no output coincident counts. In this work, we explain the extended HOM as arising from a sequence of pairwise HOM-like complete destructive interferences occurring simultaneously in the multicomponent amplitude for the output coincidence counts. We first demonstrate this diagrammatically in order to build physical intuition, before developing a general analytical proof. We then examine the case of a single photon interacting with a coherent state (and idealized laser), and consider prospects for experimental detection by including the effect of imperfect detection efficiency. This work highlights the importance of the non-classicality of light, and in particular the interference effects stemming from the discreteness of photon quanta., Comment: 28 pages, 7 figures
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- 2024
10. In-situ crystallographic mapping constrains sulfate deposition and timing in Jezero crater, Mars
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Jones, Michael W. M., Flannery, David T., Hurowitz, Joel A., Tice, Mike T., Schrank, Christoph E., Allwood, Abigail C., Tosca, Nicholas J., Catling, David C., VanBommel, Scott J., Knight, Abigail L., Ganly, Briana, Siebach, Kirsten L., Benison, Kathleen C., Broz, Adrian P., Zorzano, Maria-Paz, Heirwegh, Chris M., Orenstein, Brendan J., Clark, Benton C., Sinclair, Kimberly P., Shumway, Andrew O., Wade, Lawrence A., Davidoff, Scott, Nemere, Peter, Wright, Austin P., Galvin, Adrian E., Randazzo, Nicholas, Martinez-Frias, Jesus, and ONeil, Lauren P.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
Late-stage Ca-sulfate-filled fractures are common on Mars. Notably, the Shenandoah formation in the western edge of Jezero crater preserves a variety of Ca-sulfate minerals in the fine-grained siliciclastic rocks explored by the Perseverance rover. However, the depositional environment and timing of the formation of these sulfates is unknown. To address this outstanding problem, we developed a new technique to map the crystal textures of these sulfates in situ at two stratigraphically similar locations in the Shenandoah formation, allowing us to constrain the burial depth and paleoenvironment at the time of their deposition. Our results suggest that some Ca-sulfate analyzed was formed at a burial depth greater than 80m, whereas Ca-sulfates present at another outcrop likely precipitated in a shallow-subsurface environment. These results indicate that samples collected for potential return to Earth at the two studied locations capture two different times and distinct chemical conditions in the depositional history of the Shenandoah formation providing multiple opportunities to evaluate surface and subsurface habitability.
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- 2024
11. International Work-Integrated Learning Programs: Insights from the In-Country Partners
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Bronwyn A. Kosman, Catherine R. Knight-Agarwal, Daniela Castro de Jong, Lucy Chipchase, and Naroa Etxebarria
- Abstract
Work-integrated learning programs for higher education students that involve an international component require people in the recipient countries (in-country partners) agreeing to host and engage with the students. Yet research on these programs has focused almost exclusively on the participating students. Thus, the aim of this study was to focus on the in-country partners and gain further understanding about who they are, and how they perceive and experience these programs. Interviews with twelve in-country partners from the Indo-Pacific revealed that in-country partners are professionals contributing significant time and resources, their reputation, and cultural knowledge towards these programs. While they value the energy and ideas the students bring, they are concerned about inadequate cultural preparation of students, and the unilateral nature of the arrangements they have with higher education institutions. Future programs would benefit from including more of the in-country partner's 'voice' in program design and development.
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- 2024
12. Limited Scopes of Repair: Black Reparations Strategies and the Constraints of Local Redress Policy
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Elizabeth Jordie Davies, Jenn M. Jackson, and David J. Knight
- Abstract
We consider two local reparations cases--the Evanston Restorative Housing Program and Chicago reparations for police torture survivors. We argue that the programs are shaped by the differing political opportunities, the local context, and the social location of their advocates given that one was constructed within government systems in Evanston and the other largely by grassroots organizers in Chicago. Furthermore, both programs are criticized to varying degrees as being exclusive in their design and implementation. We term this exclusion a process of deliberative marginalization, whereby some of the most vulnerable and most directly affected beneficiaries of a redress initiative are left out of deliberations and implementation decisions about the initiative's design. Subsequently, this study shows both the promise and constraints of reparations policy at the level of local government.
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- 2024
13. A Faculty Personal Tutor Model to Support Student Transition into Higher Education during a Global Pandemic
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Rebecca Broadbent and Gillian Knight
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In 2020, Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) faculty within a United Kingdom university implemented an online personal tutoring model. This model aimed to deliver a consistent experience to ~1000 students, supporting learning and fostering a sense of belonging during a global pandemic. Here we describe and evaluate a Curriculum Integrated personal tutor model, designed to provide a structured and dialogic student experience. We provide details on the timetabled activities, aligned to student development needs, and reflect on the model's effectiveness in supporting student learning, building belonging, and providing accessible delivery. We highlight strengths and explore weaknesses, providing recommendations for implementation of this type of model at other institutions.
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- 2024
14. Clearing the plate: a strategic approach to mitigate well-to-well contamination in large-scale microbiome studies.
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Brennan, Caitriona, Belda-Ferre, Pedro, Zuffa, Simone, Charron-Lamoureux, Vincent, Mohanty, Ipsita, Ackermann, Gail, Allaband, Celeste, Ambre, Madison, Boyer, Tara, Bryant, MacKenzie, Cantrell, Kalen, Gonzalez, Antonio, McDonald, Daniel, Salido, Rodolfo, Song, Se, Wright, Gillian, Dorrestein, Pieter, and Knight, Rob
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cross-contamination ,large-scale studies ,metabolomics ,microbiome ,well-to-well contamination ,Microbiota ,Humans ,RNA ,Ribosomal ,16S ,Specimen Handling - Abstract
UNLABELLED: Large-scale studies are essential to answer questions about complex microbial communities that can be extremely dynamic across hosts, environments, and time points. However, managing acquisition, processing, and analysis of large numbers of samples poses many challenges, with cross-contamination being the biggest obstacle. Contamination complicates analysis and results in sample loss, leading to higher costs and constraints on mixed sample type study designs. While many researchers opt for 96-well plates for their workflows, these plates present a significant issue: the shared seal and weak separation between wells leads to well-to-well contamination. To address this concern, we propose an innovative high-throughput approach, termed as the Matrix method, which employs barcoded Matrix Tubes for sample acquisition. This method is complemented by a paired nucleic acid and metabolite extraction, utilizing 95% (vol/vol) ethanol to stabilize microbial communities and as a solvent for extracting metabolites. Comparative analysis between conventional 96-well plate extractions and the Matrix method, measuring 16S rRNA gene levels via quantitative polymerase chain reaction, demonstrates a notable decrease in well-to-well contamination with the Matrix method. Metagenomics, 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing (16S), and untargeted metabolomics analysis via liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) confirmed that the Matrix method recovers reproducible microbial and metabolite compositions that can distinguish between subjects. This advancement is critical for large-scale study design as it minimizes well-to-well contamination and technical variation, shortens processing times, and integrates with automated infrastructure for enhancing sample randomization and metadata generation. IMPORTANCE: Understanding dynamic microbial communities typically requires large-scale studies. However, handling large numbers of samples introduces many challenges, with cross-contamination being a major issue. It not only complicates analysis but also leads to sample loss and increased costs and restricts diverse study designs. The prevalent use of 96-well plates for nucleic acid and metabolite extractions exacerbates this problem due to their wells having little separation and being connected by a single plate seal. To address this, we propose a new strategy using barcoded Matrix Tubes, showing a significant reduction in cross-contamination compared to conventional plate-based approaches. Additionally, this method facilitates the extraction of both nucleic acids and metabolites from a single tubed sample, eliminating the need to collect separate aliquots for each extraction. This innovation improves large-scale study design by shortening processing times, simplifying analysis, facilitating metadata curation, and producing more reliable results.
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- 2024
15. Differential gut microbiota composition in β-Thalassemia patients and its correlation with iron overload.
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Nonejuie, Poochit, Wilantho, Alisa, McDonald, Daniel, Htoo, Htut, Chalerm, Jenjira, Tripathi, Anupriya, Ngamphiw, Chumpol, Tongsima, Sissades, Knight, Rob, Paiboonsukwong, Kittiphong, and Fucharoen, Suthat
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Iron overload ,Microbiome ,Thalassemia ,Humans ,beta-Thalassemia ,Gastrointestinal Microbiome ,Male ,Female ,Adult ,Iron Overload ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Feces ,Case-Control Studies ,Young Adult ,Ferritins ,Bacteria ,Middle Aged ,Adolescent - Abstract
Recent research highlights the significant impact of the gut microbiota on health and disease. Thalassemia, a hereditary blood disorder, requires regular blood transfusions, leading to an accumulation of iron in the body. Such changes could potentially alter the intestinal microbiota, thereby increasing the susceptibility of thalassemic patients to infection. In this study, we analyzed the fecal microbiota of 70 non-transfusion-dependent (NTDT) β-thalassemia/HbE patients and 30 healthy controls. Our findings indicate that iron chelation intervention had no detectable effect on the microbiome profile of thalassemic patients. However, the cross-sectional analysis revealed that the bacterial diversity and community structure in patients were significantly less diverse and distinct compared to those of healthy subjects. Using reference frames, we were also able to demonstrate that bacterial taxa that are known to produce short chain fatty acids, from the genera Alistipes, Coprococcus, and Oscillospira, and those from the family Ruminococcaceae, were less prevalent in the patients. In contrast, bacterial taxa associated with an unhealthy gut, including the genus Clostridium and those from the families Fusobacteriaceae, Enterobacteriaceae, and Peptostrptococcaceae, were more prevalent in patients and found to be correlated with higher levels of ferritin. Collectively, these changes in the microbiota could be regarded as markers of raised ferritin levels, and therefore, awareness should be exercised as they could interfere, albeit indirectly, with the treatment of the co-morbidities of thalassemia.
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- 2024
16. Social behaviour mediates the microbiome response to antibiotic treatment in a wild mammal.
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Brown, Bianca, Williams, Allison, Sabey, Kate, Onserio, Aaron, Ewoi, John, Song, Se, Knight, Rob, and Ezenwa, Vanessa
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16S rRNA ,degree ,gazelle ,social connectivity ,Animals ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Social Behavior ,Microbiota ,Antelopes - Abstract
High levels of social connectivity among group-living animals have been hypothesized to benefit individuals by creating opportunities to rapidly reseed the microbiome and maintain stability against disruption. We tested this hypothesis by perturbing the microbiome of a wild population of Grants gazelles with an antibiotic and asking whether microbiome recovery differs between individuals with high versus low levels of social connectivity. We found that after treatment, individuals with high social connectivity experienced a faster increase in microbiome richness than less socially connected individuals. Unexpectedly, the rapid increase in microbiome richness of highly connected individuals that received treatment led to their microbiomes becoming more distinct relative to the background population. Our results suggest that the microbiome of individuals with high social connectivity can be rapidly recolonized after a perturbation event, but this leads to a microbiome that is more distinct from, rather than more similar to the unperturbed state. This work provides new insight into the role of social interactions in shaping the microbiome.
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- 2024
17. Associations of plant-based foods, red and processed meat, and dairy with gut microbiome in Finnish adults.
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Maukonen, Mirkka, Koponen, Kari, Havulinna, Aki, Kaartinen, Niina, Niiranen, Teemu, Méric, Guillaume, Pajari, Anne-Maria, Knight, Rob, Salomaa, Veikko, and Männistö, Satu
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Dairy ,Diet ,Gut microbiome ,Meat ,Plant-based foods ,Sustainability ,Finland ,Humans ,Adult ,Female ,Gastrointestinal Microbiome ,Middle Aged ,Male ,Dairy Products ,Diet ,Vegetables ,Red Meat ,Fruit ,Animals ,Meat Products - Abstract
PURPOSE: Population-based studies on the associations of plant-based foods, red meat or dairy with gut microbiome are scarce. We examined whether the consumption of plant-based foods (vegetables, potatoes, fruits, cereals), red and processed meat (RPM) or dairy (fermented milk, cheese, other dairy products) are related to gut microbiome in Finnish adults. METHODS: We utilized data from the National FINRISK/FINDIET 2002 Study (n = 1273, aged 25-64 years, 55% women). Diet was assessed with 48-hour dietary recalls. Gut microbiome was analyzed using shallow shotgun sequencing. We applied multivariate analyses with linear models and permutational ANOVAs adjusted for relevant confounders. RESULTS: Fruit consumption was positively (beta = 0.03, SE = 0.01, P = 0.04), while a dairy subgroup including milk, cream and ice-creams was inversely associated (beta=-0.03, SE 0.01, P = 0.02) with intra-individual gut microbiome diversity (alpha-diversity). Plant-based foods (R2 = 0.001, P = 0.03) and dairy (R2 = 0.002, P = 0.01) but not RPM (R2 = 0.001, P = 0.38) contributed to the compositional differences in gut microbiome (beta-diversity). Plant-based foods were associated with several butyrate producers/cellulolytic species including Roseburia hominis. RPM associations included an inverse association with R. hominis. Dairy was positively associated with several lactic producing/probiotic species including Lactobacillus delbrueckii and potentially opportunistic pathogens including Citrobacter freundii. Dairy, fermented milk, vegetables, and cereals were associated with specific microbial functions. CONCLUSION: Our results suggest a potential association between plant-based foods and dairy or their subgroups with microbial diversity measures. Furthermore, our findings indicated that all the food groups were associated with distinct overall microbial community compositions. Plant-based food consumption particularly was associated with a larger number of putative beneficial species.
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- 2024
18. Parameters Driving Concrete Carbonation at its End-of-Life for Direct Air Capture in Transportation Projects
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Knight, Kelli Anne and Miller, Sabbie A.
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Carbon capture and storage ,Carbon dioxide ,Carbonation ,Cement ,Concrete ,Greenhouse gases - Abstract
Recent California regulatory efforts, United States goals, and industry roadmaps all target net-zero greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from the cement and concrete industries within a few decades. While changes in production of cement and concrete, including varying constituents, can greatly reduce GHG emissions, carbon dioxide removal (CDR) will be needed to meet this net-zero goal. Hydrated cement in concrete can carbonate (i.e., form carbon-based minerals with atmospheric CO2) and thus act as a CDR mechanism. This process occurs faster with a large surface area, such as crushed concrete at its end-of-life (EoL), which can be uniquely leveraged by transportation infrastructure projects. In this work, a literature review of key parameters that can facilitate desired CO2 uptake for transportation projects at their end of life is conducted and an initial meta-analyses of data from the literature to inform CO2 uptake for individual projects is performed. Initial considerations for what concomitant impacts may arise from this process are presented. Finally, experiments to fill a key gap in understanding how thin crushed concrete must be spread to maximize uptake reactions are conducted. Cumulatively, findings will inform whether carbonation can be implementedin a way that would support policies that include carbonation as a route for reducing emissions from cement-based materials in transportation applicationsView the NCST Project Webpage
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- 2024
19. Demonstration of Beyond Terabit/s/lambda Nonlinearity-free Transmission over the Hollow-core Fibre
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Hong, Yang, Almonacil, Sylvain, Mardoyan, Haik, Carrero, Carina Castineiras, Osuna, Sergio, Gomez, Javier R., Knight, David R., and Renaudier, Jeremie
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Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Systems and Control ,Physics - Optics - Abstract
We demonstrate nonlinearity-free transmission of Terabit/s/lambda PCS-64QAM signals through an HCF-based optical recirculating loop, which yields ~17.4% higher capacity than SMF-based loop under 23-dBm launch power (~13.5 dBm/channel) after 25 loops. Both lab experiment and field trial show HCF exhibits ~1.6-us/km lower latency than SMF., Comment: ECOC 2024 - 50th European Conference and Exhibition on Optical Communication Th1B.4 at 09:45am SC05: Optical transmission systems
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- 2024
20. Capture Rates of Highly Degenerate Neutrons
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Knight, B., Caballero, O. L., and Schatz, H.
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Nuclear Theory ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
At the low temperature and high density conditions of a neutron star crust neutrons are degenerate. In this work, we study the effect of this degeneracy on the capture rates of neutrons on neutron rich nuclei in accreted crusts. We use a statistical Hauser-Feshbach model to calculate neutron capture rates and find that neutron degeneracy can increase rates significantly. Changes increase from a factor of a few to many orders of magnitude near the neutron drip line. We also quantify uncertainties due to model inputs for masses, $\gamma$-strength functions, and level densities. We find that uncertainties increase dramatically away from stability and that degeneracy tends to increase these uncertainties further, except for cases near the neutron drip line where degeneracy leads to more robustness. As in the case of capture of classically distributed neutrons, variations in the mass model have the strongest impact. Corresponding variations in the reaction rates can be as high as 3 to 4 orders of magnitude, and be more than 5 times larger than under classical conditions. To ease the incorporation of neutron degeneracy in nucleosynthesis networks, we provide tabulated results of capture rates as well as analytical expressions as function of temperature and neutron chemical potential, for proton numbers between $3 \le Z \le 85$, derived from fits to our numerical results. Fits are based on a new parametrization that complements previously employed power law approximations with additional Lorentzian terms that account for low energy resonances, significantly improving accuracy., Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures. Tabulated reaction rates can be found at https://github.com/Nyrb1001/Degenerate-Neutron-Captures
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- 2024
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21. EFT Workshop at Notre Dame
- Author
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Smith, Nick, Spitzbart, Daniel, Dickinson, Jennet, Wilson, Jon, Gray, Lindsey, Mohrman, Kelci, Bhattacharya, Saptaparna, Piccinelli, Andrea, Roy, Titas, Paspalaki, Garyfallia, Fontes, Duarte, Martin, Adam, Shepherd, William, Cruz, Sergio Sánchez, Goncalves, Dorival, Gritsan, Andrei, Prosper, Harrison, Junk, Tom, Cranmer, Kyle, Peskin, Michael, Gilbert, Andrew, Langford, Jonathon, Petriello, Frank, Mantani, Luca, Wightman, Andrew, Knight, Charlotte, Shyamsundar, Prasanth, Basnet, Aashwin, Boldrini, Giacomo, and Lannon, Kevin
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
The LPC EFT workshop was held April 25-26, 2024 at the University of Notre Dame. The workshop was organized into five thematic sessions: "how far beyond linear" discusses issues of truncation and validity in interpretation of results with an eye towards practicality; "reconstruction-level results" visits the question of how best to design analyses directly targeting inference of EFT parameters; "logistics of combining likelihoods" addresses the challenges of bringing a diverse array of measurements into a cohesive whole; "unfolded results" tackles the question of designing fiducial measurements for later use in EFT interpretations, and the benefits and limitations of unfolding; and "building a sample library" addresses how best to generate simulation samples for use in data analysis. This document serves as a summary of presentations, subsequent discussions, and actionable items identified over the course of the workshop.
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- 2024
22. Identifying influential node groups in networks with core-periphery structure
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Bae, Gyuho, Knight, Philip A., and Eom, Young-Ho
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Physics - Physics and Society ,Physics - Data Analysis, Statistics and Probability - Abstract
Identifying influential spreaders is a crucial problem for practical applications in network science. The core-periphery(C-P) structure, common in many real-world networks, comprises a densely interconnected group of nodes(core) and the rest of the sparsely connected nodes subordinated to the core(periphery). Core nodes are expected to be more influential than periphery nodes generally, but recent studies suggest that this is not the case in some networks. In this work, we look for mesostructural conditions that arise when core nodes are significantly more influential than periphery nodes. In particular, we investigate the roles of the internal and external connectivity of cores in their relative influence. We observe that the internal and external connectivity of cores are broadly distributed, and the relative influence of the cores is also broadly distributed in real-world networks. Our key finding is that the internal connectivity of cores is positively correlated with their relative influence, whereas the relative influence increases up to a certain value of the external connectivity and decreases thereafter. Finally, results from the model-generated networks clarify the observations from the real-world networks. Our findings provide a structural condition for influential cores in networks and shed light on why some cores are influential and others are not.
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- 2024
23. Domain Shift Analysis in Chest Radiographs Classification in a Veterans Healthcare Administration Population
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Chandrashekar, Mayanka, Goethert, Ian, Haque, Md Inzamam Ul, McMahon, Benjamin, Dhaubhadel, Sayera, Knight, Kathryn, Erdos, Joseph, Reagan, Donna, Taylor, Caroline, Kuzmak, Peter, Gaziano, John Michael, McAllister, Eileen, Costa, Lauren, Ho, Yuk-Lam, Cho, Kelly, Tamang, Suzanne, Fodeh-Jarad, Samah, Ovchinnikova, Olga S., Justice, Amy C., Hinkle, Jacob, and Danciu, Ioana
- Subjects
Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video Processing ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Objectives: This study aims to assess the impact of domain shift on chest X-ray classification accuracy and to analyze the influence of ground truth label quality and demographic factors such as age group, sex, and study year. Materials and Methods: We used a DenseNet121 model pretrained MIMIC-CXR dataset for deep learning-based multilabel classification using ground truth labels from radiology reports extracted using the CheXpert and CheXbert Labeler. We compared the performance of the 14 chest X-ray labels on the MIMIC-CXR and Veterans Healthcare Administration chest X-ray dataset (VA-CXR). The VA-CXR dataset comprises over 259k chest X-ray images spanning between the years 2010 and 2022. Results: The validation of ground truth and the assessment of multi-label classification performance across various NLP extraction tools revealed that the VA-CXR dataset exhibited lower disagreement rates than the MIMIC-CXR datasets. Additionally, there were notable differences in AUC scores between models utilizing CheXpert and CheXbert. When evaluating multi-label classification performance across different datasets, minimal domain shift was observed in unseen datasets, except for the label "Enlarged Cardiomediastinum." The study year's subgroup analyses exhibited the most significant variations in multi-label classification model performance. These findings underscore the importance of considering domain shifts in chest X-ray classification tasks, particularly concerning study years. Conclusion: Our study reveals the significant impact of domain shift and demographic factors on chest X-ray classification, emphasizing the need for improved transfer learning and equitable model development. Addressing these challenges is crucial for advancing medical imaging and enhancing patient care.
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- 2024
24. The GLEAMing of the first supermassive black holes: III. Radio sources with ultra-faint host galaxies
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Broderick, J. W., Seymour, N., Drouart, G., Knight, D., Afonso, J. M., De Breuck, C., Galvin, T. J., Hedge, A. J., Lehnert, M. D., Noirot, G., Shabala, S. S., Turner, R. J., and Vernet, J.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present deep near-infrared $K_{\rm s}$-band imaging for 35 of the 53 sources from the high-redshift ($z > 2$) radio galaxy candidate sample defined in Broderick et al. (2022). These images were obtained using the High-Acuity Widefield $K$-band Imager (HAWK-I) on the Very Large Telescope. Host galaxies are detected for 27 of the sources, with $K_{\rm s} \approx 21.6$$-$$23.0$ mag (2$''$ diameter apertures; AB). The remaining eight targets are not detected to a median $3\sigma$ depth of $K_{\rm s} \approx 23.3$ mag ($2''$ diameter apertures). We examine the radio and near-infrared flux densities of the 35 sources, comparing them to the known $z > 3$ powerful radio galaxies with 500-MHz radio luminosities $L_{500\,{\rm MHz}} > 10^{27}$ W Hz$^{-1}$. By plotting 150-MHz flux density versus $K_{\rm s}$-band flux density, we find that, similar to the sources from the literature, these new targets have large radio to near-infrared flux density ratios, but extending the distribution to fainter flux densities. Five of the eight HAWK-I deep non-detections have a median $3\sigma$ lower limit of $K_{\rm s} \gtrsim 23.8$ mag ($1.5''$ diameter apertures); these five targets, along with a further source from Broderick et al. (2022) with a deep non-detection ($K_{\rm s} \gtrsim 23.7$ mag; $3\sigma$; $2''$ diameter aperture) in the Southern H-ATLAS Regions $K_{\rm s}$-band Survey, are considered candidates to be ultra-high-redshift ($z > 5$) radio galaxies. The extreme radio to near-infrared flux density ratios ($>10^5$) for these six sources are comparable to TN J0924$-$2201, GLEAM J0856$+$0223 and TGSS J1530$+$1049, the three known powerful radio galaxies at $z > 5$. For a selection of galaxy templates with different stellar masses, we show that $z \gtrsim 4.2$ is a plausible scenario for our ultra-high-redshift candidates if the stellar mass $M_{\rm *} \gtrsim 10^{10.5}\,{\rm M}_\odot$. [abridged], Comment: 24 pages, 5 figures (one of which is a multi-page figure with 30 separate panels), 2 tables, accepted for publication in PASA
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- 2024
25. Optical absorption spectrum reveals gaseous chlorine in anti-resonant hollow core fibres
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Harrington, Kerrianne, Mears, Robbie, Stone, James M., Wadsworth, William J., Knight, Jonathan C., and Birks, T. A.
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Physics - Optics - Abstract
We have observed unexpected spectral attenuation of ultraviolet light in freshly drawn hollow core optical fibres. When the fibre ends are left open to atmosphere, this loss feature dissipates over time. The loss matches the absorption spectrum of gaseous (molecular) chlorine and, given enough time, the transmission spectrum of the fibre recovers to that expected from the morphological structure of the fibre. Our measurements indicate an initial chlorine concentration of 0.45 $\mu$ mol/cm$^{3}$ in the hollow core, equivalent to 1.1 mol% Cl$_{2}$ at atmospheric pressure.
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- 2024
26. Learning Delays Through Gradients and Structure: Emergence of Spatiotemporal Patterns in Spiking Neural Networks
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Mészáros, Balázs, Knight, James, and Nowotny, Thomas
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Computer Science - Neural and Evolutionary Computing - Abstract
We present a Spiking Neural Network (SNN) model that incorporates learnable synaptic delays through two approaches: per-synapse delay learning via Dilated Convolutions with Learnable Spacings (DCLS) and a dynamic pruning strategy that also serves as a form of delay learning. In the latter approach, the network dynamically selects and prunes connections, optimizing the delays in sparse connectivity settings. We evaluate both approaches on the Raw Heidelberg Digits keyword spotting benchmark using Backpropagation Through Time with surrogate gradients. Our analysis of the spatio-temporal structure of synaptic interactions reveals that, after training, excitation and inhibition group together in space and time. Notably, the dynamic pruning approach, which employs DEEP R for connection removal and RigL for reconnection, not only preserves these spatio-temporal patterns but outperforms per-synapse delay learning in sparse networks. Our results demonstrate the potential of combining delay learning with dynamic pruning to develop efficient SNN models for temporal data processing. Moreover, the preservation of spatio-temporal dynamics throughout pruning and rewiring highlights the robustness of these features, providing a solid foundation for future neuromorphic computing applications., Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience
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- 2024
27. A Review of AI and Machine Learning Contribution in Predictive Business Process Management (Process Enhancement and Process Improvement Approaches)
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Abbasi, Mostafa, Nishat, Rahnuma Islam, Bond, Corey, Graham-Knight, John Brandon, Lasserre, Patricia, Lucet, Yves, and Najjaran, Homayoun
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Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
Purpose- The significance of business processes has fostered a close collaboration between academia and industry. Moreover, the business landscape has witnessed continuous transformation, closely intertwined with technological advancements. Our main goal is to offer researchers and process analysts insights into the latest developments concerning Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Machine Learning (ML) to optimize their processes in an organization and identify research gaps and future directions in the field. Design/methodology/approach- In this study, we perform a systematic review of academic literature to investigate the integration of AI/ML in business process management (BPM). We categorize the literature according to the BPM life-cycle and employ bibliometric and objective-oriented methodology, to analyze related papers. Findings- In business process management and process map, AI/ML has made significant improvements using operational data on process metrics. These developments involve two distinct stages: (1) process enhancement, which emphasizes analyzing process information and adding descriptions to process models, and (2) process improvement, which focuses on redesigning processes based on insights derived from analysis. Research limitations/implications- While this review paper serves to provide an overview of different approaches for addressing process-related challenges, it does not delve deeply into the intricacies of fine-grained technical details of each method. This work focuses on recent papers conducted between 2010 and 2024. Originality/value- This paper adopts a pioneering approach by conducting an extensive examination of the integration of AI/ML techniques across the entire process management lifecycle. Additionally, it presents groundbreaking research and introduces AI/ML-enabled integrated tools, further enhancing the insights for future research.
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- 2024
28. LHC EFT WG Note: SMEFT predictions, event reweighting, and simulation
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Belvedere, Alberto, Bhattacharya, Saptaparna, Boldrini, Giacomo, Chatterjee, Suman, Calandri, Alessandro, Cruz, Sergio Sánchez, Dickinson, Jennet, Glessgen, Franz J., Goldouzian, Reza, Grohsjean, Alexander, Jeppe, Laurids, Knight, Charlotte, Mattelaer, Olivier, Mohrman, Kelci, Nelson, Hannah, Perovic, Vasilije, Presilla, Matteo, Schöfbeck, Robert, and Smith, Nick
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
This note gives an overview of the tools for predicting expectations in the Standard Model effective field theory (SMEFT) at the tree level and one loop available through event generators. Methods of event reweighting, the separate simulation of squared matrix elements, and the simulation of the full SMEFT process are compared in terms of statistical efficacy and potential biases., Comment: 42 pages, 27 figures. Scipost resubmission
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- 2024
29. Development and Validation of a Machine Learning Algorithm for Clinical Wellness Visit Classification in Cats and Dogs
- Author
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Szlosek, Donald, Coyne, Michael, Riggot, Julia, Knight, Kevin, McCrann, DJ, and Kincaid, Dave
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Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Computer Science - Computers and Society - Abstract
Early disease detection in veterinary care relies on identifying subclinical abnormalities in asymptomatic animals during wellness visits. This study introduces an algorithm designed to distinguish between wellness and other veterinary visits.The purpose of this study is to validate the use of a visit classification algorithm compared to manual classification of veterinary visits by three board-certified veterinarians. Using a dataset of 11,105 clinical visits from 2012 to 2017 involving 655 animals (85.3% canines and 14.7% felines) across 544 U.S. veterinary establishments, the model was trained using a Gradient Boosting Machine model. Three validators were tasked with classifying 400 visits, including both wellness and other types of visits, selected randomly from the same database used for initial algorithm training, aiming to maintain consistency and relevance between the training and application phases; visit classifications were subsequently categorized into "wellness" or "other" based on majority consensus among validators to assess the algorithm's performance in identifying wellness visits. The algorithm demonstrated a specificity of 0.94 (95% CI: 0.91 to 0.96), implying its accuracy in distinguishing non-wellness visits. The algorithm had a sensitivity of 0.86 (95% CI: 0.80 to 0.92), indicating its ability to correctly identify wellness visits as compared to the annotations provided by veterinary experts. The balanced accuracy, calculated as 0.90 (95% CI: 0.87 to 0.93), further confirms the algorithm's overall effectiveness. The algorithm exhibits strong specificity and sensitivity, ensuring accurate identification of a high proportion of wellness visits. Overall, this algorithm holds promise for advancing research on preventive care's role in subclinical disease identification, but prospective studies are needed for validation., Comment: 21 pages, 2 figures, 4 tables
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- 2024
30. Power Analysis for Experiments with Clustered Data, Ratio Metrics, and Regression for Covariate Adjustment
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Hesterberg, Tim and Knight, Ben
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Statistics - Methodology ,Mathematics - Statistics Theory ,Primary 62K99, Secondary 62P30 ,G.3 - Abstract
We describe how to calculate standard errors for A/B tests that include clustered data, ratio metrics, and/or covariate adjustment. We may do this for power analysis/sample size calculations prior to running an experiment using historical data, or after an experiment for hypothesis testing and confidence intervals. The different applications have a common framework, using the sample variance of certain residuals. The framework is compatible with modular software, can be plugged into standard tools, doesn't require computing covariance matrices, and is numerically stable. Using this approach we estimate that covariate adjustment gives a median 66% variance reduction for a key metric, reducing experiment run time by 66%., Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures
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- 2024
31. Skeletal Density Measurements for Adsorbent Nanomaterials
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Gillespie, Andrew K., Piskulich, Zeke A., Knight, Ernest, Prosniewski, Matthew, and Pfeifer, Peter
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science ,Physics - Applied Physics - Abstract
Due to their tunable material properties, sorptive materials have a wide range of applications in energy storage, water treatment, carbon capture, analytical chemistry, and more. One crucial factor in determining the effectiveness of such materials is their skeletal density, or "true density" because it is often used to calculate key metrics, such as storage capacities. In this paper, we present skeletal density measurements through helium pycnometry for several types of adsorbent carbon materials derived from either corncob, sawdust, coffee grounds, polyvinylidene chloride (PVDC), graphitic carbon nitride (GCN), or metal organic frameworks (MOFs). The measured skeletal density of sawdust-based activated carbon was 2.02 +/- 0.05 g/$cm^{ 3}$. The measured skeletal density of coffee-based activated carbon was 2.23 +/- 0.06 $cm^{ 3}$. We also expound upon the impact that skeletal density has upon hydrogen excess adsorption measurements and other calculated engineering quantities. If a skeletal density is underestimated by 10%, it can affect the room temperature excess adsorption by at least 5% at 100 bar and by 7% at 200 bar, depending on the material type., Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables
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- 2024
32. Stalin's Final Films: Cinema, Socialist Realism, and Soviet Postwar Reality, 1945-1953
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Knight, Claire, author and Knight, Claire
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Improving knowledge of quality and safety among general and acute care medicine advanced trainees through a brief quality improvement workshop
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Aung, Ar Kar, Ryall, Mary-Ann, Davis, Sarah, Shukla, Aditi, Knight, Anne, and Lee, Jennifer I
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- 2024
34. Preparing the Teachers of Our Youngest Children: The State of Early Childhood Higher Education in Indiana Revisited. Report
- Author
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University of California, Berkeley. Center for the Study of Child Care Employment, Jenna Knight, Elizabeth Pufall Jones, and Yoonjeon Kim
- Abstract
Stakeholders and advocates in Indiana are committed to advancing strategies that improve ECE services, including workforce preparation and development, to ensure that early educators can meet the complex needs of young children. Critical to these efforts is the establishment of a well-coordinated, comprehensive professional preparation and development system that can train and support a diverse generation of pre-service educators, while also strengthening the skills of the existing ECE workforce. This study looks at how Indiana early childhood higher education programs have changed since 2015. The report describes the early childhood degree programs offered in Indiana, focusing on variations in program content, age group focus, and student field-based learning.
- Published
- 2023
35. Career Paths of Doctoral Recipients in Engineering and Computer Science: Trends by Sex, Race, Citizenship, and Discipline with an Emphasis on Biomedical Engineering
- Author
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Maya Denton, David B. Knight, Jessica R. Deters, Dustin M. Grote, and Maura Borrego
- Abstract
We summarize national-scale data for Ph.D. earners in engineering or computer science from 2015 to 2019 whose post-graduate school employment is known, highlighting outcomes for biological/biomedical/biosystems engineering students. We use NSF's Survey of Earned Doctorates (SED), which has collected information from Ph.D. recipients in the USA since 1957. The data are collected at the time of degree completion and constitute a greater than 90% response rate. Compared to all engineering and computer science disciplines, biological/biomedical/biosystems engineering has a higher proportion going to 4yr/med/research institutions (52% vs. 33%) and non-profit (3.6% vs. 2.9%) and lower proportion going to industry (33% vs. 48%), government (4.3% vs. 8.4%), and is similar for non-US positions (6.1% vs. 5.7%). Compared to 2010--2014 biological/biomedical/biosystems engineering Ph.D. recipients, more 2015--2019 recipients are going to industry (25% to 33%) and fewer to 4yr/med/research institutions (59% to 52%) and government (5.3% to 4.3%). Across all engineering and computer science disciplines, a smaller proportion of females entered industry (43%) compared to males (49%), while a larger proportion of females entered 4yr/med/research institutions (37%) compared to males (32%). Over half of Asian doctoral recipients entered industry, as compared to 38% of Hispanic doctoral recipients. In contrast, a higher proportion of Hispanic individuals (37%) entered 4yr/med/research institutions after their doctoral programs, as compared to 31% of Asian doctoral recipients. Black doctoral recipients had the highest proportion enter positions in government (14%) and non-profit (4%) sectors. Our results are situated in the broader literature focused on postdoctoral career, training, and employment sectors and trends in STEM. We discuss implications for graduate programs, policymakers, and researchers.
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- 2024
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36. PhD Student Funding Patterns: Placing Biomedical, Biological, and Biosystems Engineering in the Context of Engineering Sub-Disciplines, Biological Sciences, and Other STEM Disciplines
- Author
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David B. Knight, Dustin M. Grote, Timothy J. Kinoshita, and Maura Borrego
- Abstract
Whether doctoral students are funded primarily by fellowships, research assistantships, or teaching assistantships impacts their degree completion, time to degree, learning outcomes, and short- and long-term career outcomes. Variations in funding patterns have been studied at the broad field level but not comparing engineering sub-disciplines. We addressed two research questions: How do PhD student funding mechanisms vary across engineering sub-disciplines? And how does variation in funding mechanisms across engineering sub-disciplines map onto the larger STEM disciplinary landscape? We analyzed 103,373 engineering and computing responses to the U.S. Survey of Earned Doctorates collected between 2007 and 2016. We conducted analysis of variance with Bonferroni post hoc comparisons to examine variation in funding across sub-disciplines. Then, we conducted a k-means cluster analysis on percentage variables for fellowship, research, and teaching assistantship funding mechanism with STEM sub-discipline as the unit of analysis. A statistically significantly greater percentage of biomedical/biological engineering doctoral students were funded via a fellowship, compared to every other engineering sub-discipline. Consequently, biomedical/biological engineering had significantly lower proportions of students supported via research and teaching assistantships than nearly all other engineering sub-disciplines. We identified five clusters. The majority of engineering sub-disciplines grouped together into a cluster with high research assistantships and low teaching assistantships. Biomedical/biological engineering clustered in the high fellowships grouping with most other biological sciences but no other engineering sub-disciplines. Biomedical/biological engineering behaves much more like biological and life sciences in utilizing fellowships to fund graduate students, far more than other engineering sub-disciplines. Our study provides further evidence of the prevalence of fellowships in life sciences and how it stretches into biomedical/biological engineering. The majority of engineering sub-disciplines relied more on research assistantships to fund graduate study. The lack of uniformity provides an opportunity to diversify student experiences during their graduate programs but also necessitates an awareness to the advantages and disadvantages that different funding portfolios can bestow on students.
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- 2024
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37. Educating African Immigrant Youth: Schooling and Civic Engagement in K-12 Schools. Language and Literacy Series
- Author
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Vaughn W. M. Watson, Michelle G. Knight-Manuel, Patriann Smith, Vaughn W. M. Watson, Michelle G. Knight-Manuel, and Patriann Smith
- Abstract
This book illuminates emerging perspectives and possibilities of the vibrant schooling and civic lives of Black African youth and communities in the United States, Canada, and globally. Chapters present key research on how to develop and enact teaching methodologies and research approaches that support Black African immigrant and refugee students. The contributors examine contours of the Framework for Educating African Immigrant Youth, which focuses on four complementary approaches for teaching and learning: emboldening tellings of diaspora narratives; navigating the complex past, present, and future of teaching and learning; enacting social civic literacies to extend complex identities; and affirming and extending cultural, heritage, and embodied knowledges, languages, and practices. The frameworks and practices will strengthen how educators address the interplay of identities presented by African and, by extension, Black immigrant populations. Disciplinary perspectives include literacy and language, social studies, civics, mathematics, and higher education; university and community partnerships; teacher education; global and comparative education; and after-school initiatives. Book Features: (1) A focus on honoring and affirming the range of youth and community's diverse, embodied, social-civic literacies and lived experiences as part of their educational journey, reframing harmful narratives of immigrant youth, families, and Africa; (2) Chapter authors that include Black African scholars, early-career, and senior scholars from a range of institutions, including in the United States and Canada; (3) Chapters that draw on and extend a range of theoretical lenses grounded in African epistemologies and ontologies, as well as postcolonial and/or decolonizing approaches, culturally relevant and sustaining frameworks, language and literacy as a social practice, transnationalism, theater as social action, transformative and asset-based processes and practices, migration, and emotional capital, and more; and (4) A cross-disciplinary approach that addresses the scope and heterogeneity of African immigrant youth racialized as Black and their schooling, education, and civic engagement experiences. Implications are considered for teachers, teacher educators, and community educators.
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- 2024
38. Words Matter: Reframing Communication Sciences and Disorders Programs' Thinking about Adolescents
- Author
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Kristin Nellenbach, Carrie Knight, and Bailey Jennings
- Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this investigation was to evaluate language development and disorders course titles across communication sciences and disorders (CSD) graduate programs in an effort to determine whether adolescents were specifically being recognized via inclusive language or dedicated courses. The findings can be used to propel important discussions about the need for inclusive course titles, inform initial directions for improvements in preprofessional education, and guide broader changes in the discipline, especially for the adolescent population. Method: A review of accredited CSD graduate programs across the United States was conducted using the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association EdFind database. A total of 298 master's-level CSD programs were used for this study. CSD course titles located in each of the university's graduate catalogs were documented, categorized, and reviewed by the research team. Results: Of the 298 CSD graduate programs reviewed, one in eight specifically included the word "adolescent(s)" or "adolescence" in the titles of their language development and disorders courses. Remarkably, only four adolescent-focused courses, two of which were listed as electives, were offered across all reviewed programs. A post hoc analysis of the language used in course titling revealed that 42 titles used inclusive terminology. Conclusions: Adolescents are developmentally distinct from children, yet a majority of CSD graduate programs used ambiguous or exclusive words in the titles of their language development and disorders courses. The unintentional failure to recognize this important difference in course titles may be contributing to the ongoing neglect of adolescents within the field. Reframing collective thinking is required for change. Reasons and suggestions for including adolescents in course titles and separate offerings are provided to assist CSD graduate programs in leading the way toward improving equity for adolescents.
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- 2024
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- View/download PDF
39. A Review of Group Design Studies of Reading Comprehension Interventions for Students with ASD
- Author
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Leigh Ann Tipton-Fisler and Erin Knight
- Abstract
This review aimed to synthesize the group design literature to identify the evidence-based reading comprehension interventions for children with ASD. The primary aim was to identify which reading comprehension interventions had demonstrated positive effects for students with ASD in group design studies. This review was initiated using both PsychInfo and ERIC in October 2019 with a second review completed in April 2020. For studies to be included, they had to include pre-/post-data on a reading comprehension intervention and include students with ASD as well as to be (1) peer-reviewed, (2) written in English, and (3) published between 2000 and 2019. The decision to review articles from 2000 forward was based on the publication of the National Reading Panel report (2000) and the wealth of research on the Big Five areas of reading. Five studies were found that met criteria, with a total of 141 students and 87% of the intervention group meeting criteria for ASD. Results showed effectiveness for reading comprehension interventions using anaphoric questions, direct instruction, and comprehension training strategies. These instructional strategies are consistent with single-case design study findings showing efficacy for these strategies with individual students and are important in supporting the variability of executive functioning skills needed for integrating passage information with whole group instruction as well.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Speaking on One's Own Terms: Oracy and Orality as Partners in Classroom Talk
- Author
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Rupert Knight
- Abstract
Spoken language in schools, now often branded as oracy, is seeing something of a resurgence of interest. This is well-founded and to be welcomed. Nevertheless, the policy-level coopting of oracy, as a concept open to various interpretations, raises questions concerning the desirable degree of prescription and conformity to be promoted in pupils' spoken language. Though often encompassing talk as pedagogy, oracy is strongly associated with developing the skills of spoken language. Such skills rest on a number of assumptions and norms around participation in talk that merit examination. This article explores common classroom orthodoxies in terms of who speaks, when they may speak and how they must speak. As a way of examining these orthodoxies, the article proposes a greater acknowledgement of "orality" alongside, and as a precursor to, oracy. Using an illustration from a real lesson, it argues that raising the profile of orality is a reminder of the importance of understanding and appreciating specific and diverse oral traditions before bringing to bear the generalities and possible standardisation of oracy.
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- 2024
41. Early biological markers of post-acute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 infection.
- Author
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Lu, Scott, Peluso, Michael, Glidden, David, Davidson, Michelle, Lugtu, Kara, Pineda-Ramirez, Jesus, Tassetto, Michel, Garcia-Knight, Miguel, Zhang, Amethyst, Goldberg, Sarah, Chen, Jessica, Fortes-Cobby, Maya, Park, Sara, Martinez, Ana, So, Matthew, Donovan, Aidan, Viswanathan, Badri, Hoh, Rebecca, Donohue, Kevin, McIlwain, David, Gaudiliere, Brice, Anglin, Khamal, Yee, Brandon, Chenna, Ahmed, Winslow, John, Petropoulos, Christos, Deeks, Steven, Briggs-Hagen, Melissa, Andino, Raul, Midgley, Claire, Martin, Jeffrey, Saydah, Sharon, and Kelly, John
- Subjects
Humans ,COVID-19 ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Male ,Female ,Adult ,Viral Load ,Biomarkers ,RNA ,Viral ,Middle Aged ,Post-Acute COVID-19 Syndrome ,Aged ,Cytokines ,Antibodies ,Viral ,Immunoglobulin G - Abstract
To understand the roles of acute-phase viral dynamics and host immune responses in post-acute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 infection (PASC), we enrolled 136 participants within 5 days of their first positive SARS-CoV-2 real-time PCR test. Participants self-collected up to 21 nasal specimens within the first 28 days post-symptom onset; interviewer-administered questionnaires and blood samples were collected at enrollment, days 9, 14, 21, 28, and month 4 and 8 post-symptom onset. Defining PASC as the presence of any COVID-associated symptom at their 4-month visit, we compared viral markers (quantity and duration of nasal viral RNA load, infectious viral load, and plasma N-antigen level) and host immune markers (IL-6, IL-10, TNF-α, IFN-α, IFN-γ, MCP, IP-10, and Spike IgG) over the acute period. Compared to those who fully recovered, those reporting PASC demonstrated significantly higher maximum levels of SARS-CoV-2 RNA and N-antigen, burden of RNA and infectious viral shedding, and lower Spike-specific IgG levels within 9 days post-illness onset. No significant differences were identified among a panel of host immune markers. Our results suggest early viral dynamics and the associated host immune responses play a role in the pathogenesis of PASC, highlighting the importance of understanding early biological markers in the natural history of PASC.
- Published
- 2024
42. Impact of diet change on the gut microbiome of common marmosets (Callithrix jacchus).
- Author
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Tang-Wing, Cassandra, Mohanty, Ipsita, Bryant, MacKenzie, Makowski, Katherine, Melendez, Daira, Dorrestein, Pieter, Knight, Rob, Caraballo-Rodríguez, Andrés, Allaband, Celeste, and Jenné, Keith
- Subjects
marmoset ,metabolome ,metagenomics ,microbiome ,nonhuman microbiome ,nonhuman microbiota ,nutrition ,physiology ,primate ,veterinary microbiology ,Animals ,Callithrix ,Gastrointestinal Microbiome ,Diet ,Male ,Female ,Feces ,Bifidobacterium - Abstract
UNLABELLED: Gastrointestinal diseases are the most frequently reported clinical problems in captive common marmosets (Callithrix jacchus), often affecting the health and welfare of the animal and ultimately their use as a research subject. The microbiome has been shown to be intimately connected to diet and gastrointestinal health. Here, we use shotgun metagenomics and untargeted metabolomics in fecal samples of common marmosets collected before, during, and after a dietary transition from a biscuit to a gel diet. The overall health of marmosets, measured as weight recovery and reproductive outcome, improved after the diet transition. Moreover, each marmoset pair had significant shifts in the microbiome and metabolome after the diet transition. In general, we saw a decrease in Escherichia coli and Prevotella species and an increase in Bifidobacterium species. Untargeted metabolic profiles indicated that polyamine levels, specifically cadaverine and putrescine, were high after diet transition, suggesting either an increase in excretion or a decrease in intestinal reabsorption at the intestinal level. In conclusion, our data suggest that Bifidobacterium species could potentially be useful as probiotic supplements to the laboratory marmoset diet. Future studies with a larger sample size will be beneficial to show that this is consistent with the diet change. IMPORTANCE: Appropriate diet and health of the common marmoset in captivity are essential both for the welfare of the animal and to improve experimental outcomes. Our study shows that a gel diet compared to a biscuit diet improves the health of a marmoset colony, is linked to increases in Bifidobacterium species, and increases the removal of molecules associated with disease. The diet transition had an influence on the molecular changes at both the pair and time point group levels, but only at the pair level for the microbial changes. It appears to be more important which genes and functions present changed rather than specific microbes. Further studies are needed to identify specific components that should be considered when choosing an appropriate diet and additional supplementary foods, as well as to validate the benefits of providing probiotics. Probiotics containing Bifidobacterium species appear to be useful as probiotic supplements to the laboratory marmoset diet, but additional work is needed to validate these findings.
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- 2024
43. Associations between gut microbiota and incident fractures in the FINRISK cohort.
- Author
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Grahnemo, Louise, Kambur, Oleg, Lahti, Leo, Jousilahti, Pekka, Niiranen, Teemu, Knight, Rob, Salomaa, Veikko, Havulinna, Aki, and Ohlsson, Claes
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Gastrointestinal Microbiome ,Humans ,Male ,Female ,Fractures ,Bone ,Middle Aged ,Finland ,Aged ,Bacteria ,Metagenome ,Cohort Studies ,Incidence ,Metagenomics ,Proteobacteria ,Risk Factors ,Adult - Abstract
The gut microbiota (GM) can regulate bone mass, but its association with incident fractures is unknown. We used Cox regression models to determine whether the GM composition is associated with incident fractures in the large FINRISK 2002 cohort (n = 7043, 1092 incident fracture cases, median follow-up time 18 years) with information on GM composition and functionality from shotgun metagenome sequencing. Higher alpha diversity was associated with decreased fracture risk (hazard ratio [HR] 0.92 per standard deviation increase in Shannon index, 95% confidence interval 0.87-0.96). For beta diversity, the first principal component was associated with fracture risk (Aitchison distance, HR 0.90, 0.85-0.96). In predefined phyla analyses, we observed that the relative abundance of Proteobacteria was associated with increased fracture risk (HR 1.14, 1.07-1.20), while the relative abundance of Tenericutes was associated with decreased fracture risk (HR 0.90, 0.85-0.96). Explorative sub-analyses within the Proteobacteria phylum showed that higher relative abundance of Gammaproteobacteria was associated with increased fracture risk. Functionality analyses showed that pathways related to amino acid metabolism and lipopolysaccharide biosynthesis associated with fracture risk. The relative abundance of Proteobacteria correlated with pathways for amino acid metabolism, while the relative abundance of Tenericutes correlated with pathways for butyrate synthesis. In conclusion, the overall GM composition was associated with incident fractures. The relative abundance of Proteobacteria, especially Gammaproteobacteria, was associated with increased fracture risk, while the relative abundance of Tenericutes was associated with decreased fracture risk. Functionality analyses demonstrated that pathways known to regulate bone health may underlie these associations.
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- 2024
44. Community Health Navigators for Cancer Screening Among Deaf, Deafblind, and Hard of Hearing Adults Who Use American Sign Language.
- Author
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Bergeron, E, Valdez, R, Moreland, C, Wang, R, Knight, T, and Kushalnagar, P
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Cancer prevention ,Deaf ,Hearing loss ,Sign language ,Humans ,Sign Language ,Early Detection of Cancer ,Focus Groups ,Female ,Male ,Community Health Workers ,Community-Based Participatory Research ,Persons With Hearing Impairments ,Adult ,Middle Aged ,Patient Navigation ,Communication Barriers ,Needs Assessment ,Neoplasms ,Health Services Accessibility ,Deafness - Abstract
Deaf, deafblind, and hard of hearing (DDBHH) individuals experience barriers to accessing cancer screening, including ineffective patient-physician communication when discussing screening recommendations. For other underserved communities, culturally and linguistically aligned community health navigators (CHNs) have been shown to improve cancer screening and care. A needs assessment study was conducted to identify barriers and gather recommendations for CHN training resources. A community-based participatory needs assessment was conducted from May 2022 to June 2022 using three focus groups. Eight were cancer survivors, six advocates/navigators, and three clinicians. All questions were semi-structured and covered screening barriers, observations or personal experiences, perceived usefulness of having a CHN to promote cancer screening adherence, and training resources that may be useful to American Sign Language (ASL)-proficient CHNs, who are also culturally and linguistically aligned. Out of 20 focus group participants, seven self-identified as persons of color. Data highlighted systemic, attitudinal, communication, and personal-level barriers as recurrent themes. The most frequently cited barrier was access to training that supports the role and competencies of CHNs, followed by cultural considerations, access to cancer guidelines in ASL, dialect diversity in sign language, and the health system itself. Unaddressed barriers can contribute to health disparities, such as lower preventive cancer screening rates amongst DDBHH individuals. The next step is to translate recommendations into actionable tasks for DDBHH CHN training programs. As a result, CHNs will be well-equipped to help DDBHH individuals navigate and overcome their unique barriers to cancer screening and healthcare access.
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- 2024
45. Pangenome comparison of Bacteroides fragilis genomospecies unveils genetic diversity and ecological insights
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Oles, Renee E, Terrazas, Marvic Carrillo, Loomis, Luke R, Hsu, Chia-Yun, Tribelhorn, Caitlin, Belda-Ferre, Pedro, C., Allison, Bryant, MacKenzie, Young, Jocelyn A, Carrow, Hannah C, Sandborn, William J, Dulai, Parambir S, Sivagnanam, Mamata, Pride, David, Knight, Rob, and Chu, Hiutung
- Subjects
Microbiology ,Biological Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Microbiome ,Genetics ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Digestive Diseases ,Infectious Diseases ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Infection ,Bacteroides fragilis ,Humans ,Genome ,Bacterial ,Genetic Variation ,Gastrointestinal Microbiome ,Phylogeny ,Bacteroides Infections ,Whole Genome Sequencing ,Drug Resistance ,Bacterial ,pangenome ,commensal bacteria ,genomic diversity ,niche adaptation ,Bacteroides - Abstract
Bacteroides fragilis is a Gram-negative commensal bacterium commonly found in the human colon, which differentiates into two genomospecies termed divisions I and II. Through a comprehensive collection of 694 B. fragilis whole genome sequences, we identify novel features distinguishing these divisions. Our study reveals a distinct geographic distribution with division I strains predominantly found in North America and division II strains in Asia. Additionally, division II strains are more frequently associated with bloodstream infections, suggesting a distinct pathogenic potential. We report differences between the two divisions in gene abundance related to metabolism, virulence, stress response, and colonization strategies. Notably, division II strains harbor more antimicrobial resistance (AMR) genes than division I strains. These findings offer new insights into the functional roles of division I and II strains, indicating specialized niches within the intestine and potential pathogenic roles in extraintestinal sites.ImportanceUnderstanding the distinct functions of microbial species in the gut microbiome is crucial for deciphering their impact on human health. Classifying division II strains as Bacteroides fragilis can lead to erroneous associations, as researchers may mistakenly attribute characteristics observed in division II strains to the more extensively studied division I B. fragilis. Our findings underscore the necessity of recognizing these divisions as separate species with distinct functions. We unveil new findings of differential gene prevalence between division I and II strains in genes associated with intestinal colonization and survival strategies, potentially influencing their role as gut commensals and their pathogenicity in extraintestinal sites. Despite the significant niche overlap and colonization patterns between these groups, our study highlights the complex dynamics that govern strain distribution and behavior, emphasizing the need for a nuanced understanding of these microorganisms.
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- 2024
46. House dust metagenome and pulmonary function in a US farming population.
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Lee, Mikyeong, Kaul, Abhishek, Ward, James, Zhu, Qiyun, Richards, Marie, Wang, Ziyue, González, Antonio, Parks, Christine, Beane Freeman, Laura, Umbach, David, Motsinger-Reif, Alison, Knight, Rob, and London, Stephanie
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Metagenome ,Microbiome ,Microbiota ,Respiratory function tests ,Spirometry ,Whole genome sequencing ,Dust ,Humans ,Metagenome ,Female ,Male ,United States ,Microbiota ,Middle Aged ,Lung ,Adult ,Bacteria ,Forced Expiratory Volume ,Agriculture ,Respiratory Function Tests ,Vital Capacity ,Metagenomics - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic exposure to microorganisms inside homes can impact respiratory health. Few studies have used advanced sequencing methods to examine adult respiratory outcomes, especially continuous measures. We aimed to identify metagenomic profiles in house dust related to the quantitative traits of pulmonary function and airway inflammation in adults. Microbial communities, 1264 species (389 genera), in vacuumed bedroom dust from 779 homes in a US cohort were characterized by whole metagenome shotgun sequencing. We examined two overall microbial diversity measures: richness (the number of individual microbial species) and Shannon index (reflecting both richness and relative abundance). To identify specific differentially abundant genera, we applied the Lasso estimator with high-dimensional inference methods, a novel framework for analyzing microbiome data in relation to continuous traits after accounting for all taxa examined together. RESULTS: Pulmonary function measures (forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1), forced vital capacity (FVC), and FEV1/FVC ratio) were not associated with overall dust microbial diversity. However, many individual microbial genera were differentially abundant (p-value < 0.05 controlling for all other microbial taxa examined) in relation to FEV1, FVC, or FEV1/FVC. Similarly, fractional exhaled nitric oxide (FeNO), a marker of airway inflammation, was unrelated to overall microbial diversity but associated with differential abundance for many individual genera. Several genera, including Limosilactobacillus, were associated with a pulmonary function measure and FeNO, while others, including Moraxella to FEV1/FVC and Stenotrophomonas to FeNO, were associated with a single trait. CONCLUSIONS: Using state-of-the-art metagenomic sequencing, we identified specific microorganisms in indoor dust related to pulmonary function and airway inflammation. Some were previously associated with respiratory conditions; others were novel, suggesting specific environmental microbial components contribute to various respiratory outcomes. The methods used are applicable to studying microbiome in relation to other continuous outcomes. Video Abstract.
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- 2024
47. The Impact of Intimate Partner Violence on Homelessness and Returns to Housing: A Qualitative Analysis From the California Statewide Study of People Experiencing Homelessness.
- Author
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Hargrave, Anita S, Knight, Kelly R, Dhatt, Zena K, Taylor, Grace, Martinez, Dez, and Kushel, Margot
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Social Work ,Criminology ,Human Society ,Violence Research ,Women's Health ,Mental Health ,Homelessness ,Violence Against Women ,Social Determinants of Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Peace ,Justice and Strong Institutions ,Gender Equality ,domestic violence ,anything related to domestic violence ,intervention/treatment ,domestic violence and cultural contexts ,Psychology ,Social work ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
Homelessness is a public health concern in California and throughout the United States. Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a risk factor for experiencing homelessness. Few studies have examined the interplay between IPV, homelessness, and housing. Qualitative methods can provide a greater understanding of the lived experience of IPV and homelessness to identify potential solutions. We purposefully sampled 104 adults who reported experiencing IPV in the California Statewide Study of People Experiencing Homelessness (CASPEH), a representative, mixed-methods study. We administered semi-structured interviews focusing on IPV and six other topic areas pertaining to homelessness from October 2021 to May 2022. We created and applied a codebook with a multidisciplinary team using a hybrid of deductive and inductive logic. Our analysis included all participants who discussed IPV and homelessness across the seven studies. We conducted a thematic analysis using an interpretivist approach and informed by grounded theory. We found that violence within a partnership was multidimensional (physical, sexual, emotional, and financial) and bidirectional. We identified six themes: (1) IPV precipitated and prolonged homelessness; (2) Need for housing, financial stability, and material resources influenced staying in abusive relationships; (3) Alcohol and illicit substance use exacerbated violence between partners; (4) Participants struggled to find resources in domestic violence (DV) shelters; (5) The healthcare system did not provide substantial support; and (6) discrimination and stigma influenced equitable access to housing and DV resources. Experiencing IPV contributed to homelessness and impeded returns to housing. Limitations in current IPV resources impede care. We propose equitable expansion of survivor-centered services that improve access to long-term subsidized housing, prevent IPV and homelessness with flexible funding options, and facilitate rapid exits from homelessness through trauma-informed, non-congregate shelter that transitions to permanent housing.
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- 2024
48. Trends in volumes and survival after hematopoietic cell transplantation in racial/ethnic minorities.
- Author
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Khera, Nandita, Ailawadhi, Sikander, Brazauskas, Ruta, Patel, Jinalben, Jacobs, Benjamin, Ustun, Celalettin, Ballen, Karen, Abid, Muhammad, Diaz Perez, Miguel, Al-Homsi, A, Hashem, Hasan, Hong, Sanghee, Munker, Reinhold, Schears, Raquel, Lazarus, Hillard, Ciurea, Stefan, Badawy, Sherif, Savani, Bipin, Wirk, Baldeep, LeMaistre, C, Bhatt, Neel, Beitinjaneh, Amer, Aljurf, Mahmoud, Sharma, Akshay, Cerny, Jan, Knight, Jennifer, Kelkar, Amar, Yared, Jean, Kindwall-Keller, Tamila, Winestone, Lena, Steinberg, Amir, Arnold, Staci, Seo, Sachiko, Preussler, Jaime, Hossain, Nasheed, Fingrut, Warren, Agrawal, Vaibhav, Hashmi, Shahrukh, Lehmann, Leslie, Wood, William, Rangarajan, Hemalatha, Saber, Wael, and Hahn, Theresa
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Humans ,Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation ,Male ,Female ,Adult ,Middle Aged ,Ethnic and Racial Minorities ,Adolescent ,Child ,Aged ,Young Adult ,Child ,Preschool - Abstract
There has been an increase in volume as well as an improvement in overall survival (OS) after hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) for hematologic disorders. It is unknown if these changes have affected racial/ethnic minorities equally. In this observational study from the Center for International Blood and Marrow Transplant Research of 79 904 autologous (auto) and 65 662 allogeneic (allo) HCTs, we examined the volume and rates of change of autoHCT and alloHCT over time and trends in OS in 4 racial/ethnic groups: non-Hispanic Whites (NHWs), non-Hispanic African Americans (NHAAs), and Hispanics across 5 2-year cohorts from 2009 to 2018. Rates of change were compared using Poisson model. Adjusted and unadjusted Cox proportional hazards models examined trends in mortality in the 4 racial/ethnic groups over 5 study time periods. The rates of increase in volume were significantly higher for Hispanics and NHAAs vs NHW for both autoHCT and alloHCT. Adjusted overall mortality after autoHCT was comparable across all racial/ethnic groups. NHAA adults (hazard ratio [HR] 1.13; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.04-1.22; P = .004) and pediatric patients (HR 1.62; 95% CI 1.3-2.03; P < .001) had a higher risk of mortality after alloHCT than NHWs. Improvement in OS over time was seen in all 4 groups after both autoHCT and alloHCT. Our study shows the rate of change for the use of autoHCT and alloHCT is higher in NHAAs and Hispanics than in NHWs. Survival after autoHCT and alloHCT improved over time; however, NHAAs have worse OS after alloHCT, which has persisted. Continued efforts are needed to mitigate disparities for patients requiring alloHCT.
- Published
- 2024
49. Effects of ganaxolone on non-seizure outcomes in CDKL5 Deficiency Disorder: Double-blind placebo-controlled randomized trial.
- Author
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Downs, J, Jacoby, P, Specchio, N, Cross, H, Amin, S, Bahi-Buisson, N, Rajaraman, Rajsekar, Suter, B, Devinsky, O, Aimetti, A, Busse, G, Olson, H, Demarest, S, Benke, T, and Pestana-Knight, E
- Subjects
Anti-Seizure medication ,CDKL5 deficiency disorder ,Epilepsy ,Patient-reported outcomes ,Humans ,Female ,Male ,Double-Blind Method ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Adolescent ,Quality of Life ,Young Adult ,Treatment Outcome ,Epileptic Syndromes ,Seizures ,Pregnanolone ,Spasms ,Infantile - Abstract
CDKL5 deficiency disorder (CDD) is a rare developmental and epileptic encephalopathy. Ganaxolone, a neuroactive steroid, reduces the frequency of major motor seizures in children with CDD. This analysis explored the effect of ganaxolone on non-seizure outcomes. Children (2-19 years) with genetically confirmed CDD and ≥ 16 major motor seizures per month were enrolled in a double-blind randomized placebo-controlled trial. Ganaxolone or placebo was administered three times daily for 17 weeks. Behaviour was measured with the Anxiety, Depression and Mood Scale (ADAMS), daytime sleepiness with the Child Health Sleep Questionnaire, and quality of life with the Quality of Life Inventory-Disability (QI-Disability) scale. Scores were compared using ANOVA, adjusted for age, sex, number of anti-seizure mediations, baseline 28-day major motor seizure frequency, baseline developmental skills, and behaviour, sleep or quality of life scores. 101 children with CDD (39 clinical sites, 8 countries) were randomized. Median (IQR) age was 6 (3-10) years, 79.2 % were female, and 50 received ganaxolone. After 17 weeks of treatment, Manic/Hyperactive scores (mean difference 1.27, 95%CI -2.38,-0.16) and Compulsive Behaviour scores (mean difference 0.58, 95%CI -1.14,-0.01) were lower (improved) in the ganaxolone group compared with the placebo group. Daytime sleepiness scores were similar between groups. The total change in QOL score for children in the ganaxolone group was 2.6 points (95%CI -1.74,7.02) higher (improved) than in the placebo group but without statistical significance. Along with better seizure control, children who received ganaxolone had improved behavioural scores in select domains compared to placebo.
- Published
- 2024
50. Time of sample collection is critical for the replicability of microbiome analyses
- Author
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Allaband, Celeste, Lingaraju, Amulya, Flores Ramos, Stephany, Kumar, Tanya, Javaheri, Haniyeh, Tiu, Maria D, Dantas Machado, Ana Carolina, Richter, R Alexander, Elijah, Emmanuel, Haddad, Gabriel G, Leone, Vanessa A, Dorrestein, Pieter C, Knight, Rob, and Zarrinpar, Amir
- Subjects
Medical Biochemistry and Metabolomics ,Medical Physiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Microbiome ,Genetics ,Animals ,Mice ,Microbiota ,Male ,Specimen Handling ,RNA ,Ribosomal ,16S ,Time Factors ,Reproducibility of Results ,Circadian Rhythm ,Retrospective Studies ,Medical biochemistry and metabolomics ,Medical physiology ,Nutrition and dietetics - Abstract
As the microbiome field moves from descriptive and associative research to mechanistic and interventional studies, being able to account for all confounding variables in the experimental design, which includes the maternal effect1, cage effect2, facility differences3, as well as laboratory and sample handling protocols4, is critical for interpretability of results. Despite significant procedural and bioinformatic improvements, unexplained variability and lack of replicability still occur. One underexplored factor is that the microbiome is dynamic and exhibits diurnal oscillations that can change microbiome composition5-7. In this retrospective analysis of 16S amplicon sequencing studies in male mice, we show that sample collection time affects the conclusions drawn from microbiome studies and its effect size is larger than those of a daily experimental intervention or dietary changes. The timing of divergence of the microbiome composition between experimental and control groups is unique to each experiment. Sample collection times as short as only 4 hours apart can lead to vastly different conclusions. Lack of consistency in the time of sample collection may explain poor cross-study replicability in microbiome research. The impact of diurnal rhythms on the outcomes and study design of other fields is unknown but likely significant.
- Published
- 2024
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