84 results on '"Massé, F"'
Search Results
2. Clinical value of assessing motor performance in postacute stroke patients
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Flury, D., Massé, F., Paraschiv-Ionescu, A., Aminian, K., Luft, A. R., and Gonzenbach, R.
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- 2021
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3. A safety/security risk analysis approach of Industrial Control Systems: A cyber bowtie – combining new version of attack tree with bowtie analysis
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Abdo, H., Kaouk, M., Flaus, J.-M., and Masse, F.
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- 2018
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4. Uncertainty quantification in risk assessment - Representation, propagation and treatment approaches: Application to atmospheric dispersion modeling
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Abdo, H., Flaus, J-M., and Masse, F.
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- 2017
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5. Consideration of Grain Size Distribution and Interfacial Transition Zone in the Prediction of Elastic Properties of Cementitious Composites
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Duplan, Francois, Abou-Chakra, A., Turatsinze, A., Escadeillas, G., Brule, S., Masse, F., Kringos, Niki, editor, Birgisson, Björn, editor, Frost, David, editor, and Wang, Linbing, editor
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- 2013
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6. Activation, Corrosion and Contamination in Fast Breeder Reactors — Validation of Models with Experimental Data
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Masse, F., Rouviere, G., Borgstedt, H. U., editor, and Frees, Gunter, editor
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- 1995
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7. Clinical value of assessing motor performance in postacute stroke patients
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Flury, D; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5507-693X, Massé, F, Paraschiv-Ionescu, A, Aminian, K, Luft, A R, Gonzenbach, R, Flury, D; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5507-693X, Massé, F, Paraschiv-Ionescu, A, Aminian, K, Luft, A R, and Gonzenbach, R
- Abstract
BACKGROUND Rehabilitative treatment plans after stroke are based on clinical examinations of functional capacity and patient-reported outcomes. Objective information about daily life performance is usually not available, but it may improve therapy personalization. OBJECTIVE To show that sensor-derived information about daily life performance is clinically valuable for counseling and the planning of rehabilitation programs for individual stroke patients who live at home. Performance information is clinically valuable if it can be used as a decision aid for the therapeutic management or counseling of individual patients. METHODS This was an observational, cross-sectional case series including 15 ambulatory stroke patients. Motor performance in daily life was assessed with body-worn inertial sensors attached to the wrists, shanks and trunk that estimated basic physical activity and various measures of walking and arm activity in daily life. Stroke severity, motor function and activity, and degree of independence were quantified clinically by standard assessments and patient-reported outcomes. Motor performance was recorded for an average of 5.03 ± 1.1 h on the same day as the clinical assessment. The clinical value of performance information is explored in a narrative style by considering individual patient performance and capacity information. RESULTS The patients were aged 59.9 ± 9.8 years (mean ± SD), were 6.5 ± 7.2 years post stroke, and had a National Institutes of Health Stroke Score of 4.0 ± 2.6. Capacity and performance measures showed high variability. There were substantial discrepancies between performance and capacity measures in some patients. CONCLUSIONS This case series shows that information about motor performance in daily life can be valuable for tailoring rehabilitative therapy plans and counseling according to the needs of individual stroke patients. Although the short recording time (average of 5.03 h) limited the scope of the conclusions, this stu
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- 2021
8. Time- and dose-related effects of three 5-HT receptor ligands on the genioglossus activity in anesthetized and conscious rats
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Besnard, S., Massé, F., Verdaguer, M., Cappelin, B., Meurice, J. C., and Gestreau, C.
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- 2007
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9. The geopolitical ecology of conservation : the emergence of illegal wildlife trade as national security interest and the re-shaping of US foreign conservation assistance
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Massé, F. and Margulies, J.D.
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In this article we develop a geopolitical ecology of foreign conservation assistance. While the literature on the political nature of foreign assistance writ large highlights how geopolitical agendas are pursued through foreign assistance, we focus on how this geopolitics of foreign assistance articulates with biodiversity conservation concerns. We draw attention to how conservation donor agencies negotiate shifting geopolitical contexts in which the protection of biodiversity from the illegal wildlife trade (IWT) is increasingly framed in the language of national security concerns. We ask: Does framing IWT as a national security concern shape the allocation of foreign conservation assistance? What can answering this question tell us, both empirically and conceptually, about the geopolitical ecology of foreign conservation assistance specifically, and about the meaning of biodiversity conservation efforts to the state more broadly? We approach these questions by combining in-depth qualitative and quantitative analyses of the foreign conservation assistance provided by the US’ lead wildlife conservation agency, the United States Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS). Between 2002 to the end of fiscal year 2018, the USFWS Division of International Affairs provided assistance to 4142 projects across 106 countries worth over USD $301 million. Our results show that an increasing portion of foreign assistance for biodiversity conservation is allocated to projects that have the specific objective of combating wildlife trafficking (CWT) at the expense of other conservation priorities. This transformation of what it means to fund conservation work overseas, we argue, lies at the heart of an emerging and intensifying geopolitical ecology of conservation, marked by increasing efforts to link the illicit harvesting and trafficking of wildlife with concerns about threats to national security. We conclude by discussing what a geopolitical ecology lens offers for understanding international assistance, biodiversity conservation, more traditional geopolitical concerns, and the intersections between them.
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- 2020
10. Benchmark study on international functional safety standards
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Massé, F, primary, Tiennot, R, additional, Signoret, J, additional, Blancart, P, additional, Dupin, G, additional, and Marle, L, additional
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- 2011
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11. Episode 104: The Politics of Anti-Poaching with Francis Massé
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O'Sullivan, S, Massé, F, O'Sullivan, S, and Massé, F
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In this episode of Knowing Animals I am joined by Dr. Francis Massé. Francis is a Post-Doctoral Research Fellow in the Department of Politics at the University of Sheffield. He is also part of the Biosec team. We discuss his paper ‘Anti-poaching’s politics of (in)visibility:Representing nature and conservation amidst a poaching crisis’ which appeared in the journal Geoforum in 2018.
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- 2019
12. Why we must question the militarisation of conservation
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Duffy, R. (Rosaleen), Massé, F., Smidt, E. (Emile), Marijnen, E., Büscher, B.E. (Bram), Verweijen, J., Ramutsindela, M., Simlai, T., Joanny, L, Lunstrum, E., Duffy, R. (Rosaleen), Massé, F., Smidt, E. (Emile), Marijnen, E., Büscher, B.E. (Bram), Verweijen, J., Ramutsindela, M., Simlai, T., Joanny, L, and Lunstrum, E.
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Concerns about poaching and trafficking have led conservationists to seek urgent responses to tackle the impact on wildlife. One possible solution is the militarisation of conservation, which holds
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- 2019
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13. Why we must question the militarisation of conservation
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Duffy, R, Massé, F, Smidt, Emile, Marijnen, E, Büscher, B, Verweijen, J, Ramutsindela, M, Simlai, T, Joanny, L, Lunstrum, E, Duffy, R, Massé, F, Smidt, Emile, Marijnen, E, Büscher, B, Verweijen, J, Ramutsindela, M, Simlai, T, Joanny, L, and Lunstrum, E
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- 2019
14. Disaster Making in the Capitalocene
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O'Lear, Shannon, Masse, Francis, Dickinson, Hannah, and Duffy, Rosaleen
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- 2022
15. Suitability of commercial barometric pressure sensors to distinguish sitting and standing activities for wearable monitoring
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Massé, F., Bourke, A.K., Chardonnens, J., Paraschiv-Ionescu, A., and Aminian, K.
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- 2014
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16. Improving activity recognition using a wearable barometric pressure sensor in mobility-impaired stroke patients
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Massé, F, Gonzenbach, R R, Arami, A, Paraschiv-Ionescu, A, Luft, A R, Aminian, K, Massé, F, Gonzenbach, R R, Arami, A, Paraschiv-Ionescu, A, Luft, A R, and Aminian, K
- Abstract
BACKGROUND Stroke survivors often suffer from mobility deficits. Current clinical evaluation methods, including questionnaires and motor function tests, cannot provide an objective measure of the patients' mobility in daily life. Physical activity performance in daily-life can be assessed using unobtrusive monitoring, for example with a single sensor module fixed on the trunk. Existing approaches based on inertial sensors have limited performance, particularly in detecting transitions between different activities and postures, due to the inherent inter-patient variability of kinematic patterns. To overcome these limitations, one possibility is to use additional information from a barometric pressure (BP) sensor. METHODS Our study aims at integrating BP and inertial sensor data into an activity classifier in order to improve the activity (sitting, standing, walking, lying) recognition and the corresponding body elevation (during climbing stairs or when taking an elevator). Taking into account the trunk elevation changes during postural transitions (sit-to-stand, stand-to-sit), we devised an event-driven activity classifier based on fuzzy-logic. Data were acquired from 12 stroke patients with impaired mobility, using a trunk-worn inertial and BP sensor. Events, including walking and lying periods and potential postural transitions, were first extracted. These events were then fed into a double-stage hierarchical Fuzzy Inference System (H-FIS). The first stage processed the events to infer activities and the second stage improved activity recognition by applying behavioral constraints. Finally, the body elevation was estimated using a pattern-enhancing algorithm applied on BP. The patients were videotaped for reference. The performance of the algorithm was estimated using the Correct Classification Rate (CCR) and F-score. The BP-based classification approach was benchmarked against a previously-published fuzzy-logic classifier (FIS-IMU) and a conventional epoch-based c
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- 2015
17. Detection of major epileptic seizures with heart rate changes: feasibility test of a state-of-the-art wearable sensor
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Bussel, van, M.J.P., Arends, J.B.A.M., Massé, F., Serteyn, A.A.M., Tan, I.Y., Penders, J., Griep, P.A.M., and Signal Processing Systems
- Abstract
Purpose: To develop and validate a wearable ultra-low power prototype device for ECG-based epileptic seizure detection. Method: This observational study is a nonrandomized, open, single-site, clinical test in 10 subjects (30–50 seizures) previously diagnosed with frequent (>1/week) major epileptic seizures (tonic–clonic, generalized tonic or clonic) with heart rate changes. A wearable device running a previously developed algorithm [van Elmpt WJ et al. Seizure 2006; 15(6):366–75] for heart rate based seizure detection was tested at night during 1–4 weeks per patient. Objectives were the sensitivity, positive predictive value and technical feasibility. Results were verified by visual analysis of recorded video and comparison to previously analyzed EEGvideo data. Results: In the first 3 patients 100% of major seizures were detected; however at the cost of many false positives. Reanalysis of the data showed that optimizing parameter settings of the detection algorithm considerably improved positive predictive value. Exact results will be presented. Conclusion: Heart rate–based detection of major seizures by the proposed wearable sensor system is feasible.
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- 2010
18. CA-160: Évaluation d'un programme d'éducation thérapeutique du patient diabétique en maison de santé pluridisciplinaire en Martinique
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Masse, F.
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- 2016
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19. Shielding evaluation of a medical linear accelerator vault in preparation for installing a high-dose rate 252Cf remote afterloader
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Melhus, C. S., primary, Rivard, M. J., additional, KurKomelis, J., additional, Liddle, C. B., additional, and Massé, F. X., additional
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- 2005
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20. Résultats obtenus en fonds de poche à acier par la mise en place d'une couche de sécurité incurvée en blocs préfabriqués de bétons réfractaires
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Massé, F., primary, Poirier, J., additional, Avis, R.N., additional, de Lafarge, P., additional, and Targe, J.P., additional
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- 1991
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21. SHIELDING EVALUATION OF A MEDICAL LINEAR ACCELERATOR VAULT IN PREPARATION FOR INSTALLING A HIGH-DOSE RATE 252Cf REMOTE AFTERLOADER.
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Melhus, C. S., Rivard, M. J., KurKomelis, J., Liddle, C. B., and Massé, F. X.
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RADIOISOTOPE brachytherapy ,NUCLEAR counters ,SCISSION (Chemistry) ,MONTE Carlo method ,ION accelerators ,BARYONS - Abstract
In support of the effort to begin high-dose rate
252 Cf brachytherapy treatments at Tufts-New England Medical Center, the shielding capabilities of a clinical accelerator vault against the neutron and photon emissions from a 1.124 mg252 Cf source were examined. Outside the clinical accelerator vault, the fast neutron dose equivalent rate was below the lower limit of detection of a CR-39 etched track detector and below 0.14 ± 0.02 μSv h-1 with a proportional counter, which is consistent, within the uncertainties, with natural background. The photon dose equivalent rate was also measured to be below background levels (0.1 μSv h-1 ) using an ionisation chamber and an optically stimulated luminescence dosemeter. A Monte Carlo simulation of neutron transport through the accelerator vault was performed to validate measured values and determine the thermal-energy to low-energy neutron component. Monte Carlo results showed that the dose equivalent rate from fast neutrons was reduced by a factor of 100,000 after attenuation through the vault wall, and the thermal-energy neutron dose equivalent rate would be an additional factor of 1000 below that of the fast neutrons. Based on these findings, the shielding installed im this facility is sufficient for the use of at least 5.0 mg of252 Cf. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2005
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22. P.4.b.003 Effect of GABAergic ligands on the anxiolytic-like activity of antidepressants in the four-plates test in mice
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Bourin, M., Dubois, I., Masse, F., and Hasco¨et-Le Cleach, M.
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- 2007
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23. P.1.c.032 Regulation of NA and GABA systems on DOI (agonist 5-HT2A/2C) anxiolytic-like effect in the four-plate test and cerebral localization of target receptors
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Masse, F., Hascoet, M., and Bourin, M.
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- 2006
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24. Human Hematopoietic PGD 2 Synthase: Inhibition by 15-deoxy– 12,14-PGJ 2 and Sulindac Sulfide, and Localization to Mast Cells
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Greig, G.M., Masse, F., Nantel, F., Chateauneuf, A., and O'Neill, G.
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- 2006
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25. 109 Central effects of the 8-OHDPAT, SB 224289 and DOI on the diaphragm and the genioglossus respiratory activities in rat
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Verdaguer, M., Masse, F., Cappelin, B., Meurice, J.C., Paquereau, J., and Besnard, S.
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- 2005
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26. Guillaume Apollinaire. Correspondance. I Lettres reçues. XIII Mar-Mol.
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Apollinaire, Guillaume (1880-1918). Destinataire de lettres, Marais (Henri). Auteur de lettres, Marcel-Jacques (Alphonse), sculpteur. Auteur de lettres, Marcel-Villain (M.), pilote de guerre. Auteur de lettres, Marchand (Jean), peintre. Auteur de lettres, Marcoussis (Louis Markous, dit), peintre. Auteur de lettres, Mardrus (Dr Joseph-Charles), orientaliste. Auteur de lettres, Mare (André), peintre. Auteur de lettres, Margueritte (Paul), écrivain. Auteur de lettres, Margueritte (Lucie, Mme Paul). Auteur de lettres, Marin (M.), bibliographe. Auteur de lettres, Markovitch (Marylie), Mme Amélie de Néry, poète. Auteur de lettres, Martineau (Gabriel). Auteur de lettres, Martineau (Henri), poète et critique. Auteur de lettres, Mary (André), poète. Auteur de lettres, Massé (F.), ami de Mécislas Goldberg. Auteur de lettres, Massis (Henri), écrivain. Auteur de lettres, Matisse (Henri), peintre. Auteur de lettres, Matrod-Desmurs (Mme), miniaturiste. Auteur de lettres, Maze (Robert), poète. Auteur de lettres, Mazzini (Pietro), directeur de la revue L'Italie et la France. Auteur de lettres, Mercereau (Alexandre), pseud. Eshmer Valdor, écrivain. Auteur de lettres, Mercereau (Jack). Auteur de lettres, Merey (Roger de). Auteur de lettres, Mérignac (Ernesta), sculpteur. Auteur de lettres, Mérilhon (P.), attaché au cabinet du ministre de la Guerre. Auteur de lettres, Merrill (Stuart), poète. Auteur de lettres, Metteix (Jean), homme de lettres. Auteur de lettres, Metzinger (Jean), peintre. Auteur de lettres, Meugniot (Pierre Ch.), maréchal des logis et ami de Lou. Auteur de lettres, Meunier (Mario), helléniste et écrivain. Auteur de lettres, Meyer (Alfred Richard), éditeur berlinois. Auteur de lettres, Meyerhold (Vsevolod Emilievitch), metteur en scène russe. Auteur de lettres, Michaux (Francisque), fils de Pierre Michaux, inventeur du pédalier. Auteur de lettres, Michel (Georges-Michel), écrivain. Auteur de lettres, Michelet (Victor-Émile), écrivain. Auteur de lettres, Mignon (Dr A.). Auteur de lettres, Mille (Pierre), journaliste et romancier. Auteur de lettres, Millet (Marcel), écrivain. Auteur de lettres, Minsky (N.). Auteur de lettres, Miomandre (Francis de), écrivain. Auteur de lettres, Mitty (Demetrius Golfineano, dit Jean de), journaliste et écrivain. Auteur de lettres, Mocq[...] (J.). Auteur de lettres, Molina da Silva (Albert) Lettres. Auteur de lettres, Molina da Silva (Ferdinand). Auteur de lettres, Molina da Silva (Jacques). Auteur de lettres, Mollet (Jean, dit le baron). Auteur de lettres, Apollinaire, Guillaume (1880-1918). Destinataire de lettres, Marais (Henri). Auteur de lettres, Marcel-Jacques (Alphonse), sculpteur. Auteur de lettres, Marcel-Villain (M.), pilote de guerre. Auteur de lettres, Marchand (Jean), peintre. Auteur de lettres, Marcoussis (Louis Markous, dit), peintre. Auteur de lettres, Mardrus (Dr Joseph-Charles), orientaliste. Auteur de lettres, Mare (André), peintre. Auteur de lettres, Margueritte (Paul), écrivain. Auteur de lettres, Margueritte (Lucie, Mme Paul). Auteur de lettres, Marin (M.), bibliographe. Auteur de lettres, Markovitch (Marylie), Mme Amélie de Néry, poète. Auteur de lettres, Martineau (Gabriel). Auteur de lettres, Martineau (Henri), poète et critique. Auteur de lettres, Mary (André), poète. Auteur de lettres, Massé (F.), ami de Mécislas Goldberg. Auteur de lettres, Massis (Henri), écrivain. Auteur de lettres, Matisse (Henri), peintre. Auteur de lettres, Matrod-Desmurs (Mme), miniaturiste. Auteur de lettres, Maze (Robert), poète. Auteur de lettres, Mazzini (Pietro), directeur de la revue L'Italie et la France. Auteur de lettres, Mercereau (Alexandre), pseud. Eshmer Valdor, écrivain. Auteur de lettres, Mercereau (Jack). Auteur de lettres, Merey (Roger de). Auteur de lettres, Mérignac (Ernesta), sculpteur. Auteur de lettres, Mérilhon (P.), attaché au cabinet du ministre de la Guerre. Auteur de lettres, Merrill (Stuart), poète. Auteur de lettres, Metteix (Jean), homme de lettres. Auteur de lettres, Metzinger (Jean), peintre. Auteur de lettres, Meugniot (Pierre Ch.), maréchal des logis et ami de Lou. Auteur de lettres, Meunier (Mario), helléniste et écrivain. Auteur de lettres, Meyer (Alfred Richard), éditeur berlinois. Auteur de lettres, Meyerhold (Vsevolod Emilievitch), metteur en scène russe. Auteur de lettres, Michaux (Francisque), fils de Pierre Michaux, inventeur du pédalier. Auteur de lettres, Michel (Georges-Michel), écrivain. Auteur de lettres, Michelet (Victor-Émile), écrivain. Auteur de lettres, Mignon (Dr A.). Auteur de lettres, Mille (Pierre), journaliste et romancier. Auteur de lettres, Millet (Marcel), écrivain. Auteur de lettres, Minsky (N.). Auteur de lettres, Miomandre (Francis de), écrivain. Auteur de lettres, Mitty (Demetrius Golfineano, dit Jean de), journaliste et écrivain. Auteur de lettres, Mocq[...] (J.). Auteur de lettres, Molina da Silva (Albert) Lettres. Auteur de lettres, Molina da Silva (Ferdinand). Auteur de lettres, Molina da Silva (Jacques). Auteur de lettres, and Mollet (Jean, dit le baron). Auteur de lettres
- Abstract
Contient : Marais (Henri). Lettre ; Marcel-Jacques (Alphonse), sculpteur. Carte-lettre ; Marcel-Villain (M.), pilote de guerre. Carte-lettre ; Marchand (Jean), peintre. Carte et lettre ; Marcoussis (Louis Markous, dit), peintre. Carte ; Mardrus (Dr Joseph-Charles), orientaliste. Lettres ; Mare (André), peintre. Lettre ; Margueritte (Paul), écrivain. Cartes et Lettre. Voir aussi : NAF 25632, f. 25 ; Margueritte (Lucie, Mme Paul). Carte ; Marin (M.), bibliographe. Lettre ; Markovitch (Marylie), Mme Amélie de Néry, poète. Lettre ; Martineau (Gabriel). Lettres ; Martineau (Henri), poète et critique. Carte ; Mary (André), poète. Lettres ; Massé (F.), ami de Mécislas Goldberg. Lettres ; Massis (Henri), écrivain. Lettres ; Matisse (Henri), peintre. Billets, Voir aussi : fragment autobiographique in NAF 25621, f. 57-60 ; Matrod-Desmurs (Mme), miniaturiste. Carte de visite ; Maze (Robert), poète. Lettre ; Mazzini (Pietro), directeur de la revue L'Italie et la France. Lettre ; Mercereau (Alexandre), pseud. Eshmer Valdor, écrivain. Lettres. Nota bene : lettres et enveloppes étant arrivées disjointes, de nombreuses lettres n'ont pu être réassorties et datées ; Mercereau (Jack). Lettre ; Merey (Roger de). Lettre ; Mérignac (Ernesta), sculpteur. Lettre ; Mérilhon (P.), attaché au cabinet du ministre de la Guerre. Lettres ; Merrill (Stuart), poète. Lettres ; Metteix (Jean), homme de lettres. Lettre ; Metzinger (Jean), peintre. Lettre ; Meugniot (Pierre Ch.), maréchal des logis et ami de Lou. Poème (f. 205) et lettres ; Meunier (Mario), helléniste et écrivain. Cartes ; Meyer (Alfred Richard), éditeur berlinois. Lettres ; Meyerhold (Vsevolod Emilievitch), metteur en scène russe. Lettre ; Michaux (Francisque), fils de Pierre Michaux, inventeur du pédalier. Lettre ; Michel (Georges-Michel), écrivain. Lettres ; Michelet (Victor-Émile), écrivain. Lettres ; Mignon (Dr A.). Lettre ; Mille (Pierre), journaliste et romancier. Carte-lettre. Voir aussi : NAF 25618, f. 102-103 ; Millet (Marcel, Numérisation effectuée à partir d'un document de substitution : R 156386.
27. Wharf construction in a seismic zone
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Masse, Frederic and Spaulding, Charles
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BUILDING AND CONSTRUCTION - Design ,PORTS - Maintenance and Repair - Abstract
illus
- Published
- 2004
28. A cryogenic tritium target system for nuclear physics experiments
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Beck, D., Retzlaff, G., Turchinetz, W., Blomqvist, K.I., Demos, P., Dodson, G., Dow, K., Dzengeleski, J., Flanz, J., Karageorge, G., Masse, F., Russ, T., Russo, C., Sapp, W., Sargent, C.P., Williamson, C., Goloskie, R., Farkhondeh, M., and Whitney, R.
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- 1989
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29. Vulnerability and coping strategies within wild meat trade networks during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Enns C, van Vliet N, Mbane J, Muhindo J, Nyumu J, Bersaglio B, Massé F, Cerutti PO, and Nasi R
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Measures adopted to prevent the spread of COVID-19 and economic shocks caused by the pandemic have affected food networks globally, including wild meat trade networks that support the livelihoods and food security of millions of people around the world. In this article, we examine how COVID-related shocks have affected the vulnerability and coping strategies of different actors along wild meat trade networks. Informed by 1,876 questionnaires carried out with wild meat hunters, traders, vendors, and consumers in Cameroon, Colombia, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), and Guyana, the article presents qualitative evidence as to how COVID-19 impacted different segments of society involved in wild meat trade networks. Our findings largely align with McNamara et al. (2020) and Kamogne Tagne et al.'s (2022) causal model hypothesising how the impacts of the pandemic could lead to a change in local incentives for wild meat hunting in sub-Saharan African countries. Like McNamara et al. (2020) and Kamogne Tagne et al. (2022), we find that the pandemic reduced wild meat availability for wild meat actors in urban areas while increasing reliance on wild meat for subsistence purposes in rural areas. However, we find some impact pathways to be more relevant than others, and also incorporate additional impact pathways into the existing causal model. Based on our findings, we argue that wild meat serves as an important safety net in response to shocks for some actors in wild meat trade networks. We conclude by advocating for policies and development interventions that seek to improve the safety and sustainability of wild meat trade networks and protect access to wild meat as an environmental coping strategy during times of crisis., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (© 2023 The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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30. Description of the Method for Evaluating Digital Endpoints in Alzheimer Disease Study: Protocol for an Exploratory, Cross-sectional Study.
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Curcic J, Vallejo V, Sorinas J, Sverdlov O, Praestgaard J, Piksa M, Deurinck M, Erdemli G, Bügler M, Tarnanas I, Taptiklis N, Cormack F, Anker R, Massé F, Souillard-Mandar W, Intrator N, Molcho L, Madero E, Bott N, Chambers M, Tamory J, Shulz M, Fernandez G, Simpson W, Robin J, Snædal JG, Cha JH, and Hannesdottir K
- Abstract
Background: More sensitive and less burdensome efficacy end points are urgently needed to improve the effectiveness of clinical drug development for Alzheimer disease (AD). Although conventional end points lack sensitivity, digital technologies hold promise for amplifying the detection of treatment signals and capturing cognitive anomalies at earlier disease stages. Using digital technologies and combining several test modalities allow for the collection of richer information about cognitive and functional status, which is not ascertainable via conventional paper-and-pencil tests., Objective: This study aimed to assess the psychometric properties, operational feasibility, and patient acceptance of 10 promising technologies that are to be used as efficacy end points to measure cognition in future clinical drug trials., Methods: The Method for Evaluating Digital Endpoints in Alzheimer Disease study is an exploratory, cross-sectional, noninterventional study that will evaluate 10 digital technologies' ability to accurately classify participants into 4 cohorts according to the severity of cognitive impairment and dementia. Moreover, this study will assess the psychometric properties of each of the tested digital technologies, including the acceptable range to assess ceiling and floor effects, concurrent validity to correlate digital outcome measures to traditional paper-and-pencil tests in AD, reliability to compare test and retest, and responsiveness to evaluate the sensitivity to change in a mild cognitive challenge model. This study included 50 eligible male and female participants (aged between 60 and 80 years), of whom 13 (26%) were amyloid-negative, cognitively healthy participants (controls); 12 (24%) were amyloid-positive, cognitively healthy participants (presymptomatic); 13 (26%) had mild cognitive impairment (predementia); and 12 (24%) had mild AD (mild dementia). This study involved 4 in-clinic visits. During the initial visit, all participants completed all conventional paper-and-pencil assessments. During the following 3 visits, the participants underwent a series of novel digital assessments., Results: Participant recruitment and data collection began in June 2020 and continued until June 2021. Hence, the data collection occurred during the COVID-19 pandemic (SARS-CoV-2 virus pandemic). Data were successfully collected from all digital technologies to evaluate statistical and operational performance and patient acceptance. This paper reports the baseline demographics and characteristics of the population studied as well as the study's progress during the pandemic., Conclusions: This study was designed to generate feasibility insights and validation data to help advance novel digital technologies in clinical drug development. The learnings from this study will help guide future methods for assessing novel digital technologies and inform clinical drug trials in early AD, aiming to enhance clinical end point strategies with digital technologies., International Registered Report Identifier (irrid): DERR1-10.2196/35442., (©Jelena Curcic, Vanessa Vallejo, Jennifer Sorinas, Oleksandr Sverdlov, Jens Praestgaard, Mateusz Piksa, Mark Deurinck, Gul Erdemli, Maximilian Bügler, Ioannis Tarnanas, Nick Taptiklis, Francesca Cormack, Rebekka Anker, Fabien Massé, William Souillard-Mandar, Nathan Intrator, Lior Molcho, Erica Madero, Nicholas Bott, Mieko Chambers, Josef Tamory, Matias Shulz, Gerardo Fernandez, William Simpson, Jessica Robin, Jón G Snædal, Jang-Ho Cha, Kristin Hannesdottir. Originally published in JMIR Research Protocols (https://www.researchprotocols.org), 10.08.2022.)
- Published
- 2022
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31. Monitoring weekly progress of front crawl swimmers using IMU-based performance evaluation goal metrics.
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Hamidi Rad M, Gremeaux V, Massé F, Dadashi F, and Aminian K
- Abstract
Technical evaluation of swimming performance is an essential factor in preparing elite swimmers for their competitions. Inertial measurement units (IMUs) have attracted much attention recently because they can provide coaches with a detailed analysis of swimmers' performance during training. A coach can obtain a quantitative and objective evaluation from IMU. The purpose of this study was to validate the use of a new phase-based performance assessment with a single IMU worn on the sacrum during training sessions. Sixteen competitive swimmers performed five one-way front crawl trials at their maximum speed wearing an IMU on the sacrum. The coach recorded the lap time for each trial, as it remains the gold standard for swimmer's performance in competition. The measurement was carried out once a week for 10 consecutive weeks to monitor the improvement in the swimmers' performance. Meaningful progress was defined as a time decrease of at least 0.5 s over a 25 m lap. Using validated algorithms, we estimated five goal metrics from the IMU signals representing the swimmer's performance in the swimming phases (wall push-off, glide, stroke preparation, free-swimming) and in the entire lap. The results showed that the goal metrics for free-swimming phase and the entire lap predicted the swimmer's progress well (e.g., accuracy, precision, sensitivity, and specificity of 0.91, 0.89, 0.94, and 0.95 for the lap goal metric, respectively). As the goal metrics for initial phases (wall push-off, glide, stroke preparation) achieved high precision and specificity (≥0.79) in progress detection, the coach can use them for swimmers with satisfactory free-swimming phase performance and make further improvements in initial phases. Changes in the values of the goal metrics have been shown to be correlated with changes in lap time when there is meaningful progress. The results of this study show that goal metrics provided by the phase-based performance evaluation with a single IMU can help monitoring swimming progress. Average velocity of the lap can replace traditional lap time measurement, while phase-based goal metrics provide more information about the swimmer's performance in each phase. This evaluation can help the coach quantitatively monitor the swimmer's performance and train them more efficiently., Competing Interests: Author FM is employed by Gait Up S.A. Author FD is employed by Huma Therapeutics Ltd. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Hamidi Rad, Gremeaux, Massé, Dadashi and Aminian.)
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- 2022
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32. Three-Dimensional Lower-Limb Kinematics from Accelerometers and Gyroscopes with Simple and Minimal Functional Calibration Tasks: Validation on Asymptomatic Participants.
- Author
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Carcreff L, Payen G, Grouvel G, Massé F, and Armand S
- Subjects
- Accelerometry, Biomechanical Phenomena, Calibration, Humans, Gait, Lower Extremity
- Abstract
The use of inertial measurement units (IMUs) to compute gait outputs, such as the 3D lower-limb kinematics is of huge potential, but no consensus on the procedures and algorithms exists. This study aimed at evaluating the validity of a 7-IMUs system against the optoelectronic system. Ten asymptomatic subjects were included. They wore IMUs on their feet, shanks, thighs and pelvis. The IMUs were embedded in clusters with reflective markers. Reference kinematics was computed from anatomical markers. Gait kinematics was obtained from accelerometer and gyroscope data after sensor orientation estimation and sensor-to-segment (S2S) calibration steps. The S2S calibration steps were also applied to the cluster data. IMU-based and cluster-based kinematics were compared to the reference through root mean square errors (RMSEs), centered RMSEs (after mean removal), correlation coefficients (CCs) and differences in amplitude. The mean RMSE and centered RMSE were, respectively, 7.5° and 4.0° for IMU-kinematics, and 7.9° and 3.8° for cluster-kinematics. Very good CCs were found in the sagittal plane for both IMUs and cluster-based kinematics at the hip, knee and ankle levels (CCs > 0.85). The overall mean amplitude difference was about 7°. These results reflected good accordance in our system with the reference, especially in the sagittal plane, but the presence of offsets requires caution for clinical use.
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- 2022
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33. SmartSwim, a Novel IMU-Based Coaching Assistance.
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Hamidi Rad M, Gremeaux V, Massé F, Dadashi F, and Aminian K
- Subjects
- Motivation, Motor Vehicles, Statistics, Nonparametric, Swimming, Mentoring
- Abstract
Swimming coaches provide regular timed and technical feedback to swimmers and guide them efficiently in training sessions. Due to the complexity of swimmers’ performance, which is not visible in qualitative observation, quantitative and objective performance evaluation can better assist the coach in this regard. Inertial measurement units (IMUs) are used in swimming for objective performance evaluation. In this study, we propose a new performance evaluation feedback (SmartSwim) using IMU and investigate its effects on the swimmer’s weekly progress. Measurements were conducted each week with 15 competitive swimmers for 10 weeks using a Sacrum IMU. The SmartSwim report included a comprehensive representation of performance based on goal metrics of each phase extracted from the IMU signals. The swimmers were divided into two groups: the experimental and control groups. The SmartSwim report for each swimmer in the experimental group was given to the coach, who used it to adjust the training accordingly. The results showed that the experimental group outperformed the control group when comparing each swimmer, each session and the whole sessions. At the level of each individual, more members of the experimental group showed significant downward trend of average lap time (Mann-Kendall trend test, 95% confidence level). While comparing the sessions, the experimental group showed significantly lower lap time than the control group from the sixth session onwards (p-value < 0.05 from t-test). Considering all sessions, the experimental group showed significantly higher progress, lower average lap time, and more consistent records (Mann-Whitney U test at 95% confidence level) than the control group. This study demonstrated that SmartSwim can assist coaching by quantitatively assessing swimmers’ performance, leading to more efficient training.
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- 2022
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34. Understanding Factors that Shape Exposure to Zoonotic and Food-Borne Diseases Across Wild Meat Trade Chains.
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van Vliet N, Muhindo J, Nyumu J, Enns C, Massé F, Bersaglio B, Cerutti P, and Nasi R
- Abstract
The rise of zoonotic disease-related public health crises has sparked calls for policy action, including calls to close wildlife markets. Yet, these calls often reflect limited understanding of where, precisely, exposure to risk occurs along wildlife and wild meat trade chains. They also threaten to negatively impact food security and livelihoods. From a public health perspective, it is important to understand the practices that shape food safety all along the trade chain, resulting in meat that is either safe to eat or managed as a potential vector of pathogens. This article uses ethnographic methods to examine the steps that lead a wild animal from the forest to the plate of an urban consumer in Yangambi and Kisangani in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). Focusing on hunters, village-level consumers, transporters, market traders and urban consumers, we highlight specific practices that expose different actors involved in the trade chain to wild meat related health risks, including exposure to food borne illnesses from contaminated meat and zoonotic pathogens through direct contact with wild animals, and the local practices in place to reduce the same. We discuss interventions that could help prevent and mitigate zoonotic and food borne disease risks associated with wild meat trade chains., Competing Interests: Conflict of interestThe authors declare no conflict of interest, (© The Author(s) 2022.)
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- 2022
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35. Swimming Phase-Based Performance Evaluation Using a Single IMU in Main Swimming Techniques.
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Hamidi Rad M, Aminian K, Gremeaux V, Massé F, and Dadashi F
- Abstract
Comprehensive monitoring of performance is essential for swimmers and swimming coaches to optimize the training. Regardless of the swimming technique, the swimmer passes various swimming phases from wall to wall, including a dive into the water or wall push-off, then glide and strokes preparation and finally, swimming up to the turn. The coach focuses on improving the performance of the swimmer in each of these phases. The purpose of this study was to assess the potential of using a sacrum-worn inertial measurement unit (IMU) for performance evaluation in each swimming phase (wall push-off, glide, stroke preparation and swimming) of elite swimmers in four main swimming techniques (i.e. front crawl, breaststroke, butterfly and backstroke). Nineteen swimmers were asked to wear a sacrum IMU and swim four one-way 25 m trials in each technique, attached to a tethered speedometer and filmed by cameras in the whole lap as reference systems. Based on the literature, several goal metrics were extracted from the instantaneous velocity (e.g. average velocity per stroke cycle) and displacement (e.g. time to reach 15 m from the wall) data from a tethered speedometer for the swimming phases, each one representing the goodness of swimmer's performance. Following a novel approach, that starts from swimming bout detection and continues until detecting the swimming phases, the IMU kinematic variables in each swimming phase were extracted. The highly associated variables with the corresponding goal metrics were detected by LASSO (least absolute shrinkage and selection operator) variable selection and used for estimating the goal metrics with a linear regression model. The selected kinematic variables were relevant to the motion characteristics of each phase (e.g. selection of propulsion-related variables in wall push-off phase), providing more interpretability to the model. The estimation reached a determination coefficient (R
2 ) value more than 0.75 and a relative RMSE less than 10% for most goal metrics in all swimming techniques. The results show that a single sacrum IMU can provide a wide range of performance-related swimming kinematic variables, useful for performance evaluation in four main swimming techniques., Competing Interests: Author FM was employed by Gait Up S.A. and author FD was employed by HUMA Therapeudics Ltd. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Hamidi Rad, Aminian, Gremeaux, Massé and Dadashi.)- Published
- 2021
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36. Why we must question the militarisation of conservation.
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Duffy R, Massé F, Smidt E, Marijnen E, Büscher B, Verweijen J, Ramutsindela M, Simlai T, Joanny L, and Lunstrum E
- Abstract
Concerns about poaching and trafficking have led conservationists to seek urgent responses to tackle the impact on wildlife. One possible solution is the militarisation of conservation, which holds potentially far-reaching consequences. It is important to engage critically with the militarisation of conservation, including identifying and reflecting on the problems it produces for wildlife, for people living with wildlife and for those tasked with implementing militarised strategies. This Perspectives piece is a first step towards synthesising the main themes in emerging critiques of militarised conservation. We identify five major themes: first, the importance of understanding how poaching is defined; second, understanding the ways that local communities experience militarised conservation; third, the experiences of rangers; fourth, how the militarisation of conservation can contribute to violence where conservation operates in the context of armed conflict; and finally how it fits in with and reflects wider political economic dynamics. Ultimately, we suggest that failure to engage more critically with militarisation risks making things worse for the people involved and lead to poor conservation outcomes in the long run.
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- 2019
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37. Measuring upper limb function in children with hemiparesis with 3D inertial sensors.
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Newman CJ, Bruchez R, Roches S, Jequier Gygax M, Duc C, Dadashi F, Massé F, and Aminian K
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- Adolescent, Biomechanical Phenomena physiology, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Paresis diagnosis, Monitoring, Physiologic instrumentation, Monitoring, Physiologic methods, Movement physiology, Paresis physiopathology, Upper Extremity physiology
- Abstract
Purpose: Upper limb assessments in children with hemiparesis rely on clinical measurements, which despite standardization are prone to error. Recently, 3D movement analysis using optoelectronic setups has been used to measure upper limb movement, but generalization is hindered by time and cost. Body worn inertial sensors may provide a simple, cost-effective alternative., Methods: We instrumented a subset of 30 participants in a mirror therapy clinical trial at baseline, post-treatment, and follow-up clinical assessments, with wireless inertial sensors positioned on the arms and trunk to monitor motion during reaching tasks., Results: Inertial sensor measurements distinguished paretic and non-paretic limbs with significant differences (P < 0.01) in movement duration, power, range of angular velocity, elevation, and smoothness (normalized jerk index and spectral arc length). Inertial sensor measurements correlated with functional clinical tests (Melbourne Assessment 2); movement duration and complexity (Higuchi fractal dimension) showed moderate to strong negative correlations with clinical measures of amplitude, accuracy, and fluency., Conclusion: Inertial sensor measurements reliably identify paresis and correlate with clinical measurements; they can therefore provide a complementary dimension of assessment in clinical practice and during clinical trials aimed at improving upper limb function.
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- 2017
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38. Application of the Protein Maker as a platform purification system for therapeutic antibody research and development.
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Hélie G, Parat M, Massé F, Gerdts CJ, Loisel TP, and Matte A
- Abstract
Within the research and development environment, higher throughput, parallelized protein purification is required for numerous activities, from small scale purification of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) and antibody fragments for in vitro and in vivo assays to process development and optimization for manufacturing. Here, we describe specific applications and associated workflows of the Protein Maker liquid handling system utilized in both of these contexts. To meet the requirements for various in vitro assays, for the identification and validation of new therapeutic targets, small quantities of large numbers of purified antibodies or antibody fragments are often required. Reducing host cell proteins (HCP) levels following capture with Protein A by evaluating various wash buffers is an example of how parallelized protein purification can be leveraged to improve a process development outcome. Stability testing under various conditions of in-process intermediates, as an example, the mAb product from a clarified harvest, requires parallelized protein purification to generate concurrent samples for downstream assays. We have found that the Protein Maker can be successfully utilized for small-to-mid scale platform purification or for process development applications to generate the necessary purified protein samples. The ability to purify and buffer exchange up to 24 samples in parallel offers a significant reduction in time and cost per sample compared to serial purification using a traditional FPLC system. By combining the Protein Maker purification system with a TECAN Freedom EVO liquid handler for automated buffer exchange we have created a new, integrated platform for a variety of protein purification and process development applications.
- Published
- 2016
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39. Reliability and validity of the inertial sensor-based Timed "Up and Go" test in individuals affected by stroke.
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Wüest S, Massé F, Aminian K, Gonzenbach R, and de Bruin ED
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Case-Control Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Reproducibility of Results, Accelerometry instrumentation, Exercise Test instrumentation, Postural Balance physiology, Stroke physiopathology, Walking physiology
- Abstract
The instrumented Timed "Up and Go" test (iTUG) has the potential for playing an important role in providing clinically useful information regarding an individual's balance and mobility that cannot be derived from the original single-outcome Timed "Up and Go" test protocol. The purpose of this study was to determine the reliability and validity of the iTUG using body-fixed inertial sensors in people affected by stroke. For test-retest reliability analysis, 14 individuals with stroke and 25 nondisabled elderly patients were assessed. For validity analysis, an age-matched comparison of 12 patients with stroke and 12 nondisabled controls was performed. Out of the 14 computed iTUG metrics, the majority showed excellent test-retest reliability expressed by high intraclass correlation coefficients (range 0.431-0.994) together with low standard error of measurement and smallest detectable difference values. Bland-Altman plots demonstrated good agreement between two repeated measurements. Significant differences between patients with stroke and nondisabled controls were found in 9 of 14 iTUG parameters analyzed. Consequently, these results warrant the future application of the inertial sensor-based iTUG test for the assessment of physical deficits poststroke in longitudinal study designs.
- Published
- 2016
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40. D-amphetamine improves attention performance in adolescent Wistar, but not in SHR rats, in a two-choice visual discrimination task.
- Author
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Bizot JC, Cogrel N, Massé F, Chauvin V, Brault L, David S, and Trovero F
- Subjects
- Animals, Male, Rats, Rats, Inbred SHR, Rats, Wistar, Reaction Time drug effects, Attention drug effects, Central Nervous System Stimulants pharmacology, Dextroamphetamine pharmacology, Discrimination, Psychological drug effects, Psychomotor Performance drug effects
- Abstract
The validity of spontaneous hypertensive rat (SHR) as a model of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) has been explored by comparing SHR with Wistar rats in a test of attention, the two-choice visual discrimination task (2-CVDT). Animals were 4-5 weeks old during the training phase of the experiment and 6-7 weeks old during the testing phase in which they were tested with D-amphetamine, a stimulant drug used for the treatment of ADHD. As compared to Wistar, SHR showed a slightly better attention performance, a slightly lower impulsivity level, and a lower general activity during the training phase, but these differences disappeared or lessened thereafter, during the testing phase. D-amphetamine (0.5, 1 mg/kg) improved attention performance in Wistar, but not in SHR, and did not modify impulsivity and activity in the two strains. In conclusion, the present study did not demonstrate that SHR represents a valid model of ADHD, since it did not show face validity regarding the behavioral symptoms of ADHD and predictive validity regarding the effect of a compound used for the treatment of ADHD. On the other hand, this study showed that the 2-CVDT may represent a suitable tool for evaluating in adolescent Wistar rats the effect on attention of compounds intended for the treatment of ADHD.
- Published
- 2015
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41. Improving activity recognition using a wearable barometric pressure sensor in mobility-impaired stroke patients.
- Author
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Massé F, Gonzenbach RR, Arami A, Paraschiv-Ionescu A, Luft AR, and Aminian K
- Subjects
- Aged, Algorithms, Biomechanical Phenomena, Female, Fuzzy Logic, Humans, Locomotion physiology, Male, Middle Aged, Monitoring, Ambulatory, Movement, Posture physiology, Pressure, Reproducibility of Results, Walking physiology, Mobility Limitation, Motor Activity physiology, Stroke Rehabilitation
- Abstract
Background: Stroke survivors often suffer from mobility deficits. Current clinical evaluation methods, including questionnaires and motor function tests, cannot provide an objective measure of the patients' mobility in daily life. Physical activity performance in daily-life can be assessed using unobtrusive monitoring, for example with a single sensor module fixed on the trunk. Existing approaches based on inertial sensors have limited performance, particularly in detecting transitions between different activities and postures, due to the inherent inter-patient variability of kinematic patterns. To overcome these limitations, one possibility is to use additional information from a barometric pressure (BP) sensor., Methods: Our study aims at integrating BP and inertial sensor data into an activity classifier in order to improve the activity (sitting, standing, walking, lying) recognition and the corresponding body elevation (during climbing stairs or when taking an elevator). Taking into account the trunk elevation changes during postural transitions (sit-to-stand, stand-to-sit), we devised an event-driven activity classifier based on fuzzy-logic. Data were acquired from 12 stroke patients with impaired mobility, using a trunk-worn inertial and BP sensor. Events, including walking and lying periods and potential postural transitions, were first extracted. These events were then fed into a double-stage hierarchical Fuzzy Inference System (H-FIS). The first stage processed the events to infer activities and the second stage improved activity recognition by applying behavioral constraints. Finally, the body elevation was estimated using a pattern-enhancing algorithm applied on BP. The patients were videotaped for reference. The performance of the algorithm was estimated using the Correct Classification Rate (CCR) and F-score. The BP-based classification approach was benchmarked against a previously-published fuzzy-logic classifier (FIS-IMU) and a conventional epoch-based classifier (EPOCH)., Results: The algorithm performance for posture/activity detection, in terms of CCR was 90.4 %, with 3.3 % and 5.6 % improvements against FIS-IMU and EPOCH, respectively. The proposed classifier essentially benefits from a better recognition of standing activity (70.3 % versus 61.5 % [FIS-IMU] and 42.5 % [EPOCH]) with 98.2 % CCR for body elevation estimation., Conclusion: The monitoring and recognition of daily activities in mobility-impaired stoke patients can be significantly improved using a trunk-fixed sensor that integrates BP, inertial sensors, and an event-based activity classifier.
- Published
- 2015
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42. Reversible cysteine protease inhibitors show promise for a Chagas disease cure.
- Author
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Ndao M, Beaulieu C, Black WC, Isabel E, Vasquez-Camargo F, Nath-Chowdhury M, Massé F, Mellon C, Methot N, and Nicoll-Griffith DA
- Subjects
- Administration, Oral, Animals, Area Under Curve, Chagas Disease mortality, Chagas Disease parasitology, Cysteine Proteinase Inhibitors chemical synthesis, Inhibitory Concentration 50, Life Cycle Stages drug effects, Life Cycle Stages physiology, Male, Mice, Nitroimidazoles pharmacology, Parasitemia mortality, Protozoan Proteins metabolism, Survival Analysis, Treatment Outcome, Trypanocidal Agents chemical synthesis, Trypanosoma cruzi drug effects, Trypanosoma cruzi physiology, Chagas Disease drug therapy, Cysteine Endopeptidases metabolism, Cysteine Proteinase Inhibitors pharmacology, Parasitemia drug therapy, Protozoan Proteins antagonists & inhibitors, Trypanocidal Agents pharmacology
- Abstract
The cysteine protease cruzipain is essential for the viability, infectivity, and virulence of Trypanosoma cruzi, the causative agent of Chagas disease. Thus, inhibitors of cruzipain are considered promising anti-T. cruzi chemotherapeutic agents. Reversible cruzipain inhibitors containing a nitrile "warhead" were prepared and demonstrated 50% inhibitory concentrations (IC50s) as potent as 1 nM in baculovirus-generated cruzipain enzyme assays. In epimastigote and intracellular amastigote in vitro assays, the most potent compounds demonstrated antiparasitic behavior in the 5 to 10 μM IC50 range; however, trypomastigote production from the amastigote form was ∼90 to 95% inhibited at 2 μM. Two key compounds, Cz007 and Cz008, with IC50s of 1.1 and 1.8 nM, respectively, against the recombinant enzyme were tested in a murine model of acute T. cruzi infection, with oral dosing in chow for 28 days at doses from 3 to 50 mg/kg of body weight. At 3 mg/kg of Cz007 and 3 mg/kg of Cz008, the blood parasitemia areas under the concentration-time curves were 16% and 25% of the untreated group, respectively. At sacrifice, 24 days after immunosuppression with cyclophosphamide, parasite presence in blood, heart, and esophagus was evaluated. Based on negative quantitative PCR results in all three tissues, cure rates in surviving animals were 90% for Cz007 at 3 mg/kg, 78% for Cz008 at 3 mg/kg, and 71% for benznidazole, the control compound, at 50 mg/kg.
- Published
- 2014
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43. A lightweight security scheme for wireless body area networks: design, energy evaluation and proposed microprocessor design.
- Author
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Selimis G, Huang L, Massé F, Tsekoura I, Ashouei M, Catthoor F, Huisken J, Stuyt J, Dolmans G, Penders J, and De Groot H
- Subjects
- Computer Communication Networks, Equipment Design, Humans, Computer Security instrumentation, Electricity, Microcomputers, Monitoring, Physiologic instrumentation, Telemetry instrumentation
- Abstract
In order for wireless body area networks to meet widespread adoption, a number of security implications must be explored to promote and maintain fundamental medical ethical principles and social expectations. As a result, integration of security functionality to sensor nodes is required. Integrating security functionality to a wireless sensor node increases the size of the stored software program in program memory, the required time that the sensor's microprocessor needs to process the data and the wireless network traffic which is exchanged among sensors. This security overhead has dominant impact on the energy dissipation which is strongly related to the lifetime of the sensor, a critical aspect in wireless sensor network (WSN) technology. Strict definition of the security functionality, complete hardware model (microprocessor and radio), WBAN topology and the structure of the medium access control (MAC) frame are required for an accurate estimation of the energy that security introduces into the WBAN. In this work, we define a lightweight security scheme for WBAN, we estimate the additional energy consumption that the security scheme introduces to WBAN based on commercial available off-the-shelf hardware components (microprocessor and radio), the network topology and the MAC frame. Furthermore, we propose a new microcontroller design in order to reduce the energy consumption of the system. Experimental results and comparisons with other works are given.
- Published
- 2011
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44. Trisubstituted ureas as potent and selective mPGES-1 inhibitors.
- Author
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Chiasson JF, Boulet L, Brideau C, Chau A, Claveau D, Côté B, Ethier D, Giroux A, Guay J, Guiral S, Mancini J, Massé F, Méthot N, Riendeau D, Roy P, Rubin J, Xu D, Yu H, Ducharme Y, and Friesen RW
- Subjects
- Cell Line, Tumor, Humans, Microsomes enzymology, Prostaglandin-E Synthases, Structure-Activity Relationship, Urea chemistry, Urea pharmacology, Intramolecular Oxidoreductases antagonists & inhibitors, Urea chemical synthesis
- Abstract
A novel series of trisubstituted ureas has been identified as potent and selective mPGES-1 inhibitors. These compounds are selective over other prostanoid enzymes such as PGF synthase and TX synthase. This series of inhibitors was developed by lead optimization of a hit from an internal HTS campaign. Lead compound 42 is potent in A549 cell assay (IC(50) of 0.34 μM) and in human whole blood assay (IC(50) of 2.1 μM). An efficient and versatile one-pot strategy for the formation of ureas, involving a reductive amination, was developed to generate these inhibitors., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
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45. Difluoroethylamines as an amide isostere in inhibitors of cathepsin K.
- Author
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Isabel E, Mellon C, Boyd MJ, Chauret N, Deschênes D, Desmarais S, Falgueyret JP, Gauthier JY, Khougaz K, Lau CK, Léger S, Levorse DA, Li CS, Massé F, Percival MD, Roy B, Scheigetz J, Thérien M, Truong VL, Wesolowski G, Young RN, Zamboni R, and Black WC
- Subjects
- Administration, Oral, Amides chemistry, Animals, Biphenyl Compounds chemistry, Biphenyl Compounds pharmacology, Cathepsin K metabolism, Dogs, Ethylamines chemical synthesis, Ethylamines pharmacokinetics, Protease Inhibitors chemical synthesis, Protease Inhibitors pharmacokinetics, Rats, Cathepsin K antagonists & inhibitors, Ethylamines chemistry, Protease Inhibitors chemistry
- Abstract
The trifluoroethylamine group found in cathepsin K inhibitors like odanacatib can be replaced by a difluoroethylamine group. This change increased the basicity of the nitrogen which positively impacted the log D. This translated into an improved oral bioavailability in pre-clinical species. Difluoroethylamine compounds exhibit a similar potency against cathepsin K and selectivity profile against other cathepsins when compared to trifluoroethylamine analogs., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
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46. Identification of potent and reversible cruzipain inhibitors for the treatment of Chagas disease.
- Author
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Beaulieu C, Isabel E, Fortier A, Massé F, Mellon C, Méthot N, Ndao M, Nicoll-Griffith D, Lee D, Park H, and Black WC
- Subjects
- Biphenyl Compounds chemical synthesis, Biphenyl Compounds therapeutic use, Cathepsins antagonists & inhibitors, Cathepsins metabolism, Cysteine Endopeptidases metabolism, Cysteine Proteases chemistry, Cysteine Proteases metabolism, Cysteine Proteinase Inhibitors chemical synthesis, Cysteine Proteinase Inhibitors therapeutic use, Humans, Protozoan Proteins, Structure-Activity Relationship, Valine chemical synthesis, Valine chemistry, Valine therapeutic use, Biphenyl Compounds chemistry, Chagas Disease drug therapy, Cysteine Endopeptidases chemistry, Cysteine Proteinase Inhibitors chemistry, Valine analogs & derivatives
- Abstract
Identification of potent and reversible cruzipain inhibitors for the treatment of Chagas disease is described. The identified inhibitors bearing an amino nitrile warhead in P1 exhibit low nanomolar in vitro potency against cruzipain. Further SAR in P2 portion led to the identification of compounds, such as 26, that have a unique selectivity profile against other cysteine proteases and offering new opportunities for safer treatment of Chagas disease., (Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2010
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47. The discovery of setileuton, a potent and selective 5-lipoxygenase inhibitor.
- Author
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Ducharme Y, Blouin M, Brideau C, Châteauneuf A, Gareau Y, Grimm EL, Juteau H, Laliberté S, MacKay B, Massé F, Ouellet M, Salem M, Styhler A, and Friesen RW
- Abstract
The discovery of novel and selective inhibitors of human 5-lipoxygenase (5-LO) is described. These compounds are potent, orally bioavailable, and active at inhibiting leukotriene biosynthesis in vivo in a dog PK/PD model. A major focus of the optimization process was to reduce affinity for the human ether-a-go-go gene potassium channel while preserving inhibitory potency on 5-LO. These efforts led to the identification of inhibitor (S)-16 (MK-0633, setileuton), a compound selected for clinical development for the treatment of respiratory diseases.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The discovery of MK-0674, an orally bioavailable cathepsin K inhibitor.
- Author
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Isabel E, Bateman KP, Chauret N, Cromlish W, Desmarais S, Duong LT, Falgueyret JP, Gauthier JY, Lamontagne S, Lau CK, Léger S, LeRiche T, Lévesque JF, Li CS, Massé F, McKay DJ, Mellon C, Nicoll-Griffith DA, Oballa RM, Percival MD, Riendeau D, Robichaud J, Rodan GA, Rodan SB, Seto C, Thérien M, Truong VL, Wesolowski G, Young RN, Zamboni R, and Black WC
- Subjects
- Administration, Oral, Animals, Biological Availability, Biphenyl Compounds chemistry, Cathepsin K metabolism, Cysteine Proteinase Inhibitors chemistry, Dogs, Hepatocytes drug effects, Hepatocytes metabolism, Humans, Macaca mulatta, Rabbits, Rats, Biphenyl Compounds administration & dosage, Biphenyl Compounds pharmacokinetics, Cathepsin K antagonists & inhibitors, Cysteine Proteinase Inhibitors administration & dosage, Cysteine Proteinase Inhibitors pharmacokinetics, Drug Discovery methods
- Abstract
MK-0674 is a potent and selective cathepsin K inhibitor from the same structural class as odanacatib with a comparable inhibitory potency profile against Cat K. It is orally bioavailable and exhibits long half-life in pre-clinical species. In vivo studies using deuterated MK-0674 show stereoselective epimerization of the alcohol stereocenter via an oxidation/reduction cycle. From in vitro incubations, two metabolites could be identified: the hydroxyleucine and the glucuronide conjugate which were confirmed using authentic synthetic standards., (Copyright (c) 2009. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Synthesis and biological activity of a potent and orally bioavailable SCD inhibitor (MF-438).
- Author
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Léger S, Black WC, Deschenes D, Dolman S, Falgueyret JP, Gagnon M, Guiral S, Huang Z, Guay J, Leblanc Y, Li CS, Massé F, Oballa R, and Zhang L
- Subjects
- Administration, Oral, Animals, Enzyme Inhibitors chemistry, Enzyme Inhibitors pharmacokinetics, Mice, Microsomes, Liver metabolism, Pyridazines chemistry, Pyridazines pharmacokinetics, Rats, Stearoyl-CoA Desaturase metabolism, Structure-Activity Relationship, Thiadiazoles chemistry, Thiadiazoles pharmacokinetics, Enzyme Inhibitors chemical synthesis, Pyridazines chemical synthesis, Stearoyl-CoA Desaturase antagonists & inhibitors, Thiadiazoles chemical synthesis
- Abstract
A series of stearoyl-CoA desaturase 1 (SCD1) inhibitors were developed. Investigations of enzyme potency and metabolism led to the identification of the thiadiazole-pyridazine derivative MF-438 as a potent SCD1 inhibitor. MF-438 exhibits good pharmacokinetics and metabolic stability, thereby serving as a valuable tool for further understanding the role of SCD inhibition in biological and pharmacological models of diseases related to metabolic disorders., (Copyright 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Brain structures implicated in the four-plate test in naïve and experienced Swiss mice using injection of diazepam and the 5-HT2A agonist DOI.
- Author
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Petit-Demoulière B, Massé F, Cogrel N, Hascoët M, and Bourin M
- Subjects
- Amygdala drug effects, Amygdala physiopathology, Animals, Anxiety drug therapy, Brain drug effects, Hippocampus drug effects, Hippocampus physiopathology, Male, Mice, Microinjections, Motor Activity drug effects, Motor Activity physiology, Neuropsychological Tests, Periaqueductal Gray drug effects, Periaqueductal Gray physiopathology, Random Allocation, Serotonin 5-HT2 Receptor Agonists, Amphetamines pharmacology, Anti-Anxiety Agents pharmacology, Anxiety physiopathology, Brain physiopathology, Diazepam pharmacology, Serotonin Receptor Agonists pharmacology
- Abstract
Four-plate test-retest (FPT-R) is a useful tool to study aversive memory and abolishment of benzodiazepine effects in experienced mice to four-plate test (FPT), namely one-trial tolerance. In the present study, we have used local injections paradigm, in order to localize structures implied in anxiolytic-like effects of two drugs in naïve and experienced mice: a benzodiazepine, diazepam that is only active in naïve mice; and a 5-HT(2A/2C) agonist, DOI that exert its anxiolytic-like effect both in naïve and experienced mice. Periacqueductal grey substance, three sub-regions of hippocampus (CA1, CA2 and CA3) and two nuclei of amygdala (BLA and LA) have been studied. Local injections did not cause any modifications of ambulatory activity. DOI injections elicit anxiolytic-like effects only when injected into CA2, in naïve and experienced mice. Diazepam had an anxiolytic-like effect in naïve mice, only when injected into lateral nucleus of amygdala; and in experienced mice when injected into PAG. These results help us to better understand the way of action of these two compounds and the structures functionally involved in their effects and in one-trial tolerance (OTT).
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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