120 results on '"Shen, C.Y."'
Search Results
2. High energy product FexPt100-x thin films (x = 60–66) prepared by rapid thermal annealing
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Chang, H.W., Yuan, F.T., Shen, C.Y., Huang, M.F., Hung, C.Y., Wang, C.R., and Chang, W.C.
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- 2020
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3. Structural evolution, ferroelectric, and nanomechanical properties of Bi1-xSmxFeO3 films (x = 0.05–0.16) on glass substrates
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Lin, T.K., Shen, C.Y., Kao, C.C., Chang, C.F., Chang, H.W., Wang, C.R., and Tu, C.S.
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- 2019
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4. Improved perpendicular magnetic properties of pulsed-dc-sputtered FePt thin films
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Shen, C.Y., Yeh, P.Y., Yuan, F.T., Chang, H.W., Lee, M.Y., Lin, D.Y., and Wang, C.R.
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- 2018
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5. Structure and magnetic properties of 300-nm-thick FePt films with Hf underlayer
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Shen, C.Y., Chang, H.W., Yuan, F.T., Su, C.C., Wang, Y.W., Fan, C.L., Wang, C.R., Shih, C.W., and Chang, W.C.
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- 2016
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6. Energy product enhancement of FePt films by underlayering with Ti, Zr, and Hf
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Shen, C.Y., Chang, H.W., Yuan, F.T., Lin, M.C., Su, C.C., Yeh, H.H., Huang, M.F., Wang, C.R., Shih, C.W., and Chang, W.C.
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- 2014
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7. Effect of Hf underlayer on structure and magnetic properties of rapid thermal annealed FePt thin films
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Shen, C.Y., Yuan, F.T., Chang, H.W., Lin, M.C., Su, C.C., Chang, S.T., Wang, C.R., Mei, J.K., Hsiao, S.N., Chen, C.C., Shih, C.W., and Chang, W.C.
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- 2014
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8. Functional annotation of the 2q35 breast cancer risk locus implicates a structural variant in influencing activity of a long-range enhancer element
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Baxter, J.S., Johnson, N., Tomczyk, K., Gillespie, A., Maguire, S., Brough, R., Fachal, L., Michailidou, K., Bolla, M.K., Wang, Q., Dennis, J., Ahearn, T.U., Andrulis, I.L., Anton-Culver, H., Antonenkova, N.N., Arndt, V., Aronson, K.J., Augustinsson, A., Becher, H., Beckmann, M.W., Behrens, S., Benitez, J., Bermisheva, M., Bogdanova, N.V., Bojesen, S.E., Brenner, H., Brucker, S.Y., Cai, Q.Y., Campa, D., Canzian, F., Castelao, J.E., Chan, T.L., Chang-Claude, J., Chanock, S.J., Chenevix-Trench, G., Choi, J.Y., Clarke, C.L., Collaborators, N., Colonna, S., Conroy, D.M., Couch, F.J., Cox, A., Cross, S.S., Czene, K., Daly, M.B., Devilee, P., Dork, T., Dossus, L., Dwek, M., Eccles, D.M., Ekici, A.B., Eliassen, A.H., Engel, C., Fasching, P.A., Figueroa, J., Flyger, H., Gago-Dominguez, M., Gao, C., Garcia-Closas, M., Garcia-Saenz, J.A., Ghoussaini, M., Giles, G.G., Goldberg, M.S., Gonzalez-Neira, A., Guenel, P., Gundert, M., Haeberle, L., Hahnen, E., Haiman, C.A., Hall, P., Hamann, U., Hartman, M., Hatse, S., Hauke, J., Hollestelle, A., Hoppe, R., Hopper, J.L., Hou, M.F., Ito, H., Iwasaki, M., Jager, A., Jakubowska, A., Janni, W., John, E.M., Joseph, V., Jung, A., Kaaks, R., Kang, D., Keeman, R., Khusnutdinova, E., Kim, S.W., Kosma, V.M., Kraft, P., Kristensen, V.N., Kubelka-Sabit, K., Kurian, A.W., Kwong, A., Lacey, J.V., Lambrechts, D., Larson, N.L., Larsson, S.C., Marchand, L. le, Lejbkowicz, F., Li, J.M., Long, J.R., Lophatananon, A., LubiNski, J., Mannermaa, A., Manoochehri, M., Manoukian, S., Margolin, S., Matsuo, K., Mavroudis, D., Mayes, R., Menon, U., Milne, R.L., Taib, N.A.M., Muir, K., Muranen, T.A., Murphy, R.A., Nevanlinna, H., O'Brien, K.M., Offit, K., Olson, J.E., Olsson, H., Park, S.K., Park-Simon, T.W., Patel, A.V., Peterlongo, P., Peto, J., Plaseska-Karanfilska, D., Presneau, N., Pylkas, K., Rack, B., Rennert, G., Romero, A., Ruebner, M., Rudiger, T., Saloustros, E., Sandler, D.P., Sawyer, E.J., Schmidt, M.K., Schmutzler, R.K., Schneeweiss, A., Schoemaker, M.J., Shah, M., Shen, C.Y., Shu, X.O., Simard, J., Southey, M.C., Stone, J., Surowy, H., Swerdlow, A.J., Tamimi, R.M., Tapper, W.J., Taylor, J.A., Teo, S.H., Teras, L.R., Terry, M.B., Toland, A.E., Tomlinson, I., Truong, T., Tseng, C.C., Untch, M., Vachon, C.M., Ouweland, A.M.W. van den, Wang, S.S., Weinberg, C.R., Wendt, C., Winham, S.J., Winqvist, R., Wolk, A., Wu, A.H., Yamaji, T., Zheng, W., Ziogas, A., Pharoah, P.D.P., Dunning, A.M., Easton, D.F., Pettitt, S.J., Lord, C.J., Haider, S., Orr, N., Fletcher, O., kConFab Investigators, ABCTB Investigators, Medical Oncology, Clinical Genetics, HUS Gynecology and Obstetrics, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Biosciences, Dennis, Joe [0000-0003-4591-1214], Pharoah, Paul [0000-0001-8494-732X], Dunning, Alison [0000-0001-6651-7166], Easton, Douglas [0000-0003-2444-3247], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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Basic medicine ,breast cancer risk ,0302 clinical medicine ,Transcription (biology) ,Risk Factors ,WIDE ASSOCIATION ,TRANSCRIPTION ,Promoter Regions, Genetic ,Genetics (clinical) ,Sequence Deletion ,Genetics ,Genetics & Heredity ,0303 health sciences ,Chromosome Mapping ,3. Good health ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 2 ,Pair 2 ,Female ,Medical Genetics ,Life Sciences & Biomedicine ,Human ,Tumor suppressor gene ,SUSCEPTIBILITY LOCI ,In silico ,3122 Cancers ,Locus (genetics) ,Breast Neoplasms ,Biology ,Chromosomes ,Article ,Cell Line ,RNAS ,Promoter Regions ,03 medical and health sciences ,functional annotation ,risk locus ,CRISPR-Cas Systems ,Genetic Association Studies ,Genetic Variation ,Humans ,Insulin-Like Growth Factor Binding Protein 5 ,Molecular Sequence Annotation ,11Q13 ,Genetic ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,Enhancer ,Transcription factor ,030304 developmental biology ,Medicinsk genetik ,Reporter gene ,Science & Technology ,IDENTIFICATION ,Clinical medicine ,Estrogen receptor alpha - Abstract
A combination of genetic and functional approaches has identified three independent breast cancer risk loci at 2q35. A recent fine-scale mapping analysis to refine these associations resulted in 1 (signal 1), 5 (signal 2), and 42 (signal 3) credible causal variants at these loci. We used publicly available in silico DNase I and ChIP-seq data with in vitro reporter gene and CRISPR assays to annotate signals 2 and 3. We identified putative regulatory elements that enhanced cell-type-specific transcription from the IGFBP5 promoter at both signals (30- to 40-fold increased expression by the putative regulatory element at signal 2, 2- to 3-fold by the putative regulatory element at signal 3). We further identified one of the five credible causal variants at signal 2, a 1.4 kb deletion (esv3594306), as the likely causal variant; the deletion allele of this variant was associated with an average additional increase in IGFBP5 expression of 1.3-fold (MCF-7) and 2.2-fold (T-47D). We propose a model in which the deletion allele of esv3594306 juxtaposes two transcription factor binding regions (annotated by estrogen receptor alpha ChIP-seq peaks) to generate a single extended regulatory element. This regulatory element increases cell-type-specific expression of the tumor suppressor gene IGFBP5 and, thereby, reduces risk of estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer (odds ratio = 0.77, 95% CI 0.74-0.81, p = 3.1 × 10-31). ispartof: AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS vol:108 issue:7 pages:1190-1203 ispartof: location:United States status: published
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- 2021
9. Magnetic property enhancement of directly quenched Nd–Fe–B bulk magnets with Ti substitution
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Chang, H.W., Shih, M.F., Hsieh, C.C., Chang, W.C., and Shen, C.Y.
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- 2010
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10. Nonlinear seismic soil–pile–structure interactions: Shaking table tests and FEM analyses
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Chau, K.T., Shen, C.Y., and Guo, X.
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- 2009
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11. Breast Cancer Polygenic Risk Score and Contralateral Breast Cancer Risk
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Kramer, I., Hooning, M.J., Mavaddat, N., Hauptmann, M., Keeman, R., Steyerberg, E.W., Giardiello, D., Antoniou, A.C., Pharoah, P.D.P., Canisius, S., Abu-Ful, Z., Andrulis, I.L., Anton-Culver, H., Aronson, K.J., Augustinsson, A., Becher, H., Beckmann, M.W., Behrens, S., Benitez, J., Bermisheva, M., Bogdanova, N.V., Bojesen, S.E., Bolla, M.K., Bonanni, B., Brauch, H., Bremer, M., Brucker, S.Y., Burwinkel, B., Castelao, J.E., Chan, T.L., Chang-Claude, J., Chanock, S.J., Chenevix-Trench, G., Choi, J.Y., Clarke, C.L., Collee, J.M., Couch, F.J., Cox, A., Cross, S.S., Czene, K., Daly, M.B., Devilee, P., Dork, T., dos-Santos-Silva, I., Dunning, A.M., Dwek, M., Eccles, D.M., Evans, D.G., Fasching, P.A., Flyger, H., Gago-Dominguez, M., Garcia-Closas, M., Garcia-Saenz, J.A., Giles, G.G., Goldgar, D.E., Gonzalez-Neira, A., Haiman, C.A., Hakansson, N., Hamann, U., Hartman, M., Heemskerk-Gerritsen, B.A.M., Hollestelle, A., Hopper, J.L., Hou, M.F., Howell, A., Ito, H., Jakimovska, M., Jakubowska, A., Janni, W., John, E.M., Jung, A., Kang, D., Kets, C.M., Khusnutdinova, E., Ko, Y.D., Kristensen, V.N., Kurian, A.W., Kwong, A., Lambrechts, D., Marchand, L. le, Li, J.M., Lindblom, A., Mannermaa, A., Manoochehri, M., Margolin, S., Matsuo, K., Mavroudis, D., Meindl, A., Milne, R.L., Mulligan, A.M., Muranen, T.A., Neuhausen, S.L., Nevanlinna, H., Newman, W.G., Olshan, A.F., Olson, J.E., Olsson, H., Park-Simon, T.W., Peto, J., Petridis, C., Plaseska-Karanfilska, D., Presneau, N., Pylkas, K., Radice, P., Rennert, G., Romero, A., Roylance, R., Saloustros, E., Sawyer, E.J., Schmutzler, R.K., Schwentner, L., Scott, C., See, M.H., Shah, M., Shen, C.Y., Shu, X.O., Siesling, S., Slager, S., Sohn, C., Southey, M.C., Spinelli, J.J., Stone, J., Tapper, W.J., Tengstrom, M., Teo, S.H., Terry, M.B., Tollenaar, R.A.E.M., Tomlinson, I., Troester, M.A., Vachon, C.M., Ongeval, C. van, Veen, E.M. van, Winqvist, R., Wolk, A., Zheng, W., Ziogas, A., Easton, D.F., Hall, P., Schmidt, M.K., NBCS Collaborators, ABCTB Investigators, and kConFab Investigators
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parasitic diseases - Abstract
Previous research has shown that polygenic risk scores (PRSs) can be used to stratify women according to their risk of developing primary invasive breast cancer. This study aimed to evaluate the association between a recently validated PRS of 313 germline variants (PRS313) and contralateral breast cancer (CBC) risk. We included 56,068 women of European ancestry diagnosed with first invasive breast cancer from 1990 onward with follow-up from the Breast Cancer Association Consortium. Metachronous CBC risk (N = 1,027) according to the distribution of PRS313 was quantified using Cox regression analyses. We assessed PRS313 interaction with age at first diagnosis, family history, morphology, ER status, PR status, and HER2 status, and (neo)adjuvant therapy. In studies of Asian women, with limited follow-up, CBC risk associated with PRS313 was assessed using logistic regression for 340 women with CBC compared with 12,133 women with unilateral breast cancer. Higher PRS313 was associated with increased CBC risk: hazard ratio per standard deviation (SD) = 1.25 (95%CI = 1.18-1.33) for Europeans, and an OR per SD = 1.15 (95%CI = 1.02-1.29) for Asians. The absolute lifetime risks of CBC, accounting for death as competing risk, were 12.4% for European women at the 10th percentile and 20.5% at the 90th percentile of PRS313. We found no evidence of confounding by or interaction with individual characteristics, characteristics of the primary tumor, or treatment. The C-index for the PRS313 alone was 0.563 (95%CI = 0.547-0.586). In conclusion, PRS313 is an independent factor associated with CBC risk and can be incorporated into CBC risk prediction models to help improve stratification and optimize surveillance and treatment strategies.
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- 2020
12. Analysis of plastic flow and die design during extrusion of CPU heat sinks
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Hwang, Y.M. and Shen, C.Y.
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- 2008
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13. Hypoxia and Reoxygenation of the Lung Tissues Induced mRNA Expressions of Superoxide Dismutase and Catalase and Interventions From Different Antioxidants
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Shen, C.Y., Lee, J.F., Su, C.L., Wang, D., and Chen, C.F.
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- 2008
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14. Absorbing properties and structural design of microwave absorbers based on carbonyl iron and barium ferrite
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Feng, Y.B., Qiu, T., and Shen, C.Y.
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- 2007
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15. Translocation of Pancreatic Juice After Ischemia and Reperfusion of the Intestines and the Effects of Gabexate Mesilate (FOY) in Rats
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Chen, C.F., Wang, D., Lin, H.I., Shen, C.Y., and Yang, N.P.
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- 2007
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16. Ischemia/Reperfusion of the Liver Induces Heart Injury in Rats
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Chen, C.F., Wang, D., Lin, H.I., Leu, F.J., Shen, C.Y., and Chou, C.-C.
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- 2007
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17. Reperfusion Liver Injury—Induced Superoxide Dismutase and Catalase Expressions and the Protective Effects of N-Acetyl Cysteine
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Chen, C.F., Hsueh, C.W., Tang, T.S., Wang, D., Shen, C.Y., and Pei, J.S.
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- 2007
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18. Simulated radar imagery of an ocean 'spiral eddy'
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Cooper, A.L., Shen, C.Y., Marmorino, G.O., and Evans, T.
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Remote sensing -- Research ,Ocean -- Research ,Eddies -- Research ,Synthetic aperture radar -- Research ,Business ,Earth sciences ,Electronics and electrical industries - Abstract
Ocean submesoscale features appear to be widespread in the surface mixed layer and thus may be an important link in the energy pathway from large to small scales. An example is the 'spiral eddy,' for which several theories have been proposed. High-resolution radar imagery should be useful in testing these theories, but there have as yet been no simulations of radar imagery from first principles. As a step in this direction, we developed a capability to simulate imagery using a full-spectral calculation that includes the effects of both wave-current interaction and wave damping due to a surface film. A particular model of a spiral eddy is used to specify the surface velocity field and film distribution. Imagery is then simulated for a range of radar frequencies, wind speeds, initial film pressures, and relative radar view directions. For winds of 3-8 m/s and an initial film pressure of 0.5 mN/m, imagery for shorter radar wavelengths (X- and C-band) is dominated by the effects of film damping. For longer wavelengths (L- and P-band) wave-current interactions and film damping are of comparable magnitude; but for higher initial film pressures, the L- and P-band images also become dominated by film damping. L-band imagery, in particular, is highly sensitive to the initial value of film pressure, and such a result may have implications for determining properties of seawater films. Overall, the radar simulations produce surface patterns having characteristics that resemble radar imagery of real ocean spiral eddies. Index Terms--Current convergence, ocean submesoscale, radar imagery, remote sensing, slicks, spiral eddy, surface film, synthetic aperture radar (SAR).
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- 2005
19. Real-Time In Situ Measurements of Industrial Hazardous Gas Concentrations and Their Emission Gross
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Dong, F.Z., primary, Liu, W.Q., additional, Chu, Y.N., additional, Li, J.Q., additional, Zhang, Z.R., additional, Wang, Y., additional, Pang, T., additional, Wu, B., additional, Tu, G.J., additional, Xia, H., additional, Yang, Y., additional, Shen, C.Y., additional, Wang, Y.J., additional, Ni, Z.B., additional, and Liu, J.G., additional
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- 2011
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20. Two truncating variants in FANCC and breast cancer risk
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Dork, T., Peterlongo, P., Mannermaa, A., Bolla, M.K., Wang, Q., Dennis, J., Ahearn, T., Andrulis, I.L., Anton-Culver, H., Arndt, V., Aronson, K.J., Augustinsson, A., Freeman, L.E.B., Beckmann, M.W., Beeghly-Fadiel, A., Behrens, S., Bermisheva, M., Blomqvist, C., Bogdanova, N., Bojesen, S.E., Brauch, H., Brenner, H., Burwinkel, B., Canzian, F., Chan, T.L., Chang-Claude, J., Chanock, S.J., Choi, J.Y., Christiansen, H., Clarke, C.L., Couch, F.J., Czene, K., Daly, M.B., dos-Santos-Silva, I., Dwek, M., Eccles, D.M., Ekici, A.B., Eriksson, M., Evans, D.G., Fasching, P.A., Figueroa, J., Flyger, H., Fritschisl, L., Gabrielson, M., Gago-Dominguez, M., Gao, C., Gapstur, S.M., Garcia-Closas, M., Garcia-Saenz, J.A., Gaudet, M.M., Giles, G.G., Goldberg, M.S., Goldgar, D.E., Guenel, P., Haeberle, L., Haiman, C.A., Hakansson, N., Hall, P., Hamann, U., Hartman, M., Hauke, J., Hein, A., Hillemanns, P., Hogervorst, F.B.L., Hooning, M.J., Hopper, J.L., Howell, T., Huo, D.Z., Ito, H., Iwasaki, M., Jakubowska, A., Janni, W., John, E.M., Jung, A., Kaaks, R., Kang, D., Kapoor, P.M., Khusnutdinova, E., Kim, S.W., Kitahara, C.M., Koutros, S., Kraft, P., Kristensen, V.N., Kwon, A., Lambrechts, D., Marchand, L. le, Li, J.M., Lindstrom, S., Linet, M., W.Y. lo, Long, J.R., Lophatananon, A., Lubinski, J., Manoochehri, M., Manoukian, S., Margolin, S., Martinez, E., Matsuo, K., Mavroudis, D., Meindl, A., Menon, U., Milne, R.L., Taib, N.A.M., Muir, K., Mulligan, A.M., Neuhausen, S.L., Nevanlinna, H., Neven, P., Newman, W.G., Offit, K., Olopade, O.I., Olshan, A.F., Olson, J.E., Olsson, H., Park, S.K., Park-Simon, T.W., Peto, J., Plaseska-Karanfilska, D., Pohl-Rescigno, E., Presneau, N., Rack, B., Radice, P., Rashid, M.U., Rennert, G., Rennert, H.S., Romero, A., Ruebner, M., Saloustros, E., Schmidt, M.K., Schmutzler, R.K., Schneider, M.O., Schoemaker, M.J., Scott, C., Shen, C.Y., Shu, X.O., Simard, J., Slager, S., Smichkoska, S., Southey, M.C., Spinelli, J.J., Stone, J., Surowy, H., Swerdlow, A.J., Tamimi, R.M., Tapper, W.J., Teo, S.H., Terry, M.B., Toland, A.E., Tollenaar, R.A.E.M., Torres, D., Torres-Mejia, G., Troester, M.A., Truong, T., Tsugane, S., Untch, M., Vachon, C.M., Ouweland, A.M.W. van den, Veen, E.M. van, Vijai, J., Wendt, C., Wolk, A., Yu, J.C., Zheng, W., Ziogas, A., Ziv, E., Dunning, A.M., Pharoah, P.D.P., Schindler, D., Devilee, P., Easton, D.F., Balleine, R., Baxter, R., Braye, S., Carpenter, J., Dahlstrom, J., Forbes, J., Lee, C.S., Marsh, D., Morey, A., Pathmanathan, N., Scott, R., Simpson, P., Spigelman, A., Wilcken, N., Yip, D., Zeps, N., Borresen-Dale, A.L., Alnaes, G.I.G., Sahlberg, K.K., Ottestad, L., Karesen, R., Schlichting, E., Holmen, M.M., Sauer, T., Haakensen, V., Engebraten, O., Naume, B., Fossa, A., Kiserud, C.E., Reinertsen, K.V., Helland, A., Riis, M., Geisler, J., ABCTB Investigators, NBCS Collaborators, Andrulis, Irene L [0000-0002-4226-6435], Arndt, Volker [0000-0001-9320-8684], Brauch, Hiltrud [0000-0001-7531-2736], Dwek, Miriam [0000-0001-7184-2932], Ekici, Arif B [0000-0001-6099-7066], Fasching, Peter A [0000-0003-4885-8471], Figueroa, Jonine [0000-0002-5100-623X], Hein, Alexander [0000-0003-2601-3398], Ito, Hidemi [0000-0002-8023-4581], Matsuo, Keitaro [0000-0003-1761-6314], Menon, Usha [0000-0003-3708-1732], Milne, Roger L [0000-0001-5764-7268], Muir, Kenneth [0000-0001-6429-988X], Nevanlinna, Heli [0000-0002-0916-2976], Newman, William G [0000-0002-6382-4678], Peto, Julian [0000-0002-1685-8912], Rennert, Gad [0000-0002-8512-068X], Romero, Atocha [0000-0002-1634-7397], Schmidt, Marjanka K [0000-0002-2228-429X], Scott, Christopher [0000-0003-1340-0647], Stone, Jennifer [0000-0001-5077-0124], Truong, Thérèse [0000-0002-2943-6786], Tsugane, Shoichiro [0000-0003-4105-2774], Ziogas, Argyrios [0000-0003-4529-3727], Dunning, Alison M [0000-0001-6651-7166], Pharoah, Paul DP [0000-0001-8494-732X], Devilee, Peter [0000-0002-8023-2009], Easton, Douglas F [0000-0003-2444-3247], Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, Andrulis, Irene L. [0000-0002-4226-6435], Ekici, Arif B. [0000-0001-6099-7066], Fasching, Peter A. [0000-0003-4885-8471], Milne, Roger L. [0000-0001-5764-7268], Newman, William G. [0000-0002-6382-4678], Schmidt, Marjanka K. [0000-0002-2228-429X], Dunning, Alison M. [0000-0001-6651-7166], Pharoah, Paul D. P. [0000-0001-8494-732X], Easton, Douglas F. [0000-0003-2444-3247], HUS Comprehensive Cancer Center, Clinicum, University Management, Department of Oncology, University of Helsinki, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, HUS Gynecology and Obstetrics, Medical Oncology, and Clinical Genetics
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0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,PROTEIN ,lcsh:Medicine ,45/47 ,0302 clinical medicine ,Fanconi anemia ,Genotype ,lcsh:Science ,Sequence Deletion ,Multidisciplinary ,BRCA1 Protein ,Fanconi Anemia Complementation Group C Protein ,1184 Genetics, developmental biology, physiology ,BRCA2 Protein ,3. Good health ,BIALLELIC MUTATIONS ,DNA-REPAIR ,Female ,692/499 ,Medical Genetics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,PALB2 ,3122 Cancers ,ABCTB Investigators ,Breast Neoplasms ,FANCONIS ANEMIA ,Article ,692/4028 ,NBCS Collaborators ,03 medical and health sciences ,Breast cancer ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,NONSENSE MUTATION ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Medicinsk genetik ,45 ,business.industry ,Genetic heterogeneity ,lcsh:R ,Case-control study ,Genetic Variation ,Odds ratio ,medicine.disease ,GENE ,Fanconi Anemia ,030104 developmental biology ,Risk factors ,Case-Control Studies ,lcsh:Q ,3111 Biomedicine ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Fanconi anemia (FA) is a genetically heterogeneous disorder with 22 disease-causing genes reported to date. In some FA genes, monoallelic mutations have been found to be associated with breast cancer risk, while the risk associations of others remain unknown. The gene for FA type C, FANCC, has been proposed as a breast cancer susceptibility gene based on epidemiological and sequencing studies. We used the Oncoarray project to genotype two truncating FANCC variants (p.R185X and p.R548X) in 64,760 breast cancer cases and 49,793 controls of European descent. FANCC mutations were observed in 25 cases (14 with p.R185X, 11 with p.R548X) and 26 controls (18 with p.R185X, 8 with p.R548X). There was no evidence of an association with the risk of breast cancer, neither overall (odds ratio 0.77, 95%CI 0.44–1.33, p = 0.4) nor by histology, hormone receptor status, age or family history. We conclude that the breast cancer risk association of these two FANCC variants, if any, is much smaller than for BRCA1, BRCA2 or PALB2 mutations. If this applies to all truncating variants in FANCC it would suggest there are differences between FA genes in their roles on breast cancer risk and demonstrates the merit of large consortia for clarifying risk associations of rare variants.
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- 2019
21. A domain decomposition finite-difference method for parallel numerical implementation of time-dependent Maxwell's equations
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Lu, Yijun and Shen, C.Y.
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Maxwell equations -- Research ,Electromagnetism -- Research ,Parallel processing -- Research ,Algorithms -- Research ,Business ,Computers ,Electronics ,Electronics and electrical industries - Abstract
A domain decomposition technique together with an implicit finite-difference scheme is used to design a parallel algorithm to solve for electromagnetic scattering in the time-domain by an infinite square metallic cylinder. The implicit difference scheme yields second-order accuracy, unconditional stability, and at each time step, a large system of linear equations. The domain decomposition technique reduces the solution of this large system to that of many independent smaller subsystems. The present algorithm can be easily implemented on coarse-grain parallel vector supercomputers to obtain a speedup close to the number of available central processing units (CPU's). Index Terms - FDTD methods, parallel processing.
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- 1997
22. Use of ‘velocity projection’ to estimate the variation of sea-surface height from HF Doppler radar current measurements
- Author
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Marmorino, G.O., Shen, C.Y., Evans, T.E., Lindemann, G.J., Hallock, Z.R., and Shay, L.K.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Evidence that breast cancer risk at the 2q35 locus is mediated through IGFBP5 regulation (vol 5, 4999, 2014)
- Author
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Ghoussaini, M., Edwards, S.L., Michailidou, K., Nord, S., Lari, R.C.S., Desai, K., Kar, S., Hillman, K.M., Kaufmann, S., Glubb, D.M., Beesley, J., Dennis, J., Bolla, M.K., Wang, Q., Dicks, E., Guo, Q., Schmidt, M.K., Shah, M., Luben, R., Brown, J., Czene, K., Darabi, H., Eriksson, M., Klevebring, D., Bojesen, S.E., Nordestgaard, B.G., Nielsen, S.F., Flyger, H., Lambrechts, D., Thienpont, B., Neven, P., Wildiers, H., Broeks, A., Van't Veer, L.J., Rutgers, E.J.T., Couch, F.J., Olson, J.E., Hallberg, E., Vachon, C., Chang-Claude, J., Rudolph, A., Seibold, P., Flesch-Janys, D., Peto, J., dos-Santos-Silva, I., Gibson, L., Nevanlinna, H., Muranen, T.A., Aittomaki, K., Blomqvist, C., Hall, P., Li, J.M., Liu, J.J., Humphreys, K., Kang, D., Choi, J.Y., Park, S.K., Noh, D.Y., Matsuo, K., Ito, H., Iwata, H., Yatabe, Y., Guenel, P., Truong, T., Menegaux, F., Sanchez, M., Burwinkel, B., Marme, F., Schneeweiss, A., Sohn, C., Wu, A.H., Tseng, C.C., Berg, D. van den, Stram, D.O., Benitez, J., Zamora, M., Perez, J.I.A., Menendez, P., Shu, X.O., Lu, W., Gao, Y.T., Cai, Q.Y., Cox, A., Cross, S.S., Reed, M.W.R., Andrulis, I.L., Knight, J.A., Glendon, G., Tchatchou, S., Sawyer, E.J., Tomlinson, I., Kerin, M.J., Miller, N., Haiman, C.A., Henderson, B.E., Schumacher, F., Marchand, L. le, Lindblom, A., Margolin, S., Teo, S.H., Yip, C.H., Lee, D.S.C., Wong, T.Y., Hooning, M.J., Martens, J.W.M., Collee, J.M., Deurzen, C.H.M. van, Hopper, J.L., Southey, M.C., Tsimiklis, H., Kapuscinski, M.K., Shen, C.Y., Wu, P.E., Yu, J.C., Chen, S.T., Alnaes, G.G., Borresen-Dale, A.L., Giles, G.G., Milne, R.L., McLean, C., Muir, K., Lophatananon, A., Stewart-Brown, S., Siriwanarangsan, P., Hartman, M., Miao, H., Buhari, S.A.B.S., Teo, Y.Y., Fasching, P.A., Haeberle, L., Ekici, A.B., Beckmann, M.W., Brenner, H., Dieffenbach, A.K., Arndt, V., Stegmaier, C., Swerdlow, A., Ashworth, A., Orr, N., Schoemaker, M.J., Garcia-Closas, M., Figueroa, J., Chanock, S.J., Lissowska, J., Simard, J., Goldberg, M.S., Labreche, F., Dumont, M., Winqvist, R., Pylkas, K., Jukkola-Vuorinen, A., Brauch, H., Bruning, T., Koto, Y.D., Radice, P., Peterlongo, P., Bonanni, B., Volorio, S., Dork, T., Bogdanova, N.V., Helbig, S., Mannermaa, A., Kataja, V., Kosma, V.M., Hartikainen, J.M., Devilee, P., Tollenaar, R.A.E.M., Seynaeve, C., Asperen, C.J. van, Jakubowska, A., Lubinski, J., Jaworska-Bieniek, K., Durda, K., Slager, S., Toland, A.E., Ambrosone, C.B., Yannoukakos, D., Sangrajrang, S., Gaborieau, V., Brennan, P., Mckay, J., Hamann, U., Torres, D., Zheng, W., Long, J.R., Anton-Culver, H., Neuhausen, S.L., Luccarini, C., Baynes, C., Ahmed, S., Maranian, M., Healey, C.S., Gonzalez-Neira, A., Pita, G., Alonso, M.R., Alvarez, N., Herrero, D., Tessier, D.C., Vincent, D., Bacot, F., Santiago, I. de, Carroll, J., Caldas, C., Brown, M.A., Lupien, M., Kristensen, V.N., Pharoah, P.D.P., Chenevix-Trench, G., French, J.D., Easton, D.F., Dunning, A.M., and Australian Ovarian Canc Management
- Published
- 2018
24. Dynamic magnetoelastic properties of TbxHo0.9−xNd0.1(Fe0.8Co0.2)1.93/epoxy composites
- Author
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Shen, W.C., primary, Lin, L.L., additional, Shen, C.Y., additional, Xing, S., additional, and Pan, Z.B., additional
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Evidence that the 5p12 Variant rs10941679 Confers Susceptibility to Estrogen-Receptor-Positive Breast Cancer through FGF10 and MRPS30 Regulation
- Author
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Ghoussaini, M., French, J.D., Michailidou, K., Nord, S., Beesley, J., Canisus, S., Hillman, K.M., Kaufmann, S., Sivakumaran, H., Marjaneh, M.M., Lee, J.S., Dennis, J., Bolla, M.K., Wang, Q., Dicks, E., Milne, R.L., Hopper, J.L., Southey, M.C., Schmidt, M.K., Broeks, A., Muir, K., Lophatananon, A., Fasching, P.A., Beckmann, M.W., Fletcher, O., Johnson, N., Sawyer, E.J., Tomlinson, I., Burwinkel, B., Marme, F., Guenel, P., Truong, T., Bojesen, S.E., Flyger, H., Benitez, J., Gonzalez-Neira, A., Alonso, R., Pita, G., Neuhausen, S.L., Anton-Culver, H., Brenner, H., Arndt, V., Meindl, A., Schmutzler, R.K., Brauch, H., Hamann, U., Tessier, D.C., Vincent, D., Nevanlinna, H., Khan, S., Matsuo, K., Ito, H., Dork, T., Bogdanova, N.V., Lindblom, A., Margolin, S., Mannermaa, A., Kosma, V.M., Wu, A.H., Berg, D. van den, Lambrechts, D., Floris, G., Chang-Claude, J., Rudolph, A., Radice, P., Barile, M., Couch, F.J., Hallberg, E., Giles, G.G., Haiman, C.A., Marchand, L. le, Goldberg, M.S., Teo, S.H., Yip, C.H., Borresen-Dale, A.L., Zheng, W., Cai, Q.Y., Winqvist, R., Pylkas, K., Andrulis, I.L., Devilee, P., Tollenaar, R.A.E.M., Garcia-Closas, M., Figueroa, J., Hall, P., Czene, K., Brand, J.S., Darabi, H., Eriksson, M., Hooning, M.J., Koppert, L.B., Li, J.M., Shu, X.O., Zheng, Y., Cox, A., Cross, S.S., Shah, M., Rhenius, V., Choi, J.Y., Kang, D., Hartman, M., Chia, K.S., Kabisch, M., Torres, D., Luccarini, C., Conroy, D.M., Jakubowska, A., Lubinski, J., Sangrajrang, S., Brennan, P., Olswold, C., Slager, S., Shen, C.Y., Hou, M.F., Swerdlow, A., Schoemaker, M.J., Simard, J., Pharoah, P.D.P., Kristensen, V., Chenevix-Trench, G., Easton, D.F., Dunning, A.M., Edwards, S.L., kConFab AOCS, NBCS Collaborators, Dennis, Joe [0000-0003-4591-1214], Wang, Jean [0000-0002-9139-0627], Dicks, Ed [0000-0002-0617-0401], Rhenius, Valerie [0000-0003-4215-3235], Pharoah, Paul [0000-0001-8494-732X], Easton, Douglas [0000-0003-2444-3247], Dunning, Alison [0000-0001-6651-7166], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
- Subjects
Quantitative Trait Loci ,Breast Neoplasms ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Enhancer Elements, Genetic ,Haplotypes ,Receptors, Estrogen ,Case-Control Studies ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 5 ,Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Receptor, Fibroblast Growth Factor, Type 2 ,Promoter Regions, Genetic ,Fibroblast Growth Factor 10 ,Alleles - Abstract
Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have revealed increased breast cancer risk associated with multiple genetic variants at 5p12. Here, we report the fine mapping of this locus using data from 104,660 subjects from 50 case-control studies in the Breast Cancer Association Consortium (BCAC). With data for 3,365 genotyped and imputed SNPs across a 1 Mb region (positions 44,394,495-45,364,167; NCBI build 37), we found evidence for at least three independent signals: the strongest signal, consisting of a single SNP rs10941679, was associated with risk of estrogen-receptor-positive (ER+) breast cancer (per-g allele OR ER+ = 1.15; 95% CI 1.13-1.18; p = 8.35 × 10-30). After adjustment for rs10941679, we detected signal 2, consisting of 38 SNPs more strongly associated with ER-negative (ER-) breast cancer (lead SNP rs6864776: per-a allele OR ER- = 1.10; 95% CI 1.05-1.14; p conditional = 1.44 × 10-12), and a single signal 3 SNP (rs200229088: per-t allele OR ER+ = 1.12; 95% CI 1.09-1.15; p conditional = 1.12 × 10-05). Expression quantitative trait locus analysis in normal breast tissues and breast tumors showed that the g (risk) allele of rs10941679 was associated with increased expression of FGF10 and MRPS30. Functional assays demonstrated that SNP rs10941679 maps to an enhancer element that physically interacts with the FGF10 and MRPS30 promoter regions in breast cancer cell lines. FGF10 is an oncogene that binds to FGFR2 and is overexpressed in ∼10% of human breast cancers, whereas MRPS30 plays a key role in apoptosis. These data suggest that the strongest signal of association at 5p12 is mediated through coordinated activation of FGF10 and MRPS30, two candidate genes for breast cancer pathogenesis.
- Published
- 2016
26. Exchange bias in Co/MnPt polycrystalline films on Si(100)/SiO2 substrates with Ta underlayer
- Author
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Chang, H.W., primary, Shen, C.Y., additional, Yuan, F.T., additional, Pan, P.H., additional, Chien, Y.H., additional, Wang, C.R., additional, Horng, Lance, additional, and Jian, S.R., additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Fine-scale mapping of 8q24 locus identifies multiple independent risk variants for breast cancer
- Author
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Shi, J.J., Zhang, Y.F., Zheng, W., Michailidou, K., Ghoussaini, M., Bolla, M.K., Wang, Q., Dennis, J., Lush, M., Milne, R.L., Shu, X.O., Beesley, J., Kar, S., Andrulis, I.L., Anton-Culver, H., Arndt, V., Beckmann, M.W., Zhao, Z.G., Guo, X.Y., Benitez, J., Beeghly-Fadiel, A., Blot, W., Bogdanova, N.V., Bojesen, S.E., Brauch, H., Brenner, H., Brinton, L., Broeks, A., Bruening, T., Burwinkel, B., Cai, H., Canisius, S., Chang-Claude, J., Choi, J.Y., Couch, F.J., Cox, A., Cross, S.S., Czene, K., Darabi, H., Devilee, P., Droit, A., Dork, T., Fasching, P.A., Fletcher, O., Flyger, H., Fostira, F., Gaborieau, V., Garcia-Closas, M., Giles, G.G., Grip, M., Guenel, P., Haiman, C.A., Hamann, U., Hartman, M., Miao, H., Hollestelle, A., Hopper, J.L., Hsiung, C.N., Investigators, K., Ito, H., Jakubowska, A., Johnson, N., Torres, D., Kabisch, M., Kang, D., Khan, S., Knight, J.A., Kosma, V.M., Lambrechts, D., Li, J.M., Lindblom, A., Lophatananon, A., Lubinski, J., Mannermaa, A., Manoukian, S., Marchand, L. le, Margolin, S., Marme, F., Matsuo, K., McLean, C., Meindl, A., Muir, K., Neuhausen, S.L., Nevanlinna, H., Nord, S., Borresen-Dale, A.L., Olson, J.E., Orr, N., Ouweland, A.M.W. van den, Peterlongo, P., Putti, T.C., Rudolph, A., Sangrajrang, S., Sawyer, E.J., Schmidt, M.K., Schmutzler, R.K., Shen, C.Y., Hou, M.F., Shrubsole, M.J., Southey, M.C., Swerdlow, A., Teo, S.H., Thienpont, B., Toland, A.E., Tollenaar, R.A.E.M., Tomlinson, I., Truong, T., Tseng, C.C., Wen, W.Q., Winqvist, R., Wu, A.H., Yip, C.H., Zamora, P.M., Zheng, Y., Floris, G., Cheng, C.Y., Hooning, M.J., Martens, J.W.M., Seynaeve, C., Kristensen, V.N., Hall, P., Pharoah, P.D.P., Simard, J., Chenevix-Trench, G., Dunning, A.M., Antoniou, A.C., Easton, D.F., Cai, Q.Y., Long, J.R., Ghoussaini, Maya [0000-0002-2415-2143], Wang, Jean [0000-0002-9139-0627], Dennis, Joe [0000-0003-4591-1214], Pharoah, Paul [0000-0001-8494-732X], Dunning, Alison [0000-0001-6651-7166], Antoniou, Antonis [0000-0001-9223-3116], Easton, Douglas [0000-0003-2444-3247], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
- Subjects
breast cancer ,fine-mapping ,single nucleotide polymorphism ,8q24 ,genetic susceptibility - Abstract
Previous genome-wide association studies among women of European ancestry identified two independent breast cancer susceptibility loci represented by single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) rs13281615 and rs11780156 at 8q24. A fine-mapping study across 2.06 Mb (chr8:127,561,724-129,624,067, hg19) in 55,540 breast cancer cases and 51,168 controls within the Breast Cancer Association Consortium was conducted. Three additional independent association signals in women of European ancestry, represented by rs35961416 (OR = 0.95, 95% CI = 0.93-0.97, conditional p = 5.8 × 10(-6) ), rs7815245 (OR = 0.94, 95% CI = 0.91-0.96, conditional p = 1.1 × 10(-6) ) and rs2033101 (OR = 1.05, 95% CI = 1.02-1.07, conditional p = 1.1 × 10(-4) ) were found. Integrative analysis using functional genomic data from the Roadmap Epigenomics, the Encyclopedia of DNA Elements project, the Cancer Genome Atlas and other public resources implied that SNPs rs7815245 in Signal 3, and rs1121948 in Signal 5 (in linkage disequilibrium with rs11780156, r(2) = 0.77), were putatively functional variants for two of the five independent association signals. The results highlighted multiple 8q24 variants associated with breast cancer susceptibility in women of European ancestry.
- Published
- 2016
28. Identification and characterization of novel associations in the CASP8/ALS2CR12 region on chromosome 2 with breast cancer risk
- Author
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Lin, W.Y., Camp, N.J., Ghoussaini, M., Beesley, J., Michailidou, K., Hopper, J.L., Apicella, C., Southey, M.C., Stone, J., Schmidt, M.K., Broeks, A., Van't Veer, L.J., Rutgers, E.J.T., Muir, K., Lophatananon, A., Stewart-Brown, S., Siriwanarangsan, P., Fasching, P.A., Haeberle, L., Ekici, A.B., Beckmann, M.W., Peto, J., Dos-Santos-Silva, I., Fletcher, O., Johnson, N., Bolla, M.K., Wang, Q., Dennis, J., Sawyer, E.J., Cheng, T., Tomlinson, I., Kerin, M.J., Miller, N., Marme, F., Surowy, H.M., Burwinkel, B., Guenel, P., Truong, T., Menegaux, F., Mulot, C., Bojesen, S.E., Nordestgaard, B.G., Nielsen, S.F., Flyger, H., Benitez, J., Zamora, M.P., Perez, J.I.A., Menendez, P., Gonzalez-Neira, A., Pita, G., Alonso, M.R., Alvarez, N., Herrera, D., Anton-Culver, H., Brenner, H., Dieffenbach, A.K., Arndt, V., Stegmaier, C., Meindl, A., Lichtner, P., Schmutzler, R.K., Muller-Myhsok, B., Brauch, H., Bruning, T., Ko, Y.D., Tessier, D.C., Vincent, D., Bacot, F., Nevanlinna, H., Aittomaki, K., Blomqvist, C., Khan, S., Matsuo, K., Ito, H., Iwata, H., Horio, A., Bogdanova, N.V., Antonenkova, N.N., Dork, T., Lindblom, A., Margolin, S., Mannermaa, A., Kataja, V., Kosma, V.M., Hartikainen, J.M., Wu, A.H., Tseng, C.C., Berg, D. van den, Stram, D.O., Neven, P., Wauters, E., Wildiers, H., Lambrechts, D., Chang-Claude, J., Rudolph, A., Seibold, P., Flesch-Janys, D., Radice, P., Peterlongo, P., Manoukian, S., Bonanni, B., Couch, F.J., Wang, X.S., Vachon, C., Purrington, K., Giles, G.G., Milne, R.L., Mclean, C., Haiman, C.A., Henderson, B.E., Schumacher, F., Marchand, L. le, Simard, J., Goldberg, M.S., Labreche, F., Dumont, M., Teo, S.H., Yip, C.H., Hassan, N., Vithana, E.N., Kristensen, V., Zheng, W., Deming-Halverson, S., Shrubsole, M.J., Long, J.R., Winqvist, R., Pylkas, K., Jukkola-Vuorinen, A., Kauppila, S., Andrulis, I.L., Knight, J.A., Glendon, G., Tchatchou, S., Devilee, P., Tollenaar, R.A.E.M., Seynaeve, C., Asperen, C.J. van, Garcia-Closas, M., Figueroa, J., Lissowska, J., Brinton, L., Czene, K., Darabi, H., Eriksson, M., Brand, J.S., Hooning, M.J., Hollestelle, A., Ouweland, A.M.W. van den, Jager, A., Li, J.M., Liu, J.J., Humphreys, K., Shu, X.O., Lu, W., Gao, Y.T., Cai, H., Cross, S.S., Reed, M.W.R., Blot, W., Signorello, L.B., Cai, Q.Y., Pharoah, P.D.P., Perkins, B., Shah, M., Blows, F.M., Kang, D., Yoo, K.Y., Noh, D.Y., Hartman, M., Miao, H., Chia, K.S., Putti, T.C., Hamann, U., Luccarini, C., Baynes, C., Ahmed, S., Maranian, M., Healey, C.S., Jakubowska, A., Lubinski, J., Jaworska-Bieniek, K., Durda, K., Sangrajrang, S., Gaborieau, V., Brennan, P., Mckay, J., Slager, S., Toland, A.E., Yannoukakos, D., Shen, C.Y., Hsiung, C.N., Wu, P.E., Ding, S.L., Ashworth, A., Jones, M., Orr, N., Swerdlow, A.J., Tsimiklis, H., Makalic, E., Schmidt, D.F., Bui, Q.M., Chanock, S.J., Hunter, D.J., Hein, R., Dahmen, N., Beckmann, L., Aaltonen, K., Muranen, T.A., Heikkinen, T., Irwanto, A., Rahman, N., Turnbull, C.A., Waisfisz, Q., Meijers-Heijboer, H.E.J., Adank, M.A., Luijt, R.B. van der, Hall, P., Chenevix-Trench, G., Dunning, A., Easton, D.F., Cox, A., GENICA Network, kConFab Investigators, Australian Ovarian Canc Study Grp, Breast Ovarian Canc Susceptibility, Clinical Genetics, Obstetrics & Gynecology, Medical Oncology, Cardiothoracic Surgery, Cancer Center Amsterdam, Amsterdam Reproduction & Development (AR&D), Human Genetics, Human genetics, CCA - Oncogenesis, Ghoussaini, Maya [0000-0002-2415-2143], Wang, Jean [0000-0002-9139-0627], Dennis, Joe [0000-0003-4591-1214], Pharoah, Paul [0000-0001-8494-732X], Dunning, Alison [0000-0001-6651-7166], Easton, Douglas [0000-0003-2444-3247], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
- Subjects
Genotyping Techniques ,Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S ,CASP8 and FADD-Like Apoptosis Regulating Protein ,Genome-wide association study ,P.H.S ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Breast and Ovarian Cancer Susceptibility (BOCS) Study ,Medizinische Fakultät ,Genetics(clinical) ,Non-U.S. Gov't ,Genetics (clinical) ,Genetics ,Genetics & Heredity ,variants ,Caspase 8 ,Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't ,Association Studies Articles ,General Medicine ,Biological Sciences ,ddc ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 2 ,kConFab Investigators ,Female ,GENICA Network ,Australian Ovarian Cancer Study Group ,European Continental Ancestry Group ,Non-P.H.S ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,Breast Neoplasms ,Biology ,Research Support ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,White People ,N.I.H ,Breast cancer ,Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,medicine ,Journal Article ,Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,ddc:610 ,gene ,Genotyping ,Molecular Biology ,Genetic association ,disease ,Extramural ,Proteins ,Odds ratio ,medicine.disease ,susceptibility loci ,Minor allele frequency ,Case-Control Studies ,genome-wide association ,enhancers ,U.S. Gov't ,casp8 ,Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S ,Genome-Wide Association Study - Abstract
Previous studies have suggested that polymorphisms in CASP8 on chromosome 2 are associated with breast cancer risk. To clarify the role of CASP8 in breast cancer susceptibility, we carried out dense genotyping of this region in the Breast Cancer Association Consortium (BCAC). Single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) spanning a 1 Mb region around CASP8 were genotyped in 46 450 breast cancer cases and 42 600 controls of European origin from 41 studies participating in the BCAC as part of a custom genotyping array experiment (iCOGS). Missing genotypes and SNPs were imputed and, after quality exclusions, 501 typed and 1232 imputed SNPs were included in logistic regressionmodels adjusting for study and ancestry principal components. The SNPs retained in the final model were investigated further in data from nine genome-wide association studies (GWAS) comprising in total 10 052 case and 12 575 control subjects. The most significant association signal observed in European subjects was for the imputed intronic SNP rs1830298 in ALS2CR12 (telomeric to CASP8), with per allele odds ratio and 95% confidence interval [OR (95% confidence interval, CI)] for the minor allele of 1.05 (1.03-1.07), P = 1 × 10-5. Three additional independent signals from intronic SNPs were identified, in CASP8 (rs36043647), ALS2CR11 (rs59278883) and CFLAR (rs7558475). The association with rs1830298 was replicated in the imputed results from the combined GWAS (P=3 × 10-6), yielding a combined OR (95% CI) of 1.06 (1.04-1.08), P = 1 × 10-9. Analyses of gene expression associations in peripheral blood and normal breast tissue indicate that CASP8might be the target gene, suggesting amechanism involving apoptosis.
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- 2016
29. Medicated Janus fibers fabricated using a Teflon-coated side-by-side spinneret
- Author
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Bligh, S.W.A., Yu, D.G., Shen, C.Y., Jin, M., Williams, G.R., Zou, H., and Wang, X.
- Subjects
technology, industry, and agriculture ,Janus fibers ,Side-by-side electrospinning ,Teflon-coated spinneret ,Nano drug delivery systems ,Tunable release rates ,Structural nanocomposites - Abstract
A family of medicated Janus fibers that provides highly tunable biphasic drug release was fabricated using a side-by-side electrospinning process employing a Teflon-coated parallel spinneret. The coated spinneret facilitated the formation of a Janus Taylor cone and in turn high quality integrated Janus structures, which could not be reliably obtained without the Teflon coating. The fibers prepared had one side consisting of polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP) K60 and ketoprofen, and the other of ethyl cellulose (EC) and ketoprofen. To modulate and tune drug release, PVP K10 was doped into the EC side in some cases. The fibers were linear and had flat morphologies with an indent in the center. They provide biphasic drug release, with the PVP K60 side dissolving very rapidly to deliver a loading dose of the active ingredient, and the EC side resulting in sustained release of the remaining ketoprofen. The addition of PVP K10 to the EC side was able to accelerate the second stage of release; variation in the dopant amount permitted the release rate and extent this phase to be precisely tuned. These results offer the potential to rationally design systems with highly controllable drug release profiles, which can complement natural biological rhythms and deliver maximum therapeutic effects.
- Published
- 2016
30. 110 The Disrupted Baseline Brain Activity of the Insular in Phychogenitc Erectile Dysfunction Patients: A Resting State Mri Study
- Author
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Guan, M., primary, Dong, M.H., additional, Chen, X., additional, Shen, C.Y., additional, Zhang, X.S., additional, Tian, J., additional, and Shi, D.P., additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. No evidence that protein truncating variants in BRIP1 are associated with breast cancer risk: implications for gene panel testing
- Author
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Easton, D.F., Lesueur, F., Decker, B., Michailidou, K., Li, J., Allen, J., Luccarini, C., Pooley, K.A., Shah, M., Bolla, M.K., Wang, Q., Dennis, J., Ahmad, J., Thompson, E.R., Damiola, F., Pertesi, M., Voegele, C., Mebirouk, N., Robinot, N., Durand, G., Forey, N., Luben, R.N., Ahmed, S., Aittomaki, K., Anton-Culver, H., Arndt, V., Baynes, C., Beckman, M.W., Benitez, J., Berg, D. van den, Blot, W.J., Bogdanova, N.V., Bojesen, S.E., Brenner, H., Chang-Claude, J., Chia, K.S., Choi, J.Y., Conroy, D.M., Cox, A., Cross, S.S., Czene, K., Darabi, H., Devilee, P., Eriksson, M., Fasching, P.A., Figueroa, J., Flyger, H., Fostira, F., Garcia-Closas, M., Giles, G.G., Glendon, G., Gonzalez-Neira, A., Guenel, P., Haiman, C.A., Hall, P., Hart, S.N., Hartman, M., Hooning, M.J., Hsiung, C.N., Ito, H., Jakubowska, A., James, P.A., John, E.M., Johnson, N., Jones, M., Kabisch, M., Kang, D., Kosma, V.M., Kristensen, V., Lambrechts, D., Li, N., Lindblom, A., Long, J., Lophatananon, A., Lubinski, J., Mannermaa, A., Manoukian, S., Margolin, S., Matsuo, K., Meindl, A., Mitchell, G., Muir, K., Nevelsteen, I., Ouweland, A. van den, Peterlongo, P., Phuah, S.Y., Pylkas, K., Rowley, S.M., Sangrajrang, S., Schmutzler, R.K., Shen, C.Y., Shu, X.O., Southey, M.C., Surowy, H., Swerdlow, A., Teo, S.H., Tollenaar, R.A.E.M., Tomlinson, I., Torres, D., Truong, T., Vachon, C., Verhoef, S., Wong-Brown, M., Zheng, W., Zheng, Y., Nevanlinna, H., Scott, R.J., Andrulis, I.L., Wu, A.H., Hopper, J.L., Couch, F.J., Winqvist, R., Burwinkel, B., Sawyer, E.J., Schmidt, M.K., Rudolph, A., Dork, T., Brauch, H., Hamann, U., Neuhausen, S.L., Milne, R.L., Fletcher, O., Pharoah, P.D.P., Campbell, I.G., Dunning, A.M., Calvez-Kelm, F. le, Goldgar, D.E., Tavtigian, S.V., Chenevix-Trench, G., Australian Ovarian Canc Study Grp, kConFab Investigators, Lifepool Investigators, NBCS Investigators, Luben, Robert N [0000-0002-5088-6343], Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, Clinical Genetics, Medical Oncology, and Molecular Genetics
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0301 basic medicine ,Bioinformatics ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Cohort Studies ,Breast cancer screening ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medizinische Fakultät ,Missense mutation ,Genetics (clinical) ,Genetics & Heredity ,education.field_of_study ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Biological Sciences ,Middle Aged ,Fanconi Anemia Complementation Group Proteins ,3. Good health ,ddc ,DNA-Binding Proteins ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,kConFab Investigators ,Female ,RNA Helicases ,Australian Ovarian Cancer Study Group ,Adult ,Risk ,medicine.medical_specialty ,PALB2 ,Population ,European Continental Ancestry Group ,Breast Neoplasms ,NBCS Investigators ,Biology ,Article ,White People ,03 medical and health sciences ,Breast cancer ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,Molecular genetics ,Genetics ,medicine ,breast [Cancer] ,Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Genetic Testing ,ddc:610 ,Allele ,education ,Genetic Association Studies ,Aged ,Cancer: breast ,BRIP1 ,medicine.disease ,030104 developmental biology ,Lifepool Investigators ,Mutation - Abstract
Background: BRCA1 interacting protein C-terminal helicase 1 (BRIP1) is one of the Fanconi Anaemia Complementation (FANC) group family of DNA repair proteins. Biallelic mutations in BRIP1 are responsible for FANC group J, and previous studies have also suggested that rare protein truncating variants in BRIP1 are associated with an increased risk of breast cancer. These studies have led to inclusion of BRIP1 on targeted sequencing panels for breast cancer risk prediction. Methods: We evaluated a truncating variant, p.Arg798Ter (rs137852986), and 10 missense variants of BRIP1, in 48 144 cases and 43 607 controls of European origin, drawn from 41 studies participating in the Breast Cancer Association Consortium (BCAC). Additionally, we sequenced the coding regions of BRIP1 in 13 213 cases and 5242 controls from the UK, 1313 cases and 1123 controls from three population-based studies as part of the Breast Cancer Family Registry, and 1853 familial cases and 2001 controls from Australia. Results: The rare truncating allele of rs137852986 was observed in 23 cases and 18 controls in Europeans in BCAC (OR 1.09, 95% CI 0.58 to 2.03, p=0.79). Truncating variants were found in the sequencing studies in 34 cases (0.21%) and 19 controls (0.23%) (combined OR 0.90, 95% CI 0.48 to 1.70, p=0.75). Conclusions: These results suggest that truncating variants in BRIP1, and in particular p.Arg798Ter, are not associated with a substantial increase in breast cancer risk. Such observations have important implications for the reporting of results from breast cancer screening panels.
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- 2015
32. Population-Based Analysis of Radiation Therapy–Related Cardiac Toxicities for Breast Cancer Patients
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Shen, B.J., primary, Hung, S.K., additional, Lee, M.S., additional, Lin, H.Y., additional, Chiou, W.Y., additional, Chen, L.C., additional, Lu, T.P., additional, and Shen, C.Y., additional
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- 2016
- Full Text
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33. Fine-mapping identifies two additional breast cancer susceptibility loci at 9q31.2
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Orr, N., Dudbridge, F., Dryden, N., Maguire, S., Novo, D., Perrakis, E., Johnson, N., Ghoussaini, M., Hopper, J.L., Southey, M.C., Apicella, C., Stone, J., Schmidt, M.K., Broeks, A., Van't Veer, L.J., Hogervorst, F.B., Fasching, P.A., Haeberle, L., Ekici, A.B., Beckmann, M.W., Gibson, L., Aitken, Z., Warren, H., Sawyer, E., Tomlinson, I., Kerin, M.J., Miller, N., Burwinkel, B., Marme, F., Schneeweiss, A., Sohn, C., Guenel, P., Truong, T., Cordina-Duverger, E., Sanchez, M., Bojesen, S.E., Nordestgaard, B.G., Nielsen, S.F., Flyger, H., Benitez, J., Zamora, M.P., Perez, J.I.A., Menendez, P., Anton-Culver, H., Neuhausen, S.L., Brenner, H., Dieffenbach, A.K., Arndt, V., Stegmaier, C., Hamann, U., Brauch, H., Justenhoven, C., Bruning, T., Ko, Y.D., Nevanlinna, H., Aittomaki, K., Blomqvist, C., Khan, S., Bogdanova, N., Dork, T., Lindblom, A., Margolin, S., Mannermaa, A., Kataja, V., Kosma, V.M., Hartikainen, J.M., Chenevix-Trench, G., Beesley, J., Lambrechts, D., Moisse, M., Floris, G., Beuselinck, B., Chang-Claude, J., Rudolph, A., Seibold, P., Flesch-Janys, D., Radice, P., Peterlongo, P., Peissel, B., Pensotti, V., Couch, F.J., Olson, J.E., Slettedahl, S., Vachon, C., Giles, G.G., Milne, R.L., McLean, C., Haiman, C.A., Henderson, B.E., Schumacher, F., Marchand, L. le, Simard, J., Goldberg, M.S., Labreche, F., Dumont, M., Kristensen, V., Alnaes, G.G., Nord, S., Borresen-Dale, A.L., Zheng, W., Deming-Halverson, S., Shrubsole, M., Long, J.R., Winqvist, R., Pylkas, K., Jukkola-Vuorinen, A., Grip, M., Andrulis, I.L., Knight, J.A., Glendon, G., Tchatchou, S., Devilee, P., Tollenaar, R.A.E.M., Seynaeve, C.M., Asperen, C.J. van, Garcia-Closas, M., Figueroa, J., Chanock, S.J., Lissowska, J., Czene, K., Darabi, H., Eriksson, M., Klevebring, D., Hooning, M.J., Hollestelle, A., Deurzen, C.H.M. van, Kriege, M., Hall, P., Li, J.M., Liu, J.J., Humphreys, K., Cox, A., Cross, S.S., Reed, M.W.R., Pharoah, P.D.P., Dunning, A.M., Shah, M., Perkins, B.J., Jakubowska, A., Lubinski, J., Jaworska-Bieniek, K., Durda, K., Ashworth, A., Swerdlow, A., Jones, M., Schoemaker, M.J., Meindl, A., Schmutzler, R.K., Olswold, C., Slager, S., Toland, A.E., Yannoukakos, D., Muir, K., Lophatananon, A., Stewart-Brown, S., Siriwanarangsan, P., Matsuo, K., Ito, H., Iwata, H., Ishiguro, J., Wu, A.H., Tseng, C.C., Berg, D. van den, Stram, D.O., Teo, S.H., Yip, C.H., Kang, P., Ikram, M.K., Shu, X.O., Lu, W., Gao, Y.T., Cai, H., Kang, D., Choi, J.Y., Park, S.K., Noh, D.Y., Hartman, M., Miao, H., Lim, W.Y., Lee, S.C., Sangrajrang, S., Gaborieau, V., Brennan, P., McKay, J., Wu, P.E., Hou, M.F., Yu, J.C., Shen, C.Y., Blot, W., Cai, Q.Y., Signorello, L.B., Luccarini, C., Bayes, C., Ahmed, S., Maranian, M., Healey, C.S., Gonzalez-Neira, A., Pita, G., Alonso, M.R., Alvarez, N., Herrero, D., Tessier, D.C., Vincent, D., Bacot, F., Hunter, D.J., Lindstrom, S., Dennis, J., Michailidou, K., Bolla, M.K., Easton, D.F., Silva, I.D., Fletcher, O., Peto, J., GENICA Network, kConFab Investigators, Australian Ovarian Canc Study Grp, Obstetrics & Gynecology, Medical Oncology, Pathology, Ophthalmology, Cardiothoracic Surgery, and Clinical Genetics
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Asian Continental Ancestry Group ,Adult ,Hepatocyte Nuclear Factor 3-alpha ,Risk ,binding ,European Continental Ancestry Group ,Kruppel-Like Transcription Factors ,estrogen-receptor-alpha ,Breast Neoplasms ,GATA3 Transcription Factor ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,White People ,Kruppel-Like Factor 4 ,Asian People ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,Medizinische Fakultät ,common variants ,expression ,Humans ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,ddc:610 ,Genetic Association Studies ,Aged ,Association Studies Articles ,Estrogen Receptor alpha ,Chromosome Mapping ,foxa1 ,Middle Aged ,confer susceptibility ,analyses reveal ,Enhancer Elements, Genetic ,risk locus ,Genetic Loci ,functional variants ,genome-wide association ,Female ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 9 - Abstract
We recently identified a novel susceptibility variant, rs865686, for estrogen-receptor positive breast cancer at 9q31.2. Here, we report a fine-mapping analysis of the 9q31.2 susceptibility locus using 43 160 cases and 42 600 controls of European ancestry ascertained from 52 studies and a further 5795 cases and 6624 controls of Asian ancestry from nine studies. Single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs676256 was most strongly associated with risk in Europeans (odds ratios [OR] = 0.90 [0.88-0.92]; P-value = 1.58 × 10(-25)). This SNP is one of a cluster of highly correlated variants, including rs865686, that spans ∼14.5 kb. We identified two additional independent association signals demarcated by SNPs rs10816625 (OR = 1.12 [1.08-1.17]; P-value = 7.89 × 10(-09)) and rs13294895 (OR = 1.09 [1.06-1.12]; P-value = 2.97 × 10(-11)). SNP rs10816625, but not rs13294895, was also associated with risk of breast cancer in Asian individuals (OR = 1.12 [1.06-1.18]; P-value = 2.77 × 10(-05)). Functional genomic annotation using data derived from breast cancer cell-line models indicates that these SNPs localise to putative enhancer elements that bind known drivers of hormone-dependent breast cancer, including ER-α, FOXA1 and GATA-3. In vitro analyses indicate that rs10816625 and rs13294895 have allele-specific effects on enhancer activity and suggest chromatin interactions with the KLF4 gene locus. These results demonstrate the power of dense genotyping in large studies to identify independent susceptibility variants. Analysis of associations using subjects with different ancestry, combined with bioinformatic and genomic characterisation, can provide strong evidence for the likely causative alleles and their functional basis. ispartof: Human Molecular Genetics vol:24 issue:10 pages:2966-84 ispartof: location:England status: published
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- 2015
34. Dynamic magnetoelastic properties of TbxHo0.9−xNd0.1(Fe0.8Co0.2)1.93/epoxy composites.
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Shen, W.C., Lin, L.L., Shen, C.Y., Xing, S., and Pan, Z.B.
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RARE earth metals ,TERBIUM ,MAGNETOELASTIC effects ,MAGNETIC anisotropy ,MAGNETIC fields ,ELASTIC modulus ,COMPOSITE structures - Abstract
Tb
x Ho0.9−x Nd0.1 (Fe0.8 Co0.2 )1.93 /epoxy (0 ⩽ x ⩽ 0.40) composites are fabricated in the presence of a magnetic field. The structural and dynamic magnetoelastic properties are investigated as a function of both magnetic bias field Hbias and frequency f at room temperature. The composites are formed as textured orientation structure of 1–3 type with 〈1 0 0〉 preferred orientation for x ⩽ 0.10 and 〈1 1 1〉-orientation for x ⩾ 0.25. The composites generally possess insignificant eddy-current losses for frequency up to 50 kHz, and their dynamic magnetoelastic properties depend greatly on Hbias . The elastic modulus (E3 H and E3 B ) shows a maximum negative ΔE effect, along with a maximum d33 , at a relatively low Hbias ~ 80 kA/m, contributed by the maximum motion of non-180° domain-wall. The 1–3 type composite for x ⩾ 0.25 shows an enhanced magnetoelastic effect in comparison with 0 to 3 type one, which can be principally ascribed to its easy magnetization direction (EMD) towards 〈1 1 1〉 axis and the formation of 〈1 1 1〉-texture-oriented structure in the composite. These attractive dynamic magnetoelastic properties, e.g., the low magnetic anisotropy and d33 , max as high as 2.0 nm/A at a low Hbias ~ 80 kA/m, along with the light rare-earth Nd element existing in insulating polymer matrix, would make it a promising magnetostrictive material system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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35. Common non-synonymous SNPs associated with breast cancer susceptibility: findings from the Breast Cancer Association Consortium
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Milne, R.L., Burwinkel, B., Michailidou, K., Arias-Perez, J.I., Zamora, M.P., Menendez-Rodriguez, P., Hardisson, D., Mendiola, M., Gonzalez-Neira, A., Pita, G., Alonso, M.R., Dennis, J., Wang, Q., Bolla, M.K., Swerdlow, A., Ashworth, A., Orr, N., Schoemaker, M., Ko, Y.D., Brauch, H., Hamann, U., Andrulis, I.L., Knight, J.A., Glendon, G., Tchatchou, S., Matsuo, K., Ito, H., Iwata, H., Tajima, K., Li, J.M., Brand, J.S., Brenner, H., Dieffenbach, A.K., Arndt, V., Stegmaier, C., Lambrechts, D., Peuteman, G., Christiaens, M.R., Smeets, A., Jakubowska, A., Lubinski, J., Jaworska-Bieniek, K., Durda, K., Hartman, M., Hui, M., Lim, W.Y., Chan, C.W., Marme, F., Yang, R.X., Bugert, P., Lindblom, A., Margolin, S., Garcia-Closas, M., Chanock, S.J., Lissowska, J., Figueroa, J.D., Bojesen, S.E., Nordestgaard, B.G., Flyger, H., Hooning, M.J., Kriege, M., Ouweland, A.M.W. van den, Koppert, L.B., Fletcher, O., Johnson, N., Dos-Santos-Silva, I., Peto, J., Zheng, W., Deming-Halverson, S., Shrubsole, M.J., Long, J.R., Chang-Claude, J., Rudolph, A., Seibold, P., Flesch-Janys, D., Winqvist, R., Pylkas, K., Jukkola-Vuorinen, A., Grip, M., Cox, A., Cross, S.S., Reed, M.W.R., Schmidt, M.K., Broeks, A., Cornelissen, S., Braaf, L., Kang, D., Choi, J.Y., Park, S.K., Noh, D.Y., Simard, J., Dumont, M., Goldberg, M.S., Labreche, F., Fasching, P.A., Hein, A., Ekici, A.B., Beckmann, M.W., Radice, P., Peterlongo, P., Azzollini, J., Barile, M., Sawyer, E., Tomlinson, I., Kerin, M., Miller, N., Hopper, J.L., Schmidt, D.F., Makalic, E., Southey, M.C., Teo, S.H., Yip, C.H., Sivanandan, K., Tay, W.T., Shen, C.Y., Hsiung, C.N., Yu, J.C., Hou, M.F., Guenel, P., Truong, T., Sanchez, M., Mulot, C., Blot, W., Cai, Q.Y., Nevanlinna, H., Muranen, T.A., Aittomaki, K., Blomqvist, C., Wu, A.H., Tseng, C.C., Berg, D. van den, Stram, D.O., Bogdanova, N., Dork, T., Muir, K., Lophatananon, A., Stewart-Brown, S., Siriwanarangsan, P., Mannermaa, A., Kataja, V., Kosma, V.M., Hartikainen, J.M., Shu, X.O., Lu, W., Gao, Y.T., Zhang, B., Couch, F.J., Toland, A.E., Yannoukakos, D., Sangrajrang, S., McKay, J., Wang, X.S., Olson, J.E., Vachon, C., Purrington, K., Severi, G., Baglietto, L., Haiman, C.A., Henderson, B.E., Schumacher, F., Marchand, L. le, Devilee, P., Tollenaar, R.A.E.M., Seynaeve, C., Czene, K., Eriksson, M., Humphreys, K., Darabi, H., Ahmed, S., Shah, M., Pharoah, P.D.P., Hall, P., Giles, G.G., Benitez, J., Dunning, A.M., Chenevix-Trench, G., Easton, D.F., GENICA Network, kConFab Investigators, Australian Ovarian Canc Study Grp, TNBCC, Dennis, Joe [0000-0003-4591-1214], Wang, Jean [0000-0002-9139-0627], Pharoah, Paul [0000-0001-8494-732X], Dunning, Alison [0000-0001-6651-7166], Easton, Douglas [0000-0003-2444-3247], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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Adult ,Ataxin-7 ,A Kinase Anchor Proteins ,Breast Neoplasms ,Nerve Tissue Proteins ,Middle Aged ,Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Cytoskeletal Proteins ,Case-Control Studies ,Humans ,NIMA-Related Kinases ,Female ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,health care economics and organizations ,Alleles ,Genome-Wide Association Study - Abstract
Candidate variant association studies have been largely unsuccessful in identifying common breast cancer susceptibility\ud variants, although most studies have been underpowered to detect associations of a realistic magnitude.\ud We assessed 41 common non-synonymous single-nucleotide polymorphisms (nsSNPs) for which\ud evidence of association with breast cancer risk had been previously reported. Case-control data were combined\ud from 38 studies of white European women (46 450 cases and 42 600 controls) and analyzed using unconditional\ud logistic regression. Strong evidence of association was observed for three nsSNPs: ATXN7-K264R at 3p21\ud [rs1053338, per allele OR 5 1.07, 95% confidence interval (CI) 5 1.04–1.10, P 5 2.9 3 1026\ud ], AKAP9-M463I at\ud 7q21 (rs6964587, OR 5 1.05, 95% CI 5 1.03–1.07, P 5 1.7 3 1026\ud ) and NEK10-L513S at 3p24 (rs10510592,\ud OR 5 1.10, 95% CI 5 1.07 –1.12, P 5 5.1 3 10217). The first two associations reached genome-wide statistical\ud significance in a combined analysis of available data, including independent data from nine genome-wide association\ud studies (GWASs): for ATXN7-K264R, OR 5 1.07 (95% CI 5 1.05–1.10, P 5 1.0 3 1028\ud ); for AKAP9-M463I,\ud OR 5 1.05 (95% CI 5 1.04–1.07, P 5 2.0 3 10210). Further analysis of other common variants in these two\ud regions suggested that intronic SNPs nearby are more strongly associated with disease risk. We have thus identified\ud a novel susceptibility locus at 3p21, and confirmed previous suggestive evidence that rs6964587 at 7q21 is\ud associated with risk. The third locus, rs10510592, is located in an established breast cancer susceptibility\ud region; the association was substantially attenuated after adjustment for the known GWAS hit. Thus, each of\ud the associated nsSNPs is likely to be a marker for another, non-coding, variant causally related to breast\ud cancer risk. Further fine-mapping and functional studies are required to identify the underlying risk-modifying\ud variants and the genes through which they act.
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- 2014
36. (110)-Textured Ca-doped BiFeO 3 film on refined Pt(111) electrode layer on glass substrate at reduced temperature
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Chang, H.W., primary, Shen, C.Y., additional, Yuan, F.T., additional, Tien, S.H., additional, Lin, S.Y., additional, Chen, W.A., additional, Wang, C.R., additional, Tu, C.S., additional, and Jen, S.U., additional
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- 2016
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37. Multiferroic properties of (Bi, Ca)FeO 3 films on glass substrates
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Chang, H.W., primary, Shen, C.Y., additional, Yuan, F.T., additional, Tu, K.T., additional, Lo, Y.C., additional, Tu, S.Y., additional, Wang, C.R., additional, Tu, C.S., additional, Ouyang, H., additional, Shih, C.W., additional, Chang, W.C., additional, and Jen, S.U., additional
- Published
- 2015
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38. Large-scale genotyping identifies 41 new loci associated with breast cancer risk
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Michailidou, K., Hall, P., Gonzalez-Neira, A., Ghoussaini, M., Dennis, J., Milne, R.L., Schmidt, M.K., Chang-Claude, J., Bojesen, S.E., Bolla, M.K., Wang, Q., Dicks, E., Lee, A., Turnbull, C., Rahman, N., Fletcher, O., Peto, J., Gibson, L., Silva, I.D., Nevanlinna, H., Muranen, T.A., Aittomaki, K., Blomqvist, C., Czene, K., Irwanto, A., Liu, J.J., Waisfisz, Q., Meijers-Heijboer, H., Adank, M., Luijt, R.B. van der, Hein, R., Dahmen, N., Beckman, L., Meindl, A., Schmutzler, R.K., Muller-Myhsok, B., Lichtner, P., Hopper, J.L., Southey, M.C., Makalic, E., Schmidt, D.F., Uitterlinden, A.G., Hofman, A., Hunter, D.J., Chanock, S.J., Vincent, D., Bacot, F., Tessier, D.C., Canisius, S., Wessels, L.F.A., Haiman, C.A., Shah, M., Luben, R., Brown, J., Luccarini, C., Schoof, N., Humphreys, K., Li, J.M., Nordestgaard, B.G., Nielsen, S.F., Flyger, H., Couch, F.J., Wang, X.S., Vachon, C., Stevens, K.N., Lambrechts, D., Moisse, M., Paridaens, R., Christiaens, M.R., Rudolph, A., Nickels, S., Flesch-Janys, D., Johnson, N., Aitken, Z., Aaltonen, K., Heikkinen, T., Broeks, A., Van't Veer, L.J., Schoot, C.E. van der, Guenel, P., Truong, T., Laurent-Puig, P., Menegaux, F., Marme, F., Schneeweiss, A., Sohn, C., Burwinke, B., Zamora, M.P., Perez, J.I.A., Pita, G., Alonso, M.R., Cox, A., Brock, I.W., Cross, S.S., Reed, M.W.R., Sawyer, E.J., Tomlinson, I., Kerin, M.J., Miller, N., Henderson, B.E., Schumacher, F., Marchand, L. le, Andrulis, I.L., Knight, J.A., Glendon, G., Mulligan, A.M., Lindblom, A., Margolin, S., Hooning, M.J., Hollestelle, A., Ouweland, A.M.W. van den, Jager, A., Bui, Q.M., Stone, J., Dite, G.S., Apicella, C., Tsimiklis, H., Giles, G.G., Severi, G., Baglietto, L., Fasching, P.A., Haeberle, L., Ekici, A.B., Beckmann, M.W., Brenner, H., Muller, H., Arndt, V., Stegmaier, C., Swerdlown, A., Ashworth, A., Orr, N., Jones, M., Figueroa, J., Lissowska, J., Brinton, L., Goldberg, M.S., Labreche, F., Dumont, M., Winqvist, R., Pylkas, K., Jukkola-Vuorinen, A., Grip, M., Brauch, H., Hamann, U., Bruning, T., Radice, P., Peterlongo, P., Manouldan, S., Bonanni, B., Devilee, P., Tollenaar, R.A.E.M., Seynaeve, C., Asperen, C.J. van, Jakubowska, A., Lubinski, J., Jaworska, K., Durda, K., Mannermaa, A., Kataja, V., Kosma, V.M., Hartikainen, J.M., Bogdanova, N.V., Antonenkova, N.N., Dork, T., Kristensen, V.N., Anton-Culver, H., Slager, S., Toland, A.E., Edge, S., Fostira, F., Kang, D., Yoo, K.Y., Noh, D.Y., Matsuo, K., Ito, H., Iwata, H., Sueta, A., Wu, A.H., Tseng, C.C., Berg, D. van den, Stram, D.O., Shu, X.O., Lu, W., Gao, Y.T., Cai, H., Teo, S.H., Yip, C.H., Phuah, S.Y., Cornes, B.K., Hartman, M., Miao, H., Lim, W.Y., Sng, J.H., Muir, K., Lophatananon, A., Stewart-Brown, S., Siriwanarangsan, P., Shen, C.Y., Hsiung, C.N., Wu, P.E., Ding, S.L., Sangrajrang, S., Gaborieau, V., Brennan, P., Mckay, J., Blot, W.J., Signorello, L.B., Cai, Q.Y., Zheng, W., Deming-Halverson, S., Shrubsole, M., Long, J.R., Simard, J., Garcia-Closas, M., Pharoah, P.D.P., Chenevix-Trench, G., Dunning, A.M., Benitez, J., Easton, D.F., Breast Ovarian Canc Susceptibility, Hereditary Breast Ovarian Canc Res, kConFab Investigators, Australian Ovarian Can Study Grp, GENICA Gene Environm Interaction B, CCA -Cancer Center Amsterdam, ARD - Amsterdam Reproduction and Development, Human Genetics, Landsteiner Laboratory, Clinical Haematology, Clinical Genetics, Internal Medicine, Epidemiology, Medical Oncology, Cardiothoracic Surgery, Human genetics, CCA - Oncogenesis, and ~
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signaling pathway ,Genotyping ,Genotype ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,Genome-wide association study ,Breast Neoplasms ,consortium ,Biology ,Case-Control Studies ,Cooperative Behavior ,Female ,Gene-Environment Interaction ,Genetic Loci ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Humans ,Meta-Analysis as Topic ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Risk Factors ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Genetics ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Breast cancer ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,common variants ,expression ,medicine ,Polymorphism ,gene ,hormone-related protein ,030304 developmental biology ,Genetic association ,0303 health sciences ,Breast cancer susceptibility ,Cancer ,Single Nucleotide ,medicine.disease ,confer susceptibility ,susceptibility loci ,3. Good health ,14q24.1 rad51l1 ,TOX3 ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,genome-wide association - Abstract
Journal article Breast cancer is the most common cancer among women. Common variants at 27 loci have been identified as associated with susceptibility to breast cancer, and these account for ~9% of the familial risk of the disease. We report here a meta-analysis of 9 genome-wide association studies, including 10,052 breast cancer cases and 12,575 controls of European ancestry, from which we selected 29,807 SNPs for further genotyping. These SNPs were genotyped in 45,290 cases and 41,880 controls of European ancestry from 41 studies in the Breast Cancer Association Consortium (BCAC). The SNPs were genotyped as part of a collaborative genotyping experiment involving four consortia (Collaborative Oncological Gene-environment Study, COGS) and used a custom Illumina iSelect genotyping array, iCOGS, comprising more than 200,000 SNPs. We identified SNPs at 41 new breast cancer susceptibility loci at genome-wide significance (P < 5 × 10!¿8). Further analyses suggest that more than 1,000 additional loci are involved in breast cancer susceptibility. European Community Seventh Framework Programme - grant agreement 223175 (HEALTH-F2-2009-223175) (COGS) peer-reviewed
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- 2013
39. Breast cancer risk and 6q22.33: Combined results from breast cancer association consortium and consortium of investigators on modifiers of brca1/2
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Kirchhoff, T., Gaudet, M.M., Antoniou, A.C., McGuffog, L., Humphreys, M.K., Dunning, A.M., Bojesen, S.E., Nordestgaard, B.G., Flyger, H., Kang, D., Yoo, K.Y., Noh, D.Y., Ahn, S.H., Dork, T., Schurmann, P., Karstens, J.H., Hillemanns, P., Couch, F.J., Olson, J., Vachon, C., Wang, X.S., Cox, A., Brock, I., Elliott, G., Reed, M.W.R., Burwinkel, B., Meindl, A., Brauch, H., Hamann, U., Ko, Y.D., Broeks, A., Schmidt, M.K., Veer, L.J. van 't, Braaf, L.M., Johnson, N., Fletcher, O., Gibson, L., Peto, J., Turnbull, C., Seal, S., Renwick, A., Rahman, N., Wu, P.E., Yu, J.C., Hsiung, C.N., Shen, C.Y., Southey, M.C., Hopper, J.L., Hammet, F., Dorpe, T. van, Dieudonne, A.S., Hatse, S., Lambrechts, D., Andrulis, I.L., Bogdanova, N., Antonenkova, N., Rogov, J.I., Prokofieva, D., Bermisheva, M., Khusnutdinova, E., Asperen, C.J. van, Tollenaar, R.A.E.M., Hooning, M.J., Devilee, P., Margolin, S., Lindblom, A., Milne, R.L., Arias, J.I., Zamora, M.P., Benitez, J., Severi, G., Baglietto, L., Giles, G.G., Spurdle, A.B., Beesley, J., Chen, X.Q., Holland, H., Healey, S., Wang-Gohrke, S., Chang-Claude, J., Mannermaa, A., Kosma, V.M., Kauppinen, J., Kataja, V., Agnarsson, B.A., Caligo, M.A., Godwin, A.K., Nevanlinna, H., Heikkinen, T., Fredericksen, Z., Lindor, N., Nathanson, K.L., Domchek, S.M., Loman, N., Karlsson, P., Askmalm, M.S., Melin, B., Wachenfeldt, A. von, Hogervorst, F.B.L., Verheus, M., Rookus, M.A., Seynaeve, C., Oldenburg, R.A., Ligtenberg, M.J., Ausems, M.G.E.M., Aalfs, C.M., Gille, H.J.P., Wijnen, J.T., Garcia, E.B.G., Peock, S., Cook, M., Oliver, C.T., Frost, D., Luccarini, C., Pichert, G., Davidson, R., Chu, C., Eccles, D., Ong, K.R., Cook, J., Douglas, F., Hodgson, S., Evans, D.G., Eeles, R., Gold, B., Pharoah, P.D.P., Offit, K., Chenevix-Trench, G., Easton, D.F., GENICA Network, kConFab, AOCS Study Grp, SWE-BRCA, HEBON, EMBRACE, BCAC-CIMBA, Medical Oncology, Clinical Genetics, Genetica & Celbiologie, RS: GROW - School for Oncology and Reproduction, Human genetics, CCA - Oncogenesis, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Women's Health Research Program, Human Genetics, Cancer Center Amsterdam, and Amsterdam Reproduction & Development (AR&D)
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Oncology ,Genetics and Molecular Biology (all) ,Medicin och hälsovetenskap ,Alleles ,BRCA1 Protein ,BRCA2 Protein ,Breast Neoplasms ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 6 ,Confidence Intervals ,Female ,Genetic Association Studies ,Heterozygote ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,Odds Ratio ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Receptors, Estrogen ,Risk Factors ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Medicine (all) ,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (all) ,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (all) ,Epidemiology ,Genome-wide association study ,VARIANTS ,Bioinformatics ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Biochemistry ,0302 clinical medicine ,Breast Tumors ,Genotype ,Receptors ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,GeneralLiterature_REFERENCE(e.g.,dictionaries,encyclopedias,glossaries) ,0303 health sciences ,education.field_of_study ,variants ,Multidisciplinary ,Cancer Risk Factors ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Single Nucleotide ,3. Good health ,Genetic Epidemiology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,alleles ,Medicine ,Pair 6 ,Cancer Epidemiology ,Research Article ,Human ,medicine.medical_specialty ,SUSCEPTIBILITY LOCI ,Science ,Genetic Causes of Cancer ,Population ,Hereditary cancer and cancer-related syndromes Genetics and epigenetic pathways of disease [ONCOL 1] ,education ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,Chromosomes ,03 medical and health sciences ,Breast cancer ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,Translational research [ONCOL 3] ,Internal medicine ,Breast Cancer ,Genetics ,Cancer Genetics ,Genome-Wide Association Studies ,medicine ,GENOME-WIDE ASSOCIATION ,Polymorphism ,Genetics and epigenetic pathways of disease Translational research [NCMLS 6] ,gene ,Biology ,030304 developmental biology ,Cancer och onkologi ,Population Biology ,Hereditary cancer and cancer-related syndromes [ONCOL 1] ,Proportional hazards model ,business.industry ,Cancers and Neoplasms ,Odds ratio ,medicine.disease ,GENE ,Estrogen ,susceptibility loci ,Minor allele frequency ,Cancer and Oncology ,FGFR2 ,genome-wide association ,3111 Biomedicine ,business - Abstract
Recently, a locus on chromosome 6q22.33 (rs2180341) was reported to be associated with increased breast cancer risk in the Ashkenazi Jewish (AJ) population, and this association was also observed in populations of non-AJ European ancestry. In the present study, we performed a large replication analysis of rs2180341 using data from 31,428 invasive breast cancer cases and 34,700 controls collected from 25 studies in the Breast Cancer Association Consortium (BCAC). In addition, we evaluated whether rs2180341 modifies breast cancer risk in 3,361 BRCA1 and 2,020 BRCA2 carriers from 11 centers in the Consortium of Investigators of Modifiers of BRCA1/2 (CIMBA). Based on the BCAC data from women of European ancestry, we found evidence for a weak association with breast cancer risk for rs2180341 (per-allele odds ratio (OR) = 1.03, 95% CI 1.00-1.06, p = 0.023). There was evidence for heterogeneity in the ORs among studies (I-2 = 49.3%; p = less than0.004). In CIMBA, we observed an inverse association with the minor allele of rs2180341 and breast cancer risk in BRCA1 mutation carriers (per-allele OR = 0.89, 95% CI 0.80-1.00, p = 0.048), indicating a potential protective effect of this allele. These data suggest that that 6q22.33 confers a weak effect on breast cancer risk.
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- 2012
40. A New Approach for Recognition and Position of Traffic Lights
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Shen, C.Y, primary, Zhou, L., primary, Teng, Z.W, primary, and Wang, J.X, primary
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- 2015
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41. Spectrum Combining Technique at Low SNR for the Frequency Selective Channels
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Shen, C.Y, primary, Hu, Y.P, primary, Zhang, X., primary, and Tang, Y.Q, primary
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- 2015
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- View/download PDF
42. Impact of adherence to GOLD guidelines on 6-minute walk distance, MRC dyspnea scale score, lung function decline, quality of life, and quality-adjusted life years in a Shanghai suburb
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Jiang, Y.Q., primary, Zhu, Y.X., additional, Chen, X.L., additional, Xu, X., additional, Li, F., additional, Fu, H.J., additional, Shen, C.Y., additional, Lu, Y.Y., additional, Zhuang, Q.J., additional, Xu, G., additional, Cai, Y.Y., additional, Zhang, Y., additional, Liu, S.S., additional, Zhu, M.Y., additional, and Li, S.H., additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Full pass-band signal combining technique for a randomly distributed sensor array
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Tang, M., primary, Hu, Y.P., additional, and Shen, C.Y., additional
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- 2014
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44. A Note on Certain Starlikeness
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Shen, C.Y.
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Analytic function ,starlikeness ,open unit disk - Published
- 1991
45. Full pass-band signal combining technique for a randomly distributed sensor array.
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Tang, M., Hu, Y.P., and Shen, C.Y.
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- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Complex Structure of Bacillus subtilis RibG: The Deamination Process in Riboflavin Biosynthesis
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Chen, S.C., primary, Shen, C.Y., additional, Yen, T.M., additional, Yu, H.C., additional, Chang, T.H., additional, Lai, W.L., additional, and Liaw, S.H., additional
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- 2013
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47. Multi-scale molding and numerical simulation of the flow-induced crystallization of polymer
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Rong, Y., primary, He, H.P., additional, Cao, W., additional, Shen, C.Y., additional, and Chen, J.B., additional
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- 2013
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48. INVESTIGATION ON PHENOLOGY AND PHENOTYPIC DIVERSITY OF TERMINALIA BELLIRICA (GAERTN.) ROXB. PROVENANCES FROM CHINA AND OTHER ASIAN COUNTRIES
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Tian, D.K., primary, Huang, X., additional, Meng, J., additional, Mo, H.B., additional, Li, X.P., additional, Wang, H.Z., additional, Shen, C.Y., additional, and Pang, B., additional
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- 2013
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49. (110)-Textured Ca-doped BiFeO3 film on refined Pt(111) electrode layer on glass substrate at reduced temperature.
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Chang, H.W., Shen, C.Y., Yuan, F.T., Tien, S.H., Lin, S.Y., Chen, W.A., Wang, C.R., Tu, C.S., and Jen, S.U.
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MULTIFERROIC materials , *POLYCRYSTALLINE silicon , *ELECTRODES , *GRAIN size , *PHOTOCURRENTS - Abstract
Multiferroic and photovoltaic properties of polycrystalline Bi 0.85 Ca 0.15 FeO 3 (BCFO) film on refined Pt(111) electrode buffered glass substrate have been studied. Optimized Pt(111) electrode layer having large grain size and smooth morphology enables the development of highly (110)-textured BCFO film at a temperature as low as 450 °C. The prepared BCFO film has dense microstructure, fine grain size, and smooth surface morphology. Good ferroelectric properties with the remanent polarization (2 P r ) of 108 μC/cm 2 and electrical coercive field of 405 kV/cm are achieved. Improved ferromagnetic properties with magnetization of 9.2 emu/cm 3 and coercivity of 1250 Oe are also attained. Significant PV properties with open-circuit photovoltage of 0.49 V and the short-circuit photocurrent of 67.4 μA/cm 2 at illumination intensity of 228 mW/cm 2 are observed, which are comparable to BCFO ceramics or BFO epitaxial films. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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50. Multiferroic properties of (Bi, Ca)FeO3 films on glass substrates.
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Chang, H.W., Shen, C.Y., Yuan, F.T., Tu, K.T., Lo, Y.C., Tu, S.Y., Wang, C.R., Tu, C.S., Ouyang, H., Shih, C.W., Chang, W.C., and Jen, S.U.
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MULTIFERROIC materials , *IRON oxides , *SUBSTRATES (Materials science) , *FERROELECTRIC coercive field , *SUBSTITUTION reactions - Abstract
Effect of Ca substitution on the multiferroic properties of non-epitaxially grown polycrystalline Bi 1− x Ca x FeO 3 (BCFO) films on refined Pt(1 1 1) electrode buffered glass substrates is studied. The structural analysis shows that a pure perovskite phase with isotropic orientation is present for BCFO films ( x = 0.05–0.15). The grain size and surface roughness are reduced with increasing x . Different from the BCFO ceramics, good ferroelectric properties with the remanent polarization (2 P r ) of 91–124 μC/cm 2 and electrical coercive field ( E c ) of 294–394 kV/cm are obtained in BCFO polycrystalline thin films. Furthermore, the substitution of Ca 2+ for Bi 3+ effectively enhance the ferromagnetic properties with magnetization ( M s ) of 5.9–8.2 emu/cm 3 and coercivity ( H c ) of 1224–1258 Oe. The ferromagnetic and ferroelectric properties and leakage behavior as functions of Ca content x are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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