4,983 results on '"McGill, P"'
Search Results
2. 'Create a Fear of Missing Out' -- ChatGPT Implements Unsolicited Deceptive Designs in Generated Websites Without Warning
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Krauß, Veronika, McGill, Mark, Kosch, Thomas, Thiel, Yolanda, Schön, Dominik, and Gugenheimer, Jan
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Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction - Abstract
With the recent advancements in Large Language Models (LLMs), web developers increasingly apply their code-generation capabilities to website design. However, since these models are trained on existing designerly knowledge, they may inadvertently replicate bad or even illegal practices, especially deceptive designs (DD). This paper examines whether users can accidentally create DD for a fictitious webshop using GPT-4. We recruited 20 participants, asking them to use ChatGPT to generate functionalities (product overview or checkout) and then modify these using neutral prompts to meet a business goal (e.g., "increase the likelihood of us selling our product"). We found that all 20 generated websites contained at least one DD pattern (mean: 5, max: 9), with GPT-4 providing no warnings. When reflecting on the designs, only 4 participants expressed concerns, while most considered the outcomes satisfactory and not morally problematic, despite the potential ethical and legal implications for end-users and those adopting ChatGPT's recommendations
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- 2024
3. Blast: a Web Application for Characterizing the Host Galaxies of Astrophysical Transients
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Jones, D. O., McGill, P., Manning, T. A., Gagliano, A., Wang, B., Coulter, D. A., Foley, R. J., Narayan, G., Villar, V. A., Braff, L., Engel, A. W., Farias, D., Lai, Z., Loertscher, K., Kutcka, J., Thorp, S., and Vazquez, J.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Characterizing the host galaxies of astrophysical transients is important to many areas of astrophysics, including constraining the progenitor systems of core-collapse supernovae, correcting Type Ia supernova distances, and probabilistically classifying transients without photometric or spectroscopic data. Given the increasing transient discovery rate in the coming years, there is substantial utility in providing public, transparent, reproducible, and automatic characterization for large samples of transient host galaxies. Here we present Blast, a web application that ingests live streams of transient alerts, matches transients to their host galaxies, and performs photometry on coincident archival imaging data of the host galaxy. The photometry is then used to infer both global host-galaxy properties and galaxy properties within 2 kpc of the transient location by using the Prospector Bayesian inference framework, with an acceleration in evaluation speed achieved via simulation-based inference. Blast provides host-galaxy properties to users via a web browser or an application program interface. The software can be extended to support alternative photometric or SED-fitting algorithms, and can be scaled via an asynchronous worker queue across multiple compute nodes to handle the processing of large volumes of transient alerts for upcoming transient surveys. Blast has been ingesting newly discovered transients from the Transient Name Server since mid-2024, and has currently measured SED parameters for more than 6000 transients. The service is publicly available at https://blast.scimma.org/., Comment: submitted to PASP
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- 2024
4. On Finding Black Holes in Photometric Microlensing Surveys
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Kaczmarek, Zofia, McGill, Peter, Perkins, Scott E., Dawson, William A., Huston, Macy, Ho, Ming-Feng, Abrams, Natasha S., and Lu, Jessica R.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
There are expected to be millions of isolated black holes in the Galaxy resulting from the death of massive stars. Measuring the abundance and properties of this remnant population would shed light on the end stages of stellar evolution and the evolution paths of black hole systems. Detecting isolated black holes is currently only possible via gravitational microlensing which has so far yielded one definitive detection. The difficulty in finding microlensing black holes lies in having to choose a small subset of events based on characteristics of their lightcurves to allocate expensive and scarce follow-up resources to confirm the identity of the lens. Current methods either rely on simple cuts in parameter space without using the full distribution information or are only effective on a small subsets of events. In this paper we present a new lens classification method. The classifier takes in posterior constraints on lightcurve parameters and combines them with a Galactic simulation to estimate the lens class probability. This method is flexible and can be used with any set of microlensing lightcurve parameters making it applicable to large samples of events. We make this classification framework available via the popclass python package. We apply the classifier to $\sim10,000$ microlensing events from the OGLE survey and find $23$ high-probability black hole candidates. Our classifier also suggests that the only known isolated black hole is an observational outlier according to current Galactic models and allocation of astrometric follow-up on this event was a high-risk strategy., Comment: 19 pages, 10 figures. Submitted to AAS Journals
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- 2024
5. popclass: a python package for classifying microlensing events
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Sallaberry, Greg, Kaczmarek, Zofia, McGill, Peter, Perkins, Scott E., Dawson, William A., and Begbie, Caitlin G.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
popclass is a python package that provides a flexible, probabilistic framework for classifying the lens of a gravitational microlensing event. popclass allows a user to match characteristics of a microlensing signal to a simulation of the Galaxy to calculate lens type probabilities for an event. Constraints on any microlensing signal characteristics and any Galactic model can be used. popclass comes with an interface to common inference libraries for microlensing signal constraints, pre-loaded Galactic models, plotting functionality, and classification uncertainty quantification methods., Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure. Submitted to JOSS. Code available at https://github.com/LLNL/popclass
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- 2024
6. The Impact of Academic Advising Activities on International Students' Sense of Belonging
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Xiao Yuan, Yang Yang, and Craig M. McGill
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Research on international students suggests they have a low sense of belonging at the U.S. institutions they attend. This study examined whether academic advisor's cultural empathy, advisor-advisee rapport, and international students' advising satisfaction influenced international students' perspectives of belonging to the institution. We further examined whether cultural empathy and advisor-advisee rapport mediated the effect of advising satisfaction on international students' sense of belonging. The cross-sectional quantitative study used a convenience sample of 209 international students enrolled in two institutions in the United States. Results indicated that cultural empathy and student advising satisfaction had a statistically significant influence on the sense of belonging, not advisor-advisee rapport, and cultural empathy mediated the effect of advising satisfaction on sense of belonging. We offered recommendations for institutions and academic advisors when working with international students.
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- 2024
7. The Role of Lived Experience Eye Care Champions in Improving Awareness and Access to Eye Care Services for People with Learning Disabilities and/or Autism
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Marek Karas, Donna O'Brien, Lance Campbell, Rebecca Lunness, Joanne Kennedy, Grace McGill, Stephen Kill, and Lisa Donaldson
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Background: Documented inequalities in access to eye care for people with learning disabilities and/or autism are caused by poor uptake of primary eye care services, poor identification of eye problems, lack of signposting and reasonable adjustments of existing services, concerns about costs of care and the low priority historically given to these issues in eye care policy at a regional and national level. In 2019, the charity SeeAbility employed four eye care champions (ECCs) with lived experience of learning disability and/or autism to work in local communities in London and the Northwest of England. They provided peer-to-peer support on understanding the need for good eye health and engaged with policy makers, and learning disability, autism and eye care professionals at the local, regional and national levels to influence both the clinical practice of individual practitioners (within existing service/pathway models) and more widely to influence the commissioning of the Easy Eye Care pathway. This study explores the experiences of these ECCs. Methods: The study was conducted in April and May 2023. A case study approach was used to describe the experiences of the ECCs from March 2019 to March 2023. Data from structured interviews with the four ECCs and workload analysis were triangulated to provide a multifaceted understanding of this novel health promotion project. Findings: The ECCs found the role useful and reported that confidence in their practice and impact grew with time but they required ongoing support in the role. A good understanding of the promotional messages was reported. Developing a good network of contacts at an early stage, both people with learning disabilities and healthcare professionals, was key. Relationships with professionals were supportive and positive and a positive emotive response to their lived experience was reported in these interactions. Conclusions: From the perspective of the ECCs, the role is useful and beneficial. The work suggests some key recommendations for future development which include planning to build networks, support in presentation and communications skills and defining key messages and knowledge. Confidence of the ECCs builds with time in the role but also needs support the emotive impact of their lived experiences on audiences is highlighted. There is a need to evaluate how the programme is perceived by those who interact with it and how it changes behaviours which leads to better health outcomes.
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- 2024
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8. Update on musculoskeletal applications of magnetic resonance-guided focused ultrasound.
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Mcgill, Kevin, Baal, Joe, and Bucknor, Matthew
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Bone metastases ,Desmoid tumor ,Facet arthropathy ,High-intensity focused ultrasound ,Magnetic resonance-guided focused ultrasound ,Osteoid osteoma ,Thermal ablation ,Humans ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Interventional ,High-Intensity Focused Ultrasound Ablation ,Bone Neoplasms ,Musculoskeletal Diseases - Abstract
Magnetic resonance-guided focused ultrasound (MRgFUS) is a noninvasive, incisionless, radiation-free technology used to ablate tissue deep within the body. This technique has gained increased popularity following FDA approval for treatment of pain related to bone metastases and limited approval for treatment of osteoid osteoma. MRgFUS delivers superior visualization of soft tissue targets in unlimited imaging planes and precision in targeting and delivery of thermal dose which is all provided during real-time monitoring using MR thermometry. This paper provides an overview of the common musculoskeletal applications of MRgFUS along with updates on clinical outcomes and discussion of future applications.
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- 2024
9. Structure-preserving Image Translation for Depth Estimation in Colonoscopy Video
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Wang, Shuxian, Paruchuri, Akshay, Zhang, Zhaoxi, McGill, Sarah, and Sengupta, Roni
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Monocular depth estimation in colonoscopy video aims to overcome the unusual lighting properties of the colonoscopic environment. One of the major challenges in this area is the domain gap between annotated but unrealistic synthetic data and unannotated but realistic clinical data. Previous attempts to bridge this domain gap directly target the depth estimation task itself. We propose a general pipeline of structure-preserving synthetic-to-real (sim2real) image translation (producing a modified version of the input image) to retain depth geometry through the translation process. This allows us to generate large quantities of realistic-looking synthetic images for supervised depth estimation with improved generalization to the clinical domain. We also propose a dataset of hand-picked sequences from clinical colonoscopies to improve the image translation process. We demonstrate the simultaneous realism of the translated images and preservation of depth maps via the performance of downstream depth estimation on various datasets., Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, accepted at MICCAI 2024
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- 2024
10. Investigating the mixing between two black hole populations in LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA GWTC-3
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Ho, Ming-Feng, Perkins, Scott Ellis, Bird, Simeon, Dawson, William, Golovich, Nathan, Lu, Jessica R., and McGill, Peter
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We introduce a population model to analyze the mixing between hypothesised power-law and $\sim 35 M_\odot$ Gaussian bump black hole populations in the latest gravitational wave catalog, GWTC-3, estimating their co-location and separation. We find a relatively low level of mixing, $3.1^{+5.0}_{-3.1}\%$, between the power-law and Gaussian populations, compared to the percentage of mergers containing two Gaussian bump black holes, $5.0^{+3.2}_{-1.7}\%$. Our analysis indicates that black holes within the Gaussian bump are generally separate from the power-law population, with only a minor fraction engaging in mixing and contributing to the $\mathcal{M} \sim 14 M_\odot$ peak in the chirp mass. This leads us to identify a distinct population of Binary Gaussian Black Holes (BGBHs) that arise from mergers within the Gaussian bump. We suggest that current theories for the formation of the massive $35 M_\odot$ Gaussian bump population may need to reevaluate the underlying mechanisms that drive the preference for BGBHs., Comment: 19 pages, 11 figures. Submitted to PRD
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- 2024
11. Stochastic diffusion using mean-field limits to approximate master equations
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Hébert-Dufresne, Laurent, Kling, Matthew M., Rosenblatt, Samuel F., Miller, Stephanie N., Burnham, P. Alexander, Landry, Nicholas W., Gotelli, Nicholas J., and McGill, Brian J.
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Quantitative Biology - Populations and Evolution ,Nonlinear Sciences - Adaptation and Self-Organizing Systems - Abstract
Stochastic diffusion is the noisy and uncertain process through which dynamics like epidemics, or agents like animal species, disperse over a larger area. Understanding these processes is becoming increasingly important as we attempt to better prepare for potential pandemics and as species ranges shift in response to climate change. Unfortunately, modeling of stochastic diffusion is mostly done through inaccurate deterministic tools that fail to capture the random nature of dispersal or else through expensive computational simulations. In particular, standard tools fail to fully capture the heterogeneity of the area over which this diffusion occurs. Rural areas with low population density require different epidemic models than urban areas; likewise, the edges of a species range require us to explicitly track low integer numbers of individuals rather than vague averages. In this work, we introduce a series of new tools called "mean-FLAME" models that track stochastic dispersion using approximate master equations that explicitly follow the probability distribution of an area of interest over all of its possible states, up to states that are active enough to be approximated using a mean-field model. In one limit, this approach is locally exact if we explicitly track enough states, and in the other limit collapses back to traditional deterministic models if we track no state explicitly. Applying this approach, we show how deterministic tools fail to capture the uncertainty around the speed of nonlinear dynamical processes. This is especially true for marginal areas that are close to unsuitable for diffusion, like the edge of a species range or epidemics in small populations. Capturing the uncertainty in such areas is key to producing accurate forecasts and guiding potential interventions., Comment: For supplemental appendix, see "Ancillary files" under "Access paper" on the right
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- 2024
12. Attending to Sexuality in 'Servingness': A Phenomenological Exploration of the Experiences of Latina Lesbians at a Hispanic-Serving Institution
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Gisela P. Vega, Antonio Duran, Craig M. McGill, and Tonette S. Rocco
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As the number of Hispanic-Serving Institutions (HSIs) continues to rise in the United States, higher education scholars and practitioners have increasingly wondered how HSIs fulfill their charge to serve Latinx/a/o communities. However, Latinx/a/o sexually minoritized students often go unrecognized in conversations on servingness at HSIs. This phenomenological study addresses this gap by exploring the experiences of 15 Latina lesbians navigating their race/ethnicity, sexuality, and gender at an HSI. Informed by scholarship on how intersecting systems of power affect Latinx/a/o communities differentially, findings revealed how encountering isolation and alienation from peers, living within and against traditional gender norms and expectations, together with articulating the importance of affirming environments and individuals characterized the experiences of Latina lesbians at the institution. From the participants' stories, we used literature on servingness to explore how their experiences reflected organizational commitments to sexually minoritized students at the HSI. We then offer implications for research and practice.
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- 2024
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13. Financial Conflicts of Interest in School Psychology: A Continuing Problem
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A. Alexander Beaujean, Ryan J. McGill, and Stefan C. Dombrowski
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School psychology contributes to the science of human behavior and utilizes this science to inform an evidence-based practice. The usefulness of this science is dependent on scientists making good faith efforts to minimize bias in their research. Nonetheless, implicit biases can still influence scientists' decisions and, hence, the outcomes of their investigations. One source of such bias comes from conflicts of interest (COIs). In this article, we discuss COIs within the context of science, with a particular focus on financial COIs. In addition, we discuss how financial COIs can arise in school psychology as well as some ways the COIs may influence psychological science. We conclude by discussing how financial COIs are typically handled and some suggestions for handling them in the future.
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- 2024
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14. Recent advances in the microbial production of human milk oligosaccharides
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Pressley, Shannon R, McGill, Alex S, Luu, Bryant, and Atsumi, Shota
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Agricultural ,Veterinary and Food Sciences ,Food Sciences ,Microbiome ,Genetics ,Pediatric ,Nutrition ,Breastfeeding ,Lactation and Breast Milk ,Food sciences - Abstract
Human milk oligosaccharides (HMOs) are naturally occurring, non-digestible sugars found in human milk. They have recently become a popular target for industrial synthesis due to their positive effects on the developing gut microbiome and immune system of infants. Microbial synthesis has shown great promise in driving down the cost of these sugars and making them more available for consumers and researchers. The application of common metabolic engineering techniques such as gene knockouts, gene overexpression, and expression of exogenous genes has enabled the rational design of whole-cell biocatalysts which can produce increasingly complex HMOs. Herein, we discuss how these strategies have been applied to produce a variety of sugars from sialylated to complex fucosylated HMOs. With increased availability of HMOs, more research can be done to understand their beneficial effects.
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- 2024
15. A High Internal Heat Flux and Large Core in a Warm Neptune Exoplanet
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Welbanks, Luis, Bell, Taylor J., Beatty, Thomas G., Line, Michael R., Ohno, Kazumasa, Fortney, Jonathan J., Schlawin, Everett, Greene, Thomas P., Rauscher, Emily, McGill, Peter, Murphy, Matthew, Parmentier, Vivien, Tang, Yao, Edelman, Isaac, Mukherjee, Sagnick, Wiser, Lindsey S., Lagage, Pierre-Olivier, Dyrek, Achrène, and Arnold, Kenneth E.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Interactions between exoplanetary atmospheres and internal properties have long been hypothesized to be drivers of the inflation mechanisms of gaseous planets and apparent atmospheric chemical disequilibrium conditions. However, transmission spectra of exoplanets has been limited in its ability to observational confirm these theories due to the limited wavelength coverage of HST and inferences of single molecules, mostly H$_2$O. In this work, we present the panchromatic transmission spectrum of the approximately 750 K, low-density, Neptune-sized exoplanet WASP-107b using a combination of HST WFC3, JWST NIRCam and MIRI. From this spectrum, we detect spectroscopic features due to H$_2$O (21$\sigma$), CH$_4$ (5$\sigma$), CO (7$\sigma$), CO$_2$ (29$\sigma$), SO$_2$ (9$\sigma$), and NH$_3$ (6$\sigma$). The presence of these molecules enable constraints on the atmospheric metal enrichment (M/H is 10--18$\times$ Solar), vertical mixing strength (log$_{10}$K$_{zz}$=8.4--9.0 cm$^2$s$^{-1}$), and internal temperature ($>$345 K). The high internal temperature is suggestive of tidally-driven inflation acting upon a Neptune-like internal structure, which can naturally explain the planet's large radius and low density. These findings suggest that eccentricity driven tidal heating is a critical process governing atmospheric chemistry and interior structure inferences for a majority of the cool ($<$1,000K) super-Earth-to-Saturn mass exoplanet population., Comment: This preprint has not undergone any substantive post-submission improvements or corrections. The Version of Record of this article is published in Nature here: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-07514-w
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- 2024
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16. Credentials in the Occupation Ontology
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Beverley, John, McGill, Robin, Smith, Sam, Zheng, Jie, De Colle, Giacomo, Wilson, Finn, Diller, Matthew, Duncan, William D., Hogan, William R., and He, Yongqun
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Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Databases ,Computer Science - Information Retrieval - Abstract
The term credential encompasses educational certificates, degrees, certifications, and government-issued licenses. An occupational credential is a verification of an individuals qualification or competence issued by a third party with relevant authority. Job seekers often leverage such credentials as evidence that desired qualifications are satisfied by their holders. Many U.S. education and workforce development organizations have recognized the importance of credentials for employment and the challenges of understanding the value of credentials. In this study, we identified and ontologically defined credential and credential-related terms at the textual and semantic levels based on the Occupation Ontology (OccO), a BFO-based ontology. Different credential types and their authorization logic are modeled. We additionally defined a high-level hierarchy of credential related terms and relations among many terms, which were initiated in concert with the Alabama Talent Triad (ATT) program, which aims to connect learners, earners, employers and education/training providers through credentials and skills. To our knowledge, our research provides for the first time systematic ontological modeling of the important domain of credentials and related contents, supporting enhanced credential data and knowledge integration in the future., Comment: 11
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- 2024
17. The Gravity Collective: A Comprehensive Analysis of the Electromagnetic Search for the Binary Neutron Star Merger GW190425
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Coulter, D. A., Kilpatrick, C. D., Jones, D. O., Foley, R. J., Filippenko, A. V., Zheng, W., Swift, J. J., Rahman, G. S., Stacey, H. E., Piro, A. L., Rojas-Bravo, C., Vilchez, J. Anais, Muñoz-Elgueta, N., Arcavi, I., Dimitriadis, G., Siebert, M. R., Bloom, J. S., Bustamante-Rosell, M. J., Clever, K. E., Davis, K. W., Kutcka, J., Macias, P., McGill, P., Quiñonez, P. J., Ramirez-Ruiz, E., Siellez, K., Tinyanont, S., Cenko, S. B., Drout, M. R., Hausen, R., Jacobson-Galán, W. V., Howell, D. Andrew, Kasen, D., McCully, C., Rest, A., Taggart, K., and Valenti, S.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present an ultraviolet-to-infrared search for the electromagnetic (EM) counterpart to GW190425, the second-ever binary neutron star (BNS) merger discovered by the LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA Collaboration (LVK). GW190425 was more distant and had a larger localization area than GW170817, therefore we use a new tool teglon to redistribute the GW190425 localization probability in the context of galaxy catalogs within the final localization volume. We derive a 90th percentile area of 6,688 deg$^{2}$, a $\sim$1.5$\times$ improvement relative to the LIGO/Virgo map, and show how teglon provides an order of magnitude boost to the search efficiency of small ($\leq$1 deg$^{2}$) field-of-view instruments. We combine our data with all publicly reported imaging data, covering 9,078.59 deg$^2$ of unique area and 48.13% of the LIGO/Virgo-assigned localization probability, to calculate the most comprehensive kilonova, short gamma-ray burst (sGRB) afterglow, and model-independent constraints on the EM emission from a hypothetical counterpart to GW190425 to date under the assumption that no counterpart was found in these data. If the counterpart were similar to AT 2017gfo, there was a 28.4% chance that it would have been detected in the combined dataset. We are relatively insensitive to an on-axis sGRB, and rule out a generic transient with a similar peak luminosity and decline rate as AT 2017gfo to 30% confidence. Finally, across our new imaging and all publicly-reported data, we find 28 candidate optical counterparts that we cannot rule out as being associated with GW190425, finding that 4 such counterparts discovered within the localization volume and within 5 days of merger exhibit luminosities consistent with a kilonova., Comment: 41 pages, 11 figures, Submitted to ApJ
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- 2024
18. Connectome-constrained networks predict neural activity across the fly visual system
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Lappalainen, Janne K., Tschopp, Fabian D., Prakhya, Sridhama, McGill, Mason, Nern, Aljoscha, Shinomiya, Kazunori, Takemura, Shin-ya, Gruntman, Eyal, Macke, Jakob H., and Turaga, Srinivas C.
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- 2024
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19. “It Was a Complete Violation of Everything”: LGBT + Veterans’ Experiences of Discrimination and Oppression Through the Exemptive UK Military “Gay Ban” Policy
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McGill, Gill, Allen, Shannon, and Osborne, Alison K.
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- 2024
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20. Botryomycosis: a rare mimic of sarcoma as an initial presentation of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome
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Boone, Sean L., Horvai, Andrew E., Zimel, Melissa N., Brown, Robert, Link, Thomas M., and McGill, Kevin C.
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- 2024
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21. The specific indirect effect of IRS audits
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Grana, Jess, Lindsay, India, Lykke, Lucia, McGill, Max, McGlothlin, Alexander, Nicholl, Leigh, and Plumley, Alan
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- 2024
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22. The Impact of the Historic Policy to Ban Homosexuality in the UK Armed Forces: The Lived Experience of LGBT + Veterans
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Osborne, Alison K. and McGill, Gill
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- 2024
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23. Astrometric Microlensing by Primordial Black Holes with The Roman Space Telescope
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Fardeen, James, McGill, Peter, Perkins, Scott E., Dawson, William A., Abrams, Natasha S., Lu, Jessica R., Ho, Ming-Feng, and Bird, Simeon
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Primordial Black Holes (PBHs) could explain some fraction of dark matter and shed light on many areas of early-universe physics. Despite over half a century of research interest, a PBH population has so far eluded detection. The most competitive constraints on the fraction of dark matter comprised of PBHs ($f_{\rm DM}$) in the $(10^{-9}-10)M_{\odot}$ mass-ranges come from photometric microlensing and bound $f_{\rm DM}\lesssim10^{-2}-10^{-1}$. With the advent of the Roman Space Telescope with its sub-milliarcsecond (mas) astrometric capabilities and its planned Galactic Bulge Time Domain Survey (GBTDS), detecting astrometric microlensing signatures will become routine. Compared with photometric microlensing, astrometric microlensing signals are sensitive to different lens masses-distance configurations and contains different information, making it a complimentary lensing probe. At sub-mas astrometric precision, astrometric microlensing signals are typically detectable at larger lens-source separations than photometric signals, suggesting a microlensing detection channel of pure astrometric events. We use a Galactic simulation to predict the number of detectable microlensing events during the GBTDS via this pure astrometric microlensing channel. Assuming an absolute astrometric precision floor for bright stars of 0.1 mas for the GBTDS, we find that the number of detectable events peaks at $\approx 10^{3} f_{\rm DM}$ for a population of $ 1 M_{\odot}$ PBHs and tapers to $\approx 10f_{\rm DM}$ and $\approx 100f_{\rm DM}$ at $10^{-4}M_{\odot}$ and $10^{3}M_{\odot}$, respectively. Accounting for the distinguishability of PBHs from Stellar lenses, we conclude the GBTDS will be sensitive to a PBH population at $f_{\rm DM}$ down to $\approx10^{-1}-10^{-3}$ for $(10^{-1}-10^{2})M_{\odot}$ likely yielding novel PBH constraints., Comment: 21 pages, 11 figures, accepted to AAS Journals
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- 2023
24. Spatially resolved microlensing timescale distributions across the Galactic bulge with the VVV survey
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Kaczmarek, Zofia, McGill, Peter, Evans, N. Wyn, Smith, Leigh C., Golovich, Nathan, Kerins, Eamonn, Specht, David, and Dawson, William A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We analyze 1602 microlensing events found in the VISTA Variables in the Via Lactea (VVV) near-infrared (NIR) survey data. We obtain spatially-resolved, efficiency-corrected timescale distributions across the Galactic bulge ($|\ell|<10^\circ,$ $|b|<5^\circ$), using a Bayesian hierarchical model. Spatially-resolved peaks and means of the timescale distributions, along with their marginal distributions in strips of longitude and latitude, are in agreement at a 1$\sigma$ level with predictions based on the Besan\c{c}on model of the Galaxy. We find that the event timescales in the central bulge fields ($|\ell| < 5^\circ$) are on average shorter than the non-central ($|\ell| > 5^\circ$) fields, with the average peak of the lognormal timescale distribution at 23.6 $\pm$ 1.9 days for the central fields and 29.0 $\pm$ 3.0 days for the non-central fields. Our ability to probe the structure of the Bulge with this sample of NIR microlensing events is limited by the VVV survey's sparse cadence and relatively small number of detected microlensing events compared to dedicated optical surveys. Looking forward to future surveys, we investigate the capability of the Roman telescope to detect spatially-resolved asymmetries in the timescale distributions. We propose two pairs of Roman fields, centred on ($\ell = \pm 9,5^\circ$, $b=-0.125^\circ$) and ($\ell = -5^\circ$, $b=\pm 1.375^\circ$) as good targets to measure the asymmetry in longitude and latitude, respectively., Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2023
25. Breaking the Mold: HRD and Social Entrepreneurship -- A Recipe for Progress
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Debaro Huyler and Craig M. McGill
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Social entrepreneurship practices integrate aspects from the private, public, and non-profit sectors into a cohesive practice. This paper advocates for the integration of human resource development (HRD) research and practices into social entrepreneurship initiatives to drive progress and build effective organizations committed to positive social change and value creation. By exploring HRD insights on ethical organizational strategies, initiatives for workforce development, and their impact on employee engagement and attitudes, we contend that HRD professionals can significantly contribute to the success of social entrepreneurship.
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- 2024
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26. Queer Thriving in Catholic Education: Going Beyond the Pastoral Paradigm for LGBTQ + Inclusion: Eds. Sean Whittle & Seán Henry, published by Springer Singapore (2024) eBook ISBN 978-981-97-0323-4
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McGill, Robert
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- 2024
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27. Dietary Zinc Supplementation in Steers Modulates Labile Zinc Concentration and Zinc Transporter Gene Expression in Circulating Immune Cells
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Franco, Carlos E., Rients, Emma L., Diaz, Fabian E., Hansen, Stephanie L., and McGill, Jodi L.
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- 2024
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28. Academic Advising in Ontario: A Multiple Case Study
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Gallo, Melissa and McGill, Craig M.
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Although the practice of academic advising in North America has existed since the colonial era, it is only within the past century that an organized movement to shape the field has taken root. Most of the literature seeking to clarify the role, purpose, and function of academic advising is restricted to the United States. The purpose of this multiple case study was to explore academic advising practices at four Ontario higher education institutions in terms of types of advising, institutional advising model, and roles and responsibilities of advisors. Through document analysis and interviews with advising personnel at four Ontario institutions, our analysis illuminates the state of academic advising in Ontario and offers recommendations for practice.
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- 2023
29. Doctoral Student Perceptions of Faculty Advisors: Four Supportive Behaviors to Promote Doctoral Completion
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Kelly Roy, Craig M. Mcgill, and Jennifer L. Bloom
- Abstract
The number of doctoral recipients per year in the United States has grown considerably, yet on average, half of all students do not persist to degree completion or far exceed the expected completion timeline. Attrition and extended time to degree negatively impact both doctoral students and institutions and costs each time, money, and effort. Advisor-advisee relationship quality significantly affects degree completion. This study explores experiences of 17 full-time working professionals who had recently completed a doctoral degree in education within 6 consecutive years at a regionally accredited institution in the United States. Our findings revealed four faculty advisor behaviors that contribute to doctoral completion: encouragement, accessibility, dependability, and expertise. We offer recommendations for advisors to improve the student doctoral journey.
- Published
- 2023
30. Unusual demyelinating disease in a patient with HIV infection
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Clark, William, Tanti, Matthew, Azzam, Ismail, McGill, Fiona, and Vinjam, Maruthi
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- 2024
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31. Impact of an Injectable Trace Mineral Supplement on the Immune Response and Outcome of Mannheimia haemolytica Infection in Feedlot Cattle
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Hong, Suyeon, Rients, Emma L., Franco, Carlos E., Hansen, Stephanie L., and McGill, Jodi L.
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- 2024
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32. Responding to and managing multijurisdictional outbreaks of COVID-19 in Canadian industrial worksite/work camp settings
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McGill, Erin, Bellos, Anna, Nwosu, Andrea, Zetner, Adrian, Tyler, Andrea, Knox, Natalie, Franklin, Kristyn, and Patterson, Kaitlin
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- 2024
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33. Exploratory Factor Analysis of the NEPSY-II Conceptual Template: Acting on Evidence
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McGill, Ryan J., Beaujean, A. Alexander, Benson, Nicolas F., Dombrowski, Stefan C., and Canivez, Gary L.
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- 2024
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34. Financial Conflicts of Interest in School Psychology: A Continuing Problem
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Beaujean, A. Alexander, McGill, Ryan J., and Dombrowski, Stefan C.
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- 2024
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35. Psychometric Properties of the Parent and Youth Versions of the Inadequate Boundaries Questionnaire in Community and Clinical Samples of Adolescents
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Penner, Francesca, Cano, Kiana, McGill, Charles, Vanwoerden, Salome, and Sharp, Carla
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- 2024
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36. Disentangling the Black Hole Mass Spectrum with Photometric Microlensing Surveys
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Perkins, Scott Ellis, McGill, Peter, Dawson, William, Abrams, Natasha S., Lam, Casey Y., Ho, Ming-Feng, Lu, Jessica R., Bird, Simeon, Pruett, Kerianne, Golovich, Nathan, and Chapline, George
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
From the formation mechanisms of stars and compact objects to nuclear physics, modern astronomy frequently leverages surveys to understand populations of objects to answer fundamental questions. The population of dark and isolated compact objects in the Galaxy contains critical information related to many of these topics, but is only practically accessible via gravitational microlensing. However, photometric microlensing observables are degenerate for different types of lenses, and one can seldom classify an event as involving either a compact object or stellar lens on its own. To address this difficulty, we apply a Bayesian framework that treats lens type probabilistically and jointly with a lens population model. This method allows lens population characteristics to be inferred despite intrinsic uncertainty in the lens-class of any single event. We investigate this method's effectiveness on a simulated ground-based photometric survey in the context of characterizing a hypothetical population of primordial black holes (PBHs) with an average mass of $30 M_{\odot}$. On simulated data, our method outperforms current black hole (BH) lens identification pipelines and characterizes different subpopulations of lenses while jointly constraining the PBH contribution to dark matter to ${\approx}25$\%. Key to robust inference, our method can marginalize over population model uncertainty. We find the lower mass cutoff for stellar origin BHs, a key observable in understanding the BH mass gap, particularly difficult to infer in our simulations. This work lays the foundation for cutting-edge PBH abundance constraints to be extracted from current photometric microlensing surveys., Comment: 31 pages, 18 figures, submitted to AAS
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- 2023
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37. Bringing 2D Eclipse Mapping out of the Shadows with Leave-one-out Cross-validation
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Challener, Ryan C., Welbanks, Luis, and McGill, Peter
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Eclipse mapping is a technique for inferring 2D brightness maps of transiting exoplanets from the shape of an eclipse light curve. With JWST's unmatched precision, eclipse mapping is now possible for a large number of exoplanets. However, eclipse mapping has only been applied to two planets and the nuances of fitting eclipse maps are not yet fully understood. Here, we use Leave-one-out Cross- Validation (LOO-CV) to investigate eclipse mapping, with application to a JWST NIRISS/SOSS observation of the ultra-hot Jupiter WASP-18b. LOO-CV is a technique that provides insight into the out-of-sample predictive power of models on a data-point-by-data-point basis. We show that constraints on planetary brightness patterns behave as expected, with large-scale variations driven by the phase-curve variation in the light curve and smaller-scale structures constrained by the eclipse ingress and egress. For WASP-18b we show that the need for higher model complexity (smaller-scale features) is driven exclusively by the shape of the eclipse ingress and egress. We use LOO-CV to investigate the relationship between planetary brightness map components when mapping under a positive-flux constraint to better understand the need for complex models. Finally, we use LOO-CV to understand the degeneracy between the competing ``hotspot'' and ``plateau'' brightness map models of WASP-18b, showing that the plateau model is driven by the ingress shape and the hotspot model is driven by the egress shape, but preference for neither model is due to outliers or unmodeled signals. Based on this analysis, we make recommendations for the use of LOO-CV in future eclipse-mapping studies., Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures. Submitted to AJ. Note that browsers can have difficulty displaying the data-heavy figures
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- 2023
38. Methods for Incorporating Model Uncertainty into Exoplanet Atmospheric Analysis
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Nixon, Matthew C., Welbanks, Luis, McGill, Peter, and Kempton, Eliza M. -R.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
A key goal of exoplanet spectroscopy is to measure atmospheric properties, such as abundances of chemical species, in order to connect them to our understanding of atmospheric physics and planet formation. In this new era of high-quality JWST data, it is paramount that these measurement methods are robust. When comparing atmospheric models to observations, multiple candidate models may produce reasonable fits to the data. Typically, conclusions are reached by selecting the best-performing model according to some metric. This ignores model uncertainty in favour of specific model assumptions, potentially leading to measured atmospheric properties that are overconfident and/or incorrect. In this paper, we compare three ensemble methods for addressing model uncertainty by combining posterior distributions from multiple analyses: Bayesian model averaging, a variant of Bayesian model averaging using leave-one-out predictive densities, and stacking of predictive distributions. We demonstrate these methods by fitting the HST+Spitzer transmission spectrum of the hot Jupiter HD 209458b using models with different cloud and haze prescriptions. All of our ensemble methods lead to uncertainties on retrieved parameters that are larger, but more realistic, and consistent with physical and chemical expectations. Since they have not typically accounted for model uncertainty, uncertainties of retrieved parameters from HST spectra have likely been underreported. We recommend stacking as the most robust model combination method. Our methods can be used to combine results from independent retrieval codes, and from different models within one code. They are also widely applicable to other exoplanet analysis processes, such as combining results from different data reductions., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. 20 pages, 5 figures, 2 tables
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- 2023
39. Rapid Exchange Cooling with Trapped Ions
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Fallek, Spencer D., Sandhu, Vikram S., McGill, Ryan A., Gray, John M., Tinkey, Holly N., Clark, Craig R., and Brown, Kenton R.
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Quantum Physics ,Physics - Atomic Physics - Abstract
The trapped-ion quantum charge-coupled device (QCCD) architecture is a leading candidate for advanced quantum information processing. In current QCCD implementations, imperfect ion transport and anomalous heating can excite ion motion during a calculation. To counteract this, intermediate cooling is necessary to maintain high-fidelity gate performance. Cooling the computational ions sympathetically with ions of another species, a commonly employed strategy, creates a significant runtime bottleneck. Here, we demonstrate a different approach we call exchange cooling. Unlike sympathetic cooling, exchange cooling does not require trapping two different atomic species. The protocol introduces a bank of "coolant" ions which are repeatedly laser cooled. A computational ion can then be cooled by transporting a coolant ion into its proximity. We test this concept experimentally with two $^{40}\mathrm{Ca}^{+}$ ions, executing the necessary transport in 107 $\mathrm{\mu s}$, an order of magnitude faster than typical sympathetic cooling durations. We remove over 96%, and as many as 102(5) quanta, of axial motional energy from the computational ion. We verify that re-cooling the coolant ion does not decohere the computational ion. This approach validates the feasibility of a single-species QCCD processor, capable of fast quantum simulation and computation., Comment: 22 pages, 7 figures; matching publication
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- 2023
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40. A synthesis of evidence for policy from behavioural science during COVID-19.
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Ruggeri, Kai, Stock, Friederike, Haslam, S, Capraro, Valerio, Boggio, Paulo, Ellemers, Naomi, Cichocka, Aleksandra, Douglas, Karen, Rand, David, van der Linden, Sander, Cikara, Mina, Finkel, Eli, Druckman, James, Wohl, Michael, Petty, Richard, Tucker, Joshua, Shariff, Azim, Gelfand, Michele, Packer, Dominic, Jetten, Jolanda, Van Lange, Paul, Pennycook, Gordon, Peters, Ellen, Baicker, Katherine, Crum, Alia, Weeden, Kim, Napper, Lucy, Tabri, Nassim, Zaki, Jamil, Skitka, Linda, Kitayama, Shinobu, Mobbs, Dean, Sunstein, Cass, Ashcroft-Jones, Sarah, Todsen, Anna, Hajian, Ali, Verra, Sanne, Buehler, Vanessa, Friedemann, Maja, Hecht, Marlene, Mobarak, Rayyan, Karakasheva, Ralitsa, Tünte, Markus, Yeung, Siu, Rosenbaum, R, Lep, Žan, Yamada, Yuki, Hudson, Sa-Kiera, Macchia, Lucía, Soboleva, Irina, Dimant, Eugen, Geiger, Sandra, Jarke, Hannes, Wingen, Tobias, Berkessel, Jana, Mareva, Silvana, McGill, Lucy, Papa, Francesca, Većkalov, Bojana, Afif, Zeina, Buabang, Eike, Landman, Marna, Tavera, Felice, Andrews, Jack, Bursalıoğlu, Aslı, Zupan, Zorana, Wagner, Lisa, Navajas, Joaquín, Vranka, Marek, Kasdan, David, Chen, Patricia, Hudson, Kathleen, Novak, Lindsay, Teas, Paul, Rachev, Nikolay, Galizzi, Matteo, Milkman, Katherine, Petrović, Marija, Van Bavel, Jay, and Willer, Robb
- Subjects
Humans ,Behavioral Sciences ,Communication ,COVID-19 ,Culture ,Evidence-Based Practice ,Health Policy ,Leadership ,Pandemics ,Policy Making ,Public Health ,Social Norms - Abstract
Scientific evidence regularly guides policy decisions1, with behavioural science increasingly part of this process2. In April 2020, an influential paper3 proposed 19 policy recommendations (claims) detailing how evidence from behavioural science could contribute to efforts to reduce impacts and end the COVID-19 pandemic. Here we assess 747 pandemic-related research articles that empirically investigated those claims. We report the scale of evidence and whether evidence supports them to indicate applicability for policymaking. Two independent teams, involving 72 reviewers, found evidence for 18 of 19 claims, with both teams finding evidence supporting 16 (89%) of those 18 claims. The strongest evidence supported claims that anticipated culture, polarization and misinformation would be associated with policy effectiveness. Claims suggesting trusted leaders and positive social norms increased adherence to behavioural interventions also had strong empirical support, as did appealing to social consensus or bipartisan agreement. Targeted language in messaging yielded mixed effects and there were no effects for highlighting individual benefits or protecting others. No available evidence existed to assess any distinct differences in effects between using the terms physical distancing and social distancing. Analysis of 463 papers containing data showed generally large samples; 418 involved human participants with a mean of 16,848 (median of 1,699). That statistical power underscored improved suitability of behavioural science research for informing policy decisions. Furthermore, by implementing a standardized approach to evidence selection and synthesis, we amplify broader implications for advancing scientific evidence in policy formulation and prioritization.
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- 2024
41. Macrobehaviour: behavioural variation across space, time, and taxa
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Keith, Sally A, Drury, Jonathan P, McGill, Brian J, and Grether, Gregory F
- Subjects
Climate Change Impacts and Adaptation ,Biological Sciences ,Environmental Sciences ,Ecology ,Biodiversity ,Forecasting ,Ecosystem ,emergent properties ,environmental change ,macrobehaviour ,macroevolution ,scaling up ,Evolutionary Biology ,Biological sciences ,Environmental sciences - Abstract
We explore how integrating behavioural ecology and macroecology can provide fundamental new insight into both fields, with particular relevance for understanding ecological responses to rapid environmental change. We outline the field of macrobehaviour, which aims to unite these disciplines explicitly, and highlight examples of research in this space. Macrobehaviour can be envisaged as a spectrum, where behavioural ecologists and macroecologists use new data and borrow tools and approaches from one another. At the heart of this spectrum, interdisciplinary research considers how selection in the context of large-scale factors can lead to systematic patterns in behavioural variation across space, time, and taxa, and in turn, influence macroecological patterns and processes. Macrobehaviour has the potential to enhance forecasts of future biodiversity change.
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- 2023
42. Forming the Future of Agrohydrology
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Smidt, SJ, Haacker, EMK, Bai, X, Cherkauer, K, Choat, B, Crompton, O, Deines, JM, Groh, J, Guzmán, SM, Hartman, S, Kendall, AD, Safeeq, M, Kustas, W, McGill, BM, Nocco, MA, Pensky, J, Rapp, J, Schreiner‐Mcgraw, A, Sprenger, M, Wan, L, Weldegebriel, L, Zipper, S, and Zoccatelli, D
- Subjects
Hydrology ,Climate Change Science ,Earth Sciences ,Zero Hunger ,agriculture ,hydrology ,water resources ,challenges ,management ,commentary ,Atmospheric Sciences ,Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience ,Environmental Science and Management ,Climate change science - Abstract
Agricultural water management is increasingly prioritized throughout the world as producers are tasked with meeting growing crop demand while also managing environmental resources more sustainably. Likewise, agriculture is increasingly modifying the terrestrial water cycle. In response to these dynamics, the informal research discipline of agrohydrology continues to grow, fueled by a new era of rapidly evolving research tools and big data availability. While many researchers are actively invested in agrohydrology as a research topic, there remains a gap in formalizing this valuable discipline. This article aims to: (a) identify key research themes in agrohydrology, (b) conceptualize future research topics within each theme, and (c) estimate a timeframe before topics become pressing (i.e., before a topic becomes a limiting factor in advancing water management in an agricultural context). This commentary is meant to guide the trajectory of an evolving discipline of agrohydrology, the practice of agricultural water management at multiple nested scales, and the conversation of the invested public.
- Published
- 2023
43. Risk factors associated with the intensity of COVID-19 outbreaks in Canadian community settings: a retrospective analysis of outbreak-level surveillance data
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Demy Dam, Michelle Chen, Erin E. Rees, Bethany Cheng, Lynn Sukkarieh, Erin McGill, Yasmina Tehami, Anna Bellos, Jonathan Edwin, and Kaitlin Patterson
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,Community settings ,Outbreak ,Regression analysis ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background The severity of COVID-19 outbreaks is disproportionate across settings (e.g., long-term care facilities (LTCF), schools) across Canada. Few studies have examined factors associated with outbreak severity to inform prevention and response. Our study objective was to assess how outbreak severity, as measured using outbreak intensity and defined as number of outbreak-associated cases divided by outbreak duration, differed by setting and factors known to influence SARS-CoV-2 transmission. Methods We described outbreak intensity trends in 2021 using data from the Canadian COVID-19 Outbreak Surveillance System from seven provinces/territories, representing 93% of the Canadian population. A negative binomial fixed-effects model was used to assess for associations between the outcome, outbreak intensity, and characteristics of outbreaks: setting type, median age of cases, number at risk, and vaccination coverage of at least 1 dose. Also included were variables previously reported to influence SARS-CoV-2 transmission: stringency of non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPI) and the predominant SARS-CoV-2 variant detected by surveillance. Results The longest outbreaks occurred in LTCF (mean = 25.4 days) and correctional facilities (mean = 20.6 days) which also reported the largest outbreaks (mean = 29.6 cases per outbreak). Model results indicated that outbreak intensity was highest in correctional facilities. Relative to correctional facilities (referent), the second highest adjusted intensity ratio was in childcare centres (intensity ratio = 0.58 [95% CI: 0.51–0.66]), followed by LTCF (0.56 [95% CI: 0.51–0.66]). Schools had the lowest adjusted intensity ratio (0.46 [95% CI: 0.40–0.53]) despite having the highest proportion of outbreaks (37.5%). An increase in outbreak intensity was associated with increases in median age, the number at risk, and stringency of NPI. Greater vaccination coverage with at least 1 dose was associated with reduced outbreak intensity. Conclusion Descriptive and multivariable model results indicated that in Canada during 2021, outbreak intensity was greatest in closed congregate living facilities: correctional facilities and LTCF. Findings from this study support the importance of vaccination in reducing outbreak intensity when vaccines are effective against infection with circulating variants, which is especially important for closed congregate living facilities where NPIs are more challenging to implement.
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- 2024
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44. Graduate Students' Perceptions of Instructor Power in the U.S. Higher Education Classroom
- Author
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Antonio Delgado and Craig M. McGill
- Abstract
Higher education is a distribution center of knowledge and economic, social, and cultural power. The instructor's power is usually unquestioned, particularly by students who must comply with instructors who are the gatekeepers to resources they need. Understanding alienation in higher education classrooms illuminate how power influences educational transactions and the interests of both students and instructors. Literature on student alienation in higher education has primarily focused on depersonalized discourses or persistence/retention, which avoids the central and most basic unit of the system: the instructor-student relationship. This study explored graduate students' understandings of their experiences involving the power of their instructors in the higher education classroom. The findings of this study revealed that students understood their experiences involving instructor power in connection to the instructor-student relationship, and they responded to power and alienation through strategies for self-preservation. To understand how instructor power shapes students' higher education experience and the methods by which this power takes shape, instructors must enable students to recognize, discuss, and challenge that power.
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- 2023
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45. SN 2022oqm: A Bright and Multi-peaked Calcium-rich Transient
- Author
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Yadavalli, S. Karthik, Villar, V. Ashley, Izzo, Luca, Zenati, Yossef, Foley, Ryan J., Wheeler, J. Craig, Angus, Charlotte R., Bánhidi, Dominik, Auchettl, Katie, Bíró, Barna Imre, Bódi, Attila, Bodola, Zsófia, de Boer, Thomas, Chambers, Kenneth C., Chornock, Ryan, Coulter, David A., Csányi, István, Cseh, Borbála, Dandu, Srujan, Davis, Kyle W., Dickinson, Connor Braden, Farias, Diego, Farah, Joseph, Gall, Christa, Gao, Hua, Howell, D. Andrew, Jacobson-Galan, Wynn V., Khetan, Nandita, Kilpatrick, Charles D., Könyves-Tóth, Réka, Kriskovics, Levente, LeBaron, Natalie, Loertscher, Kayla, Saux, X. K. Le, Margutti, Rafaella, Magnier, Eugene A., McCully, Curtis, McGill, Peter, Miao, Hao-Yu, Newsome, Megan, Gonzalez, Estefania Padilla, Pál, András, Pál, Boróka H., Pan, Yen-Chen, Politsch, Collin A., Ransome, Conor L., Ramirez-Ruiz, Enrico, Rest, Armin, Rest, Sofia, Robinson, Olivia, Sears, Huei, Scheer, Jackson, Sódor, Ádám, Swift, Jonathan, Székely, Péter, Szakáts, Róbert, Szalai, Tamás, Taggart, Kirsty, Terreran, Giacomo, Venkatraman, Padma, Vinkó, József, Yang, Grace, and Zhou, Henry
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present the photometric and spectroscopic evolution of SN 2022oqm, a nearby multi-peaked hydrogen- and helium-weak calcium-rich transient (CaRT). SN 2022oqm was detected 13.1 kpc from its host galaxy, the face-on spiral galaxy NGC 5875. Extensive spectroscopic coverage reveals an early hot (T >= 40,000 K) continuum and carbon features observed $\sim$1~day after discovery, SN Ic-like photospheric-phase spectra, and strong forbidden calcium emission starting 38 days after discovery. SN 2022oqm has a relatively high peak luminosity (MB = -17 mag) for (CaRTs), making it an outlier in the population. We determine that three power sources are necessary to explain the light curve (LC), with each corresponding to a distinct peak. The first peak is powered by an expanding blackbody with a power law luminosity, suggesting shock cooling by circumstellar material (CSM). Subsequent LC evolution is powered by a double radioactive decay model, consistent with two sources of photons diffusing through optically thick ejecta. From the LC, we derive an ejecta mass and 56Ni mass of ~0.6 solar masses and ~0.09 solar masses. Spectroscopic modeling suggests 0.6 solar masses of ejecta, and with well-mixed Fe-peak elements throughout. We discuss several physical origins for SN 2022oqm and find either a surprisingly massive white dwarf progenitor or a peculiar stripped envelope model could explain SN 2022oqm. A stripped envelope explosion inside a dense, hydrogen- and helium-poor CSM, akin to SNe Icn, but with a large 56Ni mass and small CSM mass could explain SN 2022oqm. Alternatively, helium detonation on an unexpectedly massive white dwarf could also explain SN 2022oqm., Comment: 35 pages, 17 figures, 7 tables, Accepted for Publication in ApJ
- Published
- 2023
46. Type II-P Supernova Progenitor Star Initial Masses and SN 2020jfo: Direct Detection, Light Curve Properties, Nebular Spectroscopy, and Local Environment
- Author
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Kilpatrick, Charles D., Izzo, Luca, Bentley, Rory O., Chambers, Kenneth C., Coulter, David A., Drout, Maria R., de Boer, Thomas, Foley, Ryan J., Gall, Christa, Halford, Melissa R., Jones, David O., Langeroodi, Danial, Lin, Chien-Cheng, Magnier, Eugene A., McGill, Peter, O'Grady, Anna J. G., Pan, Yen-Chen, Ramirez-Ruiz, Enrico, Rest, Armin, Swift, Jonathan J., Tinyanont, Samaporn, Villar, V. Ashley, Wainscoat, Richard J., Wasserman, Amanda Rose, Yadavalli, S. Karthik, and Yang, Grace
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present optical, ultraviolet, and infrared data of the type II supernova (SN II) 2020jfo at 14.5 Mpc. This wealth of multiwavelength data allows to compare different metrics commonly used to estimate progenitor masses of SN II for the same object. Using its early light curve, we infer SN 2020jfo had a progenitor radius of $\approx$700 $R_{\odot}$, consistent with red supergiants of initial mass $M_{\rm ZAMS}=$11-13 $M_{\odot}$. The decline in its late-time light curve is best fit by a ${}^{56}$Ni mass of 0.018$\pm$0.007 $M_{\odot}$ consistent with that ejected from SN II-P with $\approx$13 $M_{\odot}$ initial mass stars. Early spectra and photometry do not exhibit signs of interaction with circumstellar matter, implying that SN 2020jfo experienced weak mass loss within the final years prior to explosion. Our spectra at $>$250 days are best fit by models from 12 $M_{\odot}$ initial mass stars. We analyzed integral field unit spectroscopy of the stellar population near SN 2020jfo, finding its massive star population had a zero age main sequence mass of 9.7$\substack{+2.5\\-1.3} M_{\odot}$. We identify a single counterpart in pre-explosion imaging and find it has an initial mass of at most $7.2\substack{+1.2\\-0.6} M_{\odot}$. We conclude that the inconsistency between this mass and indirect mass indicators from SN 2020jfo itself is most likely caused by extinction with $A_{V}=2$-3 mag due to matter around the progenitor star, which lowered its observed optical luminosity. As SN 2020jfo did not exhibit extinction at this level or evidence for interaction with circumstellar matter between 1.6-450 days from explosion, we conclude that this material was likely confined within $\approx$3000 $R_{\odot}$ from the progenitor star., Comment: 31 pages, 12 figures, accepted to MNRAS
- Published
- 2023
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47. The greenhouse gas cost of irrigation as adaptation
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McGill, Bonnie M.
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- 2024
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48. Risk factors associated with the intensity of COVID-19 outbreaks in Canadian community settings: a retrospective analysis of outbreak-level surveillance data
- Author
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Dam, Demy, Chen, Michelle, Rees, Erin E., Cheng, Bethany, Sukkarieh, Lynn, McGill, Erin, Tehami, Yasmina, Bellos, Anna, Edwin, Jonathan, and Patterson, Kaitlin
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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49. Mapping the way: functional modelling for community-based integrated care for older people
- Author
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McGill, Alexis, Salehi, Vahid, McCloskey, Rose, Smith, Doug, and Veitch, Brian
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- 2024
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50. Assessing the potential of acoustic telemetry to underpin the regional management of basking sharks (Cetorhinus maximus)
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Thorburn, James, Collins, Patrick C., Garbett, Amy, Vance, Heather, Phillips, Natasha, Drumm, Alan, Cooney, Joseph, Waters, Catherine, Ó’Maoiléidigh, Niall, Johnston, Emmett, Dolton, Haley R., Berrow, Simon, Hall, Graham, Hall, Jackie, Delvillar, Diego, McGill, Ross, Whoriskey, Fred, Fangue, Nann A., McInturf, Alexandra G., Rypel, Andrew L., Kennedy, Richard, Lilly, Jessie, Rodger, Jessica R., Adams, Colin E., van Geel, Nienke C. F., Risch, Denise, Wilkie, Lorna, Henderson, Suzanne, Mayo, Paul A., Mensink, Paul J., Witt, Matthew J., Hawkes, Lucy A., Klimley, A. Peter, and Houghton, Jonathan D. R.
- Published
- 2024
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