20 results on '"Rachel Mintz"'
Search Results
2. Hormone and receptor activator of NF-κB (RANK) pathway gene expression in plasma and mammographic breast density in postmenopausal women
- Author
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Rachel Mintz, Mei Wang, Shuai Xu, Graham A. Colditz, Chris Markovic, and Adetunji T. Toriola
- Subjects
Mammographic breast density ,Hormones ,RANK ,RANKL ,Gene expression ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background Hormones impact breast tissue proliferation. Studies investigating the associations of circulating hormone levels with mammographic breast density have reported conflicting results. Due to the limited number of studies, we investigated the associations of hormone gene expression as well as their downstream mediators within the plasma with mammographic breast density in postmenopausal women. Methods We recruited postmenopausal women at their annual screening mammogram at Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis. We used the NanoString nCounter platform to quantify gene expression of hormones (prolactin, progesterone receptor (PGR), estrogen receptor 1 (ESR1), signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT1 and STAT5), and receptor activator of nuclear factor-kB (RANK) pathway markers (RANK, RANKL, osteoprotegerin, TNFRSF18, and TNFRSF13B) in plasma. We used Volpara to measure volumetric percent density, dense volume, and non-dense volume. Linear regression models, adjusted for confounders, were used to evaluate associations between gene expression (linear fold change) and mammographic breast density. Results One unit increase in ESR1, RANK, and TNFRSF18 gene expression was associated with 8% (95% CI 0–15%, p value = 0.05), 10% (95% CI 0–20%, p value = 0.04) and % (95% CI 0–9%, p value = 0.04) higher volumetric percent density, respectively. There were no associations between gene expression of other markers and volumetric percent density. One unit increase in osteoprotegerin and PGR gene expression was associated with 12% (95% CI 4–19%, p value = 0.003) and 7% (95% CI 0–13%, p value = 0.04) lower non-dense volume, respectively. Conclusion These findings provide new insight on the associations of plasma hormonal and RANK pathway gene expression with mammographic breast density in postmenopausal women and require confirmation in other studies.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Calcium carbonate nanoparticles stimulate cancer cell reprogramming to suppress tumor growth and invasion in an organ-on-a-chip system
- Author
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Sandra F. Lam, Kevin W. Bishop, Rachel Mintz, Lei Fang, and Samuel Achilefu
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract The acidic microenvironment of solid tumors induces the propagation of highly invasive and metastatic phenotypes. However, simulating these conditions in animal models present challenges that confound the effects of pH modulators on tumor progression. To recapitulate the tumor microenvironment and isolate the effect of pH on tumor viability, we developed a bifurcated microfluidic device that supports two different cell environments for direct comparison. RFP-expressing breast cancer cells (MDA-MB-231) were cultured in treatment and control chambers surrounded by fibrin, which received acid-neutralizing CaCO3 nanoparticles (nanoCaCO3) and cell culture media, respectively. Data analysis revealed that nanoCaCO3 buffered the pH within the normal physiological range and inhibited tumor cell proliferation compared to the untreated control (p
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Total Gaseous Mercury Concentration Measurements at Fort McMurray, Alberta, Canada
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Matthew T. Parsons, Daniel McLennan, Monique Lapalme, Curtis Mooney, Corinna Watt, and Rachel Mintz
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mercury ,total gaseous mercury ,air quality ,principal component analysis ,HYSPLIT ,Fort McMurray ,oil sands ,Meteorology. Climatology ,QC851-999 - Abstract
Observations are described from total gaseous mercury (TGM) concentrations measured at the Wood Buffalo Environmental Association (WBEA) Fort McMurray—Patricia McInnes air quality monitoring station—from 21 October 2010 through 31 May 2013, inclusively. Fort McMurray is approximately 380 km north-northeast of Edmonton, Alberta, and approximately 30 km south of major Canadian oil sands developments. The average TGM concentration over the period of this study was 1.45 ± 0.18 ng∙m−3. Principal component analysis suggests that observed TGM concentrations are correlated with meteorological conditions including temperature, relative humidity, and solar radiation, and also ozone concentration. There is no significant correlation between ambient concentrations of TGM and anthropogenic pollutants, such as nitrogen oxides (NOX) and sulphur dioxide (SO2). Principal component analysis also shows that the highest TGM concentrations observed are a result of forest fire smoke near the monitoring station. Back trajectory analysis highlights the importance of long-range transport, indicating that unseasonably high TGM concentrations are generally associated with air from the southeast and west, while unseasonably low TGM concentrations are a result of arctic air moving over the monitoring station. In general, TGM concentration appears to be driven by diel and seasonal trends superimposed over a combination of long-range transport and regional surface-air flux of gaseous mercury.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Overall survival in patients with FIGO stage IVA cervical cancer
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Joshua P. Schiff, Rachel Mintz, Alexander C. Cohen, Yi Huang, Premal Thaker, Leslie S. Massad, Matthew Powell, David Mutch, Julie K. Schwarz, Stephanie T. Markovina, and Perry W. Grigsby
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Treatment Outcome ,Oncology ,Positron Emission Tomography Computed Tomography ,Brachytherapy ,Humans ,Uterine Cervical Neoplasms ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Female ,Chemoradiotherapy ,Prospective Studies ,Disease-Free Survival ,Neoplasm Staging - Abstract
FIGO stage IVA cervical cancer is a unique diagnosis that conveys a poor prognosis. Despite the use of PET/CT for staging, concurrent chemotherapy, and image-guided brachytherapy, overall survival (OS) in these patients is low. Treatment requires aggressive use of radiotherapy and chemotherapy. We report results of a prospective observational cohort study for patients with de novo stage IVA cervical cancer treated at a single institution.Patients with a new diagnosis of stage IVA cervical cancer treated at an academic institution between 1997 and 2020 were prospectively monitored. Staging was retroactively assigned using the 2018 FIGO staging system. All patients had a PET/CT prior to treatment and were treated with definitive intent radiotherapy with or without chemotherapy. The primary outcome of interest was OS. Secondary outcomes were local control, progression-free survival (PFS), and disease-specific survival (DSS).32 patients with de novo stage IVA cervical cancer were treated with definitive intent radiotherapy. Median follow-up time was 4.27 years (1.31-10.35). 22/32 (69%) of patients received brachytherapy as a part of their definitive treatment, and 28/32 (88%) received chemotherapy concurrently with radiotherapy. 14/32 (44%) of patients had no evidence of disease at last follow-up. The 5-year local control, PFS, DFS, and OS estimates were 79%, 49%, 53%, and 48%, respectively. On multivariate analysis, complete metabolic response was associated with a statistically significant improvement in PFS (HR = 0.256, 95% CI = 0.078-0.836, p = 0.024) and OS (HR = 0.273, 95% CI 0.081-0.919).These data demonstrate a robust OS in patients with stage IVA cervical cancer when treated with definitive chemoradiotherapy.
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- 2022
6. Websites about, not for, adolescents? A systematic analysis of online fertility preservation information for adolescent and young adult cancer patients
- Author
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Sienna Ruiz, Rachel Mintz, Amela Sijecic, Michelle Eggers, Aubri S. Hoffman, Terri Woodard, Kari L. Bjornard, Holly Hoefgen, Taryn Sandheinrich, Kenan Omurtag, and Ashley J. Housten
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Oncology ,Oncology (nursing) - Abstract
Purpose Fertility preservation is an increasingly important topic in adolescent and young adult cancer survivorship, yet treatments remain under-utilized, possibly due to lack of awareness and understanding. The internet is widely used by adolescents and young adults and has been proposed to fill knowledge gaps and advance high-quality, more equitable care. As a first step, this study analyzed the quality of current fertility preservation resources online and identified opportunities for improvement. Methods We conducted a systematic analysis of 500 websites to assess the quality, readability, and desirability of website features, and the inclusion of clinically relevant topics. Results The majority of the 68 eligible websites were low quality, written at college reading levels, and included few features that younger patients find desirable. Websites mentioned more common fertility preservation treatments than promising experimental treatments, and could be improved with cost information, socioemotional impacts, and other equity-related fertility topics. Conclusions Currently, the majority of fertility preservation websites are about, but not for, adolescent and young adult patients. High-quality educational websites are needed that address outcomes that matter to teens and young adults, with a priority on solutions that prioritize equity. Implications for Cancer Survivors: Adolescent and young adult survivors have limited access to high-quality fertility preservation websites that are designed for their needs. There is a need for the development of fertility preservation websites that are clinically comprehensive, written at appropriate reading levels, inclusive, and desirable. We include specific recommendations that future researchers can use to develop websites that could better address AYA populations and improve the fertility preservation decision making process.
- Published
- 2023
7. Starfysh reveals heterogeneous spatial dynamics in the breast tumor microenvironment
- Author
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Siyu He, Yinuo Jin, Achille Nazaret, Lingting Shi, Xueer Chen, Sham Rampersaud, Bahawar S. Dhillon, Izabella Valdez, Lauren E Friend, Joy Linyue Fan, Cameron Y Park, Rachel Mintz, Yeh-Hsing Lao, David Carrera, Kaylee W Fang, Kaleem Mehdi, Madeline Rohde, José L. McFaline-Figueroa, David Blei, Kam W. Leong, Alexander Y Rudensky, George Plitas, and Elham Azizi
- Abstract
Spatially-resolved gene expression profiling provides valuable insight into tissue organization and cell-cell crosstalk; however, spatial transcriptomics (ST) lacks single-cell resolution. Current ST analysis methods require single-cell RNA sequencing data as a reference for a rigorous interpretation of cell states and do not utilize associated histology images. Significant sample variation further complicates the integration of ST datasets, which is essential for identifying commonalities across tissues or altered cellular wiring in disease. Here, we present Starfysh, the first comprehensive computational toolbox for joint modeling of ST and histology data, dissection of refined cell states, and systematic integration of multiple ST datasets from complex tissues. Starfysh uses an auxiliary deep generative model that incorporates archetypal analysis and any known cell state markers to avoid the need for a single-cell-resolution reference in characterizing known or novel tissue-specific cell states. Additionally, Starfysh improves the characterization of spatial dynamics in complex tissues by leveraging histology images and enables the comparison of niches as spatial “hubs” across tissues. Integrative analysis of primary estrogen receptor-positive (ER+) breast cancer, triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC), and metaplastic breast cancer (MBC) tumors using Starfysh led to the identification of heterogeneous patient- and disease-specific hubs as well as a shared stromal hub with varying spatial orientation. Our results show the ability to delineate the spatial co-evolution of tumor and immune cell states and their crosstalk underlying intratumoral heterogeneity in TNBC and revealed metabolic reprogramming shaping immunosuppressive hubs in aggressive MBC. Starfysh is publicly available (https://github.com/azizilab/starfysh).
- Published
- 2022
8. azizilab/starfysh: STARFYSH
- Author
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Siyu He, Yinuo Jin, Achille Nazaret, Lingting Shi, Xueer Chen, Sham Rampersaud, Bahawar Dhillon, Izabella Valdez, Lauren E Friend, Joy Linyue Fan, Cameron Y Park, Rachel Mintz, Yeh-Hsing Lao, David Carrera, Kaylee W Fang, Kaleem Mehdi, Madeline Rohde, José L. McFaline-Figueroa, David Blei, Kam W. Leong, Alexander Y Rudensky, George Plitas, and Elham Azizi
- Abstract
STARFYSH model v 1.0.0 : Spatial Transcriptomic Analysis using Reference-Free auxiliarY deep generative modeling and Shared Histology
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Remote Symptom Monitoring of Patients With Cancer Undergoing Radiation Therapy
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Ryan Wahidi, Rachel Mintz, Temitope Agabalogun, Lindsey Mayer, Shahed Badiyan, and Matthew B Spraker
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General Engineering - Abstract
The goal of the study was to develop and test an automated short message service (SMS) and web service platform using CareSignal for remote symptom monitoring in a diverse population of patients with cancer. Twenty-eight patients with cancer undergoing radiotherapy were recruited at the start of their treatment regimen. Patients received a weekly SMS symptom survey to assess the severity of the side effects they experienced from treatment. An assessment of patient perceptions of the system in terms of patient-provider communication, feasibility, and overall satisfaction was conducted, finding overall good compliance in a sick patient population and patient willingness to engage with the software in the future.
- Published
- 2022
10. Annals On Call - Professionalism
- Author
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Robert M. Centor, Rachel Mintz, and Leah Pierson
- Subjects
Professionalism ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,General Medicine - Published
- 2022
11. Rethinking Professionalism Assessments in Medical Education
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Rachel Mintz, Leah Pierson, and David Gibbes Miller
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Students, Medical ,Education, Medical ,Professionalism ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,General Medicine ,Education, Medical, Undergraduate - Published
- 2022
12. Hormone and receptor activator of NF-κB (RANK) pathway gene expression in plasma and mammographic breast density in postmenopausal women
- Author
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Rachel Mintz, Mei Wang, Shuai Xu, Graham A. Colditz, Chris Markovic, and Adetunji T. Toriola
- Subjects
Postmenopause ,Receptor Activator of Nuclear Factor-kappa B ,Risk Factors ,Osteoprotegerin ,Gene Expression ,Humans ,Breast Neoplasms ,Female ,Hormones ,Breast Density ,Mammography - Abstract
Background Hormones impact breast tissue proliferation. Studies investigating the associations of circulating hormone levels with mammographic breast density have reported conflicting results. Due to the limited number of studies, we investigated the associations of hormone gene expression as well as their downstream mediators within the plasma with mammographic breast density in postmenopausal women. Methods We recruited postmenopausal women at their annual screening mammogram at Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis. We used the NanoString nCounter platform to quantify gene expression of hormones (prolactin, progesterone receptor (PGR), estrogen receptor 1 (ESR1), signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT1 and STAT5), and receptor activator of nuclear factor-kB (RANK) pathway markers (RANK, RANKL, osteoprotegerin, TNFRSF18, and TNFRSF13B) in plasma. We used Volpara to measure volumetric percent density, dense volume, and non-dense volume. Linear regression models, adjusted for confounders, were used to evaluate associations between gene expression (linear fold change) and mammographic breast density. Results One unit increase in ESR1, RANK, and TNFRSF18 gene expression was associated with 8% (95% CI 0–15%, p value = 0.05), 10% (95% CI 0–20%, p value = 0.04) and % (95% CI 0–9%, p value = 0.04) higher volumetric percent density, respectively. There were no associations between gene expression of other markers and volumetric percent density. One unit increase in osteoprotegerin and PGR gene expression was associated with 12% (95% CI 4–19%, p value = 0.003) and 7% (95% CI 0–13%, p value = 0.04) lower non-dense volume, respectively. Conclusion These findings provide new insight on the associations of plasma hormonal and RANK pathway gene expression with mammographic breast density in postmenopausal women and require confirmation in other studies.
- Published
- 2021
13. Effect of sentinel lymph node isolated tumor cells on recurrence free survival in patients with mismatch repair proficient vs. deficient stage I/II endometrioid endometrial adenocarcinoma (173)
- Author
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Shaina Bruce, Barbara Blachut, Irina Tunnage, Rachel Mintz, Adam Liebendorfer, Tanvi Joshi, Mackenzie Cummings, Marina Stasenko, Mark Shahin, Ian Hagemann, Mary Mullen, Lindsay Kuroki, Andrea Hagemann, Katherine Fuh, Carolyn McCourt, Premal Thaker, Dineo Khabele, David Mutch, and Matthew Powell
- Subjects
Oncology ,Obstetrics and Gynecology - Published
- 2022
14. Soil–Air Mercury Flux near a Large Industrial Emission Source before and after Closure (Flin Flon, Manitoba, Canada)
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Rachel Mintz, Daniel McLennan, Mark Sekela, Chris S. Eckley, and Pierrette Blanchard
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Air Pollutants ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Geography ,Air ,Environmental engineering ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Manitoba ,Mercury ,General Chemistry ,Sink (geography) ,Mercury (element) ,Soil ,chemistry ,Industrial emission ,Environmental chemistry ,Soil water ,Smelting ,Industry ,Soil Pollutants ,Environmental Chemistry ,Environmental science - Abstract
Prior to its closure, the base-metal smelter in Flin Flon, Manitoba, Canada was one of the North America's largest mercury (Hg) emission sources. Our project objective was to understand the exchange of Hg between the soil and the air before and after the smelter closure. Field and laboratory Hg flux measurements were conducted to identify the controlling variables and used for spatial and temporal scaling. Study results showed that deposition from the smelter resulted in the surrounding soil being enriched in Hg (up to 99 μg g(-1)) as well as other metals. During the period of smelter operation, air concentrations were elevated (30 ± 19 ng m(-3)), and the soil was a net Hg sink (daily flux: -3.8 ng m(-2) h(-1)). Following the smelter closure, air Hg(0) concentrations were reduced, and the soils had large emissions (daily flux: 108 ng m(-2) h(-1)). The annual scaling of soil Hg emissions following the smelter closure indicated that the landscape impacted by smelter deposition emitted or re-emitted almost 100 kg per year. Elevated soil Hg concentrations and emissions are predicted to continue for hundreds of years before background concentrations are re-established. Overall, the results indicate that legacy Hg deposition will continue to cycle in the environment long after point-source reductions.
- Published
- 2015
15. Ambient air total gaseous mercury concentrations in the vicinity of coal-fired power plants in Alberta, Canada
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B. Wiens, Rachel Mintz, Monique Lapalme, and Maxwell Mazur
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MERCURE ,Environmental Engineering ,Air pollution ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Wind ,medicine.disease_cause ,Atmospheric sciences ,Alberta ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine ,Sulfur Dioxide ,Environmental Chemistry ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Sulfur dioxide ,AERMOD ,Air Pollutants ,Gaseous mercury ,Trace element ,Environmental engineering ,Mercury ,Pollution ,Nitrogen ,Mercury (element) ,chemistry ,Environmental science ,Nitrogen Oxides ,Power Plants - Abstract
The Lake Wabamun area, in Alberta, is unique within Canada as there are four coal-fired power plants within a 500 km(2) area. Continuous monitoring of ambient total gaseous mercury (TGM) concentrations in the Lake Wabamun area was undertaken at two sites, Genesee and Meadows. The data were analyzed in order to characterise the effect of the coal-fired power plants on the regional TGM. Mean concentrations of 1.57 ng/m(3) for Genesee and 1.50 ng/m(3) for Meadows were comparable to other Canadian sites. Maximum concentrations of 9.50 ng/m(3) and 4.43 ng/m(3) were comparable to maxima recorded at Canadian sites influenced by anthropogenic sources. The Genesee site was directly affected by the coal-fired power plants with the occurrence of northwest winds, and this was evident by episodes of elevated TGM, NO(x) and SO(2) concentrations. NO(x)/TGM and SO(2)/TGM ratios of 21.71 and 19.98 microg/ng, respectively, were characteristic of the episodic events from the northwest wind direction. AERMOD modeling predicted that coal-fired power plant TGM emissions under normal operating conditions can influence hourly ground-level concentrations by 0.46-1.19 ng/m(3)(.) The effect of changes in coal-fired power plant electricity production on the ambient TGM concentrations was also investigated, and was useful in describing some of the episodes.
- Published
- 2009
16. Fuzzy logic modeling of surface ozone concentrations
- Author
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Brent R. Young, William Y. Svrcek, and Rachel Mintz
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Ozone ,Mean squared error ,General Chemical Engineering ,Air pollution ,Mean absolute error ,medicine.disease_cause ,Fuzzy logic ,Computer Science Applications ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Surface ozone ,chemistry ,Scatter plot ,Statistics ,medicine ,Mathematics - Abstract
Due to the complex relationships and the necessity for forecasts in atmospheric studies, air pollution modeling is a task for which fuzzy logic methods are amicably suited. This research investigates the ability to predict surface ozone concentration with the use of an automated fuzzy logic method, termed modified learning from examples (MLFE). Hourly ozone concentrations during summer months in the city of Edmonton are predicted with MLFE models and the results are compared to models used by Environment Canada. The root mean square error, mean absolute error and scatter plots are used to compare the results of the MLFE, CHRONOS and CANFIS models. The newly developed model captures the trends in ozone concentrations, and based on the statistical comparisons, the MLFE consistently shows good agreement with the measured data. The MLFE model compares favourably with CHRONOS and CANFIS and is easier to implement.
- Published
- 2005
17. [Untitled]
- Author
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Yaron Schur, Yoav Yair, and Rachel Mintz
- Subjects
Engineering ,Multimedia ,business.industry ,Interpretation (philosophy) ,General Engineering ,Scientific visualization ,Educational technology ,computer.software_genre ,Data science ,Science education ,Education ,Visualization ,Planetary science ,Planet ,Physics::Space Physics ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,business ,computer ,Physical law - Abstract
We present a novel approach to teaching astronomy and planetary sciences, centered on visual images and simulations of planetary objects. The basic idea of the “Thinking Journey” concept is to take the students to other celestial objects as tourists, and to teach science through the observatio of various natural phenomena in these new environments. The power of scientific visualization, through still and dynamic images, makes such a journey an exciting learning experience. The introduction of new technologies (3D animations, virtual reality) greatly enhances the visualization capabilities the teacher can use, allowing him to simulate actual flights over the terrain of other planets and to study them as if observing from a spaceship in orbit. The present program focuses on the study of the Moon and of the planet Mars, by means of observation, interpretation, and comparison to planet Earth. Students learn to recognize geological and atmospheric processes, discuss astronomic phenomena, and discover that the same basic physical laws govern all objects in the solar system.
- Published
- 2003
18. Computerized Simulation as an Inquiry Tool
- Author
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Rachel Mintz
- Subjects
Science instruction ,Secondary education ,Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous) ,Ecology (disciplines) ,Computer-Assisted Instruction ,Thinking skills ,Science education ,Education ,Mathematics (miscellaneous) ,Scientific literacy ,History and Philosophy of Science ,Pedagogy ,Mathematics education ,Psychology ,Engineering (miscellaneous) ,Cognitive style - Published
- 1993
19. Impact of Closing Canada’s Largest Point-Source of Mercury Emissions on Local Atmospheric Mercury Concentrations
- Author
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Robert Tordon, Rachel Mintz, Pierrette Blanchard, Monique Lapalme, Maxwell Mazur, Vincent L. St. Louis, Chris S. Eckley, Jennifer A. Graydon, Robert Elleman, and Matthew T. Parsons
- Subjects
Air Pollutants ,Gaseous mercury ,Point source ,Environmental engineering ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Atmospheric mercury ,Manitoba ,Mercury ,General Chemistry ,Tailings ,Mercury (element) ,chemistry ,Environmental chemistry ,Metallurgy ,Smelting ,Soil water ,Sulfur Dioxide ,Environmental Chemistry ,Particulate Matter ,Air quality index ,Copper ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
The Flin Flon, Manitoba copper smelter was Canada's largest point source of mercury emissions until its closure in 2010 after ~80 years of operation. The objective of this study was to understand the variables controlling the local ground-level air mercury concentrations before and after this major point source reduction. Total gaseous mercury (TGM) in air, mercury in precipitation, and other ancillary meteorological and air quality parameters were measured pre- and postsmelter closure, and mercury speciation measurements in air were collected postclosure. The results showed that TGM was significantly elevated during the time period when the smelter operated (4.1 ± 3.7 ng m(-3)), decreased only 20% during the year following its closure, and remained ~2-fold above background levels. Similar trends were observed for mercury concentrations in precipitation. Several lines of evidence indicated that while smelter stack emissions would occasionally mix down to the surface resulting in large spikes in TGM concentrations (up to 61 ng m(-3)), the largest contributor to elevated TGM concentrations before and after smelter closure was from surface-air fluxes from mercury-enriched soils and/or tailings. These findings highlight the ability of legacy mercury, deposited to local landscapes over decades from industrial activities, to significantly affect local air concentrations via emissions/re-emissions.
- Published
- 2013
20. The influence of training for the atomistic schema on the development of the density concept among gifted and nongifted children
- Author
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Tamar Globerson, Rachel Mintz, and Sidney Strauss
- Subjects
Developmental stage theories ,Schema (psychology) ,education ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Psychology ,Developmental psychology - Abstract
The present study was conducted for two purposes. The first was to test the relations between the schema of atomism and the concept of density, and to examine the effects of Piagetian stage and M-capacity on these relations. This was accomplished by giving training for the schema of atomism to children at different stages and with varying M- capacities. The second purpose was to test the effects of age (9–10 versus 11–12 years) and IQ (gifted versus nongified children) as variables that would influence the outcome of training. A total of 120 children were tested. The findings were that the effects of the training and the IQ variables were significant while the effect of the age variable was not. When stage and M-capacity were covaried the effects of training and IQ remained significant. Implications for issues of developmental theory and educational practice are discussed.
- Published
- 1983
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