22,170 results on '"Ullrich A"'
Search Results
2. Dexmedetomidine
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Amy Thomas and Marie Ullrich
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Critical Care Nursing - Published
- 2023
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3. Consensus Molecular Subtypes as Biomarkers of Fluorouracil and Folinic Acid Maintenance Therapy With or Without Panitumumab in RAS Wild-Type Metastatic Colorectal Cancer (PanaMa, AIO KRK 0212)
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Arndt Stahler, Beeke Hoppe, Il-Kang Na, Luisa Keilholz, Lothar Müller, Meinolf Karthaus, Stefan Fruehauf, Ullrich Graeven, Ludwig Fischer von Weikersthal, Eray Goekkurt, Stefan Kasper, Andreas Jay Kind, Annika Kurreck, Annabel Helga Sophie Alig, Swantje Held, Anke Reinacher-Schick, Volker Heinemann, David Horst, Armin Jarosch, Sebastian Stintzing, Tanja Trarbach, and Dominik Paul Modest
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Cancer Research ,Oncology - Abstract
PURPOSE Consensus molecular subtypes (CMSs) were evaluated as prognostic and predictive biomarkers of patients with RAS wild-type metastatic colorectal cancer (mCRC) receiving fluorouracil and folinic acid (FU/FA) with or without panitumumab (Pmab) after Pmab + mFOLFOX6 induction within the randomized phase II PanaMa trial. METHODS CMSs were determined in the safety set (ie, patients that received induction) and full analysis set (FAS; ie, randomly assigned patients who received maintenance) and correlated with median progression-free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) since the start of induction or maintenance treatment and objective response rates (ORRs). Hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% CI were calculated by univariate/multivariate Cox regression analyses. RESULTS Of 377 patients of the safety set, 296 (78.5%) had available CMS data: CMS1/2/3/4: 29 (9.8%)/122 (41.2%)/33 (11.2%)/112 (37.8%) and unclassifiable: 17 (5.7%). The CMSs were prognostic biomarkers in terms of PFS ( P < .0001), OS ( P < .0001), and ORR ( P = .02) since the start of induction treatment. In FAS patients (n = 196), with CMS2/4 tumors, the addition of Pmab to FU/FA maintenance therapy was associated with longer PFS (CMS2: HR, 0.58 [95% CI, 0.36 to 0.95], P = .03; CMS4: HR, 0.63 [95% CI, 0.38 to 1.03], P = .07) and OS (CMS2: HR, 0.88 [95% CI, 0.52 to 1.52], P = .66; CMS4: HR, 0.54 [95% CI, 0.30 to 0.96], P = .04). The CMS interacted significantly with treatment in terms of PFS (CMS2 v CMS1/3: P = .02; CMS4 v CMS1/3: P = .03) and OS (CMS2 v CMS1/3: P = .03; CMS4 v CMS1/3: P < .001). CONCLUSION The CMS had a prognostic impact on PFS, OS, and ORR in RAS wild-type mCRC. In PanaMa, Pmab + FU/FA maintenance was associated with beneficial outcomes in CMS2/4, whereas no benefit was observed in CMS1/3 tumors.
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- 2023
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4. Comparison of Coronary Intravascular Lithotripsy and Rotational Atherectomy in the Modification of Severely Calcified Stenoses
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Florian Blachutzik, Sophie Meier, Melissa Weissner, Sophia Schlattner, Tommaso Gori, Helen Ullrich-Daub, Luise Gaede, Stephan Achenbach, Helge Möllmann, Bogdan Chitic, Adem Aksoy, Georg Nickenig, Maren Weferling, Oliver Dörr, Niklas Boeder, Matthias Bayer, Albrecht Elsässer, Christian Hamm, and Holger Nef
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Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2023
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5. Epigenetic drugs in somatostatin type 2 receptor radionuclide theranostics and radiation transcriptomics in mouse pheochromocytoma models
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Martin Ullrich, Susan Richter, Josephine Liers, Stephan Drukewitz, Markus Friedemann, Jörg Kotzerke, Christian G. Ziegler, Svenja Nölting, Klaus Kopka, Jens Pietzsch, University of Zurich, and Ullrich, Martin
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valproic acid ,10265 Clinic for Endocrinology and Diabetology ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,radiation biology ,610 Medicine & health ,2701 Medicine (miscellaneous) ,small animal multimodal imaging ,3001 Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics (miscellaneous) ,neuroendocrine tumors ,Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics (miscellaneous) ,decitabine - Abstract
Pheochromocytomas and paragangliomas (PCCs/PGLs) are catecholamine-producing tumors. In inoperable and metastatic cases, somatostatin type 2 receptor (SSTR2) expression allows for peptide receptor radionuclide therapy with [177Lu]Lu-DOTA-TATE. Insufficient receptor levels, however, limit treatment efficacy. This study evaluates whether the epigenetic drugs valproic acid (VPA) and 5-Aza-2'-deoxycytidine (DAC) modulate SSTR2 levels and sensitivity to [177Lu]Lu-DOTA-TATE in two mouse PCC models (MPC and MTT). Methods: Drug-effects on Sstr2/SSTR2 were investigated in terms of promoter methylation, mRNA and protein levels, and radiotracer binding. Radiotracer uptake was measured in subcutaneous allografts in mice using PET and SPECT imaging. Tumor growth and gene expression (RNAseq) were characterized after drug treatments. Results: DAC alone and in combination with VPA increased SSTR2 levels along with radiotracer uptake in vitro in MPC (high-SSTR2) and MTT cells (low-SSTR2). MTT but not MPC allografts responded to DAC and VPA combination with significantly elevated radiotracer uptake, although activity concentrations remained far below those in MPC tumors. In both models, combination of DAC, VPA and [177Lu]Lu-DOTA-TATE was associated with additive effects on tumor growth and specific transcriptional responses in gene sets involved in cancer and treatment resistance. Effects of epigenetic drugs were unrelated to CpG island methylation of the Sstr2 promoter. Conclusion: This study demonstrates that SSTR2 induction in mouse pheochromocytoma models has some therapeutic benefit that occurs via yet unknown mechanisms. Transcriptional changes in tumor allografts associated with epigenetic treatment and [177Lu]Lu-DOTA-TATE provide first insights into genetic responses of PCCs/PGLs, potentially useful for developing additional strategies to prevent tumor recurrence.
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- 2023
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6. Employee involvement and participation in digital transformation: a combined analysis of literature and practitioners' expertise
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André Ullrich, Malte Reißig, Silke Niehoff, and Grischa Beier
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Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,Management of Technology and Innovation ,Strategy and Management ,General Decision Sciences - Abstract
PurposeThis paper provides a systematization of the existing body of literature on both employee participation goals and the intervention formats in the context of organizational change. Furthermore, degrees of employee involvement that the intervention formats address are identified and related to the goals of employee participation. On this basis, determinants of employee involvement and participation in the context of digital transformation are unveiled.Design/methodology/approachBased on a systematic literature review the authors structure and relate employee participation goals and formats. Through a workshop with expert practitioners, the authors transfer and enhance these theoretical findings in the context of digital transformation. Experts rated the three most important goals and identified accompanying success factors, barriers and effects.FindingsThe results show that it is not necessarily the degree of involvement but a context-specific selection of measures, the quality of their implementation as well as the actual uptake of suggestions and activities developed by employees that contribute to employees accepting and participating in goal-directed transformations. Moreover, employees must have sufficient information and time for their participation in transformation processes.Originality/valueThis paper is based on a transformative approach, combining literature analysis to identify formats and goals of employee participation with experiential knowledge of digital transformation practitioners. In addition to relating intervention formats to goals pursued in organizational change processes, empirical and experiential perspectives are used to identify three very relevant goals and respective determinants in digital transformation processes.
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- 2023
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7. MOBILE LASER SCANNING WITH LOW-COST NAVIGATION SENSORS: COMPENSATING FOR LOW-GRADE IMU WITH DUAL-GNSS AND TIGHTLY-COUPLED LIDAR
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F. Pöppl, H. Teufelsbauer, A. Ullrich, and N. Pfeifer
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Kinematic laser scanning enables efficient and accurate acquisition of 3D data, specifically point clouds. Transforming the laser ranging measurements from the scanner coordinate system to a georeferenced coordinate system requires integration with auxiliary navigation systems, in this case using GNSS (global navigation satellite system) and an IMU (inertial measurement unit). GNSS and IMU data are commonly fused via Kalman filter, and the resulting trajectory is used for georeferencing. Errors in the trajectory propagate through the georeferencing and cause discrepancies in the point cloud. To mitigate this, we present a holistic integration method incorporating GNSS, IMU and LiDAR measurements in a single adjustment, which can be seamlessly adapted to a setup with two GNSS receivers and antennas. This tight coupling of LiDAR and IMU together with the dual-GNSS setup allows the use of an ultra low-cost IMU while still achieving high-quality point clouds. We demonstrate this methodology on two datsets, where we discuss in particular the boresight calibration of such a system, and the impact of the LiDAR measurements and the dual-GNSS set-up on the trajectory and the point cloud.
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- 2023
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8. Change in Drug Use Disorders Identification Test – Consumption (DUDIT-C) with Telehealth Treatment Compared to in-Person Treatment
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Jonathan Neufeld, Fred Ullrich, Kimberly A. S. Merchant, Divya Bhagianadh, Knute D. Carter, James P. Marcin, Eve-Lynn Nelson, Carly McCord, Kari Beth Law, and Marcia M. Ward
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Health (social science) ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Medicine (miscellaneous) - Published
- 2023
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9. Seasonal influence on cognitive and psycho-physiological responses to a single 11-h day of work in outdoor mine industry workers
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Sarah M. Taggart, Olivier Girard, Grant J. Landers, Ullrich K. H. Ecker, and Karen E. Wallman
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Physiology ,Physiology (medical) - Published
- 2023
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10. What do patients think about palliative care? A national survey of hematopoietic stem cell transplant recipients
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Anna Barata, Hannah R. Abrams, Christa Meyer, Lih-Wen Mau, Deborah Mattila, Linda J. Burns, Christina Ullrich, Hemant Murthy, William A. Wood, Effie Petersdorf, Thomas W. LeBlanc, and Areej El-Jawahri
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Hematology - Abstract
Palliative care (PC) benefits patients undergoing hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), but it remains underutilized. Although transplant physicians report concerns regarding how patients perceive PC, HSCT recipients’ perceptions about PC remain unaddressed. We conducted a multisite, cross-sectional survey of autologous and allogeneic HSCT recipients 3 to 12 months after transplant to assess their familiarity, knowledge, and perception of PC, as well as their unmet PC needs. We computed a composite score of patients’ perceptions of PC and used a generalized linear regression model to examine factors associated with these perceptions. We enrolled 69.6% (250/359) of potential participants (median age = 58.1; 63.1% autologous HSCT). Overall, 44.3.8% (109/249) reported limited knowledge about PC and 52% (127/245) endorsed familiarity with PC. Most patients felt hopeful (54%) and reassured (50%) when they heard the term PC; 83% saw referral as a sign their doctor cared about what was happening to them. In multivariate analyses, patients who were more knowledgeable about PC were more likely to have positive perceptions of PC (B = 7.54, standard error = 1.61, P < .001). Patients’ demographics, HSCT features, quality of life, and symptom burden were not significantly associated with perceptions of PC. HSCT recipients have positive perceptions of PC, though many have limited knowledge about its role. Patients who were more knowledgeable about PC were more likely to have positive perceptions of PC. These data do not support transplant physicians’ negative concerns about how patients perceive PC and underscore the need to further educate patients and transplant physicians about PC.
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- 2023
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11. A Half‐Century of the Ugi Reaction: Classic Variant
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Angelika Ullrich and Uli Kazmaier
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- 2023
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12. A Half‐Century of the Ugi Reaction: Modified Variants
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Angelika Ullrich and Uli Kazmaier
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- 2023
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13. Improving Attitudes Toward Psychotherapy in Residents and Syrian Refugees in Germany: An Interview Vignette Intervention Study
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Schlechter, Pascal, Hellmann, Jens, Kamp, Svea, Echterhoff, Gerald, Wanninger, Katharina, Wagner, Ullrich, Knausenberger, Judith, Schlechter, P [0000-0002-5916-3694], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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attitudes toward seeking professional psychological help ,Cultural Studies ,denial of the need for psychological help ,Social Psychology ,masculine ,distress disclosure ,attitudes toward seeking professional ,Anthropology ,masculine norms ,support by religious faith ,psychological help ,norms ,refugee mental health - Abstract
Syrian refugees underutilize mental health services in Western receiving countries, which is partly attributable to negative attitudes toward seeking professional psychological help (APPH) and denial of the need for psychological help (DNPH). Interventions tailored to culture-specific characteristics of Syrian refugees are needed. We tested an intervention that disseminated information about the benefits of psychotherapy via ostensible interview vignettes to 205 German residents and 187 Syrian refugees residing in Germany. We used a 2 (group: residents vs. refugees) × 2 (source of information: ingroup vs. outgroup member) × 2 (therapy content: skill training vs. emotion regulation) × 2 (gender: women vs. men) between-participants design with the dependent variables APPH and DNPH. We measured adherence to masculine norms, support by religious faith, and distress disclosure as additional predictors. Refugees reported more negative APPH and higher DNPH than residents. Source of information and therapy content had no detectable effect. Men reported more negative APPH and higher DNPH than women. Adherence to masculine norms emerged as the strongest predictor of APPH. Masculine norms and support by religious faith partly explained differences between refugees and residents in APPH and DNPH. Exploratory post hoc analyses with nonintervention samples of 182 Syrian refugees and 202 residents from a similar study indicated that Syrian refugees who received an intervention (vs. no intervention) reported more positive APPH. No such difference was found for residents. Disseminating information about psychotherapy could positively impact APPH/DNPH in refugees but needs to be tailored to their sociocultural context. We outline recommendations for further research.
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- 2023
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14. Improved diffusion-weighted imaging of the prostate: Comparison of readout-segmented and zoomed single-shot imaging
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M. Klingebiel, E. Weiland, M. Boschheidgen, T. Ullrich, C. Arsov, J.P. Radtke, T. Benkert, M. Nickel, R. Strecker, H.J. Wittsack, P. Albers, G. Antoch, and L. Schimmöller
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Biomedical Engineering ,Biophysics ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging - Published
- 2023
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15. Liquation Cracking in Row 3 Twin Turbine Vane Segment Caused by Malfunctioning Plasma Coating Gun
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A. Neidel, B. Fischer, T. Gädicke, and T. Ullrich
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Mechanics of Materials ,Metals and Alloys ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials - Abstract
Transverse through-wall airfoil cracking was found in a row 3 twin turbine vane segment of a type used in heavy-duty gas turbine engines for power generation. A laboratory investigation determined liquation cracking (LC), a hot cracking mechanism, as the metallurgical cause of failure. As became apparent only after the investigation, the root cause of failure was a malfunctioning plasma gun used for thermal spraying the thermal barrier ceramic top coat onto the subject part.
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- 2023
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16. Mediating Medical Comorbidities in Geriatric Patients Undergoing Surgery for OVCF: From Preoperative Screening to Risk and Outcomes Optimization
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Max J. Scheyerer, Max Lenz, Cornelius Jacobs, Matthias Pumberger, Ulrich J. A. Spiegl, Bernhard W. Ullrich, Nicolas von der Höh, and Klaus John Schnake
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Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) - Abstract
Objectives Osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures (OVCF) are a common increasing entity in elderly patients and represent a tremendous economic burden. Surgical treatment is related to high complication rates and little is known about patient-specific and internal risk factors associated with poor clinical results. Methods We carried out a comprehensive, systematic literature search according to the PRISMA checklist and algorithm. Risk factors for perioperative complications, for early inpatient readmission, for the duration of the hospital stay, the hospital mortality, the total mortality and the clinical result were analyzed. Results A total of 739 potentially usable studies were identified. After considering all inclusion and exclusion criteria, 15 studies with 15,515 patients were included. Non-adjustable risk factors were age >90 years (OR 3.27), male gender (OR 1.41), BMI less than 18.5 kg/m2 (OR 3.97), ASA score >3 (OR 2.7), activity of daily live (ADL) (OR 1.52), dependence (OR 5.68), inpatient admission status (OR 3.22), Parkinson disease (OR 3.63) and disseminated cancer (OR 2.98). Adjustable factors were insufficient kidney function (GFR Discussion We identified a couple of non-adjustable risk factors, which should be considered preoperatively in terms of risk assessment. However, even more important were adjustable factors that can be influenced preoperatively. In conclusion, we recommend a perioperative interdisciplinary cooperation, especially with geriatricians, to achieve the best possible clinical results in geriatric patients undergoing surgery for OVCF.
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- 2023
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17. Thema: Ökologische Nachhaltigkeit und IT
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Jörg Ullrich Ochs, Oliver Hoffmann, and Werner Gruber
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General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,General Environmental Science - Published
- 2023
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18. Charge Dynamics of a CuO Thin Film on Picosecond to Microsecond Timescales Revealed by Transient Absorption Spectroscopy
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Mona Asadinamin, Aleksandar Živkovic, Susanne Ullrich, Henning Meyer, Yiping Zhao, and Petrology
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CuO ,photocatalysts ,model ,Materials Science(all) ,General Materials Science ,rate equations ,transient absorption spectroscopy (TAS) ,energy diagram - Abstract
Understanding the mechanism of charge dynamics in photocatalysts is the key to design and optimize more efficient materials for renewable energy applications. In this study, the charge dynamics of a CuO thin film are unraveled via transient absorption spectroscopy (TAS) on the picosecond to microsecond timescale for three different excitation energies, i.e., above, near, and below the band gap, to explore the role of incoherent broadband light sources. The shape of the ps-TAS spectra changes with the delay time, while that of the ns-TAS spectra is invariant for all the excitation energies. Regardless of the excitations, three time constants, τ1 ∼ 0.34–0.59 ps, τ2 ∼ 162–175 ns, and τ3 ∼ 2.5–3.3 μs, are resolved, indicating the dominating charge dynamics at very different timescales. Based on these observations, the UV–vis absorption spectrum, and previous findings in the literature, a compelling transition energy diagram is proposed. Two conduction bands and two defect (deep and shallow) states dominate the initial photo-induced electron transitions, and a sub-valence band energy state is involved in the subsequent transient absorption. By solving the rate equations for the pump-induced population dynamics and implementing the assumed Lorentzian absorption spectral shape between two energy states, the TAS spectra are modeled which capture the main spectral and time-dependent features for t > 1 ps. By further considering the contributions from free-electron absorption during very early delay times, the modeled spectra reproduce the experimental spectra very well over the entire time range and under different excitation conditions.
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- 2023
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19. The Epidemic of Internalizing Problems Among Latinx Adolescents Before and During the Coronavirus 2019 Pandemic
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Antonio J. Polo, Jesus E. Solano-Martinez, Laura Saldana, Amber D. Ramos, Miguel Herrera, Taylor Ullrich, and Milena DeMario
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Clinical Psychology ,Developmental and Educational Psychology - Published
- 2023
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20. Character-based Leadership Components at the Combat Battalion of the Czech Land Forces
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Ondrej HERMAN and David ULLRICH
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Economics and Econometrics ,Materials Chemistry ,Media Technology ,Forestry - Abstract
The military presents a specific environment for leadership study due to its extreme conditions. It remains unclear which character strengths are conducive to leadership efficacy in this context, especially as perceived by an officer’s followers. The previous research has mainly used quantitative approach, while other methods were underused.
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- 2023
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21. Evidence of bendamustine plus rituximab for old and frail patients with aggressive B-cell lymphoma
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Enrico Schalk and Kathleen Jentsch-Ullrich
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Hematology ,General Medicine - Published
- 2023
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22. Fallopia japonica and Impatiens glandulifera are colonized by species-poor root-associated fungal communities but have minor impacts on soil properties in riparian habitats
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Daniel Schmitz, Johanna Girardi, Eva Ullrich, Katherine Muñoz-Sepulveda, Mirco Bundschuh, Kai Riess, and Jens Schirmel
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Ecology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Fallopia japonica and Impatiens glandulifera are major plant invaders on a global scale that often become dominant in riparian areas. However, little is known about how these species affect interactions in soil–plant systems. The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of both species on abiotic and biotic soil properties, with a special focus on fungi. We investigated eight sites along small streams invaded by F. japonica and I. glandulifera, respectively, and compared each with nearby sites dominated by the native species Urtica dioica. Three different types of samples were collected: bulk soil, rhizosphere soil and roots from invasive and native stands at each site. Bulk soil samples were analysed for soil physicochemical, microbial properties (soil microbial respiration and ergosterol) and soil arthropod abundance (Acari and Collembola). Soil respiration was also evaluated in rhizosphere samples. The fungal community composition of both bulk soil and roots were analysed using a metabarcoding approach. Soil physicochemical properties as well as soil microbial activity, fungal biomass and soil fungal operational unit taxonomic unit (OTU) richness did not differ between invaded and native riparian habitats, indicating only minor belowground impacts of the two invasive plant species. Soil microbial activity, fungal biomass and soil fungal OTU richness were rather related to the soil physicochemical properties. In contrast, Acari abundance decreased by 68% in the presence of F. japonica, while Collembola abundance increased by 11% in I. glandulifera sites. Moreover, root-associated fungal communities differed between the invasive and native plants. In F. japonica roots, fungal OTU richness of all investigated ecological groups (mycorrhiza, endophytes, parasites, saprobes) were lower compared to U. dioica. However, in I. glandulifera roots only the OTU richness of mycorrhiza and saprobic fungi was lower. Overall, our findings show that F. japonica and I. glandulifera can influence the abundance of soil arthropods and are characterized by lower OTU richness of root-associated fungi.
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- 2023
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23. Probing Ligand Binding Sites on Large Proteins by Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy of Genetically Encoded Non-Canonical Amino Acids
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Kasuni B. Ekanayake, Mithun C. Mahawaththa, Haocheng Qianzhu, Elwy H. Abdelkader, Josemon George, Sven Ullrich, Rhys B. Murphy, Sarah E. Fry, Jason Johansen-Leete, Richard J. Payne, Christoph Nitsche, Thomas Huber, and Gottfried Otting
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Drug Discovery ,Molecular Medicine - Published
- 2023
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24. Conjugated, Aromatic Ladder Polymers: From Precision Synthesis to Single Chain Spectroscopy and Strong Light‐Matter Coupling
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John M. Lupton and Ullrich Scherf
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- 2023
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25. Clinical Practices Following Train-The-Trainer Trauma Course Completion in Uganda: A Parallel-Convergent Mixed-Methods Study
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Zeyu Tang, Derick Kayondo, Sarah J. Ullrich, Martha Namugga, Peter Muwanguzi, Gregory Klazura, Doruk Ozgediz, and Mari Armstrong-Hough
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Clinical Research ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Clinical Sciences ,Humans ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Uganda ,Surgery ,Health and social care services research - Abstract
Background Despite the growth of trauma training courses worldwide, evidence for their impact on clinical practice in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) is sparse. We investigated trauma practices by trained providers in Uganda using clinical observation, surveys, and interviews. Methods Ugandan providers participated in the Kampala Advanced Trauma Course (KATC) from 2018 to 2019. Between July and September of 2019, we directly evaluated guideline-concordant behaviors in KATC-exposed facilities using a structured real-time observation tool. We conducted 27 semi-structured interviews with course-trained providers to elucidate experiences of trauma care and factors that impact adoption of guideline-concordant behaviors. We assessed perceptions of trauma resource availability through a validated survey. Results Of 23 resuscitations, 83% were managed without course-trained providers. Frontline providers inconsistently performed universally applicable assessments: pulse checks (61%), pulse oximetry (39%), lung auscultation (52%), blood pressure (65%), pupil examination (52%). We did not observe skill transference between trained and untrained providers. In interviews, respondents found KATC personally transformative but not sufficient for facility-wide improvement due to issues with retention, lack of trained peers, and resource shortages. Resource perception surveys similarly demonstrated profound resource shortages and variation across facilities. Conclusions Trained providers view short-term trauma training interventions positively, but these courses may lack long-term impact due to barriers to adopting best practices. Trauma courses should include more frontline providers, target skill transference and retention, and increase the proportion of trained providers at each facility to promote communities of practice. Essential supplies and infrastructure in facilities must be consistent for providers to practice what they have learned.
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- 2023
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26. Compliant Hall-Effect Sensor Array for Passive Magnetic Instrument Tracking
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Nikola Fischer, Joachim Kriechbaum, Daniel Berwanger, and Franziska Mathis-Ullrich
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Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Instrumentation - Published
- 2023
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27. Simulation of African Easterly Waves in a Global Climate Model
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Xianan Jiang, Hui Su, Shuyi S. Chen, and Paul A. Ullrich
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Atmospheric Science - Abstract
African easterly waves (AEWs) exert significant influence on local and downstream high-impact weather including tropical cyclone (TC) genesis over the Atlantic. Accurate representation of AEWs in climate and weather prediction models therefore is necessary for skillful predictions. In this study, we examine simulated AEWs, including their evolution, vertical structure, and linkage to tropical cyclone genesis, in the NASA Goddard Earth Observing System Model, version 5 (GEOS-5) atmospheric global climate model. Identified by the leading empirical orthogonal function mode of time-filtered precipitation, the observed westward propagating AEWs along the southern track over the Atlantic are largely captured in GEOS-5, but with a slower phase speed and significantly weaker amplitude downstream off the West Africa coast. The weak downstream development of AEWs in GEOS-5 is accompanied by much reduced TC genesis over the main development region. Further analyses suggest that the slow westward propagation and weaker AEW amplitude downstream can be ascribed to a weak African easterly jet, while overestimated negative (positive) meridional potential vorticity (PV) gradients appear to the north (south) of 10°N in GEOS-5. The greatly overestimated positive meridional PV gradient to the south of 10°N is expected to generate strong horizontal stretching in the AEW wave pattern in the model, which hinders organization of convection and its feedback to sustain the AEW development. Persistent and vigorous AEW precipitation in the Guinea Highlands of the West Africa coast could also be responsible for reduced westward propagation of AEWs in the model.
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- 2023
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28. Depression im Alter und Frailty – epidemiologische, klinische und neurobiologische Zusammenhänge
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M. S. Depping, L. Köhler-Ipek, P. Ullrich, K. Hauer, and R. C. Wolf
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Neurology ,Neurology (clinical) ,General Medicine - Abstract
Zusammenfassung Hintergrund Depression ist beim alten Menschen die häufigste psychische Störung und wird durch geriatrietypische Morbidität beeinflusst. Die Komorbidität mit „Frailty“ ist besonders relevant. Frailty ist von zentraler Bedeutung in der modernen Altersmedizin und zeigt die belastungsabhängige Vulnerabilität eines alten Menschen sowie sein erhöhtes Risiko von Behinderung, Hospitalisierung und Tod an. Es kommt der Diagnostik und Behandlung von Depression im Alter zugute, sich mit den Zusammenhängen mit Frailty auseinanderzusetzen, auch auf neurobiologischer Ebene. Ziel der Arbeit Dieses narrative Review gibt einen Überblick über die Komorbidität von Depression im Alter und Frailty, mit einem Schwerpunkt auf neurowissenschaftlichen Erkenntnissen, die anhand des Research-Domain-Criteria(RDoC)-Ansatzes systematisiert werden. Ergebnisse Frailty findet sich komorbid bei mehr als einem Drittel der Patienten mit Depression im Alter, was mit kritischen Depressionsverläufen und mit schlechterer Wirksamkeit und Verträglichkeit antidepressiver Medikation verbunden ist. Depression und Frailty teilen motivationale und psychomotorische Merkmale, speziell Antriebsminderung, erhöhte Erschöpfbarkeit und verringerte körperliche Aktivität. Bei Frailty sind funktionelle Veränderungen in bewegungsvorbereitenden neuronalen Arealen mit motorischen Leistungseinschränkungen assoziiert. Bei Depression im Alter mit Apathie finden sich abnorme Struktur und veränderte funktionelle Konnektivität des Belohnungs- und des Salienznetzwerks, außerdem veränderte funktionelle Konnektivität dieser Netzwerke mit prämotorischen Arealen. Diskussion Es ist prognostisch und therapeutisch relevant, Frailty bei Alterspatienten mit Depression zu erkennen. Die (Weiter‑)Entwicklung und Individualisierung von Therapien für diese vulnerable Patientengruppe wird auch davon profitieren, sich auf neuronale Mechanismen der Komorbidität zu beziehen.
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- 2023
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29. Influence of the Cocoa Bean Variety on the Flavor Compound Composition of Dark Chocolates
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Lisa Ullrich, Bettina Casty, Amandine André, Tilo Hühn, Irene Chetschik, and Martin Steinhaus
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Cocoa variety ,Chemistry (miscellaneous) ,Organic Chemistry ,Theobroma cacao ,Isotopically substituted odorant ,664: Lebensmitteltechnologie ,Flavor-active compound ,Dark chocolate ,Food Science ,Analytical Chemistry - Abstract
The flavor quality is often linked to the cocoa bean variety in the literature although the influence of the variety on the flavor compound composition of chocolate has not been studied comprehensively. To investigate this, dose-over-threshold (DoT) factors of flavor-active compounds in 16 dark chocolates were compared. The three Forastero chocolates were similar and characterized by high DoT factors of 3-methylbutanal, dimethyltrisulfane, 4-hydroxy-2,5-dimethylfuran-3(2H)-one, 2-methylbutanoic acid, 3-methylbutanoic acid, phenylacetic acid, and linalool. However, the wide variations in the flavor compound profiles of the Criollo and Trinitario chocolates suggested that the variety is not the only determinant for the flavor compound composition of dark chocolates. Three Trinitario chocolates and a Criollo chocolate showed especially high DoT factors of fruity smelling esters and acetic acid while others showed similarities to the Forastero chocolates. However, the flavor compound compositions of the single-variety dark chocolates could at least be partly linked to the cocoa bean variety.
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- 2023
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30. Chemotaxis increases metabolic exchanges between marine picophytoplankton and heterotrophic bacteria
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Jean-Baptiste Raina, Marco Giardina, Douglas R. Brumley, Peta L. Clode, Mathieu Pernice, Paul Guagliardo, Jeremy Bougoure, Himasha Mendis, Steven Smriga, Eva C. Sonnenschein, Matthias S. Ullrich, Roman Stocker, and Justin R. Seymour
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Microbiology (medical) ,Immunology ,Genetics ,Cell Biology ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Microbiology - Abstract
Behaviours such as chemotaxis can facilitate metabolic exchanges between phytoplankton and heterotrophic bacteria, which ultimately regulate oceanic productivity and biogeochemistry. However, numerically dominant picophytoplankton have been considered too small to be detected by chemotactic bacteria, implying that cell–cell interactions might not be possible between some of the most abundant organisms in the ocean. Here we examined how bacterial behaviour influences metabolic exchanges at the single-cell level between the ubiquitous picophytoplankton Synechococcus and the heterotrophic bacterium Marinobacter adhaerens, using bacterial mutants deficient in motility and chemotaxis. Stable-isotope tracking revealed that chemotaxis increased nitrogen and carbon uptake of both partners by up to 4.4-fold. A mathematical model following thousands of cells confirmed that short periods of exposure to small but nutrient-rich microenvironments surrounding Synechococcus cells provide a considerable competitive advantage to chemotactic bacteria. These findings reveal that transient interactions mediated by chemotaxis can underpin metabolic relationships among the ocean’s most abundant microorganisms. ISSN:2058-5276
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- 2023
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31. Sim-to-Real Transfer for Visual Reinforcement Learning of Deformable Object Manipulation for Robot-Assisted Surgery
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Paul Maria Scheikl, Eleonora Tagliabue, Balazs Gyenes, Martin Wagner, Diego Dall'Alba, Paolo Fiorini, and Franziska Mathis-Ullrich
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Human-Computer Interaction ,Control and Optimization ,Artificial Intelligence ,Control and Systems Engineering ,Mechanical Engineering ,Biomedical Engineering ,Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer Science Applications - Published
- 2023
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32. Psychotherapy motivation in refugees: The role of alexithymia, stigmatization, self-esteem, and psychotherapy expectations
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Pascal Schlechter, Ullrich Wagner, Nexhmedin Morina, and Jens H. Hellmann
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Clinical Psychology ,Social Psychology - Abstract
Objective: Despite elevated mental health problems, refugees tend to hold more negative attitudes toward psychological help seeking than residents of receiving countries. Therefore, we examined variables expected to be related to different aspects of psychotherapy motivation (psychological distress, knowledge about therapy, and denial of psychological helplessness) in 202 German residents and 200 refugees in Germany. Method: Participants completed measures of psychotherapy motivation, together with alexithymia, stigmatization toward help seeking, self-esteem, and expectations of therapy as variables with an expected relationship with psychotherapy motivation. Results: Refugees reported higher scores of psychological distress, more denial of psychological helplessness, and less knowledge about psychotherapy than residents. Refugees further reported higher levels of alexithymia and lower expectations for interpersonal and intrapersonal change in therapy compared to residents. In a pathway model, alexithymia, perceived stigmatization, self-esteem, and expectations for interpersonal changes emerged as critical variables associated with psychotherapy motivation. Alexithymia and expectations for interpersonal change partly accounted for group differences of reduced psychotherapy motivation in refugees. Conclusions: We discuss implications for practice and future research with respect to reducing treatment barriers and providing culturally-sensitive treatments for refugees suffering from psychological distress. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved)
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- 2023
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33. P009 IL-3 receptor signalling suppresses chronic intestinal inflammation by controlling mechanobiology and tissue egress of regulatory T cells
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K Ullrich, J Derdau, C Baltes, G Rosso, S Uderhardt, L L Schulze, L J Liu, M Dedden, M Spocinska, L Kainka, M Kubánková, T M Müller, N M Schmidt, E Becker, I Atreya, S Neurath-Finotto, I Prots, B Weigmann, R López-Posadas, R Atreya, A B Ekici, F Lautenschläger, J Guck, M F Neurath, and S Zundler
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Gastroenterology ,General Medicine - Abstract
Background The pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) such as Crohn’s disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC) is still incompletely understood. However, despite having been described back in the 1980s and reported to be involved in chronic inflammatory arthritis, the role of interleukin 3 (IL-3) signaling via the IL-3 receptor (IL-3R) in the development and perpetuation of chronic intestinal inflammation remains largely unexplored. In this study, we therefore aimed to explore the role of IL-3 signaling via IL-3R in experimental colitis as well as human IBD. Methods We analysed IL-3 expression in lamina propria mononuclear cells (LPMCs) from patients with IBD and from mice with experimental colitis. We compared the development of T cell transfer colitis in Rag1-/- mice after transfer of Il3r-/- and Il3r+/+ naïve T cells and investigated the underlying mechanisms by immunofluorescence and functional cell trafficking assays. The mechanical properties of Il3r-/- and Il3r+/+ T cells were determined by real-time deformability cytometry (RT-DC) and atomic force microscopy (AFM) and cytoskeleton structure was analysed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP). Results The expression of IL-3 and IL3+ T cells were increased in the gut of patients with IBD and IL-3 expression was associated to shorter flare-free survival. In vivo, experimental chronic colitis upon T cell transfer was exacerbated in the absence of IL-3 or IL-3R signalling. This was attributable to IL-3-induced changes in kinase signalling and actin cytoskeleton structure, resulting in increased mechanical deformability and enhanced egress of regulatory T (Treg) cells from the inflamed colon mucosa. Similarly, IL-3 controlled mechanobiology in human Treg cells. (A) IL3 mRNA expression in colon tissue from patients.(B) Flare-free survival of IBD patients.(C) Colitis in Rag1–/– mice after transfer of naïve CD4+ T cells from Il3r+/+ and Il3r-/- mice. Mini-endoscopy (left) and IVIS (right).(D) RT-DC plot (left) and quantification (right) of thymic lymphocytes from Il3r-/- and Il3r+/+ mice.(E) Lightsheet microscopy (left) and quantification of TReg index (right, TReg fraction in Ozanimod/DATK32 per fraction in placebo) in mLNs from Rag1-/- mice with transfer colitis induced by Il3r-/- or Il3r+/+ T cells. Conclusion We uncover a crucial role of IL-3R signalling in regulating TReg mechanobiology and tissue egress. Together, our data demonstrate a central – probably counter-regulatory – role for IL-3 receptor signalling in Treg cells in the pathogenesis of murine and human chronic intestinal inflammation and therefore suggest that IL-3 might be a novel target for future therapeutic approaches in IBD.
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- 2023
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34. Transdural Skull Base Infiltration by Glioblastoma: Case Report and Review of the Literature
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Michael Thrull, Khaled Atasi, Lennart-Maximilian Boese, Mahmut Cakar, Ullrich Heller, Nils Jansen, Leoni-Christine Menzel, Hassan Omaimen, Katharina Theis, Damir Karacic, Diyan Dimov, Roland Coras, and Randolf Klingebiel
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General Medicine - Abstract
We report the rare occurrence of a temporal glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) showing transdural tumor extension into adjacent mastoid cells. As the dura mater provides a barrier to intraaxial tumors, GBM seldom penetrates into the skull base, even though it is a high-grade astrocytoma with a tendency to spread. Yet, some mechanisms of GBM-induced skull invasion have been identified, making this entity a very rare but nonetheless relevant differential diagnosis in otherwise ambiguous cases of an intracerebral tumor extending into the skull base. In addition, imaging markers that may assist in distinguishing extra- from intraaxial tumor infiltration of the temporal bone are described.
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- 2023
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35. Benefits of collaborative remembering in older and younger couples: the role of conversation dynamics and gender
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Huan Zhang, Yibei Liu, Xin Wang, Ziqian Cui, wang haiman, Xiping Liu, Ullrich Wagner, and Gerald Echterhoff
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Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,General Psychology - Abstract
We experimentally explored whether and how conversation dynamics would benefit collaborative remembering in intimate couples over time. To this end, we ran a study with a three-factor mixed design with relationship type (couples vs. strangers) and age (older adults vs. younger adults) as between-participants variables, and remembering condition (collaborative vs. individual) as a within-participants variable. Thirty pairs of intimate couples (fifteen long-term relationship older couples, fifteen short-term relationship younger couples) and thirty pairs of corresponding stranger-pairs (including older strangers and younger strangers) were compared with respect to recall accuracy and conversation dynamics, specifically considering the role of gender. Results revealed significant collaborative facilitation only in older couples. Also, females’ communication behaviors facilitated males’ collaborative remembering performance only in older (vs. younger) couples. In addition, a gender-specific pattern of shifts from the individual to collaborative context emerged only in older couple (vs. strangers). The findings are consistent with the notion that a longer experience of collaboration and more effective conversation dynamics allow older (vs. younger) couples to perform better at collaborative remembering. We discuss processes underlying the observed gender differences, and the social and motivational implications of collaborative remembering.
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- 2023
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36. Pattern of global spin alignment of ϕ and K*0 mesons in heavy-ion collisions
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STAR Collaboration, Abdallah, M. S., Aboona, B. E., Adam, J., Adamczyk, L., Adams, J. R., Adkins, J. K., Agakishiev, G., Aggarwal, I., Aggarwal, M. M., Ahammed, Z., Aitbaev, A., Alekseev, I., Anderson, D. M., Aparin, A., Aschenauer, E. C., Ashraf, M. U., Atetalla, F. G., Averichev, G. S., Bairathi, V., Baker, W., Cap, J. G. Ball, Barish, K., Behera, A., Bellwied, R., Bhagat, P., Bhasin, A., Bielcik, J., Bielcikova, J., Bordyuzhin, I. G., Brandenburg, J. D., Brandin, A. V., Cai, X. Z., Caines, H., Sánchez, M. Calderón de la Barca, Cebra, D., Chakaberia, I., Chaloupka, P., Chan, B. K., Chang, F-H., Chang, Z., Chatterjee, A., Chattopadhyay, S., Chen, D., Chen, J., Chen, J. H., Chen, X., Chen, Z., Cheng, J., Choudhury, S., Christie, W., Chu, X., Crawford, H. J., Csanád, M., Daugherity, M., Dedovich, T. G., Deppner, I. M., Derevschikov, A. A., Dhamija, A., Di Carlo, L., Didenko, L., Dixit, P., Dong, X., Drachenberg, J. L., Duckworth, E., Dunlop, J. C., Engelage, J., Eppley, G., Esumi, S., Evdokimov, O., Ewigleben, A., Eyser, O., Fatemi, R., Fawzi, F. M., Fazio, S., Feng, C. J., Feng, Y., Finch, E., Fisyak, Y., Francisco, A., Fu, C., Gagliardi, C. A., Galatyuk, T., Geurts, F., Ghimire, N., Gibson, A., Gopal, K., Gou, X., Grosnick, D., Gupta, A., Guryn, W., Hamed, A., Han, Y., Harabasz, S., Harasty, M. D., Harris, J. W., Harrison, H., He, S., He, W., He, X. H., He, Y., Heppelmann, S., Herrmann, N., Hoffman, E., Holub, L., Hu, C., Hu, Q., Hu, Y., Huang, H., Huang, H. Z., Huang, S. L., Huang, T., Huang, X., Huang, Y., Humanic, T. J., Isenhower, D., Isshiki, M., Jacobs, W. W., Jena, C., Jentsch, A., Ji, Y., Jia, J., Jiang, K., Ju, X., Judd, E. G., Kabana, S., Kabir, M. L., Kagamaster, S., Kalinkin, D., Kang, K., Kapukchyan, D., Kauder, K., Ke, H. W., Keane, D., Kechechyan, A., Kelsey, M., Kikoła, D. P., Kimelman, B., Kincses, D., Kisel, I., Kiselev, A., Knospe, A. G., Ko, H. S., Kochenda, L., Korobitsin, A., Kosarzewski, L. K., Kramarik, L., Kravtsov, P., Kumar, L., Kumar, S., Elayavalli, R. Kunnawalkam, Kwasizur, J. H., Lacey, R., Lan, S., Landgraf, J. M., Lauret, J., Lebedev, A., Lednicky, R., Lee, J. H., Leung, Y. H., Lewis, N., Li, C., Li, W., Li, X., Li, Y., Liang, X., Liang, Y., Licenik, R., Lin, T., Lin, Y., Lisa, M. A., Liu, F., Liu, H., Liu, P., Liu, T., Liu, X., Liu, Y., Liu, Z., Ljubicic, T., Llope, W. J., Longacre, R. S., Loyd, E., Lu, T., Lukow, N. S., Luo, X. F., Ma, L., Ma, R., Ma, Y. G., Magdy, N., Mallick, D., Manukhov, S. L., Margetis, S., Markert, C., Matis, H. S., Mazer, J. A., Minaev, N. G., Mioduszewski, S., Mohanty, B., Mondal, M. M., Mooney, I., Morozov, D. A., Mukherjee, A., Nagy, M., Nam, J. D., Nasim, Md., Nayak, K., Neff, D., Nelson, J. M., Nemes, D. B., Nie, M., Nigmatkulov, G., Niida, T., Nishitani, R., Nogach, L. V., Nonaka, T., Nunes, A. S., Odyniec, G., Ogawa, A., Oh, S., Okorokov, V. A., Okubo, K., Page, B. S., Pak, R., Pan, J., Pandav, A., Pandey, A. K., Panebratsev, Y., Parfenov, P., Paul, A., Pawlik, B., Pawlowska, D., Perkins, C., Pluta, J., Pokhrel, B. R., Porter, J., Posik, M., Prozorova, V., Pruthi, N. K., Przybycien, M., Putschke, J., Qiu, H., Quintero, A., Racz, C., Radhakrishnan, S. K., Raha, N., Ray, R. L., Reed, R., Ritter, H. G., Robotkova, M., Romero, J. L., Roy, D., Ruan, L., Sahoo, A. K., Sahoo, N. R., Sako, H., Salur, S., Samigullin, E., Sandweiss, J., Sato, S., Schmidke, W. B., Schmitz, N., Schweid, B. R., Seck, F., Seger, J., Seto, R., Seyboth, P., Shah, N., Shahaliev, E., Shanmuganathan, P. V., Shao, M., Shao, T., Sharma, R., Sheikh, A. I., Shen, D. Y., Shi, S. S., Shi, Y., Shou, Q. Y., Sichtermann, E. P., Sikora, R., Singh, J., Singha, S., Sinha, P., Skoby, M. J., Smirnov, N., Söhngen, Y., Solyst, W., Song, Y., Spinka, H. M., Srivastava, B., Stanislaus, T. D. S., Stefaniak, M., Stewart, D. J., Strikhanov, M., Stringfellow, B., Suaide, A. A. P., Sumbera, M., Sun, X. M., Sun, X., Sun, Y., Surrow, B., Svirida, D. N., Sweger, Z. W., Szymanski, P., Tang, A. H., Tang, Z., Taranenko, A., Tarnowsky, T., Thomas, J. H., Timmins, A. R., Tlusty, D., Todoroki, T., Tokarev, M., Tomkiel, C. A., Trentalange, S., Tribble, R. E., Tribedy, P., Tripathy, S. K., Truhlar, T., Trzeciak, B. A., Tsai, O. D., Tu, Z., Ullrich, T., Underwood, D. G., Upsal, I., Van Buren, G., Vanek, J., Vasiliev, A. N., Vassiliev, I., Verkest, V., Videbæk, F., Vokal, S., Voloshin, S. A., Wang, F., Wang, G., Wang, J. S., Wang, P., Wang, X., Wang, Y., Wang, Z., Webb, J. C., Weidenkaff, P. C., Westfall, G. D., Wieman, H., Wissink, S. W., Witt, R., Wu, J., Wu, Y., Xi, B., Xiao, Z. G., Xie, G., Xie, W., Xu, H., Xu, N., Xu, Q. H., Xu, Y., Xu, Z., Yan, G., Yang, C., Yang, Q., Yang, S., Yang, Y., Ye, Z., Yi, L., Yip, K., Yu, Y., Zbroszczyk, H., Zha, W., Zhang, C., Zhang, D., Zhang, J., Zhang, S., Zhang, Y., Zhang, Z. J., Zhang, Z., Zhao, F., Zhao, J., Zhao, M., Zhou, C., Zhou, Y., Zhu, X., Zurek, M., and Zyzak, M.
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,Multidisciplinary ,High Energy Physics::Phenomenology ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
Notwithstanding decades of progress since Yukawa first developed a description of the force between nucleons in terms of meson exchange, a full understanding of the strong interaction remains a major challenge in modern science. One remaining difficulty arises from the non-perturbative nature of the strong force, which leads to the phenomenon of quark confinement at distances on the order of the size of the proton. Here we show that in relativistic heavy-ion collisions, where quarks and gluons are set free over an extended volume, two species of produced vector (spin-1) mesons, namely $\phi$ and $K^{*0}$, emerge with a surprising pattern of global spin alignment. In particular, the global spin alignment for $\phi$ is unexpectedly large, while that for $K^{*0}$ is consistent with zero. The observed spin-alignment pattern and magnitude for the $\phi$ cannot be explained by conventional mechanisms, while a model with a connection to strong force fields, i.e. an effective proxy description within the Standard Model and Quantum Chromodynamics, accommodates the current data. This connection, if fully established, will open a potential new avenue for studying the behaviour of strong force fields.
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- 2023
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37. Genomic Patterns of Malignant Peripheral Nerve Sheath Tumor (MPNST) Evolution Correlate with Clinical Outcome and Are Detectable in Cell-Free DNA
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Isidro, Cortes-Ciriano, Christopher D, Steele, Katherine, Piculell, Alyaa, Al-Ibraheemi, Vanessa, Eulo, Marilyn M, Bui, Aikaterini, Chatzipli, Brendan C, Dickson, Dana C, Borcherding, Andrew, Feber, Alon, Galor, Jesse, Hart, Kevin B, Jones, Justin T, Jordan, Raymond H, Kim, Daniel, Lindsay, Colin, Miller, Yoshihiro, Nishida, Paula Z, Proszek, Jonathan, Serrano, R Taylor, Sundby, Jeffrey J, Szymanski, Nicole J, Ullrich, David, Viskochil, Xia, Wang, Matija, Snuderl, Peter J, Park, Adrienne M, Flanagan, Angela C, Hirbe, Nischalan, Pillay, and David T, Miller
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Oncology - Abstract
Malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor (MPNST), an aggressive soft-tissue sarcoma, occurs in people with neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) and sporadically. Whole-genome and multiregional exome sequencing, transcriptomic, and methylation profiling of 95 tumor samples revealed the order of genomic events in tumor evolution. Following biallelic inactivation of NF1, loss of CDKN2A or TP53 with or without inactivation of polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2) leads to extensive somatic copy-number aberrations (SCNA). Distinct pathways of tumor evolution are associated with inactivation of PRC2 genes and H3K27 trimethylation (H3K27me3) status. Tumors with H3K27me3 loss evolve through extensive chromosomal losses followed by whole-genome doubling and chromosome 8 amplification, and show lower levels of immune cell infiltration. Retention of H3K27me3 leads to extensive genomic instability, but an immune cell-rich phenotype. Specific SCNAs detected in both tumor samples and cell-free DNA (cfDNA) act as a surrogate for H3K27me3 loss and immune infiltration, and predict prognosis.Significance:MPNST is the most common cause of death and morbidity for individuals with NF1, a relatively common tumor predisposition syndrome. Our results suggest that somatic copy-number and methylation profiling of tumor or cfDNA could serve as a biomarker for early diagnosis and to stratify patients into prognostic and treatment-related subgroups.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 517
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- 2023
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38. Enzymological Characterization of 64Cu-Labeled Neprilysin Substrates and Their Application for Modulating the Renal Clearance of Targeted Radiopharmaceuticals
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Florian Brandt, Martin Ullrich, Johanna Wodtke, Klaus Kopka, Michael Bachmann, Reik Löser, Jens Pietzsch, Hans-Jürgen Pietzsch, and Robert Wodtke
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Drug Discovery ,Molecular Medicine - Published
- 2023
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39. Georg Schmorl prize of the German spine society (DWG) 2022: current treatment for inpatients with osteoporotic thoracolumbar fractures—results of the EOFTT study
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Bernhard Ullrich
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Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Surgery - Abstract
Aim Osteoporotic thoracolumbar fractures are of increasing importance. To identify the optimal treatment strategy this multicentre prospective cohort study was performed. Purpose Patients suffering from osteoporotic thoracolumbar fractures were included. Excluded were tumour diseases, infections and limb fractures. Age, sex, trauma mechanism, OF classification, OF-score, treatment strategy, pain condition and mobilization were analysed. Methods A total of 518 patients’ aged 75 ± 10 (41–97) years were included in 17 centre. A total of 174 patients were treated conservatively, and 344 were treated surgically, of whom 310 (90%) received minimally invasive treatment. An increase in the OF classification was associated with an increase in both the likelihood of surgery and the surgical invasiveness. Results Five (3%) complications occurred during conservative treatment, and 46 (13%) occurred in the surgically treated patients. 4 surgical site infections and 2 mechanical failures requested revision surgery. At discharge pain improved significantly from a visual analogue scale score of 7.7 (surgical) and 6.0 (conservative) to a score of 4 in both groups (p p = 0.001), with a significantly stronger (p = 0.007) improvement in the surgically treated patients. Conclusion Fracture severity according to the OF classification is significantly correlated with higher surgery rates and higher invasiveness of surgery. The most commonly used surgical strategy was minimally invasive short-segmental hybrid stabilization followed by kyphoplasty/vertebroplasty. Despite the worse clinical conditions of the surgically treated patients both conservative and surgical treatment led to an improved pain situation and mobility during the inpatient stay to nearly the same level for both treatments.
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- 2023
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40. Lakota Texts: Narratives of Lakota Life And Culture in the Twentieth Century
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Jan Ullrich
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Linguistics and Language ,Language and Linguistics - Published
- 2023
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41. Fall Risk Prediction in Parkinson's Disease Using Real-World Inertial Sensor Gait Data
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Martin Ullrich, Nils Roth, Arne Kuderle, Robert Richer, Till Gladow, Heiko Gasner, Franz Marxreiter, Jochen Klucken, Bjoern M. Eskofier, and Felix Kluge
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Health Information Management ,Health Informatics ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Computer Science Applications - Abstract
Falls are an eminent risk for older adults and especially patients with neurodegenerative disorders, such as Parkinson's disease (PD). Recent advancements in wearable sensor technology and machine learning may provide a possibility for an individualized prediction of fall risk based on gait recordings from standardized gait tests or from unconstrained real-world scenarios. However, the most effective aggregation of continuous real-world data as well as the potential of unsupervised gait tests recorded over multiple days for fall risk prediction still need to be investigated. Therefore, we present a data set containing real-world gait and unsupervised 4x10-Meter-Walking-Tests of 40 PD patients, continuously recorded with foot-worn inertial sensors over a period of two weeks. In this prospective study, falls were self-reported during a three-month follow-up phase, serving as ground truth for fall risk prediction. The purpose of this study was to compare different data aggregation approaches and machine learning models for the prospective prediction of fall risk using gait parameters derived either from continuous real-world recordings or from unsupervised gait tests. The highest balanced accuracy of 74.0% (sensitivity: 60.0%, specificity: 88.0%) was achieved with a Random Forest Classifier applied to the real-world gait data when aggregating all walking bouts and days of each participant. Our findings suggest that fall risk can be predicted best by merging the entire two-week real-world gait data of a patient, outperforming the prediction using unsupervised gait tests (68.0% balanced accuracy) and contribute to an improved understanding of fall risk prediction.
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- 2023
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42. Modern Tendencies in Vehicle-Based Condition Monitoring of the Railway Track
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Ullrich Martin and Héctor Alberto Fernández Bobadilla
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Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Instrumentation - Published
- 2023
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43. Exploiting flux shadowing for strain and bending engineering in core–shell nanowires
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Mahmoud Al Humaidi, Julian Jakob, Ali Al Hassan, Arman Davtyan, Philipp Schroth, Ludwig Feigl, Jesús Herranz, Dmitri Novikov, Lutz Geelhaar, Tilo Baumbach, and Ullrich Pietsch
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General Materials Science - Abstract
Here we report on the non-uniform shell growth of InxGa1−xAs on the GaAs nanowire (NW) core by molecular beam epitaxy (MBE).
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- 2023
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44. THz Systems Exploiting Photonics and Communications Technologies
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Jan C. Balzer, Clara J. Saraceno, Martin Koch, Priyansha Kaurav, Ullrich R. Pfeiffer, Withawat Withayachumnankul, Thomas Kurner, Andreas Stohr, Mohammed El-Absi, Ali Al-Haj Abbas, Thomas Kaiser, and Andreas Czylwik
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General Engineering ,Energy Engineering and Power Technology - Published
- 2023
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45. An electrolyte additive for the improved high voltage performance of LiNi0.5Mn1.5O4 (LNMO) cathodes in Li-ion batteries
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Minh Tri Nguyen, Hieu Quang Pham, José Augusto Berrocal, Ilja Gunkel, and Ullrich Steiner
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Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,General Materials Science ,General Chemistry - Abstract
We demonstrate a film-forming electrolyte additive that stabilises the LNMO cathode/electrolyte interface for rechargeable lithium-ion batteries.
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- 2023
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46. On the Arithmetic Complexity of the Bandwidth of Bandlimited Signals
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Holger Boche, Yannik N. Bock, and Ullrich J. Monich
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FOS: Computer and information sciences ,Computer Science - Information Theory ,Information Theory (cs.IT) ,Library and Information Sciences ,Computer Science Applications ,Information Systems - Abstract
The bandwidth of a signal is an important physical property that is of relevance in many signal- and information-theoretic applications. In this paper we study questions related to the computability of the bandwidth of computable bandlimited signals. To this end we employ the concept of Turing computability, which exactly describes what is theoretically feasible and can be computed on a digital computer. Recently, it has been shown that there exist computable bandlimited signals with finite energy, the actual bandwidth of which is not a computable number, and hence cannot be computed on a digital computer. In this work, we consider the most general class of band-limited signals, together with different computable representations thereof. Among other things, our analysis includes a characterization of the arithmetic complexity of the bandwidth of such signals and yields a negative answer to the question of whether it is at least possible to compute non-trivial upper or lower bounds for the bandwidth of a bandlimited signal. Furthermore, we relate the problem of bandwidth computation to the theory of oracle machines. In particular, we consider halting and totality oracles, which belong to the most frequently investigated oracle machines in the theory of computation.
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- 2023
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47. Präkonzepte zum Unterrichten von Sportlehramtsstudierenden
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Lisa Ullrich, Tim Heemsoth, and Claus Krieger
- Abstract
Sportlehramtsstudierende sind zu Beginn ihres Studiums keine unbeschriebenen Blätter. Vielmehr verfügen sie über vielfältige sportbezogene Erfahrungen aus Schule und Verein sowie damit verbundene Vorstellungen, sog. Präkonzepte, zum subjektiv sinnvoll empfundenen Unterrichten. Wir gehen davon aus, dass diese – bislang unbekannten – fachdidaktischen Präkonzepte darüber mitentscheiden, wie gut die Ausbildung von professioneller Handlungskompetenz gelingt. Der folgende Beitrag beschreibt und systematisiert erstmals Präkonzepte zum Unterrichten im Fach Sport von 190 angehenden Sportlehrkräften auf der Basis von Planungsüberlegungen. Mit Hilfe der typenbildenden Inhaltsanalyse konnten vier Präkonzepte beschrieben werden, die sich insbesondere durch die gewählten inhaltlichen und methodischen unterrichtlichen Vorgehensweisen unterscheiden. Ihre inhaltliche Validität konnte durch bedeutsame Zusammenhänge mit Lehr-Lern-Überzeugungen teilweise bestätigt werden. Insgesamt ermöglicht dieser Artikel ein besseres Verständnis der Präkonzepte von Sportlehramtsstudierenden zum Unterrichten im Fach Sport, wovon die fachdidaktische Hochschullehre zukünftig profitieren könnte.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Notizen aus der Chemie
- Author
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Annika Bande, Eva Blasco, Georg Dierkes, Johanna Heine, Alexander Hinz, Constantin Hoch, Ullrich Jahn, Hajo Kries, Björn Meermann, Erik Strub, Frank Tambornino, and Carl Christoph Tzschucke
- Subjects
General Chemical Engineering ,General Chemistry - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. L’ étude descriptive des vécus affectifs dans la phénoménologie de Husserl
- Author
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Melle, Ullrich
- Subjects
General Economics, Econometrics and Finance - Abstract
Cet article est la traduction de la première partied’un chapitre d’ouvrage écrit par Ullrich Melle, ayant pour titre original « Husserls deskriptive Erforschung der Gefühlserlebnisse » et paru en 2012. La traduction de cet article nous a paru particulièrement pertinente en raison du contexte actuel effervescent autour du problème de l’affectivité chez Husserl, matérialisé bien sûr par la parution tant attendue des Studien zur Struktur des Bewußtseins, notamment de leur second volume intitulé ...
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Reseñas de libros
- Author
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Nicholas Wilshere, Nicholas Lane, Patrick Finglass, Jan P. Stronk, Giuseppe Lentini, Nigel Wilson, Nicolas Richer, David M. Johnson, Paolo B. Cipolla, Raquel Fornieles, Martin M. Bauer, Juan Luis López Cruces, Evina Sistakou, Patricia Varona Codeso, Juan Francisco Martos Montiel, Nikoletta Kanavou, Monica Berti, Jordi Redondo, Francesca Benvenuti, Marc Steinmann, Egil Kraggerud, Heiko Ullrich, Jeanne Marie Neumann, Clemens Schlip, Frank T. Coulson, Erica Bexley, Jens-Olaf Lindermann, Roser Homar, Anita Di Stefano, Hedwig Schmalzgruber, Fabrizio Oppedisano, Javier Uría, Brian Jeffrey Maxson, Julián Solana Pujalte, Alejandro Abad Mellizo, Alejandra Guzmán Almagro, Andrea Balbo, Christian Gómez, Antoine Foucher, Fuensanta Garrido Domené, María Dolores García de Paso Carrasco, Manuel Alejandro González Muñoz, Rosario Moreno Soldevila, Míriam Librán Moreno, Mªaría Pilar García Ruiz, Albert Sabaté Morales, and Giampiero Scafoglio
- Subjects
Literature and Literary Theory ,Classics - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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