45 results on '"Leung, Michelle"'
Search Results
2. Natural barriers: waterfall transit by small flying animals
- Author
-
Ortega-Jimenez, Victor M, Herbst, Eva C, Leung, Michelle S, and Dudley, Robert
- Subjects
Zoology ,Biological Sciences ,two-phase flows ,flight ,hummingbirds ,insect ,swifts - Abstract
Waterfalls are conspicuous geomorphological features with heterogeneous structure, complex dynamics and multiphase flows. Swifts, dippers and starlings are well-known to nest behind waterfalls, and have been reported to fly through them. For smaller fliers, by contrast, waterfalls seem to represent impenetrable barriers, but associated physical constraints and the kinematic responses of volant animals during transit are unknown. Here, we describe the flight behaviour of hummingbirds (the sister group to the swifts) and of various insect taxa as they fly through an artificial sheet waterfall. We additionally launched plastic balls at different speeds at the waterfall so as to assess the inertial dependence of sheet penetration. Hummingbirds were able to penetrate the waterfall with reductions in both their translational speed, and stroke amplitude. The body tilted more vertically and exhibited greater rotations in roll, pitch and yaw, along with increases in tail spread and pitch. The much smaller plastic balls and some flies moving at speeds greater than 2.3 m s-1 and 1.6 m s-1, respectively, also overcame effects of surface tension and water momentum and passed through the waterfall; objects with lower momentum, by contrast, entered the sheet but then fell along with the moving water. Waterfalls can thus represent impenetrable physical barriers for small and slow animal fliers, and may also serve to exclude both predators and parasites from nests of some avian taxa.
- Published
- 2020
3. Superhydrophobic Paper Strips with Embedded Agarose-Anthocyanin Mini-Discs for Point-of-Need Quantitative pH Measurements.
- Author
-
Leung, Michelle, Zhang, Lingling, Li, Xiaochun, and Yu, Hua-Zhong
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Disease Modeling with 3D Cell-Based Assays Using a Novel Flowchip System and High-Content Imaging
- Author
-
Cromwell, Evan F., Leung, Michelle, Hammer, Matthew, Thai, Anthony, Rajendra, Rashmi, and Sirenko, Oksana
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Efficacy of Phase 1 of Life Goals Programme on symptom reduction and mood stability for bipolar disorder
- Author
-
So, Suzanne H., Mak, Arthur Dun-ping, Chan, Pui-shuen, Lo, Chloe Chor-wing, Na, Shirley, Leung, Michelle Hoi-ting, Ng, Iris Hoi-ching, Chau, Anson Kai Chun, and Lee, Sing
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Normal sonographic renal length measurements in an Australian pediatric population
- Author
-
Coombs, Peter R., Lavender, Ilona, Leung, Michelle Y. Z., Woods, Jessica C., Paul, Eldho, Webb, Nathalie, and Ditchfield, Michael
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Subclinical early posttraumatic seizures detected by continuous EEG monitoring in a consecutive pediatric cohort
- Author
-
Arndt, Daniel H, Lerner, Jason T, Matsumoto, Joyce H, Madikians, Andranik, Yudovin, Sue, Valino, Hannah, McArthur, David L, Wu, Joyce Y, Leung, Michelle, Buxey, Farzad, Szeliga, Conrad, Van Hirtum‐Das, Michele, Sankar, Raman, Brooks‐Kayal, Amy, and Giza, Christopher C
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Childhood Injury ,Traumatic Head and Spine Injury ,Brain Disorders ,Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) ,Neurosciences ,Neurodegenerative ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Epilepsy ,Injuries and accidents ,Adolescent ,Anticonvulsants ,Brain Injuries ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Electroencephalography ,Epilepsies ,Partial ,Female ,Glasgow Coma Scale ,Humans ,Infant ,Male ,Monitoring ,Physiologic ,Prospective Studies ,Risk Factors ,Seizures ,Status Epilepticus ,Clinical neurophysiology ,Children ,ICU ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
PurposeTraumatic brain injury (TBI) is an important cause of morbidity and mortality in children, and early posttraumatic seizures (EPTS) are a contributing factor to ongoing acute damage. Continuous video-EEG monitoring (cEEG) was utilized to assess the burden of clinical and electrographic EPTS.MethodsEighty-seven consecutive, unselected (mild - severe), acute TBI patients requiring pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) admission at two academic centers were monitored prospectively with cEEG per established clinical TBI protocols. Clinical and subclinical seizures and status epilepticus (SE, clinical and subclinical) were assessed for their relation to clinical risk factors and short-term outcome measures.Key findingsOf all patients, 42.5% (37/87) had seizures. Younger age (p = 0.002) and injury mechanism (abusive head trauma - AHT, p < 0.001) were significant risk factors. Subclinical seizures occurred in 16.1% (14/87), while 6.9% (6/87) had only subclinical seizures. Risk factors for subclinical seizures included younger age (p < 0.001), AHT (p < 0.001), and intraaxial bleed (p < 0.001). SE occurred in 18.4% (16/87) with risk factors including younger age (p < 0.001), AHT (p < 0.001), and intraaxial bleed (p = 0.002). Subclinical SE was detected in 13.8% (12/87) with significant risk factors including younger age (p < 0.001), AHT (p = 0.001), and intraaxial bleed (p = 0.004). Subclinical seizures were associated with lower discharge King's Outcome Scale for Childhood Head Injury (KOSCHI) score (p = 0.002). SE and subclinical SE were associated with increased hospital length of stay (p = 0.017 and p = 0.041, respectively) and lower hospital discharge KOSCHI (p = 0.007 and p = 0.040, respectively).SignificancecEEG monitoring significantly improves detection of seizures/SE and is the only way to detect subclinical seizures/SE. cEEG may be indicated after pediatric TBI, particularly in younger children, AHT cases, and those with intraaxial blood on computerized tomography (CT).
- Published
- 2013
8. Persistence is key: Refining immunotherapy response prediction
- Author
-
Leung, Michelle, primary and McGranahan, Nicholas, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Body composition and lung cancer-associated cachexia in TRACERx
- Author
-
Al-Sawaf, Othman, Weiss, Jakob, Skrzypski, Marcin, Lam, Jie Min, Karasaki, Takahiro, Zambrana, Francisco, Kidd, Andrew C, Frankell, Alexander M, Watkins, Thomas BK, Martinez-Ruiz, Carlos, Puttick, Clare, Black, James RM, Huebner, Ariana, Al Bakir, Maise, Sokac, Mateo, Collins, Susie, Veeriah, Selvaraju, Magno, Neil, Naceur-Lombardelli, Cristina, Prymas, Paulina, Toncheva, Antonia, Ward, Sophia, Jayanth, Nick, Salgado, Roberto, Bridge, Christopher P, Christiani, David C, Mak, Raymond H, Bay, Camden, Rosenthal, Michael, Sattar, Naveed, Welsh, Paul, Liu, Ying, Perrimon, Norbert, Popuri, Karteek, Beg, Mirza Faisal, McGranahan, Nicholas, Hackshaw, Allan, Breen, Danna M, O'Rahilly, Stephen, Birkbak, Nicolai J, Aerts, Hugo JWL, Jamal-Hanjani, Mariam, Swanton, Charles, Lester, Jason F, Bajaj, Amrita, Nakas, Apostolos, Sodha-Ramdeen, Azmina, Ang, Keng, Tufail, Mohamad, Chowdhry, Mohammed Fiyaz, Scotland, Molly, Boyles, Rebecca, Rathinam, Sridhar, Wilson, Claire, Marrone, Domenic, Dulloo, Sean, Fennell, Dean A, Matharu, Gurdeep, Shaw, Jacqui A, Riley, Joan, Primrose, Lindsay, Boleti, Ekaterini, Cheyne, Heather, Khalil, Mohammed, Richardson, Shirley, Cruickshank, Tracey, Price, Gillian, Kerr, Keith M, Benafif, Sarah, Gilbert, Kayleigh, Naidu, Babu, Patel, Akshay J, Osman, Aya, Lacson, Christer, Langman, Gerald, Shackleford, Helen, Djearaman, Madava, Kadiri, Salma, Middleton, Gary, Leek, Angela, Hodgkinson, Jack Davies, Totten, Nicola, Montero, Angeles, Smith, Elaine, Fontaine, Eustace, Granato, Felice, Doran, Helen, Novasio, Juliette, Rammohan, Kendadai, Joseph, Leena, Bishop, Paul, Shah, Rajesh, Moss, Stuart, Joshi, Vijay, Crosbie, Philip, Gomes, Fabio, Brown, Kate, Carter, Mathew, Chaturvedi, Anshuman, Priest, Lynsey, Oliveira, Pedro, Lindsay, Colin R, Blackhall, Fiona H, Krebs, Matthew G, Summers, Yvonne, Clipson, Alexandra, Tugwood, Jonathan, Kerr, Alastair, Rothwell, Dominic G, Kilgour, Elaine, Dive, Caroline, Schwarz, Roland F, Kaufmann, Tom L, Wilson, Gareth A, Rosenthal, Rachel, Van Loo, Peter, Szallasi, Zoltan, Kisistok, Judit, Diossy, Miklos, Demeulemeester, Jonas, Bunkum, Abigail, Stewart, Aengus, Magness, Alastair, Rowan, Andrew, Karamani, Angeliki, Chain, Benny, Campbell, Brittany B, Castignani, Carla, Bailey, Chris, Abbosh, Christopher, Weeden, Clare E, Lee, Claudia, Richard, Corentin, Hiley, Crispin T, Moore, David A, Pearce, David R, Karagianni, Despoina, Biswas, Dhruva, Levi, Dina, Hoxha, Elena, Cadieux, Elizabeth Larose, Lim, Emilia L, Colliver, Emma, Nye, Emma, Gronroos, Eva, Galvez-Cancino, Felip, Athanasopoulou, Foteini, Gimeno-Valiente, Francisco, Kassiotis, George, Stavrou, Georgia, Mastrokalos, Gerasimos, Zhai, Haoran, Lowe, Helen L, Matos, Ignacio Garcia, Goldman, Jacki, Reading, James L, Herrero, Javier, Rane, Jayant K, Nicod, Jerome, Hartley, John A, Peggs, Karl S, Enfield, Katey SS, Selvaraju, Kayalvizhi, Thol, Kerstin, Litchfield, Kevin, Ng, Kevin W, Chen, Kezhong, Dijkstra, Krijn, Grigoriadis, Kristiana, Thakkar, Krupa, Ensell, Leah, Shah, Mansi, Duran, Marcos Vasquez, Litovchenko, Maria, Sunderland, Mariana Werner, Hill, Mark S, Dietzen, Michelle, Leung, Michelle, Escudero, Mickael, Angelova, Mihaela, Tanic, Miljana, Sivakumar, Monica, Kanu, Nnennaya, Chervova, Olga, Lucas, Olivia, Pich, Oriol, Hobson, Philip, Pawlik, Piotr, Stone, Richard Kevin, Bentham, Robert, Hynds, Robert E, Vendramin, Roberto, Saghafinia, Sadegh, Lopez, Saioa, Gamble, Samuel, Ung, Seng Kuong Anakin, Quezada, Sergio A, Vanloo, Sharon, Zaccaria, Simone, Hessey, Sonya, Boeing, Stefan, Beck, Stephan, Bola, Supreet Kaur, Denner, Tamara, Marafioti, Teresa, Mourikis, Thanos P, Spanswick, Victoria, Barbe, Vittorio, Lu, Wei-Ting, Hill, William, Liu, Wing Kin, Wu, Yin, Naito, Yutaka, Ramsden, Zoe, Veiga, Catarina, Royle, Gary, Collins-Fekete, Charles-Antoine, Fraioli, Francesco, Ashford, Paul, Clark, Tristan, Forster, Martin D, Lee, Siow Ming, Borg, Elaine, Falzon, Mary, Papadatos-Pastos, Dionysis, Wilson, James, Ahmad, Tanya, Procter, Alexander James, Ahmed, Asia, Taylor, Magali N, Nair, Arjun, Lawrence, David, Patrini, Davide, Navani, Neal, Thakrar, Ricky M, Janes, Sam M, Hoogenboom, Emilie Martinoni, Monk, Fleur, Holding, James W, Choudhary, Junaid, Bhakhri, Kunal, Scarci, Marco, Hayward, Martin, Panagiotopoulos, Nikolaos, Gorman, Pat, Khiroya, Reena, Stephens, Robert CM, Wong, Yien Ning Sophia, Bandula, Steve, Sharp, Abigail, Smith, Sean, Gower, Nicole, Dhanda, Harjot Kaur, Chan, Kitty, Pilotti, Camilla, Leslie, Rachel, Grapa, Anca, Zhang, Hanyun, AbdulJabbar, Khalid, Pan, Xiaoxi, Yuan, Yinyin, Chuter, David, MacKenzie, Mairead, Chee, Serena, Alzetani, Aiman, Cave, Judith, Scarlett, Lydia, Richards, Jennifer, Ingram, Papawadee, Austin, Silvia, Lim, Eric, De Sousa, Paulo, Jordan, Simon, Rice, Alexandra, Raubenheimer, Hilgardt, Bhayani, Harshil, Ambrose, Lyn, Devaraj, Anand, Chavan, Hema, Begum, Sofina, Buderi, Silviu, Kaniu, Daniel, Malima, Mpho, Booth, Sarah, Nicholson, Andrew G, Fernandes, Nadia, Shah, Pratibha, Proli, Chiara, Hewish, Madeleine, Danson, Sarah, Shackcloth, Michael J, Robinson, Lily, Russell, Peter, Blyth, Kevin G, Dick, Craig, Le Quesne, John, Kirk, Alan, Asif, Mo, Bilancia, Rocco, Kostoulas, Nikos, and Thomas, Mathew
- Subjects
Male ,Proteomics ,Cachexia ,Lung Neoplasms ,Antigens, Neoplasm ,Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung ,Body Weight ,Body Composition ,Humans ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Neoplasm Proteins - Abstract
Cancer-associated cachexia (CAC) is a major contributor to morbidity and mortality in individuals with non-small cell lung cancer. Key features of CAC include alterations in body composition and body weight. Here, we explore the association between body composition and body weight with survival and delineate potential biological processes and mediators that contribute to the development of CAC. Computed tomography-based body composition analysis of 651 individuals in the TRACERx (TRAcking non-small cell lung Cancer Evolution through therapy (Rx)) study suggested that individuals in the bottom 20th percentile of the distribution of skeletal muscle or adipose tissue area at the time of lung cancer diagnosis, had significantly shorter lung cancer-specific survival and overall survival. This finding was validated in 420 individuals in the independent Boston Lung Cancer Study. Individuals classified as having developed CAC according to one or more features at relapse encompassing loss of adipose or muscle tissue, or body mass index-adjusted weight loss were found to have distinct tumor genomic and transcriptomic profiles compared with individuals who did not develop such features. Primary non-small cell lung cancers from individuals who developed CAC were characterized by enrichment of inflammatory signaling and epithelial-mesenchymal transitional pathways, and differentially expressed genes upregulated in these tumors included cancer-testis antigen MAGEA6 and matrix metalloproteinases, such as ADAMTS3. In an exploratory proteomic analysis of circulating putative mediators of cachexia performed in a subset of 110 individuals from TRACERx, a significant association between circulating GDF15 and loss of body weight, skeletal muscle and adipose tissue was identified at relapse, supporting the potential therapeutic relevance of targeting GDF15 in the management of CAC. ispartof: NATURE MEDICINE vol:29 issue:4 ispartof: location:United States status: Published online
- Published
- 2023
10. The evolution of non-small cell lung cancer metastases in TRACERx
- Author
-
Al Bakir, Maise, Huebner, Ariana, Martinez-Ruiz, Carlos, Grigoriadis, Kristiana, Watkins, Thomas BK, Pich, Oriol, Moore, David A, Veeriah, Selvaraju, Ward, Sophia, Laycock, Joanne, Johnson, Diana, Rowan, Andrew, Razaq, Maryam, Akther, Mita, Naceur-Lombardelli, Cristina, Prymas, Paulina, Toncheva, Antonia, Hessey, Sonya, Dietzen, Michelle, Colliver, Emma, Frankell, Alexander, Bunkum, Abigail, Lim, Emilia L, Karasaki, Takahiro, Abbosh, Christopher, Hiley, Crispin T, Hill, Mark S, Cook, Daniel E, Wilson, Gareth A, Salgado, Roberto, Nye, Emma, Stone, Richard Kevin, Fennell, Dean A, Price, Gillian, Kerr, Keith M, Naidu, Babu, Middleton, Gary, Summers, Yvonne, Lindsay, Colin R, Blackhall, Fiona H, Cave, Judith, Blyth, Kevin G, Nair, Arjun, Ahmed, Asia, Taylor, Magali N, Procter, Alexander James, Falzon, Mary, Lawrence, David, Navani, Neal, Thakrar, Ricky M, Janes, Sam M, Papadatos-Pastos, Dionysis, Forster, Martin D, Lee, Siow Ming, Ahmad, Tanya, Quezada, Sergio, Peggs, Karl S, Van Loo, Peter, Dive, Caroline, Hackshaw, Allan, Birkbak, Nicolai J, Zaccaria, Simone, Jamal-Hanjani, Mariam, McGranahan, Nicholas, Swanton, Charles, Lester, Jason F, Bajaj, Amrita, Nakas, Apostolos, Sodha-Ramdeen, Azmina, Ang, Keng, Tufail, Mohamad, Chowdhry, Mohammed Fiyaz, Scotland, Molly, Boyles, Rebecca, Rathinam, Sridhar, Wilson, Claire, Marrone, Domenic, Dulloo, Sean, Matharu, Gurdeep, Shaw, Jacqui A, Riley, Joan, Primrose, Lindsay, Boleti, Ekaterini, Cheyne, Heather, Khalil, Mohammed, Richardson, Shirley, Cruickshank, Tracey, Benafif, Sarah, Gilbert, Kayleigh, Patel, Akshay J, Osman, Aya, Lacson, Christer, Langman, Gerald, Shackleford, Helen, Djearaman, Madava, Kadiri, Salma, Leek, Angela, Hodgkinson, Jack Davies, Totten, Nicola, Montero, Angeles, Smith, Elaine, Fontaine, Eustace, Granato, Felice, Doran, Helen, Novasio, Juliette, Rammohan, Kendadai, Joseph, Leena, Bishop, Paul, Shah, Rajesh, Moss, Stuart, Joshi, Vijay, Crosbie, Philip, Gomes, Fabio, Brown, Kate, Carter, Mathew, Chaturvedi, Anshuman, Priest, Lynsey, Oliveira, Pedro, Krebs, Matthew G, Clipson, Alexandra, Tugwood, Jonathan, Kerr, Alastair, Rothwell, Dominic G, Kilgour, Elaine, Aerts, Hugo JWL, Schwarz, Roland F, Kaufmann, Tom L, Rosenthal, Rachel, Szallasi, Zoltan, Kisistok, Judit, Sokac, Mateo, Diossy, Miklos, Demeulemeester, Jonas, Stewart, Aengus, Magness, Alastair, Karamani, Angeliki, Chain, Benny, Campbell, Brittany B, Castignani, Carla, Bailey, Chris, Puttick, Clare, Weeden, Clare E, Lee, Claudia, Richard, Corentin, Pearce, David R, Karagianni, Despoina, Biswas, Dhruva, Levi, Dina, Hoxha, Elena, Larose Cadieux, Elizabeth, Gronroos, Eva, Galvez-Cancino, Felip, Athanasopoulou, Foteini, Gimeno-Valiente, Francisco, Kassiotis, George, Stavrou, Georgia, Mastrokalos, Gerasimos, Zhai, Haoran, Lowe, Helen L, Matos, Ignacio, Goldman, Jacki, Reading, James L, Black, James RM, Herrero, Javier, Rane, Jayant K, Nicod, Jerome, Lam, Jie Min, Hartley, John A, Enfield, Katey SS, Selvaraju, Kayalvizhi, Thol, Kerstin, Litchfield, Kevin, Ng, Kevin W, Chen, Kezhong, Dijkstra, Krijn, Thakkar, Krupa, Ensell, Leah, Shah, Mansi, Vasquez, Marcos, Litovchenko, Maria, Werner Sunderland, Mariana, Leung, Michelle, Escudero, Mickael, Angelova, Mihaela, Tanic, Miljana, Sivakumar, Monica, Kanu, Nnennaya, Chervova, Olga, Lucas, Olivia, Al-Sawaf, Othman, Hobson, Philip, Pawlik, Piotr, Bentham, Robert, Hynds, Robert E, Vendramin, Roberto, Saghafinia, Sadegh, Lopez, Saioa, Gamble, Samuel, Ung, Seng Kuong Anakin, Vanloo, Sharon, Boeing, Stefan, Beck, Stephan, Bola, Supreet Kaur, Denner, Tamara, Marafioti, Teresa, Mourikis, Thanos P, Spanswick, Victoria, Barbe, Vittorio, Lu, Wei-Ting, Hill, William, Liu, Wing Kin, Wu, Yin, Naito, Yutaka, Ramsden, Zoe, Veiga, Catarina, Royle, Gary, Collins-Fekete, Charles-Antoine, Fraioli, Francesco, Ashford, Paul, Clark, Tristan, Borg, Elaine, Wilson, James, Patrini, Davide, Martinoni Hoogenboom, Emilie, Monk, Fleur, Holding, James W, Choudhary, Junaid, Bhakhri, Kunal, Scarci, Marco, Hayward, Martin, Panagiotopoulos, Nikolaos, Gorman, Pat, Khiroya, Reena, Stephens, Robert CM, Wong, Yien Ning Sophia, Bandula, Steve, Sharp, Abigail, Smith, Sean, Gower, Nicole, Dhanda, Harjot Kaur, Chan, Kitty, Pilotti, Camilla, Leslie, Rachel, Grapa, Anca, Zhang, Hanyun, AbdulJabbar, Khalid, Pan, Xiaoxi, Yuan, Yinyin, Chuter, David, MacKenzie, Mairead, Chee, Serena, Alzetani, Aiman, Scarlett, Lydia, Richards, Jennifer, Ingram, Papawadee, Austin, Silvia, Lim, Eric, De Sousa, Paulo, Jordan, Simon, Rice, Alexandra, Raubenheimer, Hilgardt, Bhayani, Harshil, Ambrose, Lyn, Devaraj, Anand, Chavan, Hema, Begum, Sofina, Buderi, Silviu, Kaniu, Daniel, Malima, Mpho, Booth, Sarah, Nicholson, Andrew G, Fernandes, Nadia, Shah, Pratibha, Proli, Chiara, Hewish, Madeleine, Danson, Sarah, Shackcloth, Michael J, Robinson, Lily, Russell, Peter, Dick, Craig, Le Quesne, John, Kirk, Alan, Asif, Mo, Bilancia, Rocco, Kostoulas, Nikos, and Thomas, Mathew
- Subjects
Clonal Evolution ,Cohort Studies ,Evolution, Molecular ,Lung Neoplasms ,Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung ,Disease Progression ,Humans ,Neoplasm Metastasis ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,Clone Cells - Abstract
Metastatic disease is responsible for the majority of cancer-related deaths1. We report the longitudinal evolutionary analysis of 126 non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) tumours from 421 prospectively recruited patients in TRACERx who developed metastatic disease, compared with a control cohort of 144 non-metastatic tumours. In 25% of cases, metastases diverged early, before the last clonal sweep in the primary tumour, and early divergence was enriched for patients who were smokers at the time of initial diagnosis. Simulations suggested that early metastatic divergence more frequently occurred at smaller tumour diameters (less than 8 mm). Single-region primary tumour sampling resulted in 83% of late divergence cases being misclassified as early, highlighting the importance of extensive primary tumour sampling. Polyclonal dissemination, which was associated with extrathoracic disease recurrence, was found in 32% of cases. Primary lymph node disease contributed to metastatic relapse in less than 20% of cases, representing a hallmark of metastatic potential rather than a route to subsequent recurrences/disease progression. Metastasis-seeding subclones exhibited subclonal expansions within primary tumours, probably reflecting positive selection. Our findings highlight the importance of selection in metastatic clone evolution within untreated primary tumours, the distinction between monoclonal versus polyclonal seeding in dictating site of recurrence, the limitations of current radiological screening approaches for early diverging tumours and the need to develop strategies to target metastasis-seeding subclones before relapse. ispartof: NATURE vol:616 issue:7957 ispartof: location:England status: Published online
- Published
- 2023
11. The evolution of lung cancer and impact of subclonal selection in TRACERx
- Author
-
Frankell, Alexander M, Dietzen, Michelle, Al Bakir, Maise, Lim, Emilia L, Karasaki, Takahiro, Ward, Sophia, Veeriah, Selvaraju, Colliver, Emma, Huebner, Ariana, Bunkum, Abigail, Hill, Mark S, Grigoriadis, Kristiana, Moore, David A, Black, James RM, Liu, Wing Kin, Thol, Kerstin, Pich, Oriol, Watkins, Thomas BK, Naceur-Lombardelli, Cristina, Cook, Daniel E, Salgado, Roberto, Wilson, Gareth A, Bailey, Chris, Angelova, Mihaela, Bentham, Robert, Martinez-Ruiz, Carlos, Abbosh, Christopher, Nicholson, Andrew G, Le Quesne, John, Biswas, Dhruva, Rosenthal, Rachel, Puttick, Clare, Hessey, Sonya, Lee, Claudia, Prymas, Paulina, Toncheva, Antonia, Smith, Jon, Xing, Wei, Nicod, Jerome, Price, Gillian, Kerr, Keith M, Naidu, Babu, Middleton, Gary, Blyth, Kevin G, Fennell, Dean A, Forster, Martin D, Lee, Siow Ming, Falzon, Mary, Hewish, Madeleine, Shackcloth, Michael J, Lim, Eric, Benafif, Sarah, Russell, Peter, Boleti, Ekaterini, Krebs, Matthew G, Lester, Jason F, Papadatos-Pastos, Dionysis, Ahmad, Tanya, Thakrar, Ricky M, Lawrence, David, Navani, Neal, Janes, Sam M, Dive, Caroline, Blackhall, Fiona H, Summers, Yvonne, Cave, Judith, Marafioti, Teresa, Herrero, Javier, Quezada, Sergio A, Peggs, Karl S, Schwarz, Roland F, Van Loo, Peter, Miedema, Daniel M, Birkbak, Nicolai J, Hiley, Crispin T, Hackshaw, Allan, Zaccaria, Simone, Jamal-Hanjani, Mariam, McGranahan, Nicholas, Swanton, Charles, Bajaj, Amrita, Nakas, Apostolos, Sodha-Ramdeen, Azmina, Ang, Keng, Tufail, Mohamad, Chowdhry, Mohammed Fiyaz, Scotland, Molly, Boyles, Rebecca, Rathinam, Sridhar, Wilson, Claire, Marrone, Domenic, Dulloo, Sean, Matharu, Gurdeep, Shaw, Jacqui A, Riley, Joa, Primrose, Lindsay, Cheyne, Heather, Khalil, Mohammed, Richardson, Shirley, Cruickshank, Tracey, Gilbert, Kayleigh, Patel, Akshay J, Osman, Aya, Lacson, Christer, Langman, Gerald, Shackleford, Helen, Djearaman, Madava, Kadiri, Salma, Leek, Angela, Hodgkinson, Jack Davies, Totten, Nicola, Montero, Angeles, Smith, Elaine, Fontaine, Eustace, Granato, Felice, Doran, Helen, Novasio, Juliette, Rammohan, Kendadai, Joseph, Leena, Bishop, Paul, Shah, Rajesh, Moss, Stuart, Joshi, Vijay, Crosbie, Philip, Gomes, Fabio, Brown, Kate, Carter, Mathew, Chaturvedi, Anshuman, Priest, Lynsey, Oliveira, Pedro, Lindsay, Colin R, Clipson, Alexandra, Tugwood, Jonathan, Kerr, Alastair, Rothwell, Dominic G, Kilgour, Elaine, Aerts, Hugo JWL, Kaufmann, Tom L, Szallasi, Zoltan, Kisistok, Judit, Sokac, Mateo, Diossy, Miklos, Demeulemeester, Jonas, Stewart, Aengus, Magness, Alastair, Rowan, Andrew, Karamani, Angeliki, Chain, Benny, Campbell, Brittany B, Castignani, Carla, Weeden, Clare E, Richard, Corentin, Pearce, David R, Karagianni, Despoina, Levi, Dina, Hoxha, Elena, Larose Cadieux, Elizabeth, Nye, Emma, Gronroos, Eva, Galvez-Cancino, Felip, Athanasopoulou, Foteini, Gimeno-Valiente, Francisco, Kassiotis, George, Stavrou, Georgia, Mastrokalos, Gerasimos, Zhai, Haoran L, Lowe, Helen L, Matos, Ignacio, Goldman, Jacki, Reading, James L, Rane, Jayant K, Lam, Jie Min, Hartley, John A, Enfield, Katey SS, Selvaraju, Kayalvizhi, Litchfield, Kevin, Ng, Kevin W, Chen, Kezhong, Dijkstra, Krijn, Thakkar, Krupa, Ensell, Leah, Shah, Mansi, Vasquez, Marcos, Litovchenko, Maria, Werner Sunderland, Mariana, Leung, Michelle, Escudero, Mickael, Tanic, Miljana, Sivakumar, Monica, Kanu, Nnennaya, Chervova, Olga, Lucas, Olivia, Al-Sawaf, Othman, Hobson, Philip, Pawlik, Piotr, Stone, Richard Kevin, Hynds, Robert E, Vendramin, Roberto, Saghafinia, Sadegh, Lopez, Saioa, Gamble, Samuel, Ung, Seng Kuong Anakin, Vanloo, Sharon, Boeing, Stefan, Beck, Stephan, Bola, Supreet Kaur, Denner, Tamara, Mourikis, Thanos P, Spanswick, Victoria, Barbe, Vittorio, Lu, Wei-Ting, Hill, William, Wu, Yin, Naito, Yutaka, Ramsden, Zoe, Veiga, Catarina, Royle, Gary, Collins-Fekete, Charles-Antoine, Fraioli, Francesco, Ashford, Paul, Clark, Tristan, Borg, Elaine, Wilson, James, Procter, Alexander James, Ahmed, Asia, Taylor, Magali N, Nair, Arjun, Patrini, Davide, Martinoni Hoogenboom, Emilie, Monk, Fleur, Holding, James W, Choudhary, Junaid, Bhakhri, Kunal, Scarci, Marco, Hayward, Martin, Panagiotopoulos, Nikolaos, Gorman, Pat, Khiroya, Reena, Stephens, Robert CM, Wong, Yien Ning Sophia, Bandula, Steve, Sharp, Abigail, Smith, Sean, Gower, Nicole, Dhanda, Harjot Kaur, Chan, Kitty, Pilotti, Camilla, Leslie, Rachel, Grapa, Anca, Zhang, Hanyun, AbdulJabbar, Khalid, Pan, Xiaoxi, Yuan, Yinyin, Chuter, David, MacKenzie, Mairead, Chee, Serena, Alzetani, Aiman, Scarlett, Lydia, Richards, Jennifer, Ingram, Papawadee, Austin, Silvia, De Sousa, Paulo, Jordan, Simon, Rice, Alexandra, Raubenheimer, Hilgardt, Bhayani, Harshil, Ambrose, Lyn, Devaraj, Anand, Chavan, Hema, Begum, Sofina, Buderi, Silviu, Kaniu, Daniel, Malima, Mpho, Booth, Sarah, Fernandes, Nadia, Shah, Pratibha, Proli, Chiara, Danson, Sarah, Robinson, Lily, Dick, Craig, Kirk, Alan, Asif, Mo, Bilancia, Rocco, Kostoulas, Nikos, and Thomas, Mathew
- Subjects
Lung Neoplasms ,Treatment Outcome ,DNA Copy Number Variations ,Mutagenesis ,Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung ,Mutation ,Smoking ,Humans ,Adenocarcinoma of Lung ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,Phylogeny - Abstract
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-associated mortality worldwide1. Here we analysed 1,644 tumour regions sampled at surgery or during follow-up from the first 421 patients with non-small cell lung cancer prospectively enrolled into the TRACERx study. This project aims to decipher lung cancer evolution and address the primary study endpoint: determining the relationship between intratumour heterogeneity and clinical outcome. In lung adenocarcinoma, mutations in 22 out of 40 common cancer genes were under significant subclonal selection, including classical tumour initiators such as TP53 and KRAS. We defined evolutionary dependencies between drivers, mutational processes and whole genome doubling (WGD) events. Despite patients having a history of smoking, 8% of lung adenocarcinomas lacked evidence of tobacco-induced mutagenesis. These tumours also had similar detection rates for EGFR mutations and for RET, ROS1, ALK and MET oncogenic isoforms compared with tumours in never-smokers, which suggests that they have a similar aetiology and pathogenesis. Large subclonal expansions were associated with positive subclonal selection. Patients with tumours harbouring recent subclonal expansions, on the terminus of a phylogenetic branch, had significantly shorter disease-free survival. Subclonal WGD was detected in 19% of tumours, and 10% of tumours harboured multiple subclonal WGDs in parallel. Subclonal, but not truncal, WGD was associated with shorter disease-free survival. Copy number heterogeneity was associated with extrathoracic relapse within 1 year after surgery. These data demonstrate the importance of clonal expansion, WGD and copy number instability in determining the timing and patterns of relapse in non-small cell lung cancer and provide a comprehensive clinical cancer evolutionary data resource. ispartof: NATURE vol:616 issue:7957 ispartof: location:England status: Published online
- Published
- 2023
12. Evolutionary characterization of lung adenocarcinoma morphology in TRACERx
- Author
-
Karasaki, Takahiro, Moore, David A, Veeriah, Selvaraju, Naceur-Lombardelli, Cristina, Toncheva, Antonia, Magno, Neil, Ward, Sophia, Al Bakir, Maise, Watkins, Thomas BK, Grigoriadis, Kristiana, Huebner, Ariana, Hill, Mark S, Frankell, Alexander M, Abbosh, Christopher, Puttick, Clare, Zhai, Haoran, Gimeno-Valiente, Francisco, Saghafinia, Sadegh, Kanu, Nnennaya, Dietzen, Michelle, Pich, Oriol, Lim, Emilia L, Martinez-Ruiz, Carlos, Black, James RM, Biswas, Dhruva, Campbell, Brittany B, Lee, Claudia, Colliver, Emma, Enfield, Katey SS, Hessey, Sonya, Hiley, Crispin T, Zaccaria, Simone, Litchfield, Kevin, Birkbak, Nicolai J, Cadieux, Elizabeth Larose, Demeulemeester, Jonas, Van Loo, Peter, Adusumilli, Prasad R, Tan, Kay See, Cheema, Waseem, Sanchez-Vega, Francisco, Jones, David R, Rekhtman, Natasha, Travis, William D, Hackshaw, Allan, Marafioti, Teresa, Salgado, Roberto, Le Quesne, John, Nicholson, Andrew G, McGranahan, Nicholas, Swanton, Charles, Jamal-Hanjani, Mariam, Lester, Jason F, Bajaj, Amrita, Nakas, Apostolos, Sodha-Ramdeen, Azmina, Ang, Keng, Tufail, Mohamad, Chowdhry, Mohammed Fiyaz, Scotland, Molly, Boyles, Rebecca, Rathinam, Sridhar, Wilson, Claire, Marrone, Domenic, Dulloo, Sean, Fennell, Dean A, Matharu, Gurdeep, Shaw, Jacqui A, Riley, Joan, Primrose, Lindsay, Boleti, Ekaterini, Cheyne, Heather, Khalil, Mohammed, Richardson, Shirley, Cruickshank, Tracey, Price, Gillian, Kerr, Keith M, Benafif, Sarah, Gilbert, Kayleigh, Naidu, Babu, Patel, Akshay J, Osman, Aya, Lacson, Christer, Langman, Gerald, Shackleford, Helen, Djearaman, Madava, Kadiri, Salma, Middleton, Gary, Leek, Angela, Hodgkinson, Jack Davies, Totten, Nicola, Montero, Angeles, Smith, Elaine, Fontaine, Eustace, Granato, Felice, Doran, Helen, Novasio, Juliette, Rammohan, Kendadai, Joseph, Leena, Bishop, Paul, Shah, Rajesh, Moss, Stuart, Joshi, Vijay, Crosbie, Philip, Gomes, Fabio, Brown, Kate, Carter, Mathew, Chaturvedi, Anshuman, Priest, Lynsey, Oliveira, Pedro, Lindsay, Colin R, Blackhall, Fiona H, Krebs, Matthew G, Summers, Yvonne, Clipson, Alexandra, Tugwood, Jonathan, Kerr, Alastair, Rothwell, Dominic G, Kilgour, Elaine, Dive, Caroline, Aerts, Hugo JWL, Schwarz, Roland F, Kaufmann, Tom L, Wilson, Gareth A, Rosenthal, Rachel, Szallasi, Zoltan, Kisistok, Judit, Sokac, Mateo, Diossy, Miklos, Bunkum, Abigail, Stewart, Aengus, Magness, Alastair, Rowan, Andrew, Karamani, Angeliki, Chain, Benny, Castignani, Carla, Bailey, Chris, Weeden, Clare E, Richard, Corentin, Pearce, David R, Karagianni, Despoina, Levi, Dina, Hoxha, Elena, Nye, Emma, Gronroos, Eva, Galvez-Cancino, Felip, Athanasopoulou, Foteini, Kassiotis, George, Stavrou, Georgia, Mastrokalos, Gerasimos, Lowe, Helen L, Matos, Ignacio Garcia, Goldman, Jacki, Reading, James L, Herrero, Javier, Rane, Jayant K, Nicod, Jerome, Lam, Jie Min, Hartley, John A, Peggs, Karl S, Selvaraju, Kayalvizhi, Thol, Kerstin, Ng, Kevin W, Chen, Kezhong, Dijkstra, Krijn, Thakkar, Krupa, Ensell, Leah, Shah, Mansi, Duran, Marcos Vasquez, Litovchenko, Maria, Sunderland, Mariana Werner, Leung, Michelle, Escudero, Mickael, Angelova, Mihaela, Tanic, Miljana, Sivakumar, Monica, Chervova, Olga, Lucas, Olivia, Al-Sawaf, Othman, Prymas, Paulina, Hobson, Philip, Pawlik, Piotr, Stone, Richard Kevin, Bentham, Robert, Hynds, Robert E, Vendramin, Roberto, Lopez, Saioa, Gamble, Samuel, Ung, Seng Kuong Anakin, Quezada, Sergio A, Vanloo, Sharon, Boeing, Stefan, Beck, Stephan, Bola, Supreet Kaur, Denner, Tamara, Mourikis, Thanos P, Spanswick, Victoria, Barbe, Vittorio, Lu, Wei-Ting, Hill, William, Liu, Wing Kin, Wu, Yin, Naito, Yutaka, Ramsden, Zoe, Veiga, Catarina, Royle, Gary, Collins-Fekete, Charles-Antoine, Fraioli, Francesco, Ashford, Paul, Clark, Tristan, Forster, Martin D, Lee, Siow Ming, Borg, Elaine, Falzon, Mary, Papadatos-Pastos, Dionysis, Wilson, James, Ahmad, Tanya, Procter, Alexander James, Ahmed, Asia, Taylor, Magali N, Nair, Arjun, Lawrence, David, Patrini, Davide, Navani, Neal, Thakrar, Ricky M, Janes, Sam M, Hoogenboom, Emilie Martinoni, Monk, Fleur, Holding, James W, Choudhary, Junaid, Bhakhri, Kunal, Scarci, Marco, Hayward, Martin, Panagiotopoulos, Nikolaos, Gorman, Pat, Khiroya, Reena, Stephens, Robert CM, Wong, Yien Ning Sophia, Bandula, Steve, Sharp, Abigail, Smith, Sean, Gower, Nicole, Dhanda, Harjot Kaur, Chan, Kitty, Pilotti, Camilla, Leslie, Rachel, Grapa, Anca, Zhang, Hanyun, AbdulJabbar, Khalid, Pan, Xiaoxi, Yuan, Yinyin, Chuter, David, MacKenzie, Mairead, Chee, Serena, Alzetani, Aiman, Cave, Judith, Scarlett, Lydia, Richards, Jennifer, Ingram, Papawadee, Austin, Silvia, Lim, Eric, De Sousa, Paulo, Jordan, Simon, Rice, Alexandra, Raubenheimer, Hilgardt, Bhayani, Harshil, Ambrose, Lyn, Devaraj, Anand, Chavan, Hema, Begum, Sofina, Buderi, Silviu, Kaniu, Daniel, Malima, Mpho, Booth, Sarah, Fernandes, Nadia, Shah, Pratibha, Proli, Chiara, Hewish, Madeleine, Danson, Sarah, Shackcloth, Michael J, Robinson, Lily, Russell, Peter, Blyth, Kevin G, Dick, Craig, Kirk, Alan, Asif, Mo, Bilancia, Rocco, Kostoulas, Nikos, and Thomas, Mathew
- Subjects
TRACERx Consortium - Abstract
Lung adenocarcinomas (LUADs) display a broad histological spectrum from low-grade lepidic tumors through to mid-grade acinar and papillary and high-grade solid, cribriform and micropapillary tumors. How morphology reflects tumor evolution and disease progression is poorly understood. Whole-exome sequencing data generated from 805 primary tumor regions and 121 paired metastatic samples across 248 LUADs from the TRACERx 421 cohort, together with RNA-sequencing data from 463 primary tumor regions, were integrated with detailed whole-tumor and regional histopathological analysis. Tumors with predominantly high-grade patterns showed increased chromosomal complexity, with higher burden of loss of heterozygosity and subclonal somatic copy number alterations. Individual regions in predominantly high-grade pattern tumors exhibited higher proliferation and lower clonal diversity, potentially reflecting large recent subclonal expansions. Co-occurrence of truncal loss of chromosomes 3p and 3q was enriched in predominantly low-/mid-grade tumors, while purely undifferentiated solid-pattern tumors had a higher frequency of truncal arm or focal 3q gains and SMARCA4 gene alterations compared with mixed-pattern tumors with a solid component, suggesting distinct evolutionary trajectories. Clonal evolution analysis revealed that tumors tend to evolve toward higher-grade patterns. The presence of micropapillary pattern and 'tumor spread through air spaces' were associated with intrathoracic recurrence, in contrast to the presence of solid/cribriform patterns, necrosis and preoperative circulating tumor DNA detection, which were associated with extra-thoracic recurrence. These data provide insights into the relationship between LUAD morphology, the underlying evolutionary genomic landscape, and clinical and anatomical relapse risk. ispartof: NATURE MEDICINE vol:29 issue:4 ispartof: location:United States status: Published online
- Published
- 2023
13. Abstract 1394: Pervasive allele specific transcriptional repression of the class I and II HLA genes in TRACERx non-small cell lung cancer
- Author
-
Puttick, Clare, primary, Pich, Oriol, additional, Leung, Michelle, additional, Martinez-Ruiz, Carlos, additional, Bentham, Robert, additional, Rosenthal, Rachel, additional, Hessey, Sonya, additional, Black, James R., additional, Lim, Emilia L., additional, Enfield, Katey, additional, Colliver, Emma, additional, Dijkstra, Krijn, additional, Hiley, Crispin T., additional, Karasaki, Takahiro, additional, Huebner, Ariana, additional, Bakir, Maise Al, additional, Watkins, Thomas B., additional, Frankell, Alexander M., additional, Zaccaria, Simone, additional, Jamal-Hanjani, Mariam, additional, McGranahan, Nicholas, additional, and Swanton, Charles, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Antisocial personality disorder subscale (Chinese version) of the structured clinical interview for the DSM-IV axis II disorders: Validation study in Cantonese-speaking Hong Kong Chinese
- Author
-
Tang, Dorothy YY, Liu, Amy CY, Leung, Michelle HT, and Sui, Bonnie WM
- Published
- 2013
15. How can BIM support Construction Safety Management? Development of SIM
- Author
-
Chan Isabelle Y S, Leung H Y, Fung Ivan W H, and Leung Michelle
- Subjects
Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 - Abstract
BIM is continuously changing the way construction can be approached, from design, scheduling, costing to facilities management. However, even though construction safety is a worldwide issue, and though previous, yet limited, studies have proven its great potential, BIM has not been extended to include automated construction safety management functions, i.e., hazard identification, assessment and control for construction works. In fact, as many as 71% of safety incidents can be prevented by safety considerations at design stage. Automation via BIM is the key to enhance effectiveness and efficiency of safety management, but development of Safety Information Modelling (SIM) is the key pre-requisite. This paper aims to outline a research project for developing both information and technical requirements for SIM via questionnaire survey, focus group, and real case studies. The project results, to be validated by real projects, will act as solid platform for developing:- i) Practical guidance to construction and safety professionals on the types of safety management a SIM can conduct, and the ways of utilizing the safety information in a SIM model [based on the systematic SIM information requirements (e.g., object identification, geometry attributes, safety rules)]; and ii) Overall guidance to software developers to develop appropriate SIM tools for different scenarios [based on the systematic SIM technical requirements (e.g., model information exchange, visualization, conflict analysis process for risk assessment, reliability)].
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Supplementary information from Natural barriers: waterfall transit by small flying animals
- Author
-
Ortega-Jimenez, Victor M., Herbst, Eva C., Leung, Michelle, and Dudley, Robert
- Subjects
ComputingMethodologies_DOCUMENTANDTEXTPROCESSING ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,ComputerApplications_COMPUTERSINOTHERSYSTEMS ,GeneralLiterature_MISCELLANEOUS - Abstract
Supplementary tables, video legend and raw data description
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Natural barriers: waterfall transit by small flying animals
- Author
-
Ortega-Jimenez, Victor M; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0024-5086, Herbst, Eva C; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3640-9695, Leung, Michelle S, Dudley, Robert, Ortega-Jimenez, Victor M; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0024-5086, Herbst, Eva C; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3640-9695, Leung, Michelle S, and Dudley, Robert
- Abstract
Waterfalls are conspicuous geomorphological features with heterogeneous structure, complex dynamics and multiphase flows. Swifts, dippers and starlings are well-known to nest behind waterfalls, and have been reported to fly through them. For smaller fliers, by contrast, waterfalls seem to represent impenetrable barriers, but associated physical constraints and the kinematic responses of volant animals during transit are unknown. Here, we describe the flight behaviour of hummingbirds (the sister group to the swifts) and of various insect taxa as they fly through an artificial sheet waterfall. We additionally launched plastic balls at different speeds at the waterfall so as to assess the inertial dependence of sheet penetration. Hummingbirds were able to penetrate the waterfall with reductions in both their translational speed, and stroke amplitude. The body tilted more vertically and exhibited greater rotations in roll, pitch and yaw, along with increases in tail spread and pitch. The much smaller plastic balls and some flies moving at speeds greater than 2.3 m s−1 and 1.6 m s−1, respectively, also overcame effects of surface tension and water momentum and passed through the waterfall; objects with lower momentum, by contrast, entered the sheet but then fell along with the moving water. Waterfalls can thus represent impenetrable physical barriers for small and slow animal fliers, and may also serve to exclude both predators and parasites from nests of some avian taxa.
- Published
- 2020
18. Michelle Leung
- Author
-
Leung, Michelle, primary
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. New Service Model for Common Mental Disorders in Hong Kong: a Retrospective Outcome Study
- Author
-
Lee, WK, primary, Lo, Alison, additional, Chong, George, additional, Chang, SYS, additional, Lu, Vivien, additional, Yip, PLI, additional, Liu, CMK, additional, Leung, Michelle, additional, Chung, CM, additional, Wong, KY, additional, Yeung, YYE, additional, Chan, SMA, additional, Ngai, YS, additional, Wong, PS, additional, and Lo, TL, additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Moment-to-moment interaction between affectivity and coping behaviours in bipolar disorder and the role of cognitive appraisals
- Author
-
Leung, Michelle Hoi-ting, primary, So, Suzanne Ho-wai, additional, Kwok, Nate Tsz-Kit, additional, Ng, Iris Hoi-ching, additional, Chan, Pui-shuen, additional, Lo, Chloe Chor-wing, additional, Na, Shirley, additional, Mak, Arthur Dun-ping, additional, and Lee, Sing, additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Stanford Doggo: Students develop open-source agile quadruped robot
- Author
-
Leung, Michelle
- Subjects
Robots ,Robotics ,Robotics industry ,Robot ,News, opinion and commentary ,Sports and fitness - Abstract
Byline: Michelle Leung Members of Stanford Student Robotics' Extreme Mobility team have developed a four-legged robot that can walk, jump and even do a backflip. On May 21, Aaron Schultz [...]
- Published
- 2019
22. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar weighs in on intersection of sports, race, religion, politics
- Author
-
Leung, Michelle
- Subjects
American Muslims ,Religion ,Corporate sponsorship ,Books ,Religion and politics ,Muslims ,Activists ,Islam ,Journalists ,News, opinion and commentary ,Sports and fitness - Abstract
Byline: Michelle Leung by Michelle Leung -- May 2, 2019May 1, 2019No Comments Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, the NBA's all-time leading scorer, spoke at Stanford's Memorial Auditorium on Wednesday on the intersection [...]
- Published
- 2019
23. UAR seeks to add more advisers to address students' academic needs
- Author
-
Leung, Michelle
- Subjects
College students -- Planning ,Education ,Students ,Company business planning ,News, opinion and commentary ,Sports and fitness - Abstract
Byline: Michelle Leung by Michelle Leung -- April 18, 2019April 18, 2019No Comments Over the last several years, the Undergraduate Advising and Research office has been involved in a long-range [...]
- Published
- 2019
24. Meredith Monk's 'Cellular Songs' combines biological fascination with musical performance
- Author
-
Leung, Michelle
- Subjects
Concerts ,Performing arts ,Artists ,Musical performance ,Composers ,News, opinion and commentary ,Sports and fitness - Abstract
Byline: Michelle Leung by Michelle Leung -- April 4, 2019April 4, 2019No Comments Artist and composer Meredith Monk and members of the Vocal Ensemble will perform Monk's new work 'Cellular [...]
- Published
- 2019
25. CHINA 70N examines human-animal relationships through cross-cultural exploration
- Author
-
Leung, Michelle
- Subjects
Human-animal relationships -- Analysis ,Comparative literature ,Seminars ,News, opinion and commentary ,Sports and fitness - Abstract
Byline: Michelle Leung by Michelle Leung -- April 1, 2019March 31, 2019No Comments Designed as a cross-cultural comparative course, CHINA 70N: 'Animal Planet and the Romance of the Species,' was [...]
- Published
- 2019
26. Former New Taipei City mayor discusses Taiwan's economic future
- Author
-
Leung, Michelle
- Subjects
Presidential elections ,Mayors -- Planning ,Company business planning ,News, opinion and commentary ,Sports and fitness - Abstract
Byline: Michelle Leung Eric Chu, who plans to run for president of Taiwan in the 2020 general election, emphasized the importance of giving more power to Taiwan's future economy at [...]
- Published
- 2019
27. Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence initiative talks AI, humanities and the arts
- Author
-
Leung, Michelle
- Subjects
Artificial intelligence ,Science history ,Workshops (Educational programs) ,Artificial intelligence ,News, opinion and commentary ,Sports and fitness - Abstract
Byline: Michelle LeungAt the full-day collaborative workshop 'AI, Humanities & the Arts,' speakers hosted by the Stanford Humanities Center stressed artificial intelligence's potential to supplement human capabilities rather than replace [...]
- Published
- 2019
28. Unique to Stanford: Digital humanities bridges technology and humanities
- Author
-
Leung, Michelle
- Subjects
Human rights ,College students ,News, opinion and commentary ,Sports and fitness - Abstract
Byline: Michelle LeungThis article is the third and final installment in a series examining unique concentrations at Stanford. The first article in the series highlights the Symbolic Systems program, while [...]
- Published
- 2019
29. Faculty Senate discusses ways to prevent honor code and fundamental standard violations
- Author
-
Leung, Michelle
- Subjects
News, opinion and commentary ,Sports and fitness - Abstract
Byline: Michelle LeungThe Office of Community Standards saw 207 total cases -- 180 of which were honor code cases -- in the 2017-2018 school year, presenters told the Faculty Senate [...]
- Published
- 2019
30. Unique to Stanford: Global Studies and Human Rights minors
- Author
-
Leung, Michelle
- Subjects
News, opinion and commentary ,Sports and fitness - Abstract
Byline: Michelle LeungThis article is the second in a series examining unique concentrations at Stanford.Over the past four years, the Stanford Global Studies Division of the School of Humanities and [...]
- Published
- 2019
31. Hoover hosts roundtable discussion on US-Taiwan-China relations
- Author
-
Leung, Michelle
- Subjects
News, opinion and commentary ,Sports and fitness ,Taiwan Relations Act of 1979 - Abstract
Byline: Michelle LeungOn Tuesday, Hoover Institution scholars addressed China's recent tightening of policy surrounding Taiwan and considered what the United States' role should be in maintaining the three-way political balance.The [...]
- Published
- 2019
32. China Guiding Cases Project at SLS advances global understanding of Chinese laweval(ez_write_tag([[728,90],'stanforddaily_com-box-3','ezslot_0']));
- Author
-
Leung, Michelle
- Subjects
News, opinion and commentary ,Sports and fitness - Abstract
Byline: Michelle LeungThe China Guiding Cases Project -- founded by Stanford Law School lecturer Mei Gechlik J.S.D. '01 to support unification of China's legal standards and improve transparency in the [...]
- Published
- 2019
33. Stanford Vision and Learning Lab develops social robot to roam campuseval(ez_write_tag([[728,90],'stanforddaily_com-box-3','ezslot_1']));
- Author
-
Leung, Michelle
- Subjects
News, opinion and commentary ,Sports and fitness - Abstract
Byline: Michelle LeungResearchers in the Stanford Vision and Learning Lab are teaching a robot called JackRabbot 2 to understand social rules that humans use to interact with each other, with [...]
- Published
- 2019
34. Automated Vehicle Location (AVL) for Road Condition Reporting
- Author
-
McCullouch, Bob, primary, Leung, Michelle, additional, and Kang, Wonjin, additional
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The impact of bacteriophages on phyllosphere bacterial abundance and composition
- Author
-
Morella, Norma M., primary, Gomez, Annika L., additional, Wang, Grant, additional, Leung, Michelle S., additional, and Koskella, Britt, additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Stanford Vision and Learning Lab develops social robot to roam campuseval(ez_write_tag([[728,90],'stanforddaily_com-box-3','ezslot_0']));
- Author
-
Leung, Michelle
- Subjects
Social norms ,Computer vision ,Research scientists ,Robots ,Computer science ,Robot ,News, opinion and commentary ,Sports and fitness - Abstract
Byline: Michelle Leung Researchers in the Stanford Vision and Learning Lab are teaching a robot called JackRabbot 2 to understand social rules that humans use to interact with each other, [...]
- Published
- 2018
37. Subdural haemorrhages - bilateral acute on chronic
- Author
-
El-Feky, Mostafa, primary and Leung, Michelle, additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Automated Vehicle Location (AVL) for Road Condition Reporting
- Author
-
McCullouch, Bob G., Leung, Michelle, and Kang, Wonjin
- Subjects
Winter operations ,snow plow ,MDSS ,snow and ice ,AVL ,SPR-2922 ,Civil Engineering ,maintenance - Abstract
This project developed an AVL system for INDOT that utilized the statewide wireless network, SAFE-T. This option was chosen after doing a cost analysis of commercial AVL systems that use cellular data communications. The system developed provides real time information collected during snow and ice removal. Information includes weather and road conditions, truck speed, amount of chemicals spread, time, location, plow position, and road temperature. This information is displayed on INDOT GIS maps available through a browser on the INDOT network. The data is also transferred to the MDSS that INDOT uses in winter activities. This system experienced significant data transfer problems and consequently was eliminated as a viable AVL alternative. Therefore other commercial AVL systems were evaluated in this study. Other activities included investigating other hardware options for data collection and data transfer. Also, a hotspot method for data transfer was tested to do batch data transfer. A summer AVL application for paint stripping was developed. Two other commercial systems were evaluated, IWAPI and ThomTech. The IWAPI system was evaluated over three winter seasons and Thomtech for the 08-09 season. Both systems experienced data transfer problems which seems to be the biggest issue with AVL systems. Overall most users were satisfied with how the systems operated and with the information being collected and reported. The project exposed issues that exist with all types of AVL systems. There are plusses and minuses, and costs and benefits. These are described in the report. One outcome is that AVL systems are not a panacea, they offer better information and benefits, but are they economically justifiable? An internal INDOT study was performed during the 08-09 season that shows a savings of $10,000,000 in salt costs that can be attributed to some degree the use of AVL and MDSS.
- Published
- 2011
39. CIG-P: Circular Interaction Graph for Proteomics
- Author
-
Hobbs, Christopher K, primary, Leung, Michelle, additional, Tsang, Herbert H, additional, and Ebhardt, H Alexander, additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Analysis of 30-day readmissions among neurosurgical patients: surgical complication avoidance as key to quality improvement
- Author
-
Buchanan, Colin C., primary, Hernandez, Estebes A., additional, Anderson, Jody M., additional, Dye, Justin A., additional, Leung, Michelle, additional, Buxey, Farzad, additional, Bergsneider, Marvin, additional, Afsar-Manesh, Nasim, additional, Pouratian, Nader, additional, and Martin, Neil A., additional
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Automated Vehicle Location (AVL) for Road Condition Reporting
- Author
-
McCullouch, Bob G., Leung, Michelle, Kang, Wonjin, McCullouch, Bob G., Leung, Michelle, and Kang, Wonjin
- Abstract
This project developed an AVL system for INDOT that utilized the statewide wireless network, SAFE-T. This option was chosen after doing a cost analysis of commercial AVL systems that use cellular data communications. The system developed provides real time information collected during snow and ice removal. Information includes weather and road conditions, truck speed, amount of chemicals spread, time, location, plow position, and road temperature. This information is displayed on INDOT GIS maps available through a browser on the INDOT network. The data is also transferred to the MDSS that INDOT uses in winter activities. This system experienced significant data transfer problems and consequently was eliminated as a viable AVL alternative. Therefore other commercial AVL systems were evaluated in this study. Other activities included investigating other hardware options for data collection and data transfer. Also, a hotspot method for data transfer was tested to do batch data transfer. A summer AVL application for paint stripping was developed. Two other commercial systems were evaluated, IWAPI and ThomTech. The IWAPI system was evaluated over three winter seasons and Thomtech for the 08-09 season. Both systems experienced data transfer problems which seems to be the biggest issue with AVL systems. Overall most users were satisfied with how the systems operated and with the information being collected and reported. The project exposed issues that exist with all types of AVL systems. There are plusses and minuses, and costs and benefits. These are described in the report. One outcome is that AVL systems are not a panacea, they offer better information and benefits, but are they economically justifiable? An internal INDOT study was performed during the 08-09 season that shows a savings of $10,000,000 in salt costs that can be attributed to some degree the use of AVL and MDSS.
- Published
- 2009
42. Timing Matters: Early Post Traumatic Seizures in a Pediatric Population (P01.024)
- Author
-
Su, Michael, primary, McArthur, David, additional, Lerner, Jason, additional, Arndt, Daniel, additional, Matsumoto, Joyce, additional, Valino, Hannah, additional, Yudovin, Sue, additional, Leung, Michelle, additional, and Giza, Christopher, additional
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The quality-constrained scheduling problem in plastics compounding
- Author
-
Younes, Abdunnaser, primary, Elkamel, Ali, additional, Leung, Michelle, additional, Tzoganakis, Costas, additional, and Lohi, Ali, additional
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. The quality-constrained scheduling problem in plastics compounding.
- Author
-
Younes, Abdunnaser, Elkamel, Ali, Leung, Michelle, Tzoganakis, Costas, and Lohi, Ali
- Subjects
PRODUCTION scheduling ,PRODUCT quality ,MATHEMATICAL programming ,LINEAR programming ,MIXED integer linear programming ,GUMS & resins - Abstract
Interest is increasing in plastic compounding plants that offer tailor-made resins. Such plants produce a wide range of products in small quantities and with frequent changeovers. The underlying scheduling problem has been extensively researched; however, the concept of incorporating qualities of the finished product in the problem of plastics compounding has not been considered. We express product qualities as an additional problem constraint so that the production schedule ensures product quality. The additional constraint makes this mixed integer nonlinear program (MINLP) problem more difficult to solve. Several case studies are solved to illustrate the utility of the proposed approach. Experiments demonstrated that qualities of the finished product can be ensured a priori if the appropriate relations are developed and integrated in the optimisation model. As well, this paper provides insight into the economic aspects of the scheduling problem under consideration. Experiments showed that none of the cost components (operation, raw material, inventory, penalty or utilities) can alone play the role of the optimisation criterion. © 2012 Canadian Society for Chemical Engineering [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Less Is More: How I learned to be a Design Ascetic and you can too.
- Author
-
LEUNG, MICHELLE
- Subjects
PUBLISHING ,READABILITY (Literary style) ,COLOR - Abstract
The article discusses the concept of design asceticism, emphasizing the value of minimalism in design. By removing non-essential elements and focusing on the core message, designers can create clearer, more refined, and powerful designs. The article provides five techniques for achieving a lean and impactful design, including prioritizing essential information, utilizing negative space, and avoiding overreliance on trends. The goal is to create a clean, elegant, and timeless design.
- Published
- 2023
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.