725 results on '"Meredith, C. P."'
Search Results
2. Denser Environments Cultivate Larger Galaxies: A Comprehensive Study beyond the Local Universe with 3 Million Hyper Suprime-Cam Galaxies
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Ghosh, Aritra, Urry, C. Megan, Powell, Meredith C., Shimakawa, Rhythm, Bosch, Frank C. van den, Nagai, Daisuke, Mitra, Kaustav, and Connolly, Andrew J.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The relationship between galaxy size and environment has remained enigmatic, with over a decade of conflicting results. We present one of the first comprehensive studies of the variation of galaxy radius with environment beyond the local Universe and demonstrate that large-scale environmental density is correlated with galaxy radius independent of stellar mass and galaxy morphology. We confirm with $>5\sigma$ confidence that galaxies in denser environments are up to $\sim25\%$ larger than their equally massive counterparts with similar morphology in less dense regions of the Universe. We achieve this result by correlating projected two-dimensional densities over $\sim360$ deg$^2$ with the structural parameters of $\sim3$ million Hyper Suprime-Cam galaxies at $0.3 \leq z < 0.7$ with $\log M/M_{\odot} \geq 8.9$. Compared to most previous studies, this sample is $\sim100-10,000$ times larger and goes $\sim1$ dex deeper in mass-completeness. We demonstrate that past conflicting results have been driven by small sample sizes and a lack of robust measurement uncertainties. We verify the presence of the above correlation separately for disk-dominated, bulge-dominated, star-forming, and quiescent subpopulations. We find the strength of the correlation to be dependent on redshift, stellar mass, and morphology. The correlation is strongest at lower redshifts and systematically weakens or disappears beyond $z \geq 0.5$. At $z\geq0.5$, more massive galaxies still display a statistically significant correlation. Although some existing theoretical frameworks can be selectively invoked to explain some of the observed correlations, our work demonstrates the need for more comprehensive theoretical investigations of the correlation between galaxy size and environment., Comment: 29 pages, 13 figures. Published in The Astrophysical Journal. We welcome comments and constructive criticism
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- 2024
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3. “That’s Definitely a Red Flag”: Sexual Violence Risk Perception by Men who have Sex with Men Using Dating and Sexual Networking Apps
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Korovich, Megan, Nicoletti, Alexandra, Bettinelli, Marta, Shank, Faith, Angelone, D. J., and Jones, Meredith C.
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- 2024
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4. DNA-based studies and genetic diversity indicator assessments are complementary approaches to conserving evolutionary potential
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Hoban, Sean, Paz-Vinas, Ivan, Shaw, Robyn E., Castillo-Reina, Luis, da Silva, Jessica M., DeWoody, J. Andrew, Ekblom, Robert, Fedorca, Ancuta, Forester, Brenna R., Funk, W. Chris, Geue, Julia C., Heuertz, Myriam, Hollingsworth, Peter M., Hughes, Alice C., Hunter, Margaret E., Hvilsom, Christina, Ishihama, Fumiko, Jordan, Rebecca, Kalamujić Stroil, Belma, Kershaw, Francine, Khoury, Colin K., Köppä, Viktoria, Laikre, Linda, Macdonald, Anna J., Mastretta-Yanes, Alicia, Meek, Mariah H., Mergeay, Joachim, Millette, Katie L., O’Brien, David, Rincón-Parra, Victor J., Rodríguez-Morales, M. Alejandra, Schuman, Meredith C., Segelbacher, Gernot, Sunnucks, Paul, Taylor, Rebecca S., Thurfjell, Henrik, Vernesi, Cristiano, and Grueber, Catherine E.
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- 2024
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5. Perceived Barriers and Facilitators to Performing Evening Regular Activity Breaks at Home: A COM-B Analysis
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Gale, Jennifer T., Peddie, Meredith C., and Hargreaves, Elaine A.
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- 2024
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6. Effect of Minimally Invasive Gastrectomy on Return to Intended Oncologic Therapy for Gastric Cancer
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Koo, Andee, Mavani, Parit T., Sok, Caitlin, Goyal, Subir, Concors, Seth, Mason, Meredith C., Winer, Joshua H., Russell, Maria C., Cardona, Kenneth, Lin, Edward, Maithel, Shishir K., Kooby, David A., Staley, III, Charles A., and Shah, Mihir M.
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- 2024
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7. Correction: DNA-based studies and genetic diversity indicator assessments are complementary approaches to conserving evolutionary potential
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Hoban, Sean, Paz-Vinas, Ivan, Shaw, Robyn E., Castillo-Reina, Luis, da Silva, Jessica M., Dewoody, J. Andrew, Ekblom, Robert, Fedorca, Ancuta, Forester, Brenna R., Funk, W. Chris, Geue, Julia C., Heuertz, Myriam, Hollingsworth, Peter M., Hughes, Alice C., Hunter, Margaret E., Hvilsom, Christina, Ishihama, Fumiko, Jordan, Rebecca, Stroil, Belma Kalamujić, Kershaw, Francine, Khoury, Colin K., Köppä, Viktoria, Laikre, Linda, Macdonald, Anna J., Mastretta-Yanes, Alicia, Meek, Mariah H., Mergeay, Joachim, Millette, Katie L., O’Brien, David, Rincón-Parra, Victor J., Rodríguez-Morales, M. Alejandra, Schuman, Meredith C., Segelbacher, Gernot, Sunnucks, Paul, Taylor, Rebecca S., Thurfjell, Henrik, Vernesi, Cristiano, and Grueber, Catherine E.
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- 2024
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8. Patterns of Conflict and Post-Conflict Affiliation in Propithecus diadema and Eulemur fulvus
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Ostad Rahimi, Sara, Caillaud, Damien, and Lutz, Meredith C.
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- 2024
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9. The Influence of Health-Related Behavior Profiles on College Students’ Perceptions of COVID-19 Safety Measures
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Shank, Faith, Korovich, Megan, Nicoletti, Alexandra, Angelone, DJ, and Jones, Meredith C.
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- 2024
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10. Influence of instrumentation type on outcomes after surgical management of spondylodiscitis: a systematic review and meta-analysis
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Maddy, Krisna S., Tigre, Joseph Yunga, Lu, Victor M., Costello, Meredith C., Errante, Emily L., Levi, Allan D., and Burks, S. Shelby
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- 2024
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11. Anthropometric traits and risk of multiple myeloma: differences by race, sex and diagnostic clinical features
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Arnold, Kevin D., Ong, Krystle L., Ravi, Gayathri, Cutshall, Hannah, Purnell, Kalyn, Wessel, Meredith C., Godby, Kelly N., Bal, Susan, Giri, Smith, Rogers, Laura Q., Demark-Wahnefried, Wendy, Davies, Faith E., Costa, Luciano J., Morgan, Gareth J., Birmann, Brenda M., and Brown, Elizabeth E.
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- 2024
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12. Rapid and objective assessment of auditory temporal processing using dynamic amplitude-modulated stimuli
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Parida, Satyabrata, Yurasits, Kimberly, Cancel, Victoria E., Zink, Maggie E., Mitchell, Claire, Ziliak, Meredith C., Harrison, Audrey V., Bartlett, Edward L., and Parthasarathy, Aravindakshan
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- 2024
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13. Rapid and objective assessment of auditory temporal processing using dynamic amplitude-modulated stimuli
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Satyabrata Parida, Kimberly Yurasits, Victoria E. Cancel, Maggie E. Zink, Claire Mitchell, Meredith C. Ziliak, Audrey V. Harrison, Edward L. Bartlett, and Aravindakshan Parthasarathy
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Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Abstract Current tests of hearing fail to diagnose pathologies in ~10% of patients seeking help for hearing difficulties. Neural ensemble responses to perceptually relevant cues in the amplitude envelope, termed envelope following responses (EFR), hold promise as an objective diagnostic tool to probe these ‘hidden’ hearing difficulties. But clinical translation is impeded by current measurement approaches involving static amplitude modulated (AM) tones, which are time-consuming and lack optimal spectrotemporal resolution. Here we develop a framework to rapidly measure EFRs using dynamically varying AMs combined with spectrally specific analyses. These analyses offer 5x improvement in time and 30x improvement in spectrotemporal resolution, and more generally, are optimal for analyzing time-varying signals with known spectral trajectories of interest. We validate this approach across several mammalian species, including humans, and demonstrate robust responses that are highly correlated with traditional static EFRs. Our analytic technique facilitates rapid and objective neural assessment of temporal processing throughout the brain that can be applied to track auditory neurodegeneration using EFRs, as well as tracking recovery after therapeutic interventions.
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- 2024
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14. BASS XXXIV: A Catalog of the Nuclear Mm-wave Continuum Emission Properties of AGNs Constrained on Scales $\lesssim$ 100--200 pc
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Kawamuro, Taiki, Ricci, Claudio, Mushotzky, Richard F., Imanishi, Masatoshi, Bauer, Franz E., Ricci, Federica, Koss, Michael J., Privon, George C., Trakhtenbrot, Benny, Izumi, Takuma, Ichikawa, Kohei, Rojas, Alejandra F., Smith, Krista Lynne, Shimizu, Taro, Oh, Kyuseok, Brok, Jakob S. den, Baba, Shunsuke, Balokovic, Mislav, Chang, Chin-Shin, Kakkad, Darshan, Pfeifle, Ryan W., Temple, Matthew J., Ueda, Yoshihiro, Harrison, Fiona, Powell, Meredith C., Stern, Daniel, Urry, Meg, and Sanders, David B.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a catalog of the millimeter-wave (mm-wave) continuum properties of 98 nearby ($z <$ 0.05) active galactic nuclei (AGNs) selected from the 70-month Swift/BAT hard X-ray catalog that have precisely determined X-ray spectral properties and subarcsec-resolution ALMA Band-6 (211--275 GHz) observations as of 2021 April. Due to the hard-X-ray ($>$ 10 keV) selection, the sample is nearly unbiased for obscured systems at least up to Compton-thick-level obscuration, and provides the largest number of AGNs with high physical resolution mm-wave data ($\lesssim$ 100--200 pc). Our catalog reports emission peak coordinates, spectral indices, and peak fluxes and luminosities at 1.3 mm (230 GHz). Additionally, high-resolution mm-wave images are provided. Using the images and creating radial surface brightness profiles of mm-wave emission, we identify emission extending from the central source and isolated blob-like emission. Flags indicating the presence of these emission features are tabulated. Among 90 AGNs with significant detections of nuclear emission, 37 AGNs ($\approx$ 41%) appear to have both or one of extended or blob-like components. We, in particular, investigate AGNs that show well-resolved mm-wave components and find that these seem to have a variety of origins (i.e., a jet, radio lobes, a secondary AGN, stellar clusters, a narrow line region, galaxy disk, active star-formation regions, and AGN-driven outflows), and some components have currently unclear origins., Comment: 49 pages, 7 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in ApJS
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- 2023
15. BASS XXXV. The $M_\rm{BH}$-$\sigma_\rm{\star}$ Relation of 105-Month Swift-BAT Type 1 AGNs
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Caglar, Turgay, Koss, Michael J., Burtscher, Leonard, Trakhtenbrot, Benny, Erdim, M. Kiyami, Mejía-Restrepo, Julian E., Ricci, Federica, Powell, Meredith C., Ricci, Claudio, Mushotzky, Richard, Bauer, Franz E., Ananna, Tonima T., Bär, Rudolf E., Brandl, Bernhard, Brinchmann, Jarle, Harrison, Fiona, Ichikawa, Kohei, Kakkad, Darshan, Oh, Kyuseok, Riffel, Rogério, Sartori, Lia F., Smith, Krista L., Stern, Daniel, and Urry, C. Megan
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present two independent measurements of stellar velocity dispersions ( $\sigma_\rm{\star}$ ) from the Ca\,H+K \& Mg\,\textsc{i} region (3880--5550~\AA) and the Calcium Triplet region (CaT, 8350--8750~\AA) for 173 hard X-ray-selected Type 1 AGNs ($z \leq$ 0.08) from the 105-month Swift-BAT catalog. We construct one of the largest samples of local Type 1 AGNs that have both single-epoch (SE) 'virial' black hole mass ($M_\rm{BH}$) estimates and $\sigma_\rm{\star}$ measurements obtained from high spectral resolution data, allowing us to test the usage of such methods for SMBH studies. We find that the two independent $\sigma_\rm{\star}$ measurements are highly consistent with each other, with an average offset of only $0.002\pm0.001$ dex. Comparing $M_\rm{BH}$ estimates based on broad emission lines and stellar velocity dispersion measurements, we find that the former is systematically lower by $\approx$0.12 dex. Consequently, Eddington ratios estimated through broad-line $M_\rm{BH}$ determinations are similarly biased (but in the opposite way). We argue that the discrepancy is driven by extinction in the broad-line region (BLR). We also find an anti-correlation between the offset from the $M_\rm{BH}$ - $\sigma_\rm{\star}$ relation and the Eddington ratio. Our sample of Type 1 AGNs shows a shallower $M_\rm{BH}$ - $\sigma_\rm{\star}$ relation (with a power law exponent of $\approx$3.5) compared with that of inactive galaxies (with a power-law exponent of $\approx$4.5), confirming earlier results obtained from smaller samples., Comment: Accepted by the ApJ
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- 2023
16. ASO Visual Abstract: Effect of Minimally Invasive Gastrectomy on Return to Intended Oncologic Therapy for Gastric Cancer
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Koo, Andee, Mavani, Parit T., Sok, Caitlin, Goyal, Subir, Concors, Seth, Mason, Meredith C., Winer, Joshua H., Russell, Maria C., Cardona, Kenneth, Lin, Edward, Maithel, Shishir K., Kooby, David A., Staley, III, Charles A., and Shah, Mihir M.
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- 2024
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17. The Associations Between Drinking Motives and Alcohol-Related Consequences in Graduate Students from Universities in the United States
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Shank, Faith, Angelone, D.J., and Jones, Meredith C.
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- 2024
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18. Housing Instability Associated with Return to Stimulant Use among Previously Abstaining Women
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Mehtani, Nicky J, Chuku, Chika C, Meacham, Meredith C, Vittinghoff, Eric, Dilworth, Samantha E, and Riley, Elise D
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Human Society ,Psychology ,Brain Disorders ,Substance Misuse ,Mental Health ,Prevention ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,HIV/AIDS ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Methamphetamine ,Aetiology ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Housing Instability ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Housing ,Cocaine ,cocaine ,homelessness ,housing instability ,housing policy ,methamphetamine ,stimulant use disorder ,women ,Toxicology - Abstract
Stimulant use among unstably housed individuals is associated with increased risks of psychiatric co-morbidity, violence, HIV transmission, and overdose. Due to a lack of highly effective treatments, evidence-based policies targeting the prevention of stimulant use disorder are of critical importance. However, little empirical evidence exists on risks associated with initiating or returning to stimulant use among at-risk populations. In a longitudinal cohort of unstably housed women in San Francisco (2016-2019), self-reported data on stimulant use, housing status, and mental health were collected monthly for up to 6 months, and factors associated with initiating stimulants after a period of non-use were identified through logistic regression. Among 245 participants, 42 (17.1%) started using cocaine and 46 (18.8%) started using methamphetamine. In analyses adjusting for demographics and socio-structural exposures over the preceding month, experiencing street homelessness was associated with initiating cocaine use (AOR: 2.10; 95% CI: 1.04, 4.25) and sheltered homelessness with initiating methamphetamine use (AOR: 2.57; 95% CI: 1.37, 4.79). Other factors-including race, income, unmet subsistence needs, mental health, and treatment adherence-did not reach levels of significance, suggesting the paramount importance of policies directed toward improving access to permanent supportive housing to prevent stimulant use among unstably housed women.
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- 2023
19. Cell phone access among persons who inject drugs in Tijuana, BC, Mexico
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Collins, Kelly M, Abramovitz, Daniela, Meacham, Meredith C, Gonzalez-Zuniga, Patricia E, Patrick, Kevin, and Garfein, Richard S
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- 2023
20. Information and the Umwelt: a theoretical framework for the evolution of play.
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Schank, Jeffrey C, Lutz, Meredith C, and Wood, Sydney
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Information theory ,Social play ,Umwelt ,agent-based model ,behavior systems ,cooperation ,curiosity ,development ,environmental enrichment ,evolution ,play behavior ,public goods game ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Behavioral Science & Comparative Psychology - Abstract
Play is phylogenetically widespread, and there are many proposed theories and fitness benefits of play. However, we still need a theoretical framework that unifies our understanding of the benefits that facilitated the evolution of play in so many diverse species. Starting with von Uexküll's theory of the Umwelt (i.e., the sensory-motor worlds of animals), together with the behavior systems approach, we propose that the Umwelt is an information processing system that serves basic biological functions. During development, the Umwelt undergoes a rapid expansion in the sensory and motor stimuli it processes. We argue that play is a process that converts surplus resources into information. By increasing the information content of the developing Umwelt, play confers fitness benefits. To demonstrate that play could evolve based on its information benefits, we present a model and simulation results of the evolution of a social play learning process that provides fitness-enhancing information in adult cooperative and competitive situations. Finally, we discuss this information-theoretic framework in relation to proposed hypotheses and fitness benefits of play.
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- 2023
21. Estimating rate of lung function change using clinical spirometry data
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Robert A Wise, Nadia N Hansel, Nirupama Putcha, Meredith C McCormack, Aparna Balasubramanian, Christopher Cervantes, Andrew S Gearhart, Ashraf Fawzy, and Anil Singh
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Medicine ,Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 - Abstract
Rationale In chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), accurately estimating lung function from electronic health record (EHR) data would be beneficial but requires addressing complexities in clinically obtained testing. This study compared analytic methods for estimating rate of forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1) change from EHR data.Methods We estimated rate of FEV1 change in patients with COPD from a single centre who had ≥3 outpatient tests spanning at least 1 year. Estimates were calculated as both an absolute mL/year and a relative %/year using non-regressive (Total Change, Average Change) and regressive (Quantile, RANSAC, Huber) methods. We compared distributions of the estimates across methods focusing on extreme values. Univariate zero-inflated negative binomial regressions tested associations between estimates and all-cause or COPD hospitalisations. Results were validated in an external cohort.Results Among 1417 participants, median rate of change was approximately −30 mL/year or −2%/year. Non-regressive methods frequently generated erroneous estimates due to outlier first measurements or short intervals between tests. Average change yielded the most extreme estimates (minimum=−3761 mL/year), while regressive methods, and Huber specifically, minimised extreme estimates. Huber, Total Change and Quantile FEV1 slope estimates were associated with all-cause hospitalisations (Huber incidence rate ratio 0.98, 95% CI 0.97 to 0.99, p
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- 2024
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22. Race and Ethnicity in Pulmonary Function Test Interpretation: An Official American Thoracic Society Statement
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Bhakta, Nirav R, Bime, Christian, Kaminsky, David A, McCormack, Meredith C, Thakur, Neeta, Stanojevic, Sanja, Baugh, Aaron D, Braun, Lundy, Lovinsky-Desir, Stephanie, Adamson, Rosemary, Witonsky, Jonathan, Wise, Robert A, Levy, Sean D, Brown, Robert, Forno, Erick, Cohen, Robyn T, Johnson, Meshell, Balmes, John, Mageto, Yolanda, Lee, Cathryn T, Masekela, Refiloe, Weiner, Daniel J, Irvin, Charlie G, Swenson, Erik R, Rosenfeld, Margaret, Schwartzstein, Richard M, Agrawal, Anurag, Neptune, Enid, Wisnivesky, Juan P, Ortega, Victor E, and Burney, Peter
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Clinical Research ,Reduced Inequalities ,Humans ,United States ,Ethnicity ,Respiratory Function Tests ,Societies ,race ,ethnicity ,interpretation ,PFT ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Respiratory System - Abstract
Current American Thoracic Society (ATS) standards promote the use of race and ethnicity-specific reference equations for pulmonary function test (PFT) interpretation. There is rising concern that the use of race and ethnicity in PFT interpretation contributes to a false view of fixed differences between races and may mask the effects of differential exposures. This use of race and ethnicity may contribute to health disparities by norming differences in pulmonary function. In the United States and globally, race serves as a social construct that is based on appearance and reflects social values, structures, and practices. Classification of people into racial and ethnic groups differs geographically and temporally. These considerations challenge the notion that racial and ethnic categories have biological meaning and question the use of race in PFT interpretation. The ATS convened a diverse group of clinicians and investigators for a workshop in 2021 to evaluate the use of race and ethnicity in PFT interpretation. Review of evidence published since then that challenges current practice and continued discussion concluded with a recommendation to replace race and ethnicity-specific equations with race-neutral average reference equations, which must be accompanied with a broader re-evaluation of how PFTs are used to make clinical, employment, and insurance decisions. There was also a call to engage key stakeholders not represented in this workshop and a statement of caution regarding the uncertain effects and potential harms of this change. Other recommendations include continued research and education to understand the impact of the change, to improve the evidence for the use of PFTs in general, and to identify modifiable risk factors for reduced pulmonary function.
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- 2023
23. Using Machine Learning to Determine Morphologies of $z<1$ AGN Host Galaxies in the Hyper Suprime-Cam Wide Survey
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Tian, Chuan, Urry, C. Megan, Ghosh, Aritra, Ofman, Ryan, Ananna, Tonima Tasnim, Auge, Connor, Cappelluti, Nico, Powell, Meredith C., Sanders, David B., Schawinski, Kevin, Stark, Dominic, and Tremblay, Grant R.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
We present a machine-learning framework to accurately characterize morphologies of Active Galactic Nucleus (AGN) host galaxies within $z<1$. We first use PSFGAN to decouple host galaxy light from the central point source, then we invoke the Galaxy Morphology Network (GaMorNet) to estimate whether the host galaxy is disk-dominated, bulge-dominated, or indeterminate. Using optical images from five bands of the HSC Wide Survey, we build models independently in three redshift bins: low $(0
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- 2022
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24. Morphological Parameters and Associated Uncertainties for 8 Million Galaxies in the Hyper Suprime-Cam Wide Survey
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Ghosh, Aritra, Urry, C. Megan, Mishra, Aayush, Perreault-Levasseur, Laurence, Natarajan, Priyamvada, Sanders, David B., Nagai, Daisuke, Tian, Chuan, Cappelluti, Nico, Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S., Powell, Meredith C., Rau, Amrit, and Treister, Ezequiel
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We use the Galaxy Morphology Posterior Estimation Network (GaMPEN) to estimate morphological parameters and associated uncertainties for $\sim 8$ million galaxies in the Hyper Suprime-Cam (HSC) Wide survey with $z \leq 0.75$ and $m \leq 23$. GaMPEN is a machine learning framework that estimates Bayesian posteriors for a galaxy's bulge-to-total light ratio ($L_B/L_T$), effective radius ($R_e$), and flux ($F$). By first training on simulations of galaxies and then applying transfer learning using real data, we trained GaMPEN with $<1\%$ of our dataset. This two-step process will be critical for applying machine learning algorithms to future large imaging surveys, such as the Rubin-Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST), the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope (NGRST), and Euclid. By comparing our results to those obtained using light-profile fitting, we demonstrate that GaMPEN's predicted posterior distributions are well-calibrated ($\lesssim 5\%$ deviation) and accurate. This represents a significant improvement over light profile fitting algorithms which underestimate uncertainties by as much as $\sim60\%$. For an overlapping sub-sample, we also compare the derived morphological parameters with values in two external catalogs and find that the results agree within the limits of uncertainties predicted by GaMPEN. This step also permits us to define an empirical relationship between the S\'ersic index and $L_B/L_T$ that can be used to convert between these two parameters. The catalog presented here represents a significant improvement in size ($\sim10 \times $), depth ($\sim4$ magnitudes), and uncertainty quantification over previous state-of-the-art bulge+disk decomposition catalogs. With this work, we also release GaMPEN's source code and trained models, which can be adapted to other datasets., Comment: 39 pages, 31 figures. Published in The Astrophysical Journal. We welcome comments and constructive criticism. Public Data Release at http://gampen.ghosharitra.com/
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- 2022
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25. BASS XXXIX: Swift-BAT AGN with changing-look optical spectra
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Temple, Matthew J., Ricci, Claudio, Koss, Michael J., Trakhtenbrot, Benny, Bauer, Franz E., Mushotzky, Richard, Rojas, Alejandra F., Caglar, Turgay, Harrison, Fiona, Oh, Kyuseok, Gonzalez, Estefania Padilla, Powell, Meredith C., Ricci, Federica, Riffel, Rogério, Stern, Daniel, and Urry, C. Megan
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Changing-look (CL) AGN are unique probes of accretion onto supermassive black holes (SMBHs), especially when simultaneous observations in complementary wavebands allow investigations into the properties of their accretion flows. We present the results of a search for CL behaviour in 412 Swift-BAT detected AGN with multiple epochs of optical spectroscopy from the BAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey (BASS). 125 of these AGN also have 14-195 keV ultra-hard X-ray light-curves from Swift-BAT which are contemporaneous with the epochs of optical spectroscopy. Eight CL events are presented for the first time, where the appearance or disappearance of broad Balmer line emission leads to a change in the observed Seyfert type classification. Combining with known events from the literature, 21 AGN from BASS are now known to display CL behaviour. Nine CL events have 14-195 keV data available, and five of these CL events can be associated with significant changes in their 14-195 keV flux from BAT. The ultra-hard X-ray flux is less affected by obscuration and so these changes in the 14-195 keV band suggest that the majority of our CL events are not due to changes in line-of-sight obscuration. We derive a CL rate of 0.7-6.2 per cent on 10-25 year time-scales, and show that many transitions happen within at most a few years. Our results motivate further multi-wavelength observations with higher cadence to better understand the variability physics of accretion onto SMBHs., Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, plus appendix. v2: updated references. Published in MNRAS
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- 2022
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26. Probing the Structure and Evolution of BASS AGN through Eddington Ratios
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Ananna, Tonima Tasnim, Urry, C. Megan, Ricci, Claudio, Natarajan, Priyamvada, Hickox, Ryan C., Trakhtenbrot, Benny, Treister, Ezequiel, Weigel, Anna K., Ueda, Yoshihiro, Koss, Michael J., Bauer, F. E., Temple, Matthew J., Balokovic, Mislav, Mushotzky, Richard, Auge, Connor, Sanders, David B., Kakkad, Darshan, Sartori, Lia F., Marchesi, Stefano, Harrison, Fiona, Stern, Daniel, Oh, Kyuseok, Caglar, Turgay, Powell, Meredith C., Podjed, Stephanie A., and Mejia-Restrepo, Julian E.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We constrain the intrinsic Eddington ratio (\lamEdd ) distribution function for local AGN in bins of low and high obscuration (log NH <= 22 and 22 < log NH < 25), using the Swift-BAT 70-month/BASS DR2 survey. We interpret the fraction of obscured AGN in terms of circum-nuclear geometry and temporal evolution. Specifically, at low Eddington ratios (log lamEdd < -2), obscured AGN outnumber unobscured ones by a factor of ~4, reflecting the covering factor of the circum-nuclear material (0.8, or a torus opening angle of ~ 34 degrees). At high Eddington ratios (\log lamEdd > -1), the trend is reversed, with < 30% of AGN having log NH > 22, which we suggest is mainly due to the small fraction of time spent in a highly obscured state. Considering the Eddington ratio distribution function of narrow-line and broad-line AGN from our prior work, we see a qualitatively similar picture. To disentangle temporal and geometric effects at high lamEdd, we explore plausible clearing scenarios such that the time-weighted covering factors agree with the observed population ratio. We find that the low fraction of obscured AGN at high lamEdd is primarily due to the fact that the covering factor drops very rapidly, with more than half the time is spent with < 10% covering factor. We also find that nearly all obscured AGN at high-lamEdd exhibit some broad-lines. We suggest that this is because the height of the depleted torus falls below the height of the broad-line region, making the latter visible from all lines of sight., Comment: Accepted by ApJL
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- 2022
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27. Intrathecal chemotherapy for leptomeningeal disease in high-grade gliomas: a systematic review
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Singh, Eric, Gurses, Muhammet Enes, Costello, Meredith C., Berke, Chandler, Lu, Victor M., Daggubati, Lekhaj, Komotar, Ricardo J., Ivan, Michael E., and Shah, Ashish H.
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- 2024
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28. Young Mothers and Dating Violence: An Examination of Depressive Symptomatology and Interpersonal Competency
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Wallace, Lauren C., Jones, Meredith C., Angelone, D. J., and Fife, Dustin
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- 2024
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29. GALFIT-ing AGN Host Galaxies in COSMOS: HST vs. Subaru
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Dewsnap, Callum, Barmby, Pauline, Gallagher, Sarah C., Urry, C. Megan, Ghosh, Aritra, and Powell, Meredith C.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The COSMOS field has been extensively observed by most major telescopes, including Chandra, HST, and Subaru. HST imaging boasts very high spatial resolution and is used extensively in morphological studies of distant galaxies. Subaru provides lower spatial resolution imaging than HST but a substantially wider field of view with greater sensitivity. Both telescopes provide near-infrared imaging of COSMOS. Successful morphological fitting of Subaru data would allow us to measure morphologies of over $10^4$ known active galactic nucleus (AGN) hosts, accessible through Subaru wide-field surveys, currently not covered by HST. For 4016 AGN between $0.03
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- 2022
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30. BASS XXXII: Studying the Nuclear Mm-wave Continuum Emission of AGNs with ALMA at Scales $\lesssim$ 100-200 pc
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Kawamuro, Taiki, Ricci, Claudio, Imanishi, Masatoshi, Mushotzky, Richard F., Izumi, Takuma, Ricci, Federica, Bauer, Franz E., Koss, Michael J., Trakhtenbrot, Benny, Ichikawa, Kohei, Rojas, Alejandra F., Smith, Krista Lynne, Shimizu, Taro, Oh, Kyuseok, Brok, Jakob S. den, Baba, Shunsuke, Baloković, Mislav, Chang, Chin-Shin, Kakkad, Darshan, Pfeifle, Ryan W., Privon, George C., Temple, Matthew J., Ueda, Yoshihiro, Harrison, Fiona, Powell, Meredith C., Stern, Daniel, Urry, Meg, and Sanders, David B.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
To understand the origin of nuclear ($\lesssim$ 100 pc) millimeter-wave (mm-wave) continuum emission in active galactic nuclei (AGNs), we systematically analyzed sub-arcsec resolution Band-6 (211-275 GHz) ALMA data of 98 nearby AGNs ($z <$ 0.05) from the 70-month Swift/BAT catalog. The sample, almost unbiased for obscured systems, provides the largest number of AGNs to date with high mm-wave spatial resolution sampling ($\sim$ 1-200 pc), and spans broad ranges of 14-150 keV luminosity {$40 < \log[L_{\rm 14-150}/({\rm erg\,s^{-1}})] < 45$}, black hole mass [$5 < \log(M_{\rm BH}/M_\odot) < 10$], and Eddington ratio ($-4 < \log \lambda_{\rm Edd} < 2$). We find a significant correlation between 1.3 mm (230 GHz) and 14-150 keV luminosities. Its scatter is $\approx$ 0.36 dex, and the mm-wave emission may serve as a good proxy of the AGN luminosity, free of dust extinction up to $N_{\rm H} \sim 10^{26}$ cm$^{-2}$. While the mm-wave emission could be self-absorbed synchrotron radiation around the X-ray corona according to past works, we also discuss different possible origins of the mm-wave emission; AGN-related dust emission, outflow-driven shocks, and a small-scale ($<$ 200 pc) jet. The dust emission is unlikely to be dominant, as the mm-wave slope is generally flatter than expected. Also, due to no increase in the mm-wave luminosity with the Eddington ratio, a radiation-driven outflow model is possibly not the common mechanism. Furthermore, we find independence of the mm-wave luminosity on indicators of the inclination angle from the polar axis of the nuclear structure, which is inconsistent with a jet model whose luminosity depends only on the angle., Comment: 44 pages, 35 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in ApJ; modified format, added supplementary figure (Fig. 32)
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- 2022
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31. BASS XXVI: DR2 Host Galaxy Stellar Velocity Dispersions
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Koss, Michael J., Trakhtenbrot, Benny, Ricci, Claudio, Oh, Kyuseok, Bauer, Franz E., Stern, Daniel, Caglar, Turgay, Brok, Jakob S. den, Mushotzky, Richard, Ricci, Federica, Mejia-Restrepo, Julian E., Lamperti, Isabella, Treister, Ezequiel, Bar, Rudolf E., Harrison, Fiona, Powell, Meredith C., Privon, George C., Riffel, Rogerio, Rojas, Alejandra F., Schawinski, Kevin, and Urry, C. Megan
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present new central stellar velocity dispersions for 484 Sy 1.9 and Sy 2 from the second data release of the Swift/BAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey (BASS DR2). This constitutes the largest study of velocity dispersion measurements in X-ray selected, obscured AGN with 956 independent measurements of the Ca H+K and Mg b region (3880-5550A) and the Ca triplet region (8350-8730A) from 642 spectra mainly from VLT/Xshooter or Palomar/DoubleSpec. Our sample spans velocity dispersions of 40-360 km/s, corresponding to 4-5 orders of magnitude in black holes mass (MBH=10^5.5-9.6 Msun), bolometric luminosity (LBol~10^{42-46 ergs/s), and Eddington ratio (L/Ledd~10^{-5}-2). For 281 AGN, our data provide the first published central velocity dispersions, including 6 AGN with low mass black holes (MBH=10^5.5-6.5 Msun), discovered thanks to our high spectral resolution observations (sigma~25 km/s). The survey represents a significant advance with a nearly complete census of hard-X-ray selected obscured AGN with measurements for 99% of nearby AGN (z<0.1) outside the Galactic plane. The BASS AGN have higher velocity dispersions than the more numerous optically selected narrow line AGN (i.e., ~150 vs. ~100 km/s), but are not biased towards the highest velocity dispersions of massive ellipticals (i.e., >250 km/s). Despite sufficient spectral resolution to resolve the velocity dispersions associated with the bulges of small black holes (~10^4-5 Msun), we do not find a significant population of super-Eddington AGN. Using estimates of the black hole sphere of influence, direct stellar and gas black hole mass measurements could be obtained with existing facilities for more than ~100 BASS AGN., Comment: 32 pages, 16 figures, 8 tables, published in ApJS as part of BASS DR2 special issue
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- 2022
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32. BASS XXII: The BASS DR2 AGN Catalog and Data
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Koss, Michael J., Ricci, Claudio, Trakhtenbrot, Benny, Oh, Kyuseok, Brok, Jakob S. den, Mejia-Restrepo, Julian E., Stern, Daniel, Privon, George C., Treister, Ezequiel, Powell, Meredith C., Mushotzky, Richard, Bauer, Franz E., Ananna, Tonima T., Balokovic, Mislav, Bar, Rudolf E., Becker, George, Bessiere, Patricia, Burtscher, Leonard, Caglar, Turgay, Congiu, Enrico, Evans, Phil, Harrison, Fiona, Heida, Marianne, Ichikawa, Kohei, Kamraj, Nikita, Lamperti, Isabella, Pacucci, Fabio, Ricci, Federica, Riffel, Rogerio, Rojas, Alejandra F., Schawinski, Kevin, Temple, Matthew, Urry, C. Megan, Veilleux, Sylvain, and Williams, Jonathan
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present the AGN catalog and optical spectroscopy for the second data release of the Swift BAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey (BASS DR2). With this DR2 release we provide 1425 optical spectra, of which 1181 are released for the first time, for the 858 hard X-ray selected AGN in the Swift BAT 70-month sample. The majority of the spectra (813/1425, 57%) are newly obtained from VLT/Xshooter or Palomar/Doublespec. Many of the spectra have both higher resolution (R>2500, N~450) and/or very wide wavelength coverage (3200-10000 A, N~600) that are important for a variety of AGN and host galaxy studies. We include newly revised AGN counterparts for the full sample and review important issues for population studies, with 44 AGN redshifts determined for the first time and 780 black hole mass and accretion rate estimates. This release is spectroscopically complete for all AGN (100%, 858/858) with 99.8% having redshift measurements (857/858) and 96% completion in black hole mass estimates of unbeamed AGN (outside the Galactic plane). This AGN sample represents a unique census of the brightest hard X-ray selected AGN in the sky, spanning many orders of magnitude in Eddington ratio (Ledd=10^-5-100), black hole mass (MBH=10^5-10^10 Msun), and AGN bolometric luminosity (Lbol=10^40-10^47 ergs/s)., Comment: 34 pages, 11 figures, 15 tables, published in ApJS as part of BASS DR2 special issue
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- 2022
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33. BAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey XXI: The Data Release 2 Overview
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Koss, Michael J., Trakhtenbrot, Benny, Ricci, Claudio, Bauer, Franz E., Treister, Ezequiel, Mushotzky, Richard, Urry, C. Megan, Ananna, Tonima T., Balokovic, Mislav, Brok, Jakob S. den, Cenko, S. Bradley, Harrison, Fiona, Ichikawa, Kohei, Lamperti, Isabella, Lein, Amy, Mejia-Restrepo, Julian E., Oh, Kyuseok, Pacucci, Fabio, Pfeifle, Ryan W., Powell, Meredith C., Privon, George C., Ricci, Federica, Salvato, Mara, Schawinski, Kevin, Shimizu, Taro, Smith, Krista L., and Stern, Daniel
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The BAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey (BASS) is designed to provide a highly complete census of the key physical parameters of supermassive black holes (SMBHs) that power local active galactic nuclei (AGN) (z<0.3), including their bolometric luminosity, black hole mass, accretion rates, and line-of-sight gas obscuration, and the distinctive properties of their host galaxies (e.g., star formation rates, masses, and gas fractions). We present an overview of the BASS data release 2 (DR2), an unprecedented spectroscopic survey in spectral range, resolution, and sensitivity, including 1449 optical (3200-10000 A) and 233 NIR (1-2.5 um) spectra for the brightest 858 ultra-hard X-ray (14-195 keV) selected AGN across the entire sky and essentially all levels of obscuration. This release provides a highly complete set of key measurements (emission line measurements and central velocity dispersions), with 99.9% measured redshifts and 98% black hole masses estimated (for unbeamed AGN outside the Galactic plane). The BASS DR2 AGN sample represents a unique census of nearby powerful AGN, spanning over 5 orders of magnitude in AGN bolometric luminosity, black hole mass, Eddington ratio, and obscuration. The public BASS DR2 sample and measurements can thus be used to answer fundamental questions about SMBH growth and its links to host galaxy evolution and feedback in the local universe, as well as open questions concerning SMBH physics. Here we provide a brief overview of the survey strategy, the key BASS DR2 measurements, data sets and catalogs, and scientific highlights from a series of DR2-based works., Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures, 5 tables, published in ApJS as part of BASS DR2 special issue
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- 2022
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34. BASS XXVIII: Near-infrared Data Release 2, High-Ionization and Broad Lines in Active Galactic Nuclei
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Brok, Jakob den, Koss, Michael J., Trakhtenbrot, Benny, Stern, Daniel, Cantalupo, Sebastiano, Lamperti, Isabella, Ricci, Federica, Ricci, Claudio, Oh, Kyuseok, Bauer, Franz E., Riffel, Rogerio, Rodriguez-Ardila, Alberto, Baer, Rudolf, Harrison, Fiona, Ichikawa, Kohei, Mejia-Restrepo, Julian E., Mushotzky, Richard, Powell, Meredith C., Boissay-Malaquin, Rozenn, Stalevski, Marko, Treister, Ezequiel, Urry, C. Megan, and Veilleux, Sylvain
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the BAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey (BASS) Near-infrared Data Release 2 (DR2), a study of 168 nearby ($\bar z$ = 0.04, $z$ < 0.6) active galactic nuclei (AGN) from the all-sky Swift Burst Array Telescope X-ray survey observed with Very Large Telescope (VLT)/X-shooter in the near-infrared (NIR; 0.8 - 2.4 $\mu$m). We find that 49/109 (45%) Seyfert 2 and 35/58 (60%) Seyfert 1 galaxies observed with VLT/X-shooter show at least one NIR high-ionization coronal line (CL, ionization potential $\chi$ > 100 eV). Comparing the emission of the [Si vi] $\lambda$1.9640 CL with the X-ray emission for the DR2 AGN, we find a significantly tighter correlation, with a lower scatter (0.37 dex) than for the optical [O iii] $\lambda$5007 line (0.71 dex). We do not find any correlation between CL emission and the X-ray photon index $\Gamma$. We find a clear trend of line blueshifts with increasing ionization potential in several CLs, such as [Si vi] $\lambda$1.9640, [Si x] $\lambda$1.4300, [S viii] $\lambda$0.9915, and [S ix] $\lambda$1.2520, indicating the radial structure of the CL region. Finally, we find a strong underestimation bias in black hole mass measurements of Sy 1.9 using broad H$\alpha$ due to the presence of significant dust obscuration. In contrast, the broad Pa$\alpha$ and Pa$\beta$ emission lines are in agreement with the $M$-$\sigma$ relation. Based on the combined DR1 and DR2 X-shooter sample, the NIR BASS sample now comprises 266 AGN with rest-frame NIR spectroscopic observations, the largest set assembled to date., Comment: 36 pages, 24 figures, 10 tables, published in ApJS as part of BASS DR2 special issue
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- 2022
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35. Cascading effects of mammal host community composition on tick vector occurrence at the urban human–wildlife interface
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Jonathan Bastard, Nichar Gregory, Pilar Fernandez, Michaela Mincone, Olivia Card, Meredith C. VanAcker, Sara Kross, and Maria A. Diuk‐Wasser
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community composition ,habitat fragmentation ,hosts ,Lyme disease ,tick‐borne disease ,ticks ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Abstract Habitat fragmentation and host community composition are implicated as key drivers of changing tick populations and tick‐borne pathogen dynamics, altering infection risk through coupled socioecological pathways that mediate interactions between tick vectors, vertebrate hosts, and humans. Patterns of host diversity may be particularly idiosyncratic across urbanized landscapes, due to trade‐offs between extreme fragmentation that reduces habitat suitability and access, and human activities that artificially increase resource availability for wildlife. We used camera and hair trap surveys and tick sampling to identify links between landscape composition and configuration, the mammalian host community, and the presence of three tick vector species at a human–wildlife interface in New York City, an emerging area within an endemic region for several tick‐borne diseases. We found that human infrastructures, such as the presence of fences in yards, could affect mammal host community composition by changing the “hardness” of edges between urban greenspaces and residential areas. We identified yard‐ and broader landscape‐level features associated with the presence of urban mammal species, and identified cascading effects of host community composition on tick distribution in yards, suggesting management implications for the mitigation of human exposure to tick‐borne pathogens. In particular, we identified a possible role of ubiquitous mesomammals, such as raccoons (Procyon lotor), in transporting Amblyomma americanum ticks between parks and neighboring residential yards, and confirmed the key role of white‐tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) for introducing Ixodes scapularis ticks into yards. Our results challenge assumptions that biodiversity loss in human‐modified areas always increases the risk for tick‐borne diseases. Instead, we found many residential sites had higher mammal species richness and higher detection of low reservoir competent (“dilution”) hosts for Borrelia burgdorferi, such as opossums (Didelphis virginiana), than paired forested greenspaces. Our study highlights the importance of disentangling the mechanisms mediating tick‐borne disease hazard as a critical first step toward reducing urban tick‐borne disease risk.
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- 2024
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36. Evening regular activity breaks extend subsequent free-living sleep time in healthy adults: a randomised crossover trial
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Rachael W Taylor, Jillian J Haszard, Jennifer T Gale, Dorothy L Wei, and Meredith C Peddie
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Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Objective To determine if performing regular 3-min bouts of resistance exercise spread over 4 hours in an evening will impact subsequent sleep quantity and quality, sedentary time and physical activity compared with prolonged uninterrupted sitting.Methods In this randomised crossover trial, participants each completed two 4-hour interventions commencing at approximately 17:00 hours: (1) prolonged sitting and (2) sitting interrupted with 3 min of bodyweight resistance exercise activity breaks every 30 min. On completion, participants returned to a free-living setting. This paper reports secondary outcomes relating to sleep quality and quantity, physical activity and sedentary time which were assessed using wrist-worn ActiGraph GT3+ accelerometers paired with a sleep and wear time diary.Results A total of 28 participants (women, n=20), age 25.6±5.6 years, body mass index 29.5±6.7 kg/m2 (mean±SD) provided data for this analysis. Compared with prolonged sitting, regular activity breaks increased mean sleep period time and time spent asleep by 29.3 min (95% CI: 1.3 to 57.2, p=0.040) and 27.7 min (95% CI: 2.3 to 52.4, p=0.033), respectively, on the night of the intervention. There was no significant effect on mean sleep efficiency (mean: 0.2%, 95% CI: −2.0 to 2.4, p=0.857), wake after sleep onset (1.0 min, 95% CI: −9.6 to 11.7, p=0.849) and number of awakenings (0.8, 95% CI: −1.8 to 3.3, p=0.550). Subsequent 24-hour and 48-hour physical activity patterns were not significantly different.Conclusions Performing bodyweight resistance exercise activity breaks in the evening has the potential to improve sleep period and total sleep time and does not disrupt other aspects of sleep quality or subsequent 24-hour physical activity. Future research should explore the longer-term impact of evening activity breaks on sleep.Trial registration number Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ACTRN12621000250831).
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- 2024
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37. BASS XXV: DR2 Broad-line Based Black Hole Mass Estimates and Biases from Obscuration
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Mejıa-Restrepo, Julian E., Trakhtenbrot, Benny, Koss, Michael J., Oh, Kyuseok, Brok, Jakob den, Stern, Daniel, Powell, Meredith C., Ricci, Federica, Caglar, Turgay, Ricci, Claudio, Bauer, Franz E., Treister, Ezequiel, Harrison, Fiona A., Urry, C. M., Ananna, Tonima Tasnim, Asmus, Daniel, Assef, Roberto J., Bar, Rudolf E., Bessiere, Patricia S., Burtscher, Leonard, Ichikawa, Kohei, Kakkad, Darshan, Kamraj, Nikita, Mushotzky, Richard, Privon, George C., Rojas, Alejandra F., Sani, Eleonora, Schawinski, Kevin, and Veilleux, Sylvain
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present measurements of broad emission lines and virial estimates of supermassive black hole masses ($M_{BH}$) for a large sample of ultra-hard X-ray selected active galactic nuclei (AGNs) as part of the second data release of the BAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey (BASS/DR2). Our catalog includes $M_{BH}$ estimates for a total 689 AGNs, determined from the H$\alpha$, H$\beta$, $MgII\lambda2798$, and/or $CIV\lambda1549$ broad emission lines. The core sample includes a total of 512 AGNs drawn from the 70-month Swift/BAT all-sky catalog. We also provide measurements for 177 additional AGNs that are drawn from deeper Swift/BAT survey data. We study the links between $M_{BH}$ estimates and line-of-sight obscuration measured from X-ray spectral analysis. We find that broad H$\alpha$ emission lines in obscured AGNs ($\log (N_{\rm H}/{\rm cm}^{-2})> 22.0$) are on average a factor of $8.0_{-2.4}^{+4.1}$ weaker, relative to ultra-hard X-ray emission, and about $35_{-12}^{~+7}$\% narrower than in unobscured sources (i.e., $\log (N_{\rm H}/{\rm cm}^{-2}) < 21.5$). This indicates that the innermost part of the broad-line region is preferentially absorbed. Consequently, current single-epoch $M_{BH}$ prescriptions result in severely underestimated ($>$1 dex) masses for Type 1.9 sources (AGNs with broad H$\alpha$ but no broad H$\beta$) and/or sources with $\log (N_{\rm H}/{\rm cm}^{-2}) > 22.0$. We provide simple multiplicative corrections for the observed luminosity and width of the broad H$\alpha$ component ($L[{\rm b}{\rm H}\alpha]$ and FWHM[bH$\alpha$]) in such sources to account for this effect, and to (partially) remedy $M_{BH}$ estimates for Type 1.9 objects. As key ingredient of BASS/DR2, our work provides the community with the data needed to further study powerful AGNs in the low-redshift Universe., Comment: published in ApJS
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- 2022
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38. Association Between HIV and Prevalence and Manifestations of Asthma: Analysis of the Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study and Women's Interagency HIV Study
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Drummond, M Bradley, Edmonds, Andrew, Ramirez, Catalina, Stosor, Valentina, Barjaktarevic, Igor Z, Morris, Alison, McCormack, Meredith C, Bhatt, Surya P, Alcaide, Maria L, Cribbs, Sushma K, D'Souza, Gypsyamber, Bhandari, Neha, Kunisaki, Ken M, Huang, Laurence, Kassaye, Seble G, Foronjy, Robert, Sharma, Anjali, Westreich, Daniel J, and Adimora, Adaora A
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Public Health ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Lung ,HIV/AIDS ,Asthma ,Infectious Diseases ,Clinical Research ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Management of diseases and conditions ,Respiratory ,Infection ,Female ,Humans ,Cohort Studies ,Prevalence ,Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome ,Retrospective Studies ,HIV Infections ,asthma ,HIV ,lung diseases ,Public Health and Health Services ,Virology ,Clinical sciences ,Epidemiology ,Public health - Abstract
BackgroundThe association between HIV and asthma prevalence and manifestations remains unclear, with few studies including women.SettingA retrospective observational cohort study from the Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study and Women's Interagency HIV Study.MethodsAsthma was defined in 2 ways: (1) self-report and (2) robust criteria requiring all the following: lack of fixed airflow obstruction, presence of wheeze on the St. George's Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ), and report of asthma therapies. Estimates of asthma prevalence and asthma-related manifestations were compared by HIV serostatus.ResultsA total of 1815 men and 2122 women were included. Asthma prevalence did not differ between people with HIV (PWH) and people without HIV regardless of definition: self-report (men, 12.0% vs. 11.2%; women, 24.3% vs. 27.5%) and robust criteria (men, 5.0% vs. 3.4%; women, 12.8% vs. 13.2%). Among men with asthma, worse respiratory symptom burden was reported among those with HIV, regardless of asthma definition. Among women with self-reported asthma, those with HIV had less respiratory symptom burden. Regardless of serostatus, women with robust-defined asthma had similar respiratory symptoms across SGRQ domains and similar frequencies of phlegm, shortness of breath, and wheezing.ConclusionsAmong PWH and people without HIV, asthma prevalence was 2-fold to 3-fold higher using self-reported definition rather than robust definition. In men and women, HIV was not associated with increased asthma prevalence. In men, HIV was associated with more respiratory symptoms when asthma was self-reported; the relationship was attenuated with the robust criteria. Further studies are needed to explore asthma phenotypes among PWH.
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- 2022
39. Factors influencing terrestriality in primates of the Americas and Madagascar
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Eppley, Timothy M, Hoeks, Selwyn, Chapman, Colin A, Ganzhorn, Jörg U, Hall, Katie, Owen, Megan A, Adams, Dara B, Allgas, Néstor, Amato, Katherine R, Andriamahaihavana, McAntonin, Aristizabal, John F, Baden, Andrea L, Balestri, Michela, Barnett, Adrian A, Bicca-Marques, Júlio César, Bowler, Mark, Boyle, Sarah A, Brown, Meredith, Caillaud, Damien, Calegaro-Marques, Cláudia, Campbell, Christina J, Campera, Marco, Campos, Fernando A, Cardoso, Tatiane S, Carretero-Pinzón, Xyomara, Champion, Jane, Chaves, Óscar M, Chen-Kraus, Chloe, Colquhoun, Ian C, Dean, Brittany, Dubrueil, Colin, Ellis, Kelsey M, Erhart, Elizabeth M, Evans, Kayley JE, Fedigan, Linda M, Felton, Annika M, Ferreira, Renata G, Fichtel, Claudia, Fonseca, Manuel L, Fontes, Isadora P, Fortes, Vanessa B, Fumian, Ivanyr, Gibson, Dean, Guzzo, Guilherme B, Hartwell, Kayla S, Heymann, Eckhard W, Hilário, Renato R, Holmes, Sheila M, Irwin, Mitchell T, Johnson, Steig E, Kappeler, Peter M, Kelley, Elizabeth A, King, Tony, Knogge, Christoph, Koch, Flávia, Kowalewski, Martin M, Lange, Liselot R, Lauterbur, M Elise, Louis, Edward E, Lutz, Meredith C, Martínez, Jesús, Melin, Amanda D, de Melo, Fabiano R, Mihaminekena, Tsimisento H, Mogilewsky, Monica S, Moreira, Leandro S, Moura, Letícia A, Muhle, Carina B, Nagy-Reis, Mariana B, Norconk, Marilyn A, Notman, Hugh, O’Mara, M Teague, Ostner, Julia, Patel, Erik R, Pavelka, Mary SM, Pinacho-Guendulain, Braulio, Porter, Leila M, Pozo-Montuy, Gilberto, Raboy, Becky E, Rahalinarivo, Vololonirina, Raharinoro, Njaratiana A, Rakotomalala, Zafimahery, Ramos-Fernández, Gabriel, Rasamisoa, Delaïd C, Ratsimbazafy, Jonah, Ravaloharimanitra, Maholy, Razafindramanana, Josia, Razanaparany, Tojotanjona P, Righini, Nicoletta, Robson, Nicola M, da Rosa Gonçalves, Jonas, Sanamo, Justin, Santacruz, Nicole, Sato, Hiroki, Sauther, Michelle L, Scarry, Clara J, Serio-Silva, Juan Carlos, Shanee, Sam, de Souza Lins, Poliana GA, and Smith, Andrew C
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Life Below Water ,Americas ,Animals ,Biological Evolution ,Cercopithecidae ,Haplorhini ,Humans ,Madagascar ,Mammals ,Primates ,Trees ,primate communities ,primate evolution ,evolutionary transitions ,niche shift ,climate change - Abstract
Among mammals, the order Primates is exceptional in having a high taxonomic richness in which the taxa are arboreal, semiterrestrial, or terrestrial. Although habitual terrestriality is pervasive among the apes and African and Asian monkeys (catarrhines), it is largely absent among monkeys of the Americas (platyrrhines), as well as galagos, lemurs, and lorises (strepsirrhines), which are mostly arboreal. Numerous ecological drivers and species-specific factors are suggested to set the conditions for an evolutionary shift from arboreality to terrestriality, and current environmental conditions may provide analogous scenarios to those transitional periods. Therefore, we investigated predominantly arboreal, diurnal primate genera from the Americas and Madagascar that lack fully terrestrial taxa, to determine whether ecological drivers (habitat canopy cover, predation risk, maximum temperature, precipitation, primate species richness, human population density, and distance to roads) or species-specific traits (body mass, group size, and degree of frugivory) associate with increased terrestriality. We collated 150,961 observation hours across 2,227 months from 47 species at 20 sites in Madagascar and 48 sites in the Americas. Multiple factors were associated with ground use in these otherwise arboreal species, including increased temperature, a decrease in canopy cover, a dietary shift away from frugivory, and larger group size. These factors mostly explain intraspecific differences in terrestriality. As humanity modifies habitats and causes climate change, our results suggest that species already inhabiting hot, sparsely canopied sites, and exhibiting more generalized diets, are more likely to shift toward greater ground use.
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- 2022
40. Effects of Atmospheric, Topographic, and BRDF Correction on Imaging Spectroscopy-Derived Data Products
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Marius Vogtli, Daniel Schlapfer, Meredith C. Schuman, Michael E. Schaepman, Mathias Kneubuhler, and Alexander Damm
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Atmospheric correction ,bidirectional reflectance distribution function (BRDF) correction ,imaging spectroscopy ,reflectance variability ,spectral index ,surface anisotropy ,Ocean engineering ,TC1501-1800 ,Geophysics. Cosmic physics ,QC801-809 - Abstract
Surface reflectance is an important data product in imaging spectroscopy for obtaining surface information. The complex retrieval of surface reflectance, however, critically relies on accurate knowledge of atmospheric absorption and scattering, and the compensation of these effects. Furthermore, illumination and observation geometry in combination with surface reflectance anisotropy determine dynamics in retrieved surface reflectance not related to surface absorption properties. To the best of authors' knowledge, no comprehensive assessment of the impact of atmospheric, topographic, and anisotropy effects on derived surface information is available so far. This study systematically evaluates the impact of these effects on reflectance, albedo, and vegetation products. Using three well-established processing schemes (ATCOR F., ATCOR R., and BREFCOR), high-resolution APEX imaging spectroscopy data, covering a large gradient of illumination and observation angles, are brought to several processing states, varyingly affected by mentioned effects. Pixel-wise differences of surface reflectance, albedo, and spectral indices of neighboring flight lines are quantitatively analyzed in their respective overlapping area. We found that compensation of atmospheric effects reveals actual anisotropy-related dynamics in surface reflectance and derived albedo, related to an increase in pixel-wise relative reflectance and albedo differences of more than 40%. Subsequent anisotropy compensation allows us to successfully reduce apparent relative reflectance and albedo differences by up to 20%. In contrast, spectral indices are less affected by atmospheric and anisotropy effects, showing relative differences of 3% to 10% in overlapping regions of flight lines. We recommend to base decisions on the use of appropriate processing schemes on individual use cases considering envisioned data products.
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- 2024
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41. BASS XXIV: The BASS DR2 Spectroscopic Line Measurements and AGN Demographics
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Oh, Kyuseok, Koss, Michael J., Ueda, Yoshihiro, Stern, Daniel, Ricci, Claudio, Trakhtenbrot, Benny, Powell, Meredith C., Brok, Jakob S. Den, Lamperti, Isabella, Mushotzky, Richard, Ricci, Federica, Bär, Rudolf E., Rojas, Alejandra F., Ichikawa, Kohei, Riffel, Rogerio, Treister, Ezequiel, Harrison, Fiona, Urry, C. Megan, Bauer, Franz E., and Schawinski, Kevin
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the second catalog and data release of optical spectral line measurements and AGN demographics of the BAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey, which focuses on the of Swift-BAT hard X-ray detected AGNs. We use spectra from dedicated campaigns and publicly available archives to investigate spectral properties of most of the AGNs listed in the 70-month Swift-BAT all-sky catalog; specifically, 743 of the 746 unbeamed and unlensed AGNs (99.6%). We find a good correspondence between the optical emission line widths and the hydrogen column density distributions using the X-ray spectra, with a clear dichotomy of AGN types for NH = 10^22 cm-2. Based on optical emission-line diagnostics, we show that 48%-75% of BAT AGNs are classified as Seyfert, depending on the choice of emission lines used in the diagnostics. The fraction of objects with upper limits on line emission varies from 6% to 20%. Roughly 4% of the BAT AGNs have lines too weak to be placed on the most commonly used diagnostic diagram, [O III]{\lambda}5007/H\b{eta} versus [N II]{\lambda}6584/H{\alpha}, despite the high signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) of their spectra. This value increases to 35% in the [O III]{\lambda}5007/[O II]{\lambda}3727 diagram, owing to difficulties in line detection. Compared to optically-selected narrow-line AGNs in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, the BAT narrow-line AGNs have a higher rate of reddening/extinction, with H{\alpha}/H\b{eta} > 5 (~ 36%), indicating that hard X-ray selection more effectively detects obscured AGNs from the underlying AGN population. Finally, we present a subpopulation of AGNs that feature complex broad-lines (34%, 250/743) or double-peaked narrow emission lines (2%, 17/743)., Comment: 30 pages, 17 figures, 11 tables, accepted for publication in ApJS; part of BASS DR2 special issue
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- 2022
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42. X-ray Coronal Properties of Swift/BAT-Selected Seyfert 1 Active Galactic Nuclei
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Kamraj, Nikita, Brightman, Murray, Harrison, Fiona A., Stern, Daniel, García, Javier A., Baloković, Mislav, Ricci, Claudio, Koss, Michael J., Mejía-Restrepo, Julian E., Oh, Kyuseok, Powell, Meredith C., and Urry, C. Megan
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The corona is an integral component of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) which produces the bulk of the X-ray emission above 1--2 keV. However, many of its physical properties and the mechanisms powering this emission remain a mystery. In particular, the temperature of the coronal plasma has been difficult to constrain for large samples of AGN, as constraints require high quality broadband X-ray spectral coverage extending above 10 keV in order to measure the high energy cutoff, which provides constraints on the combination of coronal optical depth and temperature. We present constraints on the coronal temperature for a large sample of Seyfert 1 AGN selected from the Swift/BAT survey using high quality hard X-ray data from the NuSTAR observatory combined with simultaneous soft X-ray data from Swift/XRT or XMM-Newton. When applying a physically-motivated, non-relativistic disk reflection model to the X-ray spectra, we find a mean coronal temperature kT $=$ 84$\pm$9 keV. We find no significant correlation between the coronal cutoff energy and accretion parameters such as the Eddington ratio and black hole mass. We also do not find a statistically significant correlation between the X-ray photon index, $\Gamma$, and Eddington ratio. This calls into question the use of such relations to infer properties of supermassive black hole systems., Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures. Accepted November 2021 for publication in ApJ; passed to production January 2022
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- 2022
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43. BASS XXX: Distribution Functions of DR2 Eddington-ratios, Black Hole Masses, and X-ray Luminosities
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Ananna, Tonima Tasnim, Weigel, Anna K., Trakhtenbrot, Benny, Koss, Michael J., Urry, C. Megan, Ricci, Claudio, Hickox, Ryan C., Treister, Ezequiel, Bauer, Franz E., Ueda, Yoshihiro, Mushotzky, Richard, Ricci, Federica, Oh, Kyuseok, Mejia-Restrepo, Julian E., Brok, Jakob Den, Stern, Daniel, Powell, Meredith C., Caglar, Turgay, Ichikawa, Kohei, Wong, O. Ivy, Harrison, Fiona A., and Schawinski, Kevin
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We determine the low-redshift X-ray luminosity function (XLF), active black hole mass function (BHMF), and Eddington-ratio distribution function (ERDF) for both unobscured (Type 1) and obscured (Type 2) active galactic nuclei (AGN) using the unprecedented spectroscopic completeness of the BAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey (BASS) data release 2. In addition to a straightforward 1/Vmax approach, we also compute the intrinsic distributions, accounting for sample truncation by employing a forward modeling approach to recover the observed BHMF and ERDF. As previous BHMFs and ERDFs have been robustly determined only for samples of bright, broad-line (Type 1) AGNs and/or quasars, ours is the first directly observationally constrained BHMF and ERDF of Type 2 AGN. We find that after accounting for all observational biases, the intrinsic ERDF of Type 2 AGN is significantly skewed towards lower Eddington ratios than the intrinsic ERDF of Type 1 AGN. This result supports the radiation-regulated unification scenario, in which radiation pressure dictates the geometry of the dusty obscuring structure around an AGN. Calculating the ERDFs in two separate mass bins, we verify that the derived shape is consistent, validating the assumption that the ERDF (shape) is mass independent. We report the local AGN duty cycle as a function of mass and Eddington ratio, by comparing the BASS active BHMF with the local mass function for all SMBH. We also present the log N-log S of Swift-BAT 70-month sources., Comment: Accepted by APJS
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- 2022
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44. Effects of resistance exercise alone or with caffeine on hemodynamics, autonomic modulation and arterial stiffness in resistance-trained women
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Parks, Jason C., Joplin, Meredith C. Paskert, Marshall, Erica M., Kearney, Sarah G., Humm, Stacie M., Kern, Michelle A., Pinzone, Anthony G., Erb, Emily K., Smith, Therese M., and Kingsley, J. Derek
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- 2023
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45. Trends in Fentanyl Content on Reddit Substance Use Forums, 2013–2021
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Bunting, Amanda M., Krawczyk, Noa, Lippincott, Thomas, Gu, Yuanqi, Arya, Simran, Nagappala, Suhas, and Meacham, Meredith C.
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- 2023
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46. Use of the Spirometric “Fixed-Ratio” Underdiagnoses COPD in African-Americans in a Longitudinal Cohort Study
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Regan, Elizabeth A., Lowe, Melissa E., Make, Barry J., Curtis, Jeffrey L., Chen, Quan (Grace), Cho, Michael H., Crooks, James L., Lowe, Katherine E., Wilson, Carla, O’Brien, James K., Oates, Gabriela R., Baldomero, Arianne K., Kinney, Gregory L., Young, Kendra A., Diaz, Alejandro A., Bhatt, Surya P., McCormack, Meredith C., Hansel, Nadia N., Kim, Victor, Richmond, Nicole E., Westney, Gloria E., Foreman, Marilyn G., Conrad, Douglas J., DeMeo, Dawn L., Hoth, Karin F., Amaza, Hannatu, Balasubramanian, Aparna, Kallet, Julia, Watts, Shandi, Hanania, Nicola A., Hokanson, John, Beaty, Terri H., Crapo, James D., Silverman, Edwin K., Casaburi, Richard, and Wise, Robert
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- 2023
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47. Covering the bases: Population genomic structure of Lemna minor and the cryptic species L. japonica in Switzerland
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Marc W. Schmid, Aboubakr Moradi, Deborah M. Leigh, Meredith C. Schuman, and Sofia J. vanMoorsel
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clonal reproduction ,duckweed ,genetic diversity ,kmers ,whole‐genome sequencing ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Abstract Duckweeds, including the common duckweed Lemna minor, are increasingly used to test eco‐evolutionary theories. Yet, despite its popularity and near‐global distribution, the understanding of its population structure (and genetic variation therein) is still limited. It is essential that this is resolved, because of the impact genetic diversity has on experimental responses and scientific understanding. Through whole‐genome sequencing, we assessed the genetic diversity and population genomic structure of 23 natural Lemna spp. populations from their natural range in Switzerland. We used two distinct analytical approaches, a reference‐free kmer approach and the classical reference‐based one. Two genetic clusters were identified across the described species distribution of L. minor, surprisingly corresponding to species‐level divisions. The first cluster contained the targeted L. minor individuals and the second contained individuals from a cryptic species: Lemna japonica. Within the L. minor cluster, we identified a well‐defined population structure with little intra‐population genetic diversity (i.e., within ponds) but high inter‐population diversity (i.e., between ponds). In L. japonica, the population structure was significantly weaker and genetic variation between a subset of populations was as low as within populations. This study revealed that L. japonica is more widespread than previously thought. Our findings signify that thorough genotype‐to‐phenotype analyses are needed in duckweed experimental ecology and evolution.
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- 2024
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48. Screening of leaf extraction and storage conditions for eco‐metabolomics studies
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Jakob Lang, Sergio E. Ramos, Marharyta Smohunova, Laurent Bigler, and Meredith C. Schuman
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agroecology ,chemical ecology ,extract stability ,maize (zea mays) ,UHPLC–MS ,Botany ,QK1-989 - Abstract
Abstract Mass spectrometry‐based plant metabolomics is frequently used to identify novel natural products or study the effect of specific treatments on a plant's metabolism. Reliable sample handling is required to avoid artifacts, which is why most protocols mandate shock freezing of plant tissue in liquid nitrogen and an uninterrupted cooling chain. However, the logistical challenges of this approach make it infeasible for many ecological studies. Especially for research in the tropics, permanent cooling poses a challenge, which is why many of those studies use dried leaf tissue instead. We screened a total of 10 extraction and storage approaches for plant metabolites extracted from maize leaf tissue across two cropping seasons to develop a methodology for agroecological studies in logistically challenging tropical locations. All methods were evaluated based on changes in the metabolite profile across a 2‐month storage period at different temperatures with the goal of reproducing the metabolite profile of the living plant as closely as possible. We show that our newly developed on‐site liquid–liquid extraction protocol provides a good compromise between sample replicability, extraction efficiency, material logistics, and metabolite profile stability. We further discuss alternative methods which showed promising results and feasibility of on‐site sample handling for field studies.
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- 2024
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49. Optimal Lung Cancer Screening Criteria Among Persons Living With HIV
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Sellers, Subhashini A, Edmonds, Andrew, Ramirez, Catalina, Cribbs, Sushma K, Ofotokun, Igho, Huang, Laurence, Morris, Alison, Mccormack, Meredith C, Kunisaki, Ken M, D'souza, Gypsyamber, Rivera, M Patricia, Drummond, M Bradley, and Adimora, Adaora A
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Infectious Diseases ,Lung Cancer ,Lung ,Prevention ,Cancer ,Clinical Research ,Health Services ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Cohort Studies ,Early Detection of Cancer ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Lung Neoplasms ,Male ,Mass Screening ,Middle Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,lung cancer ,HIV ,AIDS ,lung cancer screening ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Virology - Abstract
BackgroundThe US Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) 2021 updated recommendations on lung cancer screening with chest computed tomography to apply to individuals 50-80 years of age (previously 55-80 years), with a ≥20 pack-year history (previously ≥30), whether currently smoking or quit ≤15 years ago. Despite being at higher risk for lung cancer, persons with HIV (PWH) were not well-represented in the National Lung Screening Trial, which informed the USPSTF 2013 recommendations. It is unknown or unclear how PWH are affected by the 2021 recommendations.SettingThis study was a retrospective analysis of PWH with and without lung cancer in the Women's Interagency HIV Study and the Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study.MethodsWe identified PWH, ages 40-80 years, who currently or previously smoked, with (cases) and without lung cancer (noncases). The sensitivity and specificity of the old, new, and alternative screening criteria were evaluated in each cohort.ResultsWe identified 52 women and 19 men with lung cancer and 1950 women and 1599 men without lung cancer. Only 11 women (22%) and 6 men (32%) with lung cancer met 2013 screening criteria; however, more women (22; 44%) and men (12; 63%) met 2021 criteria. Decreased age and tobacco exposure thresholds in women further increased sensitivity of the 2021 criteria.ConclusionsThe 2021 USPSTF lung cancer screening recommendations would have resulted in more PWH with lung cancer being eligible for screening at the time of their diagnosis. Further investigation is needed to determine optimal screening criteria for PWH, particularly in women.
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- 2022
50. Development, feasibility, and acceptability of SPoRT: a dating violence and sexual risk prevention intervention for college student-athletes
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Nicole Jaffe, Meredith C. Jones, and D. J. Angelone
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Intervention ,Development ,Dating violence ,Student-athletes ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Background Student-athletes are one subgroup of college students in the USA at risk for dating violence and sexual risk behaviors. Despite this, research on student-athletes’ dating behaviors is limited; existing research pertains primarily to the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I athletes and focuses on male student-athletes as perpetrators of dating and sexual violence. While some existing programs aim to reduce dating violence and promote healthy relationships, these programs are education based, and not tailored to the specific strengths and challenges of student-athletes. We therefore designed Supporting Prevention in Relationships for Teams (SPoRT), a novel, four-session prevention intervention for Division III student-athletes of all genders to reduce dating violence and sexual risk behavior by targeting knowledge and skills identified in pilot research, incorporating psychoeducation with techniques from cognitive-behavioral therapy, mindfulness, bystander intervention, and normative feedback. Methods This study represents stage 1 of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Stage Model for Behavioral Intervention Development, evaluating the feasibility and acceptability of SPoRT. We describe the development, content, and proposed delivery methods for SPoRT and evaluated the feasibility and acceptability of the program using a mixed-methods approach. Thirty college student-athletes (12 men, 18 women) completed questionnaires and participated in focus groups to provide feedback on the program’s length, timing, group size and dynamics, content, and suggestions for making the SPoRT prevention intervention more feasible and acceptable. Results Our recruitment procedures were successful, and participants rated the program as feasible in terms of delivery methods and logistics. Participants liked that SPoRT was developed based on pilot data collected from student-athletes, brief, and skills based and tailored to athletic team needs. SPoRT was perceived as appropriate and relevant to student-athlete needs in terms of dating violence and sexual risk prevention knowledge and skills. Most participants (63%) rated the program as “excellent” and said they would recommend it to others. Conclusions We found SPoRT to be both feasible and acceptable in terms of content and delivery. Suggested modifications will be incorporated into the SPoRT healthy relationships prevention intervention to be tested in an NIH Stage 1 efficacy trial.
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- 2023
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