1,014 results on '"McCary A"'
Search Results
2. Global fine-resolution data on springtail abundance and community structure
- Author
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Potapov, Anton M., Chen, Ting-Wen, Striuchkova, Anastasia V., Alatalo, Juha M., Alexandre, Douglas, Arbea, Javier, Ashton, Thomas, Ashwood, Frank, Babenko, Anatoly B., Bandyopadhyaya, Ipsa, Baretta, Carolina Riviera Duarte Maluche, Baretta, Dilmar, Barnes, Andrew D., Bellini, Bruno C., Bendjaballah, Mohamed, Berg, Matty P., Bernava, Verónica, Bokhorst, Stef, Bokova, Anna I., Bolger, Thomas, Bouchard, Mathieu, Brito, Roniere A., Buchori, Damayanti, Castaño-Meneses, Gabriela, Chauvat, Matthieu, Chomel, Mathilde, Chow, Yasuko, Chown, Steven L., Classen, Aimee T., Cortet, Jérôme, Čuchta, Peter, de la Pedrosa, Ana Manuela, De Lima, Estevam C. A., Deharveng, Louis E., Doblas Miranda, Enrique, Drescher, Jochen, Eisenhauer, Nico, Ellers, Jacintha, Ferlian, Olga, Ferreira, Susana S. D., Ferreira, Aila S., Fiera, Cristina, Filser, Juliane, Franken, Oscar, Fujii, Saori, Koudji, Essivi Gagnon, Gao, Meixiang, Gendreau-Berthiaume, Benoit, Gers, Charles, Greve, Michelle, Hamra-Kroua, Salah, Handa, I. Tanya, Hasegawa, Motohiro, Heiniger, Charlène, Hishi, Takuo, Holmstrup, Martin, Homet, Pablo, Høye, Toke T., Ivask, Mari, Jacques, Bob, Janion-Scheepers, Charlene, Jochum, Malte, Joimel, Sophie, Jorge, Bruna Claudia S., Juceviča, Edite, Kapinga, Esther M., Kováč, Ľubomír, Krab, Eveline J., Krogh, Paul Henning, Kuu, Annely, Kuznetsova, Natalya, Lam, Weng Ngai, Lin, Dunmei, Lindo, Zoë, Liu, Amy W. P., Lu, Jing-Zhong, Luciáñez, María José, Marx, Michael T., Mawan, Amanda, McCary, Matthew A., Minor, Maria A., Mitchell, Grace I., Moreno, David, Nakamori, Taizo, Negri, Ilaria, Nielsen, Uffe N., Ochoa-Hueso, Raúl, Oliveira Filho, Luís Carlos I., Palacios-Vargas, José G., Pollierer, Melanie M., Ponge, Jean-François, Potapov, Mikhail B., Querner, Pascal, Rai, Bibishan, Raschmanová, Natália, Rashid, Muhammad Imtiaz, Raymond-Léonard, Laura J., Reis, Aline S., Ross, Giles M., Rousseau, Laurent, Russell, David J., Saifutdinov, Ruslan A., Salmon, Sandrine, Santonja, Mathieu, Saraeva, Anna K., Sayer, Emma J., Scheunemann, Nicole, Scholz, Cornelia, Seeber, Julia, Shaw, Peter, Shveenkova, Yulia B., Slade, Eleanor M., Stebaeva, Sophya, Sterzynska, Maria, Sun, Xin, Susanti, Winda Ika, Taskaeva, Anastasia A., Tay, Li Si, Thakur, Madhav P., Treasure, Anne M, Tsiafouli, Maria, Twala, Mthokozisi N., Uvarov, Alexei V., Venier, Lisa A., Widenfalk, Lina A., Widyastuti, Rahayu, Winck, Bruna, Winkler, Daniel, Wu, Donghui, Xie, Zhijing, Yin, Rui, Zampaulo, Robson A., Zeppelini, Douglas, Zhang, Bing, Zoughailech, Abdelmalek, Ashford, Oliver, Klauberg-Filho, Osmar, and Scheu, Stefan
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- 2024
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3. High-charge 10 GeV electron acceleration in a 10 cm nanoparticle-assisted hybrid wakefield accelerator
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Aniculaesei, Constantin, Ha, Thanh, Yoffe, Samuel, McCary, Edward, Spinks, Michael M, Quevedo, Hernan J., Labun, Lance, Labun, Ou Z., Sain, Ritwik, Hannasch, Andrea, Zgadzaj, Rafal, Pagano, Isabella, Franco-Altamirano, Jose A., Ringuette, Martin L., Gaul, Erhart, Luedtke, Scott V., Tiwari, Ganesh, Ersfeld, Bernhard, Brunetti, Enrico, Ruhl, Hartmut, Ditmire, Todd, Bruce, Sandra, Donovan, Michael E., Jaroszynski, Dino A., Downer, Michael C., and Hegelich, Bjorn Manuel
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Physics - Plasma Physics ,Physics - Accelerator Physics - Abstract
In an electron wakefield accelerator, an intense laser pulse or charged particle beam excites plasma waves. Under proper conditions, electrons from the background plasma are trapped in the plasma wave and accelerated to ultra-relativistic velocities. We present recent results from a proof-of-principle wakefield acceleration experiment that reveal a unique synergy between a laser-driven and particle-driven accelerator: a high-charge laser-wakefield accelerated electron bunch can drive its own wakefield while simultaneously drawing energy from the laser pulse via direct laser acceleration. This process continues to accelerate electrons beyond the usual decelerating phase of the wakefield, thus reaching much higher energies. We find that the 10-centimeter-long nanoparticle-assisted wakefield accelerator can generate 340 pC, 10.4+-0.6 GeV electron bunches with 3.4 GeV RMS convolved energy spread and 0.9 mrad RMS divergence. It can also produce bunches with lower energy, a few percent energy spread, and a higher charge. This synergistic mechanism and the simplicity of the experimental setup represent a step closer to compact tabletop particle accelerators suitable for applications requiring high charge at high energies, such as free electron lasers or radiation sources producing muon beams.
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- 2022
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4. Gamma-Ray Emitting Radionuclides Concentrations and Decontamination Factors of ATR Loop Liquid Samples Cycle 172A Revision 0
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Ottaway, Dani, primary, Reichenberger, Michael, additional, and McCary, Kelly, additional
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- 2024
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5. From 'Sweat Equity' to the Sweet Spot: Understanding Career Commitment Influences for Title IX Administrators
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Jennifer Q. McCary
- Abstract
Title IX regulations have been in place for five decades, and various studies have examined the impact of these regulations on athletics, adjudication, and the experiences of complainants and respondents involved in cases. Although Title IX has evolved, skeptics and supporters have debated whether the regulations are effective. As of late, each presidential administration has revised guidance and steepened the risks for those responsible for Title IX compliance. The Department of Education, through the Office for Civil Rights, requires that institutions of higher education have Title IX coordinators. Results of surveys conducted on the state of the profession have signaled there may be high attrition in Title IX roles, yet limited research has focused on Title IX administrators. The purpose of this study was to understand career commitment influences for Title IX administrators in higher education, with a specific focus on the role of institutional resources. Career entrenchment (Carson et al., 1995; Wilson et al., 2016) and career commitment (Wilson et al., 2016) form the conceptual framework of the study. Additionally, I explored how organization development and change principles may intersect with Title IX work. Career and organizational commitment, as well as resources, are all central to how organizations develop and change. The research questions were: (1) What influences career commitment for Title IX administrators navigating case management and compliance? (2) What role do institutional resources play in Title IX administrators' ongoing career and organizational commitment? I used generalized inductive qualitative research and conducted semi-structured interviews with ten participants with a minimum of three years of experience in Title IX investigation, adjudication, or compliance at Ohio college or university campuses. Seven themes emerged to explain what influenced the participants' career commitment: "Sweat Equity": Professional Contributions; Institutional Experiences; Threat of Burnout; Making a Difference in Students' Lives; Allocation of Resources; Criticality of Support; and Belief in the Institution. The findings of this study showcase what higher education leaders and lawmakers should consider in retaining these highly-specialized employees. Additionally, the findings may apply to career commitment influences for others in compliance positions and other helping roles. This study highlights ways that collaborative change strategies can be useful tools for institutional, government, and organizational leaders based on my interpretations of participants' experiences. I also recommend practical strategies to advance theory. [The dissertation citations contained here are published with the permission of ProQuest LLC. Further reproduction is prohibited without permission. Copies of dissertations may be obtained by Telephone (800) 1-800-521-0600. Web page: http://www.proquest.com/en-US/products/dissertations/individuals.shtml.]
- Published
- 2023
6. Individualized Sexuality Education for People with Autism Spectrum Disorder
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Warner, Sara, Barger, Madeline, and McCary, Lindsay M.
- Abstract
There is a lack of research and program development in the area of sexuality education for those with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). The prevalence of ASD is on the rise, and research demonstrates that individuals with ASD desire romantic and sexual relationships. It is important that programming targeting sexuality education for individuals with ASD be developed and implemented to better support the unique learning needs associated with ASD. Sexuality education helps promote positive development of one's sexual health, gender awareness, self-advocacy, and self-efficacy. Sexuality education also helps prevent undesirable or unsafe sexual experiences or behaviors and is an important component of every individual's development, well-being, and quality of life. This paper outlines why further development and use of sexuality education materials specific to those with ASD is necessary and summarizes the current literature regarding sexuality education for this population. Lastly, recommendations are provided for the development and/or expansion of current curricula as well methods of delivery with an exploration of emerging curricula efforts in the field.
- Published
- 2022
7. Laser-driven neutron source from high temperature D-D fusion reactions
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Jiao, Xuejing, Curry, C., Gauthier, M., Fiuza, F., Kim, J., McCary, E., Labun, L., Labun, O. Z., Schoenwaelder, C., Roycroft, R., Tiwari, G., Glenn, G., Treffert, F., Ditmire, T., Glenzer, S., and Hegelich, B. M.
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Physics - Plasma Physics - Abstract
We report a laser-driven neutron source with high yield ($>10^8$/J) and high peak flux ($>10^{25}$/cm$^2$/s) derived from high-temperature deuteron-deuteron fusion reactions. The neutron yield and the fusion temperature ($\sim 200$ keV) in our experiment are respectively two orders of magnitude and one order of magnitude higher than any previous laser-induced D-D fusion reaction. The high-temperature plasma is generated from thin ($\sim 2\,\mu$m), solid-density deuterium targets, produced by a cryogenic jet, irradiated by a 140 fs, 130 J petawatt laser with an F/3 off-axis parabola and a plasma mirror achieving fast volumetric heating of the target. The fusion temperature and neutron fluxes achieved here suggest future laser experiments can take advantage of neutrons to diagnose the plasma conditions and come closer to laboratory study of astrophysically-relevant nuclear physics., Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures
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- 2020
8. Globally invariant metabolism but density-diversity mismatch in springtails
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Potapov, Anton M., Guerra, Carlos A., van den Hoogen, Johan, Babenko, Anatoly, Bellini, Bruno C., Berg, Matty P., Chown, Steven L., Deharveng, Louis, Kováč, Ľubomír, Kuznetsova, Natalia A., Ponge, Jean-François, Potapov, Mikhail B., Russell, David J., Alexandre, Douglas, Alatalo, Juha M., Arbea, Javier I., Bandyopadhyaya, Ipsa, Bernava, Verónica, Bokhorst, Stef, Bolger, Thomas, Castaño-Meneses, Gabriela, Chauvat, Matthieu, Chen, Ting-Wen, Chomel, Mathilde, Classen, Aimee T., Cortet, Jerome, Čuchta, Peter, Manuela de la Pedrosa, Ana, Ferreira, Susana S. D., Fiera, Cristina, Filser, Juliane, Franken, Oscar, Fujii, Saori, Koudji, Essivi Gagnon, Gao, Meixiang, Gendreau-Berthiaume, Benoit, Gomez-Pamies, Diego F., Greve, Michelle, Tanya Handa, I., Heiniger, Charlène, Holmstrup, Martin, Homet, Pablo, Ivask, Mari, Janion-Scheepers, Charlene, Jochum, Malte, Joimel, Sophie, Claudia S. Jorge, Bruna, Jucevica, Edite, Ferlian, Olga, Iuñes de Oliveira Filho, Luís Carlos, Klauberg-Filho, Osmar, Baretta, Dilmar, Krab, Eveline J., Kuu, Annely, de Lima, Estevam C. A., Lin, Dunmei, Lindo, Zoe, Liu, Amy, Lu, Jing-Zhong, Luciañez, María José, Marx, Michael T., McCary, Matthew A., Minor, Maria A., Nakamori, Taizo, Negri, Ilaria, Ochoa-Hueso, Raúl, Palacios-Vargas, José G., Pollierer, Melanie M., Querner, Pascal, Raschmanová, Natália, Rashid, Muhammad Imtiaz, Raymond-Léonard, Laura J., Rousseau, Laurent, Saifutdinov, Ruslan A., Salmon, Sandrine, Sayer, Emma J., Scheunemann, Nicole, Scholz, Cornelia, Seeber, Julia, Shveenkova, Yulia B., Stebaeva, Sophya K., Sterzynska, Maria, Sun, Xin, Susanti, Winda I., Taskaeva, Anastasia A., Thakur, Madhav P., Tsiafouli, Maria A., Turnbull, Matthew S., Twala, Mthokozisi N., Uvarov, Alexei V., Venier, Lisa A., Widenfalk, Lina A., Winck, Bruna R., Winkler, Daniel, Wu, Donghui, Xie, Zhijing, Yin, Rui, Zeppelini, Douglas, Crowther, Thomas W., Eisenhauer, Nico, and Scheu, Stefan
- Published
- 2023
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9. Impacts of habitat connectivity on grassland arthropod metacommunity structure: A field‐based experimental test of theory
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Franklin Bertellotti, Nathalie R. Sommer, Oswald J. Schmitz, and Matthew A. McCary
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arthropods ,conservation management ,ecological restoration ,grasslands ,habitat connectivity ,metacommunity structure ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Abstract Metacommunity theory has advanced scientific understanding of how species interactions and spatial processes influence patterns of biodiversity and community structure across landscapes. While the central tenets of metacommunity theory have been promoted as pivotal considerations for conservation management, few field experiments have tested the validity of metacommunity predictions. Here, we tested one key prediction of metacommunity theory—that decreasing habitat connectivity should erode metacommunity structure by hindering species movement between patches. For 2 years, we manipulated an experimental old‐field grassland ecosystem via mowing to represent four levels of habitat connectivity: (1) open control, (2) full connectivity, (3) partial connectivity, and (4) no connectivity. Within each treatment plot (10 × 10 m, n = 4 replicates), we measured the abundance and diversity (i.e., alpha and beta) of both flying and ground arthropods using sticky and pitfall traps, respectively. We found that the abundance and diversity of highly mobile flying arthropods were unaffected by habitat connectivity, whereas less mobile ground arthropods were highly impacted. The mean total abundance of ground arthropods was 2.5× and 2× higher in the control and partially connected plots compared to isolated patches, respectively. We also reveal that habitat connectivity affected the trophic interactions of ground arthropods, with predators (e.g., wolf spiders, ground spiders) being highly positively correlated with micro‐detritivores (springtails, mites) but not macro‐detritivores (millipedes, isopods) as habitat connectivity increased. Together these findings indicate that changes in habitat connectivity can alter the metacommunity structure for less mobile organisms such as ground arthropods. Because of their essential roles in terrestrial ecosystem functioning and services, we recommend that conservationists, restoration practitioners, and land managers include principles of habitat connectivity for ground arthropods when designing biodiversity management programs.
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- 2023
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10. A global research priority agenda to advance public health responses to fatty liver disease
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Lazarus, Jeffrey V., Mark, Henry E., Allen, Alina M., Arab, Juan Pablo, Carrieri, Patrizia, Noureddin, Mazen, Alazawi, William, Alkhouri, Naim, Alqahtani, Saleh A., Arrese, Marco, Bataller, Ramon, Berg, Thomas, Brennan, Paul N., Burra, Patrizia, Castro-Narro, Graciela E., Cortez-Pinto, Helena, Cusi, Kenneth, Dedes, Nikos, Duseja, Ajay, Francque, Sven M., Hagström, Hannes, Huang, Terry T-K., Wajcman, Dana Ivancovsky, Kautz, Achim, Kopka, Christopher J., Krag, Aleksander, Miller, Veronica, Newsome, Philip N., Rinella, Mary E., Romero, Diana, Sarin, Shiv Kumar, Silva, Marcelo, Spearman, C. Wendy, Tsochatzis, Emmanuel A., Valenti, Luca, Villota-Rivas, Marcela, Zelber-Sagi, Shira, Schattenberg, Jörn M., Wong, Vincent Wai-Sun, Younossi, Zobair M., Aberg, Fredrik, Adams, Leon, Al-Naamani, Khalid, Albadawy, Reda M., Alexa, Zinaida, Allison, Michael, Alnaser, Faisal A., Alswat, Khalid, Alvares-da-Silva, Mario Reis, Alvaro, Domenico, Alves-Bezerra, Michele, Andrade, Raul J., Anstee, Quentin M., Awuku, Yaw Asante, Baatarkhuu, Oidov, Baffy, Gyorgy, Bakieva, Shokhista, Bansal, Meena B., Barouki, Robert, Batterham, Rachel L., Behling, Cynthia, Belfort-DeAguiar, Renata, Berzigotti, Annalisa, Betel, Michael, Bianco, Cristiana, Bosi, Emanuele, Boursier, Jerome, Brunt, Elizabeth M., Bugianesi, Elisabetta, Byrne, Christopher J., Cabrera Cabrejos, Maria Cecilia, Caldwell, Stephen, Carr, Rotonya, Castellanos Fernández, Marlen Ivón, Castera, Laurent, Castillo-López, Maria Gabriela, Caussy, Cyrielle, Cerda-Reyes, Eira, Ceriello, Antonio, Chan, Wah- Kheong, Chang, Yoosoo, Charatcharoenwitthaya, Phunchai, Chavez-Tapia, Norberto, Chung, Raymond T., Colombo, Massimo, Coppell, Kirsten, Cotrim, Helma P., Craxi, Antonio, Crespo, Javier, Dassanayake, Anuradha, Davidson, Nicholas O., De Knegt, Robert, de Ledinghen, Victor, Demir, Münevver, Desalegn, Hailemichael, Diago, Moises, Dillon, John F., Dimmig, Bruce, Dirac, M. Ashworth, Dirchwolf, Melisa, Dufour, Jean-François, Dvorak, Karel, Ekstedt, Mattias, El-Kassas, Mohamed, Elsanousi, Osama M., Elsharkawy, Ahmed M., Elwakil, Reda, Eskridge, Wayne, Eslam, Mohammed, Esmat, Gamal, Fan, Jian- Gao, Ferraz, Maria Lucia, Flisiak, Robert, Fortin, Davide, Fouad, Yasser, Freidman, Scott L., Fuchs, Michael, Gadano, Adrian, Gastaldelli, Amalia, Geerts, Anja, Geier, Andreas, George, Jacob, Gerber, Lynn H., Ghazinyan, Hasmik, Gheorghe, Liana, Kile, Denise Giangola, Girala, Marcos, Boon Bee, George Goh, Goossens, Nicolas, Graupera, Isabel, Grønbæk, Henning, Hamid, Saeed, Hebditch, Vanessa, Henry, Zachary, Hickman, Ingrid J., Hobbs, L. Ansley, Hocking, Samantha L., Hofmann, Wolf Peter, Idilman, Ramazan, Iruzubieta, Paula, Isaacs, Scott, Isakov, Vasily A., Ismail, Mona H., Jamal, Mohammad H., Jarvis, Helen, Jepsen, Peter, Jornayvaz, François, Sudhamshu, K.C., Kakizaki, Satoru, Karpen, Saul, Kawaguchi, Takumi, Keating, Shelley E., Khader, Yousef, Kim, Seung Up, Kim, Won, Kleiner, David E., Koek, Ger, Joseph Komas, Narcisse Patrice, Kondili, Loreta A., Koot, Bart G., Korenjak, Marko, Kotsiliti, Eleni, Koulla, Yiannoula, Kugelmas, Carina, Kugelmas, Marcelo, Labidi, Asma, Lange, Naomi F., Lavine, Joel E., Lazo, Mariana, Leite, Nathalie, Lin, Han-Chieh, Lkhagvaa, Undram, Long, Michelle T., Lopez-Jaramillo, Patricio, Lozano, Adelina, Macedo, Maria Paula, Malekzadeh, Reza, Marchesini, Giulio, Marciano, Sebastian, Martinez, Kim, Martínez Vázquez, Sophia E., Mateva, Lyudmila, Mato, José M., Nlombi, Charles Mbendi, McCary, Alexis Gorden, McIntyre, Jeff, McKee, Martin, Mendive, Juan M., Mikolasevic, Ivana, Miller, Pamela S., Milovanovic, Tamara, Milton, Terri, Moreno-Alcantar, Rosalba, Morgan, Timothy R., Motala, Ayesha, Muris, Jean, Musso, Carla, Nava-González, Edna J., Negro, Francesco, Nersesov, Alexander V., Neuschwander-Tetri, Brent A., Nikolova, Dafina, Norris, Suzanne, Novak, Katja, Ocama, Ponsiano, Ong, Janus P., Ong-Go, Arlinking, Onyekwere, Charles, Padilla, Martin, Pais, Raluca, Pan, Calvin, Panduro, Arturo, Panigrahi, Manas K., Papatheodoridis, Georgios, Paruk, Imran, Patel, Keyur, Gonçalves, Carlos Penha, Figueroa, Marlene Pérez, Pérez-Escobar, Juanita, Pericàs, Juan M., Perseghin, Gianluca, Pessoa, Mário Guimarães, Petta, Salvatore, Marques Souza de Oliveira, Claudia Pinto, Prabhakaran, Dorairaj, Pyrsopoulous, Nikolaos, Rabiee, Atoosa, Ramji, Alnoor, Ratziu, Vlad, Ravendhran, Natarajan, Ray, Katrina, Roden, Michael, Romeo, Stefano, Romero-Gómez, Manuel, Rotman, Yaron, Rouabhia, Samir, Rowe, Ian A., Sadirova, Shakhlo, Alkhatry, Maryam Salem, Salupere, Riina, Satapathy, Sanjaya K., Schwimmer, Jeffrey B., Sebastiani, Giada, Seim, Lynn, Seki, Yosuke, Serme, Abdel Karim, Shapiro, David, Sharvadze, Lali, Shaw, Jonathan E., Shawa, Isaac Thom, Shenoy, Thrivikrama, Shibolet, Oren, Shimakawa, Yusuke, Shubrook, Jay H., Singh, Shivaram Prasad, Sinkala, Edford, Skladany, Lubomir, Skrypnyk, Igor, Song, Myeong Jun, Sookoian, Silvia, Sridharan, Kannan, Stefan, Norbert, Stine, Jonathan G., Stratakis, Nikolaos, Sheriff, Dhastagir Sultan, Sundaram, Shikha S., Svegliati-Baroni, Gianluca, Swain, Mark G., Tacke, Frank, Taheri, Shahrad, Tan, Soek-Siam, Tapper, Elliot B., Targher, Giovanni, Tcaciuc, Eugen, Thiele, Maja, Tiniakos, Dina, Tolmane, Ieva, Torre, Aldo, Torres, Esther A., Treeprasertsuk, Sombat, Trenell, Michael, Turcan, Svetlana, Turcanu, Adela, Valantinas, Jonas, van Kleef, Laurens A., Velarde Ruiz Velasco, Jose Antonio, Vesterhus, Mette, Vilar-Gomez, Eduardo, Waked, Imam, Wattacheril, Julia, Wedemeyer, Heiner, Wilkins, Fonda, Willemse, José, Wong, Robert J., Yilmaz, Yusuf, Yki-Järvinen, Hannele, Yu, Ming-Lung, Yumuk, Volkan, Zeybel, Müjdat, Zheng, Kenneth I., Zheng, Ming-Hua, and Huang, Terry T.-K.
- Published
- 2023
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11. Beam Distortion Effects upon focusing an ultrashort Petawatt Laser Pulse to greater than 10$^{22}$ W/cm$^{2}$
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Tiwari, Ganesh, Gaul, Erhard, Martinez, Mikael, Dyer, Gilliss, Gordon, Joseph, Spinks, Michael, Toncian, Toma, Bowers, Brant, Jiao, Xuejing, Kupfer, Rotem, Lisi, Luc, Mccary, Edward, Roycroft, Rebecca, Yandow, Andrew, Glenn, Griffin, Donovan, Mike, Ditmire, Todd, and Hegelich, Bjorn Manuel
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Physics - Optics - Abstract
When an ultrashort laser pulse is tightly focused to a size approaching its central wavelength, the properties of the focused spot diverge from the diffraction limited case. Here we report on this change in behavior of a tightly focused Petawatt class laser beam by an F/1 off-axis paraboloid (OAP). Considering the effects of residual aberration, the spatial profile of the near field and pointing error, we estimate the deviation in peak intensities of the focused spot from the ideal case. We verify that the estimated peak intensity values are within an acceptable error range of the measured values. With the added uncertainties in target alignment, we extend the estimation to infer on-target peak intensities of $\geq$ 10$^{22}$ W/cm$^{2}$ for a target at the focal plane of this F/1 OAP., Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures
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- 2019
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12. Laser-driven x-ray and proton micro-source and application to simultaneous single-shot bi-modal radiographic imaging.
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Ostermayr, TM, Kreuzer, C, Englbrecht, FS, Gebhard, J, Hartmann, J, Huebl, A, Haffa, D, Hilz, P, Parodi, K, Wenz, J, Donovan, ME, Dyer, G, Gaul, E, Gordon, J, Martinez, M, Mccary, E, Spinks, M, Tiwari, G, Hegelich, BM, and Schreiber, J
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Animals ,Gryllidae ,Protons ,Radiography ,Lasers ,X-Rays ,Multimodal Imaging - Abstract
Radiographic imaging with x-rays and protons is an omnipresent tool in basic research and applications in industry, material science and medical diagnostics. The information contained in both modalities can often be valuable in principle, but difficult to access simultaneously. Laser-driven solid-density plasma-sources deliver both kinds of radiation, but mostly single modalities have been explored for applications. Their potential for bi-modal radiographic imaging has never been fully realized, due to problems in generating appropriate sources and separating image modalities. Here, we report on the generation of proton and x-ray micro-sources in laser-plasma interactions of the focused Texas Petawatt laser with solid-density, micrometer-sized tungsten needles. We apply them for bi-modal radiographic imaging of biological and technological objects in a single laser shot. Thereby, advantages of laser-driven sources could be enriched beyond their small footprint by embracing their additional unique properties, including the spectral bandwidth, small source size and multi-mode emission.
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- 2020
13. En-route to the fission-fusion reaction mechanism: a status update on laser-driven heavy ion acceleration
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Lindner, F. H., McCary, E., Jiao, X., Ostermayr, T. M., Roycroft, R., Tiwari, G., Hegelich, B. M., Schreiber, J., and Thirolf, P. G.
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Physics - Plasma Physics - Abstract
The fission-fusion reaction mechanism was proposed in order to generate extremely neutron-rich nuclei close to the waiting point N = 126 of the rapid neutron capture nucleosynthesis process (r-process). The production of such isotopes and the measurement of their nuclear properties would fundamentally help to increase the understanding of the nucleosynthesis of the heaviest elements in the universe. Major prerequisite for the realization of this new reaction scheme is the development of laser-based acceleration of ultra-dense heavy ion bunches in the mass range of A = 200 and above. In this paper, we review the status of laser-driven heavy ion acceleration in the light of the fission-fusion reaction mechanism. We present results from our latest experiment on heavy ion acceleration, including a new milestone with laser-accelerated heavy ion energies exceeding 5 MeV/u.
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- 2018
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14. En-route to the fission–fusion reaction mechanism: a status update on laser-driven heavy ion acceleration
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Lindner, FH, McCary, E, Jiao, X, Ostermayr, TM, Roycroft, R, Tiwari, G, Hegelich, BM, Schreiber, J, and Thirolf, PG
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laser-driven heavy ion acceleration ,fission-fusion reaction mechanism ,short-pulse laser ,physics.plasm-ph ,Atomic ,Molecular ,Nuclear ,Particle and Plasma Physics ,Other Physical Sciences ,Fluids & Plasmas - Abstract
The fission-fusion reaction mechanism was proposed in order to generate extremely neutron-rich nuclei close to the waiting point N = 126 of the rapid neutron capture nucleosynthesis process (r-process). The production of such isotopes and the measurement of their nuclear properties would fundamentally help to increase the understanding of the nucleosynthesis of the heaviest elements in the Universe. Major prerequisite for the realization of this new reaction scheme is the development of laser-based acceleration of ultra-dense heavy ion bunches in the mass range of A ≈ 200 and above. In this paper, we review the status of laser-driven heavy ion acceleration in the light of the fission-fusion reaction mechanism. We present results from our latest experiment on heavy ion acceleration, including a new milestone with laser-accelerated heavy ion energies exceeding 5 MeV u-1.
- Published
- 2019
15. Inclusive Sustainability Approaches in Common-Pool Resources from the Perspective of Blackologists
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YITBAREK, SENAY, BAILEY, KAREN, TYLER, SHAKARA, STRICKLAND, JERAMIE, McCARY, MATTHEW, and HARRIS, NYEEMA C.
- Published
- 2021
16. Unintended consequences of planting native and non‐native trees in treeless ecosystems to mitigate climate change.
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Moyano, Jaime, Dimarco, Romina D., Paritsis, Juan, Peterson, Tess, Peltzer, Duane A., Crawford, Kerri M., McCary, Matthew A., Davis, Kimberley T., Pauchard, Aníbal, and Nuñez, Martin A.
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TREE planting ,CLIMATE change mitigation ,CARBON sequestration ,ALBEDO ,CLIMATE change ,AFFORESTATION - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Ecology is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
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17. Fast and thermal neutron spectrum dosimetry measurements in the Advanced Test Reactor large-B and small-l positions following the sixth core internals change-out
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Reichenberger Michael, Maile Andrew, Johnson Matthew, Norman Daren, Bays Samuel, McCary Kelly, and Manwaring Nathan
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Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
The Advanced Test Reactor (ATR) has a wide variety of irradiation positions that have had experiments that were developed by users from around the world. Most experiment irradiations rely on thoroughly benchmarked numerical models. However, some irradiation positions in ATR are not as well- characterized and are complicated by spectral perturbations from control cylinder orientation. The “small I” and “large-B” irradiation positions are located nearby control cylinders and suffer from these flux perturbations from control cylinder orientations that change during an irradiation cycle to maintain the desired core power distribution. Models predicted that these types of position would exhibit both spectral shifts and amplitude changes in neutron flux, but few measurements have been conducted to benchmark these predictions. Recently, requalification testing was performed to confirm the operational readiness of the ATR following the completion of the Core Internals Change-out (CIC). These tests provided a unique opportunity to validate the analytical methods used to simulate the ATR because nearly all components in the reactor were in a clean as-built state, significantly reducing modelling uncertainties. One subset of the testing included characterization of the fast and thermal neutron flux in the “small-I” and “large-B” positions using silver, cobalt, and nickel neutron dosimetry. In contrast to typical irradiation cycles, the control cylinders were held in position during the post-CIC nuclear testing. The specific activity of these dosimeter wires was measured following two low-power tests with different control cylinder positions.
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- 2024
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18. Two decades of data reveal that Biological Invasions needs to increase participation beyond North America, Europe, and Australasia
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Nuñez, Martin A., Chiuffo, Mariana C., Seebens, Hanno, Kuebbing, Sara, McCary, Matthew A., Lieurance, Deah, Zhang, Bo, Simberloff, Daniel, and Meyerson, Laura A.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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19. Words matter: how to increase gender and LGBTQIA + inclusivity at Biological Invasions
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Lieurance, Deah, Kuebbing, Sara, McCary, Matthew A., and Nuñez, Martin A.
- Published
- 2022
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20. A self-study of editorial board diversity at Biological Invasions
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Kuebbing, Sara E., McCary, Matthew A., Lieurance, Deah, Nuñez, Martin A., Chiuffo, Mariana C., Zhang, Bo, Seebens, Hanno, Simberloff, Daniel, and Meyerson, Laura A.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Transient top-down and bottom-up effects of resources pulsed to multiple trophic levels
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McCary, Matthew A., Phillips, Joseph S., Ramiadantsoa, Tanjona, Nell, Lucas A., McCormick, Amanda R., and Botsch, Jamieson C.
- Published
- 2021
22. High deuteron and neutron yields from the interaction of a petawatt laser with a cryogenic deuterium jet
- Author
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X. Jiao, C. B. Curry, M. Gauthier, H.-G. J. Chou, F. Fiuza, J. B. Kim, D. D. Phan, E. McCary, E. C. Galtier, G. M. Dyer, B. K. Ofori-Okai, L. Labun, O. Z. Labun, C. Schoenwaelder, R. Roycroft, G. Tiwari, G. D. Glenn, F. Treffert, S. H. Glenzer, and B. M. Hegelich
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laser-driven neutron source ,high-flux neutron source ,rapid neutron capture process ,laboratory astro-nuclear physics experiment ,laser-driven fusion ,laser-driven ion source ,Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
A compact high-flux, short-pulse neutron source would have applications from nuclear astrophysics to cancer therapy. Laser-driven neutron sources can achieve fluxes much higher than spallation and reactor neutron sources by reducing the volume and time in which the neutron-producing reactions occur by orders of magnitude. We report progress towards an efficient laser-driven neutron source in experiments with a cryogenic deuterium jet on the Texas Petawatt laser. Neutrons were produced both by laser-accelerated multi-MeV deuterons colliding with Be and mixed metallic catchers and by d (d,n)3He fusion reactions within the jet. We observed deuteron yields of 1013/shot in quasi-Maxwellian distributions carrying ∼8−10% of the input laser energy. We obtained neutron yields greater than 1010/shot and found indications of a deuteron-deuteron fusion neutron source with high peak flux (>1022 cm−2 s−1). The estimated fusion neutron yield in our experiment is one order of magnitude higher than any previous laser-induced dd fusion reaction. Though many technical challenges will have to be overcome to convert this proof-of-principle experiment into a consistent ultra-high flux neutron source, the neutron fluxes achieved here suggest laser-driven neutron sources can support laboratory study of the rapid neutron-capture process, which is otherwise thought to occur only in astrophysical sites such as core-collapse supernova, and binary neutron star mergers.
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- 2023
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23. Pattern of seasonal variation in rates of predation between spider families is temporally stable in a food web with widespread intraguild predation
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David H. Wise, Robin M. Mores, Jennifer M. Pajda-De La O, and Matthew A. McCary
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Medicine ,Science - Published
- 2023
24. Non-Maxwellian electron distributions resulting from direct laser acceleration in near-critical plasmas
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Toncian, T., Wang, C., McCary, E., Meadows, A., Arefiev, A. V., Blakeney, J., Serratto, K., Kuk, D., Chester, C., Roycroft, R., Gao, L., Fu, H., Yan, X. Q., Schreiber, J., Pomerantz, I., Bernstein, A., Quevedo, H., Dyer, G., Ditmire, T., and Hegelich, B. M.
- Subjects
Physics - Plasma Physics - Abstract
The irradiation of few nm thick targets by a finite-contrast high-intensity short-pulse laser results in a strong pre-expansion of these targets at the arrival time of the main pulse. The targets decompress to near and lower than critical densities plasmas extending over few micrometers, i.e. multiple wavelengths. The interaction of the main pulse with such a highly localized but inhomogeneous target leads to the generation of a short channel and further self-focusing of the laser beam. Experiments at the GHOST laser system at UT Austin using such targets measured non-Maxwellian, peaked electron distribution with large bunch charge and high electron density in the laser propagation direction. These results are reproduced in 2D PIC simulations using the EPOCH code, identifying Direct Laser Acceleration (DLA) as the responsible mechanism. This is the first time that DLA has been observed to produce peaked spectra as opposed to broad, maxwellian spectra observed in earlier experiments. This high-density electrons have potential applications as injector beams for a further wakefield acceleration stage as well as for pump-probe applications., Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures
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- 2015
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25. Effect of kernel breakage on the fermentation profile, nitrogen fractions, and in vitro starch digestibility of whole-plant corn silage and ensiled corn grain
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B.A. Saylor, E.C. Diepersloot, C. Heinzen, Jr., C.L. McCary, and L.F. Ferraretto
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Dairy processing. Dairy products ,SF250.5-275 - Abstract
The objective of this experiment was to analyze the effect of kernel breakage on the fermentation profile, nitrogen fractions, and ruminal in vitro starch digestibility of whole-plant corn silage and ensiled corn grain. Whole corn plants were harvested, and ears were separated from the forage portion and shelled. Corn kernels were either left intact or broken manually using a hammer. The remaining forage portion of the corn plants was chopped. Samples of the intact and broken kernels were stored for 0 or 30 d in quadruplicate vacuum pouches. Remaining intact and broken kernels were each reconstituted with the chopped forage portion of the corn plant to simulate whole-plant corn forage and were also stored for 0 or 30 d. In kernels separated from whole-plant corn silage, kernel form had no effect on zein protein concentrations. However, it was observed that in vitro starch digestibility at 7 h increased with ensiling only in kernels that were broken. When corn kernels were ensiled alone, concentrations of soluble crude protein and ammonia nitrogen increased with ensiling to a greater extent when kernels were broken. Finally, fermentation of ensiled corn grain was enhanced when kernels were broken. Overall, this study gives insight into the importance of kernel breakage to improve starch digestibility in corn silage through means other than a reduction in particle size and opens the door for continued investigation into the proteolytic activity occurring in the silo.
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- 2021
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26. Invasive plants and their root traits are linked to the homogenization of soil microbial communities across the United States.
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Nunez-Mir, Gabriela C. and McCary, Matthew A.
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- *
PLANT invasions , *INVASIVE plants , *SOIL microbiology , *MICROBIAL communities , *NATIVE plants - Abstract
Although the impacts of invasive plants on soil ecosystems are widespread, the role and impacts of invader root traits in structuring microbial communities remain poorly understood. Here, we present a macroecological study investigating how plant invaders and their root traits affect soil microbial communities, spanning data from 377 unique plots across the United States sampled multiple times, totaling 632 sampling events and 94 invasive plant species. We found that native and invasive plants harbor different root traits on average, with invasive plants possessing higher specific root lengths and native plants having higher root tissue density. We also show that soil microbial communities experiencing heavy plant invasions were more similar to each other in composition across ecosystem types and geographical regions than plots with higher proportions of native plants, which displayed highly variable microbial communities across the continent. Root traits of invasive plants in highly invaded plots explained two times more variation in microbial composition than native plants. This work represents an important step toward understanding macroscale and cross-scale patterns of the relationship between plant invasions, root traits, and soil microbial composition. Our findings provide insights into how invasive plants may impact ecosystem functioning at the macroscale via their homogenizing influence on microbial communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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27. Graduate Student Literature Review: Current perspectives on whole-plant sorghum silage production and utilization by lactating dairy cows
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McCary, C.L., Vyas, D., Faciola, A.P., and Ferraretto, L.F.
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- 2020
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28. Predators control pests and increase yield across crop types and climates: a meta-analysis
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Boldorini, Gabriel X., primary, Mccary, Matthew A., additional, Romero, Gustavo Q., additional, Mills, Kirby L., additional, Sanders, Nathan J., additional, Reich, Peter B., additional, Michalko, Radek, additional, and Gonçalves-Souza, Thiago, additional
- Published
- 2024
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29. Plant invader alters soil food web via changes to fungal resources
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McCary, Matthew A. and Wise, David H.
- Published
- 2019
30. Global fine-resolution data on springtail abundance and community structure
- Author
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Russian Science Foundation, Leipzig University, German Research Foundation, Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (Brasil), Federal Ministry of Education and Research (Germany), Carl Tryggers Foundation, Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (France), Australian Research Council, National Science Foundation (US), American Association of University Women, German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research, Ministry of Innovation and Technology (Hungary), National Natural Science Foundation of China, South African National Antarctic Programme, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), European Commission, Estonian Science Foundation, Government of Canada, St. John's University, Ministére de l'Education Nationale de la Recherche et de la Technologie (France), Latvian Council of Science, Massey University, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Royal Society Te Apārangi, Slovak Research and Development Agency, Higher Education Commission (Pakistan), Natural Resources Canada, Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry, Nanyang Technological University, Potapov, Anton [0000-0002-4456-1710], Striuchkova, Anastasia V. [0000-0002-6666-5844], Alatalo, Juha M. [0000-0001-5084-850X], Arbea, Javier I. [0000-0001-6122-1331], Babenko, Anatoly [0000-0002-6077-0619], Barnes, Andrew D. [0000-0002-6499-381X], Bellini, Bruno C. [0000-0001-7881-9436], Bernava, Verónica [0000-0002-7654-7913], Bokhorst, Stef [0000-0003-0184-1162], Castaño-Meneses, Gabriela [0000-0002-5405-5221], Chauvat, Matthieu [0000-0002-4831-5904], Chomel, Mathilde [0000-0001-5110-2355], Chown, Steven L. [0000-0001-6069-5105], Classen, Aimme T. [0000-0002-6741-3470], de Lima, Estevam C. A. [0000-0002-1680-4818], Doblas-Miranda, E. [0000-0003-3366-2759], Drescher. Jochen [0000-0002-5162-9779], Eisenhauer, Nico [0000-0002-0371-6720], Ferlian, Olga [0000-0002-2536-7592], Filser, Juliane [0000-0003-1535-6168], Franken, Oscar [0000-0001-8361-3117], Greve, Michelle [0000-0002-6229-8506], Holmstrup, Martin [0000-0001-8395-6582], Homet, Pablo [0000-0002-4285-6953], Høye, Toke T. [0000-0001-5387-3284], Janion-Scheepers, C. [0000-0001-5942-7912], Jochum, Malte [0000-0002-8728-1145], Jucevica, Edite [0000-0002-0710-9450], Kapinga, Esther M. [0000-0002-2454-6820], Kovac, L'ubomír [0000-0001-8194-2128], Krab, Eveline J. [0000-0001-8262-0198], Henning Krogh, Paul [0000-0003-2033-553X], Lindo, Zoë [0000-0001-9942-7204], Lu, Jing-Zhong [0000-0002-4051-8993], Luciánez Sánchez, Mª J. [0000-0001-5679-0951], Mawan, Amanda [0000-0003-1820-7432], Moreno Mateos, D. [0000-0002-1539-5848], Negri, Ilaria [0000-0001-5188-1408], Nielsen, Uffe N. [0000-0003-2400-7453], Ochoa-Hueso, Raúl [0000-0002-1839-6926], Oliveira Filho, Luís Carlos I. [0000-0002-9010-481X], Palacios-Vargas, José [0000-0001-9097-6813], Pollierer, Melani M. [0000-0002-1498-2362], Potapov, Mikhail B. [0000-0002-6111-3354], Rashid, Muhammad Imtiaz [0000-0002-5178-4445], Raymond-Léonard, Laura J. [0000-0002-7324-7843], Saifutdinov, Ruslan [0000-0002-8878-3630], Sayer, Emma J. [0000-0002-3322-4487], Seeber, Julia [0000-0003-0189-7377], Shveenkova, Yulia B. [0000-0003-1887-8551], Slade, Eleanor M. [0000-0002-6108-1196], Sterzynska, Maria [0000-0001-9712-4285], Sun, Xin [0000-0002-3988-7847], Taskaeva, Anastasia A. [0000-0002-4519-8458], Thakur, Madhav P. [0000-0001-9426-1313], Tsiafouli, Maria A. [0000-0003-0203-8347], Twala, Mthokozisi N. [0000-0001-6499-1892], Winck, Bruna [0000-0002-7996-9855], Winkler, Daniel E.[0000-0002-6008-0562], Yin, Rui [0000-0002-4580-1317], Zeppelini, Douglas [0000-0002-9026-1129], Scheu, Stefan [0000-0003-4350-9520], Potapov, Anton, Chen, Ting-Wen, Striuchkova, Anastasia V., Alatalo, Juha M., Alexandre, Douglas, Arbea, Javier I., Ashton, Thomas, Ashwood, Frank, Babenko, Anatoly, Bandyopadhyaya, Ipsa, Duarte Maluche Baretta, Carolina R., Joimel, Sophie, Jorge, Bruna Claudia S., Jucevica, Edite, Kapinga, Esther M., Kovac, L'ubomír, Krab, Eveline J., Henning Krogh, Paul, Kuu, Annely, Kuznetsova, Natalia A., Lam Weng, Ngai, Russell, David J., Lin, Dunmei, Lindo, Zoë, Liu, Amy, Lu, Jing-Zhong, Luciánez Sánchez, Mª J., Marx, Michael T., Mawan, Amanda, McCary, Matthew A., Minor, María A., Mitchell, Grace I., Saifutdinov, Ruslan, Moreno Mateos, D., Nakamori, Taizo, Negri, Ilaria, Nielsen, Uffe N., Ochoa-Hueso, Raúl, Oliveira Filho, Luís Carlos I., Palacios-Vargas, José, Pollierer, Melani M., Ponge, Jean-François, Potapov, Mikhail B., Salmon, Sandrine, Querner, Pascal, Rai, Bibishan, Raschmanová, Natália, Rashid, Muhammad Imtiaz, Raymond-Léonard, Laura J., Reis, Aline S., Ross, Giles M., Rousseau, Laurent, Santoja, Mathieu, Saraeva, Anna K., Sayer, Emma J., Scheunemann, Nicole, Scholz, Cornelia, Seeber, Julia, Shaw, Peter, Baretta, Dilmar, Shveenkova, Yulia B., Slade, Eleanor M., Stebaeva, Sophya K., Sterzynska, Maria, Sun, Xin, Susanti, Winda I., Taskaeva, Anastasia A., Tay, Li Si, Thakur, Madhav P., Treasure, Anne M., Barnes, Andrew D., Tsiafouli, Maria A., Twala, Mthokozisi N., Uvarov, Alexei V., Vernier, Lisa A., Widenfalk, Lina A., Widyastuti, Rahayu, Winck, Bruna, Winkler, Daniel E., Wu, Donghui, Xie, Zhijing, Bellini, Bruno C., Yin, Rui, Zampaulo, Robson A., Zeppelini, Douglas, Zhang, Bing, Zoughailech, Abdelmalek, Ashford, Oliver, Klauberg-Filho, Osmar, Scheu, Stefan, Bendjaballah, Mohamed, Berg, Matty P., Bernava, Verónica, Bokhorst, Stef, Bokova, Anna I., Bolger, Thomas, Bouchard, Mathieu, Brito, Roniere A., Buchori, Damayanti, Castaño-Meneses, Gabriela, Chauvat, Matthieu, Chomel, Mathilde, Chow, Yasuko, Chown, Steven L., Classen, Aimme T., Cortet, Jérôme, Čuchta, Peter, Pedrosa, Ana M. de la, de Lima, Estevam C. A., Deharveng, Louis, Doblas-Miranda, E., Drescher. Jochen, Eisenhauer, Nico, Ellers, J., Ferlian, Olga, Ferreira, Susana S. D., Ferreira, Alisa S., Fiera, Cristina, Filser, Juliane, Franken, Oscar, Fujii, S., Gagnon Koudji, Essivi, Gao, Meixiang, Gendreau-Berthiaume, Benoit, Gers. Charles, Greve, Michelle, Hamra-Kroua, Salah, Tanya Handa, Ira, Hasegawa, Motohiro, Heiniger, Charlène, Hishi, Takuo, Holmstrup, Martin, Homet, Pablo, Høye, Toke T., Ivask, Mari, Jacques, Bob, Janion-Scheepers, C., Jochum, Malte, Russian Science Foundation, Leipzig University, German Research Foundation, Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (Brasil), Federal Ministry of Education and Research (Germany), Carl Tryggers Foundation, Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (France), Australian Research Council, National Science Foundation (US), American Association of University Women, German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research, Ministry of Innovation and Technology (Hungary), National Natural Science Foundation of China, South African National Antarctic Programme, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), European Commission, Estonian Science Foundation, Government of Canada, St. John's University, Ministére de l'Education Nationale de la Recherche et de la Technologie (France), Latvian Council of Science, Massey University, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Royal Society Te Apārangi, Slovak Research and Development Agency, Higher Education Commission (Pakistan), Natural Resources Canada, Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry, Nanyang Technological University, Potapov, Anton [0000-0002-4456-1710], Striuchkova, Anastasia V. [0000-0002-6666-5844], Alatalo, Juha M. [0000-0001-5084-850X], Arbea, Javier I. [0000-0001-6122-1331], Babenko, Anatoly [0000-0002-6077-0619], Barnes, Andrew D. [0000-0002-6499-381X], Bellini, Bruno C. [0000-0001-7881-9436], Bernava, Verónica [0000-0002-7654-7913], Bokhorst, Stef [0000-0003-0184-1162], Castaño-Meneses, Gabriela [0000-0002-5405-5221], Chauvat, Matthieu [0000-0002-4831-5904], Chomel, Mathilde [0000-0001-5110-2355], Chown, Steven L. [0000-0001-6069-5105], Classen, Aimme T. [0000-0002-6741-3470], de Lima, Estevam C. A. [0000-0002-1680-4818], Doblas-Miranda, E. [0000-0003-3366-2759], Drescher. Jochen [0000-0002-5162-9779], Eisenhauer, Nico [0000-0002-0371-6720], Ferlian, Olga [0000-0002-2536-7592], Filser, Juliane [0000-0003-1535-6168], Franken, Oscar [0000-0001-8361-3117], Greve, Michelle [0000-0002-6229-8506], Holmstrup, Martin [0000-0001-8395-6582], Homet, Pablo [0000-0002-4285-6953], Høye, Toke T. [0000-0001-5387-3284], Janion-Scheepers, C. [0000-0001-5942-7912], Jochum, Malte [0000-0002-8728-1145], Jucevica, Edite [0000-0002-0710-9450], Kapinga, Esther M. [0000-0002-2454-6820], Kovac, L'ubomír [0000-0001-8194-2128], Krab, Eveline J. [0000-0001-8262-0198], Henning Krogh, Paul [0000-0003-2033-553X], Lindo, Zoë [0000-0001-9942-7204], Lu, Jing-Zhong [0000-0002-4051-8993], Luciánez Sánchez, Mª J. [0000-0001-5679-0951], Mawan, Amanda [0000-0003-1820-7432], Moreno Mateos, D. [0000-0002-1539-5848], Negri, Ilaria [0000-0001-5188-1408], Nielsen, Uffe N. [0000-0003-2400-7453], Ochoa-Hueso, Raúl [0000-0002-1839-6926], Oliveira Filho, Luís Carlos I. [0000-0002-9010-481X], Palacios-Vargas, José [0000-0001-9097-6813], Pollierer, Melani M. [0000-0002-1498-2362], Potapov, Mikhail B. [0000-0002-6111-3354], Rashid, Muhammad Imtiaz [0000-0002-5178-4445], Raymond-Léonard, Laura J. [0000-0002-7324-7843], Saifutdinov, Ruslan [0000-0002-8878-3630], Sayer, Emma J. [0000-0002-3322-4487], Seeber, Julia [0000-0003-0189-7377], Shveenkova, Yulia B. [0000-0003-1887-8551], Slade, Eleanor M. [0000-0002-6108-1196], Sterzynska, Maria [0000-0001-9712-4285], Sun, Xin [0000-0002-3988-7847], Taskaeva, Anastasia A. [0000-0002-4519-8458], Thakur, Madhav P. [0000-0001-9426-1313], Tsiafouli, Maria A. [0000-0003-0203-8347], Twala, Mthokozisi N. [0000-0001-6499-1892], Winck, Bruna [0000-0002-7996-9855], Winkler, Daniel E.[0000-0002-6008-0562], Yin, Rui [0000-0002-4580-1317], Zeppelini, Douglas [0000-0002-9026-1129], Scheu, Stefan [0000-0003-4350-9520], Potapov, Anton, Chen, Ting-Wen, Striuchkova, Anastasia V., Alatalo, Juha M., Alexandre, Douglas, Arbea, Javier I., Ashton, Thomas, Ashwood, Frank, Babenko, Anatoly, Bandyopadhyaya, Ipsa, Duarte Maluche Baretta, Carolina R., Joimel, Sophie, Jorge, Bruna Claudia S., Jucevica, Edite, Kapinga, Esther M., Kovac, L'ubomír, Krab, Eveline J., Henning Krogh, Paul, Kuu, Annely, Kuznetsova, Natalia A., Lam Weng, Ngai, Russell, David J., Lin, Dunmei, Lindo, Zoë, Liu, Amy, Lu, Jing-Zhong, Luciánez Sánchez, Mª J., Marx, Michael T., Mawan, Amanda, McCary, Matthew A., Minor, María A., Mitchell, Grace I., Saifutdinov, Ruslan, Moreno Mateos, D., Nakamori, Taizo, Negri, Ilaria, Nielsen, Uffe N., Ochoa-Hueso, Raúl, Oliveira Filho, Luís Carlos I., Palacios-Vargas, José, Pollierer, Melani M., Ponge, Jean-François, Potapov, Mikhail B., Salmon, Sandrine, Querner, Pascal, Rai, Bibishan, Raschmanová, Natália, Rashid, Muhammad Imtiaz, Raymond-Léonard, Laura J., Reis, Aline S., Ross, Giles M., Rousseau, Laurent, Santoja, Mathieu, Saraeva, Anna K., Sayer, Emma J., Scheunemann, Nicole, Scholz, Cornelia, Seeber, Julia, Shaw, Peter, Baretta, Dilmar, Shveenkova, Yulia B., Slade, Eleanor M., Stebaeva, Sophya K., Sterzynska, Maria, Sun, Xin, Susanti, Winda I., Taskaeva, Anastasia A., Tay, Li Si, Thakur, Madhav P., Treasure, Anne M., Barnes, Andrew D., Tsiafouli, Maria A., Twala, Mthokozisi N., Uvarov, Alexei V., Vernier, Lisa A., Widenfalk, Lina A., Widyastuti, Rahayu, Winck, Bruna, Winkler, Daniel E., Wu, Donghui, Xie, Zhijing, Bellini, Bruno C., Yin, Rui, Zampaulo, Robson A., Zeppelini, Douglas, Zhang, Bing, Zoughailech, Abdelmalek, Ashford, Oliver, Klauberg-Filho, Osmar, Scheu, Stefan, Bendjaballah, Mohamed, Berg, Matty P., Bernava, Verónica, Bokhorst, Stef, Bokova, Anna I., Bolger, Thomas, Bouchard, Mathieu, Brito, Roniere A., Buchori, Damayanti, Castaño-Meneses, Gabriela, Chauvat, Matthieu, Chomel, Mathilde, Chow, Yasuko, Chown, Steven L., Classen, Aimme T., Cortet, Jérôme, Čuchta, Peter, Pedrosa, Ana M. de la, de Lima, Estevam C. A., Deharveng, Louis, Doblas-Miranda, E., Drescher. Jochen, Eisenhauer, Nico, Ellers, J., Ferlian, Olga, Ferreira, Susana S. D., Ferreira, Alisa S., Fiera, Cristina, Filser, Juliane, Franken, Oscar, Fujii, S., Gagnon Koudji, Essivi, Gao, Meixiang, Gendreau-Berthiaume, Benoit, Gers. Charles, Greve, Michelle, Hamra-Kroua, Salah, Tanya Handa, Ira, Hasegawa, Motohiro, Heiniger, Charlène, Hishi, Takuo, Holmstrup, Martin, Homet, Pablo, Høye, Toke T., Ivask, Mari, Jacques, Bob, Janion-Scheepers, C., and Jochum, Malte
- Abstract
Springtails (Collembola) inhabit soils from the Arctic to the Antarctic and comprise an estimated ~32% of all terrestrial arthropods on Earth. Here, we present a global, spatially-explicit database on springtail communities that includes 249,912 occurrences from 44,999 samples and 2,990 sites. These data are mainly raw sample-level records at the species level collected predominantly from private archives of the authors that were quality-controlled and taxonomically-standardised. Despite covering all continents, most of the sample-level data come from the European continent (82.5% of all samples) and represent four habitats: woodlands (57.4%), grasslands (14.0%), agrosystems (13.7%) and scrublands (9.0%). We included sampling by soil layers, and across seasons and years, representing temporal and spatial within-site variation in springtail communities. We also provided data use and sharing guidelines and R code to facilitate the use of the database by other researchers. This data paper describes a static version of the database at the publication date, but the database will be further expanded to include underrepresented regions and linked with trait data.
- Published
- 2024
31. Global fine-resolution data on springtail abundance and community structure
- Author
-
Potapov, A. M., Chen, T. -W., Striuchkova, A. V., Alatalo, J. M., Alexandre, D., Arbea, J., Ashton, T., Ashwood, F., Babenko, A. B., Bandyopadhyaya, I., Baretta, C. R. D. M., Baretta, D., Barnes, A. D., Bellini, B. C., Bendjaballah, M., Berg, M. P., Bernava, V., Bokhorst, S., Bokova, A. I., Bolger, T., Bouchard, M., Brito, R. A., Buchori, D., Castano-Meneses, G., Chauvat, M., Chomel, M., Chow, Y., Chown, S. L., Classen, A. T., Cortet, J., Cuchta, P., de la Pedrosa, A. M., De Lima, E. C. A., Deharveng, L. E., Doblas Miranda, E., Drescher, J., Eisenhauer, N., Ellers, J., Ferlian, O., Ferreira, S. S. D., Ferreira, A. S., Fiera, C., Filser, J., Franken, O., Fujii, S., Koudji, E. G., Gao, M., Gendreau-Berthiaume, B., Gers, C., Greve, M., Hamra-Kroua, S., Handa, I. T., Hasegawa, M., Heiniger, C., Hishi, T., Holmstrup, M., Homet, P., Hoye, T. T., Ivask, M., Jacques, B., Janion-Scheepers, C., Jochum, M., Joimel, S., Jorge, B. C. S., Jucevica, E., Kapinga, E. M., Kovac, L., Krab, E. J., Krogh, P. H., Kuu, A., Kuznetsova, N., Lam, W. N., Lin, D., Lindo, Z., Liu, A. W. P., Lu, J. -Z., Lucianez, M. J., Marx, M. T., Mawan, A., Mccary, M. A., Minor, M. A., Mitchell, G. I., Moreno, D., Nakamori, T., Negri, Ilaria, Nielsen, U. N., Ochoa-Hueso, R., Oliveira Filho, L. C. I., Palacios-Vargas, J. G., Pollierer, M. M., Ponge, J. -F., Potapov, M. B., Querner, P., Rai, B., Raschmanova, N., Rashid, M. I., Raymond-Leonard, L. J., Reis, A. S., Ross, G. M., Rousseau, L., Russell, D. J., Saifutdinov, R. A., Salmon, S., Santonja, M., Saraeva, A. K., Sayer, E. J., Scheunemann, N., Scholz, C., Seeber, J., Shaw, P., Shveenkova, Y. B., Slade, E. M., Stebaeva, S., Sterzynska, M., Sun, X., Susanti, W. I., Taskaeva, A. A., Tay, L. S., Thakur, M. P., Treasure, A. M., Tsiafouli, M., Twala, M. N., Uvarov, A. V., Venier, L. A., Widenfalk, L. A., Widyastuti, R., Winck, B., Winkler, D., Wu, D., Xie, Z., Yin, R., Zampaulo, R. A., Zeppelini, D., Zhang, B., Zoughailech, A., Ashford, O., Klauberg-Filho, O., Scheu, S., Negri I. (ORCID:0000-0001-5188-1408), Potapov, A. M., Chen, T. -W., Striuchkova, A. V., Alatalo, J. M., Alexandre, D., Arbea, J., Ashton, T., Ashwood, F., Babenko, A. B., Bandyopadhyaya, I., Baretta, C. R. D. M., Baretta, D., Barnes, A. D., Bellini, B. C., Bendjaballah, M., Berg, M. P., Bernava, V., Bokhorst, S., Bokova, A. I., Bolger, T., Bouchard, M., Brito, R. A., Buchori, D., Castano-Meneses, G., Chauvat, M., Chomel, M., Chow, Y., Chown, S. L., Classen, A. T., Cortet, J., Cuchta, P., de la Pedrosa, A. M., De Lima, E. C. A., Deharveng, L. E., Doblas Miranda, E., Drescher, J., Eisenhauer, N., Ellers, J., Ferlian, O., Ferreira, S. S. D., Ferreira, A. S., Fiera, C., Filser, J., Franken, O., Fujii, S., Koudji, E. G., Gao, M., Gendreau-Berthiaume, B., Gers, C., Greve, M., Hamra-Kroua, S., Handa, I. T., Hasegawa, M., Heiniger, C., Hishi, T., Holmstrup, M., Homet, P., Hoye, T. T., Ivask, M., Jacques, B., Janion-Scheepers, C., Jochum, M., Joimel, S., Jorge, B. C. S., Jucevica, E., Kapinga, E. M., Kovac, L., Krab, E. J., Krogh, P. H., Kuu, A., Kuznetsova, N., Lam, W. N., Lin, D., Lindo, Z., Liu, A. W. P., Lu, J. -Z., Lucianez, M. J., Marx, M. T., Mawan, A., Mccary, M. A., Minor, M. A., Mitchell, G. I., Moreno, D., Nakamori, T., Negri, Ilaria, Nielsen, U. N., Ochoa-Hueso, R., Oliveira Filho, L. C. I., Palacios-Vargas, J. G., Pollierer, M. M., Ponge, J. -F., Potapov, M. B., Querner, P., Rai, B., Raschmanova, N., Rashid, M. I., Raymond-Leonard, L. J., Reis, A. S., Ross, G. M., Rousseau, L., Russell, D. J., Saifutdinov, R. A., Salmon, S., Santonja, M., Saraeva, A. K., Sayer, E. J., Scheunemann, N., Scholz, C., Seeber, J., Shaw, P., Shveenkova, Y. B., Slade, E. M., Stebaeva, S., Sterzynska, M., Sun, X., Susanti, W. I., Taskaeva, A. A., Tay, L. S., Thakur, M. P., Treasure, A. M., Tsiafouli, M., Twala, M. N., Uvarov, A. V., Venier, L. A., Widenfalk, L. A., Widyastuti, R., Winck, B., Winkler, D., Wu, D., Xie, Z., Yin, R., Zampaulo, R. A., Zeppelini, D., Zhang, B., Zoughailech, A., Ashford, O., Klauberg-Filho, O., Scheu, S., and Negri I. (ORCID:0000-0001-5188-1408)
- Abstract
Springtails (Collembola) inhabit soils from the Arctic to the Antarctic and comprise an estimated ~32% of all terrestrial arthropods on Earth. Here, we present a global, spatially-explicit database on springtail communities that includes 249,912 occurrences from 44,999 samples and 2,990 sites. These data are mainly raw sample-level records at the species level collected predominantly from private archives of the authors that were quality-controlled and taxonomically-standardised. Despite covering all continents, most of the sample-level data come from the European continent (82.5% of all samples) and represent four habitats: woodlands (57.4%), grasslands (14.0%), agrosystems (13.7%) and scrublands (9.0%). We included sampling by soil layers, and across seasons and years, representing temporal and spatial within-site variation in springtail communities. We also provided data use and sharing guidelines and R code to facilitate the use of the database by other researchers. This data paper describes a static version of the database at the publication date, but the database will be further expanded to include underrepresented regions and linked with trait data.
- Published
- 2024
32. Innovative sensing technologies for nuclear instrumentation.
- Author
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Pattrick Calderoni, David Hurley, Josh Daw, Austin Fleming, and Kelly McCary
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. A global research priority agenda to advance public health responses to fatty liver disease
- Author
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Lazarus, J, Mark, H, Allen, A, Arab, J, Carrieri, P, Noureddin, M, Alazawi, W, Alkhouri, N, Alqahtani, S, Arrese, M, Bataller, R, Berg, T, Brennan, P, Burra, P, Castro-Narro, G, Cortez-Pinto, H, Cusi, K, Dedes, N, Duseja, A, Francque, S, Hagstrom, H, Huang, T, Wajcman, D, Kautz, A, Kopka, C, Krag, A, Miller, V, Newsome, P, Rinella, M, Romero, D, Sarin, S, Silva, M, Spearman, C, Tsochatzis, E, Valenti, L, Villota-Rivas, M, Zelber-Sagi, S, Schattenberg, J, Wong, V, Younossi, Z, Aberg, F, Adams, L, Al-Naamani, K, Albadawy, R, Alexa, Z, Allison, M, Alnaser, F, Alswat, K, Alvares-da-Silva, M, Alvaro, D, Alves-Bezerra, M, Andrade, R, Anstee, Q, Awuku, Y, Baatarkhuu, O, Baffy, G, Bakieva, S, Bansal, M, Barouki, R, Batterham, R, Behling, C, Belfort-DeAguiar, R, Berzigotti, A, Betel, M, Bianco, C, Bosi, E, Boursier, J, Brunt, E, Bugianesi, E, Byrne, C, Cabrera Cabrejos, M, Caldwell, S, Carr, R, Castellanos Fernandez, M, Castera, L, Castillo-Lopez, M, Caussy, C, Cerda-Reyes, E, Ceriello, A, Chan, W, Chang, Y, Charatcharoenwitthaya, P, Chavez-Tapia, N, Chung, R, Colombo, M, Coppell, K, Cotrim, H, Craxi, A, Crespo, J, Dassanayake, A, Davidson, N, De Knegt, R, de Ledinghen, V, Demir, M, Desalegn, H, Diago, M, Dillon, J, Dimmig, B, Dirac, M, Dirchwolf, M, Dufour, J, Dvorak, K, Ekstedt, M, El-Kassas, M, Elsanousi, O, Elsharkawy, A, Elwakil, R, Eskridge, W, Eslam, M, Esmat, G, Fan, J, Ferraz, M, Flisiak, R, Fortin, D, Fouad, Y, Freidman, S, Fuchs, M, Gadano, A, Gastaldelli, A, Geerts, A, Geier, A, George, J, Gerber, L, Ghazinyan, H, Gheorghe, L, Kile, D, Girala, M, Boon Bee, G, Goossens, N, Graupera, I, Gronbaek, H, Hamid, S, Hebditch, V, Henry, Z, Hickman, I, Hobbs, L, Hocking, S, Hofmann, W, Idilman, R, Iruzubieta, P, Isaacs, S, Isakov, V, Ismail, M, Jamal, M, Jarvis, H, Jepsen, P, Jornayvaz, F, Sudhamshu, K, Kakizaki, S, Karpen, S, Kawaguchi, T, Keating, S, Khader, Y, Kim, S, Kim, W, Kleiner, D, Koek, G, Joseph Komas, N, Kondili, L, Koot, B, Korenjak, M, Kotsiliti, E, Koulla, Y, Kugelmas, C, Kugelmas, M, Labidi, A, Lange, N, Lavine, J, Lazo, M, Leite, N, Lin, H, Lkhagvaa, U, Long, M, Lopez-Jaramillo, P, Lozano, A, Macedo, M, Malekzadeh, R, Marchesini, G, Marciano, S, Martinez, K, Martinez Vazquez, S, Mateva, L, Mato, J, Nlombi, C, Mccary, A, Mcintyre, J, Mckee, M, Mendive, J, Mikolasevic, I, Miller, P, Milovanovic, T, Milton, T, Moreno-Alcantar, R, Morgan, T, Motala, A, Muris, J, Musso, C, Nava-Gonzalez, E, Negro, F, Nersesov, A, Neuschwander-Tetri, B, Nikolova, D, Norris, S, Novak, K, Ocama, P, Ong, J, Ong-Go, A, Onyekwere, C, Padilla, M, Pais, R, Pan, C, Panduro, A, Panigrahi, M, Papatheodoridis, G, Paruk, I, Patel, K, Goncalves, C, Figueroa, M, Perez-Escobar, J, Pericas, J, Perseghin, G, Pessoa, M, Petta, S, Marques Souza de Oliveira, C, Prabhakaran, D, Pyrsopoulous, N, Rabiee, A, Ramji, A, Ratziu, V, Ravendhran, N, Ray, K, Roden, M, Romeo, S, Romero-Gomez, M, Rotman, Y, Rouabhia, S, Rowe, I, Sadirova, S, Alkhatry, M, Salupere, R, Satapathy, S, Schwimmer, J, Sebastiani, G, Seim, L, Seki, Y, Serme, A, Shapiro, D, Sharvadze, L, Shaw, J, Shawa, I, Shenoy, T, Shibolet, O, Shimakawa, Y, Shubrook, J, Singh, S, Sinkala, E, Skladany, L, Skrypnyk, I, Song, M, Sookoian, S, Sridharan, K, Stefan, N, Stine, J, Stratakis, N, Sheriff, D, Sundaram, S, Svegliati-Baroni, G, Swain, M, Tacke, F, Taheri, S, Tan, S, Tapper, E, Targher, G, Tcaciuc, E, Thiele, M, Tiniakos, D, Tolmane, I, Torre, A, Torres, E, Treeprasertsuk, S, Trenell, M, Turcan, S, Turcanu, A, Valantinas, J, van Kleef, L, Velarde Ruiz Velasco, J, Vesterhus, M, Vilar-Gomez, E, Waked, I, Wattacheril, J, Wedemeyer, H, Wilkins, F, Willemse, J, Wong, R, Yilmaz, Y, Yki-Jarvinen, H, Yu, M, Yumuk, V, Zeybel, M, Zheng, K, Zheng, M, Lazarus J. V., Mark H. E., Allen A. M., Arab J. P., Carrieri P., Noureddin M., Alazawi W., Alkhouri N., Alqahtani S. A., Arrese M., Bataller R., Berg T., Brennan P. N., Burra P., Castro-Narro G. E., Cortez-Pinto H., Cusi K., Dedes N., Duseja A., Francque S. M., Hagstrom H., Huang T. T. -K., Wajcman D. I., Kautz A., Kopka C. J., Krag A., Miller V., Newsome P. N., Rinella M. E., Romero D., Sarin S. K., Silva M., Spearman C. W., Tsochatzis E. A., Valenti L., Villota-Rivas M., Zelber-Sagi S., Schattenberg J. M., Wong V. W. -S., Younossi Z. M., Aberg F., Adams L., Al-Naamani K., Albadawy R. M., Alexa Z., Allison M., Alnaser F. A., Alswat K., Alvares-da-Silva M. R., Alvaro D., Alves-Bezerra M., Andrade R. J., Anstee Q. M., Awuku Y. A., Baatarkhuu O., Baffy G., Bakieva S., Bansal M. B., Barouki R., Batterham R. L., Behling C., Belfort-DeAguiar R., Berzigotti A., Betel M., Bianco C., Bosi E., Boursier J., Brunt E. M., Bugianesi E., Byrne C. J., Cabrera Cabrejos M. C., Caldwell S., Carr R., Castellanos Fernandez M. I., Castera L., Castillo-Lopez M. G., Caussy C., Cerda-Reyes E., Ceriello A., Chan W. -K., Chang Y., Charatcharoenwitthaya P., Chavez-Tapia N., Chung R. T., Colombo M., Coppell K., Cotrim H. P., Craxi A., Crespo J., Dassanayake A., Davidson N. O., De Knegt R., de Ledinghen V., Demir M., Desalegn H., Diago M., Dillon J. F., Dimmig B., Dirac M. A., Dirchwolf M., Dufour J. -F., Dvorak K., Ekstedt M., El-Kassas M., Elsanousi O. M., Elsharkawy A. M., Elwakil R., Eskridge W., Eslam M., Esmat G., Fan J. -G., Ferraz M. L., Flisiak R., Fortin D., Fouad Y., Freidman S. L., Fuchs M., Gadano A., Gastaldelli A., Geerts A., Geier A., George J., Gerber L. H., Ghazinyan H., Gheorghe L., Kile D. G., Girala M., Boon Bee G. G., Goossens N., Graupera I., Gronbaek H., Hamid S., Hebditch V., Henry Z., Hickman I. J., Hobbs L. A., Hocking S. L., Hofmann W. P., Idilman R., Iruzubieta P., Isaacs S., Isakov V. A., Ismail M. H., Jamal M. H., Jarvis H., Jepsen P., Jornayvaz F., Sudhamshu K. C., Kakizaki S., Karpen S., Kawaguchi T., Keating S. E., Khader Y., Kim S. U., Kim W., Kleiner D. E., Koek G., Joseph Komas N. P., Kondili L. A., Koot B. G., Korenjak M., Kotsiliti E., Koulla Y., Kugelmas C., Kugelmas M., Labidi A., Lange N. F., Lavine J. E., Lazo M., Leite N., Lin H. -C., Lkhagvaa U., Long M. T., Lopez-Jaramillo P., Lozano A., Macedo M. P., Malekzadeh R., Marchesini G., Marciano S., Martinez K., Martinez Vazquez S. E., Mateva L., Mato J. M., Nlombi C. M., McCary A. G., McIntyre J., McKee M., Mendive J. M., Mikolasevic I., Miller P. S., Milovanovic T., Milton T., Moreno-Alcantar R., Morgan T. R., Motala A., Muris J., Musso C., Nava-Gonzalez E. J., Negro F., Nersesov A. V., Neuschwander-Tetri B. A., Nikolova D., Norris S., Novak K., Ocama P., Ong J. P., Ong-Go A., Onyekwere C., Padilla M., Pais R., Pan C., Panduro A., Panigrahi M. K., Papatheodoridis G., Paruk I., Patel K., Goncalves C. P., Figueroa M. P., Perez-Escobar J., Pericas J. M., Perseghin G., Pessoa M. G., Petta S., Marques Souza de Oliveira C. P., Prabhakaran D., Pyrsopoulous N., Rabiee A., Ramji A., Ratziu V., Ravendhran N., Ray K., Roden M., Romeo S., Romero-Gomez M., Rotman Y., Rouabhia S., Rowe I. A., Sadirova S., Alkhatry M. S., Salupere R., Satapathy S. K., Schwimmer J. B., Sebastiani G., Seim L., Seki Y., Serme A. K., Shapiro D., Sharvadze L., Shaw J. E., Shawa I. T., Shenoy T., Shibolet O., Shimakawa Y., Shubrook J. H., Singh S. P., Sinkala E., Skladany L., Skrypnyk I., Song M. J., Sookoian S., Sridharan K., Stefan N., Stine J. G., Stratakis N., Sheriff D. S., Sundaram S. S., Svegliati-Baroni G., Swain M. G., Tacke F., Taheri S., Tan S. -S., Tapper E. B., Targher G., Tcaciuc E., Thiele M., Tiniakos D., Tolmane I., Torre A., Torres E. A., Treeprasertsuk S., Trenell M., Turcan S., Turcanu A., Valantinas J., van Kleef L. A., Velarde Ruiz Velasco J. A., Vesterhus M., Vilar-Gomez E., Waked I., Wattacheril J., Wedemeyer H., Wilkins F., Willemse J., Wong R. J., Yilmaz Y., Yki-Jarvinen H., Yu M. -L., Yumuk V., Zeybel M., Zheng K. I., Zheng M. -H., Lazarus, J, Mark, H, Allen, A, Arab, J, Carrieri, P, Noureddin, M, Alazawi, W, Alkhouri, N, Alqahtani, S, Arrese, M, Bataller, R, Berg, T, Brennan, P, Burra, P, Castro-Narro, G, Cortez-Pinto, H, Cusi, K, Dedes, N, Duseja, A, Francque, S, Hagstrom, H, Huang, T, Wajcman, D, Kautz, A, Kopka, C, Krag, A, Miller, V, Newsome, P, Rinella, M, Romero, D, Sarin, S, Silva, M, Spearman, C, Tsochatzis, E, Valenti, L, Villota-Rivas, M, Zelber-Sagi, S, Schattenberg, J, Wong, V, Younossi, Z, Aberg, F, Adams, L, Al-Naamani, K, Albadawy, R, Alexa, Z, Allison, M, Alnaser, F, Alswat, K, Alvares-da-Silva, M, Alvaro, D, Alves-Bezerra, M, Andrade, R, Anstee, Q, Awuku, Y, Baatarkhuu, O, Baffy, G, Bakieva, S, Bansal, M, Barouki, R, Batterham, R, Behling, C, Belfort-DeAguiar, R, Berzigotti, A, Betel, M, Bianco, C, Bosi, E, Boursier, J, Brunt, E, Bugianesi, E, Byrne, C, Cabrera Cabrejos, M, Caldwell, S, Carr, R, Castellanos Fernandez, M, Castera, L, Castillo-Lopez, M, Caussy, C, Cerda-Reyes, E, Ceriello, A, Chan, W, Chang, Y, Charatcharoenwitthaya, P, Chavez-Tapia, N, Chung, R, Colombo, M, Coppell, K, Cotrim, H, Craxi, A, Crespo, J, Dassanayake, A, Davidson, N, De Knegt, R, de Ledinghen, V, Demir, M, Desalegn, H, Diago, M, Dillon, J, Dimmig, B, Dirac, M, Dirchwolf, M, Dufour, J, Dvorak, K, Ekstedt, M, El-Kassas, M, Elsanousi, O, Elsharkawy, A, Elwakil, R, Eskridge, W, Eslam, M, Esmat, G, Fan, J, Ferraz, M, Flisiak, R, Fortin, D, Fouad, Y, Freidman, S, Fuchs, M, Gadano, A, Gastaldelli, A, Geerts, A, Geier, A, George, J, Gerber, L, Ghazinyan, H, Gheorghe, L, Kile, D, Girala, M, Boon Bee, G, Goossens, N, Graupera, I, Gronbaek, H, Hamid, S, Hebditch, V, Henry, Z, Hickman, I, Hobbs, L, Hocking, S, Hofmann, W, Idilman, R, Iruzubieta, P, Isaacs, S, Isakov, V, Ismail, M, Jamal, M, Jarvis, H, Jepsen, P, Jornayvaz, F, Sudhamshu, K, Kakizaki, S, Karpen, S, Kawaguchi, T, Keating, S, Khader, Y, Kim, S, Kim, W, Kleiner, D, Koek, G, Joseph Komas, N, Kondili, L, Koot, B, Korenjak, M, Kotsiliti, E, Koulla, Y, Kugelmas, C, Kugelmas, M, Labidi, A, Lange, N, Lavine, J, Lazo, M, Leite, N, Lin, H, Lkhagvaa, U, Long, M, Lopez-Jaramillo, P, Lozano, A, Macedo, M, Malekzadeh, R, Marchesini, G, Marciano, S, Martinez, K, Martinez Vazquez, S, Mateva, L, Mato, J, Nlombi, C, Mccary, A, Mcintyre, J, Mckee, M, Mendive, J, Mikolasevic, I, Miller, P, Milovanovic, T, Milton, T, Moreno-Alcantar, R, Morgan, T, Motala, A, Muris, J, Musso, C, Nava-Gonzalez, E, Negro, F, Nersesov, A, Neuschwander-Tetri, B, Nikolova, D, Norris, S, Novak, K, Ocama, P, Ong, J, Ong-Go, A, Onyekwere, C, Padilla, M, Pais, R, Pan, C, Panduro, A, Panigrahi, M, Papatheodoridis, G, Paruk, I, Patel, K, Goncalves, C, Figueroa, M, Perez-Escobar, J, Pericas, J, Perseghin, G, Pessoa, M, Petta, S, Marques Souza de Oliveira, C, Prabhakaran, D, Pyrsopoulous, N, Rabiee, A, Ramji, A, Ratziu, V, Ravendhran, N, Ray, K, Roden, M, Romeo, S, Romero-Gomez, M, Rotman, Y, Rouabhia, S, Rowe, I, Sadirova, S, Alkhatry, M, Salupere, R, Satapathy, S, Schwimmer, J, Sebastiani, G, Seim, L, Seki, Y, Serme, A, Shapiro, D, Sharvadze, L, Shaw, J, Shawa, I, Shenoy, T, Shibolet, O, Shimakawa, Y, Shubrook, J, Singh, S, Sinkala, E, Skladany, L, Skrypnyk, I, Song, M, Sookoian, S, Sridharan, K, Stefan, N, Stine, J, Stratakis, N, Sheriff, D, Sundaram, S, Svegliati-Baroni, G, Swain, M, Tacke, F, Taheri, S, Tan, S, Tapper, E, Targher, G, Tcaciuc, E, Thiele, M, Tiniakos, D, Tolmane, I, Torre, A, Torres, E, Treeprasertsuk, S, Trenell, M, Turcan, S, Turcanu, A, Valantinas, J, van Kleef, L, Velarde Ruiz Velasco, J, Vesterhus, M, Vilar-Gomez, E, Waked, I, Wattacheril, J, Wedemeyer, H, Wilkins, F, Willemse, J, Wong, R, Yilmaz, Y, Yki-Jarvinen, H, Yu, M, Yumuk, V, Zeybel, M, Zheng, K, Zheng, M, Lazarus J. V., Mark H. E., Allen A. M., Arab J. P., Carrieri P., Noureddin M., Alazawi W., Alkhouri N., Alqahtani S. A., Arrese M., Bataller R., Berg T., Brennan P. N., Burra P., Castro-Narro G. E., Cortez-Pinto H., Cusi K., Dedes N., Duseja A., Francque S. M., Hagstrom H., Huang T. T. -K., Wajcman D. I., Kautz A., Kopka C. J., Krag A., Miller V., Newsome P. N., Rinella M. E., Romero D., Sarin S. K., Silva M., Spearman C. W., Tsochatzis E. A., Valenti L., Villota-Rivas M., Zelber-Sagi S., Schattenberg J. M., Wong V. W. -S., Younossi Z. M., Aberg F., Adams L., Al-Naamani K., Albadawy R. M., Alexa Z., Allison M., Alnaser F. A., Alswat K., Alvares-da-Silva M. R., Alvaro D., Alves-Bezerra M., Andrade R. J., Anstee Q. M., Awuku Y. A., Baatarkhuu O., Baffy G., Bakieva S., Bansal M. B., Barouki R., Batterham R. L., Behling C., Belfort-DeAguiar R., Berzigotti A., Betel M., Bianco C., Bosi E., Boursier J., Brunt E. M., Bugianesi E., Byrne C. J., Cabrera Cabrejos M. C., Caldwell S., Carr R., Castellanos Fernandez M. I., Castera L., Castillo-Lopez M. G., Caussy C., Cerda-Reyes E., Ceriello A., Chan W. -K., Chang Y., Charatcharoenwitthaya P., Chavez-Tapia N., Chung R. T., Colombo M., Coppell K., Cotrim H. P., Craxi A., Crespo J., Dassanayake A., Davidson N. O., De Knegt R., de Ledinghen V., Demir M., Desalegn H., Diago M., Dillon J. F., Dimmig B., Dirac M. A., Dirchwolf M., Dufour J. -F., Dvorak K., Ekstedt M., El-Kassas M., Elsanousi O. M., Elsharkawy A. M., Elwakil R., Eskridge W., Eslam M., Esmat G., Fan J. -G., Ferraz M. L., Flisiak R., Fortin D., Fouad Y., Freidman S. L., Fuchs M., Gadano A., Gastaldelli A., Geerts A., Geier A., George J., Gerber L. H., Ghazinyan H., Gheorghe L., Kile D. G., Girala M., Boon Bee G. G., Goossens N., Graupera I., Gronbaek H., Hamid S., Hebditch V., Henry Z., Hickman I. J., Hobbs L. A., Hocking S. L., Hofmann W. P., Idilman R., Iruzubieta P., Isaacs S., Isakov V. A., Ismail M. H., Jamal M. H., Jarvis H., Jepsen P., Jornayvaz F., Sudhamshu K. C., Kakizaki S., Karpen S., Kawaguchi T., Keating S. E., Khader Y., Kim S. U., Kim W., Kleiner D. E., Koek G., Joseph Komas N. P., Kondili L. A., Koot B. G., Korenjak M., Kotsiliti E., Koulla Y., Kugelmas C., Kugelmas M., Labidi A., Lange N. F., Lavine J. E., Lazo M., Leite N., Lin H. -C., Lkhagvaa U., Long M. T., Lopez-Jaramillo P., Lozano A., Macedo M. P., Malekzadeh R., Marchesini G., Marciano S., Martinez K., Martinez Vazquez S. E., Mateva L., Mato J. M., Nlombi C. M., McCary A. G., McIntyre J., McKee M., Mendive J. M., Mikolasevic I., Miller P. S., Milovanovic T., Milton T., Moreno-Alcantar R., Morgan T. R., Motala A., Muris J., Musso C., Nava-Gonzalez E. J., Negro F., Nersesov A. V., Neuschwander-Tetri B. A., Nikolova D., Norris S., Novak K., Ocama P., Ong J. P., Ong-Go A., Onyekwere C., Padilla M., Pais R., Pan C., Panduro A., Panigrahi M. K., Papatheodoridis G., Paruk I., Patel K., Goncalves C. P., Figueroa M. P., Perez-Escobar J., Pericas J. M., Perseghin G., Pessoa M. G., Petta S., Marques Souza de Oliveira C. P., Prabhakaran D., Pyrsopoulous N., Rabiee A., Ramji A., Ratziu V., Ravendhran N., Ray K., Roden M., Romeo S., Romero-Gomez M., Rotman Y., Rouabhia S., Rowe I. A., Sadirova S., Alkhatry M. S., Salupere R., Satapathy S. K., Schwimmer J. B., Sebastiani G., Seim L., Seki Y., Serme A. K., Shapiro D., Sharvadze L., Shaw J. E., Shawa I. T., Shenoy T., Shibolet O., Shimakawa Y., Shubrook J. H., Singh S. P., Sinkala E., Skladany L., Skrypnyk I., Song M. J., Sookoian S., Sridharan K., Stefan N., Stine J. G., Stratakis N., Sheriff D. S., Sundaram S. S., Svegliati-Baroni G., Swain M. G., Tacke F., Taheri S., Tan S. -S., Tapper E. B., Targher G., Tcaciuc E., Thiele M., Tiniakos D., Tolmane I., Torre A., Torres E. A., Treeprasertsuk S., Trenell M., Turcan S., Turcanu A., Valantinas J., van Kleef L. A., Velarde Ruiz Velasco J. A., Vesterhus M., Vilar-Gomez E., Waked I., Wattacheril J., Wedemeyer H., Wilkins F., Willemse J., Wong R. J., Yilmaz Y., Yki-Jarvinen H., Yu M. -L., Yumuk V., Zeybel M., Zheng K. I., and Zheng M. -H.
- Abstract
Background & aims: An estimated 38% of adults worldwide have non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). From individual impacts to widespread public health and economic consequences, the implications of this disease are profound. This study aimed to develop an aligned, prioritised fatty liver disease research agenda for the global health community. Methods: Nine co-chairs drafted initial research priorities, subsequently reviewed by 40 core authors and debated during a three-day in-person meeting. Following a Delphi methodology, over two rounds, a large panel (R1 n = 344, R2 n = 288) reviewed the priorities, via Qualtrics XM, indicating agreement using a four-point Likert-scale and providing written feedback. The core group revised the draft priorities between rounds. In R2, panellists also ranked the priorities within six domains: epidemiology, models of care, treatment and care, education and awareness, patient and community perspectives, and leadership and public health policy. Results: The consensus-built fatty liver disease research agenda encompasses 28 priorities. The mean percentage of ‘agree’ responses increased from 78.3 in R1 to 81.1 in R2. Five priorities received unanimous combined agreement (‘agree’ + ‘somewhat agree’); the remaining 23 priorities had >90% combined agreement. While all but one of the priorities exhibited at least a super-majority of agreement (>66.7% ‘agree’), 13 priorities had [removed]90% combined agreement. Conclusions: Adopting this multidisciplinary consensus-built research priorities agenda can deliver a step-change in addressing fatty liver disease, mitigating against its individual and societal harms and proactively altering its natural history through prevention, identification, treatment, and care. This agenda should catalyse the global health community's efforts to advance and accelerate responses to this widespread and fast-growing public health threat. Impact and implications: An estimated 38% of adults and 13% o
- Published
- 2023
34. A multi-society Delphi consensus statement on new fatty liver disease nomenclature
- Author
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Mary E, R, Jeffrey V, L, Vlad, R, Sven M, F, Arun J, S, Fasiha, K, Diana, R, Manal F, A, Quentin M, A, Juan Pablo, A, Marco, A, Ramon, B, Ulrich, B, Jerome, B, Elisabetta, B, Christopher, B, Graciela E, C, Abhijit, C, Helena, C, Donna, C, Kenneth, C, Mohamed, E, Samuel, K, Wayne, E, Jiangao, F, Samer, G, Cynthia D, G, Stephen A, H, Seung Up, K, Bart, K, Marko, K, Kris, K, Florence, L, Rohit, L, Robert, M, Timothy R, M, Elisabeth, P, Michael, R, Manuel, R, Marcelo, S, Shivaram Prasad, S, Silvia C, S, C Wendy, S, Dina, T, Luca, V, Miriam B, V, Vincent, W, Stavra, X, Yusuf, Y, Zobair, Y, Ansley, H, Marcela, V, Newsome, NVeeral Ajmeral, P, Alazawi, W, Alkhatry, M, Alkhouri, N, Allen, A, Allison, M, Alswat, K, R Alvares-da-Silva, M, Alves-Bezerra, M, J Armstrong, M, Arufe, D, Aschner, P, Baffy, G, Bansal, M, Bedossa, P, Belfort, R, Berg, T, Berzigotti, A, Betel, M, Bianco, C, Brass, C, L Brosgart, C, Matthews Brunt, E, Buti, M, Caldwell, S, Carr, R, Casanovas, T, Castera, L, Caussy, C, Cerda, E, Chalasani, N, Kheong Chan, W, Charatcharoenwitthaya, P, Charlton, M, Cheung, A, Chiodi, D, Chung, R, Cohen, D, Corey, K, P Cotrim, H, Crespo, J, Dassanayake, A, Davidson, N, De Knegt, R, De Ledinghen, V, Demir, M, Diaz, S, Mae Diehl, A, Dimmig, B, Dirchwolf, M, Duseja, A, Dvorak, K, Ekstedt, M, El Wakil, R, Lucía Ferraz, M, Friedman, S, Fuchs, M, Gastaldelli, A, Geerts, A, Geier, A, Girala, M, Goh, G, Goossens, N, Graupera, I, Hagström, H, Henry, Z, Hunyady, B, Hutchison, A, Isaacs, S, Jornayvaz, F, Kemp, C, Kile, D, Kim, W, Kleiner, D, Kohli, R, Kugelmas, M, Lavine, J, Lazo, M, Leite, N, Lozano, A, Luukkonen, P, Macedo, P, Mansour, D, Mantzoros, C, Marchesini, G, Marciano, S, Martinez, K, Vladimirova Mateva, L, M Mato, J, Mccary, A, Miele, L, Mikolasevic, I, Miller, V, Moreno, R, Moylan, C, Nakajima, A, Charles Nault, J, Norris, S, Noureddin, M, P Oliveira, C, Ong, A, Padilla, M, Pais, R, Panduro, A, K Panigrahi, M, Papatheodoridis, G, Pelusi, S, Pérez, M, Perez Escobar, J, Perseghin, G, Pessoa, M, Petta, S, Pinzani, M, Platon Lupsor, M, Rabiee, A, Romeo, S, Rotman, Y, Rowe, I, Salupere, R, Satapathy, S, M Schattenberg, J, Schaufert, W, Schnabl, B, Seim, L, Serfaty, L, Shapiro, D, K Singal, A, Skladany, L, Stefan, N, Stine, J, Sundaram, S, Svegliati-Baroni, G, Szabo, G, Tacke, F, Tanwandee, T, Targher, G, Terrault, N, Tetri, B, Thiele, M, Tisthammer, B, Torre Delgadillo, A, Trauner, M, Tsochatzis, E, Van Kleef, L, Van Mil, S, Vanwagner, L, Antonio Velarde Ruiz Velasco, J, Vesterhus, M, Vilar-Gomez, E, Watt, K, Wattacheril, J, Wilkins, F, Willemse, J, Zekry, A, Zelber-Sagi, S, Rinella, Mary E, Lazarus, Jeffrey V, Ratziu, Vlad, Francque, Sven M, Sanyal, Arun J, Kanwal, Fasiha, Romero, Diana, Abdelmalek, Manal F, Anstee, Quentin M, Arab, Juan Pablo, Arrese, Marco, Bataller, Ramon, Beuers, Ulrich, Boursier, Jerome, Bugianesi, Elisabetta, Byrne, Christopher, Castro Narro, Graciela E, Chowdhury, Abhijit, Cortez-Pinto, Helena, Cryer, Donna, Cusi, Kenneth, El-Kassas, Mohamed, Klein, Samuel, Eskridge, Wayne, Fan, Jiangao, Gawrieh, Samer, Guy, Cynthia D, Harrison, Stephen A, Kim, Seung Up, Koot, Bart, Korenjak, Marko, Kowdley, Kris, Lacaille, Florence, Loomba, Rohit, Mitchell-Thain, Robert, Morgan, Timothy R, Powell, Elisabeth, Roden, Michael, Romero-Gómez, Manuel, Silva, Marcelo, Singh, Shivaram Prasad, Sookoian, Silvia C, Spearman, C Wendy, Tiniakos, Dina, Valenti, Luca, Vos, Miriam B, Wai-Sun Wong, Vincent, Xanthakos, Stavra, Yilmaz, Yusuf, Younossi, Zobair, Hobbs, Ansley, Villota-Rivas, Marcela, Philip NVeeral Ajmeral, William Alazawi, Maryam Alkhatry, Naim Alkhouri, Alina Allen, Michael Allison, Khalid Alswat, Mario R Alvares-da-Silva, Michele Alves-Bezerra, Matthew J Armstrong, Diego Arufe, Pablo Aschner, Gyorgy Baffy, Meena Bansal, Pierre Bedossa, Renata Belfort, Thomas Berg, Annalisa Berzigotti, Michael Betel, Cristiana Bianco, Clifford Brass, Carol L Brosgart, Elizabeth Matthews Brunt, Maria Buti, Steve Caldwell, Rotonya Carr, Teresa Casanovas, Laurent Castera, Cyrielle Caussy, Eira Cerda, Naga Chalasani, Wah Kheong Chan, Phunchai Charatcharoenwitthaya, Michael Charlton, Amanda Cheung, Daniela Chiodi, Ray Chung, David Cohen, Kathleen Corey, Helma P Cotrim, Javier Crespo, Anuradha Dassanayake, Nicholas Davidson, Robert De Knegt, Victor De Ledinghen, Münevver Demir, Sebastian Diaz, Anna Mae Diehl, Bruce Dimmig, Melisa Dirchwolf, Ajay Duseja, Karel Dvorak, Mattias Ekstedt, Reda El Wakil, María Lucía Ferraz, Scott Friedman, Michael Fuchs, Amalia Gastaldelli, Anja Geerts, Andreas Geier, Marcos Girala, George Goh, Nicolas Goossens, Isabel Graupera, Hannes Hagström, Zachary Henry, Bela Hunyady, Alan Hutchison, Scott Isaacs, François Jornayvaz, Cynthia Kemp, Denise Kile, Won Kim, David Kleiner, Rohit Kohli, Marcelo Kugelmas, Joel Lavine, Mariana Lazo, Nathalie Leite, Adelina Lozano, Panu Luukkonen, Paula Macedo, Dina Mansour, Christos Mantzoros, Giulio Marchesini, Sebastián Marciano, Kim Martinez, Lyudmila Vladimirova Mateva, Jose M Mato, Alexis McCary, Luca Miele, Ivana Mikolasevic, Veronica Miller, Rosalba Moreno, Cynthia Moylan, Atsushi Nakajima, Jean Charles Nault, Suzanne Norris, Mazen Noureddin, C P Oliveira, Arlin Ong, Martín Padilla, Raluca Pais, Arturo Panduro, Manas K Panigrahi, George Papatheodoridis, Serena Pelusi, Marlene Pérez, Juanita Perez Escobar, Gianluca Perseghin, Mario Pessoa, Salvatore Petta, Massimo Pinzani, Monica Platon Lupsor, Atoosa Rabiee, Stefano Romeo, Yaron Rotman, Ian Rowe, Riina Salupere, Sanjaya Satapathy, Jörn M Schattenberg, Wendy Schaufert, Bernd Schnabl, Lynn Seim, Lawrence Serfaty, David Shapiro, Ashwani K Singal, Lubomir Skladany, Norbert Stefan, Jonathan Stine, Shikha Sundaram, Gianluca Svegliati-Baroni, Gyonzgi Szabo, Frank Tacke, Tawesak Tanwandee, Giovanni Targher, Norah Terrault, Brent Tetri, Maja Thiele, Baron Tisthammer, Aldo Torre Delgadillo, Michael Trauner, Emmanuel Tsochatzis, Laurens Van Kleef, Saskia Van Mil, Lisa VanWagner, Jose Antonio Velarde Ruiz Velasco, Mette Vesterhus, Eduardo Vilar-Gomez, Kymberly Watt, Julia Wattacheril, Fonda Wilkins, José Willemse, Amany Zekry, Shira Zelber-Sagi, Mary E, R, Jeffrey V, L, Vlad, R, Sven M, F, Arun J, S, Fasiha, K, Diana, R, Manal F, A, Quentin M, A, Juan Pablo, A, Marco, A, Ramon, B, Ulrich, B, Jerome, B, Elisabetta, B, Christopher, B, Graciela E, C, Abhijit, C, Helena, C, Donna, C, Kenneth, C, Mohamed, E, Samuel, K, Wayne, E, Jiangao, F, Samer, G, Cynthia D, G, Stephen A, H, Seung Up, K, Bart, K, Marko, K, Kris, K, Florence, L, Rohit, L, Robert, M, Timothy R, M, Elisabeth, P, Michael, R, Manuel, R, Marcelo, S, Shivaram Prasad, S, Silvia C, S, C Wendy, S, Dina, T, Luca, V, Miriam B, V, Vincent, W, Stavra, X, Yusuf, Y, Zobair, Y, Ansley, H, Marcela, V, Newsome, NVeeral Ajmeral, P, Alazawi, W, Alkhatry, M, Alkhouri, N, Allen, A, Allison, M, Alswat, K, R Alvares-da-Silva, M, Alves-Bezerra, M, J Armstrong, M, Arufe, D, Aschner, P, Baffy, G, Bansal, M, Bedossa, P, Belfort, R, Berg, T, Berzigotti, A, Betel, M, Bianco, C, Brass, C, L Brosgart, C, Matthews Brunt, E, Buti, M, Caldwell, S, Carr, R, Casanovas, T, Castera, L, Caussy, C, Cerda, E, Chalasani, N, Kheong Chan, W, Charatcharoenwitthaya, P, Charlton, M, Cheung, A, Chiodi, D, Chung, R, Cohen, D, Corey, K, P Cotrim, H, Crespo, J, Dassanayake, A, Davidson, N, De Knegt, R, De Ledinghen, V, Demir, M, Diaz, S, Mae Diehl, A, Dimmig, B, Dirchwolf, M, Duseja, A, Dvorak, K, Ekstedt, M, El Wakil, R, Lucía Ferraz, M, Friedman, S, Fuchs, M, Gastaldelli, A, Geerts, A, Geier, A, Girala, M, Goh, G, Goossens, N, Graupera, I, Hagström, H, Henry, Z, Hunyady, B, Hutchison, A, Isaacs, S, Jornayvaz, F, Kemp, C, Kile, D, Kim, W, Kleiner, D, Kohli, R, Kugelmas, M, Lavine, J, Lazo, M, Leite, N, Lozano, A, Luukkonen, P, Macedo, P, Mansour, D, Mantzoros, C, Marchesini, G, Marciano, S, Martinez, K, Vladimirova Mateva, L, M Mato, J, Mccary, A, Miele, L, Mikolasevic, I, Miller, V, Moreno, R, Moylan, C, Nakajima, A, Charles Nault, J, Norris, S, Noureddin, M, P Oliveira, C, Ong, A, Padilla, M, Pais, R, Panduro, A, K Panigrahi, M, Papatheodoridis, G, Pelusi, S, Pérez, M, Perez Escobar, J, Perseghin, G, Pessoa, M, Petta, S, Pinzani, M, Platon Lupsor, M, Rabiee, A, Romeo, S, Rotman, Y, Rowe, I, Salupere, R, Satapathy, S, M Schattenberg, J, Schaufert, W, Schnabl, B, Seim, L, Serfaty, L, Shapiro, D, K Singal, A, Skladany, L, Stefan, N, Stine, J, Sundaram, S, Svegliati-Baroni, G, Szabo, G, Tacke, F, Tanwandee, T, Targher, G, Terrault, N, Tetri, B, Thiele, M, Tisthammer, B, Torre Delgadillo, A, Trauner, M, Tsochatzis, E, Van Kleef, L, Van Mil, S, Vanwagner, L, Antonio Velarde Ruiz Velasco, J, Vesterhus, M, Vilar-Gomez, E, Watt, K, Wattacheril, J, Wilkins, F, Willemse, J, Zekry, A, Zelber-Sagi, S, Rinella, Mary E, Lazarus, Jeffrey V, Ratziu, Vlad, Francque, Sven M, Sanyal, Arun J, Kanwal, Fasiha, Romero, Diana, Abdelmalek, Manal F, Anstee, Quentin M, Arab, Juan Pablo, Arrese, Marco, Bataller, Ramon, Beuers, Ulrich, Boursier, Jerome, Bugianesi, Elisabetta, Byrne, Christopher, Castro Narro, Graciela E, Chowdhury, Abhijit, Cortez-Pinto, Helena, Cryer, Donna, Cusi, Kenneth, El-Kassas, Mohamed, Klein, Samuel, Eskridge, Wayne, Fan, Jiangao, Gawrieh, Samer, Guy, Cynthia D, Harrison, Stephen A, Kim, Seung Up, Koot, Bart, Korenjak, Marko, Kowdley, Kris, Lacaille, Florence, Loomba, Rohit, Mitchell-Thain, Robert, Morgan, Timothy R, Powell, Elisabeth, Roden, Michael, Romero-Gómez, Manuel, Silva, Marcelo, Singh, Shivaram Prasad, Sookoian, Silvia C, Spearman, C Wendy, Tiniakos, Dina, Valenti, Luca, Vos, Miriam B, Wai-Sun Wong, Vincent, Xanthakos, Stavra, Yilmaz, Yusuf, Younossi, Zobair, Hobbs, Ansley, Villota-Rivas, Marcela, Philip NVeeral Ajmeral, William Alazawi, Maryam Alkhatry, Naim Alkhouri, Alina Allen, Michael Allison, Khalid Alswat, Mario R Alvares-da-Silva, Michele Alves-Bezerra, Matthew J Armstrong, Diego Arufe, Pablo Aschner, Gyorgy Baffy, Meena Bansal, Pierre Bedossa, Renata Belfort, Thomas Berg, Annalisa Berzigotti, Michael Betel, Cristiana Bianco, Clifford Brass, Carol L Brosgart, Elizabeth Matthews Brunt, Maria Buti, Steve Caldwell, Rotonya Carr, Teresa Casanovas, Laurent Castera, Cyrielle Caussy, Eira Cerda, Naga Chalasani, Wah Kheong Chan, Phunchai Charatcharoenwitthaya, Michael Charlton, Amanda Cheung, Daniela Chiodi, Ray Chung, David Cohen, Kathleen Corey, Helma P Cotrim, Javier Crespo, Anuradha Dassanayake, Nicholas Davidson, Robert De Knegt, Victor De Ledinghen, Münevver Demir, Sebastian Diaz, Anna Mae Diehl, Bruce Dimmig, Melisa Dirchwolf, Ajay Duseja, Karel Dvorak, Mattias Ekstedt, Reda El Wakil, María Lucía Ferraz, Scott Friedman, Michael Fuchs, Amalia Gastaldelli, Anja Geerts, Andreas Geier, Marcos Girala, George Goh, Nicolas Goossens, Isabel Graupera, Hannes Hagström, Zachary Henry, Bela Hunyady, Alan Hutchison, Scott Isaacs, François Jornayvaz, Cynthia Kemp, Denise Kile, Won Kim, David Kleiner, Rohit Kohli, Marcelo Kugelmas, Joel Lavine, Mariana Lazo, Nathalie Leite, Adelina Lozano, Panu Luukkonen, Paula Macedo, Dina Mansour, Christos Mantzoros, Giulio Marchesini, Sebastián Marciano, Kim Martinez, Lyudmila Vladimirova Mateva, Jose M Mato, Alexis McCary, Luca Miele, Ivana Mikolasevic, Veronica Miller, Rosalba Moreno, Cynthia Moylan, Atsushi Nakajima, Jean Charles Nault, Suzanne Norris, Mazen Noureddin, C P Oliveira, Arlin Ong, Martín Padilla, Raluca Pais, Arturo Panduro, Manas K Panigrahi, George Papatheodoridis, Serena Pelusi, Marlene Pérez, Juanita Perez Escobar, Gianluca Perseghin, Mario Pessoa, Salvatore Petta, Massimo Pinzani, Monica Platon Lupsor, Atoosa Rabiee, Stefano Romeo, Yaron Rotman, Ian Rowe, Riina Salupere, Sanjaya Satapathy, Jörn M Schattenberg, Wendy Schaufert, Bernd Schnabl, Lynn Seim, Lawrence Serfaty, David Shapiro, Ashwani K Singal, Lubomir Skladany, Norbert Stefan, Jonathan Stine, Shikha Sundaram, Gianluca Svegliati-Baroni, Gyonzgi Szabo, Frank Tacke, Tawesak Tanwandee, Giovanni Targher, Norah Terrault, Brent Tetri, Maja Thiele, Baron Tisthammer, Aldo Torre Delgadillo, Michael Trauner, Emmanuel Tsochatzis, Laurens Van Kleef, Saskia Van Mil, Lisa VanWagner, Jose Antonio Velarde Ruiz Velasco, Mette Vesterhus, Eduardo Vilar-Gomez, Kymberly Watt, Julia Wattacheril, Fonda Wilkins, José Willemse, Amany Zekry, and Shira Zelber-Sagi
- Abstract
The principal limitations of the terms NAFLD and NASH are the reliance on exclusionary confounder terms and the use of potentially stigmatising language. This study set out to determine if content experts and patient advocates were in favour of a change in nomenclature and/or definition. A modified Delphi process was led by three large pan-national liver associations. The consensus was defined a priori as a supermajority (67%) vote. An independent committee of experts external to the nomenclature process made the final recommendation on the acronym and its diagnostic criteria. A total of 236 panellists from 56 countries participated in 4 online surveys and 2 hybrid meetings. Response rates across the 4 survey rounds were 87%, 83%, 83%, and 78%, respectively. Seventy-four percent of respondents felt that the current nomenclature was sufficiently flawed to consider a name change. The terms “nonalcoholic” and “fatty” were felt to be stigmatising by 61% and 66% of respondents, respectively. Steatotic liver disease was chosen as an overarching term to encompass the various aetiologies of steatosis. The term steatohepatitis was felt to be an important pathophysiological concept that should be retained. The name chosen to replace NAFLD was metabolic dysfunction–associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD). There was consensus to change the definition to include the presence of at least 1 of 5 cardiometabolic risk factors. Those with no metabolic parameters and no known cause were deemed to have cryptogenic steatotic liver disease. A new category, outside pure metabolic dysfunction–associated steatotic liver disease, termed metabolic and alcohol related/associated liver disease (MetALD), was selected to describe those with metabolic dysfunction–associated steatotic liver disease, who consume greater amounts of alcohol per week (140–350 g/wk and 210–420 g/wk for females and males, respectively). The new nomenclature and diagnostic criteria are widely supported and non-stigmati
- Published
- 2023
35. The acceleration of a high-charge electron bunch to 10 GeV in a 10-cm nanoparticle-assisted wakefield accelerator
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Aniculaesei, Constantin, primary, Ha, Thanh, additional, Yoffe, Samuel, additional, Labun, Lance, additional, Milton, Stephen, additional, McCary, Edward, additional, Spinks, Michael M., additional, Quevedo, Hernan J., additional, Labun, Ou Z., additional, Sain, Ritwik, additional, Hannasch, Andrea, additional, Zgadzaj, Rafal, additional, Pagano, Isabella, additional, Franco-Altamirano, Jose A., additional, Ringuette, Martin L., additional, Gaul, Erhart, additional, Luedtke, Scott V., additional, Tiwari, Ganesh, additional, Ersfeld, Bernhard, additional, Brunetti, Enrico, additional, Ruhl, Hartmut, additional, Ditmire, Todd, additional, Bruce, Sandra, additional, Donovan, Michael E., additional, Downer, Michael C., additional, Jaroszynski, Dino A., additional, and Hegelich, Bjorn Manuel, additional
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- 2023
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36. Impacts of habitat connectivity on grassland arthropod metacommunity structure: A field‐based experimental test of theory
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Bertellotti, Franklin, primary, Sommer, Nathalie R., additional, Schmitz, Oswald J., additional, and McCary, Matthew A., additional
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- 2023
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37. Use of High-Frequency Data to Detect Household Leaks as Event Outliers
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MCCARY, JOHN P. and HEANEY, JAMES P.
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- 2018
38. Championing inclusive terminology in ecology and evolution
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Susan J. Cheng, Kaitlyn M. Gaynor, Alex C. Moore, Kathy Darragh, Cesar O. Estien, J.W. Hammond, Christopher Lawrence, Kirby L. Mills, Marcella D. Baiz, Danielle Ignace, Lily Khadempour, Matthew A. McCary, Mallory M. Rice, Shersingh Joseph Tumber-Dávila, and Justine A. Smith
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Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Published
- 2023
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39. Effects of Microbial Inoculation and Storage Length on Fermentation Profile and Nutrient Composition of Whole-Plant Sorghum Silage of Different Varieties
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E. Cole Diepersloot, Matheus R. Pupo, Lucas G. Ghizzi, Jessica O. Gusmão, Celso Heinzen, Cody L. McCary, Marcelo O. Wallau, and Luiz F. Ferraretto
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L. buchneri ,L. diolivorans ,variety ,aerobic stability ,2-propanediol. ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
This study aimed to assess the effects of a heterofermentative microbial inoculant and storage length on fermentation profile, aerobic stability, and nutrient composition in whole-plant sorghum silage (WPSS) from different varieties. Experiment 1, a completely randomized design with a 2 × 3 factorial treatment arrangement, evaluated microbial inoculation [CON (50 mL distilled water) or LBLD (Lactobacillus plantarum DSM 21762, L. buchneri DSM 12856, and L. diolivorans DSM 32074; 300,000 CFU/g of fresh forage)] and storage length (14, 28, or 56 d) in forage WPSS. The LBLD silage had lower pH compared to CON, and greater concentrations of succinic acid, ethanol, 1,2-propanediol (1,2-PD), 1-propanol, 2,3-butanediol and total acids. After 56 d, lactic acid concentration was greater for CON, while acetic acid and aerobic stability were greater in LBLD silage. Experiment 2, a completely randomized design with a 2 × 3 factorial treatment arrangement, evaluated effects of microbial inoculation (same as experiment 1) and storage length (14, 28, or 56 d) in WPSS of three varieties [forage sorghum (Mojo Seed, OPAL, Hereford, TX), sorghum-sudangrass (Dyna-gro Seed, Fullgraze II, Loveland, CO, United States), or sweet sorghum (MAFES Foundation Seed Stocks, Dale, MS State, MS)]. The LBLD forage sorghum had greater acetic acid and 1,2-PD concentrations at 56 d and 28 d, respectively, but lower concentrations of propionic acid at 56 d and butyric acid at 14 and 28 d. Additionally, WSC concentration was greater for CON than LBLD at 28 d. Furthermore, CON sweet sorghum had greater lactic acid, propionic acid, and butyric acid concentrations. However, greater acetic acid and 1,2-PD were observed for LBLD sweet sorghum. The CON sweet sorghum had greater concentration of WSC and yeast counts. The CON sorghum sudangrass had greater lactic and butyric acid concentrations than LBLD at 14 d, but lower acetic acid and 1,2-PD concentrations at 56 d. Yeast counts were greater for CON than LBLD sorghum sudangrass silage. Overall, results indicate inoculation of WPSS with Lactobacillus plantarum DSM 21762, L. buchneri DSM 12856, and L. diolivorans DSM 32074 improves heterofermentative co-fermentation allowing the accumulation of acetic acid concentration and increasing antifungal capacities and aerobic stability of WPSS.
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- 2021
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40. Vegetation structure modulates ecosystem and community responses to spatial subsidies
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Matthew A. McCary, Randall D. Jackson, and Claudio Gratton
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allochthonous resources ,arthropods ,decomposition ,ecosystem processes ,spatial subsidies ,vegetation structure ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Abstract Ecosystem responses to external inputs of nutrients and organisms are highly variable. Theory predicts that ecosystem traits will determine the responses to spatial subsidies, but evidence for how vegetation structure can modulate those effects is lacking. We investigated how vegetation structure (i.e., leaf area index [LAI] and vegetation height) influenced the ecosystem and community responses to insect spatial subsidies in a subarctic grassland. Our experiment consisted of a 2 × 2 manipulation where in one treatment we either blocked flying insects over a 2‐yr period in 1‐m2 plots near the shore of Lake Mývatn, Iceland, where deposition of aquatic adult midges (Diptera: Chironomidae) to land is high, or left control plots accessible to flying midges. In the second treatment, grassland vegetation was cut (tall vs. short) at the start of each season and then allowed to regrow. We then measured litter decomposition and arthropod composition and density within each plot (n = 6 replicates × 4 treatments). Midge‐exclusion cages reduced midge deposition by 81% relative to the open plots. Vegetation cutting initially reduced LAI and vegetation height by 3× and 1.5×, respectively, but these were not different by the end of the second‐growing season. We found that vegetation structure modulated the effects of midge subsides on litter decomposition, with taller canopies intercepting more insect subsidies than shorter ones, leading to 18% faster litter decomposition. In contrast, the short‐vegetation plots intercepted fewer subsidies and had higher temperatures and sunlight, resulting in no effects of midges on decomposition. However, by the end of the experiment when all vegetation structure characteristics had converged across all plots, we found no differences in decomposition between treatments. The effects of midge subsidies on arthropod composition depended on the vegetation structure, suggesting that arthropods might also be responding to the structural effects on spatial subsidies. Our findings indicate that vegetation structure can modify the abiotic environment and the quantity of subsidies entering a recipient ecosystem as aerial insects, resulting in ecosystem‐ and community‐level responses. Thus, changing vegetation structure via habitat disturbances will likely have important implications for ecosystem functions that rely on spatial subsidies.
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- 2021
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41. Using Accountability as a Lever for Changing the Culture of Schools: Examining District Strategies. First Edition.
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North Carolina Univ., Greensboro. School of Education., SERVE: SouthEastern Regional Vision for Education., and McCary, Mack
- Abstract
What does it mean to be a "good" school district? What are the actions needed to establish a culture of continuous and long-term improvement? This document was written for school and district leaders interested in exploring how to frame and understand accountability for quality. It explores what it really means for a school district to hold itself accountable at all levels. Chapter 1 summarizes the unintended consequences that result from accreditation and accountability policies that put too much pressure on schools to raise test scores. The second chapter tells the story of one school district--Elizabeth City-Pasquotank School District in North Carolina--that developed accountability strategies around the belief that encouraging good school-based thinking about quality teaching and learning practices would lead to good test results. The district strategies evolved over 4 years to include: (1) developing a new set of "process" indicators; (2) district leaders visiting and talking with school faculty; (3) training teachers in classroom assessment; (4) supporting the development of school-based authentic assessment approaches; (5) developing promotion/intervention policies that clarify expectations for student progress and demand accountability from students and parents as well as schools; and (6) involving school administrators and all teachers in the development of agreed-upon standards for "good" teaching in the basics. Chapter 3 discusses how the strategies encouraged accountability at several levels. Appendices include the district's proposed districtwide indicators, a support staff feedback-survey, components of the grades 1-6 communication-skills program, an evaluation rubric for senior project presentations, and the K-8 promotion-intervention policy. (Contains 33 references.) (LMI)
- Published
- 1997
42. Experiments and simulations of isochorically heated warm dense carbon foam at the Texas Petawatt Laser
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R. Roycroft, P. A. Bradley, E. McCary, B. Bowers, H. Smith, G. M. Dyer, B. J. Albright, S. Blouin, P. Hakel, H. J. Quevedo, E. L. Vold, L. Yin, and B. M. Hegelich
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Nuclear and particle physics. Atomic energy. Radioactivity ,QC770-798 - Abstract
An experimental and simulation study of warm dense carbon foams at ambient density (ne ∼ 1021 cm−3) is presented. This study of isochorically heated foams is motivated by their potential application in carbon-atmosphere white-dwarf envelopes, where there are modeling uncertainties due to the equation of state. The foams are heated on an approximately picosecond time scale with a laser-accelerated proton beam. The cooling and expansion of the heated foams can be modeled with appropriately initialized radiation-hydrodynamics codes; xRAGE code is used in this work. The primary experimental diagnostic is the streaked optical pyrometer, which images a narrow band of radiation from the rear surface of the heated material. Presented are xRAGE modeling results for both solid aluminum targets and carbonized resorcinol-formaldehyde foam targets, showing that the foam appears to cool slowly on the pyrometer because of partial transparency. So that simulations of cooling foam are processed properly, it is necessary to account for finite optical depth in the photosphere calculation, and the methods for performing that calculation are presented in depth.
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- 2021
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43. Streaked optical pyrometer for proton-driven isochoric heating experiments of solid and foam targets
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R. Roycroft, B. Bowers, H. Smith, E. McCary, F. Aymond, G. M. Dyer, H. J. Quevedo, P. A. Bradley, E. L. Vold, L. Yin, and B. M. Hegelich
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Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
We have designed, built, and calibrated an ultrafast streaked optical pyrometer (SOP) with ∼5 ps resolution for measuring the time-resolved surface blackbody temperature of an isochorically heated plasma. The pyrometer is calibrated to measure temperatures from 0.5 eV to 25 eV, with the option of adding calibrated neutral density filters to observe hotter plasmas. We demonstrated the use of this pyrometer on isochoric heating experiments using laser-accelerated proton beams as an energy source at the f/40 beamline of the Texas Petawatt Laser. We used the large focal spot size (∼80 μm radius) of the f/40 pulses to accelerate high numbers of ∼MeV protons off 5 μm thick solid gold targets. During our experimental campaign, we heated 10 µm thick aluminum foil targets to 1–10 eV over a duration of 50 ps and also observed heating to ∼2 eV in 100 µm thick 60 mg/cm3 carbon foams using the SOP to measure both the temperature and heating timescale.
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- 2020
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44. Developing the Strategic Thinking of Instructional Leaders. Occasional Paper No. 13.
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National Center for Educational Leadership, Cambridge, MA., Hallinger, Philip, and McCary, C. E.
- Abstract
Emerging research on instructional leadership is examined in this paper, with a focus on the new perspective on strategic thinking. The main theme is that research must address the reasoning that underlies the exercise of leadership rather than describe discrete behaviors of effective leaders. A computer simulation designed to facilitate the transfer from research to leadership practice is described. The simulation model asks aspiring principals to choose a combination of improvement strategies using research-based cost and benefit information. Outcomes of the simulation are discussed and suggestions are made for the design and delivery of administrative training and development. Appendices contain a description of the problem scenario, a list of school improvement strategies, a synopsis of research on a strategy, and an example of a cost-benefit strategy description. (Contains 44 references.) (LMI)
- Published
- 1992
45. Pattern of seasonal variation in rates of predation between spider families is temporally stable in a food web with widespread intraguild predation
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Wise, David H., primary, Mores, Robin M., additional, M. Pajda-De La O, Jennifer, additional, and McCary, Matthew A., additional
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- 2023
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46. Rethinking scholarly communication
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Sponberg, Adrienne, primary, McCary, Matthew A, additional, O'Riordan, Catherine, additional, Padilla, Pamela, additional, and Wallace, Richard L, additional
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- 2023
- Full Text
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47. Early social communication in infants with fragile X syndrome and infant siblings of children with autism spectrum disorder
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Hahn, Laura J., Brady, Nancy C., McCary, Lindsay, Rague, Lisa, and Roberts, Jane E.
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- 2017
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48. Brief Report: Autism Symptoms in Infants with Fragile X Syndrome
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Roberts, Jane E., Tonnsen, Bridgette L., McCary, Lindsay M., Caravella, Kelly E., and Shinkareva, Svetlana V.
- Abstract
Fragile X syndrome (FXS) is the most common known genetic cause of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Although 50-75% of children with FXS meet ASD criteria, no studies have compared ASD symptoms in infants with FXS versus other high risk groups, such as siblings of children with ASD (ASIBs). Using the Autism Observation Scale for Infants, our findings indicate that 53% of 12-month infants with FXS fall in the "at risk" category compared to 17 and 6% for age-matched ASIBs and controls, respectively. Elevated atypical motor behaviors were associated with elevated risk for FXS. Cross-syndrome comparisons are essential to understanding the heterogeneity of ASD and identifying candidate markers that will facilitate differential diagnosis of ASD in genetic disorders such as FXS.
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- 2016
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49. Infant Development in Fragile X Syndrome: Cross-Syndrome Comparisons
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Roberts, Jane E., McCary, Lindsay M., Shinkareva, Svetlana V., and Bailey, Donald B.
- Abstract
This study examined the developmental profile of male infants with fragile X syndrome (FXS) and its divergence from typical development and development of infants at high risk for autism associated with familial recurrence (ASIBs). Participants included 174 boys ranging in age from 5 to 28 months. Cross-sectional profiles on the Mullen Scales of Early Learning indicated infants with FXS could be differentiated from typically developing infants and ASIBs by 6 months of age. Infants with FXS displayed a trend of lower developmental skills with increasing age that was unique from the typically developing and ASIB groups. Findings suggest infants with FXS present with more significant, pervasive and early emerging delays than previously reported with potentially etiologically distinct developmental profiles.
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- 2016
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50. Covariation between local and landscape factors influences the structure of ground-active arthropod communities in fragmented metropolitan woodlands
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McCary, Matthew A., Minor, Emily, and Wise, David H.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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