367 results on '"Reynolds, P. N."'
Search Results
2. WALLABY Pilot Survey: The diversity of HI structural parameters in nearby galaxies
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Reynolds, T. N., Catinella, B., Cortese, L., Deg, N., Denes, H., Elagali, A., For, B. -Q., Kamphuis, P., Kleiner, D., Koribalski, B. S., Lee-Waddell, K., Murugeshan, C., Raja, W., Rhee, J., Spekkens, K., Staveley-Smith, L., van der Hulst, J. M., Wang, J., Westmeier, T., Wong, O. I., Bigiel, F., Bosma, A., Holwerda, B. W., Leahy, D. A., and Meyer, M. J.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We investigate the diversity in the sizes and average surface densities of the neutral atomic hydrogen (HI) gas discs in ~280 nearby galaxies detected by the Widefield ASKAP L-band Legacy All-sky Blind Survey (WALLABY). We combine the uniformly observed, interferometric HI data from pilot observations of the Hydra cluster and NGC 4636 group fields with photometry measured from ultraviolet, optical and near-infrared imaging surveys to investigate the interplay between stellar structure, star formation and HI structural parameters. We quantify the HI structure by the size of the HI relative to the optical disc and the average HI surface density measured using effective and isodensity radii. For galaxies resolved by >1.3 beams, we find that galaxies with higher stellar masses and stellar surface densities tend to have less extended HI discs and lower HI surface densities: the isodensity HI structural parameters show a weak negative dependence on stellar mass and stellar mass surface density. These trends strengthen when we limit our sample to galaxies resolved by >2 beams. We find that galaxies with higher HI surface densities and more extended HI discs tend to be more star forming: the isodensity HI structural parameters have stronger correlations with star formation. Normalising the HI disc size by the optical effective radius (instead of the isophotal radius) produces positive correlations with stellar masses and stellar surface densities and removes the correlations with star formation. This is due to the effective and isodensity HI radii increasing with mass at similar rates while, in the optical, the effective radius increases slower than the isophotal radius. Our results demonstrate that with WALLABY we can begin to bridge the gap between small galaxy samples with high spatial resolution HI data and large, statistical studies using spatially unresolved, single-dish data., Comment: 16 page, 5 figures, accepted for publication in PASA
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- 2023
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3. Unique Nash equilibrium of a nonlinear model of opinion dynamics on networks with friction-inspired stubbornness
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Reynolds, David N. and Tudisco, Francesco
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Mathematics - Dynamical Systems ,Computer Science - Social and Information Networks ,Nonlinear Sciences - Adaptation and Self-Organizing Systems ,Physics - Physics and Society ,91D30, 05C57, 05C50, 34A34, 34D05 - Abstract
The modeling of opinion dynamics has seen much study in varying academic disciplines. Understanding the complex ways information can be disseminated is a complicated problem for mathematicians as well as social scientists. We present a nonlinear model of opinion dynamics that utilizes an environmental averaging protocol similar to the DeGroot and Freidkin-Johnsen models. Indeed, the way opinions evolve is complex and nonlinear effects ought to be considered when modelling. For this model, the nonlinearity destroys the translation invariance of the equations, as well as the convexity of the associated payout functions. The standard theory for well-posedness and convergence no longer applies and we must utilize the Brouwer topological degree and nonconvex analysis in order to achieve these results. Numerical simulations of the model reveal that the nonlinearity behaves similarly to the well-known Friedkin-Johnsen for so-called "reasonable" opinions, but better models the way agents that hold "extreme" opinions are more stubborn than their reasonable counterparts.
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- 2023
4. WALLABY Pilot Survey: Hydra Cluster Galaxies UV and HI morphometrics
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Holwerda, Benne W., Bigiel, Frank, Bosma, Albert, Courtois, Helene M., Deg, Nathan, Dénes, Helga, Elagali, Ahmed, For, Bi-Qing, Koribalski, Baerbel, Leahy, Denis A., Lee-Waddell, Karen, López-Sánchez, Ángel R., Oh, Se-Heon, Reynolds, Tristan N., Rhee, Jonghwan, Spekkens, Kristine, Wang, Jing, Westmeier, Tobias, and Wong, O. Ivy
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Galaxy morphology in atomic hydrogen (HI) and in the ultra-violet (UV) are closely linked. This has motivated their combined use to quantify morphology over the full H i disk for both H i and UV imaging. We apply galaxy morphometrics: Concentration, Asymmetry, Gini, M20 and Multimode-Intensity-Deviation statistics to the first moment-0 maps of the WALLABY survey of galaxies in the Hydra cluster center. Taking advantage of this new HI survey, we apply the same morphometrics over the full HI extent on archival GALEX FUV and NUV data to explore how well HI truncated, extended ultraviolet disk (XUV) and other morphological phenomena can be captured using pipeline WALLABY data products. Extended HI and UV disks can be identified relatively straightforward from their respective concentration. Combined with WALLABY HI, even the shallowest GALEX data is sufficient to identify XUV disks. Our second goal is to isolate galaxies undergoing ram-pressure stripping in the H i morphometric space. We employ four different machine learning techniques, a decision tree, a k-nearest neighbour, a support-vector machine, and a random forest. Up to 80% precision and recall are possible with the Random Forest giving the most robust results., Comment: 17 figures, 12 figures, 7 tables, accepted by MNRAS
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- 2023
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5. WALLABY Pilot Survey: Public release of HI kinematic models for more than 100 galaxies from phase 1 of ASKAP pilot observations
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Deg, N., Spekkens, K., Westmeier, T., Reynolds, T. N., Venkataraman, P., Goliath, S., Shen, A. X., Halloran, R., Bosma, A., Catinella, B., de Blok, W. J. G., Dénes, H., Di Teodoro, E. M., Elagali, A., For, B. -Q., Howlett, C., Józsa, G. I. G., Kamphuis, P., Kleiner, D., Koribalski, B., Lee-Waddell, K., Lelli, F., Lin, X., Murugeshan, C., Oh, S., Rhee, J., Scott, T. C., Staveley-Smith, L., van der Hulst, J. M., Verdes-Montenegro, L., Wang, J., and Wong, O. I.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the Widefield ASKAP L-band Legacy All-sky Blind surveY (WALLABY) Pilot Phase I HI kinematic models. This first data release consists of HI observations of three fields in the direction of the Hydra and Norma clusters, and the NGC 4636 galaxy group. In this paper, we describe how we generate and publicly release flat-disk tilted-ring kinematic models for 109/592 unique HI detections in these fields. The modelling method adopted here - which we call the WALLABY Kinematic Analysis Proto-Pipeline (WKAPP) and for which the corresponding scripts are also publicly available - consists of combining results from the homogeneous application of the FAT and 3DBAROLO algorithms to the subset of 209 detections with sufficient resolution and S/N in order to generate optimized model parameters and uncertainties. The 109 models presented here tend to be gas rich detections resolved by at least 3-4 synthesized beams across their major axes, but there is no obvious environmental bias in the modelling. The data release described here is the first step towards the derivation of similar products for thousands of spatially-resolved WALLABY detections via a dedicated kinematic pipeline. Such a large publicly available and homogeneously analyzed dataset will be a powerful legacy product that that will enable a wide range of scientific studies., Comment: Accepted to PASA
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- 2022
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6. WALLABY Pilot Survey: Public release of HI data for almost 600 galaxies from phase 1 of ASKAP pilot observations
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Westmeier, T., Deg, N., Spekkens, K., Reynolds, T. N., Shen, A. X., Gaudet, S., Goliath, S., Huynh, M. T., Venkataraman, P., Lin, X., O'Beirne, T., Catinella, B., Cortese, L., Dénes, H., Elagali, A., For, B. -Q., Józsa, G. I. G., Howlett, C., van der Hulst, J. M., Jurek, R. J., Kamphuis, P., Kilborn, V. A., Kleiner, D., Koribalski, B. S., Lee-Waddell, K., Murugeshan, C., Rhee, J., Serra, P., Shao, L., Staveley-Smith, L., Wang, J., Wong, O. I., Zwaan, M. A., Allison, J. R., Anderson, C. S., Ball, Lewis, Bock, D. C. -J., Brodrick, D., Bunton, J. D., Cooray, F. R., Gupta, N., Hayman, D. B., Mahony, E. K., Moss, V. A., Ng, A., Pearce, S. E., Raja, W., Roxby, D. N., Voronkov, M. A., Warhurst, K. A., Courtois, H. M., and Said, K.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present WALLABY pilot data release 1, the first public release of HI pilot survey data from the Wide-field ASKAP L-band Legacy All-sky Blind Survey (WALLABY) on the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder. Phase 1 of the WALLABY pilot survey targeted three $60~{\rm deg}^2$ regions on the sky in the direction of the Hydra and Norma galaxy clusters and the NGC 4636 galaxy group, covering the redshift range of z < 0.08. The source catalogue, images and spectra of nearly 600 extragalactic HI detections and kinematic models for 109 spatially resolved galaxies are available. As the pilot survey targeted regions containing nearby group and cluster environments, the median redshift of the sample of z ~ 0.014 is relatively low compared to the full WALLABY survey. The median galaxy HI mass is $2.3 \times 10^{9}~M_{\odot}$. The target noise level of 1.6 mJy per $30''$ beam and 18.5 kHz channel translates into a $5\sigma$ HI mass sensitivity for point sources of about $5.2 \times 10^{8} \, (D_{\rm L} / \mathrm{100~Mpc})^{2} \, M_{\odot}$ across 50 spectral channels (~200 km/s) and a $5\sigma$ HI column density sensitivity of about $8.6 \times 10^{19} \, (1 + z)^{4}~\mathrm{cm}^{-2}$ across 5 channels (~20 km/s) for emission filling the $30''$ beam. As expected for a pilot survey, several technical issues and artefacts are still affecting the data quality. Most notably, there are systematic flux errors of up to several 10% caused by uncertainties about the exact size and shape of each of the primary beams as well as the presence of sidelobes due to the finite deconvolution threshold. In addition, artefacts such as residual continuum emission and bandpass ripples have affected some of the data. The pilot survey has been highly successful in uncovering such technical problems, most of which are expected to be addressed and rectified before the start of the full WALLABY survey., Comment: 24 pages, 13 figures, 5 tables, accepted for publication in PASA
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- 2022
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7. Schr\'odinger-Lohe type models of quantum synchronization with nonidentical oscillators
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Antonelli, Paolo and Reynolds, David N.
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Mathematics - Analysis of PDEs ,35Q40 (Primary) 35B40, 81P40 (Secondary) - Abstract
We study the asymptotic emergent dynamics of two models that can be thought of as extensions of the well known Schr\"odinger-Lohe model for quantum synchronization. More precisely, the interaction strength between different oscillators is determined by intrinsic parameters, following Cucker-Smale communication protocol. Unlike the original Schr\"odinger-Lohe system, where the interaction strength was assumed to be uniform, in the cases under our consideration the total mass of each quantum oscillator is allowed to vary in time. A striking consequence of this property is that these extended models yield configurations exhibiting phase, but not space, synchronization. The results are mainly based on the analysis of the ODE systems arising from the correlations, control over the well known Cucker-Smale dynamics, and the dynamics satisfied by the quantum order parameter., Comment: 18 pages, minor changes and submitted
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- 2022
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8. WALLABY Pilot Survey: HI gas disc truncation and star formation of galaxies falling into the Hydra I cluster
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Reynolds, T. N., Catinella, B., Cortese, L., Westmeier, T., Meurer, G. R., Shao, L., Obreschkow, D., Román, J., Verdes-Montenegro, L., Deg, N., Dénes, H., For, B. -Q., Kleiner, D., Koribalski, B. S., Lee-Waddell, K., Murugeshan, C., Oh, S. -H., Rhee, J., Spekkens, K., Staveley-Smith, L., Stevens, A. R. H., van der Hulst, J. M., Wang, J., Wong, O. I., Holwerda, B. W., Bosma, A., Madrid, J. P., and Bekki, K.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present results from our analysis of the Hydra I cluster observed in neutral atomic hydrogen (HI) as part of the Widefield ASKAP L-band Legacy All-sky Blind Survey (WALLABY). These WALLABY observations cover a 60-square-degree field of view with uniform sensitivity and a spatial resolution of 30 arcsec. We use these wide-field observations to investigate the effect of galaxy environment on HI gas removal and star formation quenching by comparing the properties of cluster, infall and field galaxies extending up to $\sim5R_{200}$ from the cluster centre. We find a sharp decrease in the HI-detected fraction of infalling galaxies at a projected distance of $\sim1.5R_{200}$ from the cluster centre from $\sim0.85\%$ to $\sim0.35\%$. We see evidence for the environment removing gas from the outskirts of HI-detected cluster and infall galaxies through the decrease in the HI to $r$-band optical disc diameter ratio. These galaxies lie on the star forming main sequence, indicating that gas removal is not yet affecting the inner star-forming discs and is limited to the galaxy outskirts. Although we do not detect galaxies undergoing galaxy-wide quenching, we do observe a reduction in recent star formation in the outer disc of cluster galaxies, which is likely due to the smaller gas reservoirs present beyond the optical radius in these galaxies. Stacking of HI non-detections with HI masses below $M_{\rm{HI}}\lesssim10^{8.4}\,\rm{M}_{\odot}$ will be required to probe the HI of galaxies undergoing quenching at distances $\gtrsim60$ Mpc with WALLABY., Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2021
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9. WALLABY Pre-Pilot Survey: HI Content of the Eridanus Supergroup
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For, Bi-Qing, Wang, J., Westmeier, T., Wong, O. I., Murugeshan, C., Staveley-Smith, L., Courtois, H. M., Pomarede, D., Spekkens, K., Catinella, B., McQuinn, K. B. W., Elagali, A., Koribalski, B. S., Lee-Waddell, K., Madrid, J. P., Popping, A., Reynolds, T. N., Rhee, J., Bekki, K., Denes, H., Kamphuis, P., and Verdes-Montenegro, L.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present observations of the Eridanus supergroup obtained with the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) as part of the pre-pilot survey for the Widefield ASKAP L-band Legacy All-sky Blind Survey (WALLABY). The total number of detected HI sources is 55, of which 12 are background galaxies not associated with the Eridanus supergroup. Two massive HI clouds are identified and large HI debris fields are seen in the NGC 1359 interacting galaxy pair, and the face-on spiral galaxy NGC 1385. We describe the data products from the source finding algorithm and present the basic parameters. The presence of distorted HI morphology in all detected galaxies suggests ongoing tidal interactions within the subgroups. The Eridanus group has a large fraction of HI deficient galaxies as compared to previously studied galaxy groups. These HI deficient galaxies are not found at the centre of the group. We find that galaxies in the Eridanus supergroup do not follow the general trend of the atomic gas fraction versus stellar mass scaling relation, which indicates that the scaling relation changes with environmental density. In general, the majority of these galaxies are actively forming stars., Comment: 20 pages, 14 Figures, 5 Tables. Accepted by MNRAS. Supplementary material is published online
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- 2021
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10. WALLABY Pre-Pilot Survey: The effects of angular momentum and environment on the HI gas and star formation properties of galaxies in the Eridanus supergroup
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Murugeshan, C., Kilborn, V. A., For, B. -Q., Wong, O. I., Wang, J., Westmeier, T., Stevens, A. R. H., Spekkens, K., Kamphuis, P., Staveley-Smith, L., Lee-Waddell, K., Kleiner, D., Koribalski, B. S., Cluver, M. E., Oh, S. -H., Rhee, J., Catinella, B., Reynolds, T. N., Denes, H., and Elagali, A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We use high-resolution ASKAP observations of galaxies in the Eridanus supergroup to study their HI, angular momentum and star formation properties, as part of the WALLABY pre-pilot survey efforts. The Eridanus supergroup is composed of three sub-groups in the process of merging to form a cluster. The main focus of this study is the Eridanus (or NGC 1395) sub-group. The baryonic specific angular momentum - baryonic mass ($j_{\mathrm{b}} - M_{\mathrm{b}}$) relation for the Eridanus galaxies is observed to be an unbroken power law of the form $j_{\mathrm{b}} \propto M_{\mathrm{b}}^{0.57 \pm 0.05}$, with a scatter of $\sim 0.10 \pm 0.01$ dex, consistent with previous works. We examine the relation between the atomic gas fraction, $f_{\mathrm{atm}}$, and the integrated atomic disc stability parameter $q$ (the $f_{\mathrm{atm}} - q$ relation), and find that the Eridanus galaxies deviate significantly from the relation owing to environmental processes such as tidal interactions and ram-pressure affecting their HI gas. We find that a majority of the Eridanus galaxies are HI deficient compared to normal star-forming galaxies in the field. We also find that the star formation among the Eridanus galaxies may be suppressed owing to their environment, thus hinting at significant levels of pre-processing within the Eridanus sub-group, even before the galaxies have entered a cluster-like environment., Comment: 19 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2021
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11. WALLABY pre-pilot survey: Two dark clouds in the vicinity of NGC 1395
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Wong, O. Ivy, Stevens, A. R. H., For, B. -Q., Westmeier, T., Dixon, M., Oh, S. -H., Józsa, G. I. G., Reynolds, T. N., Lee-Waddell, K., Román, J., Verdes-Montenegro, L., Courtois, H. M., Pomarède, D., Murugeshan, C., Whiting, M. T., Bekki, K., Bigiel, F., Bosma, A., Catinella, B., Dénes, H., Elagali, A., Holwerda, B. W., Kamphuis, P., Kilborn, V. A., Kleiner, D., Koribalski, B. S., Lelli, F., Madrid, J. P., McQuinn, K. B. W., Popping, A., Rhee, J., Roychowdhury, S., Scott, T. C., Sengupta, C., Spekkens, K., Staveley-Smith, L., and Wakker, B. P.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) WALLABY pre-pilot observations of two `dark' HI sources (with HI masses of a few times 10^8 Msol and no known stellar counterpart) that reside within 363 kpc of NGC 1395, the most massive early-type galaxy in the Eridanus group of galaxies. We investigate whether these `dark' HI sources have resulted from past tidal interactions or whether they are an extreme class of low surface brightness galaxies. Our results suggest that both scenarios are possible, and not mutually exclusive. The two `dark' HI sources are compact, reside in relative isolation and are more than 159 kpc away from their nearest HI-rich galaxy neighbour. Regardless of origin, the HI sizes and masses of both `dark' HI sources are consistent with the HI size-mass relationship that is found in nearby low-mass galaxies, supporting the possibility that these HI sources are an extreme class of low surface brightness galaxies. We identified three analogues of candidate primordial `dark' HI galaxies within the TNG100 cosmological, hydrodynamic simulation. All three model analogues are dark matter-dominated, have assembled most of their mass 12-13 Gyr ago, and have not experienced much evolution until cluster infall 1-2 Gyr ago. Our WALLABY pre-pilot science results suggest that the upcoming large area HI surveys will have a significant impact on our understanding of low surface brightness galaxies and the physical processes that shape them., Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2021
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12. Global solutions to multi-dimensional topological Euler alignment systems
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Lear, Daniel, Reynolds, David N., and Shvydkoy, Roman
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Mathematics - Analysis of PDEs ,92D25, 35Q35, 76N10 - Abstract
We present a systematic approach to regularity theory of the multi-dimensional Euler alignment systems with topological diffusion introduced in \cite{STtopo}. While these systems exhibit flocking behavior emerging from purely local communication, bearing direct relevance to empirical field studies, global and even local well-posedness has proved to be a major challenge in multi-dimensional settings due to the presence of topological effects. In this paper we reveal two important classes of global smooth solutions -- parallel shear flocks with incompressible velocity and stationary density profile, and nearly aligned flocks with close to constant velocity field but arbitrary density distribution. Existence of such classes is established via an efficient continuation criterion requiring control only on the Lipschitz norm of state quantities, which makes it accessible to the applications of fractional parabolic theory. The criterion presents a major improvement over the existing result of \cite{RS2020}, and is proved with the use of quartic paraproduct estimates., Comment: 28 pages
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- 2021
13. SoFiA 2 -- An automated, parallel HI source finding pipeline for the WALLABY survey
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Westmeier, T., Kitaeff, S., Pallot, D., Serra, P., van der Hulst, J. M., Jurek, R. J., Elagali, A., For, B. -Q., Kleiner, D., Koribalski, B. S., Lee-Waddell, K., Mould, J. R., Reynolds, T. N., Rhee, J., and Staveley-Smith, L.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We present SoFiA 2, the fully automated 3D source finding pipeline for the WALLABY extragalactic HI survey with the Australian SKA Pathfinder (ASKAP). SoFiA 2 is a reimplementation of parts of the original SoFiA pipeline in the C programming language and makes use of OpenMP for multi-threading of the most time-critical algorithms. In addition, we have developed a parallel framework called SoFiA-X that allows the processing of large data cubes to be split across multiple computing nodes. As a result of these efforts, SoFiA 2 is substantially faster and comes with a much reduced memory footprint compared to its predecessor, thus allowing the large WALLABY data volumes of hundreds of gigabytes of imaging data per epoch to be processed in real-time. The source code has been made publicly available to the entire community under an open-source licence. Performance tests using mock galaxies injected into genuine ASKAP data suggest that in the absence of significant imaging artefacts SoFiA 2 is capable of achieving near-100% completeness and reliability above an integrated signal-to-noise ratio of about 5-6. We also demonstrate that SoFiA 2 generally recovers the location, integrated flux and w20 line width of galaxies with high accuracy. Other parameters, including the peak flux density and w50 line width, are more strongly biased due to the influence of the noise on the measurement. In addition, very faint galaxies below an integrated signal-to-noise ratio of about 10 may get broken up into multiple components, thus requiring a strategy to identify fragmented sources and ensure that they do not affect the integrity of any scientific analysis based on the SoFiA 2 output., Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2021
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14. WALLABY Pilot Survey: First Look at the Hydra I Cluster and Ram Pressure Stripping of ESO 501-G075
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Reynolds, T. N., Westmeier, T., Elagali, A., Catinella, B., Cortese, L., Deg, N., For, B. -Q., Kamphuis, P., Kleiner, D., Koribalski, B. S., Lee-Waddell, K., Oh, S. -H., Rhee, J., Serra, P., Spekkens, K., Staveley-Smith, L., Stevens, A. R. H., Taylor, E. N., Wang, J., and Wong, O. I.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present results from neutral atomic hydrogen (HI) observations of Hydra I, the first cluster observed by the Widefield ASKAP L-band Legacy All-sky Blind Survey (WALLABY) on the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder. For the first time we show that WALLABY can reach its final survey sensitivity. Leveraging the sensitivity, spatial resolution and wide field of view of WALLABY, we identify a galaxy, ESO 501-G075, that lies near the virial radius of Hydra I and displays an HI tail. ESO 501-G075 shows a similar level of morphological asymmetry as another cluster member, which lies near the cluster centre and shows signs of experiencing ram pressure. We investigate possible environmental processes that could be responsible for producing the observed disturbance in the HI morphology of ESO 501-G075. We rule out tidal interactions, as ESO 501-G075 has no nearby neighbours within $\sim0.34$Mpc. We use a simple model to determine that ram pressure can remove gas from the disc at radii $r\gtrsim25$kpc. We conclude that, as ESO 501-G075 has a typical HI mass compared to similar galaxies in the field and its morphology is compatible with a ram pressure scenario, ESO 501-G075 is likely recently infalling into the cluster and in the early stages of experiencing ram pressure., Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2021
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15. WALLABY Pilot Survey: the diversity of ram pressure stripping of the galactic HI gas in the Hydra Cluster
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Wang, Jing, Staveley-Smith, Lister, Westmeier, Tobias, Catinella, Barbara, Shao, Li, Reynolds, T. N., For, Bi-Qing, Lee, Bumhyun, Liang, Ze-zhong, Wang, Shun, Elagali, A., Denes, H., Kleiner, D., Koribalski, Baerbel S., Lee-Waddell, K., Oh, S-H., Rhee, J., Serra, P., Spekkens, K., Wong, O. I., Bekki, K., Bigiel, F., Courtois, H. M., Hess, Kelley M., Holwerda, B. W., McQuinn, Kristen B. W., Pandey-Pommier, M., van der Hulst, J. M., and Verdes-Montenegro, L.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
This study uses HI image data from the WALLABY pilot survey with the ASKAP telescope, covering the Hydra cluster out to 2.5$r_{200}$. We present the projected phase-space distribution of HI-detected galaxies in Hydra, and identify that nearly two thirds of the galaxies within $1.25r_{200}$ may be in the early stages of ram pressure stripping. More than half of these may be only weakly stripped, with the ratio of strippable HI (i.e., where the galactic restoring force is lower than the ram pressure in the disk) mass fraction (over total HI mass) distributed uniformly below 90%. Consequently, the HI mass is expected to decrease by only a few 0.1 dex after the currently strippable portion of HI in these systems has been stripped. A more detailed look at the subset of galaxies that are spatially resolved by WALLABY observations shows that, while it typically takes less than 200 Myr for ram pressure stripping to remove the currently strippable portion of HI, it may take more than 600 Myr to significantly change the total HI mass. Our results provide new clues to understanding the different rates of HI depletion and star formation quenching in cluster galaxies., Comment: 25 pages, 10 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication at ApJ
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- 2021
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16. HI Deficiencies and Asymmetries in HIPASS Galaxies
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Reynolds, T. N., Westmeier, T., and Staveley-Smith, L.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present an analysis of the sky distribution of neutral hydrogen (HI) deficiency and spectral asymmetry for galaxies detected by the HI Parkes All-Sky Survey (HIPASS) as a function of projected environment density. Previous studies of galaxy HI deficiency using HIPASS were sensitive to galaxies that are extremely HI rich or poor. We use an updated binning statistic for measuring the global sky distribution of HI deficiency that is sensitive to the average deficiencies. Our analysis confirms the result from previous studies that galaxies residing in denser environments, such as Virgo, are on average more HI deficient than galaxies at lower densities. However, many other individual groups and clusters are not found to be on average significantly HI poor, in contradiction to previous work. In terms of HI spectral asymmetries, we do not recover any significant trend of increasing asymmetry with environment density as found for other galaxy samples. We also investigate the correlation between HI asymmetry and deficiency, but find no variation in the mean asymmetry of galaxies that are HI rich, normal or poor. This indicates that there is either no dependence of asymmetry on HI deficiency, or a galaxy's HI deficiency only has a small influence on the measured HI asymmetry that we are unable to observe using only integrated spectra., Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2020
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17. Grassmannian reduction of Cucker-Smale systems and dynamical opinion games
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Lear, Daniel, Reynolds, David N., and Shvydkoy, Roman
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Mathematics - Analysis of PDEs ,Mathematics - Classical Analysis and ODEs ,92D25, 35Q35 - Abstract
In this note we study a new class of alignment models with self-propulsion and Rayleigh-type friction forces, which describes the collective behavior of agents with individual characteristic parameters. We describe the long time dynamics via a new method which allows to reduce analysis from the multidimensional system to a simpler family of two-dimensional systems parametrized by a proper Grassmannian. With this method we demonstrate exponential alignment for a large (and sharp) class of initial velocity configurations confined to a sector of opening less than $\pi$. In the case when characteristic parameters remain frozen, the system governs dynamics of opinions for a set of players with constant convictions. Viewed as a dynamical non-cooperative game, the system is shown to possess a unique stable Nash equilibrium, which represents a settlement of opinions most agreeable to all agents. Such an agreement is furthermore shown to be a global attractor for any set of initial opinions., Comment: 20 pages
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- 2020
18. HI Asymmetries in LVHIS, VIVA and HALOGAS Galaxies
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Reynolds, T. N., Westmeier, T., Staveley-Smith, L., Chauhan, G., and Lagos, C. D. P.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present an analysis of morphological, kinematic and spectral asymmetries in observations of atomic neutral hydrogen (HI) gas from the Local Volume HI Survey (LVHIS), the VLA Imaging of Virgo in Atomic Gas (VIVA) survey and the Hydrogen Accretion in Local Galaxies Survey (HALOGAS). With the aim of investigating the impact of the local environment density and stellar mass on the measured HI asymmetries in future large HI surveys, we provide recommendations for the most meaningful measures of asymmetry for use in future analysis. After controlling for stellar mass, we find signs of statistically significant trends of increasing asymmetries with local density. The most significant trend we measure is for the normalised flipped spectrum residual ($A_{\mathrm{spec}}$), with mean LVHIS and VIVA values of $0.204\pm0.011$ and $0.615\pm0.068$ at average weighted $10^{\mathrm{th}}$ nearest-neighbour galaxy number densities of $\log(\rho_{10}/\mathrm{Mpc}^{-3})=-1.64$ and 0.88, respectively. Looking ahead to the WALLABY survey on the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP), we estimate that the number of detections will be sufficient to provide coverage over 5 orders of magnitude in both local density and stellar mass increasing the dynamic range and accuracy with which we can probe the effect of these properties on the asymmetry in the distribution of atomic gas in galaxies., Comment: 20 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
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- 2020
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19. WALLABY -- An SKA Pathfinder HI Survey
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Koribalski, B. S., Staveley-Smith, L., Westmeier, T., Serra, P., Spekkens, K., Wong, O. I., Lagos, C. D. P., Obreschkow, D., Ryan-Weber, E. V., Zwaan, M., Kilborn, V., Bekiaris, G., Bekki, K., Bigiel, F., Boselli, A., Bosma, A., Catinella, B., Chauhan, G., Cluver, M. E., Colless, M., Courtois, H. M., Crain, R. A., de Blok, W. J. G., Dénes, H., Duffy, A. R., Elagali, A., Fluke, C. J., For, B. -Q., Heald, G., Henning, P. A., Hess, K. M., Holwerda, B. W., Howlett, C., Jarrett, T., Jones, D. H., Jones, M. G., Józsa, G. I. G., Jurek, R., Jütte, E., Kamphuis, P., Karachentsev, I., Kerp, J., Keiner, D., Kraan-Korteweg, R. C., Lee-Waddell, K., López-Sánchez, A. R., Madrid, J., Meyer, M., Mould, J., Murugeshan, C., Norris, R. P., Oh, S. -H., Oosterloo, T. A., Popping, A., Putman, M., Reynolds, T. N., Rhee, J., Robotham, A. S. G., Ryder, S., Schröder, A. C., Shao, Li, Stevens, A. R. H., Taylor, E. N., van der Hulst, J. M., Verdes-Montenegro, L., Wakker, B. P., Wang, J., Whiting, M., Winkel, B., and Wolf, C.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The Widefield ASKAP L-band Legacy All-sky Blind surveY (WALLABY) is a next-generation survey of neutral hydrogen (HI) in the Local Universe. It uses the widefield, high-resolution capability of the Australian Square Kilometer Array Pathfinder (ASKAP), a radio interferometer consisting of 36 x 12-m dishes equipped with Phased-Array Feeds (PAFs), located in an extremely radio-quiet zone in Western Australia. WALLABY aims to survey three-quarters of the sky (-90 degr < Dec < +30 degr) to a redshift of z < 0.26, and generate spectral line image cubes at ~30 arcsec resolution and ~1.6 mJy/beam per 4 km/s channel sensitivity. ASKAP's instantaneous field of view at 1.4 GHz, delivered by the PAF's 36 beams, is about 30 sq deg. At an integrated signal-to-noise ratio of five, WALLABY is expected to detect over half a million galaxies with a mean redshift of z ~ 0.05 (~200 Mpc). The scientific goals of WALLABY include: (a) a census of gas-rich galaxies in the vicinity of the Local Group; (b) a study of the HI properties of galaxies, groups and clusters, in particular the influence of the environment on galaxy evolution; and (c) the refinement of cosmological parameters using the spatial and redshift distribution of low-bias gas-rich galaxies. For context we provide an overview of previous large-scale HI surveys. Combined with existing and new multi-wavelength sky surveys, WALLABY will enable an exciting new generation of panchromatic studies of the Local Universe. - First results from the WALLABY pilot survey are revealed, with initial data products publicly available in the CSIRO ASKAP Science Data Archive (CASDA)., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApSS (38 pages, 14 figures), see also https://www.atnf.csiro.au/research/WALLABY/ - Contact email: Baerbel.Koribalski@csiro.au
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- 2020
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20. Local well-posedness of the topological Euler alignment models of collective behavior
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Reynolds, David N. and Shvydkoy, Roman
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Mathematics - Analysis of PDEs ,92D25, 35Q35, 76N10 - Abstract
In this paper we address the problem of well-posedness of multi-dimensional topological Euler-alignment models introduced in \cite{ST-topo}. The main result demonstrates local existence and uniqueness of classical solutions in class $(\rho,u) \in H^{m+\alpha} \times H^{m+1}$ on the periodic domain $\mathbb{T}^n$, where $0<\alpha<2$ is the order of singularity of the topological communication kernel $\phi(x,y)$, and $m = m(n,\alpha)$ is large. Our approach is based on new sharp coercivity estimates for the topological alignment operator \[ \mathcal{L}_\phi f(x) = \int_{\mathbb{T}^n} \phi(x,y) (f(y) - f(x) ) dy, \] which render proper a priori estimates and help stabilize viscous approximation of the system. In dimension 1, this result, in conjunction with the technique developed in \cite{ST-topo} gives global well-posendess in the natural space of data mentioned above., Comment: 33 pages
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- 2019
21. WALLABY Early Science -- IV. ASKAP HI imaging of the nearby galaxy IC 5201
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Kleiner, D., Koribalski, B. S., Serra, P., Whiting, M. T., Westmeier, T., Wong, O. I., Kamphuis, P., Popping, A., Bekiaris, G., Elagali, A., For, B. -Q., Lee-Waddell, K., Madrid, J. P., Reynolds, T. N., Rhee, J., Shao, L., Staveley-Smith, L., Wang, J., Anderson, C. S., Collier, J., Ord, S. M., and Voronkov, M. A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a Wide-field ASKAP L-Band Legacy All-sky Blind surveY (WALLABY) study of the nearby ($v_{\rm sys}$ = 915 km s$^{-1}$) spiral galaxy IC 5201 using the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP). IC 5201 is a blue, barred spiral galaxy that follows the known scaling relations between stellar mass, SFR, HI mass and diameter. We create a four-beam mosaicked HI image cube, from 175 hours of observations made with a 12-antenna sub-array. The RMS noise level of the cube is 1.7 mJy beam$^{-1}$ per channel, equivalent to a column density of $N_{\rm HI}$ = 1.4 $\times$ 10$^{20}$ cm$^{-2}$ over 25 km s$^{-1}$. We report 9 extragalactic HI detections $-$ 5 new HI detections including the first velocity measurements for 2 galaxies. These sources are IC 5201, 3 dwarf satellite galaxies, 2 galaxies and a tidal feature belonging to the NGC 7232/3 triplet and 2 potential infalling galaxies to the triplet. There is evidence of a previous tidal interaction between IC 5201 and the irregular satellite AM 2220$-$460. A close fly-by is likely responsible for the asymmetric optical morphology of IC 5201 and warping its disc, resulting in the irregular morphology of AM 2220$-$460. We quantify the HI kinematics of IC 5201, presenting its rotation curve as well as showing that the warp starts at 14 kpc along the major axis, increasing as a function of radius with a maximum difference in position angle of 20$^\circ$. There is no evidence of stripped HI, triggered or quenched star formation in the system as measured using DECam optical and $GALEX$ UV photometry., Comment: 19 pages, 11 figures, accepted in MNRAS
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- 2019
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22. WALLABY Early Science - III. An HI Study of the Spiral Galaxy NGC 1566
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Elagali, A., Staveley-Smith, L., Rhee, J., Wong, O. I., Bosma, A., Westmeier, T., Koribalski, B. S., Heald, G., For, B. -Q., Kleiner, D., Lee-Waddell, K., Madrid, J. P., Popping, A., Reynolds, T. N., Meyer, M. J., Allison, J. R., Lagos, C. D. P., Voronkov, M. A., Serra, P., Shao, L., Wang, J., Anderson, C. S., Bunton, J. D., Bekiaris, G., Kamphuis, P., Oh, S-H., Walsh, W. M., and Kilborn, V. A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
This paper reports on the atomic hydrogen gas (HI) observations of the spiral galaxy NGC 1566 using the newly commissioned Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) radio telescope. We measure an integrated HI flux density of $180.2$ Jy km s$^{-1}$ emanating from this galaxy, which translates to an HI mass of $1.94\times10^{10}$M$_\circ$ at an assumed distance of $21.3$ Mpc. Our observations show that NGC 1566 has an asymmetric and mildly warped HI disc. The HI-to-stellar mass fraction of NGC 1566 is $0.29$, which is high in comparison with galaxies that have the same stellar mass ($10^{10.8}$M$_\circ$). We also derive the rotation curve of this galaxy to a radius of $50$ kpc and fit different mass models to it. The NFW, Burkert and pseudo-isothermal dark matter halo profiles fit the observed rotation curve reasonably well and recover dark matter fractions of $0.62$, $0.58$ and $0.66$, respectively. Down to the column density sensitivity of our observations ($N_{HI} = 3.7\times10^{19}$ cm$^{-2}$), we detect no HI clouds connected to, or in the nearby vicinity of, the HI disc of NGC 1566 nor nearby interacting systems. We conclude that, based on a simple analytic model, ram pressure interactions with the IGM can affect the HI disc of NGC 1566 and is possibly the reason for the asymmetries seen in the HI morphology of NGC 1566., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2019
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23. WALLABY Early Science - II. The NGC 7232 galaxy group
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Lee-Waddell, K., Koribalski, B. S., Westmeier, T., Elagali, A., For, B. -Q., Kleiner, D., Madrid, J. P., Popping, A., Reynolds, T. N., Rhee, J., Serra, P., Shao, L., Staveley-Smith, L., Wang, J., Whiting, M. T., Wong, O. I., Allison, J. R., Bhandari, S., Collier, J. D., Heald, G., Marvil, J., and Ord, S. M.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We report on neutral hydrogen (HI) observations of the NGC 7232 group with the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP). These observations were conducted as part of the Wide-field ASKAP L-Band Legacy All-sky Blind surveY (WALLABY) Early Science program with an array of 12 ASKAP antennas equipped with Phased Array Feeds, which were used to form 36 beams to map a field of view of 30 square degrees. Analyzing a subregion of the central beams, we detect 17 HI sources. Eleven of these detections are identified as galaxies and have stellar counterparts, of which five are newly resolved HI galaxy sources. The other six detections appear to be tidal debris in the form of HI clouds that are associated with the central triplet, NGC 7232/3, comprising the spiral galaxies NGC 7232, NGC7232B and NGC7233. One of these HI clouds has a mass of M_HI ~ 3 x 10^8 M_sol and could be the progenitor of a long-lived tidal dwarf galaxy. The remaining HI clouds are likely transient tidal knots that are possibly part of a diffuse tidal bridge between NGC 7232/3 and another group member, the lenticular galaxy IC 5181., Comment: 18 pages (including appendix), 9 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2019
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24. The PedBE clock accurately estimates DNA methylation age in pediatric buccal cells.
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McEwen, Lisa M, O'Donnell, Kieran J, McGill, Megan G, Edgar, Rachel D, Jones, Meaghan J, MacIsaac, Julia L, Lin, David Tse Shen, Ramadori, Katia, Morin, Alexander, Gladish, Nicole, Garg, Elika, Unternaehrer, Eva, Pokhvisneva, Irina, Karnani, Neerja, Kee, Michelle ZL, Klengel, Torsten, Adler, Nancy E, Barr, Ronald G, Letourneau, Nicole, Giesbrecht, Gerald F, Reynolds, James N, Czamara, Darina, Armstrong, Jeffrey M, Essex, Marilyn J, de Weerth, Carolina, Beijers, Roseriet, Tollenaar, Marieke S, Bradley, Bekh, Jovanovic, Tanja, Ressler, Kerry J, Steiner, Meir, Entringer, Sonja, Wadhwa, Pathik D, Buss, Claudia, Bush, Nicole R, Binder, Elisabeth B, Boyce, W Thomas, Meaney, Michael J, Horvath, Steve, and Kobor, Michael S
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Mouth Mucosa ,Epithelial Cells ,Humans ,Cohort Studies ,Longitudinal Studies ,Epigenesis ,Genetic ,CpG Islands ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Infant ,Female ,Male ,Young Adult ,Epigenomics ,DNA methylation ,adolescence ,age ,development ,epigenetic clock ,Human Genome ,Genetics ,Pediatric ,Underpinning research ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Generic health relevance ,Good Health and Well Being - Abstract
The development of biological markers of aging has primarily focused on adult samples. Epigenetic clocks are a promising tool for measuring biological age that show impressive accuracy across most tissues and age ranges. In adults, deviations from the DNA methylation (DNAm) age prediction are correlated with several age-related phenotypes, such as mortality and frailty. In children, however, fewer such associations have been made, possibly because DNAm changes are more dynamic in pediatric populations as compared to adults. To address this gap, we aimed to develop a highly accurate, noninvasive, biological measure of age specific to pediatric samples using buccal epithelial cell DNAm. We gathered 1,721 genome-wide DNAm profiles from 11 different cohorts of typically developing individuals aged 0 to 20 y old. Elastic net penalized regression was used to select 94 CpG sites from a training dataset (n = 1,032), with performance assessed in a separate test dataset (n = 689). DNAm at these 94 CpG sites was highly predictive of age in the test cohort (median absolute error = 0.35 y). The Pediatric-Buccal-Epigenetic (PedBE) clock was characterized in additional cohorts, showcasing the accuracy in longitudinal data, the performance in nonbuccal tissues and adult age ranges, and the association with obstetric outcomes. The PedBE tool for measuring biological age in children might help in understanding the environmental and contextual factors that shape the DNA methylome during child development, and how it, in turn, might relate to child health and disease.
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- 2020
25. Changes in Approaches to Learning over Three Years of University Undergraduate Study
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McDonald, Fiona J., Reynolds, John N. J., Bixley, Ann, and Spronken-Smith, Rachel A.
- Abstract
This study aimed to evaluate and compare approaches to learning by a longitudinal cohort of undergraduate students as they progressed from their first to third years of study in anatomy and physiology. "The Approaches and Study Skills Inventory for Students" (ASSIST) was completed at the beginning and end of their first year of university study, and in their final semester. At first year, a surface learning approach predominated; however, at third year, students showed a significant increase in their use of deep and strategic learning approaches compared to first year, although surface learning approaches were retained. The extent to which third-year students took both strategic and deep approaches to learning was positively correlated with their performance on assessment. As students progress through a three-year science degree, they develop deeper and more strategic learning approaches, and assessment and teaching styles probably promote these approaches to learning.
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- 2017
26. WALLABY Early Science - I. The NGC 7162 Galaxy Group
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Reynolds, Tristan N., Westmeier, Tobias, Staveley-Smith, Lister, Elagali, Ahmed, For, Bi-Qing, Kleiner, Dane, Koribalski, Baerbel S., Lee-Waddell, Karen, Madrid, Juan P., Popping, Attila, Rhee, Jonghwan, Whiting, Matthew, Wong, O. Ivy, Davies, Luke J. M., Driver, Simon, Robotham, Aaron, Allison, James R., Bekiaris, Georgios, Collier, Jordan D., Heald, George, Meyer, Martin, Chippendale, Aaron P., MacLeod, Adam, and Voronkov, Maxim A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present Widefield ASKAP L-band Legacy All-sky Blind Survey (WALLABY) early science results from the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) observations of the NGC 7162 galaxy group. We use archival HIPASS and Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) observations of this group to validate the new ASKAP data and the data reduction pipeline ASKAPsoft. We detect six galaxies in the neutral hydrogen (HI) 21-cm line, expanding the NGC 7162 group membership from four to seven galaxies. Two of the new detections are also the first HI detections of the dwarf galaxies, AM 2159-434 and GALEXASC J220338.65-431128.7, for which we have measured velocities of $cz=2558$ and $cz=2727$ km s$^{-1}$, respectively. We confirm that there is extended HI emission around NGC 7162 possibly due to past interactions in the group as indicated by the $40^{\circ}$ offset between the kinematic and morphological major axes for NGC 7162A, and its HI richness. Taking advantage of the increased resolution (factor of $\sim1.5$) of the ASKAP data over archival ATCA observations, we fit a tilted ring model and use envelope tracing to determine the galaxies' rotation curves. Using these we estimate the dynamical masses and find, as expected, high dark matter fractions of $f_{\mathrm{DM}}\sim0.81-0.95$ for all group members. The ASKAP data are publicly available., Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2018
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27. Not all very-low-carbohydrate diets are created equal. Reply to Conte C, Camajani E, Lai A, Caprio M [letter]
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Reynolds, Andrew N., Kahleova, Hana, Uusitupa, Matti, Hermansen, Kjeld, Aas, Anne-Marie, Schwab, Ursula, Lean, Michael E. J., Pfeiffer, Andreas, Salas-Salvadó, Jordi, and Mann, Jim I.
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- 2023
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28. Government inaction and the preventable diabetes pandemic
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Reynolds, Andrew N. and Mann, Jim
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- 2023
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29. Organotypic sinonasal airway culture systems are predictive of the mucociliary phenotype produced by bronchial airway epithelial cells
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Delhove, Juliette, Alawami, Moayed, Macowan, Matthew, Lester, Susan E., Nguyen, Phan T., Jersmann, Hubertus P. A., Reynolds, Paul N., and Roscioli, Eugene
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- 2022
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30. Coincidence of cholinergic pauses, dopaminergic activation and depolarisation of spiny projection neurons drives synaptic plasticity in the striatum
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Reynolds, John N. J., Avvisati, Riccardo, Dodson, Paul D., Fisher, Simon D., Oswald, Manfred J., Wickens, Jeffery R., and Zhang, Yan-Feng
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- 2022
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31. Dietary fibre in hypertension and cardiovascular disease management: systematic review and meta-analyses
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Reynolds, Andrew N., Akerman, Ashley, Kumar, Shiristi, Diep Pham, Huyen Tran, Coffey, Sean, and Mann, Jim
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- 2022
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32. Dietary fat intakes and cardiovascular disease risk in adults with type 2 diabetes: a systematic review and meta-analysis
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Schwab, Ursula, Reynolds, Andrew N., Sallinen, Taisa, Rivellese, Angela Albarosa, and Risérus, Ulf
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- 2021
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33. Gelatinisation and milling whole-wheat increases postprandial blood glucose: randomised crossover study of adults with type 2 diabetes
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Elbalshy, Mona M., Reynolds, Andrew N., Mete, Evelyn, Robinson, Caleb, Oey, Indrawati, Silcock, Pat, Haszard, Jillian J., Perry, Tracy L., Mann, Jim, and Te Morenga, Lisa
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- 2021
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34. Efficacy, safety, and user experience of DIY or open-source artificial pancreas systems: a systematic review
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Asarani, N. A. M., Reynolds, A. N., Elbalshy, M., Burnside, M., de Bock, M., Lewis, D. M., and Wheeler, B. J.
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- 2021
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35. Global Solutions to Multi-dimensional Topological Euler Alignment Systems
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Lear, Daniel, Reynolds, David N., and Shvydkoy, Roman
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- 2022
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36. Challenging Sleep-Wake Behaviors Reported in Informal, Conversational Interviews of Caregivers of Children with Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder
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Spruyt, Karen, Ipsiroglu, Osman, Stockler, Sylvia, and Reynolds, James N.
- Abstract
Objective: Sleep complaints are clinically expected in children exposed to alcohol during pregnancy. We aim to reveal patterns of association among sleep--wake behaviors that are challenging in the life of children with fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD). Methods: Through text-mining analyses, we numericized the transcripts of 59 caregiver's informal, conversational interviews. That is, the relative frequencies-of-occurrences of words as well as their semantic specificities (italic) were clustered, categorized, and visualized for patterns. Results: A total of 4008 words were indexed where "sleep" took the 91st place of most important words. "Sleep" and "wake" were however not associatively conversed throughout the interviews. Sleep-related words conversed were: "night," "nap," "apnea," "asleep," "awake," "bed," "bedroom," "bedtime," "mattress," "melatonin," "overnight," and "wakeup." Among some FASD-characteristic words describing the challenges were: "huge," "alcohol," "manage*," "stop," "adopt," "crazy*." The semantic space reflecting these challenges experienced in caring for children with FASD was divided into two axes: child-oriented vs. other-oriented words, and day-related and night-related words. The position of sleep shows that problematic sleep was expressed as a 'family' issue. Clumsy* was interrelated with problematic sleeping and waking. Despite that mostly "night" was associatively conversed, the association of "Routines," "Managing," and "Planning" with "sleep" underscores the challenges faced. Conclusion: When conversing caregivers of children with FASD seldom interrelate 'sleep' but rather 'night' with FASD-characteristics. Increased sleep awareness combined with educational initiatives regarding sleep are advocated.
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- 2018
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37. Implications of the 2022 lung function update and GLI global reference equations among patients with interstitial lung disease
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Li, Andrew, Teoh, Alan, Troy, Lauren, Glaspole, Ian, Wilsher, Margaret L, de Boer, Sally, Wrobel, Jeremy, Moodley, Yuben P, Thien, Francis, Gallagher, Henry, Galbraith, Michelle, Chambers, Daniel C, Mackintosh, John, Goh, Nicole, Khor, Yet Hong, Edwards, Adrienne, Royals, Karen, Grainge, Christopher, Kwan, Benjamin, Keir, Gregory J, Ong, Chong, Reynolds, Paul N, Veitch, Elizabeth, Chai, Gin Tsen, Ng, Ziqin, Tan, Geak Poh, Jackson, Dan, Corte, Tamera, and Jo, Helen
- Abstract
BackgroundLung function testing remains a cornerstone in the assessment and management of interstitial lung disease (ILD) patients. The clinical implications of the Global Lung function Initiative (GLI) reference equations and the updated interpretation strategies remain uncertain.MethodsAdult patients with ILD with baseline forced vital capacity (FVC) were included from the Australasian ILD registry and the National Healthcare Group ILD registry, Singapore.The European Coal and Steel Community and Miller reference equations were compared with the GLI reference equations to assess (a) differences in lung function percent predicted values; (b) ILD risk prediction models and (c) eligibility for ILD clinical trial enrolment.ResultsAmong 2219 patients with ILD, 1712 (77.2%) were white individuals. Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), connective tissue disease-associated ILD and unclassifiable ILD predominated.Median FVC was 2.60 (2.01–3.36) L, forced expiratory volume in 1 s was 2.09 (1.67–2.66) L and diffusing capacity of the lungs for carbon monoxide (DLCO) was 13.60 (10.16–17.60) mL/min/mm Hg. When applying the GLI reference equations, the mean FVC percentage predicted was 8.8% lower (87.7% vs 78.9%, p<0.01) while the mean DLCO percentage predicted was 4.9% higher (58.5% vs 63.4%, p<0.01). There was a decrease in 19 IPF and 119 non-IPF patients who qualified for the nintedanib clinical trials when the GLI reference equations were applied. Risk prediction models performed similarly in predicting mortality using both reference equations.ConclusionApplying the GLI reference equations in patients with ILD leads to higher DLCO percentage predicted values and smaller lung volume percentage predicted values. While applying the GLI reference equations did not impact on prognostication, fewer patients met the clinical trial criteria for antifibrotic agents.
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- 2024
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38. The cost-effectiveness of screening tools used in the diagnosis of fetal alcohol spectrum disorder: a modelled analysis
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Berrigan, Patrick, Andrew, Gail, Reynolds, James N., and Zwicker, Jennifer D.
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- 2019
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39. Dynamic control of neurochemical release with ultrasonically-sensitive nanoshell-tethered liposomes
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Mackay, Sean M., Myint, David Mo Aung, Easingwood, Richard A., Hegh, Dylan Y., Wickens, Jeffery R., Hyland, Brian I., Jameson, Guy N. L., Reynolds, John N. J., and Tan, Eng Wui
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- 2019
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40. Population-based prevalence of fetal alcohol spectrum disorder in Canada
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Popova, Svetlana, Lange, Shannon, Poznyak, Vladimir, Chudley, Albert E., Shield, Kevin D., Reynolds, James N., Murray, Margaret, and Rehm, Jürgen
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- 2019
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41. Gastroesophageal reflux and antacid therapy in IPF: analysis from the Australia IPF Registry
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Jo, Helen E., Corte, Tamera J., Glaspole, Ian, Grainge, Christopher, Hopkins, Peter M. A., Moodley, Yuben, Reynolds, Paul N., Chapman, Sally, Walters, E. Haydn, Zappala, Christopher, Allan, Heather, Keir, Gregory J., Cooper, Wendy A., Mahar, Annabelle M., Ellis, Samantha, Macansh, Sacha, and Goh, Nicole S.
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- 2019
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42. Unpacking the Heterogeneity of Cognitive Functioning in Children and Adolescents with Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder: Determining the Role of Moderators and Strengths
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McLachlan, Kaitlyn, Paolozza, Angelina, Kully-Martens, Katrina, Portales-Casamar, Elodie, Pavlidis, Paul, Andrew, Gail, Hanlon-Dearman, Ana, Loock, Christine, McFarlane, Audrey, Nikkel, Sarah M., Pei, Jacqueline, Oberlander, Tim F., Samdup, Dawa, Reynolds, James N., and Rasmussen, Carmen
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- 2017
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43. Advice to walk after meals is more effective for lowering postprandial glycaemia in type 2 diabetes mellitus than advice that does not specify timing: a randomised crossover study
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Reynolds, Andrew N., Mann, Jim I., Williams, Sheila, and Venn, Bernard J.
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- 2016
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44. Acute effect of fructose intake from sugar-sweetened beverages on plasma uric acid: a randomised controlled trial
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Carran, E L, White, S J, Reynolds, A N, Haszard, J J, and Venn, B J
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- 2016
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45. Calcium dependent plasticity applied to repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation with a neural field model
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Wilson, M. T., Fung, P. K., Robinson, P. A., Shemmell, J., and Reynolds, J. N. J.
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- 2016
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46. Adherence of Tc-99 Sestamibi to Plastic Syringes Could Complicate Efforts in Dose Reduction in MPI SPECT
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Reynolds, Sean N. and Kikut, Janusz
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- 2016
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47. A Comparative Evaluation of the Effects of an Open Classroom Instructional Program and a Traditional Instructional Program.
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Pennsylvania State Dept. of Education, Harrisburg. Bureau of Information Systems. and Reynolds, Robert N.
- Abstract
Approximately 250 students in grades 1-6 of two elementary schools, one utilizing an open classroom instructional program and the other a traditional instructional program, comprised the sample in this first year of a planned 2-year study. The study focuses on the assessment of the comparative effects of the two instructional programs on three student variables: (1) self-concept, (2) attitude toward school, and (3) academic achievement. Pretests on these variables were administered in May and June of 1972; posttests were administered in May and June of 1973. Analysis of covariance was used to analyze this data. In addition, data related to teacher attitudes and classroom environment and practices was collected and analyzed. The first-year results indicate that there were no statistically significant differences between the two programs in relation to the three major student variables, although questionnaires administered to the parents and pupils of the open classroom school indicated an improved attitude toward school. (Author)
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- 1974
48. Does Open Classroom Education Really Make a Difference? Final Report.
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Pennsylvania State Dept. of Education, Harrisburg. and Reynolds, Robert N.
- Abstract
Limited to a comparison of one open school and one traditional school, this study was performed to empirically assess the claims of open classroom proponents. Approximately 250 students in grades 1 through 6 of two elementary schools, one utilizing an open classroom instructional program and the other a traditional instructional program, comprised the sample in the two-year study which focused on the assessment of the comparative effects of the two instructional programs upon three student variables: (1) self-concept, (2) attitude toward school, and (3) achievement of basic skills. Measurement of these variables were accomplished by the use of the Piers-Harris Self-Concept Scale and the Pictorial Self-Concept Scale, the "Faces" Inventory, and the Stanford Achievement Test. Pretests on the three variables were administered in May and June of 1972; posttests were administered in May and June of 1974. Analysis of covariance was used to analyze this data. In addition, data related to teacher attitudes and classroom environment and practices was collected and analyzed. Results do not provide support for any conclusive comprehensive statements concerning the relative effectiveness of the open or traditional instructional program. However, there was evidence to suggest that the open classroom instructional program effected positive changes in the affective areas of self-concept and attitude toward school. Students in both instructional programs performed equally well in the achievement of basic skills. (Author/RC)
- Published
- 1974
49. A Two-Year Evaluation of the Comparative Effects of an Open Classroom Instructional Program and a Traditional Instructional Program.
- Author
-
Pennsylvania State Dept. of Education, Harrisburg. Bureau of Information Systems. and Reynolds, Robert N.
- Abstract
This study was a 2-year comparison of the effects of open classroom versus traditional instruction on children's self-concept, attitudes toward school and achievement of basic skills. The 250 participants were students in grades 1-6 of two elementary schools -- one utilizing an open classroom approach and the other a traditional approach. The measurement instruments used included the Piers-Harris Self-Concept Scale and the Pictorial Self-Concept Scale, the "Faces" Inventory, and the Stanford Achievement Test. Pretests on the three variables were administered in May and June of 1972 and posttests were administered in May and June of 1974. In addition, data related to teacher attitudes and classroom environment and practices were collected and analyzed. The results of an analysis of covariance did not provide support for any conclusive comprehensive statements concerning the relative effectiveness of the open or the traditional instructional program. However, there was evidence to suggest that the open classroom instructional program effected positive changes in the affective areas of self-concept and attitude toward school. Students in both instructional programs performed equally well in the achievement of basic skills. (JMB)
- Published
- 1975
50. Pennsylvania Looks at Special Education: A Two Year Report. Includes Summary.
- Author
-
Pennsylvania State Dept. of Education, Harrisburg. and Reynolds, Robert N.
- Abstract
The 2-year study reports on student progress, quality of instructional programs and costs for five groups of 7,000 exceptional students in Pennsylvania; educable mentally retarded, trainable mentally retarded, physically handicapped, socially and emotionally disturbed, and brain injured. Instruments are said to have included the Wide Range Achievement Test, the Vineland Social Maturity Scale, the Indicators of Quality test for program evaluation, and budget line-item figures for program cost. Among conclusions discussed are that children in the sample did make significant progress in the areas assessed; the average daily membership (ADM) costs ranged from about two to three and one-half times as much as the ADM costs for equivalent regular education students. Nearly half the report is comprised of five appendixes, such as correlation matrices for individual categories of exceptionality. (CL)
- Published
- 1978
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