5,719 results on '"Ryan, H."'
Search Results
2. Safetywashing: Do AI Safety Benchmarks Actually Measure Safety Progress?
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Ren, Richard, Basart, Steven, Khoja, Adam, Gatti, Alice, Phan, Long, Yin, Xuwang, Mazeika, Mantas, Pan, Alexander, Mukobi, Gabriel, Kim, Ryan H., Fitz, Stephen, and Hendrycks, Dan
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Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Computation and Language ,Computer Science - Computers and Society - Abstract
As artificial intelligence systems grow more powerful, there has been increasing interest in "AI safety" research to address emerging and future risks. However, the field of AI safety remains poorly defined and inconsistently measured, leading to confusion about how researchers can contribute. This lack of clarity is compounded by the unclear relationship between AI safety benchmarks and upstream general capabilities (e.g., general knowledge and reasoning). To address these issues, we conduct a comprehensive meta-analysis of AI safety benchmarks, empirically analyzing their correlation with general capabilities across dozens of models and providing a survey of existing directions in AI safety. Our findings reveal that many safety benchmarks highly correlate with upstream model capabilities, potentially enabling "safetywashing" -- where capability improvements are misrepresented as safety advancements. Based on these findings, we propose an empirical foundation for developing more meaningful safety metrics and define AI safety in a machine learning research context as a set of clearly delineated research goals that are empirically separable from generic capabilities advancements. In doing so, we aim to provide a more rigorous framework for AI safety research, advancing the science of safety evaluations and clarifying the path towards measurable progress.
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- 2024
3. Self-deployable contracting-cord metamaterials with tunable mechanical properties
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Yan, Wenzhong, Jones, Talmage, Jawetz, Christopher L., Lee, Ryan H., Hopkins, Jonathan B., and Mehta, Ankur
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Computer Science - Robotics ,Physics - Applied Physics - Abstract
Recent advances in active materials and fabrication techniques have enabled the production of cyclically self-deployable metamaterials with an expanded functionality space. However, designing metamaterials that possess continuously tunable mechanical properties after self-deployment remains a challenge, notwithstanding its importance. Inspired by push puppets, we introduce an efficient design strategy to create reversibly self-deployable metamaterials with continuously tunable post-deployment stiffness and damping. Our metamaterial comprises contracting actuators threaded through beads with matching conical concavo-convex interfaces in networked chains. The slack network conforms to arbitrary shapes, but when actuated, it self-assembles into a preprogrammed configuration with beads gathered together. Further contraction of the actuators can dynamically tune the assembly's mechanical properties through the beads' particle jamming, while maintaining the overall structure with minimal change. We show that, after deployment, such metamaterials exhibit pronounced tunability in bending-dominated configurations: they can become more than 35 times stiffer and change their damping capability by over 50%. Through systematic analysis, we find that the beads'conical angle can introduce geometric nonlinearity, which has a major effect on the self-deployability and tunability of the metamaterial. Our work provides routes towards reversibly self-deployable, lightweight, and tunable metamaterials, with potential applications in soft robotics, reconfigurable architectures, and space engineering., Comment: 6 figures
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- 2024
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4. Using Thermal Crowding to Direct Pattern Formation on the Nanoscale
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Allaire, Ryan H., Cummings, Linda J., and Kondic, Lou
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
Metal films and other geometries of nanoscale thickness, when exposed to laser irradiation, melt and evolve as fluids as long as their temperature is sufficiently high. This evolution often leads to pattern formation, which may be influenced strongly by material parameters that are temperature dependent. In addition, the laser heat absorption itself depends on the time-dependent metal thickness. Self-consistent modeling of evolving metal films shows that, by controlling the amount and geometry of deposited metal, one could control the instability development. In particular, depositing additional metal leads to elevated temperatures through the `thermal crowding' effect, which strongly influences the metal film evolution. This influence may proceed via disjoint metal geometries, by heat diffusion through the underlying substrate. Fully self-consistent modeling focusing on the dominant effects, as well as accurate time-dependent simulations, allow us to describe the main features of thermal crowding and provide a route to control fluid instabilities and pattern formation on the nanoscale.
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- 2024
5. Diffuse Gastric Cancer: A Comprehensive Review of Molecular Features and Emerging Therapeutics
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Wu, Lawrence W., Jang, Sung Joo, Shapiro, Cameron, Fazlollahi, Ladan, Wang, Timothy C., Ryeom, Sandra W., and Moy, Ryan H.
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- 2024
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6. Designing Problems for Improved Instruction and Learning -- Linear Algebra
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Allaire, Ryan H., Reynolds, Margaret, and Lee, Andrew C.
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Mathematics - History and Overview - Abstract
One of the grand challenges of Mathematics instruction is to provide students with problems that are both accessible and have a reasonably elegant solution. Instructors commonly resort to resources like course textbooks, online-learning platforms, or other automated problem-generating software to select problems for exams and assignments. However, reliance on such tools may result in limited control over problem parameters, potentially yielding intricate solutions that impede students' understanding. This article centers on Linear Algebra, wherein we devise algorithms for reverse engineering matrices of integers with integer outcomes through operations such as the inverse, LU decomposition, and QR decomposition. The focus is on empowering instructors to manipulate matrix properties deliberately, ensuring the creation of problems that enrich instruction and foster student confidence. The intellectual endeavor of reverse engineering such problems, grounded in both theory and matrix properties, proves mutually beneficial for both students and instructors alike.
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- 2024
7. Queued Up: 2024 Edition, Characteristics of Power Plants Seeking Transmission Interconnection As of the End of 2023
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Rand, Joseph, Manderlink, Nick, Gorman, Will, Wiser, Ryan H, Seel, Joachim, Kemp, Julie Mulvaney, Jeong, Seongeun, and Kahrl, Fredrich
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Electric transmission system operators (ISOs, RTOs, or utilities) require projects seeking to connect to the grid to undergo a series of impact studies before they can be built. This process establishes what new transmission equipment or upgrades may be needed before a project can connect to the system and assigns the costs of that equipment. The lists of projects in this process are known as “interconnection queues”. The amount of new electric capacity in these queues is growing dramatically, with nearly 2,600 gigawatts (GW) of total generation and storage capacity now seeking connection to the grid (over 95% of which is for zero-carbon resources like solar, wind, and battery storage). However, most projects that apply for interconnection are ultimately withdrawn, and those that are built are taking longer on average to complete the required studies and become operational. Data from these queues nonetheless provide a general indicator for mid-term trends in developer interest.This annually updated briefing and data file compiles and analyzes interconnection queue data from all seven ISOs/RTOs alongside 44 non-ISO utilities, which collectively represent over 95% of the currently installed U.S. electric generating capacity.-The total capacity active in the queues is growing year-over-year, with over 1,570 GW of generation and an estimated 1,030 GW of storage capacity as of the end of 2023.-In total, over 1,480 GW of zero-carbon generating capacity is currently seeking transmission access. Solar (1,086 GW) accounts for the largest share of generation capacity in the queues. Substantial wind (366 GW) capacity is also seeking interconnection, 1/3 of which is for offshore projects (120 GW).-Solar and battery storage are – by far – the fastest growing resources in the queues. Combined, they account for over 80% of new capacity entering the queues in 2023.-Proposed fossil fuel generation much lower, with 79 GW of natural gas and 1.5 GW of coal currently proposed.-Hybrid projects (co-locating multiple generation and/or storage types) comprise a large – and increasing – share of proposed projects, particularly in CAISO and the non-ISO West. 571 GW of solar hybrids (primarily solar+battery) and 48 GW of wind hybrids are currently active in the queues. Over half of the battery storage capacity in the queues is paired with some form of generation (mostly solar).-However, much of this proposed capacity will not ultimately be built. Among a subset of queues for which data are available, only 19% of the projects (and 14% of capacity) seeking connection from 2000 to 2018 have been built as of the end of 2023.-Interconnection wait times are also on the rise: The typical duration from connection request to commercial operation increased from
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- 2024
8. A Graph-Based Approach for Software Functionality Classification on the Web
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Jiang, Yinhao, Bewong, Michael, Mahboubi, Arash, Halder, Sajal, Islam, Rafiqul, Islam, Md Zahidul, Ip, Ryan H. L., Gauravaram, Praveen, Xue, Jason, Goos, Gerhard, Series Editor, Hartmanis, Juris, Founding Editor, Bertino, Elisa, Editorial Board Member, Gao, Wen, Editorial Board Member, Steffen, Bernhard, Editorial Board Member, Yung, Moti, Editorial Board Member, Barhamgi, Mahmoud, editor, Wang, Hua, editor, and Wang, Xin, editor
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- 2025
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9. A mixture distribution for modelling bivariate ordinal data
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Ip, Ryan H. L. and Wu, K. Y. K.
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- 2024
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10. Generator Interconnection Cost Analysis in the Southwest Power Pool (SPP) Territory
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Seel, Joachim, Kemp, Julie Mulvaney, Rand, Joseph, Gorman, Will, Millstein, Dev, Wiser, Ryan H, Weissfeld, Ari, DiSanti, Nicholas, and Porter, Kevin
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Electric transmission system operators (ISOs, RTOs, or utilities) require new large generators seeking to connect to the grid to undergo a series of impact studies before they can be built. This process establishes what new transmission equipment or upgrades may be needed before a project can connect to the system and assigns the costs of that equipment. Berkeley Lab has collected interconnection cost data for 845 projects from interconnection studies for the Southwest Power Pool (SPP) Territory. The studies were performed between 2002 and 2023 and include all of the most refined cost estimates available. Project-level cost summary data are available for download on this page.We find:-Project-specific interconnection costs can differ widely.-Average interconnection costs are stable for projects that complete all interconnection studies but have escalated for those that withdraw.-Broader network upgrade costs are the primary driver of recent cost increases, especially for withdrawn projects.-Potential interconnection costs of all solar and wind requests have been greater than those of storage and natural gas projects.-Economies of scale exist for completed wind and solar projects but not for other fuel types or withdrawn projects.-Interconnection costs vary by location.Berkeley Lab publishes a series of short analytical papers of generator interconnection costs to the transmission system for MISO, PJM, SPP, ISO-NE and NYISO, which you can find at https://emp.lbl.gov/interconnection_costs.
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- 2024
11. Queued Up: Characteristics of Power Plants Seeking Transmission Interconnection As of the End of 2022
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Rand, Joseph, Strauss, Rose, Gorman, Will, Seel, Joachim, Kemp, Julie Mulvaney, Jeong, Seongeun, Robson, Dana, and Wiser, Ryan H
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Proposed large-scale electric generation and storage projects must apply for interconnection to the bulk power system via interconnection queues. While most projects that apply for interconnection are not subsequently built, data from these queues nonetheless provide a general indicator for mid-term trends in developer interest. Berkeley Lab compiled and analyzed data from all seven ISOs/RTOs in concert with 35 non-ISO utilities, representing an estimated 85% of all U.S. electricity load. We include all "active" projects in these generation interconnection queues through the end of 2022, as well as data on "operational" and "withdrawn" projects where those data are available.We find that the amount of new electric capacity in these queues is growing dramatically, with over 2,000 gigawatts (GW) of total generation and storage capacity now seeking connection to the grid (over 95% of which is for zero-carbon resources like solar, wind, and battery storage). Solar (947 GW) and battery storage (~680 GW) are – by far – the fastest growing resources in the queues; combined they accounted for over 80% of new capacity entering the queues in 2022. Substantial wind (300 GW) capacity is also seeking interconnection, 38% of which is for offshore projects (113 GW). In total, about 1,250 GW of zero-carbon generating capacity is currently seeking transmission access, as is 82 GW of natural gas capacity. Hybrids projects (co-locating multiple generation and/or storage types) comprise a large – and increasing – share of proposed projects, particularly in CAISO and the non-ISO West. 457 GW of solar hybrids (primarily solar+battery) and 24 GW of wind hybrids are currently active in the queues; over half of battery storage in the queues is paired with generation.However, much of this proposed capacity will be withdrawn from the queues and not built. Among a subset of queues for which data are available, only 21% of the projects (and 14% of capacity) seeking connection from 2000 to 2017 have been built as of the end of 2022. Additionally, interconnection wait times are on the rise: The typical duration from connection request to commercial operation increased from
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- 2024
12. Interconnection Cost Analysis in the PJM Territory
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Seel, Joachim, Rand, Joseph, Gorman, Will, Millstein, Dev, Wiser, Ryan H, Cotton, Will, Fisher, Katherine, Kuykendall, Olivia, Weissfeld, Ari, and Porter, Kevin
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Electric transmission system operators (ISOs, RTOs, or utilities) require new large generators seeking to connect to the grid to undergo a series of impact studies before they can be built. This process establishes what new transmission equipment or upgrades may be needed before a project can connect to the system and assigns the costs of that equipment. Berkeley Lab has collected interconnection cost data from interconnection studies for the PJM Territory, representing nearly 86% of all new unique generators requesting interconnection from 2000 to 2022. Project-level cost summary data are available for download on this page.We find:-Average interconnection costs have grown as the number of interconnection requests have escalated-Projects that have completed all required interconnection studies have the lowest cost compared to applicants still actively working through the interconnection process or those that have withdrawn.-Broader network upgrade costs are the primary driver of recent cost increase.-Potential interconnection costs for wind, storage, and solar are larger than for natural gas-Larger generators have greater interconnection costs in absolute terms, but economies of scale exist on a per kW basis.-Interconnection costs vary by locationBerkeley Lab will publish a series of short analytical papers of generator interconnection costs to the transmission system for MISO, PJM, SPP, ISO-NE and NYISO, which you can find at https://emp.lbl.gov/interconnection_costs.
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- 2024
13. Florida Current transport observations reveal four decades of steady state
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Volkov, Denis L., Smith, Ryan H., Garcia, Rigoberto F., Smeed, David A., Moat, Ben I., Johns, William E., and Baringer, Molly O.
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- 2024
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14. Oculomotor behaviors in youth with an eating disorder: findings from a video-based eye tracking task
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Kirkpatrick, Ryan H., Booij, Linda, Riek, Heidi C., Huang, Jeff, Pitigoi, Isabell C., Brien, Donald C., Coe, Brian C., Couturier, Jennifer, Khalid-Khan, Sarosh, and Munoz, Douglas P.
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- 2024
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15. Neighborhood-level deprivation and survival in lung cancer
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Kennedy, Kathleen, Jusue-Torres, Ignacio, Buller, Ian D., Rossi, Emily, Mallisetty, Apurva, Rodgers, Kristen, Lee, Beverly, Menchaca, Martha, Pasquinelli, Mary, Nguyen, Ryan H., Weinberg, Frank, Rubinstein, Israel, Herman, James G., Brock, Malcolm, Feldman, Lawrence, Aldrich, Melinda C., and Hulbert, Alicia
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- 2024
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16. Enhancing surgical internship preparedness through a Transition to Internship Bootcamp
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Joshi, Priyashma, Hernandez, Alexandra, Collie, Brianna L., Sands, Ryan H., Huerta, Carlos T., Delamater, Jessica M., Hui, Vanessa W., Goel, Neha, and Sands, Laurence R.
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- 2024
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17. The chemical succession in anoxic lake waters as source of molecular diversity of organic matter
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Lau, Maximilian P., Hutchins, Ryan H. S., Tank, Suzanne E., and A. del Giorgio, Paul
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- 2024
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18. Empirical Estimates of Transmission Value using Locational Marginal Prices
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Millstein, Dev, Wiser, Ryan H, Gorman, Will, Jeong, Seongeun, Kim, James Hyungkwan, and Ancell, Amos
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This study focuses on one potential benefit of transmission infrastructure—congestion relief. It explores historical grid conditions from 2012 through the first half of 2022, and evaluates the marginal value of transmission in facilitating trade within and across regional boundaries by calculating differences in observed nodal wholesale power prices. The study finds that wholesale power prices exhibit stark geographic differences that, in many cases, are stable over time. Many regional and interregional transmission links have significant potential economic value from reducing congestion and expanding opportunities for trade. In fact, many links have hourly average pricing differences in 2021 that exceeded $15/MWh—equivalent to $130 million per year for a 1000 MW link. The value of transmission is correlated with overall energy prices and varies by region and year. Critically, extreme conditions and high-value periods play an outsized role in the value of transmission, with 50% of transmission’s congestion value coming from only 5% of hours. Transmission planners run the risk of understating the benefits of regional and interregional transmission if extreme conditions and high-value periods are not adequately considered. These periods are natural features of actual market operations. As such, the study highlights the need for planners to more-comprehensively assess the value of transmission under both normal and extreme conditions.
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- 2023
19. Bitter taste receptor activation by cholesterol and an intracellular tastant
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Kim, Yoojoong, Gumpper, Ryan H., Liu, Yongfeng, Kocak, D. Dewran, Xiong, Yan, Cao, Can, Deng, Zhijie, Krumm, Brian E., Jain, Manish K., Zhang, Shicheng, Jin, Jian, and Roth, Bryan L.
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- 2024
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20. Florida Current transport observations reveal four decades of steady state
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Denis L. Volkov, Ryan H. Smith, Rigoberto F. Garcia, David A. Smeed, Ben I. Moat, William E. Johns, and Molly O. Baringer
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Science - Abstract
Abstract The potential weakening of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) in response to anthropogenic forcing, suggested by climate models, is at the forefront of scientific debate. A key AMOC component, the Florida Current (FC), has been measured using submarine cables between Florida and the Bahamas at 27°N nearly continuously since 1982. A decrease in the FC strength could be indicative of the AMOC weakening. Here, we reassess motion-induced voltages measured on a submarine cable and reevaluate the overall trend in the inferred FC transport. We find that the cable record beginning in 2000 requires a correction for the secular change in the geomagnetic field. This correction removes a spurious trend in the record, revealing that the FC has remained remarkably stable. The recomputed AMOC estimates at ~26.5°N result in a significantly weaker negative trend than that which is apparent in the AMOC time series obtained with the uncorrected FC transports.
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- 2024
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21. Oculomotor behaviors in youth with an eating disorder: findings from a video-based eye tracking task
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Ryan H. Kirkpatrick, Linda Booij, Heidi C. Riek, Jeff Huang, Isabell C. Pitigoi, Donald C. Brien, Brian C. Coe, Jennifer Couturier, Sarosh Khalid-Khan, and Douglas P. Munoz
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Eating disorder ,Saccade ,Anorexia nervosa ,Bulimia nervosa ,Eye blink ,Pupil response ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Abstract Background The oculomotor circuit spans many cortical and subcortical areas that have been implicated in psychiatric disease. This, combined with previous findings, suggests that eye tracking may be a useful method to investigate eating disorders. Therefore, this study aimed to assess oculomotor behaviors in youth with and without an eating disorder. Methods Female youth with and without an eating disorder completed a structured task involving randomly interleaved pro-saccade (toward at a stimulus) and anti-saccade (away from stimulus) trials with video-based eye tracking. Differences in saccades (rapid eye movements between two points), eye blinks and pupil were examined. Results Youth with an eating disorder (n = 65, M age = 17.16 ± 3.5 years) were compared to healthy controls (HC; n = 65, M age = 17.88 ± 4.3 years). The eating disorder group was composed of individuals with anorexia nervosa (n = 49), bulimia nervosa (n = 7) and other specified feeding or eating disorder (n = 9). The eating disorder group was further divided into two subgroups: individuals with a restrictive spectrum eating disorder (ED-R; n = 43) or a bulimic spectrum eating disorder (ED-BP; n = 22). In pro-saccade trials, the eating disorder group made significantly more fixation breaks than HCs (F(1,128) = 5.33, p = 0.023). The ED-BP group made the most anticipatory pro-saccades, followed by ED-R, then HCs (F(2,127) = 3.38, p = 0.037). Groups did not differ on rate of correct express or regular latency pro-saccades. In anti-saccade trials, groups only significantly differed on percentage of direction errors corrected (F(2, 127) = 4.554, p = 0.012). The eating disorder group had a significantly smaller baseline pupil size (F(2,127) = 3.60, p = 0.030) and slower pro-saccade dilation velocity (F(2,127) = 3.30, p = 0.040) compared to HCs. The ED-R group had the lowest blink probability during the intertrial interval (ITI), followed by ED-BP, with HCs having the highest ITI blink probability (F(2,125) = 3.63, p = 0.029). Conclusions These results suggest that youth with an eating disorder may have different oculomotor behaviors during a structured eye tracking task. The oculomotor behavioral differences observed in this study presents an important step towards identifying neurobiological and cognitive contributions towards eating disorders.
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- 2024
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22. Neighborhood-level deprivation and survival in lung cancer
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Kathleen Kennedy, Ignacio Jusue-Torres, Ian D. Buller, Emily Rossi, Apurva Mallisetty, Kristen Rodgers, Beverly Lee, Martha Menchaca, Mary Pasquinelli, Ryan H. Nguyen, Frank Weinberg, Israel Rubinstein, James G. Herman, Malcolm Brock, Lawrence Feldman, Melinda C. Aldrich, and Alicia Hulbert
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Lung cancer ,Neighborhood-level deprivation ,Disparities ,Epigenetic ,DNA methylation ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background Despite recent advances in lung cancer therapeutics and improving overall survival, disparities persist among socially disadvantaged populations. This study aims to determine the effects of neighborhood deprivation indices (NDI) on lung cancer mortality. This is a multicenter retrospective cohort study assessing the relationship between NDI and overall survival adjusted for age, disease stage, and DNA methylation among biopsy-proven lung cancer patients. State-specific NDI for each year of sample collection were computed at the U.S. census tract level and dichotomized into low- and high-deprivation. Results A total of 173 non small lung cancer patients were included, with n = 85 (49%) and n = 88 (51%) in the low and high-deprivation groups, respectively. NDI was significantly higher among Black patients when compared with White patients (p = 0.003). There was a significant correlation between DNA methylation and stage for HOXA7, SOX17, ZFP42, HOXA9, CDO1 and TAC1. Only HOXA7 DNA methylation was positively correlated with NDI. The high-deprivation group had a statistically significant shorter survival than the low-deprivation group (p = 0.02). After adjusting for age, race, stage, and DNA methylation status, belonging to the high-deprivation group was associated with higher mortality with a hazard ratio of 1.81 (95%CI: 1.03–3.19). Conclusions Increased neighborhood-level deprivation may be associated with liquid biopsy DNA methylation, shorter survival, and increased mortality. Changes in health care policies that consider neighborhood-level indices of socioeconomic deprivation may enable a more equitable increase in lung cancer survival.
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- 2024
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23. High-affinity agonists reveal recognition motifs for the MRGPRD GPCR
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Chunyu Wang, Yongfeng Liu, Marion Lanier, Adam Yeager, Isha Singh, Ryan H. Gumpper, Brian E. Krumm, Chelsea DeLeon, Shicheng Zhang, Marcus Boehm, Richard Pittner, Alain Baron, Lisa Dvorak, Corinne Bacon, Brian K. Shoichet, Esther Martinborough, Jonathan F. Fay, Can Cao, and Bryan L. Roth
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CP: Molecular biology ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Summary: The human MRGPRD protein is a member of the Mas-related G protein-coupled receptors (MRGPRs) that is involved in the sensing of pain, itch, and other inflammatory stimuli. As with other MRGPRs, MRGPRD is a relatively understudied receptor with few known agonists. The most potent small-molecule agonist of MRGPRD reported so far is β-alanine, with an affinity in the micromole range, which largely restricts its functional study. Here, we report two MRGPRD agonists, EP-2825 and EP-3945, that are approximately 100-fold more potent than β-alanine and determine the structures of MRGPRD-Gq in complex with EP-2825 and EP-3945, respectively. The structures reveal distinct agonist binding modes of MRGPRD and large conformational plasticity of the orthosteric pocket. Collectively, the discovery of high-affinity MRGPRD agonists and their distinct binding modes will facilitate the functional study and the structure-based design of ligands targeting this understudied receptor.
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- 2024
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24. Bitter taste receptor T2R14-Gαi coupling mediates innate immune responses to microbial quorum sensing molecules in cystic fibrosis
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Nisha Singh, Ryan H. Cunnington, Anjali Bhagirath, Ankita Vaishampayan, Mohd Wasif Khan, Tejas Gupte, Kangmin Duan, Abdelilah S. Gounni, Shyamala Dakshisnamurti, John W. Hanrahan, and Prashen Chelikani
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Pathophysiology ,Immunology ,Microbiology ,Science - Abstract
Summary: Cystic fibrosis (CF) is an autosomal recessive disease characterized by microbial infection and progressive decline in lung function, leading to significant morbidity and mortality. The bitter taste receptor T2R14 is a chemosensory receptor that is significantly expressed in airways. Using a combination of cell-based assays and T2R14 knockdown in bronchial epithelial cells from CF and non-CF individuals, we observed that T2R14 plays a crucial role in the detection of bacterial and fungal signals and enhances host innate immune responses. Expression of Gαi protein is enhanced in CF bronchial epithelial cells and T2R14-Gαi specific signaling leads to increased calcium mobilization. Knockdown of T2R14 leads to reduced innate immune activation by bacterial strains deficient in quorum sensing. The results demonstrate that T2R14 helps protect against microbial infection and thus may play an important role in the innate immune defense of the CF airway epithelium.
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- 2024
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25. Age-related changes in pupil dynamics and task modulation across the healthy lifespan
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Jeff Huang, Matthew L. Smorenburg, Rachel Yep, Heidi C. Riek, Olivia G. Calancie, Ryan H. Kirkpatrick, Donald C. Brien, Brian C. Coe, Chin-An Wang, and Douglas P. Munoz
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pupillary response ,development ,aging ,saccade preparation ,anti-saccade ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
The pupil is modulated by luminance, arousal, bottom-up sensory, and top-down cognitive signals, and has increasingly been used to assess these aspects of brain functioning in health and disease. However, changes in pupil dynamics across the lifespan have not been extensively examined, hindering our ability to fully utilize the pupil in probing these underlying neural processes in development and aging in healthy and clinical cohorts. Here, we examined pupil responses during the interleaved pro−/anti-saccade task (IPAST) in healthy participants across the lifespan (n = 567, 5–93 years of age). Based on the extracted measurements of pupil dynamics, we demonstrated age-related changes in pupil measures and task modulation. Moreover, we characterized the underlying factors and age-related effects in components of pupil responses that may be attributed to developmental and aging changes in the associated brain regions. Finally, correlations between factors of pupil dynamics and saccade behaviors revealed evidence of shared neural processes in the pupil and saccade control circuitries. Together, these results demonstrate changes in pupil dynamics as a result of development and aging, providing a baseline with which altered pupil responses due to neurological deficits at different ages can be studied.
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- 2024
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26. Advances in digital anthropometric body composition assessment: neural network algorithm prediction of appendicular lean mass
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Marazzato, Frederic, McCarthy, Cassidy, Field, Ryan H., Nguyen, Han, Nguyen, Thao, Shepherd, John A., Tinsley, Grant M., and Heymsfield, Steven B.
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- 2024
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27. Malicious Package Detection using Metadata Information.
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Sajal Halder, Michael Bewong, Arash Mahboubi, Yinhao Jiang, Md. Rafiqul Islam 0001, Md Zahidul Islam 0001, Ryan H. L. Ip, Muhammad Ejaz Ahmed, Gowri Sankar Ramachandran, and Muhammad Ali Babar 0001
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- 2024
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28. Coefficient of Dynamic Wall Friction for Hardwood Fuel Pellets
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Turner, Aaron P., Koc, Ali Bulent, Dean, Ryan H., di Prisco, Marco, Series Editor, Chen, Sheng-Hong, Series Editor, Vayas, Ioannis, Series Editor, Kumar Shukla, Sanjay, Series Editor, Sharma, Anuj, Series Editor, Kumar, Nagesh, Series Editor, Wang, Chien Ming, Series Editor, Cui, Zhen-Dong, Series Editor, Cavallo, Eugenio, editor, Auat Cheein, Fernando, editor, Marinello, Francesco, editor, Saçılık, Kamil, editor, Muthukumarappan, Kasiviswanathan, editor, and Abhilash, Purushothaman C., editor
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- 2024
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29. FUNDAMENTALS OF INSTITUTIONAL QUALITY AND ECONOMIC FREEDOM
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Murphy, Ryan H.
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Tax rates -- Economic aspects -- Analysis ,Natural resources -- United Kingdom ,Business ,Economics ,Business, international ,Regional focus/area studies - Abstract
Social scientists have extensively studied the causes of good institutions, including the origins of economic freedom. Results concerning the causes of different kinds of institutions are often similar, often concluding that the geography, environment, and culture are important factors. However, a recent political economy framework suggests that certain dimensions of economic freedom, namely specific dimensions of the size of government (government consumption, transfers and subsidies, and the top marginal tax rate), differ systematically from other dimensions of liberalization. This paper explores these arguments by constructing an index of a set of consensus predictors of institutional quality: ethnic fractionalization (predicts negatively), the natural log of the population size (negatively), absolute latitude (positively), natural resource rents (negatively), the presence of the country in the Americas (negatively), British legal origins (positively), the presence of the country in Eurasia (positively), and island geography (positively). The countries with the 'best' fundamentals for institutional quality are Iceland, Ireland, Malta, Finland, and Cyprus, while the five with the 'worst' fundamentals are Angola, Nigeria, Chad, Burkina Faso, and Ghana. It then takes this index of 'fundamentals' of institutional quality and shows that, although they predict economic liberalism as a whole (as measured by the Economic Freedom of the World index) as they would predict other measures of institutional quality, they predict oppositely (i.e., corresponding to larger governments) for the dimensions of the size of government listed above. The result is congruent with the predictions of the political economy model. Additionally, this result is not contingent on the inclusion of any one of the 'fundamental' variables, although natural resource rents and absolute latitude appear to be the most important variables. Countries with considerably more economic freedom than would be predicted by their fundaments include Peru, Singapore, the United States, Chile, and Canada; should deviations from fitted values be seen as presaging future movements in institutions, these countries are the most likely to see upcoming declines. The aforementioned political economy model implies that these findings are the result of complexities involved in the interaction between state capacity and different dimensions of economic liberalization. JEL Classifications: P17, O43, and D70 Keywords: Institutional Development; Economic Freedom, INTRODUCTION There is extensive scholarship on the origins and causes of economic freedom (Lawson, Murphy & Powell 2020), one dimension of institutional quality. The broader literature on institutions often points [...]
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- 2024
30. Interconnection Cost Analysis in ISO-New England
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Kemp, Julie Mulvaney, Seel, Joachim, Gorman, Will, Rand, Joseph, Wiser, Ryan H, Cotton, Will, and Porter, Kevin
- Abstract
Electric transmission system operators (ISOs, RTOs, or utilities) require new large generators seeking to connect to the grid to undergo a series of impact studies before they can be built. This process establishes what new transmission equipment or upgrades may be needed before a project can connect to the system and assigns the costs of that equipment. Berkeley Lab has collected interconnection cost data for 194 projects in New England from interconnection studies performed between 2010 and 2021. Project-level cost summary data are available for download on this page.We find:-Interconnection costs have grown over time, especially for projects that withdraw.-Interconnection costs are highest for onshore wind, followed by solar and storage. Natural gas and offshore wind projects tend to cost less to interconnect, in comparison.-Economies of scale exist for solar and possibly storage projects, but not for other resource types.-Wind and solar projects requesting capacity network resource interconnection service have higher interconnection costs, despite being evaluated using the same interconnection standard in the analyzed studies.-Low and high interconnection costs can be found throughout the ISO-NE footprint.-Costs are split fairly evenly between investments at the point of interconnection and within the broader network for active and withdrawn projects, while complete projects incur most costs at the point of interconnection.
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- 2023
31. Building Effective Mentoring Relationships During Clinical Ethics Fellowships: Pedagogy, Programs, and People
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Bibler, Trevor M., Nelson, Ryan H., Moore, Bryanna, Malek, Janet, and Majumder, Mary A.
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- 2024
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32. Psychedelics: preclinical insights provide directions for future research
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Gumpper, Ryan H. and Roth, Bryan L.
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- 2024
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33. Clinical characteristics, racial inequities, and outcomes in patients with breast cancer and COVID-19: A COVID-19 and cancer consortium (CCC19) cohort study
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Nagaraj, Gayathri, Vinayak, Shaveta, Khaki, Ali Raza, Sun, Tianyi, Kuderer, Nicole M, Aboulafia, David M, Acoba, Jared D, Awosika, Joy, Bakouny, Ziad, Balmaceda, Nicole B, Bao, Ting, Bashir, Babar, Berg, Stephanie, Bilen, Mehmet A, Bindal, Poorva, Blau, Sibel, Bodin, Brianne E, Borno, Hala T, Castellano, Cecilia, Choi, Horyun, Deeken, John, Desai, Aakash, Edwin, Natasha, Feldman, Lawrence E, Flora, Daniel B, Friese, Christopher R, Galsky, Matthew D, Gonzalez, Cyndi J, Grivas, Petros, Gupta, Shilpa, Haynam, Marcy, Heilman, Hannah, Hershman, Dawn L, Hwang, Clara, Jani, Chinmay, Jhawar, Sachin R, Joshi, Monika, Kaklamani, Virginia, Klein, Elizabeth J, Knox, Natalie, Koshkin, Vadim S, Kulkarni, Amit A, Kwon, Daniel H, Labaki, Chris, Lammers, Philip E, Lathrop, Kate I, Lewis, Mark A, Li, Xuanyi, de Lima Lopes, Gilbert, Lyman, Gary H, Makower, Della F, Mansoor, Abdul-Hai, Markham, Merry-Jennifer, Mashru, Sandeep H, McKay, Rana R, Messing, Ian, Mico, Vasil, Nadkarni, Rajani, Namburi, Swathi, Nguyen, Ryan H, Nonato, Taylor Kristian, O'Connor, Tracey Lynn, Panagiotou, Orestis A, Park, Kyu, Patel, Jaymin M, Patel, Kanishka GopikaBimal, Peppercorn, Jeffrey, Polimera, Hyma, Puc, Matthew, Rao, Yuan James, Razavi, Pedram, Reid, Sonya A, Riess, Jonathan W, Rivera, Donna R, Robson, Mark, Rose, Suzanne J, Russ, Atlantis D, Schapira, Lidia, Shah, Pankil K, Shanahan, M Kelly, Shapiro, Lauren C, Smits, Melissa, Stover, Daniel G, Streckfuss, Mitrianna, Tachiki, Lisa, Thompson, Michael A, Tolaney, Sara M, Weissmann, Lisa B, Wilson, Grace, Wotman, Michael T, Wulff-Burchfield, Elizabeth M, Mishra, Sanjay, French, Benjamin, Warner, Jeremy L, Lustberg, Maryam B, Accordino, Melissa K, and Shah, Dimpy P
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Coronaviruses ,Infectious Diseases ,Cancer ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Breast Cancer ,Lung ,Women's Health ,Good Health and Well Being ,United States ,Humans ,Female ,Middle Aged ,COVID-19 ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Cohort Studies ,Breast Neoplasms ,Retrospective Studies ,COVID-19 and Cancer Consortium ,breast cancer ,epidemiology ,global health ,human ,oncology ,pandemic ,racial inequities ,Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,Biological sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
BackgroundLimited information is available for patients with breast cancer (BC) and coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), especially among underrepresented racial/ethnic populations.MethodsThis is a COVID-19 and Cancer Consortium (CCC19) registry-based retrospective cohort study of females with active or history of BC and laboratory-confirmed severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection diagnosed between March 2020 and June 2021 in the US. Primary outcome was COVID-19 severity measured on a five-level ordinal scale, including none of the following complications, hospitalization, intensive care unit admission, mechanical ventilation, and all-cause mortality. Multivariable ordinal logistic regression model identified characteristics associated with COVID-19 severity.Results1383 female patient records with BC and COVID-19 were included in the analysis, the median age was 61 years, and median follow-up was 90 days. Multivariable analysis revealed higher odds of COVID-19 severity for older age (aOR per decade, 1.48 [95% CI, 1.32-1.67]); Black patients (aOR 1.74; 95 CI 1.24-2.45), Asian Americans and Pacific Islander patients (aOR 3.40; 95 CI 1.70-6.79) and Other (aOR 2.97; 95 CI 1.71-5.17) racial/ethnic groups; worse ECOG performance status (ECOG PS ≥2: aOR, 7.78 [95% CI, 4.83-12.5]); pre-existing cardiovascular (aOR, 2.26 [95% CI, 1.63-3.15])/pulmonary comorbidities (aOR, 1.65 [95% CI, 1.20-2.29]); diabetes mellitus (aOR, 2.25 [95% CI, 1.66-3.04]); and active and progressing cancer (aOR, 12.5 [95% CI, 6.89-22.6]). Hispanic ethnicity, timing, and type of anti-cancer therapy modalities were not significantly associated with worse COVID-19 outcomes. The total all-cause mortality and hospitalization rate for the entire cohort was 9% and 37%, respectively however, it varied according to the BC disease status.ConclusionsUsing one of the largest registries on cancer and COVID-19, we identified patient and BC-related factors associated with worse COVID-19 outcomes. After adjusting for baseline characteristics, underrepresented racial/ethnic patients experienced worse outcomes compared to non-Hispanic White patients.FundingThis study was partly supported by National Cancer Institute grant number P30 CA068485 to Tianyi Sun, Sanjay Mishra, Benjamin French, Jeremy L Warner; P30-CA046592 to Christopher R Friese; P30 CA023100 for Rana R McKay; P30-CA054174 for Pankil K Shah and Dimpy P Shah; KL2 TR002646 for Pankil Shah and the American Cancer Society and Hope Foundation for Cancer Research (MRSG-16-152-01-CCE) and P30-CA054174 for Dimpy P Shah. REDCap is developed and supported by Vanderbilt Institute for Clinical and Translational Research grant support (UL1 TR000445 from NCATS/NIH). The funding sources had no role in the writing of the manuscript or the decision to submit it for publication.Clinical trial numberCCC19 registry is registered on ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT04354701.
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- 2023
34. High level of complexity and global diversity of the 3q29 locus revealed by optical mapping and long-read sequencing
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Yilmaz, Feyza, Gurusamy, Umamaheswaran, Mosley, Trenell J, Hallast, Pille, Kim, Kwondo, Mostovoy, Yulia, Purcell, Ryan H, Shaikh, Tamim H, Zwick, Michael E, Kwok, Pui-Yan, Lee, Charles, and Mulle, Jennifer G
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Biological Sciences ,Genetics ,Human Genome ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Humans ,Segmental Duplications ,Genomic ,Chromosome Mapping ,Genomics ,Syndrome ,Haplotypes ,DNA Copy Number Variations ,3q29 ,Structural variations ,Genomic disorders ,Schizophrenia ,NAHR ,Copy number variant(s) ,Clinical Sciences - Abstract
BackgroundHigh sequence identity between segmental duplications (SDs) can facilitate copy number variants (CNVs) via non-allelic homologous recombination (NAHR). These CNVs are one of the fundamental causes of genomic disorders such as the 3q29 deletion syndrome (del3q29S). There are 21 protein-coding genes lost or gained as a result of such recurrent 1.6-Mbp deletions or duplications, respectively, in the 3q29 locus. While NAHR plays a role in CNV occurrence, the factors that increase the risk of NAHR at this particular locus are not well understood.MethodsWe employed an optical genome mapping technique to characterize the 3q29 locus in 161 unaffected individuals, 16 probands with del3q29S and their parents, and 2 probands with the 3q29 duplication syndrome (dup3q29S). Long-read sequencing-based haplotype resolved de novo assemblies from 44 unaffected individuals, and 1 trio was used for orthogonal validation of haplotypes and deletion breakpoints.ResultsIn total, we discovered 34 haplotypes, of which 19 were novel haplotypes. Among these 19 novel haplotypes, 18 were detected in unaffected individuals, while 1 novel haplotype was detected on the parent-of-origin chromosome of a proband with the del3q29S. Phased assemblies from 44 unaffected individuals enabled the orthogonal validation of 20 haplotypes. In 89% (16/18) of the probands, breakpoints were confined to paralogous copies of a 20-kbp segment within the 3q29 SDs. In one del3q29S proband, the breakpoint was confined to a 374-bp region using long-read sequencing. Furthermore, we categorized del3q29S cases into three classes and dup3q29S cases into two classes based on breakpoints. Finally, we found no evidence of inversions in parent-of-origin chromosomes.ConclusionsWe have generated the most comprehensive haplotype map for the 3q29 locus using unaffected individuals, probands with del3q29S or dup3q29S, and available parents, and also determined the deletion breakpoint to be within a 374-bp region in one proband with del3q29S. These results should provide a better understanding of the underlying genetic architecture that contributes to the etiology of del3q29S and dup3q29S.
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- 2023
35. Domesticating Time
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Stanton, Travis W., primary, Taube, Karl A., additional, and Collins, Ryan H., additional
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- 2024
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36. Diversity and heterogeneity of smallholder vegetable farming systems and their impact on food security and income in Malawi
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Wisdom Madede Nzima, Ryan H. L. Ip, Muhammad Azher Bhatti, Sosheel Solomon Godfrey, Lars Olav Eik, Sera Rose Gondwe, and Shai André Divon
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farm typologies ,vegetable farming system ,food security ,food accessibility ,household income ,smallholder vegetable farmer ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,TX341-641 ,Food processing and manufacture ,TP368-456 - Abstract
Household food security and income play central roles in sustainable development at the global, national, and local levels. Smallholder vegetable farming systems are widely regarded as crucial contributors to enhancing household food security and income in the developing world. Comprehensive whole-farm analysis of smallholder vegetable farming systems points out greater diversity and heterogeneity driven by interactions of socioeconomic and biophysical factors such as land profiles, land use, farm assets, enterprise income, off/non-farm activities, and household structure and expenditure. However, three distinct farm typologies exist (Resource and Livelihood Constrained Off-farm Dependent/Supplemented–RLCOD farmers, Resource and Livelihood Abundant and Commercial Oriented–RLACO farmers, and Medium Resources and Livelihoods Constrained Market Oriented–MRLCMO farmers), exhibiting significant differences and variability in structural and functional factors. The production of maize, groundnuts, soybean, and bean crops remains the primary source of livelihood for all farm typologies. Similarly, vegetable production is vital for farmers’ livelihoods in all farm types, yielding more income than food needs. However, both crop and vegetable productivity and production are still low and below the national and potential target across farm typologies. Small-scale irrigation offers one alternative solution in the context of increasing climate change. Small livestock (chickens, goats, and pigs) play a significant role in the livelihood of vegetable farmers despite their low productivity. Disparities exist across farm typologies in available arable and irrigable land, available household labor, capacity to hire additional labor, farm assets, and inputs, as well as participation in off-farm and non-labor-farm activities. While vegetable production and its proportion sold and earned income emerge as critical factors affecting household food accessibility and acquisition, additional factors such as crop production, proportion of crops sold, daily food expenditure, livestock income, and TLU significantly influence household access for different farm typologies, requiring consideration to achieve food security in vegetable farming systems.
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- 2024
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37. Bitter taste receptor T2R14-Gαi coupling mediates innate immune responses to microbial quorum sensing molecules in cystic fibrosis
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Singh, Nisha, Cunnington, Ryan H., Bhagirath, Anjali, Vaishampayan, Ankita, Khan, Mohd Wasif, Gupte, Tejas, Duan, Kangmin, Gounni, Abdelilah S., Dakshisnamurti, Shyamala, Hanrahan, John W., and Chelikani, Prashen
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- 2024
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38. Realizing synergy between Cu, Ga, and Zr for selective CO2 hydrogenation to methanol
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Al Abdulghani, Abdullah J., Turizo-Pinilla, Edgar E., Fabregas-Angulo, Maria J., Hagmann, Ryan H., Ibrahim, Faysal, Jansen, Jacob H., Agbi, Theodore O., Bhat, Samiha, Sepúlveda-Pagán, Miguel, Kraimer, Morgan O., Queen, Collin M., Sun, Zhuoran, Nikolla, Eranda, Pagán-Torres, Yomaira J., and Hermans, Ive
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- 2024
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39. Disparities in pediatric parotid cancer treatment and presentation: A National study
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Sharma, Rahul K., Krishnapura, Shreyas G., Ceremsak, John, Gallant, Jean-Nicolas, Benedetti, Daniel J., Borinstein, Scott C., and Belcher, Ryan H.
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- 2024
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40. Singapore's Small Development State
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Murphy, Ryan H.
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Singapore -- Economic policy ,Economic development -- Laws, regulations and rules -- Political aspects ,Government regulation ,Economics ,Political science ,Social sciences - Abstract
In this issue Bryan Cheang, writing within a lengthy tradition of scholarship, objects to the description of various East Asian success stories, especially Singapore, as exemplars of liberalism. No one [...]
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- 2023
41. The chemical succession in anoxic lake waters as source of molecular diversity of organic matter
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Maximilian P. Lau, Ryan H. S. Hutchins, Suzanne E. Tank, and Paul A. del Giorgio
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Lake-water quality ,Anoxia ,Carbon cycling ,Chemical diversity ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract The aquatic networks that connect soils with oceans receive each year 5.1 Pg of terrestrial carbon to transport, bury and process. Stagnant sections of aquatic networks often become anoxic. Mineral surfaces attract specific components of organic carbon, which are released under anoxic conditions to the pool of dissolved organic matter (DOM). The impact of the anoxic release on DOM molecular composition and reactivity in inland waters is unknown. Here, we report concurrent release of iron and DOM in anoxic bottom waters of northern lakes, removing DOM from the protection of iron oxides and remobilizing previously buried carbon to the water column. The deprotected DOM appears to be highly reactive, terrestrially derived and molecularly distinct, generating an ambient DOM pool that relieves energetic constraints that are often assumed to limit carbon turnover in anoxic waters. The Fe-to-C stoichiometry during anoxic mobilization differs from that after oxic precipitation, suggesting that up to 21% of buried OM escapes a lake-internal release-precipitation cycle, and can instead be exported downstream. Although anoxic habitats are transient and comprise relatively small volumes of water on the landscape scale, our results show that they may play a major role in structuring the reactivity and molecular composition of DOM transiting through aquatic networks and reaching the oceans.
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- 2024
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42. Variability in mechanical properties of additively manufactured 17-4 PH stainless steel produced by multiple vendors: insights for qualification
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Yin, Denise, Gienger, Edwin B., Croom, Brendan P., Reider, Lucy A., Trethewey, Bruce R., Lark, Alex R., Nimer, Salahudin M., Carter, Ryan H., Post, Zach J., Montalbano, Timothy J., Chung, Christine, Rettaliata, Justin, and Presley, Michael
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- 2023
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43. A multi-level modeling approach to guide management of female feral hogs in Great Smoky Mountains National Park
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Buderman, Frances E., Helm, Patrick J., Clark, Joseph D., Williamson, Ryan H., Yarkovich, Joseph, and Mullinax, Jennifer M.
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- 2023
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44. Domesticating Time: Quadripartite Symbolism and Founding Rituals at Yaxuná
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Stanton, Travis W., author, Taube, Karl A., author, and Collins, Ryan H., author
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- 2024
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45. TAPping Into PD-L1 Testing Efficiency for Gastroesophageal Cancer
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Henick, Brian S. and Moy, Ryan H.
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- 2024
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46. Implementation of Online Learning in Physical Therapy Graduate School: Multimethod Examination of Physical Therapy Students' Perception
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McGlawn, Ryan H.
- Abstract
The shift to online learning due to the COVID-19 pandemic has brought about significant changes in the way education is delivered. The online environment provides a new avenue for physical therapy education. With a majority of undergraduate students taking at least one course online, their perceptions of online learning are critical in the development of online physical therapy education. This study aims to investigate the University of Mississippi Medical Center (UMMC) entry-level physical therapy students' perceptions of online learning. The study sample will include approximately 150 students comprised of 3 cohorts of 50 students. The study is a multimethod examination over the course of three years. The survey and interview will be issued at the beginning of the summer semester at the beginning of the three-year curriculum. The survey will illustrate the basic demographics of the students, perceptions of course design, the student's past experience with online courses, positive and negative aspects of online courses, and implementation of online courses in the physical therapy curriculum. The follow-up interview will give the students more opportunities to elaborate on any feedback about course design, values of online courses, attributes of the online course, and recommendations for other online courses. A strong leadership philosophy is essential for guiding leaders in their decision-making and actions regarding online education. My leadership philosophy focuses on four key traits: clear vision, servant's heart, inclusiveness of ideas, and mentoring of colleagues. Utilization of the results of this study along with my leadership philosophy can help other healthcare educators develop online and hybrid courses that meet the needs of the student and produce the same outcomes as traditional face-to-face instruction. [The dissertation citations contained here are published with the permission of ProQuest LLC. Further reproduction is prohibited without permission. Copies of dissertations may be obtained by Telephone (800) 1-800-521-0600. Web page: http://www.proquest.com/en-US/products/dissertations/individuals.shtml.]
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- 2023
47. The role of cathode architecture and anion interactions on the performance of Al-substituted α-Ni(OH)2 in rechargeable Ni–Zn cells
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Kimmel, Samuel W., DeBlock, Ryan H., Manley, Jaret A., Silguero, Cory M., Rolison, Debra R., and Rhodes, Christopher P.
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- 2024
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48. Innovative Strategies for Addressing Adolescent Health in Primary Care Through Telehealth
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Chiccarelli, Elvira, North, Steve, and Pasternak, Ryan H.
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- 2024
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49. Drivers of population dynamics of at-risk populations change with pathogen arrival
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Grimaudo, Alexander T., Hoyt, Joseph R., King, R. Andrew, Toomey, Rickard S., Simpson, Chris, Holliday, Cory, Silvis, Alexander, Doyle, Rick T., Kath, Joseph A., Armstrong, Mike P., Brack, Virgil, Jr, Reynolds, Richard J., Williamson, Ryan H., Turner, Gregory G., Kuczynska, Vona, Meyer, Jordan J., Jansky, Kyle, Herzog, Carl J., Hopkins, Skylar R., and Langwig, Kate E.
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- 2024
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50. An Inconsistent ENSO Response to Northern Hemisphere Stadials Over the Last Deglaciation
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Ryan H. Glaubke, Matthew W. Schmidt, Jennifer E. Hertzberg, Lenzie G. Ward, Franco Marcantonio, Danielle Schimmenti, and Kaustubh Thirumalai
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ENSO ,eastern Pacific ,ocean circulation ,foraminifera ,deglaciation ,abrupt climate change ,Geophysics. Cosmic physics ,QC801-809 - Abstract
Abstract The dynamics shaping the El Niño‐Southern Oscillation's (ENSO) response to present and future climate change remain unclear, partly due to limited paleo‐ENSO records spanning past abrupt climate events. Here, we measure Mg/Ca ratios on individual foraminifera to reconstruct east Pacific subsurface temperature variability, a proxy for ENSO variability, across the last 25,000 years, including the millennial‐scale events of the last deglaciation. Combining these data with proxy system model output reveals divergent ENSO responses to Northern Hemisphere stadials: enhanced variability during Heinrich Stadial 1 (H1) and reduced variability during the Younger Dryas (YD), relative to the Holocene. H1 ENSO likely intensified through meltwater‐induced changes to ocean/atmospheric circulation, a response observed in models, but the lack of a similar response during the YD challenges model simulations. We suggest the tropical Pacific mean state during H1 primed ENSO for larger fluctuations under meltwater forcing, whereas the YD mean state likely buffered against it.
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- 2024
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