1,933 results on '"Seaton P"'
Search Results
2. inlabru: software for fitting latent Gaussian models with non-linear predictors
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Lindgren, Finn, Bachl, Fabian, Illian, Janine, Suen, Man Ho, Rue, Håvard, and Seaton, Andrew E.
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Statistics - Methodology ,Statistics - Computation - Abstract
The integrated nested Laplace approximation (INLA) method has become a popular approach for computationally efficient approximate Bayesian computation. In particular, by leveraging sparsity in random effect precision matrices, INLA is commonly used in spatial and spatio-temporal applications. However, the speed of INLA comes at the cost of restricting the user to the family of latent Gaussian models and the likelihoods currently implemented in {INLA}, the main software implementation of the INLA methodology. {inlabru} is a software package that extends the types of models that can be fitted using INLA by allowing the latent predictor to be non-linear in its parameters, moving beyond the additive linear predictor framework to allow more complex functional relationships. For inference it uses an approximate iterative method based on the first-order Taylor expansion of the non-linear predictor, fitting the model using INLA for each linearised model configuration. {inlabru} automates much of the workflow required to fit models using {R-INLA}, simplifying the process for users to specify, fit and predict from models. There is additional support for fitting joint likelihood models by building each likelihood individually. {inlabru} also supports the direct use of spatial data structures, such as those implemented in the {sf} and {terra} packages. In this paper we outline the statistical theory, model structure and basic syntax required for users to understand and develop their own models using {inlabru}. We evaluate the approximate inference method using a Bayesian method checking approach. We provide three examples modelling simulated spatial data that demonstrate the benefits of the additional flexibility provided by {inlabru}.
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- 2024
3. The SDSS-V Black Hole Mapper Reverberation Mapping Project: CIV BAL Acceleration in the Quasar SBS 1408+544
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Wheatley, Robert, Grier, Catherine J., Hall, Patrick B., Brandt, W. N., Lotz, Jonah, Schneider, D. P., Trump, Jonathan R., Shen, Yue, Seaton, Lucas M., Anderson, Scott F., Temple, Matthew J., Assef, Roberto, Fries, Logan B., Homayouni, Y., Kakkad, Darshan, Koekemoer, Anton M., Martınez-Aldama, Mary Loli, Negrete, C. Alenka, Ricci, Claudio, Bizyaev, Dmitry, Brownstein, Joel R., Morrison, Sean, and Pan, Kaike
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the results of an investigation of a highly variable CIV broad absorption-line feature in the quasar SBS 1408+544 (z=2.337) that shows a significant shift in velocity over time. This source was observed as a part of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Reverberation Mapping Project and the SDSS-V Black Hole Mapper Reverberation Mapping Project, and has been included in two previous studies, both of which identified significant variability in a high-velocity CIV broad absorption line (BAL) on timescales of just a few days in the quasar rest frame. Using ~130 spectra acquired over eight years of spectroscopic monitoring with SDSS, we have determined that this BAL is not only varying in strength, but is also systematically shifting to higher velocities. Using cross-correlation methods, we measure the velocity shifts (and corresponding acceleration) of the BAL on a wide range of timescales, measuring an overall velocity shift of delta v = -683 (+89, -84) km s-1 over the 8-year monitoring period. This corresponds to an average rest-frame acceleration of a=1.04 (+0.14, -0.13) cm s-2, though the magnitude of the acceleration on shorter timescales is not constant throughout. We place our measurements in the context of BAL-acceleration models and examine various possible causes of the observed velocity shift., Comment: Published in the Astrophysical Journal
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- 2024
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4. Automated Trustworthiness Testing for Machine Learning Classifiers
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Cho, Steven, Cousins-Baxter, Seaton, Ruberto, Stefano, and Terragni, Valerio
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Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Computer Science - Software Engineering - Abstract
Machine Learning (ML) has become an integral part of our society, commonly used in critical domains such as finance, healthcare, and transportation. Therefore, it is crucial to evaluate not only whether ML models make correct predictions but also whether they do so for the correct reasons, ensuring our trust that will perform well on unseen data. This concept is known as trustworthiness in ML. Recently, explainable techniques (e.g., LIME, SHAP) have been developed to interpret the decision-making processes of ML models, providing explanations for their predictions (e.g., words in the input that influenced the prediction the most). Assessing the plausibility of these explanations can enhance our confidence in the models' trustworthiness. However, current approaches typically rely on human judgment to determine the plausibility of these explanations. This paper proposes TOWER, the first technique to automatically create trustworthiness oracles that determine whether text classifier predictions are trustworthy. It leverages word embeddings to automatically evaluate the trustworthiness of a model-agnostic text classifiers based on the outputs of explanatory techniques. Our hypothesis is that a prediction is trustworthy if the words in its explanation are semantically related to the predicted class. We perform unsupervised learning with untrustworthy models obtained from noisy data to find the optimal configuration of TOWER. We then evaluated TOWER on a human-labeled trustworthiness dataset that we created. The results show that TOWER can detect a decrease in trustworthiness as noise increases, but is not effective when evaluated against the human-labeled dataset. Our initial experiments suggest that our hypothesis is valid and promising, but further research is needed to better understand the relationship between explanations and trustworthiness issues.
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- 2024
5. CATEcor: an Open Science, Shaded-Truss, Externally-Occulted Coronagraph
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DeForest, Craig E., Seaton, Daniel B., Caspi, Amir, Beasley, Matt, Davis, Sarah J., Erickson, Nicholas F., Kovac, Sarah A., Patel, Ritesh, Tosolini, Anna, and West, Matthew J.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the design of a portable coronagraph, CATEcor, that incorporates a novel "shaded truss" style of external occultation and serves as a proof-of-concept for that family of coronagraphs. The shaded truss design style has the potential for broad application in various scientific settings. We conceived CATEcor itself as a simple instrument to observe the corona during the darker skies available during a partial solar eclipse, or for students or interested amateurs to detect the corona under ideal non-eclipsed conditions. CATEcor is therefore optimized for simplicity and accessibility to the public. It is implemented using an existing dioptric telescope and an adapter rig that mounts in front of the objective lens, restricting the telescope aperture and providing external occultation. The adapter rig, including occulter, is fabricated using fusion deposition modeling (FDM; colloquially "3D printing"), greatly reducing cost. The structure is designed to be integrated with moderate care and may be replicated in a university or amateur setting. While CATEcor is a simple demonstration unit, the design concept, process, and trades are useful for other more sophisticated coronagraphs in the same general family, which might operate under normal daytime skies outside the annular-eclipse conditions used for CATEcor., Comment: 27pp; 12 figures; accepted to Solar Physics
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- 2024
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6. Fine-tuning Protein Language Models with Deep Mutational Scanning improves Variant Effect Prediction
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Lafita, Aleix, Gonzalez, Ferran, Hossam, Mahmoud, Smyth, Paul, Deasy, Jacob, Allyn-Feuer, Ari, Seaton, Daniel, and Young, Stephen
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Quantitative Biology - Genomics ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
Protein Language Models (PLMs) have emerged as performant and scalable tools for predicting the functional impact and clinical significance of protein-coding variants, but they still lag experimental accuracy. Here, we present a novel fine-tuning approach to improve the performance of PLMs with experimental maps of variant effects from Deep Mutational Scanning (DMS) assays using a Normalised Log-odds Ratio (NLR) head. We find consistent improvements in a held-out protein test set, and on independent DMS and clinical variant annotation benchmarks from ProteinGym and ClinVar. These findings demonstrate that DMS is a promising source of sequence diversity and supervised training data for improving the performance of PLMs for variant effect prediction., Comment: Machine Learning for Genomics Explorations workshop at ICLR 2024
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- 2024
7. Polarisable soft solvent models with applications in dissipative particle dynamics
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Chiacchiera, Silvia, Warren, Patrick B., Masters, Andrew J., and Seaton, Michael A.
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Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed Matter ,Condensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics - Abstract
We critically examine a broad class of explicitly polarisable soft solvent models aimed at applications in dissipative particle dynamics. We obtain the dielectric permittivity using the fluctuating box dipole method in linear response theory, and verify the models in relation to several test cases including demonstrating ion desorption from an oil-water interface due to image charge effects. We additionally compute the Kirkwood factor and find it uniformly lies in the range gK approx 0.7-0.8, indicating that dipole-dipole correlations are not negligible in these models. This is supported by measurements of dipole-dipole correlation functions. As a consequence, Onsager theory over-predicts the dielectric permittivity by approximately 20-30 percent. On the other hand, the mean square molecular dipole moment can be accurately estimated with a first-order Wertheim perturbation theory., Comment: 17 pages, 10 figures, RevTeX 4.1
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- 2024
8. Observations of the Polarized Solar Corona during the Annular Eclipse of October 14, 2023
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Seaton, Daniel B., Caspi, Amir, Alzate, Nathalia, Davis, Sarah J., DeForest, Alec R., DeForest, Craig E., Erickson, Nicholas F., Kovac, Sarah A., Patel, Ritesh, Osterman, Steven N., Tosolini, Anna, Van Kooten, Samuel J., and West, Matthew J.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We present results of a dual eclipse expedition to observe the solar corona from two sites during the annular solar eclipse of 2023 October 14, using a novel coronagraph designed to be accessible for amateurs and students to build and deploy. The coronagraph "CATEcor" builds on the standardized eclipse observing equipment developed for the Citizen CATE 2024 experiment. The observing sites were selected for likelihood of clear observations, for historic relevance (near the Climax site in the Colorado Rocky Mountains), and for centrality to the annular eclipse path (atop Sandia Peak above Albuquerque, New Mexico). The novel portion of CATEcor is an external occulter assembly that slips over the front of a conventional dioptric telescope, forming a "shaded-truss" externally occulted coronagraph. CATEcor is specifically designed to be easily constructed in a garage or "makerspace" environment. We successfully observed some bright features in the solar corona to an altitude of approximately 2.25 R$_\odot$ during the annular phases of the eclipse. Future improvements to the design, in progress now, will reduce both stray light and image artifacts; our objective is to develop a design that can be operated successfully by amateur astronomers at sufficient altitude even without the darkened skies of a partial or annular eclipse., Comment: Accepted by Solar Physics
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- 2024
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9. The symplectic form associated to a singular Poisson algebra
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Herbig, Hans-Christian, Esquivel, William Osnayder Clavijo, and Seaton, Christopher
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Mathematics - Algebraic Geometry ,Mathematical Physics ,Mathematics - Symplectic Geometry ,70G45 - Abstract
Given an affine Poisson algebra, that is singular one may ask whether there is an associated symplectic form. In the smooth case the answer is obvious: for the symplectic form to exist the Poisson tensor has to be invertible. In the singular case, however, derivations do not form a projective module and the nondegeneracy condition is more subtle. For a symplectic singularity one may naively ask if there is indeed an analogue of a symplectic form. We examine an example of a symplectic singularity, namely the double cone, and show that here such a symplectic form exists. We use the naive de Rham complex of a Lie-Rinehart algebra. Our analysis of the double cone uses Gr\"obner bases calculations. We also give an alternative construction of the symplectic form that generalizes to categorical quotients of cotangent lifted representations of finite groups. We use the same formulas to construct a symplectic form on the simple cone, seen as a Poisson differential space and generalize the construction to linear symplectic orbifolds. We present useful auxiliary results that enable to explicitly determine generators for the module of derivations an affine variety. The latter may be understood as a differential space., Comment: The paper has been greatly revised and expanded and has now 14 pages. Coauthor Christopher Seaton has been added. A mistake in Section 4 has been corrected
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- 2024
10. Euler characteristics of linear symplectic quotients and $\operatorname{O}(2)$-spaces
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Farsi, Carla, Meit, Hannah, and Seaton, Christopher
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Mathematics - Algebraic Topology ,Mathematics - Symplectic Geometry ,Primary 57S15, Secondary 22A22, 14P10, 57R18 - Abstract
We give explicit computations of the $\Gamma$-Euler characteristic of several families of orbit space definable translation groupoids. These include the translation groupoids associated to finite-dimensional linear representations of the circle and real and unitary representations of the real $2\times 2$ orthogonal group. In the case of translation groupoids associated to linear symplectic quotients of representations of a arbitrary compact Lie group $G$, we show that unlike the other cases, the $\Gamma$-Euler characteristic depends only on the group and not on the representation., Comment: 24 pages
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- 2024
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11. Protein Dose-Sparing Effect of AS01B Adjuvant in a Randomized Preventive HIV Vaccine Trial of ALVAC-HIV (vCP2438) and Adjuvanted Bivalent Subtype C gp120.
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Chirenje, Zvavahera, Laher, Fatima, Dintwe, One, Muyoyeta, Monde, deCamp, Allan, He, Zonglin, Grunenberg, Nicole, Laher Omar, Faatima, Seaton, Kelly, Polakowski, Laura, Woodward Davis, Amanda, Maganga, Lucas, Baden, Lindsey, Mayer, Kenneth, Kalams, Spyros, Keefer, Michael, Edupuganti, Srilatha, Rodriguez, Benigno, Frank, Ian, Scott, Hyman, Stranix-Chibanda, Lynda, Gurunathan, Sanjay, Koutsoukos, Marguerite, Van Der Meeren, Olivier, DiazGranados, Carlos, Paez, Carmen, Andersen-Nissen, Erica, Kublin, James, Corey, Lawrence, Ferrari, Guido, Tomaras, Georgia, and McElrath, M
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HIV ,adjuvant ,dose ,vaccine ,Humans ,Female ,Adjuvants ,Immunologic ,AIDS Vaccines ,Adult ,Male ,Young Adult ,HIV Infections ,HIV Envelope Protein gp120 ,Adolescent ,Double-Blind Method ,HIV Antibodies ,Squalene ,Polysorbates ,HIV-1 ,Viral Vaccines - Abstract
BACKGROUND: HVTN 120 is a phase 1/2a randomized double-blind placebo-controlled human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) vaccine trial that evaluated the safety and immunogenicity of ALVAC-HIV (vCP2438) and MF59- or AS01B-adjuvanted bivalent subtype C gp120 Env protein at 2 dose levels in healthy HIV-uninfected adults. METHODS: Participants received ALVAC-HIV (vCP2438) alone or placebo at months 0 and 1. At months 3 and 6, participants received either placebo, ALVAC-HIV (vCP2438) with 200 μg of bivalent subtype C gp120 adjuvanted with MF59 or AS01B, or ALVAC-HIV (vCP2438) with 40 μg of bivalent subtype C gp120 adjuvanted with AS01B. Primary outcomes were safety and immune responses. RESULTS: We enrolled 160 participants, 55% women, 18-40 years old (median age 24 years) of whom 150 received vaccine and 10 placebo. Vaccines were generally safe and well tolerated. At months 6.5 and 12, CD4+ T-cell response rates and magnitudes were higher in the AS01B-adjuvanted groups than in the MF59-adjuvanted group. At month 12, HIV-specific Env-gp120 binding antibody response magnitudes in the 40 μg gp120/AS01B group were higher than in either of the 200 μg gp120 groups. CONCLUSIONS: The 40 μg dose gp120/AS01B regimen elicited the highest CD4+ T-cell and binding antibody responses. Clinical Trials Registration . NCT03122223.
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- 2024
12. Enhancing patient-clinician collaboration during treatment decision-making: study protocol for a community-engaged, mixed method hybrid type 1 trial of collaborative decision skills training (CDST) for veterans with psychosis.
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Treichler, Emily, McBride, Lauren, Gomez, Elissa, Jain, Joanna, Seaton, Sydney, Yu, Kasey, Oakes, David, Perivoliotis, Dimitri, Girard, Vanessa, Reznik, Samantha, Salyers, Michelle, Thomas, Michael, Spaulding, William, Granholm, Eric, Rabin, Borsika, and Light, Gregory
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Implementation science ,Person-centered care ,Recovery ,Schizophrenia ,Shared decision-making ,Humans ,Psychotic Disorders ,Veterans ,Patient Participation ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Cooperative Behavior ,Clinical Decision-Making ,Physician-Patient Relations ,Decision Making ,Shared ,United States ,Feasibility Studies ,California ,Decision Making ,United States Department of Veterans Affairs - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patient participation in treatment decision making is a pillar of recovery-oriented care and is associated with improvements in empowerment and well-being. Although demand for increased involvement in treatment decision-making is high among veterans with serious mental illness, rates of involvement are low. Collaborative decision skills training (CDST) is a recovery-oriented, skills-based intervention designed to support meaningful patient participation in treatment decision making. An open trial among veterans with psychosis supported CDSTs feasibility and demonstrated preliminary indications of effectiveness. A randomized control trial (RCT) is needed to test CDSTs effectiveness in comparison with an active control and further evaluate implementation feasibility. METHODS: The planned RCT is a hybrid type 1 trial, which will use mixed methods to systematically evaluate the effectiveness and implementation feasibility of CDST among veterans participating in a VA Psychosocial Rehabilitation and Recovery Center (PRRC) in Southern California. The first aim is to assess the effectiveness of CDST in comparison with the active control via the primary outcome, collaborative decision-making behavior during usual care appointments between veterans and their VA mental health clinicians, and secondary outcomes (i.e., treatment engagement, satisfaction, and outcome). The second aim is to characterize the implementation feasibility of CDST within the VA PRRC using the Practical Robust Implementation and Sustainability Model framework, including barriers and facilitators within the PRRC context to support future implementation. DISCUSSION: If CDST is found to be effective and feasible, implementation determinants gathered throughout the study can be used to ensure sustained and successful implementation at this PRRC and other PRRCs and similar settings nationally. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04324944. Registered on March 27, 2020. Trial registration data can be found in Appendix 1.
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- 2024
13. A framework for three-dimensional statistical shape modeling of the proximal femur in Legg–Calvé–Perthes disease
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Johnson, Luke G., Mozingo, Joseph D., Atkins, Penny R., Schwab, Seaton, Morris, Alan, Elhabian, Shireen Y., Wilson, David R., Kim, Harry K. W., and Anderson, Andrew E.
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- 2024
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14. Flows of Local Sheet Dwarfs in Relation to the Council of Giants
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Seaton, L. M., McCall, M. L., and McCall, N. T.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The kinematics of isolated dwarf galaxies in the Local Sheet have been studied to ascertain how the Council of Giants has affected flows. Peculiar velocities parallel to the Sheet in the frame of reference of the Council ascend steeply from negative to positive values on the near side of the Council at a heliocentric radius of $2.4 \pm 0.2$ Mpc. They descend to preponderantly negative values at a radius of $3.9^{+0.4}_{-0.5}$ Mpc, which is near the middle of the Council realm. Such behaviour is evidence for a flow field set up by the combined gravitational effects of the Local Group and Council, the ascending node being where their gravitational forces balance. Receding dwarfs on the near side of the Council are predominantly located in the direction of M94, although this may be a manifestation of the limitations of sampling. If M94 were entirely responsible for the placement of the ascending node, then the galaxy's total mass relative to the Local Group would have to be $0.8^{+0.4}_{-0.3}$, the same as indicated by the orbits of satellite galaxies. Rather, if the placement of the ascending node were set by matter distributed evenly in azimuth at the Council's radius, then the required total mass relative to the Local Group would have to be $4^{+3}_{-2}$, which is 30% to 40% lower than implied by satellite motions but still consistent within errors. The mere existence of the ascending node confirms that the Council of Giants limits the gravitational reach of the Local Group., Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, 1 table
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- 2024
15. A symmetric function approach to polynomial regression
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Herbig, Hans-Christian, Herden, Daniel, and Seaton, Christopher
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Mathematics - Rings and Algebras ,Mathematics - Statistics Theory ,Primary 05E05, 62J02, Secondary 65F05 - Abstract
We give an explicit solution formula for the polynomial regression problem in terms of Schur polynomials and Vandermonde determinants. We thereby generalize the work of Chang, Deng, and Floater to the case of model functions of the form $\sum _{i=1}^{n} a_{i} x^{d_{i}}$ for some integer exponents $d_{1} >d_{2} >\dotsc >d_{n} \geq 0$ and phrase the results using Schur polynomials. Even though the solution circumvents the well-known problems with the forward stability of the normal equation, it is only of practical value if $n$ is small because the number of terms in the formula grows rapidly with the number $m$ of data points. The formula can be evaluated essentially without rounding., Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures
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- 2024
16. Interventions that have potential to help older adults living with social frailty: a systematic scoping review
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Kastner, Monika, Herrington, Isabella, Makarski, Julie, Amog, Krystle, Bain, Tejia, Evangelista, Vianca, Hayden, Leigh, Gruber, Alexa, Sutherland, Justin, Sirkin, Amy, Perrier, Laure, Graham, Ian D., Greiver, Michelle, Honsberger, Joan, Hynes, Mary, Macfarlane, Charlie, Prasaud, Leela, Sklar, Barbara, Twohig, Margo, Liu, Barbara, Munce, Sarah, Marr, Sharon, O’Neill, Braden, Papaioannou, Alexandra, Seaton, Bianca, Straus, Sharon E., Dainty, Katie, and Holroyd-Leduc, Jayna
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- 2024
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17. Enhancing patient-clinician collaboration during treatment decision-making: study protocol for a community-engaged, mixed method hybrid type 1 trial of collaborative decision skills training (CDST) for veterans with psychosis
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Treichler, Emily B. H., McBride, Lauren E., Gomez, Elissa, Jain, Joanna, Seaton, Sydney, Yu, Kasey E., Oakes, David, Perivoliotis, Dimitri, Girard, Vanessa, Reznik, Samantha, Salyers, Michelle P., Thomas, Michael L., Spaulding, William D., Granholm, Eric L., Rabin, Borsika A., and Light, Gregory A.
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- 2024
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18. Beak and feather disease virus detected in the endangered Red Goshawk (Erythrotriorchis radiatus)
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MacColl, Christopher, Watson, James E. M., Leseberg, Nicholas P., Seaton, Richard, Das, Tridip, Das, Shubhagata, and Raidal, Shane R.
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- 2024
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19. Author Correction: High monoclonal neutralization titers reduced breakthrough HIV-1 viral loads in the Antibody Mediated Prevention trials
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Reeves, Daniel B., Mayer, Bryan T., deCamp, Allan C., Huang, Yunda, Zhang, Bo, Carpp, Lindsay N., Magaret, Craig A., Juraska, Michal, Gilbert, Peter B., Montefiori, David C., Bar, Katharine J., Cardozo-Ojeda, E. Fabian, Schiffer, Joshua T., Rossenkhan, Raabya, Edlefsen, Paul, Morris, Lynn, Mkhize, Nonhlanhla N., Williamson, Carolyn, Mullins, James I., Seaton, Kelly E., Tomaras, Georgia D., Andrew, Philip, Mgodi, Nyaradzo, Ledgerwood, Julie E., Cohen, Myron S., Corey, Lawrence, Naidoo, Logashvari, Orrell, Catherine, Goepfert, Paul A., Casapia, Martin, Sobieszczyk, Magdalena E., Karuna, Shelly T., and Edupuganti, Srilatha
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- 2024
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20. Multifaceted roles for BCL3 in cancer: a proto-oncogene comes of age
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Seaton, Gillian, Smith, Hannah, Brancale, Andrea, Westwell, Andrew D., and Clarkson, Richard
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- 2024
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21. A Chromatic Treatment of Linear Polarization in the Solar Corona at the 2023 Total Solar Eclipse
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Patel, Ritesh, Seaton, Daniel B., Caspi, Amir, Kovac, Sarah A., Davis, Sarah J., Carini, John P., Gardner, Charles H., Gosain, Sanjay, Klein, Viliam, Laatsch, Shawn A., Reiff, Patricia H., Saini, Nikita, Weir, Rachael, Zietlow, Daniel W., Elmore, David F., Ursache, Andrei E., DeForest, Craig E., West, Matthew J., Bruenjes, Fred, and Winter, Jen
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Physics - Popular Physics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
The broadband solar K-corona is linearly polarized due to Thomson scattering. Various strategies have been used to represent coronal polarization. Here, we present a new way to visualize the polarized corona, using observations from the 2023 April 20 total solar eclipse in Australia in support of the Citizen CATE 2024 project. We convert observations in the common four-polarizer orthogonal basis (0{\deg}, 45{\deg}, 90{\deg}, & 135{\deg}) to -60{\deg}, 0{\deg}, and +60{\deg} (MZP) polarization, which is homologous to R, G, B color channels. The unique image generated provides some sense of how humans might visualize polarization if we could perceive it in the same way we perceive color., Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure; accepted for publication in Research Notes of the American Astronomical Society (RNAAS)
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- 2023
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22. A universal Euler characteristic of non-orbifold groupoids and Riemannian structures on Lie groupoids
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Farsi, Carla, Proctor, Emily, and Seaton, Christopher
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Mathematics - Differential Geometry ,Mathematics - Algebraic Topology ,22A22, 53C65, 57S15, 14P10, 57R18 - Abstract
We introduce the universal Euler characteristic of an orbit space definable groupoid, a class of groupoids containing cocompact proper Lie groupoids as well as translation groupoids for semialgebraic group actions. Generalizing results of Gusein-Zade, Luengo, and Melle-Hern\'andez, we show that every additive and multiplicative invariant of orbit space definable groupoids with an additional local triviality hypothesis arises as a ring homomorphism applied to the universal Euler characteristic. This in particular includes the $\Gamma$-orbifold Euler characteristic introduced by the first and third authors when $\Gamma$ is a finitely presented group. For Lie groupoids with Riemannian structures in the sense of del Hoyo-Fernandes, and for Cartan-Lie groupoids with Riemannian structures in the sense of Kotov-Strobl, we study the Riemannian structures induced on the suborbifolds of the inertia space given by images of isotropy groups. We realize the $\mathbb{Z}$-orbifold Euler characteristic as the integral of a differential form defined on the arrow space or the space of composable pairs of arrows of the original groupoid., Comment: 23 pages
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- 2023
23. High-fidelity 3D Reconstruction of Solar Coronal Physics with the Updated CROBAR Method
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Plowman, Joseph, Seaton, Daniel B., Caspi, Amir, Hughes, J. Marcus, and West, Matthew J.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present an extension of the Coronal Reconstruction Onto B-Aligned Regions (CROBAR) method to Linear Force Free Field (LFFF) extrapolations, and apply it to the reconstruction of a set of AIA, MDI, and STEREO EUVI data. The results demonstrate that CROBAR can not only reconstruct coronal emission structures, but also that it can help constrain the coronal field extrapolations via the LFFF's helicity $\alpha$ parameter. They also provide a real-world example of how CROBAR can easily incorporate information from multiple perspectives to improve its reconstructions, and we also use the additional perspectives to help validate the reconstructions. We furthermore touch on the use of real-world emission passbands rather than idealized power-law type ones using DEMs. We conclude with a comparison of CROBAR generated emission to observed emission and those produced with idealized DEM based power-laws. These results further illustrate the promise of CROBAR for real-world applications, and we make available a preliminary release of the software available for download., Comment: 18 Pages, 14 Figures, to be submitted to ApJ
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- 2023
24. A bilingual speech neuroprosthesis driven by cortical articulatory representations shared between languages
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Silva, Alexander B., Liu, Jessie R., Metzger, Sean L., Bhaya-Grossman, Ilina, Dougherty, Maximilian E., Seaton, Margaret P., Littlejohn, Kaylo T., Tu-Chan, Adelyn, Ganguly, Karunesh, Moses, David A., and Chang, Edward F.
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- 2024
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25. A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Impairment and Quality of Life in Children and Adolescents with Anxiety Disorders
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Dickson, Sophie J., Oar, Ella L., Kangas, Maria, Johnco, Carly J., Lavell, Cassie H., Seaton, Ashleigh H., McLellan, Lauren F., Wuthrich, Viviana M., and Rapee, Ronald M.
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- 2024
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26. Modelling the influence of road elevation on pollutant dispersion
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O’Neill, James, Seaton, Martin, Johnson, Kate, Stocker, Jenny, Patel, Rohan, Van Poppel, Martine, and Carruthers, David
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- 2024
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27. Picoflare jets power the solar wind emerging from a coronal hole on the Sun
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Chitta, L. P., Zhukov, A. N., Berghmans, D., Peter, H., Parenti, S., Mandal, S., Cuadrado, R. Aznar, Schühle, U., Teriaca, L., Auchère, F., Barczynski, K., Buchlin, É., Harra, L., Kraaikamp, E., Long, D. M., Rodriguez, L., Schwanitz, C., Smith, P. J., Verbeeck, C., and Seaton, D. B.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Plasma Physics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
Coronal holes are areas on the Sun with open magnetic field lines. They are a source region of the solar wind, but how the wind emerges from coronal holes is not known. We observed a coronal hole using the Extreme Ultraviolet Imager on the Solar Orbiter spacecraft. We identified jets on scales of a few hundred kilometers, which last 20 to 100 seconds and reach speeds of ~100 kilometers per second. The jets are powered by magnetic reconnection and have kinetic energy in the picoflare range. They are intermittent but widespread within the observed coronal hole. We suggest that such picoflare jets could produce enough high-temperature plasma to sustain the solar wind and that the wind emerges from coronal holes as a highly intermittent outflow at small scales., Comment: This is the author's version of the work. The definitive version was published in Science on 24 August 2023
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- 2023
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28. The Closest View of a Fast Coronal Mass Ejection: How Faulty Assumptions near Perihelion Lead to Unrealistic Interpretations of PSP/WISPR Observations
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Patel, Ritesh, West, Matthew J., Seaton, Daniel B., Hess, Phillip, Niembro, Tatiana, and Reeves, Katharine K.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on the closest view of a coronal mass ejection observed by the Parker Solar Probe (PSP)/Wide-field Imager for {Parker} Solar PRobe (WISPR) instrument on September 05, 2022, when PSP was traversing from a distance of 15.3~to~13.5~R$_\odot$ from the Sun. The CME leading edge and an arc-shaped {\emph{concave-up} structure near the core} was tracked in WISPR~field of view using the polar coordinate system, for the first time. Using the impact distance on Thomson surface, we measured average speeds of CME leading edge and concave-up structure as $\approx$2500~$\pm$~270\,km\,s$^{-1}$ and $\approx$400~$\pm$~70\,km\,s$^{-1}$ with a deceleration of $\approx$20~m~s$^{-2}$ for the later. {The use of the plane-of-sky approach yielded an unrealistic speed of more than three times of this estimate.} We also used single viewpoint STEREO/COR-2A images to fit the Graduated Cylindrical Shell (GCS) model to the CME while incorporating the source region location from EUI of Solar Orbiter and estimated a 3D speed of $\approx$2700\,km\,s$^{-1}$. We conclude that this CME exhibits the highest speed during the ascending phase of solar cycle 25. This places it in the category of extreme speed CMEs, which account for only 0.15\% of all CMEs listed in the CDAW CME catalog., Comment: 13 Pages, 6 Figures; Accepted in The Astrophysical Journal Letters
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- 2023
29. The Critical Coronal Transition Region: A Physics-framed Strategy to Uncover the Genesis of the Solar Wind and Solar Eruptions
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Vourlidas, Angelos, Caspi, Amir, Ko, Yuan-Kuen, Laming, J. Martin, Mason, James P., Miralles, Mari Paz, Raouafi, Nour-Eddine, Raymond, John C., Seaton, Daniel B., Strachan, Leonard, Viall, Nicholeen, Vievering, Juliana, and West, Matthew J.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Plasma Physics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
Our current theoretical and observational understanding suggests that critical properties of the solar wind and Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs) are imparted within 10 Rs, particularly below 4 Rs. This seemingly narrow spatial region encompasses the transition of coronal plasma processes through the entire range of physical regimes from fluid to kinetic, and from primarily closed to open magnetic field structures. From a physics perspective, therefore, it is more appropriate to refer to this region as the Critical Coronal Transition Region (CCTR) to emphasize its physical, rather than spatial, importance to key Heliophysics science. This white paper argues that the comprehensive exploration of the CCTR will answer two of the most central Heliophysics questions, "How and where does the solar wind form?" and "How do eruptions form?", by unifying hardware/software/modeling development and seemingly disparate research communities and frameworks. We describe the outlines of decadal-scale plan to achieve that by 2050., Comment: White paper submitted to the Decadal Survey for Solar and Space Physics (Heliophysics) 2024-2033; 6 pages, 1 figure, 2 tables
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- 2023
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30. Isomorphisms of Symplectic Torus Quotients
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Herbig, Hans-Christian, Schwarz, Gerald W., and Seaton, Christopher
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Mathematics - Symplectic Geometry ,Mathematics - Algebraic Geometry ,Primary 53D20, 13A50, Secondary 14L30, 57S15, 20G20 - Abstract
We call a reductive complex group $G$ quasi-toral if $G^0$ is a torus. Let $G$ be quasi-toral and let $V$ be a faithful $1$-modular $G$-module. Let $N$ (the shell) be the zero fiber of the canonical moment mapping $\mu\colon V\oplus V^*\to\mathfrak{g}^*$. Then $N$ is a complete intersection variety with rational singularities. Let $M$ denote the categorical quotient $N/\!\!/ G$. We show that $M$ determines $V\oplus V^*$ and $G$, up to isomorphism, if $\operatorname{codim}_N N_\mathrm{sing}\geq 4$. If $\operatorname{codim}_NN_\mathrm{sing}=3$, the lowest possible, then there is a process to produce an algebraic (hence quasi-toral) subgroup $G'\subset G$ and a faithful $1$-modular $G'$-submodule $V'\subset V$ with shell $N'$ such that $\operatorname{codim}_{N'}(N')_\mathrm{sing}\geq 4$. Moreover, there is a $G'$-equivariant morphism $N'\to N$ inducing an isomorphism $N'/\!\!/ G'\xrightarrow{\sim} N/\!\!/ G$. Thus, up to isomorphism, $M$ determines $V'\oplus (V')^*$ and $G'$, hence also $N'$. We establish similar results for real shells and real symplectic quotients associated to unitary modules for compact Lie groups., Comment: 24 pages
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- 2023
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31. Fundamentals of impulsive energy release in the corona
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Shih, Albert Y., Glesener, Lindsay, Krucker, Säm, Guidoni, Silvina, Christe, Steven, Reeves, Katharine K., Gburek, Szymon, Caspi, Amir, Alaoui, Meriem, Allred, Joel, Battaglia, Marina, Baumgartner, Wayne, Dennis, Brian, Drake, James, Goetz, Keith, Golub, Leon, Hannah, Iain, Hayes, Laura, Holman, Gordon, Inglis, Andrew, Ireland, Jack, Kerr, Graham, Klimchuk, James, McKenzie, David, Moore, Christopher S., Musset, Sophie, Reep, Jeffrey, Ryan, Daniel, Saint-Hilaire, Pascal, Savage, Sabrina, Seaton, Daniel B., Stęślicki, Marek, and Woods, Thomas N.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Plasma Physics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
It is essential that there be coordinated and co-optimized observations in X-rays, gamma-rays, and EUV during the peak of solar cycle 26 (~2036) to significantly advance our understanding of impulsive energy release in the corona. The open questions include: What are the physical origins of space-weather events? How are particles accelerated at the Sun? How is impulsively released energy transported throughout the solar atmosphere? How is the solar corona heated? Many of the processes involved in triggering, driving, and sustaining solar eruptive events -- including magnetic reconnection, particle acceleration, plasma heating, and energy transport in magnetized plasmas -- also play important roles in phenomena throughout the Universe. This set of observations can be achieved through a single flagship mission or, with foreplanning, through a combination of major missions (e.g., the previously proposed FIERCE mission concept)., Comment: White paper submitted to the Decadal Survey for Solar and Space Physics (Heliophysics) 2024-2033; 5 pages, 1 figure
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- 2023
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32. Small Platforms, High Return: The Need to Enhance Investment in Small Satellites for Focused Science, Career Development, and Improved Equity
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Mason, James Paul, Begbie, Robert G., Bowen, Maitland, Caspi, Amir, Chamberlin, Phillip C., Chandran, Amal, Cohen, Ian, DeLuca, Edward E., de Wijn, Alfred G., Dissauer, Karin, Eparvier, Francis, Filwett, Rachael, Gibson, Sarah, Gilly, Chris R., Herde, Vicki, Ho, George, Hospodarsky, George, Jaynes, Allison, Jones, Andrew R., Kasper, Justin C., Kohnert, Rick, Lee, Zoe, Mason, E. I., Merkel, Aimee, Mesquita, Rafael, Moore, Christopher S., Nikoukar, Romina, Pesnell, W. Dean, Regoli, Leonardo, Savage, Sabrina, Seaton, Daniel B., Spence, Harlan, Thiemann, Ed, Vievering, Juliana T., Wilder, Frederick, and Woods, Thomas N.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
In the next decade, there is an opportunity for very high return on investment of relatively small budgets by elevating the priority of smallsat funding in heliophysics. We've learned in the past decade that these missions perform exceptionally well by traditional metrics, e.g., papers/year/\$M (Spence et al. 2022 -- arXiv:2206.02968). It is also well established that there is a "leaky pipeline" resulting in too little diversity in leadership positions (see the National Academies Report at https://www.nationalacademies.org/our-work/increasing-diversity-in-the-leadership-of-competed-space-missions). Prioritizing smallsat funding would significantly increase the number of opportunities for new leaders to learn -- a crucial patch for the pipeline and an essential phase of career development. At present, however, there are far more proposers than the available funding can support, leading to selection ratios that can be as low as 6% -- in the bottom 0.5th percentile of selection ratios across the history of ROSES. Prioritizing SmallSat funding and substantially increasing that selection ratio are the fundamental recommendations being made by this white paper., Comment: White paper submitted to the Decadal Survey for Solar and Space Physics (Heliophysics) 2024-2033; 6 pages, 1 figure
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- 2023
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33. Work-Life Balance Starts with Proper Deadlines and Exemplary Agencies
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Lugaz, Noé, Winslow, Réka M., Al-Haddad, Nada, Lee, Christina O., Vines, Sarah K., Reeves, Katharine, Caspi, Amir, Seaton, Daniel, Downs, Cooper, Glesener, Lindsay, Vourlidas, Angelos, Scolini, Camilla, Török, Tibor, Allen, Robert, and Palmerio, Erika
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Physics and Society ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
Diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programs can only be implemented successfully if proper work-life balance is possible in Heliophysics (and in STEM field in general). One of the core issues stems from the culture of "work-above-life" associated with mission concepts, development, and implementation but also the expectations that seem to originate from numerous announcements from NASA (and other agencies). The benefits of work-life balance are well documented; however, the entire system surrounding research in Heliophysics hinders or discourages proper work-life balance. For example, there does not seem to be attention paid by NASA Headquarters (HQ) on the timing of their announcements regarding how it will be perceived by researchers, and how the timing may promote a culture where work trumps personal life. The same is true for remarks by NASA HQ program officers during panels or informal discussions, where seemingly innocuous comments may give a perception that work is expected after "normal" work hours. In addition, we are calling for work-life balance plans and implementation to be one of the criteria used for down-selection and confirmation of missions (Key Decision Points: KDP-B, KDP-C)., Comment: White paper submitted to the Decadal Survey for Solar and Space Physics (Heliophysics) 2024-2033; 6 pages
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- 2023
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34. Our Cheating Is Not Your Cheating: Signature Misconduct Exemplified in Mathematics
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Jo-ann Larkins and Katherine Seaton
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That the manifestation of cheating varies between disciplines is rarely discussed, an unspoken assumption being that assessment takes the form of written prose supported by a bibliography. Students and academics from disciplines, such as mathematics, not fitting this model can feel that their work is regarded as an aberration. 'Plagiarism' is not an adequate term to indicate collusion on an individual task, copying a classmate's calculation by hand, or substitution of a computational tool for one's own competence when it is being tested. Signature pedagogies give rise to signature assessments and hence signature misconduct. Our analysis provides insight into the nature and rationale of mathematics assessment for the broader academic integrity community, and we suggest that other disciplines, particularly the non-text disciplines, may wish to similarly examine their own forms of misconduct. Our cheating is not your cheating; therein lies a challenge for all of us.
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- 2024
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35. Magnetic Energy Powers the Corona: How We Can Understand its 3D Storage & Release
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Caspi, Amir, Seaton, Daniel B., Casini, Roberto, Downs, Cooper, Gibson, Sarah E., Gilbert, Holly, Glesener, Lindsay, Guidoni, Silvina E., Hughes, J. Marcus, McKenzie, David, Plowman, Joseph, Reeves, Katharine K., Saint-Hilaire, Pascal, Shih, Albert Y., and West, Matthew J.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Plasma Physics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
The coronal magnetic field is the prime driver behind many as-yet unsolved mysteries: solar eruptions, coronal heating, and the solar wind, to name a few. It is, however, still poorly observed and understood. We highlight key questions related to magnetic energy storage, release, and transport in the solar corona, and their relationship to these important problems. We advocate for new and multi-point co-optimized measurements, sensitive to magnetic field and other plasma parameters, spanning from optical to $\gamma$-ray wavelengths, to bring closure to these long-standing and fundamental questions. We discuss how our approach can fully describe the 3D magnetic field, embedded plasma, particle energization, and their joint evolution to achieve these objectives., Comment: White paper submitted to the Decadal Survey for Solar and Space Physics (Heliophysics) 2024-2033; 16 pages, 3 figures
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- 2023
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36. Improving Multi-Dimensional Data Formats, Access, and Assimilation Tools for the Twenty-First Century
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Seaton, Daniel B., Caspi, Amir, Casini, Roberto, Downs, Cooper, Gibson, Sarah E., Gilbert, Holly, Glesener, Lindsay, Guidoni, Silvina E., Hughes, J. Marcus, McKenzie, David, Plowman, Joseph, Reeves, Katharine K., Saint-Hilaire, Pascal, Shih, Albert Y., and West, Matthew J.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Data Analysis, Statistics and Probability ,Physics - Plasma Physics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
Heliophysics image data largely relies on a forty-year-old ecosystem built on the venerable Flexible Image Transport System (FITS) data standard. While many in situ measurements use newer standards, they are difficult to integrate with multiple data streams required to develop global understanding. Additionally, most data users still engage with data in much the same way as they did decades ago. However, contemporary missions and models require much more complex support for 3D multi-parameter data, robust data assimilation strategies, and integration of multiple individual data streams required to derive complete physical characterizations of the Sun and Heliospheric plasma environment. In this white paper we highlight some of the 21$^\mathsf{st}$ century challenges for data frameworks in heliophysics, consider an illustrative case study, and make recommendations for important steps the field can take to modernize its data products and data usage models. Our specific recommendations include: (1) Investing in data assimilation capability to drive advanced data-constrained models, (2) Investing in new strategies for integrating data across multiple instruments to realize measurements that cannot be produced from single observations, (3) Rethinking old data use paradigms to improve user access, develop deep understanding, and decrease barrier to entry for new datasets, and (4) Investing in research on data formats better suited for multi-dimensional data and cloud-based computing., Comment: White paper submitted to the Decadal Survey for Solar and Space Physics (Heliophysics) 2024-2033; 9 pages, 3 figures
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- 2023
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37. COMPLETE: A flagship mission for complete understanding of 3D coronal magnetic energy release
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Caspi, Amir, Seaton, Daniel B., Casini, Roberto, Downs, Cooper, Gibson, Sarah E., Gilbert, Holly, Glesener, Lindsay, Guidoni, Silvina E., Hughes, J. Marcus, McKenzie, David, Plowman, Joseph, Reeves, Katharine K., Saint-Hilaire, Pascal, Shih, Albert Y., and West, Matthew J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Plasma Physics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
COMPLETE is a flagship mission concept combining broadband spectroscopic imaging and comprehensive magnetography from multiple viewpoints around the Sun to enable tomographic reconstruction of 3D coronal magnetic fields and associated dynamic plasma properties, which provide direct diagnostics of energy release. COMPLETE re-imagines the paradigm for solar remote-sensing observations through purposefully co-optimized detectors distributed on multiple spacecraft that operate as a single observatory, linked by a comprehensive data/model assimilation strategy to unify individual observations into a single physical framework. We describe COMPLETE's science goals, instruments, and mission implementation. With targeted investment by NASA, COMPLETE is feasible for launch in 2032 to observe around the maximum of Solar Cycle 26., Comment: White paper submitted to the Decadal Survey for Solar and Space Physics (Heliophysics) 2024-2033; 10 pages, 6 figures, 1 table
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- 2023
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38. The James Webb Space Telescope Mission
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Gardner, Jonathan P., Mather, John C., Abbott, Randy, Abell, James S., Abernathy, Mark, Abney, Faith E., Abraham, John G., Abraham, Roberto, Abul-Huda, Yasin M., Acton, Scott, Adams, Cynthia K., Adams, Evan, Adler, David S., Adriaensen, Maarten, Aguilar, Jonathan Albert, Ahmed, Mansoor, Ahmed, Nasif S., Ahmed, Tanjira, Albat, Rüdeger, Albert, Loïc, Alberts, Stacey, Aldridge, David, Allen, Mary Marsha, Allen, Shaune S., Altenburg, Martin, Altunc, Serhat, Alvarez, Jose Lorenzo, Álvarez-Márquez, Javier, de Oliveira, Catarina Alves, Ambrose, Leslie L., Anandakrishnan, Satya M., Andersen, Gregory C., Anderson, Harry James, Anderson, Jay, Anderson, Kristen, Anderson, Sara M., Aprea, Julio, Archer, Benita J., Arenberg, Jonathan W., Argyriou, Ioannis, Arribas, Santiago, Artigau, Étienne, Arvai, Amanda Rose, Atcheson, Paul, Atkinson, Charles B., Averbukh, Jesse, Aymergen, Cagatay, Bacinski, John J., Baggett, Wayne E., Bagnasco, Giorgio, Baker, Lynn L., Balzano, Vicki Ann, Banks, Kimberly A., Baran, David A., Barker, Elizabeth A., Barrett, Larry K., Barringer, Bruce O., Barto, Allison, Bast, William, Baudoz, Pierre, Baum, Stefi, Beatty, Thomas G., Beaulieu, Mathilde, Bechtold, Kathryn, Beck, Tracy, Beddard, Megan M., Beichman, Charles, Bellagama, Larry, Bely, Pierre, Berger, Timothy W., Bergeron, Louis E., Darveau-Bernier, Antoine, Bertch, Maria D., Beskow, Charlotte, Betz, Laura E., Biagetti, Carl P., Birkmann, Stephan, Bjorklund, Kurt F., Blackwood, James D., Blazek, Ronald Paul, Blossfeld, Stephen, Bluth, Marcel, Boccaletti, Anthony, Boegner Jr., Martin E., Bohlin, Ralph C., Boia, John Joseph, Böker, Torsten, Bonaventura, N., Bond, Nicholas A., Bosley, Kari Ann, Boucarut, Rene A., Bouchet, Patrice, Bouwman, Jeroen, Bower, Gary, Bowers, Ariel S., Bowers, Charles W., Boyce, Leslye A., Boyer, Christine T., Boyer, Martha L., Boyer, Michael, Boyer, Robert, Bradley, Larry D., Brady, Gregory R., Brandl, Bernhard R., Brannen, Judith L., Breda, David, Bremmer, Harold G., Brennan, David, Bresnahan, Pamela A., Bright, Stacey N., Broiles, Brian J., Bromenschenkel, Asa, Brooks, Brian H., Brooks, Keira J., Brown, Bob, Brown, Bruce, Brown, Thomas M., Bruce, Barry W., Bryson, Jonathan G., Bujanda, Edwin D., Bullock, Blake M., Bunker, A. J., Bureo, Rafael, Burt, Irving J., Bush, James Aaron, Bushouse, Howard A., Bussman, Marie C., Cabaud, Olivier, Cale, Steven, Calhoon, Charles D., Calvani, Humberto, Canipe, Alicia M., Caputo, Francis M., Cara, Mihai, Carey, Larkin, Case, Michael Eli, Cesari, Thaddeus, Cetorelli, Lee D., Chance, Don R., Chandler, Lynn, Chaney, Dave, Chapman, George N., Charlot, S., Chayer, Pierre, Cheezum, Jeffrey I., Chen, Bin, Chen, Christine H., Cherinka, Brian, Chichester, Sarah C., Chilton, Zachary S., Chittiraibalan, Dharini, Clampin, Mark, Clark, Charles R., Clark, Kerry W., Clark, Stephanie M., Claybrooks, Edward E., Cleveland, Keith A., Cohen, Andrew L., Cohen, Lester M., Colón, Knicole D., Coleman, Benee L., Colina, Luis, Comber, Brian J., Comeau, Thomas M., Comer, Thomas, Reis, Alain Conde, Connolly, Dennis C., Conroy, Kyle E., Contos, Adam R., Contreras, James, Cook, Neil J., Cooper, James L., Cooper, Rachel Aviva, Correia, Michael F., Correnti, Matteo, Cossou, Christophe, Costanza, Brian F., Coulais, Alain, Cox, Colin R., Coyle, Ray T., Cracraft, Misty M., Noriega-Crespo, Alberto, Crew, Keith A., Curtis, Gary J., Cusveller, Bianca, Maciel, Cleyciane Da Costa, Dailey, Christopher T., Daugeron, Frédéric, Davidson, Greg S., Davies, James E., Davis, Katherine Anne, Davis, Michael S., Day, Ratna, de Chambure, Daniel, de Jong, Pauline, De Marchi, Guido, Dean, Bruce H., Decker, John E., Delisa, Amy S., Dell, Lawrence C., Dellagatta, Gail, Dembinska, Franciszka, Demosthenes, Sandor, Dencheva, Nadezhda M., Deneu, Philippe, DePriest, William W., Deschenes, Jeremy, Dethienne, Nathalie, Detre, Örs Hunor, Diaz, Rosa Izela, Dicken, Daniel, DiFelice, Audrey S., Dillman, Matthew, Disharoon, Maureen O., van Dishoeck, Ewine F., Dixon, William V., Doggett, Jesse B., Dominguez, Keisha L., Donaldson, Thomas S., Doria-Warner, Cristina M., Santos, Tony Dos, Doty, Heather, Douglas Jr., Robert E., Doyon, René, Dressler, Alan, Driggers, Jennifer, Driggers, Phillip A., Dunn, Jamie L., DuPrie, Kimberly C., Dupuis, Jean, Durning, John, Dutta, Sanghamitra B., Earl, Nicholas M., Eccleston, Paul, Ecobichon, Pascal, Egami, Eiichi, Ehrenwinkler, Ralf, Eisenhamer, Jonathan D., Eisenhower, Michael, Eisenstein, Daniel J., Hamel, Zaky El, Elie, Michelle L., Elliott, James, Elliott, Kyle Wesley, Engesser, Michael, Espinoza, Néstor, Etienne, Odessa, Etxaluze, Mireya, Evans, Leah, Fabreguettes, Luce, Falcolini, Massimo, Falini, Patrick R., Fatig, Curtis, Feeney, Matthew, Feinberg, Lee D., Fels, Raymond, Ferdous, Nazma, Ferguson, Henry C., Ferrarese, Laura, Ferreira, Marie-Héléne, Ferruit, Pierre, Ferry, Malcolm, Filippazzo, Joseph Charles, Firre, Daniel, Fix, Mees, Flagey, Nicolas, Flanagan, Kathryn A., Fleming, Scott W., Florian, Michael, Flynn, James R., Foiadelli, Luca, Fontaine, Mark R., Fontanella, Erin Marie, Forshay, Peter Randolph, Fortner, Elizabeth A., Fox, Ori D., Framarini, Alexandro P., Francisco, John I., Franck, Randy, Franx, Marijn, Franz, David E., Friedman, Scott D., Friend, Katheryn E., Frost, James R., Fu, Henry, Fullerton, Alexander W., Gaillard, Lionel, Galkin, Sergey, Gallagher, Ben, Galyer, Anthony D., Marín, Macarena García, Gardner, Lisa E., Garland, Dennis, Garrett, Bruce Albert, Gasman, Danny, Gáspár, András, Gastaud, René, Gaudreau, Daniel, Gauthier, Peter Timothy, Geers, Vincent, Geithner, Paul H., Gennaro, Mario, Gerber, John, Gereau, John C., Giampaoli, Robert, Giardino, Giovanna, Gibbons, Paul C., Gilbert, Karolina, Gilman, Larry, Girard, Julien H., Giuliano, Mark E., Gkountis, Konstantinos, Glasse, Alistair, Glassmire, Kirk Zachary, Glauser, Adrian Michael, Glazer, Stuart D., Goldberg, Joshua, Golimowski, David A., Gonzaga, Shireen P., Gordon, Karl D., Gordon, Shawn J., Goudfrooij, Paul, Gough, Michael J., Graham, Adrian J., Grau, Christopher M., Green, Joel David, Greene, Gretchen R., Greene, Thomas P., Greenfield, Perry E., Greenhouse, Matthew A., Greve, Thomas R., Greville, Edgar M., Grimaldi, Stefano, Groe, Frank E., Groebner, Andrew, Grumm, David M., Grundy, Timothy, Güdel, Manuel, Guillard, Pierre, Guldalian, John, Gunn, Christopher A., Gurule, Anthony, Gutman, Irvin Meyer, Guy, Paul D., Guyot, Benjamin, Hack, Warren J., Haderlein, Peter, Hagan, James B., Hagedorn, Andria, Hainline, Kevin, Haley, Craig, Hami, Maryam, Hamilton, Forrest Clifford, Hammann, Jeffrey, Hammel, Heidi B., Hanley, Christopher J., Hansen, Carl August, Hardy, Bruce, Harnisch, Bernd, Harr, Michael Hunter, Harris, Pamela, Hart, Jessica Ann, Hartig, George F., Hasan, Hashima, Hashim, Kathleen Marie, Hashimoto, Ryan, Haskins, Sujee J., Hawkins, Robert Edward, Hayden, Brian, Hayden, William L., Healy, Mike, Hecht, Karen, Heeg, Vince J., Hejal, Reem, Helm, Kristopher A., Hengemihle, Nicholas J., Henning, Thomas, Henry, Alaina, Henry, Ronald L., Henshaw, Katherine, Hernandez, Scarlin, Herrington, Donald C., Heske, Astrid, Hesman, Brigette Emily, Hickey, David L., Hilbert, Bryan N., Hines, Dean C., Hinz, Michael R., Hirsch, Michael, Hitcho, Robert S., Hodapp, Klaus, Hodge, Philip E., Hoffman, Melissa, Holfeltz, Sherie T., Holler, Bryan Jason, Hoppa, Jennifer Rose, Horner, Scott, Howard, Joseph M., Howard, Richard J., Huber, Jean M., Hunkeler, Joseph S., Hunter, Alexander, Hunter, David Gavin, Hurd, Spencer W., Hurst, Brendan J., Hutchings, John B., Hylan, Jason E., Ignat, Luminita Ilinca, Illingworth, Garth, Irish, Sandra M., Isaacs III, John C., Jackson Jr., Wallace C., Jaffe, Daniel T., Jahic, Jasmin, Jahromi, Amir, Jakobsen, Peter, James, Bryan, James, John C., James, LeAndrea Rae, Jamieson, William Brian, Jandra, Raymond D., Jayawardhana, Ray, Jedrzejewski, Robert, Jeffers, Basil S., Jensen, Peter, Joanne, Egges, Johns, Alan T., Johnson, Carl A., Johnson, Eric L., Johnson, Patricia, Johnson, Phillip Stephen, Johnson, Thomas K., Johnson, Timothy W., Johnstone, Doug, Jollet, Delphine, Jones, Danny P., Jones, Gregory S., Jones, Olivia C., Jones, Ronald A., Jones, Vicki, Jordan, Ian J., Jordan, Margaret E., Jue, Reginald, Jurkowski, Mark H., Justis, Grant, Justtanont, Kay, Kaleida, Catherine C., Kalirai, Jason S., Kalmanson, Phillip Cabrales, Kaltenegger, Lisa, Kammerer, Jens, Kan, Samuel K., Kanarek, Graham Childs, Kao, Shaw-Hong, Karakla, Diane M., Karl, Hermann, Kassin, Susan A., Kauffman, David D., Kavanagh, Patrick, Kelley, Leigh L., Kelly, Douglas M., Kendrew, Sarah, Kennedy, Herbert V., Kenny, Deborah A., Keski-Kuha, Ritva A., Keyes, Charles D., Khan, Ali, Kidwell, Richard C., Kimble, Randy A., King, James S., King, Richard C., Kinzel, Wayne M., Kirk, Jeffrey R., Kirkpatrick, Marc E., Klaassen, Pamela, Klingemann, Lana, Klintworth, Paul U., Knapp, Bryan Adam, Knight, Scott, Knollenberg, Perry J., Knutsen, Daniel Mark, Koehler, Robert, Koekemoer, Anton M., Kofler, Earl T., Kontson, Vicki L., Kovacs, Aiden Rose, Kozhurina-Platais, Vera, Krause, Oliver, Kriss, Gerard A., Krist, John, Kristoffersen, Monica R., Krogel, Claudia, Krueger, Anthony P., Kulp, Bernard A., Kumari, Nimisha, Kwan, Sandy W., Kyprianou, Mark, Labador, Aurora Gadiano, Labiano, Álvaro, Lafrenière, David, Lagage, Pierre-Olivier, Laidler, Victoria G., Laine, Benoit, Laird, Simon, Lajoie, Charles-Philippe, Lallo, Matthew D., Lam, May Yen, LaMassa, Stephanie Marie, Lambros, Scott D., Lampenfield, Richard Joseph, Lander, Matthew Ed, Langston, James Hutton, Larson, Kirsten, Larson, Melora, LaVerghetta, Robert Joseph, Law, David R., Lawrence, Jon F., Lee, David W., Lee, Janice, Lee, Yat-Ning Paul, Leisenring, Jarron, Leveille, Michael Dunlap, Levenson, Nancy A., Levi, Joshua S., Levine, Marie B., Lewis, Dan, Lewis, Jake, Lewis, Nikole, Libralato, Mattia, Lidon, Norbert, Liebrecht, Paula Louisa, Lightsey, Paul, Lilly, Simon, Lim, Frederick C., Lim, Pey Lian, Ling, Sai-Kwong, Link, Lisa J., Link, Miranda Nicole, Lipinski, Jamie L., Liu, XiaoLi, Lo, Amy S., Lobmeyer, Lynette, Logue, Ryan M., Long, Chris A., Long, Douglas R., Long, Ilana D., Long, Knox S., López-Caniego, Marcos, Lotz, Jennifer M., Love-Pruitt, Jennifer M., Lubskiy, Michael, Luers, Edward B., Luetgens, Robert A., Luevano, Annetta J., Lui, Sarah Marie G. Flores, Lund III, James M., Lundquist, Ray A., Lunine, Jonathan, Lützgendorf, Nora, Lynch, Richard J., MacDonald, Alex J., MacDonald, Kenneth, Macias, Matthew J., Macklis, Keith I., Maghami, Peiman, Maharaja, Rishabh Y., Maiolino, Roberto, Makrygiannis, Konstantinos G., Malla, Sunita Giri, Malumuth, Eliot M., Manjavacas, Elena, Marini, Andrea, Marrione, Amanda, Marston, Anthony, Martel, André R, Martin, Didier, Martin, Peter G., Martinez, Kristin L., Maschmann, Marc, Masci, Gregory L., Masetti, Margaret E., Maszkiewicz, Michael, Matthews, Gary, Matuskey, Jacob E., McBrayer, Glen A., McCarthy, Donald W., McCaughrean, Mark J., McClare, Leslie A., McClare, Michael D., McCloskey, John C., McClurg, Taylore D., McCoy, Martin, McElwain, Michael W., McGregor, Roy D., McGuffey, Douglas B., McKay, Andrew G., McKenzie, William K., McLean, Brian, McMaster, Matthew, McNeil, Warren, De Meester, Wim, Mehalick, Kimberly L., Meixner, Margaret, Meléndez, Marcio, Menzel, Michael P., Menzel, Michael T., Merz, Matthew, Mesterharm, David D., Meyer, Michael R., Meyett, Michele L., Meza, Luis E., Midwinter, Calvin, Milam, Stefanie N., Miller, Jay Todd, Miller, William C., Miskey, Cherie L., Misselt, Karl, Mitchell, Eileen P., Mohan, Martin, Montoya, Emily E., Moran, Michael J., Morishita, Takahiro, Moro-Martín, Amaya, Morrison, Debra L., Morrison, Jane, Morse, Ernie C., Moschos, Michael, Moseley, S. H., Mosier, Gary E., Mosner, Peter, Mountain, Matt, Muckenthaler, Jason S., Mueller, Donald G., Mueller, Migo, Muhiem, Daniella, Mühlmann, Prisca, Mullally, Susan Elizabeth, Mullen, Stephanie M., Munger, Alan J, Murphy, Jess, Murray, Katherine T., Muzerolle, James C., Mycroft, Matthew, Myers, Andrew, Myers, Carey R., Myers, Fred Richard R., Myers, Richard, Myrick, Kaila, Nagle IV, Adrian F., Nayak, Omnarayani, Naylor, Bret, Neff, Susan G., Nelan, Edmund P., Nella, John, Nguyen, Duy Tuong, Nguyen, Michael N., Nickson, Bryony, Nidhiry, John Joseph, Niedner, Malcolm B., Nieto-Santisteban, Maria, Nikolov, Nikolay K., Nishisaka, Mary Ann, Nota, Antonella, O'Mara, Robyn C., Oboryshko, Michael, O'Brien, Marcus B., Ochs, William R., Offenberg, Joel D., Ogle, Patrick Michael, Ohl, Raymond G., Olmsted, Joseph Hamden, Osborne, Shannon Barbara, O'Shaughnessy, Brian Patrick, Östlin, Göran, O'Sullivan, Brian, Otor, O. Justin, Ottens, Richard, Ouellette, Nathalie N. -Q., Outlaw, Daria J., Owens, Beverly A., Pacifici, Camilla, Page, James Christophe, Paranilam, James G., Park, Sang, Parrish, Keith A., Paschal, Laura, Patapis, Polychronis, Patel, Jignasha, Patrick, Keith, Pattishall Jr., Robert A., Paul, Douglas William, Paul, Shirley J., Pauly, Tyler Andrew, Pavlovsky, Cheryl M., Peña-Guerrero, Maria, Pedder, Andrew H., Peek, Matthew Weldon, Pelham, Patricia A., Penanen, Konstantin, Perriello, Beth A., Perrin, Marshall D., Perrine, Richard F., Perrygo, Chuck, Peslier, Muriel, Petach, Michael, Peterson, Karla A., Pfarr, Tom, Pierson, James M., Pietraszkiewicz, Martin, Pilchen, Guy, Pipher, Judy L., Pirzkal, Norbert, Pitman, Joseph T., Player, Danielle M., Plesha, Rachel, Plitzke, Anja, Pohner, John A., Poletis, Karyn Konstantin, Pollizzi, Joseph A., Polster, Ethan, Pontius, James T., Pontoppidan, Klaus, Porges, Susana C., Potter, Gregg D., Prescott, Stephen, Proffitt, Charles R., Pueyo, Laurent, Neira, Irma Aracely Quispe, Radich, Armando, Rager, Reiko T., Rameau, Julien, Ramey, Deborah D., Alarcon, Rafael Ramos, Rampini, Riccardo, Rapp, Robert, Rashford, Robert A., Rauscher, Bernard J., Ravindranath, Swara, Rawle, Timothy, Rawlings, Tynika N., Ray, Tom, Regan, Michael W., Rehm, Brian, Rehm, Kenneth D., Reid, Neill, Reis, Carl A., Renk, Florian, Reoch, Tom B., Ressler, Michael, Rest, Armin W., Reynolds, Paul J., Richon, Joel G., Richon, Karen V., Ridgaway, Michael, Riedel, Adric Richard, Rieke, George H., Rieke, Marcia, Rifelli, Richard E., Rigby, Jane R., Riggs, Catherine S., Ringel, Nancy J., Ritchie, Christine E., Rix, Hans-Walter, Robberto, Massimo, Robinson, Michael S., Robinson, Orion, Rock, Frank W., Rodriguez, David R., del Pino, Bruno Rodríguez, Roellig, Thomas, Rohrbach, Scott O., Roman, Anthony J., Romelfanger, Frederick J., Romo Jr., Felipe P., Rosales, Jose J., Rose, Perry, Roteliuk, Anthony F., Roth, Marc N., Rothwell, Braden Quinn, Rouzaud, Sylvain, Rowe, Jason, Rowlands, Neil, Roy, Arpita, Royer, Pierre, Rui, Chunlei, Rumler, Peter, Rumpl, William, Russ, Melissa L., Ryan, Michael B., Ryan, Richard M., Saad, Karl, Sabata, Modhumita, Sabatino, Rick, Sabbi, Elena, Sabelhaus, Phillip A., Sabia, Stephen, Sahu, Kailash C., Saif, Babak N., Salvignol, Jean-Christophe, Samara-Ratna, Piyal, Samuelson, Bridget S., Sanders, Felicia A., Sappington, Bradley, Sargent, B. A., Sauer, Arne, Savadkin, Bruce J., Sawicki, Marcin, Schappell, Tina M., Scheffer, Caroline, Scheithauer, Silvia, Scherer, Ron, Schiff, Conrad, Schlawin, Everett, Schmeitzky, Olivier, Schmitz, Tyler S., Schmude, Donald J., Schneider, Analyn, Schreiber, Jürgen, Schroeven-Deceuninck, Hilde, Schultz, John J., Schwab, Ryan, Schwartz, Curtis H., Scoccimarro, Dario, Scott, John F., Scott, Michelle B., Seaton, Bonita L., Seely, Bruce S., Seery, Bernard, Seidleck, Mark, Sembach, Kenneth, Shanahan, Clare Elizabeth, Shaughnessy, Bryan, Shaw, Richard A., Shay, Christopher Michael, Sheehan, Even, Sheth, Kartik, Shih, Hsin-Yi, Shivaei, Irene, Siegel, Noah, Sienkiewicz, Matthew G., Simmons, Debra D., Simon, Bernard P., Sirianni, Marco, Sivaramakrishnan, Anand, Slade, Jeffrey E., Sloan, G. C., Slocum, Christine E., Slowinski, Steven E., Smith, Corbett T., Smith, Eric P., Smith, Erin C., Smith, Koby, Smith, Robert, Smith, Stephanie J., Smolik, John L., Soderblom, David R., Sohn, Sangmo Tony, Sokol, Jeff, Sonneborn, George, Sontag, Christopher D., Sooy, Peter R., Soummer, Remi, Southwood, Dana M., Spain, Kay, Sparmo, Joseph, Speer, David T., Spencer, Richard, Sprofera, Joseph D., Stallcup, Scott S., Stanley, Marcia K., Stansberry, John A., Stark, Christopher C., Starr, Carl W., Stassi, Diane Y., Steck, Jane A., Steeley, Christine D., Stephens, Matthew A., Stephenson, Ralph J., Stewart, Alphonso C., Stiavelli, Massimo, Stockman Jr., Hervey, Strada, Paolo, Straughn, Amber N., Streetman, Scott, Strickland, David Kendal, Strobele, Jingping F., Stuhlinger, Martin, Stys, Jeffrey Edward, Such, Miguel, Sukhatme, Kalyani, Sullivan, Joseph F., Sullivan, Pamela C., Sumner, Sandra M., Sun, Fengwu, Sunnquist, Benjamin Dale, Swade, Daryl Allen, Swam, Michael S., Swenton, Diane F., Swoish, Robby A., Litten, Oi In Tam, Tamas, Laszlo, Tao, Andrew, Taylor, David K., Taylor, Joanna M., Plate, Maurice te, Van Tea, Mason, Teague, Kelly K., Telfer, Randal C., Temim, Tea, Texter, Scott C., Thatte, Deepashri G., Thompson, Christopher Lee, Thompson, Linda M., Thomson, Shaun R., Thronson, Harley, Tierney, C. M., Tikkanen, Tuomo, Tinnin, Lee, Tippet, William Thomas, Todd, Connor William, Tran, Hien D., Trauger, John, Trejo, Edwin Gregorio, Truong, Justin Hoang Vinh, Tsukamoto, Christine L., Tufail, Yasir, Tumlinson, Jason, Tustain, Samuel, Tyra, Harrison, Ubeda, Leonardo, Underwood, Kelli, Uzzo, Michael A., Vaclavik, Steven, Valenduc, Frida, Valenti, Jeff A., Van Campen, Julie, van de Wetering, Inge, Van Der Marel, Roeland P., van Haarlem, Remy, Vandenbussche, Bart, Vanterpool, Dona D., Vernoy, Michael R., Costas, Maria Begoña Vila, Volk, Kevin, Voorzaat, Piet, Voyton, Mark F., Vydra, Ekaterina, Waddy, Darryl J., Waelkens, Christoffel, Wahlgren, Glenn Michael, Walker Jr., Frederick E., Wander, Michel, Warfield, Christine K., Warner, Gerald, Wasiak, Francis C., Wasiak, Matthew F., Wehner, James, Weiler, Kevin R., Weilert, Mark, Weiss, Stanley B., Wells, Martyn, Welty, Alan D., Wheate, Lauren, Wheeler, Thomas P., White, Christy L., Whitehouse, Paul, Whiteleather, Jennifer Margaret, Whitman, William Russell, Williams, Christina C., Willmer, Christopher N. A., Willott, Chris J., Willoughby, Scott P., Wilson, Andrew, Wilson, Debra, Wilson, Donna V., Windhorst, Rogier, Wislowski, Emily Christine, Wolfe, David J., Wolfe, Michael A., Wolff, Schuyler, Wondel, Amancio, Woo, Cindy, Woods, Robert T., Worden, Elaine, Workman, William, Wright, Gillian S., Wu, Carl, Wu, Chi-Rai, Wun, Dakin D., Wymer, Kristen B., Yadetie, Thomas, Yan, Isabelle C., Yang, Keith C., Yates, Kayla L., Yeager, Christopher R., Yerger, Ethan John, Young, Erick T., Young, Gary, Yu, Gene, Yu, Susan, Zak, Dean S., Zeidler, Peter, Zepp, Robert, Zhou, Julia, Zincke, Christian A., Zonak, Stephanie, and Zondag, Elisabeth
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Twenty-six years ago a small committee report, building on earlier studies, expounded a compelling and poetic vision for the future of astronomy, calling for an infrared-optimized space telescope with an aperture of at least $4m$. With the support of their governments in the US, Europe, and Canada, 20,000 people realized that vision as the $6.5m$ James Webb Space Telescope. A generation of astronomers will celebrate their accomplishments for the life of the mission, potentially as long as 20 years, and beyond. This report and the scientific discoveries that follow are extended thank-you notes to the 20,000 team members. The telescope is working perfectly, with much better image quality than expected. In this and accompanying papers, we give a brief history, describe the observatory, outline its objectives and current observing program, and discuss the inventions and people who made it possible. We cite detailed reports on the design and the measured performance on orbit., Comment: Accepted by PASP for the special issue on The James Webb Space Telescope Overview, 29 pages, 4 figures
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- 2023
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39. The Multiview Observatory for Solar Terrestrial Science (MOST)
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Gopalswamy, N., Christe, S., Fung, S. F., Gong, Q., Gruesbeck, J. R., Jian, L. K., Kanekal, S. G., Kay, C., Kucera, T. A., Leake, J. E., Li, L., Makela, P., Nikulla, P., Reginald, N. L., Shih, A., Tadikonda, S. K., Viall, N., Wilson III, L. B., Yashiro, S., Golub, L., DeLuca, E., Reeves, K., Sterling, A. C., Winebarger, A. R., DeForest, C., Hassler, D. M., Seaton, D. B., Desai, M. I., Mokashi, P. S., Lazio, J., Jensen, E. A., Manchester, W. B., Sachdeva, N., Wood, B., Kooi, J., Hess, P., Wexler, D. B., Bale, S. D., Krucker, S., Hurlburt, N., DeRosa, M., Gosain, S., Jain, K., Kholikov, S., Petrie, G. J. D., Pevtsov, A., Tripathy, S. C., Zhao, J., Scherrer, P. H., Rajaguru, S. P., Woods, T., Kenney, M., Zhang, J., Scolini, C., Cho, K. S., Park, Y. D., and Jackson, B. V.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
We report on a study of the Multiview Observatory for Solar Terrestrial Science (MOST) mission that will provide comprehensive imagery and time series data needed to understand the magnetic connection between the solar interior and the solar atmosphere/inner heliosphere. MOST will build upon the successes of SOHO and STEREO missions with new views of the Sun and enhanced instrument capabilities. This article is based on a study conducted at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center that determined the required instrument refinement, spacecraft accommodation, launch configuration, and flight dynamics for mission success. MOST is envisioned as the next generation great observatory positioned to obtain three-dimensional information of large-scale heliospheric structures such as coronal mass ejections, stream interaction regions, and the solar wind itself. The MOST mission consists of 2 pairs of spacecraft located in the vicinity of Sun-Earth Lagrange points L4 (MOST1, MOST3) and L5 (MOST2 and MOST4). The spacecraft stationed at L4 (MOST1) and L5 (MOST2) will each carry seven remote-sensing and three in-situ instrument suites, including a novel radio package known as the Faraday Effect Tracker of Coronal and Heliospheric structures (FETCH). MOST3 and MOST4 will carry only the FETCH instruments and are positioned at variable locations along the Earth orbit up to 20{\deg} ahead of L4 and 20{\deg} behind L5, respectively. FETCH will have polarized radio transmitters and receivers on all four spacecraft to measure the magnetic content of solar wind structures propagating from the Sun to Earth using the Faraday rotation technique. The MOST mission will be able to sample the magnetized plasma throughout the Sun-Earth connected space during the mission lifetime over a solar cycle., Comment: 42 pages, 19 figures, 8 tables, to appear in J. Atmospheric and Solar Terrestrial Physics
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- 2023
40. 'Wearing a Mask Won't Protect Us from Our History': The Impact of COVID-19 on Black Children and Families. Social Policy Report. Volume 35, Number 2
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Society for Research in Child Development, Bogan, Erin, Adams-Bass, Valerie N., Francis, Lori A., Gaylord-Harden, Noni K., Seaton, Eleanor K., Scott, Judith C., and Williams, Joanna L.
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The data on COVID-19 show an irrefutable and disturbing pattern: Black Americans are contracting and dying from COVID-19 at rates that far exceed other racial and ethnic groups. Due to historical and current iterations of racism, Black Americans have been forced into conditions that elevate their risk for COVID-19 and consequently place Black children at the epicenter of loss across multiple domains of life. The current paper highlights the impact of the pandemic on Black children at the individual, family, and school levels. Based on an understanding of the influence of structural racism on COVID-19 disparities, policy recommendations are provided that focus on equitable access to quality education, home ownership, and employment to fully address the needs of Black children and families during and after the pandemic. Research, practice, and policy recommendations are made to journal editors, funding agencies, grant review panels, and researchers regarding how research on COVID-19 should be framed to inform intervention efforts aimed at improving the situation of Black children and families.
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- 2022
41. The SWAP Filter: A Simple Azimuthally Varying Radial Filter for Wide-Field EUV Solar Images
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Seaton, Daniel B., Berghmans, David, Bloomfield, D. Shaun, De Groof, Anik, D'Huys, Elke, Nicula, Bogdan, Rachmeler, Laurel A., and West, Matthew J.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the SWAP Filter: an azimuthally varying, radial normalizing filter specifically developed for EUV images of the solar corona, named for the Sun Watcher with Active Pixels and Image Processing (SWAP) instrument on the Project for On-Board Autonomy 2 spacecraft. We discuss the origins of our technique, its implementation and key user-configurable parameters, and highlight its effects on data via a series of examples. We discuss the filter's strengths in a data environment in which wide field-of-view observations that specifically target the low signal-to-noise middle corona are newly available and expected to grow in the coming years., Comment: Contact D. B. Seaton for animations referenced in figure captions
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- 2023
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42. Radio Studies of the Middle Corona: Current State and New Prospects in the Next Decade
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Chen, Bin, Kooi, Jason E., Wexler, David B., Gary, Dale E., Yu, Sijie, Mondal, Surajit, Kobelski, Adam R., Seaton, Daniel B., West, Matthew J., White, Stephen M., Fleishman, Gregory D., Saint-Hilaire, Pascal, Zhang, Peijin, Gilly, Chris R., Mason, James P., and Reid, Hamish
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
The "middle corona," defined by West et al. (2022) as the region between ~1.5-6 solar radii, is a critical transition region that connects the highly structured lower corona to the outer corona where the magnetic field becomes predominantly radial. At radio wavelengths, remote-sensing of the middle corona falls in the meter-decameter wavelength range where a critical transition of radio emission mechanisms occurs. In addition, plasma properties of the middle corona can be probed by trans-coronal radio propagation methods including radio scintillation and Faraday rotation techniques. Together they offer a wealth of diagnostic tools for the middle corona, complementing current and planned missions at other wavelengths. These diagnostics include unique means for detecting and measuring the magnetic field and energetic electrons associated with coronal mass ejections, mapping coronal shocks and electron beam trajectories, as well as constraining the plasma density, magnetic field, and turbulence of the "young" solar wind. Following a brief overview of pertinent radio diagnostic methods, this white paper will discuss the current state of radio studies on the middle corona, challenges to obtaining a more comprehensive picture, and recommend an outlook in the next decade. Our specific recommendations for advancing the middle coronal sciences from the radio perspective are: (1) Prioritizing solar-dedicated radio facilities in the ~0.1-1 GHz range with broadband, high-dynamic-range imaging spectropolarimetry capabilities. (2) Developing facilities and techniques to perform multi-perspective, multiple lines-of-sight trans-coronal radio Faraday Rotation measurements., Comment: Science white paper submitted to the 2024 Solar and Space Physics Decadal Survey. All submitted white papers (including this one) are available at https://www.nationalacademies.org/our-work/decadal-survey-for-solar-and-space-physics-heliophysics-2024-2033. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2208.04485
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- 2023
43. Magnetic Reconnection as the Driver of the Solar Wind
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Raouafi, Nour E., Stenborg, G., Seaton, D. B., Wang, H., Wang, J., DeForest, C. E., Bale, S. D., Drake, J. F., Uritsky, V. M., Karpen, J. T., DeVore, C. R., Sterling, A. C., Horbury, T. S., Harra, L. K., Bourouaine, S., Kasper, J. C., Kumar, P., Phan, T. D., and Velli, M.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
We present EUV solar observations showing evidence for omnipresent jetting activity driven by small-scale magnetic reconnection at the base of the solar corona. We argue that the physical mechanism that heats and drives the solar wind at its source is ubiquitous magnetic reconnection in the form of small-scale jetting activity (i.e., a.k.a. jetlets). This jetting activity, like the solar wind and the heating of the coronal plasma, are ubiquitous regardless of the solar cycle phase. Each event arises from small-scale reconnection of opposite polarity magnetic fields producing a short-lived jet of hot plasma and Alfv\'en waves into the corona. The discrete nature of these jetlet events leads to intermittent outflows from the corona, which homogenize as they propagate away from the Sun and form the solar wind. This discovery establishes the importance of small-scale magnetic reconnection in solar and stellar atmospheres in understanding ubiquitous phenomena such as coronal heating and solar wind acceleration. Based on previous analyses linking the switchbacks to the magnetic network, we also argue that these new observations might provide the link between the magnetic activity at the base of the corona and the switchback solar wind phenomenon. These new observations need to be put in the bigger picture of the role of magnetic reconnection and the diverse form of jetting in the solar atmosphere., Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures
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- 2023
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44. Phase behaviour of coarse-grained fluids
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Sokhan, Vlad P, Seaton, Michael A, and Todorov, Ilian T
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Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed Matter - Abstract
Soft condensed matter structures often challenge us with complex many-body phenomena governed by collective modes spanning wide spatial and temporal domains. In order to successfully tackle such problems mesoscopic coarse-grained (CG) statistical models are being developed, providing a dramatic reduction in computational complexity. CG models provide an intermediate step in the complex statistical framework of linking the thermodynamics of condensed phases with the properties of their constituent atoms and molecules. These allow us to offload part of the problem to the CG model itself and reformulate the remainder in terms of reduced CG phase space. However, such exchange of pawns to chess pieces, or ``Hamiltonian renormalization'', is a radical step and the thermodynamics of the primary atomic and CG models could be markedly different. Here, we present a comprehensive study of the phase diagram including binodal and interfacial properties of a novel soft CG model, which includes finite-range attraction and supports liquid phases. Although the model is rooted in similar arguments to the Lennard-Jones (LJ) atomic pair potential, its phase behaviour is qualitatively different from that of LJ and features several anomalies such as an unusually broad liquid range, change in concavity of the liquid coexistence branch with variation of the model parameters, volume contraction on fusion, temperature of maximum density in the liquid phase and negative thermal expansion in the solid phase. These results provide new insight into the connection between simple potential models and complex emergent condensed matter phenomena., Comment: 10 pages, full paper
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- 2023
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45. A high-performance neuroprosthesis for speech decoding and avatar control.
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Metzger, Sean, Littlejohn, Kaylo, Silva, Alexander, Seaton, Margaret, Wang, Ran, Dougherty, Maximilian, Wu, Peter, Berger, Michael, Zhuravleva, Inga, Tu-Chan, Adelyn, Ganguly, Karunesh, Anumanchipalli, Gopala, Chang, Edward, Moses, David, and Liu, Jessie
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Humans ,Cerebral Cortex ,Clinical Trials as Topic ,Communication ,Deep Learning ,Face ,Gestures ,Movement ,Neural Prostheses ,Paralysis ,Speech ,Vocabulary ,Voice - Abstract
Speech neuroprostheses have the potential to restore communication to people living with paralysis, but naturalistic speed and expressivity are elusive1. Here we use high-density surface recordings of the speech cortex in a clinical-trial participant with severe limb and vocal paralysis to achieve high-performance real-time decoding across three complementary speech-related output modalities: text, speech audio and facial-avatar animation. We trained and evaluated deep-learning models using neural data collected as the participant attempted to silently speak sentences. For text, we demonstrate accurate and rapid large-vocabulary decoding with a median rate of 78 words per minute and median word error rate of 25%. For speech audio, we demonstrate intelligible and rapid speech synthesis and personalization to the participants pre-injury voice. For facial-avatar animation, we demonstrate the control of virtual orofacial movements for speech and non-speech communicative gestures. The decoders reached high performance with less than two weeks of training. Our findings introduce a multimodal speech-neuroprosthetic approach that has substantial promise to restore full, embodied communication to people living with severe paralysis.
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- 2023
46. Pharmacokinetic serum concentrations of VRC01 correlate with prevention of HIV-1 acquisition
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Seaton, Kelly E, Huang, Yunda, Karuna, Shelly, Heptinstall, Jack R, Brackett, Caroline, Chiong, Kelvin, Zhang, Lily, Yates, Nicole L, Sampson, Mark, Rudnicki, Erika, Juraska, Michal, deCamp, Allan C, Edlefsen, Paul T, Mullins, James I, Williamson, Carolyn, Rossenkhan, Raabya, Giorgi, Elena E, Kenny, Avi, Angier, Heather, Randhawa, April, Weiner, Joshua A, Rojas, Michelle, Sarzotti-Kelsoe, Marcella, Zhang, Lu, Sawant, Sheetal, Ackerman, Margaret E, McDermott, Adrian B, Mascola, John R, Hural, John, McElrath, M Julianna, Andrew, Philip, Hidalgo, Jose A, Clark, Jesse, Laher, Fatima, Orrell, Catherine, Frank, Ian, Gonzales, Pedro, Edupuganti, Srilatha, Mgodi, Nyaradzo, Corey, Lawrence, Morris, Lynn, Montefiori, David, Cohen, Myron S, Gilbert, Peter B, and Tomaras, Georgia D
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Immunology ,Pediatric AIDS ,HIV/AIDS ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Immunization ,Infectious Diseases ,Vaccine Related (AIDS) ,Biotechnology ,Vaccine Related ,Pediatric ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies ,Antibodies ,Neutralizing ,Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome ,HIV Infections ,HIV Seropositivity ,HIV Antibodies ,HIV-1 ,AIDS Vaccines ,Body weight-based dosing ,HIV ,Broadly neutralising antibodies ,body weight ,prevention ,broadly neutralizing antibodies ,monoclonal antibody ,pharmacokinetics ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Clinical sciences ,Epidemiology - Abstract
BackgroundThe phase 2b proof-of-concept Antibody Mediated Prevention (AMP) trials showed that VRC01, an anti-HIV-1 broadly neutralising antibody (bnAb), prevented acquisition of HIV-1 sensitive to VRC01. To inform future study design and dosing regimen selection of candidate bnAbs, we investigated the association of VRC01 serum concentration with HIV-1 acquisition using AMP trial data.MethodsThe case-control sample included 107 VRC01 recipients who acquired HIV-1 and 82 VRC01 recipients who remained without HIV-1 during the study. We measured VRC01 serum concentrations with a qualified pharmacokinetic (PK) Binding Antibody Multiplex Assay. We employed nonlinear mixed effects PK modelling to estimate daily-grid VRC01 concentrations. Cox regression models were used to assess the association of VRC01 concentration at exposure and baseline body weight, with the hazard of HIV-1 acquisition and prevention efficacy as a function of VRC01 concentration. We also compared fixed dosing vs. body weight-based dosing via simulations.FindingsEstimated VRC01 concentrations in VRC01 recipients without HIV-1 were higher than those in VRC01 recipients who acquired HIV-1. Body weight was inversely associated with HIV-1 acquisition among both placebo and VRC01 recipients but did not modify the prevention efficacy of VRC01. VRC01 concentration was inversely correlated with HIV-1 acquisition, and positively correlated with prevention efficacy of VRC01. Simulation studies suggest that fixed dosing may be comparable to weight-based dosing in overall predicted prevention efficacy.InterpretationThese findings suggest that bnAb serum concentration may be a useful marker for dosing regimen selection, and operationally efficient fixed dosing regimens could be considered for future trials of HIV-1 bnAbs.FundingWas provided by the National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) (UM1 AI068614, to the HIV Vaccine Trials Network [HVTN]; UM1 AI068635, to the HVTN Statistical Data and Management Center [SDMC], Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center [FHCC]; 2R37 054165 to the FHCC; UM1 AI068618, to HVTN Laboratory Center, FHCC; UM1 AI068619, to the HPTN Leadership and Operations Center; UM1 AI068613, to the HIV Prevention Trials Network [HPTN] Laboratory Center; UM1 AI068617, to the HPTN SDMC; and P30 AI027757, to the Center for AIDS Research, Duke University (AI P30 AI064518) and University of Washington (P30 AI027757) Centers for AIDS Research; R37AI054165 from NIAID to the FHCC; and OPP1032144 CA-VIMC Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
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- 2023
47. Coma Off It: Removing Variable Point Spread Functions from Astronomical Images
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Hughes, J. M., DeForest, C. E., and Seaton, D. B.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We describe a rapid and direct method for regularizing, post-facto, the point-spread function (PSF) of a telescope or other imaging instrument, across its entire field of view. Imaging instruments in general blur point sources of light by local convolution with a point-spread function that varies slowly across the field of view, due to coma, spherical aberration, and similar effects. It is possible to regularize the PSF in post-processing, producing data with a homogeneous ``effective PSF'' across the entire field of view. In turn, the method enables seamless wide-field astronomical mosaics at higher resolution than would otherwise be achievable, and potentially changes the design trade space for telescopes, lenses, and other optical systems where data uniformity is important. For many kinds of optical aberration, simple and rapid convolution with a locally optimized ``transfer PSF'' produces extremely uniform imaging properties at low computational cost. PSF regularization} does not require access to the instrument that obtained the data, and can be bootstrapped from existing data sets that include starfield images or other means of estimating the PSF across the field., Comment: 11 pages; accepted by Astronomical Journal
- Published
- 2022
48. Energetic electron precipitation driven by electromagnetic ion cyclotron waves from ELFIN's low altitude perspective
- Author
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Angelopoulos, V., Zhang, X. -J., Artemyev, A. V., Mourenas, D., Tsai, E., Wilkins, C., Runov, A., Liu, J., Turner, D. L., Li, W., Khurana, K., Wirz, R. E., Sergeev, V. A., Meng, X., Wu, J., Hartinger, M. D., Raita, T., Shen, Y., An, X., Shi, X., Bashir, M. F., Shen, X., Gan, L., Qin, M., Capannolo, L., Ma, Q., Russell, C. L., Masongsong, E. V., Caron, R., He, I., Iglesias, L., Jha, S., King, J., Kumar, S., Le, K., Mao, J., McDermott, A., Nguyen, K., Norris, A., Palla, A., Roosnovo, Tam, J., Xie, E., Yap, R. C., Ye, S., Young, C., Adair, L. A., Shaffer, C., Chung, M., Cruce, P., Lawson, M., Leneman, D., Allen, M., Anderson, M., Arreola-Zamora, M., Artinger, J., Asher, J., Branchevsky, D., Cliffe, M., Colton, K., Costello, C., Depe, D., Domae, B. W., Eldin, S., Fitzgibbon, L., Flemming, A., Frederick, D. M., Gilbert, A., Hesford, B., Krieger, R., Lian, K., McKinney, E., Miller, J. P., Pedersen, C., Qu, Z., Rozario, R., Rubly, M., Seaton, R., Subramanian, A., Sundin, S. R., Tan, A., Thomlinson, D., Turner, W., Wing, G., Wong, C., and Zarifian, A.
- Subjects
Physics - Space Physics ,Physics - Plasma Physics - Abstract
We review comprehensive observations of electromagnetic ion cyclotron (EMIC) wave-driven energetic electron precipitation using data from the energetic electron detector on the Electron Losses and Fields InvestigatioN (ELFIN) mission, two polar-orbiting low-altitude spinning CubeSats, measuring 50-5000 keV electrons with good pitch-angle and energy resolution. EMIC wave-driven precipitation exhibits a distinct signature in energy-spectrograms of the precipitating-to-trapped flux ratio: peaks at 0.5 MeV which are abrupt (bursty) with significant substructure (occasionally down to sub-second timescale). Multiple ELFIN passes over the same MLT sector allow us to study the spatial and temporal evolution of the EMIC wave - electron interaction region. Using two years of ELFIN data, we assemble a statistical database of 50 events of strong EMIC wave-driven precipitation. Most reside at L=5-7 at dusk, while a smaller subset exists at L=8-12 at post-midnight. The energies of the peak-precipitation ratio and of the half-peak precipitation ratio (our proxy for the minimum resonance energy) exhibit an L-shell dependence in good agreement with theoretical estimates based on prior statistical observations of EMIC wave power spectra. The precipitation ratio's spectral shape for the most intense events has an exponential falloff away from the peak (i.e., on either side of 1.45 MeV). It too agrees well with quasi-linear diffusion theory based on prior statistics of wave spectra. Sub-MeV electron precipitation observed concurrently with strong EMIC wave-driven 1MeV precipitation has a spectral shape that is consistent with efficient pitch-angle scattering down to 200-300 keV by much less intense higher frequency EMIC waves. These results confirm the critical role of EMIC waves in driving relativistic electron losses. Nonlinear effects may abound and require further investigation.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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49. Direct observations of a complex coronal web driving highly structured slow solar wind
- Author
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Chitta, L. P., Seaton, D. B., Downs, C., DeForest, C. E., and Higginson, A. K.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Plasma Physics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
The solar wind consists of continuous streams of charged particles that escape into the heliosphere from the Sun, and is split into fast and slow components, with the fast wind emerging from the interiors of coronal holes. Near the ecliptic plane, the fast wind from low-latitude coronal holes is interspersed with a highly structured slow solar wind, the source regions and drivers of which are poorly understood. Here we report extreme-ultraviolet observations that reveal a spatially complex web of magnetized plasma structures that persistently interact and reconnect in the middle corona. Coronagraphic white-light images show concurrent emergence of slow wind streams over these coronal web structures. With advanced global MHD coronal models, we demonstrate that the observed coronal web is a direct imprint of the magnetic separatrix web (S-web). By revealing a highly dynamic portion of the S-web, our observations open a window into important middle-coronal processes that appear to play a key role in driving the structured slow solar wind., Comment: This version of the article has been accepted for publication, after peer review but is not the Version of Record and does not reflect post-acceptance improvements, or any corrections. The Version of Record is available online at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41550-022-01834-5
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Principal Candidates' Reflective Learning during a Full-Time Internship
- Author
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Drake, Timothy A., Ivey, Laura, and Seaton, Lacey
- Abstract
In this case study, we explore how principal candidates made sense of their internship by analyzing their weekly reflections during a school year. We found that candidates' views of leadership developed from viewing leadership solely through the lens of making decisions and providing direction, to recognizing that much of the work of a school leader came from building relationships and delegating leadership responsibilities. Candidates' experiences managing student discipline, conducting classroom walkthroughs and teacher evaluations, and leading professional development and professional learning communities (PLCs) were especially developmental. We conclude with implications for preservice training programs and future research.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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