43 results on '"Pease, K."'
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2. Spatial and temporal patterns across an ecological boundary: Allochthonous effects of a young saltwater lake on a desert ecosystem
- Author
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Brehme, C.S., Boarman, W.I., Hathaway, S.A., Herring, A., Lyren, L., Mendelsohn, M., Pease, K., Rahn, M., Rochester, C., Stokes, D., Turschak, G., and Fisher, R.N.
- Published
- 2009
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3. Acknowledgement to reviewers of social sciences in 2019
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Abbas, A., Abel, G., Abreu, A., Adam, A., Adamek, M., Adiletta, G., Adusei-asante, K.A., Romeo, M.D.M., Alderson, A., Alfaro, E., Aliverti, A., Almeida, Fernando, Álvarez-gonzález, L.I., Amelina, A., Anand, C., Anderson, G., Andreasson, J., Ang, I., Aragon, J., Arcidiacono, C., Arcuri, S., Assante, D., Atukeren, E., Avery, H., Ayeb-karlsson, S., Azadi, H., Bachman, R., Bader, M., Badulescu, A., Bahmanteymouri, E., Baines, S., Baker, T., Baker‐beall, C., Bañón, L., Bar‐am, N., Barbier‐greenland, K., Barnett, R., Barragán‐escandón, A., Barreto, A.M., Barrett, E., Bartkowski, J., Bartram, R., Bartzas, G., Bates, D., Baviera‐puig, A., Bayley, A., Beazley, H., Beer, C., Behr, H., Beier, G., Belford, N., Bencivenga, R., Benli, A.E., Benton‐short, L., Berei, J.M., Berbel‐pineda, E., Bernstein, Berntzen, E.R., Bertella, L., Birney, G., Bittle, M., Black, S., Rivero, L.B., Blattner, J.J., Blok, C., Blount, A., Boas, Y., Bockarie, I., Bockerman, A., Bodén, P., Bönisch‐brednich, L., Bontje, B., Bontje, M., Borsellino, V., Bostan, I., Bowl, M., Bowman, B., Bracci, E., Bracken, C.M., Bradley, H., Brereton, P., Brewer, J., Bridge, D., Brooks, S., Brown, Andrijana, Brzoska, M., Brzozowski, W., Buckley, G., Buente, W., Bullaro, G.R., Burke, M.D., Burlacu, S., Busu, M., Butler, S., Byrne, J., Cabral, L., Cai, Y., Cajias, M., Calin, A.C., Callegari, C., Camarero, M., Campbell-figuerola, H., Campbell, J.R., Cannito, M., Canonico, E., Canosa, A., Carabelli, G., Carlbom, A., Carlone, T., Caron, R., Carpenter, A., Caruso, G., Casais, B., Castro, M.P., Cava, M.-J., Čeněk, J., Cerchione, R., Certomà, C., Chan, E., Charles, D., Charlwood, A., Chatzifotiou, S., Chell, K., Chen, L., Chen, Q., Chen, W.-J., Ching, L., Christensen, J., Ciasullo, M.V., Cimermanová, I., Činčera, J., Cipollina, M., Clutterbuck, R., Cochrane, B., Collin, K., Conley, R., Connell, H., Connelly, J., Connelly, L., Connelly, R., Conti, D., Conversi, D., Conway, G., Cooper, S., Cope, M., Corsini, F., Cristian, P., Crohn, H.M., Croog, R.C., Salazar, T., Csiszár, C., D’auria, I., D’souza, A., D’souza, N., Dabija, D.-C., Dagg, J., Dalby, S., DaleDalsgård, B., Dʹamato, A.L., Daniel, D., Dant, L., Dantas, C., Darwin, H., Dashper, K., David, M.E., De Flippo, D., De, A., Edi, M., Velázquez, E.D.C., Velázquez, F., Del Vecchio, P., Delatolla, A., Delgado, P., Delgado‐romero, E., Delrosso, J., Desimone, J., Detlefsen, L., Devaney, C., Díaz, L.M., Didham, R., Diogo, E., Dirakis, A., Doberneck, D., Doidge, M.D., Molero, G., Dombrowski, P.J., Doñate, C., Đorđević, Martín, Reis, P.G.R., Doucek, P., Dundes, L., Dvouletý, O., Dybo, T., Eastman, J., Eckhardt, J., Economou, A., Edler, D., Edu, U., Ekblom, P.E., Khaled, D., Ellis, C., Elsabry, E., Erceg, A., Erokhin, V., Ertz, M., Everitt, J., Evers, A., Falcone, P.M.F., Cabana, P., Fawcett, B., Fearnley, B., Featherstone, M., Ferreira, M., Ferreira, P., Fetner, T., Fisher, J., Fisher, R., Fitzpatrick, T., Flanagan, C., Fogarty, E.A., Fonchingong, C.C., Fontana, M., Fook, J., Foreman, A.M., Foster‐mcgregor, N., Fox, S., Franco, J.A., Franklin, A.L., Friedrich, T., Fromm, I., Fu, N., Fucà, R., Fukuda, Y., Fusco, G., Gabriela, D., Galan, D., Gamo, A., Galiano, J., Garcia, A., García, M.E.A., García‐germán, S., García‐machado, J.J., García‐ruiz, C.R., Gavini, M., Gazzano, A., Gebhardt, M., Gerson, S., Gherghina, Ş.C., Gibbs, P., Gilhooly, D., Gill, F., Gill, N., Gil‐lopez, A.J., Ginès Fabrellas, A., Giuffrida, N., Giuliani, G., Goddard, J., Godderis, R., Goh, C.S., Gomes, O., Goncharuk, A.G., Canche, M.G., Pérez, I.G., Valero, G., González, R.C.L., Gonzalez‐benson, O., Gonzalez‐feliu, J., González‐lópez, M., Gozdziak, E., Granx, B., Gran, R., Gray, S.L., Grbes, A., Grondys, K., Grugan, S., Guenther, J., Guijarro, F., Gurko, T., Haas, L.L., Hagellx, A., Hagell, H., Hallgrímsdóttir, H., Hamada, T., Hanf, J., Hannouf, M., Hao, F., Harman, G., Harris, K.L., Harris, R., Harrison, N.H., Healy, G., Healy, K., Heikkilä, E., Hellmich, C., Henig, J., Henninger, C.E., Heo, W., Herman, C., Herrero‐diz, P., Heyman, J., Hibbert, N., Hillman, A.L., Hillman, B., Hine, B., Hino, K., Hinten, M., Hipp, L., Hoang, D., Holleran, D., Hollin, I., Holm, M., Holmes, C., Hook, G., Hoornweg, D., Hopper, L., Hossain, M., Hoxhaj, R., Hu, B., Huang, Y., Huarita, E., Hudec, O., Humbert, A.L., Hung, M.-C., Hunt, A., Husu, L., IanoleIbáñez‐gonzález, R., Ibáñez‐gonzález, M.J., Ide, T., Ijaz, Muhammad Fazal, Impicciatore, R., Ingwersen, M., Ioannides, D., Iseppi, L., Islam, M.M., Jaakkola, M., Jagger, S., Jagosh, J., Jenkin, G., Joelsson, T., Johansen, R.E.B., Johnsen, H.C., Garmann Jona, G., Jones, T., Judit, O., Kalalahti, M., Kang, M., Kantamaneni, K., Kaplan, L., Kapsalis, V., Karbowski, A., Katsoni, V., Kavish, D.R., Kawamura, H., Keilman, N.W., Kelly, J., Kenneth, H., Kepaptsoglou, K., Kevin, D., Kewley, S., Kim, J.-C., Kim, K.-Y., Kim, S., Kimengsi, J.N., Klein, J., Kleine, M., Klemes, J.I.R.I., Klepp, S., Klinkenberg, L.E.F., Knight, L., Knowles, J., Koerner, S., Konsolakis, K., Konstantinov, V., Kopkin, N.K., Kordova, S., Kosinski, E., Kostelka, F., Kot, S., Kotter, R., Kramers, A., Krienert, J.L., Kubon, M., Kuffer, M., Kungolos, A., Kuttner, P., Kużelewska, E., Ladd, A.E., Lammi, M., Landrum, J., Lange, B., Languilaire, T.D., Lantz, J.-C., Laudal, B., Laurentsyeva, T., Lavizzari, N., Lavoie, A., Feuvre, J.L., Leakey, N., Lee, R., Lee, A., Lee, E., Lee, J., Lentner, J.-H., Lenz‐taguchi, C., Leong, H., Levac, W.S., Lewin, L., Lewinson, E., Li, T., Li, F., Li, G., Li, M., Liczmańska‐kopcewicz, Y., Lillard, K., Linková, C., Links, M., Lipinski, P., Storto, J.L., Lochtman, C., Lockwood, K., Loh, A., Lomonaco‐benzing, V., Łopaciuk‐gonczaryk, R., López, B., lópez, D., Lorenzini, J., Löther, A., Loughnan, C., Love, T., Lucas, M.L., Ubago, J., Lukić, J., Lumley‐sapanski, A., Macedo, I., Macfarlane, S., Machimbarrena, J.M., Magda, R., Magrane, D., Maier, D., Majić, S., Majumdar, S., Makarovič, M., Malekigorji, M., Mallick, B., Malone, D., Mandić, D., Maniou, T., Mannell, J.M., Barbutiu, S., Marczak, M., Markvica, K.M., Aragón, M.D.M., Martín, J.S.M., Pereira, A., Marzal‐felici, J., Mason, F., Mather, J., Matijosaitiene, I., MatthewsMattisson, R., Mattisson, C., Matuszak, Ł., Matuzeviciute, K., Mauerer, G., Mayer, A., McCaig, C., McClearn, D., McKee, S.C., McKendry, S., McMahon, M., McReynolds, P., Medina‐vicent, M., Medyna, G., Mees, H., Meil, G., Meringolo, P., Miciuła, I., Milczarek‐andrzejewska, D., Miles, P., Milivojević, S., Miller, G., Minello, A., Miron, D., Mironeasa, S., Misra, J., Mitchell, T., Moldovan, O., Molero, P.P., Møllersen, S., Momsen, J.H., Moniz, A.B., Morea, D., Moreau, M.-P., Morgan, D.L., Morgan, H., Moscatelli, S., Mostowska, M., Mousavi, A., Mousavi, S., Mrugalska, B., Muinos, G., Mukungu, K., Mukuni, J., Murakami, D., Muresan, I.C., Murib, Z., Muro, A., Mustafa, G., Nackerud, L., Nalmpantis, D., Napal, M., Närvi, J., Naser, M., Nash, V., Navarre‐jackson, L., Navarro, R., Nazarczuk, D., Neale, J., Necula, J., Němec, S., Neven, D., Nevgi, A., Newbold, A., Newton, G., New, A., Niakšu, O., Niiniluoto, I., Nkogo, J.C., Nobre, S., Nunn, P., Oakes, R., Obrad, C., Oke, A., Okorie, O., Oncioiu, I., Ormsbee, F., Ortega‐sánchez, D., Osgood, J., Osorio, C., Oswald, J., Otis, M.D., Ouassini, A., Oxford, S., Page, T., Paixão, M.J., De Pajares, E.M., Palmesr, E., Palos‐sánchez, P., Pamučar, Dragan, Pan, H., Panek, J., Pankowska, M., Papadakis, S., Papafilippou, V.P., Medina, R., Park, C.S., Partalidou, M., Passantino, A., Passini, S., Paul, S., Pavliuk, R., Pearce, P., Pease, K., Pentaris, P., Perez, V.W., Pérez‐armendáriz, C., Perez‐vaisvidovsky, N., Perez‐y‐perez, M., Perry, N., Prtchu, D., Peterson, D.A.M., Alexandru‐ionut, Petrykowski, Petrykowski, P., Phillips, L., Pickard, S., Pickel, A., Pieke, F., Piekut, A., Pierce, S., Pierrakis, Y., Piguet, E., Pleace, N., Połom, M., Polsa, P., Ponticorvo, M., Pookulangara, S., Pope, J., Popoli, P., Postigo, J.C., Price‐Wolf, J., Prior, 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B., Sarapura, S., Sari, D., Satybaldieva, E., Saura, J.R., Sayed, N., Scandurra, C., Schartner, A., Schellekens, J., Schenk‐hoppé, K.R., Scherer, L., Schewe, J.A., Schewe, R., Schiller, N.G., Schmidt, E.-M., Schneickert, C., Schneider, J., Scott, H., Scott, P., Seibel, K., Seidler, R., Seifert, S.S., Puyuelo, M.S., Azevedo, P.S., Lopez, A.E.S., Raamkumar, A.S., Blundo, D., Severo, M., Shakya, K.M., Shapiro, A., Shaw, I.F., Shaw, T.V., Shea, B., Shearer, H., Sheldon, S., Shell‐duncan, B., Shepherd, S., Sheridan, L., Siemienska, R., Sillup, G.P., Simeon, J.C., Simonelli, A., Skilodimou, H.D., Škrinjarić, T., Slater, G., Smardon, R., Smith, J., Smoląg, K., Snauwaert, D.T., Soanes‐white, T., Sobocińska, M., Sohaib, O., Soldatić, K., Sorainen, G.T., Soldatos, A., Sørensen, N.N., Spanu, S., Stadlober, E., Stafford, F., Ștefănescu‐mihăilă, R.O., Stefanini, A., Štefko, R., Steglich, E., Steirer, G., Stephenson, M.O., Stoecker, R., Stoffelen, A., Strang, A., Suppa, D., Sutton, J., Svobodová, L., Swigon, M., Synnott, J., Sytsma, V., Tabe, T., Tajeddini, K., Tang, S., Taylor, B., Taylor, C., Teignier, M., Teixeira, C., Tempelaar, D., Ter Avest, K.H., Ter Horst, E., Testa, M.R., Thakur, N., Thiamwong, L., Thijsen, A., Thomas, B.A., Thompson, C., Thompson, D., Tisdall, K., Toft, Mancini, Torell, A., Toscano‐hernández, G., Tregua, A.E., Triandafyllidou, M., Tseloni, A., Seloni, A., Tsikouras, P., Tsogas, G., Twamley, K., Tyler, D.U., Haque, A., Underwood, M., Urbański, M., Uribe‐toril, J., Vaezipour, A., Van Hove, L.V., Huylenbroeck, G., Van Nuland, S., Vanner, C., Vázquez‐cano, E., Veen, E., Veintimilla, S.G.-A., Veković, M., Velija, P., Venco, E.M., Verticelli, A., Vicente, P.V., Estiarte, C., Višnjić, A., Visvizi, A., Vlasblom, J.D., Volsche, S.V., Fintel, D., Von Keyserlingk, L., Vranješević, J., Walter, K.V., Wandosell, G., Wang, Y., Wasileski, G., Wastl‐walter, D., Weaving, C., Weenik, D., Wehr, K., Wei, X., Wharton, A., White, G., Whitehouse, H., Whitley, C.T., Whitman, 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Valero, G., González, R.C.L., Gonzalez‐benson, O., Gonzalez‐feliu, J., González‐lópez, M., Gozdziak, E., Granx, B., Gran, R., Gray, S.L., Grbes, A., Grondys, K., Grugan, S., Guenther, J., Guijarro, F., Gurko, T., Haas, L.L., Hagellx, A., Hagell, H., Hallgrímsdóttir, H., Hamada, T., Hanf, J., Hannouf, M., Hao, F., Harman, G., Harris, K.L., Harris, R., Harrison, N.H., Healy, G., Healy, K., Heikkilä, E., Hellmich, C., Henig, J., Henninger, C.E., Heo, W., Herman, C., Herrero‐diz, P., Heyman, J., Hibbert, N., Hillman, A.L., Hillman, B., Hine, B., Hino, K., Hinten, M., Hipp, L., Hoang, D., Holleran, D., Hollin, I., Holm, M., Holmes, C., Hook, G., Hoornweg, D., Hopper, L., Hossain, M., Hoxhaj, R., Hu, B., Huang, Y., Huarita, E., Hudec, O., Humbert, A.L., Hung, M.-C., Hunt, A., Husu, L., IanoleIbáñez‐gonzález, R., Ibáñez‐gonzález, M.J., Ide, T., Ijaz, Muhammad Fazal, Impicciatore, R., Ingwersen, M., Ioannides, D., Iseppi, L., Islam, M.M., Jaakkola, M., Jagger, S., Jagosh, J., Jenkin, G., Joelsson, T., Johansen, R.E.B., Johnsen, H.C., Garmann Jona, G., Jones, T., Judit, O., Kalalahti, M., Kang, M., Kantamaneni, K., Kaplan, L., Kapsalis, V., Karbowski, A., Katsoni, V., Kavish, D.R., Kawamura, H., Keilman, N.W., Kelly, J., Kenneth, H., Kepaptsoglou, K., Kevin, D., Kewley, S., Kim, J.-C., Kim, K.-Y., Kim, S., Kimengsi, J.N., Klein, J., Kleine, M., Klemes, J.I.R.I., Klepp, S., Klinkenberg, L.E.F., Knight, L., Knowles, J., Koerner, S., Konsolakis, K., Konstantinov, V., Kopkin, N.K., Kordova, S., Kosinski, E., Kostelka, F., Kot, S., Kotter, R., Kramers, A., Krienert, J.L., Kubon, M., Kuffer, M., Kungolos, A., Kuttner, P., Kużelewska, E., Ladd, A.E., Lammi, M., Landrum, J., Lange, B., Languilaire, T.D., Lantz, J.-C., Laudal, B., Laurentsyeva, T., Lavizzari, N., Lavoie, A., Feuvre, J.L., Leakey, N., Lee, R., Lee, A., Lee, E., Lee, J., Lentner, J.-H., Lenz‐taguchi, C., Leong, H., Levac, W.S., Lewin, L., Lewinson, E., Li, T., Li, F., Li, G., Li, M., Liczmańska‐kopcewicz, Y., Lillard, K., Linková, C., Links, M., Lipinski, P., Storto, J.L., Lochtman, C., Lockwood, K., Loh, A., Lomonaco‐benzing, V., Łopaciuk‐gonczaryk, R., López, B., lópez, D., Lorenzini, J., Löther, A., Loughnan, C., Love, T., Lucas, M.L., Ubago, J., Lukić, J., Lumley‐sapanski, A., Macedo, I., Macfarlane, S., Machimbarrena, J.M., Magda, R., Magrane, D., Maier, D., Majić, S., Majumdar, S., Makarovič, M., Malekigorji, M., Mallick, B., Malone, D., Mandić, D., Maniou, T., Mannell, J.M., Barbutiu, S., Marczak, M., Markvica, K.M., Aragón, M.D.M., Martín, J.S.M., Pereira, A., Marzal‐felici, J., Mason, F., Mather, J., Matijosaitiene, I., MatthewsMattisson, R., Mattisson, C., Matuszak, Ł., Matuzeviciute, K., Mauerer, G., Mayer, A., McCaig, C., McClearn, D., McKee, S.C., McKendry, S., McMahon, M., McReynolds, P., Medina‐vicent, M., Medyna, G., Mees, H., Meil, G., Meringolo, P., Miciuła, I., Milczarek‐andrzejewska, D., Miles, P., Milivojević, S., Miller, G., Minello, A., Miron, D., Mironeasa, S., Misra, J., Mitchell, T., Moldovan, O., Molero, P.P., Møllersen, S., Momsen, J.H., Moniz, A.B., Morea, D., Moreau, M.-P., Morgan, D.L., Morgan, H., Moscatelli, S., Mostowska, M., Mousavi, A., Mousavi, S., Mrugalska, B., Muinos, G., Mukungu, K., Mukuni, J., Murakami, D., Muresan, I.C., Murib, Z., Muro, A., Mustafa, G., Nackerud, L., Nalmpantis, D., Napal, M., Närvi, J., Naser, M., Nash, V., Navarre‐jackson, L., Navarro, R., Nazarczuk, D., Neale, J., Necula, J., Němec, S., Neven, D., Nevgi, A., Newbold, A., Newton, G., New, A., Niakšu, O., Niiniluoto, I., Nkogo, J.C., Nobre, S., Nunn, P., Oakes, R., Obrad, C., Oke, A., Okorie, O., Oncioiu, I., Ormsbee, F., Ortega‐sánchez, D., Osgood, J., Osorio, C., Oswald, J., Otis, M.D., Ouassini, A., Oxford, S., Page, T., Paixão, M.J., De Pajares, E.M., Palmesr, E., Palos‐sánchez, P., Pamučar, Dragan, Pan, H., Panek, J., Pankowska, M., Papadakis, S., Papafilippou, V.P., Medina, R., Park, C.S., Partalidou, M., Passantino, A., Passini, S., Paul, S., Pavliuk, R., Pearce, P., Pease, K., Pentaris, P., Perez, V.W., Pérez‐armendáriz, C., Perez‐vaisvidovsky, N., Perez‐y‐perez, M., Perry, N., Prtchu, D., Peterson, D.A.M., Alexandru‐ionut, Petrykowski, Petrykowski, P., Phillips, L., Pickard, S., Pickel, A., Pieke, F., Piekut, A., Pierce, S., Pierrakis, Y., Piguet, E., Pleace, N., Połom, M., Polsa, P., Ponticorvo, M., Pookulangara, S., Pope, J., Popoli, P., Postigo, J.C., Price‐Wolf, J., Prior, S., Privitera, D., Prud’homme, C., Prosser, J., Prus, P., Puiu, S., Purcell, R., Pyrialakou, D., Quam‐wickham, N., Quarmby, T., Quinlan, K.M., Quinn, A., Quinn, R., Raciti, M., Radicić, D., Rahimi, B., Ramlo, S., Randle, H., Ratajczak, M., Raymond, T., Recio‐menéndez, M., Reese, L.A., Regner, T., Reichman, J., WReim, iebke, R., Pastor, A.M., Rexhepi, G., Reyes‐menendez, A., Reynaud, C., Ribeiro‐soriano, D., Ricci, S., Ridaura, G., Rita, C., Roberts, M., Roberts, G., Roberts, K., Rockerbie, D., Rodger, J.A., Rodin, G., Rodrigues, D.R., Martín, J.A., Rodríguez, C.F., Rodriguez‐modroño, P., Romero‐rodríguez, L.M., Rončáková, T., Roper, I., Rorie, M.R., Marzán, C.F., Rose, G., Rose, M., Rosen, R., Roth, R., Roubík, H., Roumpos, C., Rowbottom, D., Roy, J., Ruban, D., Rubira‐garcía, R., Ruiperez‐valiente, J.A., Ruiz, R., Ruiz‐real, J.L., Russell, B., Russo, K., Sabol, W., Safonte, F., Salin, M., Salom‐carrasco, J.S., Sánchez, L.D., Sanghera, Santos, B.S., Silva, D., Sanz, F., Sanz‐altamira, B., Sarapura, S., Sari, D., Satybaldieva, E., Saura, J.R., Sayed, N., Scandurra, C., Schartner, A., Schellekens, J., Schenk‐hoppé, K.R., Scherer, L., Schewe, J.A., Schewe, R., Schiller, N.G., Schmidt, E.-M., Schneickert, C., Schneider, J., Scott, H., Scott, P., Seibel, K., Seidler, R., Seifert, S.S., Puyuelo, M.S., Azevedo, P.S., Lopez, A.E.S., Raamkumar, A.S., Blundo, D., Severo, M., Shakya, K.M., Shapiro, A., Shaw, I.F., Shaw, T.V., Shea, B., Shearer, H., Sheldon, S., Shell‐duncan, B., Shepherd, S., Sheridan, L., Siemienska, R., Sillup, G.P., Simeon, J.C., Simonelli, A., Skilodimou, H.D., Škrinjarić, T., Slater, G., Smardon, R., Smith, J., Smoląg, K., Snauwaert, D.T., Soanes‐white, T., Sobocińska, M., Sohaib, O., Soldatić, K., Sorainen, G.T., Soldatos, A., Sørensen, N.N., Spanu, S., Stadlober, E., Stafford, F., Ștefănescu‐mihăilă, R.O., Stefanini, A., Štefko, R., Steglich, E., Steirer, G., Stephenson, M.O., Stoecker, R., Stoffelen, A., Strang, A., Suppa, D., Sutton, J., Svobodová, L., Swigon, M., Synnott, J., Sytsma, V., Tabe, T., Tajeddini, K., Tang, S., Taylor, B., Taylor, C., Teignier, M., Teixeira, C., Tempelaar, D., Ter Avest, K.H., Ter Horst, E., Testa, M.R., Thakur, N., Thiamwong, L., Thijsen, A., Thomas, B.A., Thompson, C., Thompson, D., Tisdall, K., Toft, Mancini, Torell, A., Toscano‐hernández, G., Tregua, A.E., Triandafyllidou, M., Tseloni, A., Seloni, A., Tsikouras, P., Tsogas, G., Twamley, K., Tyler, D.U., Haque, A., Underwood, M., Urbański, M., Uribe‐toril, J., Vaezipour, A., Van Hove, L.V., Huylenbroeck, G., Van Nuland, S., Vanner, C., Vázquez‐cano, E., Veen, E., Veintimilla, S.G.-A., Veković, M., Velija, P., Venco, E.M., Verticelli, A., Vicente, P.V., Estiarte, C., Višnjić, A., Visvizi, A., Vlasblom, J.D., Volsche, S.V., Fintel, D., Von Keyserlingk, L., Vranješević, J., Walter, K.V., Wandosell, G., Wang, Y., Wasileski, G., Wastl‐walter, D., Weaving, C., Weenik, D., Wehr, K., Wei, X., Wharton, A., White, G., Whitehouse, H., Whitley, C.T., Whitman, L., Wiersma‐mosley, J.D., Wilcke, H., Wilkes, R., Williams, L., Williamson, R.D., Wimalasena, L., Wiseman, A., Wołek, M., Wright, E.Q., Wroblewski, A., Wyile, A.S., Wynn, C., Xu, X., Xue, B., Yang, J., Yoe, T.M., Young, M., Younus, M., Yu, T.-F., Yuan, Q., Zadra, C., Zaharijević, A., Zajda, J., Zander, K., Zbuchea, A., Zelin, A., Zhang, C., Zippel, K., Zitricky, V., Živanović, P., Zou, L., Zufferey, C., Zuhdi, M., and Zumeta, W.M.
- Published
- 2020
4. So, were you surprised by the BBC/ONS crime risk calculator?
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Tseloni, A and Pease, K
- Published
- 2017
5. Preventing repeat and near repeat crime concentrations
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Farrell, G, Pease, K, Tilley, N, and Sidebottom, A
- Abstract
Crime is highly concentrated: Most crime is a rehearsal for further crime against the same or similar targets, at the same or similar locations, and perhaps theft of the same type of products. The study of repeat victimization has evolved into that on crime hotspots and other forms of near repeat, and led to predictive policing. The F-B-I theory of crime concentration notes how some targets have characteristics that Flag them as attractive, offenders learn some targets or places are attractive which Boosts the chances of further crime, while the Interaction of potential offenders and suitable targets creates high crime locations. There is strong evidence that targeting crime concentrations with prevention resources can succeed but that it is not necessarily easy to implement appropriate tactics. Hence while there is great potential, much research remains to be undertaken in this rapidly evolving and important area.
- Published
- 2017
6. Assessment of invasive New Zealand mudsnail abundance on juvenile mayfly populations within the Malibu Creek Watershed
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Vu, K. and Pease, K.
- Subjects
Animal populations -- Distribution ,Snails -- Distribution ,Watersheds -- Environmental aspects ,Company distribution practices ,Science and technology - Abstract
50 ASSESSMENT OF INVASIVE NEW ZEALAND MUDSNAIL ABUNDANCE ON JUVENILE MAYFLY POPULATIONS WITHIN THE MALIBU CREEK WATERSHED New Zealand mudsnails (Potamopyrgus antipodarum) have been unintentionally introduced throughout the world, are [...]
- Published
- 2014
7. DNA retention after arrest: balancing privacy interests and protection
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Tseloni, A and Pease, K
- Abstract
The S & Marper judgement of the European Court of Human Rights addresses the question of DNA profile retention in the absence of conviction or admission of guilt. It casts the problem as a question of balancing the principles of individual privacy and public protection. In the Court's view there is a level of public protection conferred by retention of DNA from arrestees against whom no further action is taken which would justify retention, yet relevant data do not exist to determine the level of public protection gained by such retention. A pilot study is reported here showing that a group against whom arrest is followed by no further action exhibits levels of subsequent criminality (measured by frequency, latency and most severe outcome) similar to those of people officially processed by sentence or caution. Survival and count regression analyses suggest statistical approaches to be taken using larger and better samples. A research programme is outlined which would allow evidence-based policy on DNA profile retention.
- Published
- 2011
8. Population inequality: the case of repeat
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Tseloni, A and Pease, K
- Abstract
This paper employs data from the 2000 British Crime Survey for England and Wales to discuss ways of illustrating the degree of inequality in the distribution of crime victimisation. In particular, Lorenz curves are presented for major crime categories, i.e. property, personal and vehicle crime, and their components are presented. They are fitted both nationally (i.e. to victimised and non-victimised people) and amongst victims. Crime Lorenz curves over victims illustrate repeat victimisation. Additional repeat victimisation statistics, such as concentration, the percentage of repeat crimes and the percentage of repeat victims, are also shown. Threats and assaults are the most recurring crimes whereas theft of vehicles shows low rates of repetition within a year.
- Published
- 2005
9. Repeat Burglary Victimization. Results of Empirical Research in the Netherlands
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Kleemans, E.R., Farrell, G., Pease, K., and Criminal Law
- Published
- 2001
10. Victim careers and 'career victims'? [In: Farrell, G. and Pease, K., eds., Repeat victimisation, Crime Prevention Studies, vol. 12]
- Author
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Farrell, G, Tseloni, A, Wiersema, B, and Pease, K
- Abstract
Whereas there is a mature body of work examining criminal careers that has been established over the course of several decades, the study of victim careers is in its infancy. While there has been recent growth in the study of repeat victimization, the natural extension of this work into studies of the life course remains to be undertaken. The present paper suggests why the study of victimization over the life course may prove important for criminological theory and practice, and explores ways in which it might be taken forward. A rich vein of criminological enquiry remains to be exploited that promises to inform theories of criminal victimization as well as crime prevention practice. The paper also proposes the utilization of an accelerated longitudinal design to enhance the study of victim careers. Such designs are rich in promise but typically extremely expensive to conduct. In theory, a study of victim careers using such a design may be possible from extant data sources, which would make it cost-effective. However, even if the design proposed herein did not reach its full potential, theory and practice may be greatly informed through the pursuit of a research agenda that incorporates longitudinal studies of victim careers.
- Published
- 2001
11. Signal Crimes and Signal Policing
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Roach, J., primary, Alexander, R., additional, and Pease, K., additional
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Towards the Modest Predictability of Daily Burglary Counts
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Johnson, S. D., primary, Bowers, K. J., additional, and Pease, K., additional
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Stars in Their Lies: How Better to Identify People Who Give False Dates of Birth to Police
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Roach, J., primary, Pease, K., additional, and Clegg, K., additional
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. How to Behave Like a Scientist?
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Pease, K., primary
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Conference Papers: Providing Humanitarian Relief and Protection in the Future The Problems of Moral Hazard: Humanitarian Aid During Violent Conflict
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Pease, K.-K., primary
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Molecular classification of selective oestrogen receptor modulators on the basis of gene expression profiles of breast cancer cells expressing oestrogen receptor α
- Author
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Levenson, A S, primary, Kliakhandler, I L, additional, Svoboda, K M, additional, Pease, K M, additional, Kaiser, S A, additional, Ward, III, J E, additional, and Jordan, V C, additional
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Ipswich River Nutrient Dynamics: Preliminary Assessment of a Simple Nitrogen-Processing Model
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Pease, K. M., primary, Claessens, L., additional, Hopkinson, C., additional, Rastetter, E., additional, Vallino, J., additional, and Kilham, N., additional
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Repeat victim support
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FARRELL, G., primary and PEASE, K., additional
- Published
- 1997
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- View/download PDF
19. REVIEWS
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Pease, K., primary
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The Observational Approach Applied to Open Pit Mine Slopes
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Pease, K. A., primary, Howard, A. L ., additional, and Refer, M. C., additional
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Controlled Thermonuclear Reactions.
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Artsimovich, L. A., Kolb, A. C., Pease, K. S., and Furth, Harold P.
- Published
- 1965
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Attitudes in linguistic communication: a further study of immediacy.
- Author
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Pease, Kenneth and Pease, K
- Subjects
COMMUNICATION ,LANGUAGE & languages ,PSYCHOLOGY ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,SOCIAL groups ,SOCIAL interaction - Abstract
The article presents information on the attitudes of people in linguistic communication. The inference of attitudes from linguistic communication has been a topic of enduring interest in experimental social psychology. The more direct, or immediate the relationship between the communicator and the referent of the communication, the more positive affect is attributed to the communicator about the referent. Expressed the other way, nonimmediacy is held to be indicative of less positive or more negative affect than a comparable immediate alternative way of saying the same thing.
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- 1972
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23. Control of the estrogen-like actions of the tamoxifen-estrogen receptor complex by the surface amino acid at position 351
- Author
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Levenson, A. S., Schafer, J. I. MacGregor, Bentrem, D. J., Pease, K. M., and Jordan, V. C.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Pop Records and Connotative Satiation: Test of Jakobovits' Theory
- Author
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Bush, P. A. and Pease, K. G.
- Abstract
An experiment is described in which adolescent schoolgirls rated on a 7-point good-bad scale, the repeated presentations of an extract from a current popular record. Mean ratings moved from the good end of the scale toward the indifference point with repetition. Coincident with this was the tendency for individual ratings to move toward the poles of the scale with repetition. These findings are inconsistent with the analysis of ‘pop’ music popularity presented by Jakobovits (1966).
- Published
- 1968
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25. Parole in England and Wales: Home office research study no. 38
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Nuttall, C. P., primary, Barnard, E. E., additional, Fowles, A. J., additional, Frost, A., additional, Hammond, W. H., additional, Mayhew, P., additional, Pease, K., additional, Tarling, R., additional, and Weatheritt, M. J., additional
- Published
- 1977
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Influence of Meaning on Fragmentation of Visual Afterimages
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Arnold, P., primary, Meudell, P. R., additional, and Pease, K. G., additional
- Published
- 1968
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. A longitudinal study of the relationships between psychometric test scores, offence history and the plasma concentrations of phenylacetic and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acids in seven inmates of a prison for the psychiatrically disturbed
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Davis, B. A., Durden, D. A., Pease, K., and Yu, P. H.
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
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28. Policing, vulnerability and mental health
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Ian Cummins, McDaniel, J, Moss, K, and Pease, K
- Subjects
Coalition government ,Austerity ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Political science ,Vulnerability ,Retrenchment ,Context (language use) ,Social Welfare ,Criminology ,Welfare ,Mental health ,media_common - Abstract
Police forces across the world have played an increasing role in responding to mental health crises and emergency situations. This chapter will examine the debates about whether this is an appropriate role for police officers, who on the whole have limited mental health training. In the UK, the demands on the police in this field have risen because of welfare retrenchment since 2010, when austerity policies were adopted by the Coalition Government. The chapter will argue that the police will always have some role to play in mental health work. However, the aim of policy should be to limit it as much as is possible. The role of the police in mental health work needs to be examined in the broader context of social welfare policies. The chapter argues that the work of Fineman (2004, 2008) can form the basis for a revitalised social state.
- Published
- 2020
29. Repeat Burglary Victimization. Results of Empirical Research in the Netherlands
- Author
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E.R. Kleemans, Farrell, G., and Pease, K.
- Published
- 2001
30. Implementing an Updated Alcohol Withdrawal Symptom Management Order Set Focused on Patient Safety.
- Author
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Lorbiecki M, Gidal A, Hagle M, Smith T, Ragen-Pease K, Peterson K, Matye M, Kowol MA, and Lampe E
- Subjects
- Humans, Quality Improvement, Diazepam therapeutic use, Lorazepam therapeutic use, Substance Withdrawal Syndrome nursing, Patient Safety
- Abstract
Background: Patients experiencing alcohol withdrawal often receive care on inpatient mental health units. Registered nurses on one such unit had several concerns and questions about the existing alcohol withdrawal symptom management order set. To address these issues, a multidisciplinary team including nurses, psychiatrists, and pharmacists was formed., Objectives: The aims for this project were to review and revise the existing order set, educate staff, implement the changes, and evaluate outcomes., Methods: The Plan-Do-Study-Act quality improvement framework guided the project. Five phases were completed to revise the order set and implement: a survey of nurses on the unit, community practice evaluation, and order set revisions. A simulation escape room facilitated nursing education. Patient records were reviewed to identify adverse events., Results: Diazepam replaced lorazepam as the primary medication choice, and a front-loading protocol was added. Order set clarity was improved, education increased nursing staff confidence to competently complete a patient assessment with the Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment Alcohol Scale Revised, and no adverse patient events occurred after implementation., Conclusion: A revised order set for symptom management of patients experiencing alcohol withdrawal reflected up-to-date evidence while maintaining patient safety. All nurses agreed the revised order set was clear and easy to follow; pharmacists and physicians were satisfied with the revisions. Implications for leaders include having a multidisciplinary team, sufficient resources to answer clinical questions, and regular discussions by all involved disciplines to review any adverse events as well as newly published evidence. Close monitoring of patients early in implementation is recommended to detect adverse events., Competing Interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest. The authors alone are responsible for the content and writing of the article., (Copyright © 2024 International Nurses Society on Addictions.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Practice Concepts and Innovations for Pediatric End-of-Life Care by the Interdisciplinary Care Team.
- Author
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Pease K and McMillin SE
- Subjects
- Attitude of Health Personnel, Attitude to Death, Child, Family psychology, Hospice Care methods, Humans, Stress, Psychological prevention & control, Bereavement, Parents psychology, Patient Care Team organization & administration, Professional-Family Relations, Terminal Care psychology
- Abstract
In recent years, clinical approaches to anticipatory grief and inclusivity amongst the medical team and family members have grown. In thinking about the end-of-life concerns within the pediatric care setting, practice concepts, and innovations inform how physicians and members of the interdisciplinary care team choose to approach conversations with parents and family members, as well as the particular level of involvement parents should have in decisions regarding the end of their child's life.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Determining the drivers of population structure in a highly urbanized landscape to inform conservation planning.
- Author
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Thomassen HA, Harrigan RJ, Semple Delaney K, Riley SPD, Serieys LEK, Pease K, Wayne RK, and Smith TB
- Subjects
- California, Ecosystem, Gene Flow, Genetic Variation, Humans, Conservation of Natural Resources, Genetics, Population
- Abstract
Understanding the environmental contributors to population structure is of paramount importance for conservation in urbanized environments. We used spatially explicit models to determine genetic population structure under current and future environmental conditions across a highly fragmented, human-dominated environment in Southern California to assess the effects of natural ecological variation and urbanization. We focused on 7 common species with diverse habitat requirements, home-range sizes, and dispersal abilities. We quantified the relative roles of potential barriers, including natural environmental characteristics and an anthropogenic barrier created by a major highway, in shaping genetic variation. The ability to predict genetic variation in our models differed among species: 11-81% of intraspecific genetic variation was explained by environmental variables. Although an anthropogenically induced barrier (a major highway) severely restricted gene flow and movement at broad scales for some species, genetic variation seemed to be primarily driven by natural environmental heterogeneity at a local level. Our results show how assessing environmentally associated variation for multiple species under current and future climate conditions can help identify priority regions for maximizing population persistence under environmental change in urbanized regions., (© 2017 Society for Conservation Biology.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Emerging needle ablation technology in urology.
- Author
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Leveillee RJ, Pease K, and Salas N
- Subjects
- Ablation Techniques instrumentation, Ablation Techniques methods, Animals, Diffusion of Innovation, Electroporation, Humans, Microwaves therapeutic use, Needles, Steam, Treatment Outcome, Urologic Surgical Procedures instrumentation, Urologic Surgical Procedures methods, Ablation Techniques trends, Urologic Surgical Procedures trends
- Abstract
Purpose of Review: Thermal ablation of urologic tumors in the form of freezing (cryoablation) and heating (radiofrequency ablation) have been utilized successfully to treat and ablate soft tissue tumors for over 15 years. Multiple studies have demonstrated efficacy nearing that of extirpative surgery for certain urologic conditions. There are technical limitations to their speed and safety profile because of the physical limits of thermal diffusion., Recent Findings: Recently, there has been a desire to investigate other forms of energy in an effort to circumvent the limitations of cryoblation and radiofrequency ablation. This review will focus on three relatively new energy applications as they pertain to tissue ablation: microwave, irreversible electroporation, and water vapor. High-intensity-focused ultrasound nor interstitial lasers are discussed, as there have been no recently published updates., Summary: Needle and probe-based ablative treatments will continue to play an important role. As three-dimensional imaging workstations move from the advanced radiologic interventional suite to the operating room, surgeons will likely still play a pivotal role in the +-application of these probe ablative devices. It is essential that the surgeon understands the fundamentals of these devices in order to optimize their application.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Attempted and completed incidents of stranger-perpetrated child sexual abuse and abduction.
- Author
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Gallagher B, Bradford M, and Pease K
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child Abuse, Sexual prevention & control, Child Abuse, Sexual psychology, Crime psychology, Crime Victims legislation & jurisprudence, Crime Victims psychology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Data Collection, Fear, Female, Humans, Incidence, Male, Pedophilia psychology, Police, Self Disclosure, United Kingdom, Child Abuse, Sexual statistics & numerical data, Crime statistics & numerical data, Pedophilia epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: To establish the prevalence, typology and nature of attempted or completed incidents of stranger-perpetrated sexual abuse or abduction of children "away from home"., Methods: A questionnaire was completed by 2,420 children (83% response rate) aged 9-16 years in 26 elementary and high schools in North-West England., Results: Of these children, 19.0% (n=461) reported that they had been the victims of any attempted or completed sexual abuse or abduction incident away from home at some point in their lives. Of these children, 161 (6.7% of the original sample) reported that the "last" incident had been perpetrated by a stranger. Based upon these last incidents, four main types of attempted or completed CSA or abduction incident were identified: indecent exposure (40.8% of victims), touching (25.8%), and abduction (23.1%), each occurring on their own; and incidents involving multiple types of act (10.2%). The majority of these abductions (91.1%) and touching incidents (50.9%) were attempted as opposed to completed. Rates of victimization were generally higher among girls than boys (10.4% vs. 4.2%, p<.001). A sizeable minority of victims had experienced sexual abuse or abduction previously (28.8%). The large majority of incidents were carried out by males (88.2%). Most incidents occurred when children were accompanied by their peers (67.9%). Many victims were frightened by their experience (46.9% very frightened) and the large majority made a disclosure (79.9%). Only a minority of incidents were reported to the police (33.3%)., Conclusions: Incidents of attempted and completed stranger CSA and abduction are distinct from CSA and abduction by known persons, go against stereotypes, are complex, and give rise to a number of key issues that may have implications for prevention and intervention., Practice Implications: Professionals involved in child protection should undertake work to reduce the risk of existing victims of CSA or abduction becoming victims of stranger CSA or abduction, and the risk of attempted incidents becoming completed ones. They also need to encourage the disclosure and reporting of attempted and completed stranger CSA and abduction incidents.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Molecular classification of selective oestrogen receptor modulators on the basis of gene expression profiles of breast cancer cells expressing oestrogen receptor alpha.
- Author
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Levenson AS, Kliakhandler IL, Svoboda KM, Pease KM, Kaiser SA, Ward JE 3rd, and Jordan VC
- Subjects
- Breast Neoplasms metabolism, Estrogen Receptor alpha, Gene Expression Profiling, Humans, Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis, Receptors, Estrogen metabolism, Tumor Cells, Cultured, Breast Neoplasms genetics, Receptors, Estrogen genetics
- Abstract
The purpose of this study was to classify selective oestrogen receptor modulators based on gene expression profiles produced in breast cancer cells expressing either wtERalpha or mutant(351)ERalpha. In total, 54 microarray experiments were carried out by using a commercially available Atlas cDNA Expression Arrays (Clontech), containing 588 cancer-related genes. Nine sets of data were generated for each cell line following 24 h of treatment: expression data were obtained for cells treated with vehicle EtOH (Control); with 10(-9) or 10(-8) M oestradiol; with 10(-6) M 4-hydroxytamoxifen; with 10(-6) M raloxifene; with 10(-6) M idoxifene, with 10(-6) M EM 652, with 10(-6) M GW 7604; with 5 x 10(-5) M resveratrol and with 10(-6) M ICI 182,780. We developed a new algorithm 'Expression Signatures' to classify compounds on the basis of differential gene expression profiles. We created dendrograms for each cell line, in which branches represent relationships between compounds. Additionally, clustering analysis was performed using different subsets of genes to assess the robustness of the analysis. In general, only small differences between gene expression profiles treated with compounds were observed with correlation coefficients ranged from 0.83 to 0.98. This observation may be explained by the use of the same cell context for treatments with compounds that essentially belong to the same class of drugs with oestrogen receptors related mechanisms. The most surprising observation was that ICI 182,780 clustered together with oestrodiol and raloxifene for cells expressing wtERalpha and clustered together with EM 652 for cells expressing mutant(351)ERalpha. These data provide a rationale for a more precise and elaborate study in which custom made oligonucleotide arrays can be used with comprehensive sets of genes known to have consensus and putative oestrogen response elements in their promoter regions.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Molecular classification of estrogens.
- Author
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Jordan VC, Schafer JM, Levenson AS, Liu H, Pease KM, Simons LA, and Zapf JW
- Subjects
- Binding Sites, Breast Neoplasms genetics, Breast Neoplasms metabolism, Estradiol Congeners chemistry, Estradiol Congeners classification, Estradiol Congeners pharmacology, Estrogens chemistry, Estrogens physiology, Humans, Models, Molecular, Protein Conformation, Receptors, Estrogen chemistry, Receptors, Estrogen genetics, Receptors, Estrogen metabolism, Transfection, Transforming Growth Factor alpha genetics, Tumor Cells, Cultured, Estrogens classification
- Abstract
Estrogens are involved in a multiplicity of programmed events in target tissues e.g.: uterus, breast, and pituitary gland, and hormone-responsive tumors occur at these target sites. We have addressed the possibility that all of the estrogens do not produce the same conformation of estrogen receptor alpha (ER). A novel assay in vitro was used to activate the transforming growth factor alpha (TGF-alpha) gene in situ in MDA-MB-231 cells stably transfected with cDNA for D351 ER or D351G ER. Three estrogen types were used: estradiol, diethylstilbestrol, and a triphenylethylene (TPE) derivative of tamoxifen without the antiestrogenic side chain. Computer molecular modeling was used to interpret data. A flat estrogen such as estradiol or diethylstilbestrol can induce TGF-alpha through a correctly positioned activating function 2 (AF2) and bind SRC-1. The TPE did not activate AF2 but activated the TGF-alpha gene through AF2b. This was demonstrated because D351 but not D351G ER activated the TGF-alpha gene with the TPE. We propose two classes of estrogens with different ER complexes that may incorporate different coactivators to function. Phytoestrogens and environmental xenoestrogens will fall into different classes based on structure and may exhibit selective actions and carcinogenic potential based on different ER conformations.
- Published
- 2001
37. Equipment records for modular analytical systems.
- Author
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Pease KA
- Subjects
- Management Information Systems, Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid, Forms and Records Control methods, Maintenance organization & administration, Quality Control
- Abstract
The dominant technology in the BAS analytical chemistry laboratory is high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Logbooks have been too cumbersome and unworkable for recording maintenance and repair of HPLC systems. Liquid chromatographs can have 10 or more components that can all move independently of one another as systems are reconfigured for different types of analyses. One solution to the problem of keeping accurate, easily retrievable records of equipment maintenance and repair is to use a card to record the information and a database to catalog the cards. The card contains all of the required information for routine or nonroutine maintenance and for remedial action and/or repair. The document is controlled by providing each card with a unique number and maintaining a duplicate in a bound book. The cards are filed by equipment ID number, producing an historical record of the maintenance and repair of a piece of equipment. The information on each card is also summarized in a database. Using the database, regular schedules of routine maintenance can be produced, the inclusion of all cards can be verified, and the records of a particular piece of equipment can be displayed.
- Published
- 1995
38. Longitudinal study of inmates of a prison for the psychiatrically disturbed: plasma concentrations of biogenic amine metabolites and amino acids.
- Author
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Davis BA, Yu PH, Durden DA, Pease K, Green C, Menzies R, Gordon A, Templeman R, and Boulton AA
- Subjects
- Adult, Aggression physiology, Antisocial Personality Disorder psychology, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Reference Values, Amino Acids blood, Antisocial Personality Disorder blood, Biogenic Amines blood, Commitment of Mentally Ill, Prisoners psychology
- Abstract
Plasma concentrations of eight large and neutral amino acids and 10 acidic metabolites of biogenic amines in seven inmates incarcerated in the Regional Psychiatric Centre (Praries), Correctional Service of Canada, were assessed each week day for 4 weeks (i.e., 20 samples each). Measures of central tendency and dispersion of the variables were calculated. The measures are distinctively different in their variability and their normality of distribution. The large and neutral amino acid (LNAA) measures are somewhat less variable, but also less likely to be normally distributed than most acid metabolites. Acid metabolites tend to show consistent interindividual differences that persist over time, with the notable exception of 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid. LNAA measures tend to show differences across time but not between individuals. The distributional properties of LNAA measures are largely accounted for by the observation of a downward convergence of values of these variables over the 4 weeks of the study.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Characterization of N-alpha-acetylation of corticotropin fragments by a rat pituitary enzyme.
- Author
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Pease KA and Dixon JE
- Subjects
- Acetylation, Animals, Kinetics, Rats, Rats, Inbred Strains, Subcellular Fractions enzymology, Substrate Specificity, Acetyltransferases metabolism, Adrenocorticotropic Hormone metabolism, Pituitary Gland, Anterior enzymology, Pituitary Gland, Posterior enzymology
- Published
- 1981
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Alterations in levels of thyrotrophin releasing hormone and rates of hormone degradation in hypothalamic tissue of the developing rat.
- Author
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Pease K, Shen H, Acres GS, Rupnow JH, and Dixon JE
- Subjects
- Animals, Animals, Newborn metabolism, Chromatography, Thin Layer, Female, Hypothalamus embryology, Hypothalamus enzymology, Male, Radioimmunoassay, Rats, Hypothalamus metabolism, Thyrotropin-Releasing Hormone metabolism
- Abstract
Developmental changes in levels of hypothalamic thyrotrophin releasing hormone (TRH) and the role that hypothalamic degrading enzymes may play in these alterations were investigated. Levels of TRH in male and female fetal rats and in male neonatal rats were measured by radioimmunoassay. The hormone content of the hypothalamus was shown to increase from less than 1 ng at 1--4 days of age to approximately 10 ng at 20 days of age. Thereafter, the content of TRH declined to the adult level of about 5 ng. The ability of fractionated hypothalamic homogenates to degrade TRH was measured over the same time. The 27 000 g supernatant fraction contained a degrading activity that yielded only radiolabelled deamido-TRH upon incubation with [L-proline 2,3-3H]TRH. The corresponding particulate fraction contained at least two distinct TRH degrading activities as determined by the number of metabolites present. Changes in rates of degradation were not large enough to account for the differences observed in levels of TRH.
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Characterization of a transient intermediate formed in the liver alcohol dehydrogenase catalyzed reduction of 3-hydroxy-4-nitrobenzaldehyde.
- Author
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MacGibbon AK, Koerber SC, Pease K, and Dunn MF
- Subjects
- Animals, Horses, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Kinetics, Mathematics, NAD metabolism, Oxidation-Reduction, Protein Binding, Spectrophotometry, Alcohol Dehydrogenase metabolism, Benzaldehydes metabolism, Liver enzymology
- Abstract
The compounds 3-hydroxy-4-nitrobenzaldehyde and 3-hydroxy-4-nitrobenzyl alcohol are introduced as new chromophoric substrates for probing the catalytic mechanism of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase (LADH). Ionization of the phenolic hydroxyl group shifts the spectrum of the aldehyde from 360 to 433 nm (pKa = 6.0), whereas the spectrum of the alcohol shifts from 350 to 417 nm (pKa = 6.9). Rapid-scanning, stopped-flow (RSSF) studies at alkaline pH show that the LADH-catalyzed interconversion of these compounds occurs via the formation of an enzyme-bound intermediate with a blue-shifted spectrum. When reaction is limited to a single turnover of enzyme sites, the formation and decay of the intermediate when aldehyde reacts with enzyme-bound reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide E(NADH) are characterized by two relaxations (lambda f approximately equal to 3 lambda s). Detailed stopped-flow kinetic studies were carried out to investigate the disappearance of aldehyde and NADH, the formation and decay of the intermediate, the displacement of Auramine O by substrate, and 2H kinetic isotope effects. It was found that NADH oxidation takes place at the rate of the slower relaxation (lambda s); when NADD is substituted for NADH, lambda s is subject to a small primary isotope effect (lambda Hs/lambda Ds = 2.0); and the events that occur in lambda s precede lambda f. These findings identify the intermediate as a ternary complex containing bound oxidized nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) and some form of 3-hydroxy-4-nitrobenzyl alcohol. The blue-shifted spectrum of the intermediate strongly implies a structure wherein the phenolic hydroxyl is neutral. When constrained to a mechanism that assumes only the neutral phenolic form of the substrate binds and reacts and that the intermediate is an E(NAD+, product) complex, computer simulations yield RSSF and single-wavelength time courses that are qualitatively and semiquantitatively consistent with the experimental data. We conclude that the LADH substrate site can be divided into two subsites: a highly polar, electropositive subsite in the vicinity of the active-site zinc and, just a few angstroms away, a rather nonpolar region. The polar subsite promotes formation of the two interconverting reactive ternary complexes. The nonpolar region is the binding site for the hydrocarbon-like side chains of substrates and in the case of 3-hydroxy-4-nitrobenzaldehyde conveys specificity for the neutral form of the phenolic group.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Road safety education for young children.
- Author
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Pease K and Preston B
- Subjects
- Accidents, Traffic, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Male, Accident Prevention, Education
- Published
- 1967
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The index of contingency: a critique.
- Author
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Pease K
- Subjects
- Language
- Published
- 1972
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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