2,020 results on '"T., Paul"'
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2. Hyperthermal stress potentiates enhanced lipid utilisation in genetically improved farmed Tilapia, Oreochromis niloticus juveniles
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Akhila, S., Varghese, Tincy, Sahu, Narottam Prasad, Gupta, Subodh, Dasgupta, Subrata, Deo, Ashutosh D., Mannur, Vijayakumar Sidramappa, Nathaniel T, Paul, and Chandan, Nitish Kumar
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- 2025
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3. Determination of the effective critical breakdown field for Si, wide, and extreme bandgap semiconductor superjunction devices
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Mohamed Torky and T. Paul Chow
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Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
Designing high voltage superjunction (SJ) power devices with wide bandgap and extreme bandgap semiconductors, when compared to silicon, can enhance the trade-off between RON,sp and BV significantly, due to their >10× higher avalanche breakdown electric field. Nevertheless, because of the difference in the breakdown field profile and ionization path length, the effective breakdown field for these semiconductor SJ devices has not been determined theoretically. Consequently, we estimate and compare the effective critical breakdown electric field for SJ device structures in Si, 4H–SiC, 2H–GaN, β-Ga2O3, diamond, and AlN using Technology Computer Aided Design TCAD simulation. We also establish its dependence on the SJ devices’ structural parameters, such as the pillar thickness. Furthermore, we also quantitatively compare the on-state performance of these SJ devices, including their thermal capabilities, using a paramount figure-of-merit to underscore the potential improvement possible.
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- 2024
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4. Developments and results in the context of the JEM-EUSO program obtained with the ESAF simulation and analysis framework
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S. Abe, J. H. Adams, D. Allard, P. Alldredge, L. Anchordoqui, A. Anzalone, E. Arnone, B. Baret, D. Barghini, M. Battisti, J. Bayer, R. Bellotti, A. A. Belov, M. Bertaina, P. F. Bertone, M. Bianciotto, P. L. Biermann, F. Bisconti, C. Blaksley, S. Blin-Bondil, P. Bobik, K. Bolmgren, S. Briz, J. Burton, F. Cafagna, G. Cambié, D. Campana, F. Capel, R. Caruso, M. Casolino, C. Cassardo, A. Castellina, K. Černý, M. J. Christl, R. Colalillo, L. Conti, G. Cotto, H. J. Crawford, R. Cremonini, A. Creusot, A. Cummings, A. de Castro Gónzalez, C. de la Taille, L. del Peral, R. Diesing, P. Dinaucourt, A. Di Nola, A. Ebersoldt, T. Ebisuzaki, J. Eser, F. Fenu, S. Ferrarese, G. Filippatos, W. W. Finch, F. Flaminio, C. Fornaro, D. Fuehne, C. Fuglesang, M. Fukushima, D. Gardiol, G. K. Garipov, A. Golzio, P. Gorodetzky, F. Guarino, C. Guépin, A. Guzmán, A. Haungs, T. Heibges, J. Hernández-Carretero, F. Isgrò, E. G. Judd, F. Kajino, I. Kaneko, Y. Kawasaki, M. Kleifges, P. A. Klimov, I. Kreykenbohm, J. F. Krizmanic, V. Kungel, E. Kuznetsov, F. López Martínez, S. Mackovjak, D. Mandát, M. Manfrin, A. Marcelli, L. Marcelli, W. Marszał, J. N. Matthews, A. Menshikov, T. Mernik, M. Mese, S. S. Meyer, J. Mimouni, H. Miyamoto, Y. Mizumoto, A. Monaco, J.A Morales de los Ríos, S. Nagataki, J. M. Nachtman, D. Naumov, A. Neronov, T. Nonaka, T. Ogawa, S. Ogio, H. Ohmori, A. V. Olinto, Y. Onel, G. Osteria, A. Pagliaro, B. Panico, E. Parizot, I. H. Park, B. Pastircak, T. Paul, M. Pech, F. Perfetto, P. Picozza, L. W. Piotrowski, Z. Plebaniak, J. Posligua, R. Prevete, G. Prévôt, H. Prieto, M. Przybylak, M. Putis, E. Reali, P. Reardon, M. H. Reno, M. Ricci, M. Rodríguez Frías, G. Romoli, G. Sáez Cano, H. Sagawa, N. Sakaki, A. Santangelo, O. A. Saprykin, F. Sarazin, M. Sato, H. Schieler, P. Schovánek, V. Scotti, S. Selmane, S. A. Sharakin, K. Shinozaki, J. F. Soriano, J. Szabelski, N. Tajima, T. Tajima, Y. Takahashi, M. Takeda, Y. Takizawa, C. Tenzer, S. B. Thomas, L. G. Tkachev, T. Tomida, S. Toscano, M. Traïche, D. Trofimov, K. Tsuno, P. Vallania, L. Valore, T. M. Venters, C. Vigorito, P. von Ballmoos, M. Vrabel, S. Wada, J. Watts, A. Weindl, L. Wiencke, J. Wilms, D. Winn, H. Wistrand, I. V. Yashin, R. Young, and M. Yu. Zotov
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Astrophysics ,QB460-466 ,Nuclear and particle physics. Atomic energy. Radioactivity ,QC770-798 - Abstract
Abstract JEM-EUSO is an international program for the development of space-based Ultra-High Energy Cosmic Ray observatories. The program consists of a series of missions which are either under development or in the data analysis phase. All instruments are based on a wide-field-of-view telescope, which operates in the near-UV range, designed to detect the fluorescence light emitted by extensive air showers in the atmosphere. We describe the simulation software ESAF in the framework of the JEM-EUSO program and explain the physical assumptions used. We present here the implementation of the JEM-EUSO, POEMMA, K-EUSO, TUS, Mini-EUSO, EUSO-SPB1 and EUSO-TA configurations in ESAF. For the first time ESAF simulation outputs are compared with experimental data.
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- 2023
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5. Airborne Observations Constrain Heterogeneous Nitrogen and Halogen Chemistry on Tropospheric and Stratospheric Biomass Burning Aerosol
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Zachary C. J. Decker, Gordon A. Novak, Kenneth Aikin, Patrick R. Veres, J. Andrew Neuman, Ilann Bourgeois, T. Paul Bui, Pedro Campuzano‐Jost, Matthew M. Coggon, Douglas A. Day, Joshua P. DiGangi, Glenn S. Diskin, Maximilian Dollner, Alessandro Franchin, Carley D. Fredrickson, Karl D. Froyd, Georgios I. Gkatzelis, Hongyu Guo, Samuel R. Hall, Hannah Halliday, Katherine Hayden, Christopher D. Holmes, Jose L. Jimenez, Agnieszka Kupc, Jakob Lindaas, Ann M. Middlebrook, Richard H. Moore, Benjamin A. Nault, John B. Nowak, Demetrios Pagonis, Brett B. Palm, Jeff Peischl, Felix M. Piel, Pamela S. Rickly, Michael A. Robinson, Andrew W. Rollins, Thomas B. Ryerson, Gregory P. Schill, Kanako Sekimoto, Chelsea R. Thompson, Kenneth L. Thornhill, Joel A. Thornton, Kirk Ullmann, Carsten Warneke, Rebecca A. Washenfelder, Bernadett Weinzierl, Elizabeth B. Wiggins, Christina J. Williamson, Edward L. Winstead, Armin Wisthaler, Caroline C. Womack, and Steven S. Brown
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biomass burning ,heterogeneous chemistry ,N2O5 ,ClNO2 ,chloride ,UTLS ,Geophysics. Cosmic physics ,QC801-809 - Abstract
Abstract Heterogeneous chemical cycles of pyrogenic nitrogen and halides influence tropospheric ozone and affect the stratosphere during extreme Pyrocumulonimbus (PyroCB) events. We report field‐derived N2O5 uptake coefficients, γ(N2O5), and ClNO2 yields, φ(ClNO2), from two aircraft campaigns observing fresh smoke in the lower and mid troposphere and processed/aged smoke in the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere (UTLS). Derived φ(ClNO2) varied across the full 0–1 range but was typically
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- 2024
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6. Real-world predictors of survival in patients with limited-stage small-cell lung cancer in Manitoba, Canada
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David E. Dawe, Rebekah Rittberg, Iqra Syed, Mary Kate Shanahan, Daniel Moldaver, Oliver Bucher, Katie Galloway, Kayla Reynolds, James T. Paul, Craig Harlos, Julian O. Kim, and Shantanu Banerji
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small-cell lung cancer ,limited-stage ,performance status ,real world ,long-term survival ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
BackgroundAlthough therapy for limited-stage small-cell lung cancer (LS-SCLC) is administered with curative intent, most patients relapse and eventually die of recurrent disease. Chemotherapy (CT) with concurrent radiotherapy (RT) remains the standard of care for LS-SCLC; however, this could evolve in the near future. Therefore, understanding the current prognostic factors associated with survival is essential.ObjectiveThis real-world analysis examines factors associated with long-term survival in patients with LS-SCLC treated with CT in Manitoba, Canada.MethodsA retrospective cohort study was conducted using Manitoba Cancer Registry and CancerCare Manitoba records. Eligible patients were aged >18 years and had cytologically confirmed LS-SCLC diagnosed between January 1, 2004, and December 31, 2018, for which they received CT ± RT. Baseline patient, disease, and treatment characteristics and survival duration, characterized as short (24 months), were extracted. Overall survival (OS) was estimated at one, two, and five years and assessed using Kaplan-Meier methods and Cox proportional hazards models.ResultsOver the 15-year study period, 304 patients met the eligibility criteria. Long-term survivors comprised 39.1% of the cohort; at diagnosis, this subgroup was younger, more likely to have Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group Performance Status (ECOG PS) 0, and have normal lactate dehydrogenase, sodium, and hemoglobin levels. OS estimates for the entire cohort at one, two, and five years were 66%, 38%, and 18%, respectively. In the ECOG PS 0 subgroup, OS estimates at one, two, and five years were 85%, 52%, and 24%, respectively; OS estimates were 60%, 35%, and 17%, respectively, for ECOG PS 1−2 and were 47%, 23%, and 10%, respectively, for ECOG PS 3−4. OS was significantly higher among patients with normal serum sodium and hemoglobin levels than those with abnormal levels. Univariable hazard regression models found that ECOG PS, age at diagnosis, receipt of prophylactic cranial irradiation (PCI), and thoracic RT were associated with survival. On multivariable hazard regression, ECOG PS and receipt of PCI were associated with survival.ConclusionSurvival for greater than two years in patients with LS-SCLC treated with CT ± RT was associated with ECOG PS and receipt of PCI.
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- 2023
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7. IMPACT OF COVID-19 PANDEMIC ON THE RADIOTHERAPY AND CANCER PATIENTS IN A TERTIARY HEALTH CARE CENTER OF ASSAM, NORTHEAST INDIA: A RETROSPECTIVE SINGLE INSTITUTION STUDY
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C. Baruah, K. Deka, T. Paul, B. Sarma, P. Patowary, S. Sreeni, and B. Mahanta
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covid-19 ,radiotherapy ,pandemic ,lockdown ,oncology ,Medicine - Abstract
Background. The COVID-19 pandemic has affected every sector of health care system including the cancer care. Objective. The purpose of the study is to analyse the impact of the current COVID‑19 pandemic on routine radiotherapy practice at a tertiary hospital of Northeast India. Methods. This is a retrospective study of all patients planned for radiotherapy at Assam Medical College, a tertiary care centre, in Assam, India from January 1, 2020 to May 31, 2020. The study samples are divided into two groups: group A – patients treated from January 1, 2020, to March 20, 2020 (pre-lockdown,) and group B – patients treated from March 21, 2020, to May 31, 2020 (lockdown). The department registration numbers of all the patients were collected from the entry register, and the respective paper files were then accessed to obtain the required data. Results. A total of 153 patients were planned for radiotherapy during the study period, of these 113 patients receiving radiotherapy in the pre-lockdown period and 40 patients receiving it in the lockdown period. The number of female patients decreased from 66 (58.40%) in the pre-lockdown period to 20 (50%) during the lockdown. The number of male patients also decreased from 47 to 20 but the proportion increased from 41.5% to 50%. The proportion of patients who completed radiotherapy was 90.8% in group B compare to 88.3% in group A. Conclusion. There was a decrease in number of cancer patients, especially female during the lockdown. The pandemic has severely disrupted every aspect of cancer care.
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- 2023
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8. Dietary magnesium chelate alleviates oxidative stress and improves growth in white-leg shrimp, Penaeus vannamei (Boone, 1931), reared in inland saline water
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Panmei, Hougaina, Jana, Prasanta, Varghese, Tincy, Nathaniel T, Paul, Chadha, Narinder Kumar, Krishna, Gopal, Pailan, Gour Hari, and Dasgupta, Subrata
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- 2023
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9. Real-world predictors of survival in patients with extensive-stage small-cell lung cancer in Manitoba, Canada: a retrospective cohort study
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David E. Dawe, Rebekah Rittberg, Iqra Syed, Mary Kate Shanahan, Daniel Moldaver, Oliver Bucher, Katie Galloway, Kayla Reynolds, James T. Paul, Craig Harlos, Julian O. Kim, and Shantanu Banerji
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radiotherapy (RT) ,small cell lung cancer (SCLC) ,extensive stage (ES) ,performance status (ECOG-PS) ,real world ,long-term survival ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
BackgroundExtensive-stage small-cell lung cancer (ES-SCLC) is an incurable cancer with poor prognosis in which characteristics predictive of long-term survival are debated. The utility of agents such as immune checkpoint inhibitors highlights the importance of identifying key characteristics and treatment strategies that contribute to long-term survival and could help guide therapeutic decisions.ObjectiveThis real-world analysis examines the characteristics, treatment patterns, and clinical outcomes of patients receiving chemotherapy without immunotherapy for ES-SCLC in Manitoba, Canada.MethodsA retrospective cohort study assessed patient characteristics, treatment, and survival duration (short: 24 months) using the Manitoba Cancer Registry and CancerCare Manitoba records. Eligible patients were aged >18 years with cytologically confirmed ES-SCLC diagnosed between January 1, 2004, and December 31, 2018, and received cytotoxic chemotherapy (CT). The one-, two-, and five-year probabilities of overall survival (OS) were assessed relative to patient, disease, and treatment characteristics using Kaplan-Meier methods and Cox proportional hazards models.ResultsThis analysis included 537 patients. Cisplatin was used in 56.1% of patients, 45.6% received thoracic radiotherapy (RT), and few received prophylactic cranial irradiation (PCI). In the overall cohort, one-, two- and five-year OS rates were 26%, 8%, and 3%, respectively. For patients with Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group Performance Status (ECOG PS) 0, OS rates at one, two, and five years were 43%, 17%, and 10%, respectively, vs. 27%, 8%, and 2% for those with ECOG PS 1–2, and 16%, 3%, and 3% for those with ECOG PS 3–4. In long-term survivors, ECOG PS scores were lower and abnormal laboratory test results were less frequent. Overall, 74.4% of long-term survivors received thoracic RT and 53.5% received PCI. Known poor prognostic factors – including brain/liver metastases, high lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), abnormal sodium, and low hemoglobin levels – were less common but still seen in long-term survivors.ConclusionAlthough rare, patients with ES-SCLC may experience long-term survival with CT ± thoracic RT ± PCI. Factors predicting long-term survival include traditional prognostic factors such as ECOG PS, LDH level, and receipt of thoracic RT or PCI. These findings support current treatment algorithms for ES-SCLC and provide baseline survival estimates to assess the real-world impact of adding immune checkpoint inhibitors in the future.
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- 2023
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10. Comparative evaluation of antimicrobial efficacy of fluoride-based and self-assembling peptide P11-4-based tooth remineralization agents on Streptococcus mutans: A microbiological study
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Zaina Gayas, Umme Azher, Santhosh T Paul, Arul Selvan, C Divya Reddy, D Raghu, and Vishnu Uday
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dental caries ,fluorides ,remineralizing agents ,self-assembling peptides p11-4 ,streptococcus mutans ,Dentistry ,RK1-715 - Abstract
Background: Dental caries is a biofilm-related oral disease that continues to afflict the majority of the world's population. The disease results from an interaction between specific bacteria and dietary constituents within a biofilm known as dental plaque. Among the cariogenic microorganisms, Streptococcus mutans (S. mutans) plays pivotal role in caries-inducing processes. Objectives: Evaluate and compare the antimicrobial efficacy of self-assembling peptide P11-4-based tooth remineralization agents on S. mutans. Materials and Methods: An in vitro microbiological study. The antibacterial efficacy of self-assembling peptide P11-4 gel (Group 1), fluoride enhanced hydroxyapatite gel (Group 2), acidulated phosphate fluoride gel (Group 3), chlorhexidine gluconate gel 1.0% w/w (Group 4; positive control), and normal saline (Group 5; negative control) was performed using time-kill assay over a period of 24 h and the number of S. mutans colony-forming units (CFUs) were calculated. Statistical Analysis: Statistical analysis was done using Kruskal–Wallis test and Mann–Whitney post hoc Test. The level of significance was set at P < 0.05. Results: Group 1 showed mean CFUs (× 103) of 841.33 ± 3.51, Group 2 showed 10035.33 ± 60.68, Group 3 showed 1058.00 ± 56.96, Group 4 showed 0.00 ± 0.00, and Group 5 showed mean CFUs with 15226.67 ± 96.67. The difference in the mean CFUs (× 103) between different groups was statistically significant at P < 0.001. Conclusion: The self-assembling peptide P11-4-based tooth remineralization agent exhibited an inhibitory influence on S. mutans and hence formation of cariogenic bacteria dominant biofilm can thus be affected by its application.
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- 2023
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11. Complementary anti-cancer pathways triggered by inhibition of sideroflexin 4 in ovarian cancer
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Lia Tesfay, Bibbin T. Paul, Poornima Hegde, Molly Brewer, Samrin Habbani, Evan Jellison, Timothy Moore, Hao Wu, Suzy V. Torti, and Frank M. Torti
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract DNA damaging agents are a mainstay of standard chemotherapy for ovarian cancer. Unfortunately, resistance to such DNA damaging agents frequently develops, often due to increased activity of DNA repair pathways. Sideroflexin 4 (SFXN4) is a little-studied inner mitochondrial membrane protein. Here we demonstrate that SFXN4 plays a role in synthesis of iron sulfur clusters (Fe-S) in ovarian cancer cells and ovarian cancer tumor-initiating cells, and that knockdown of SFXN4 inhibits Fe-S biogenesis in ovarian cancer cells. We demonstrate that this has two important consequences that may be useful in anti-cancer therapy. First, inhibition of Fe-S biogenesis triggers the accumulation of excess iron, leading to oxidative stress. Second, because enzymes critical to multiple DNA repair pathways require Fe-S clusters for their function, DNA repair enzymes and DNA repair itself are inhibited by reduction of SFXN4. Through this dual mechanism, SFXN4 inhibition heightens ovarian cancer cell sensitivity to DNA-damaging drugs and DNA repair inhibitors used in ovarian cancer therapy, such as cisplatin and PARP inhibitors. Sensitization is achieved even in drug resistant ovarian cancer cells. Further, knockout of SFXN4 decreases DNA repair and profoundly inhibits tumor growth in a mouse model of ovarian cancer metastasis. Collectively, these results suggest that SFXN4 may represent a new target in ovarian cancer therapy.
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- 2022
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12. Evidence of visual crossmodal reorganization positively relates to speech outcomes in cochlear implant users
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Brandon T. Paul, Münir Demir Bajin, Mila Uzelac, Joseph Chen, Trung Le, Vincent Lin, and Andrew Dimitrijevic
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Deaf individuals who use a cochlear implant (CI) have remarkably different outcomes for auditory speech communication ability. One factor assumed to affect CI outcomes is visual crossmodal plasticity in auditory cortex, where deprived auditory regions begin to support non-auditory functions such as vision. Previous research has viewed crossmodal plasticity as harmful for speech outcomes for CI users if it interferes with sound processing, while others have demonstrated that plasticity related to visual language may be beneficial for speech recovery. To clarify, we used electroencephalography (EEG) to measure brain responses to a partial face speaking a silent single-syllable word (visual language) in 15 CI users and 13 age-matched typical-hearing controls. We used source analysis on EEG activity to measure crossmodal visual responses in auditory cortex and then compared them to CI users’ speech-in-noise listening ability. CI users’ brain response to the onset of the video stimulus (face) was larger than controls in left auditory cortex, consistent with crossmodal activation after deafness. CI users also produced a mixture of alpha (8–12 Hz) synchronization and desynchronization in auditory cortex while watching lip movement while controls instead showed desynchronization. CI users with higher speech scores had stronger crossmodal responses in auditory cortex to the onset of the video, but those with lower speech scores had increases in alpha power during lip movement in auditory areas. Therefore, evidence of crossmodal reorganization in CI users does not necessarily predict poor speech outcomes, and differences in crossmodal activation during lip reading may instead relate to strategies or differences that CI users use in audiovisual speech communication.
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- 2022
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13. Rapid cloud removal of dimethyl sulfide oxidation products limits SO₂ and cloud condensation nuclei production in the marine atmosphere
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Novak, Gordon A., Fite, Charles H., Holmes, Christopher D., Veres, Patrick R., Neuman, J. Andrew, Faloona, Ian, Thornton, Joel A., Wolfe, Glenn M., Vermeuel, Michael P., Jernigan, Christopher M., Peischl, Jeff, Ryerson, Thomas B., Thompson, Chelsea R., Bourgeois, Ilann, Warneke, Carsten, Gkatzelis, Georgios I., Coggon, Mathew M., Sekimoto, Kanako, Bui, T. Paul, Dean-Day, Jonathan, Diskin, Glenn S., DiGangi, Joshua P., Nowak, John B., Moore, Richard H., Wiggins, Elizabeth B., Winstead, Edward L., Robinson, Claire, Thornhill, K. Lee, Sanchez, Kevin J., Hall, Samuel R., Ullmann, Kirk, Dollner, Maximilian, Weinzierl, Bernadett, Blake, Donald R., and Bertram, Timothy H.
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- 2021
14. An Observation-Based, Reduced-Form Model for Oxidation in the Remote Marine Troposphere
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Colleen B. Baublitz, Arlene M. Fiore, Sarah M. Ludwig, Julie M. Nicely, Glenn M. Wolfe, Lee T. Murray, Róisín Commane, Michael J. Prather, Daniel C. Anderson, Gustavo Correa, Bryan N. Duncan, Melanie Follette-Cook, Daniel M. Westervelt, Ilann Bourgeois, William H. Brune, T. Paul Bui, Joshua P. DiGangi, Glenn S. Diskin, Samuel R. Hall, Kathryn McKain, David O. Miller, Jeff Peischl, Alexander B. Thames, Chelsea R. Thompson, Kirk Ullmann, and Steven C. Wofsy
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Earth Resources and Remote Sensing ,Meteorology and Climatology - Abstract
The hydroxyl radical (OH) fuels atmospheric chemical cycling as the main sink for methane and a driver of the formation and loss of many air pollutants, but direct OH observations are sparse. We develop and evaluate an observation-based proxy for short term, spatial variations in OH (ProxyOH) in the remote marine troposphere using unprecedented and comprehensive measurements from the NASA Atmospheric Tomography (ATom) airborne campaign. ProxyOH is a reduced form of the OH steady-state equation representing the dominant OH production and loss pathways in the remote marine troposphere, according to box model simulations of OH constrained with ATom observations. ProxyOH comprises only eight variables that are generally observed by routine ground- or satellite-based instruments. ProxyOH scales linearly with in situ [OH] spatial variations along the ATom flight tracks (median r2 = 0.90, interquartile range = 0.80 – 0.94 across 2 km altitude by 20° latitudinal regions). We deconstruct spatial variations in ProxyOH as a first-order approximation of the sensitivity of OH variations to individual terms. Two terms modulate within-region ProxyOH variations—water vapor (H2O) and, to a lesser extent, nitric oxide (NO). This implies that a limited set of observations could offer a novel avenue for observation-based mapping of OH spatial variations over much of the remote marine troposphere. Both H2O and NO are expected to change with climate, while NO also varies strongly with human activities. We also illustrate the utility of ProxyOH as a process-based approach for evaluating inter-model differences in remote marine tropospheric OH.
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- 2023
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15. Sea spray aerosol concentration modulated by sea surface temperature
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Liu, Shang, Liu, Cheng-Cheng, Froyd, Karl D., Schill, Gregory P., Murphy, Daniel M., Bui, T. Paul, Dean-Day, Jonathan M., Weinzierl, Bernadett, Dollner, Maximilian, Diskin, Glenn S., Chen, Gao, and Gao, Ru-Shan
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- 2021
16. Role of Neutrophil-lymphocyte Ratio as Shortterm Outcome Prognostic Indicator Following an Acute ST Segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction-A Prospective Observational Study
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Catherine T Paul, Vijayashree Thyagaraj, and Swati Hegde
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acute coronary syndrome ,complication ,morbidity ,mortality ,prognosis ,Medicine - Abstract
Introduction: The ratio of Neutrophils to Lymphocytes (NLR) has recently arisen as a likely biomarker to forecast clinical outcomes in Ischaemic Heart Disease (IHD). The NLR in cases of ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction (STEMI) with respect to survival outcomes and complications is not well established in literature and was evaluated in the present study. Aim: To study the association of NLR with complications and mortality following acute STEMI. Materials and Methods: A short-term prospective observational study was conducted in 102 participants diagnosed with STEMI. The study was conducted at tertiary care hospital from October 2015 to September 2017. Haematological, serological and radiographical findings were obtained and compared between survivors and non survivors. Receiver Operator Curve (ROC) and Area Under the Curve (AUC) analysis were performed to analyse the utility of NLR in predicting mortality and major complications. Results: The mean age of patients was 64.12±14.82 years and 75.5% of them were male. Non survivors (9.8%) had a greater incidence of cardiogenic shock (p-value
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- 2021
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17. Anticipating hopes, fears and expectations towards COVID-19 vaccines: A qualitative interview study in seven European countries
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Katharina T. Paul, Bettina M. Zimmermann, Paolo Corsico, Amelia Fiske, Susi Geiger, Stephanie Johnson, Janneke M.L. Kuiper, Elisa Lievevrouw, Luca Marelli, Barbara Prainsack, Wanda Spahl, and Ine Van Hoyweghen
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SARS-CoV-2 ,Vaccine hesitancy ,Europe ,Pandemic ,Qualitative research ,Vaccination policy ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Vaccine uptake is essential to managing the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, and vaccine hesitancy is a persistent concern. At the same time, both decision-makers and the general population have high hopes for COVID-19 vaccination. Drawing from qualitative interview data collected in October 2020 as part of the pan-European SolPan study, this study explores early and anticipatory expectations, hopes and fears regarding COVID-19 vaccination across seven European countries. We find that stances towards COVID-19 vaccines were shaped by personal lived experiences, but participants also aligned personal and communal interests in their considerations. Trust, particularly in expert institutions, was an important prerequisite for vaccine acceptance, but participants also expressed doubts about the rapid vaccine development process. Our findings emphasise the need to move beyond the study of factors driving vaccine hesitancy, and instead to focus on how people personally perceive vaccination in their particular social and political context.
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- 2022
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18. Democratic research: Setting up a research commons for a qualitative, comparative, longitudinal interview study during the COVID-19 pandemic
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Bettina M. Zimmermann, Hendrik Wagenaar, Katharina Kieslich, Barbara Prainsack, Gert Meyers, Alena Buyx, Seliem El-Sayed, Amelia Fiske, Ilaria Galasso, Susi Geiger, Nora Hangel, Ruth Horn, Stephanie Johnson, Janneke M.L. Kuiper, Federica Lucivero, Stuart McLennan, Katharina T. Paul, Mirjam Pot, Isabella Radhuber, Gabrielle Samuel, Tamar Sharon, Lotje Siffels, Ine Van Hoyweghen, Sula Awad, Théo Bourgeron, Johanna Eichinger, Marie Gaille, Christian Haddad, Sarah Hayes, Andrew Hoffman, Marie Jasser, Joke Kenens, Marjolein Lanzing, Sébastien Libert, Elisa Lievevrouw, Luca Marelli, Fernandos Ongolly, Amicia Phillips, Clémence Pinel, Katharina Riesinger, Stephen Roberts, Gertrude Saxinger, Lukas Schlogl, Franziska Schönweitz, Anna Sierawska, Wanda Spahl, Emma Stendahl, Siemen Vanstreels, Simeon Vidolov, and Elias Weiss
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Research and data commons ,Qualitative research ,Comparative research ,Solidarity ,COVID-19 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
The sudden and dramatic advent of the COVID-19 pandemic led to urgent demands for timely, relevant, yet rigorous research. This paper discusses the origin, design, and execution of the SolPan research commons, a large-scale, international, comparative, qualitative research project that sought to respond to the need for knowledge among researchers and policymakers in times of crisis. The form of organization as a research commons is characterized by an underlying solidaristic attitude of its members and its intrinsic organizational features in which research data and knowledge in the study is shared and jointly owned. As such, the project is peer-governed, rooted in (idealist) social values of academia, and aims at providing tools and benefits for its members. In this paper, we discuss challenges and solutions for qualitative studies that seek to operate as research commons.
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- 2022
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19. Beyond the 'information deficit model' - understanding vaccine-hesitant attitudes of midwives in Austria: a qualitative study
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Lisa Lehner, Janna Gribi, Kathryn Hoffmann, Katharina T. Paul, and Ruth Kutalek
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Vaccine hesitancy - MMR vaccinations - midwives - midwife training - health communication ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Healthcare workers are considered key stakeholders in efforts to address vaccine hesitancy. Midwives’ influence in advising expectant parents on early-childhood vaccinations is unquestioned, yet they remain an understudied group. The literature on midwives’ attitudes towards vaccinations is also inconclusive. We therefore conducted an explorative qualitative study on midwives’ vaccine-hesitant attitudes towards MMR (measles-mumps-rubella) vaccinations in Austria. Methods We conducted 12 in-depth interviews on their knowledge, concerns, and beliefs with midwives who self-identified as hesitant or resistant towards early-childhood MMR vaccinations. We analyzed the data using a grounded theory approach to distill common themes and meanings. Results Healthcare workers’ stewardship to address vaccine hesitancy is commonly framed in terms of the “information deficit model”: disseminate the right information and remedy publics’ information deficits. Our findings suggest that this approach is too simplistic: Midwives’ professional self-understanding, their notions of “good care” and “good parenthood” inflect how they engage with vaccine information and how they address it to their clients. Midwives’ model of care prioritized good counseling rather than sharing scientific information in a “right the wrong”-manner. They saw themselves as critical consumers of that information and as promoting “empowered patients” who were free, and affluent enough, to make their own choices about vaccinations. In so doing, they also often promoted traditional notions of motherhood. Conclusions Research shows that, for parents, vaccine decision-making builds on trust and dialogue with healthcare professionals and is more than a technical issue. In order to foster these interactions, understanding healthcare professionals’ means of engaging with information is key to understanding how they engage with their constituents. Healthcare workers are more than neutral resources; their daily praxis influenced by their professional standing in the healthcare system. Similarly, healthcare professionals’ views on vaccinations cannot be remedied with more information either. Building better and more diverse curricula for different groups of healthcare workers must attend to their respective roles, ethics of care, and professional beliefs. Taken together, better models for addressing vaccine hesitancy can only be developed by espousing a multi-faceted view of decision-making processes and interactions of healthcare workers with constituents.
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- 2021
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20. A novel murine model of multi-day moderate ethanol exposure reveals increased intestinal dysfunction and liver inflammation with age
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Rachel H McMahan, Kevin M Najarro, Juliet E Mullen, Madison T Paul, David J Orlicky, Holly J Hulsebus, and Elizabeth J Kovacs
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Alcohol ,Aging ,Gut barrier ,Liver ,Antimicrobial peptide ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 ,Geriatrics ,RC952-954.6 - Abstract
Abstract Background There are currently > 600 million people over the age of 65 globally and this number is expected to double by the year 2050. Alcohol use among this population is on the rise, which is concerning as aging is associated with increased risk for a number of chronic illnesses. As most studies investigating the effects of alcohol have focused on young/middle-aged populations, there is a dearth of information regarding the consequences of alcohol use in older consumers. In addition, most murine ethanol models have concentrated on exposure to very high levels of ethanol, while the vast majority of elderly drinkers do not consume alcohol in excess; instead, they drink on average 2 alcoholic beverages a day, 3–4 days a week. Methods We designed a murine model of aging and moderate ethanol consumption to determine if the deleterious effects of alcohol on the gut-liver axis are exacerbated in aged, relative to younger, animals. Aged and young mice were exposed to a multi-day moderate exposure ethanol regimen for 4 weeks and changes in gut permeability along with intestinal tight junction protein and antimicrobial peptide gene expression were measured. In addition, hepatic inflammation was assessed by histological analysis, inflammatory gene expression and flow cytometric analysis of inflammatory infiltrate. Results Our results reveal that in aged, but not young mice, moderate ethanol exposure yielded significantly worsened intestinal permeability, including increased bacterial translocation from the gut, elevated serum iFABP and leakage of FITC-dextran from the gut. Interestingly, moderate ethanol exposure in young animals led to gut protective transcriptional changes in the ileum while this protective response was blunted in aged mice. Finally, moderate ethanol exposure in aged mice also resulted in marked inflammatory changes in the liver. Conclusions These results demonstrate that aged mice are more susceptible to ethanol-induced gut barrier dysfunction and liver inflammation, even at moderate doses of ethanol. This increased vulnerability to ethanol’s gastrointestinal effects has important implications for alcohol use in the aging population. Future studies will explore whether improving intestinal barrier function can reverse these age-related changes.
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- 2021
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21. Computational synthesis of substrates by crystal cleavage
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Joshua T. Paul, Alice Galdi, Christopher Parzyck, Kyle M. Shen, Jared Maxson, and Richard G. Hennig
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Materials of engineering and construction. Mechanics of materials ,TA401-492 ,Computer software ,QA76.75-76.765 - Abstract
Abstract The discovery of substrate materials has been dominated by trial and error, opening the opportunity for a systematic search. We generate bonding networks for materials from the Materials Project and systematically break up to three bonds in the networks for three-dimensional crystals. Successful cleavage reduces the bonding network to two periodic dimensions. We identify 4693 symmetrically unique cleavage surfaces across 2133 bulk crystals, 4626 of which have a maximum Miller index of one. We characterize the likelihood of cleavage by creating monolayers of these surfaces and calculating their thermodynamic stability using density functional theory to discover 3991 potential substrates. Following, we identify distinct trends in the work of cleavage and relate them to bonding in the three-dimensional precursor. We illustrate the potential impact of the substrate database by identifying several improved epitaxial substrates for the transparent conductor BaSnO3. The open-source databases of predicted and commercial substrates are available at MaterialsWeb.org.
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- 2021
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22. Global airborne sampling reveals a previously unobserved dimethyl sulfide oxidation mechanism in the marine atmosphere
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Veres, Patrick R., Neuman, J. Andrew, Bertram, Timothy H., Assaf, Emmanuel, Wolfe, Glenn M., Williamson, Christina J., Weinzierl, Bernadett, Tilmes, Simone, Thompson, Chelsea R., Thames, Alexander B., Schroder, Jason C., Saiz-Lopez, Alfonso, Rollins, Andrew W., Roberts, James M., Price, Derek, Peischl, Jeff, Nault, Benjamin A., Møller, Kristian H., Miller, David O., Meinardi, Simone, Li, Qinyi, Lamarque, Jean-Francois, Kupc, Agnieszka, Kjaergaard, Henrik G., Kinnison, Douglas, Jimenez, Jose L., Jernigan, Christopher M., Hornbrook, Rebecca S., Hills, Alan, Dollner, Maximilian, Day, Douglas A., Cuevas, Carlos A., Campuzano-Jost, Pedro, Burkholder, James, Bui, T. Paul, Brune, William H., Brown, Steven S., Brock, Charles A., Bourgeois, Ilann, Blake, Donald R., Apel, Eric C., and Ryerson, Thomas B.
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- 2020
23. Terrain Trapped Airflows and Precipitation Variability during an Atmospheric River Event
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Ryoo, Ju-Mee, Chiao, Sen, Spackman, J. Ryan, Iraci, Laura T., Ralph, F. Martin, Martin, Andrew, Dole, Randall M., Marrero, Josette E., Yates, Emma L., Bui, T. Paul, Dean-Day, Jonathan M., and Chang, Cecilia S.
- Published
- 2020
24. Neural responses to naturalistic audiovisual speech are related to listening demand in cochlear implant users
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Bowen Xiu, Brandon T. Paul, Joseph M. Chen, Trung N. Le, Vincent Y. Lin, and Andrew Dimitrijevic
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speech tracking ,EEG ,listening in noise ,attention ,temporal response function ,movies ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
There is a weak relationship between clinical and self-reported speech perception outcomes in cochlear implant (CI) listeners. Such poor correspondence may be due to differences in clinical and “real-world” listening environments and stimuli. Speech in the real world is often accompanied by visual cues, background environmental noise, and is generally in a conversational context, all factors that could affect listening demand. Thus, our objectives were to determine if brain responses to naturalistic speech could index speech perception and listening demand in CI users. Accordingly, we recorded high-density electroencephalogram (EEG) while CI users listened/watched a naturalistic stimulus (i.e., the television show, “The Office”). We used continuous EEG to quantify “speech neural tracking” (i.e., TRFs, temporal response functions) to the show’s soundtrack and 8–12 Hz (alpha) brain rhythms commonly related to listening effort. Background noise at three different signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs), +5, +10, and +15 dB were presented to vary the difficulty of following the television show, mimicking a natural noisy environment. The task also included an audio-only (no video) condition. After each condition, participants subjectively rated listening demand and the degree of words and conversations they felt they understood. Fifteen CI users reported progressively higher degrees of listening demand and less words and conversation with increasing background noise. Listening demand and conversation understanding in the audio-only condition was comparable to that of the highest noise condition (+5 dB). Increasing background noise affected speech neural tracking at a group level, in addition to eliciting strong individual differences. Mixed effect modeling showed that listening demand and conversation understanding were correlated to early cortical speech tracking, such that high demand and low conversation understanding occurred with lower amplitude TRFs. In the high noise condition, greater listening demand was negatively correlated to parietal alpha power, where higher demand was related to lower alpha power. No significant correlations were observed between TRF/alpha and clinical speech perception scores. These results are similar to previous findings showing little relationship between clinical speech perception and quality-of-life in CI users. However, physiological responses to complex natural speech may provide an objective measure of aspects of quality-of-life measures like self-perceived listening demand.
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- 2022
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25. PCB-77 biodegradation potential of biosurfactant producing bacterial isolates recovered from contaminated soil
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Monika Sandhu, Atish T. Paul, Jarosław Proćków, José Manuel Pérez de la Lastra, and Prabhat N. Jha
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polychlorinated biphenyl ,biodegradation ,biosurfactant ,Pseudomonas aeruginosa ,Pseudomonas plecoglossicida ,Priestia megaterium ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) are persistent organic pollutants widely distributed in the environment and possess deleterious health effects. The main objective of the study was to obtain bacterial isolates from PCB-contaminated soil for enhanced biodegradation of PCB-77. Selective enrichment resulted in the isolation of 33 strains of PCB-contaminated soil nearby Bhilai steel plant, Chhattisgarh, India. Based on the prominent growth using biphenyl as the sole carbon source and the confirmation of its degradation by GC-MS/MS analysis, four isolates were selected for further study. The isolates identified by 16S rRNA gene sequencing were Pseudomonas aeruginosa MAPB-2, Pseudomonas plecoglossicida MAPB-6, Brucella anthropi MAPB-9, and Priestia megaterium MAPB-27. The isolate MAPB-9 showed a degradation of 66.15% biphenyl, while MAPB-2, MAPB-6, and MAPB-27 showed a degradation of 62.06, 57.02, and 56.55%, respectively in 48 h. Additionally, the degradation ability of these strains was enhanced with addition of co-metabolite glucose (0.2%) in the culture medium. Addition of glucose showed 100% degradation of biphenyl by MAPB-9, in 48 h, while MAPB-6, MAPB-2, and MAPB-27 showed 97.1, 67.5, and 53.3% degradation, respectively as analyzed by GC-MS/MS. Furthermore, in the presence of inducer, PCB-77 was found to be 59.89, 30.49, 27.19, and 4.43% degraded by MAPB-6, MAPB-9, MAPB-2, and MAPB-27, respectively in 7 d. The production of biosurfactants that aid in biodegradation process were observed in all the isolates. This was confirmed by ATR-FTIR analysis that showed the presence of major functional groups (CH2, CH3, CH, = CH2, C–O–C, C-O) of the biosurfactant. The biosurfactants were further identified by HPTLC and GC-MS/MS analysis. Present study is the first to report PCB-77 degradation potential of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, B. anthropi, Pseudomonas plecoglossicida, and Priestia megaterium. Similarly, this is the first report on Pseudomonas plecoglossicida and Priestia megaterium for PCB biodegradation. Our results suggest that the above isolates can be used for the biodegradation of biphenyl and PCB-77 in PCB-contaminated soil.
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- 2022
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26. Computation of distribution of relaxation times by Tikhonov regularization for Li ion batteries: usage of L-curve method
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T. Paul, P. W. Chi, Phillip M. Wu, and M. K. Wu
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract In this paper, the distribution of relaxation times (DRTs) functions are calculated numerically in Matlab for synthetic impedance data from single parallel $$RC$$ RC circuit and two parallel $$RC$$ RC circuits connected in series, experimental impedance data from supercapacitors and α-LiFeO2 anode based Li ion batteries. The quality of the impedance data is checked with the Kramers–Krönig (KK) relations. The DRTs are calculated within the KK compatible regime for all the systems using Tikhonov regularization (TR) method. Here we use a fast and simple L-curve method to estimate the TR parameter (λ) for regularization of the Fredholm integral equations of first kind in impedance. Estimation of the regularization parameters are performed effectively from the offset of the global corner of the L-curve rather than simply using the global corner. The physical significances of DRT peaks are also discussed by calculating the effective resistances and capacitances coupled with peak fitting program. For instance, two peaks in the DRTs justify the electrical double layer capacitance and ion diffusion phenomena for supercapacitors in low to intermediate frequencies respectively. Moreover, the surface film effect, Li/electrolyte and electrode/electrolyte charge transfer related processes are identified for α-LiFeO2 anode based Li-ion batteries. This estimation of the offset of the global corner extends the L-curve approach coupled with the Tikhonov regularization in the field of electrochemistry and can also be applied in similar process detection methods.
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- 2021
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27. The Need for Nonprofit Entrepreneurship Education
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Thomas, T. Paul and Van Slyke, Craig
- Abstract
Despite the growth of entrepreneurship education over the last 20 years, there remains an unserved need for entrepreneurship educational programs designed for those interested in starting nonprofit organizations. The authors discuss the need for such programs, and how business educators are well equipped to satisfy this need. They also offer an early-stage nonprofit entrepreneurship program as support for their claims.
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- 2019
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28. Performance projection of high-voltage, quasi-lateral diamond MOSFET for power electronics applications
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Guo, Zhibo and Chow, T. Paul
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- 2020
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29. Degradation of forward current density with increasing blocking voltage in diamond Schottky-pn diodes
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Hitchcock, Collin and Chow, T. Paul
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- 2020
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30. ROAD SEGMENTATION ON LOW RESOLUTION LIDAR POINT CLOUDS FOR AUTONOMOUS VEHICLES
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L. Gigli, B. R. Kiran, T. Paul, A. Serna, N. Vemuri, B. Marcotegui, and S. Velasco-Forero
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Technology ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 ,Applied optics. Photonics ,TA1501-1820 - Abstract
Point cloud datasets for perception tasks in the context of autonomous driving often rely on high resolution 64-layer Light Detection and Ranging (LIDAR) scanners. They are expensive to deploy on real-world autonomous driving sensor architectures which usually employ 16/32 layer LIDARs. We evaluate the effect of subsampling image based representations of dense point clouds on the accuracy of the road segmentation task. In our experiments the low resolution 16/32 layer LIDAR point clouds are simulated by subsampling the original 64 layer data, for subsequent transformation in to a feature map in the Bird-Eye-View(BEV) and Spherical-View (SV) representations of the point cloud. We introduce the usage of the local normal vector with the LIDAR’s spherical coordinates as an input channel to existing LoDNN architectures. We demonstrate that this local normal feature in conjunction with classical features not only improves performance for binary road segmentation on full resolution point clouds, but it also reduces the negative impact on the accuracy when subsampling dense point clouds as compared to the usage of classical features alone. We assess our method with several experiments on two datasets: KITTI Road-segmentation benchmark and the recently released Semantic KITTI dataset.
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- 2020
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31. Metagenomic analysis for taxonomic and functional potential of Polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and Polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) degrading bacterial communities in steel industrial soil.
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Monika Sandhu, Atish T Paul, and Prabhat N Jha
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Iron and steel industries are the major contributors to persistent organic pollutants (POPs). The microbial community present at such sites has the potential to remediate these contaminants. The present study highlights the metabolic potential of the resident bacterial community of PAHs and PCB contaminated soil nearby Bhilai steel plant, Chhattisgarh (India). The GC-MS/MS analysis of soil samples MGB-2 (sludge) and MGB-3 (dry soil) resulted in identification of different classes of POPs including PAHs {benzo[a]anthracene (nd; 17.69%), fluorene (15.89%, nd), pyrene (nd; 18.7%), benzo(b)fluoranthene (3.03%, nd), benzo(k)fluoranthene (11.29%; nd), perylene (5.23%; nd)} and PCBs (PCB-15, PCB-95, and PCB-136). Whole-genome metagenomic analysis by Oxford Nanopore GridION Technology revealed predominance of domain bacteria (97.4%; 97.5%) followed by eukaryote (1.4%; 1.5%), archaea (1.2%; 0.9%) and virus (0.02%; 0.04%) in MGB-2 and MGB-3 respectively. Proteobacteria (44.3%; 50.0%) to be the prominent phylum followed by Actinobacteria (22.1%; 19.5%) in MBG-2 and MBG-3, respectively. However, Eukaryota microbial communities showed a predominance of phylum Ascomycota (20.5%; 23.6%), Streptophyta (18.5%, 17.0%) and unclassified (derived from Eukaryota) (12.1%; 12.2%) in MGB-2 and MGB-3. The sample MGB-3 was richer in macronutrients (C, N, P), supporting high microbial diversity than MGB-2. The presence of reads for biphenyl degradation, dioxin degradation, PAH degradation pathways can be further correlated with the presence of PCB and PAH as detected in the MGB-2 and MGB-3 samples. Further, taxonomic vis-à-vis functional analysis identified Burkholderia, Bradyrhizobium, Mycobacterium, and Rhodopseudomonas as the keystone degrader of PAH and PCB. Overall, our results revealed the importance of metagenomic and physicochemical analysis of the contaminated site, which improves the understanding of metabolic potential and adaptation of bacteria growing under POP contaminated environments.
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- 2022
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32. Improved electrical performance of MOCVD-grown GaN p-i-n diodes with high-low junction p-layers
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Howell-Clark, Jennifer, Guo, Zhibo, Wetzel, Christian, Chow, T. Paul, Guanxi, Piao, Yano, Yoshiki, Tabuchi, Toshiya, and Matsumoto, Koh
- Published
- 2019
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33. Accommodating EBD: Do Assessment Accommodations Reflect Low Expectations for Students With EBD
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Davis, Hartwell T. Paul
- Abstract
Some accommodations that are offered to students with emotional behavior disorders (EBD) do little to remediate a diagnosed disability, resulting instead in enabling the continuance of the condition. IDEA specifies that access to educational opportunities include accommodations both in "instruction and assessment" (Byrnes, 2008, p. 307). While such accommodations as the use of calculators, extra test time, differences in test, or even exclusion from test may lower barriers in assessment, there is a question as to whether these same accommodations serve to remediate the long term effects of EBD regarding future academic achievement. Instead assessment accommodation may hinder the ongoing process of instruction and do more harm than good by reinforcing lower expectations that effect a student's achievement.
- Published
- 2010
34. HFACS-based FAHP implementation to identify critical factors influencing human error occurrence in nuclear plant control room
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Karthick, M., Robert, T. Paul, and Kumar, C. Senthil
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- 2020
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35. Sympathetic activation by lower body negative pressure decreases kidney perfusion without inducing hypoxia in healthy humans
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van der Bel, René, Verbree, Jasper, Gurney-Champion, Oliver J., van Osch, Matthias J. P., Stroes, Erik S. G., Nederveen, Aart J., and Krediet, C. T. Paul
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- 2020
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36. The potential role of organics in new particle formation and initial growth in the remote tropical upper troposphere
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Agnieszka Kupc, Christina J. Williamson, Anna L. Hodshire, Jan Kazil, Eric Ray, T. Paul Bui, Maximilian Dollner, Karl D. Froyd, Kathryn McKain, Andrew Rollins, Gregory P. Schill, Alexander Thames, Bernadett B. Weinzierl, Jeffrey R. Pierce, and Charles A. Brock
- Published
- 2020
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37. Photochemical Evolution of the 2013 California Rim Fire: Synergistic Impacts of Reactive Hydrocarbons and Enhanced Oxidants
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Glenn M Wolfe, Thomas F Hanisco, Heather L Arkinson, Donald R Blake, Armin Wisthaler, Tomas Mikoviny, Thomas B Ryerson, Ilana Pollack, Jeff Peischl, Paul O Wennberg, John D Crounse, Jason M St Clair, Alex Teng, L Greg Huey, Xiaoxi Liu, Alan Fried, Petter Weibring, Dirk Richter, James Walega, Samuel R Hall, Kirk Ullmann, Jose L Jimenez, Pedro Campuzano-Jost, T Paul Bui, Glenn Diskin, James R Podolske, Glen Sachse, and Ronald C Cohen
- Subjects
Environment Pollution - Abstract
Large wildfires markedly alter regional atmospheric composition, but chemical complexity challenges model predictions of downwind impacts. Here, we elucidate key facets of gas-phase photochemistry and assess novel chemical processes via a case study of the 2013 California Rim Fire plume. Airborne in situ observations, acquired during the NASA Studies of Emissions, Atmospheric Composition, Clouds and Climate Coupling by Regional Surveys (SEAC4RS) mission, illustrate the evolution of volatile organic compounds (VOC), oxidants, and reactive nitrogen over 12 hours of atmospheric aging. Measurements show rapid formation of ozone and peroxyacyl nitrates (PNs), sustained peroxide production, and prolonged enhancements in oxygenated VOC and nitrogen oxides (NOX). Measurements and Lagrangian trajectories constrain a 0-D puff model that approximates plume photochemical history and provides a framework for evaluating key processes. Simulations examine the effects of 1) previously-unmeasured reactive VOC identified in recent laboratory studies, and 2) emissions and secondary production of nitrous acid (HONO). Inclusion of estimated unmeasured VOC leads to a 250% increase in OH reactivity and a 70% increase in radical production via oxygenated VOC photolysis. HONO amplifies radical cycling and serves as a downwind NOX source, although two different HONO production mechanisms (particulate nitrate photolysis and heterogeneous NO2 conversion) exhibit markedly different effects on ozone, NOX, and PNs. Analysis of radical initiation rates suggests that oxygenated VOC photolysis is a major radical source, exceeding HONO photolysis when averaged over the first 2 hours of aging. Ozone production chemistry transitions from VOC-sensitive to NOX-sensitive within the first hour of plume aging, with both peroxide and organic nitrate formation contributing significantly to radical termination. To simulate smoke plume chemistry accurately, models should simultaneously account for the full reactive VOC pool and all relevant oxidant sources.
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- 2022
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38. The Called, Chosen, and Faithful Leader
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Davis, Hartwell T. Paul
- Abstract
Leaders are made, not born. Like so many other of life's complex issues, the question of nature vs. nurture in leadership is one that is analyzed, researched, and debated by educators, philosophers, social scientist, and even leaders themselves. Leadership has been dissected as to personality, character, and behavior. Researchers have developed tests, established programs, and created the best graduate level courses to study, train, and develop leaders. While there may be differing views on what makes a leader, there appears to be consensus in all schools of leadership about one fact of leadership: Leadership is about relationship. Leadership does not exist without someone to lead and someone to follow.
- Published
- 2009
39. A Review of the EUSO-Balloon Pathfinder for the JEM-EUSO Program
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J. H. Adams, S. Ahmad, D. Allard, A. Anzalone, S. Bacholle, P. Barrillon, J. Bayer, M. Bertaina, F. Bisconti, C. Blaksley, S. Blin-Bondil, P. Bobík, F. Cafagna, D. Campana, F. Capel, M. Casolino, C. Cassardo, C. Catalano, R. Cremonini, S. Dagoret-Campagne, P. Danto, L. del Peral, C. de la Taille, A. Díaz Damian, M. Dupieux, A. Ebersoldt, T. Ebisuzaki, J. Eser, J. Evrard, F. Fenu, S. Ferrarese, C. Fornaro, M. Fouka, P. Gorodetzky, F. Guarino, A. Guzman, Y. Hachisu, A. Haungs, E. Judd, A. Jung, J. Karczmarczyk, Y. Kawasaki, P. A. Klimov, E. Kuznetsov, S. Mackovjak, M. Manfrin, L. Marcelli, G. Medina-Tanco, K. Mercier, A. Merino, T. Mernik, H. Miyamoto, J. A. Morales de los Ríos, C. Moretto, B. Mot, A. Neronov, H. Ohmori, A. V. Olinto, G. Osteria, B. Panico, E. Parizot, T. Paul, P. Picozza, L. W. Piotrowski, Z. Plebaniak, S. Pliego, P. Prat, G. Prévôt, H. Prieto, M. Putis, J. Rabanal, M. Ricci, J. Rojas, M. D. Rodríguez Frías, G. Roudil, G. Sáez Cano, Z. Sahnoun, N. Sakaki, J. C. Sanchez, A. Santangelo, F. Sarazin, V. Scotti, K. Shinozaki, H. Silva, J. F. Soriano, G. Suino, J. Szabelski, S. Toscano, I. Tabone, Y. Takizawa, P. von Ballmoos, L. Wiencke, M. Wille, and M. Zotov
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- 2022
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40. Simulation-based Study of Single-Event Burnout in 4H-SiC High-Voltage Vertical Superjunction DMOSFET: Physical Failure Mechanism and Robustness vs. Performance Tradeoffs
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Joseph A. McPherson, Andrew A. Woodworth, T. Paul Chow, and Wei Ji
- Subjects
Electronics And Electrical Engineering - Abstract
We explore and elucidate physical failure mechanisms in a 4H-SiC, high voltage, superjunction (SJ) vertical DMOSFET from a single heavy ion strike using three-dimensional electro-thermal transient simulations. The single-event burnout (SEB) failure is thermal runaway from second breakdown, initiated by impact ionization and terminated with mesoplasma formation, at the center of the P-pillar/N+ substrate interface. We also demonstrate that the SEB performance of this SiC SJ DMOSFET is insensitive to the pillar width but sensitive to the strike location with ion strike at the P-pillar causing SEB at a lower blocking voltage than at the N-pillar. Compared to commercially available 1.2 kV blocking-rated non-SJ DMOSFETs, which have been demonstrated to survive SEB up to 525 V, the SJ DMOSFET increases SEB survival threshold voltage (VSEB) by a factor of 2.2, making it close to 1200 V, while the on-resistance is increased by only 11%. Using our recently developed figure of merit (FoM), which considers the trade-off between VSEB and on-state performance, we find that the SiC SJ DMOSFET achieves a FoM that is 14 times better, making it superior to conventional 1.2 kV SiC DMOSFETs for long-term radiation-tolerant operation in space applications.
- Published
- 2022
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41. Policy-Relevant Attitudes Toward COVID-19 Vaccination: Associations With Demography, Health Risk, and Social and Political Factors
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Katharina T. Paul, Jakob-Moritz Eberl, and Julia Partheymüller
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vaccination ,policy&politics ,attitudes ,COVID-19 ,Austria ,survey ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Background: Vaccination is considered to be a key public health intervention to end the COVID-19 pandemic. Yet, the success of the intervention is contingent on attitudes toward vaccination and the design of vaccination policies.Methods: We conduct cross-sectional analyses of policy-relevant attitudes toward COVID-19 vaccination using survey data of a representative sample of Austrian residents collected by the Austrian Corona Panel Project (ACPP). As outcomes, we examine the individual readiness to get vaccinated, the support for compulsory vaccinations, and the preference for making the vaccine available free of charge. The independent variables include demographics, objective and perceived health risks, and social and political factors.Results: Although there is broad public support for making the vaccine available free of charge, vaccine hesitancy and the opposition to a vaccine mandate are widespread. The protective function of the vaccine for the individual only motivates limited support for vaccinations. Opposition to COVID-19 vaccination also stems from a lack of sense of community and an ongoing politicization of the issue through conspiracy theories and party politics.Conclusion: We propose that overcoming the inherent free-rider problem of achieving sufficiently high vaccination rates poses a potential dilemma for policymakers: Given the politicized nature of the issue, they may find themselves having to choose between making vaccinations compulsory at political costs and a lingering pandemic at high costs for public health and the economy. We propose that promoting a sense of community and addressing potential practical constraints will be key in designing an effective COVID-19 vaccination policy.
- Published
- 2021
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42. Determination of the effective critical breakdown field for Si, wide, and extreme bandgap semiconductor superjunction devices.
- Author
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Torky, Mohamed and Chow, T. Paul
- Subjects
- *
ELECTRIC breakdown , *COMPUTER-aided design , *ELECTRIC fields , *COMPUTER engineering , *HIGH voltages , *COLUMNS - Abstract
Designing high voltage superjunction (SJ) power devices with wide bandgap and extreme bandgap semiconductors, when compared to silicon, can enhance the trade-off between RON,sp and BV significantly, due to their >10× higher avalanche breakdown electric field. Nevertheless, because of the difference in the breakdown field profile and ionization path length, the effective breakdown field for these semiconductor SJ devices has not been determined theoretically. Consequently, we estimate and compare the effective critical breakdown electric field for SJ device structures in Si, 4H–SiC, 2H–GaN, β-Ga2O3, diamond, and AlN using Technology Computer Aided Design TCAD simulation. We also establish its dependence on the SJ devices' structural parameters, such as the pillar thickness. Furthermore, we also quantitatively compare the on-state performance of these SJ devices, including their thermal capabilities, using a paramount figure-of-merit to underscore the potential improvement possible. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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43. The pro- and anti-tumor roles of mesenchymal stem cells toward BRCA1-IRIS-overexpressing TNBC cells
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Daniel Ryan, Bibbin T. Paul, Jim Koziol, and Wael M. ElShamy
- Subjects
BRCA1-IRIS ,Triple-negative breast cancer ,Metastasis ,Mesenchymal stem cells ,IL-6 ,Prostaglandin E2 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background To evaluate the cross-talk between BRCA1-IRIS (IRIS)-overexpressing (IRISOE) TNBC cells and tumor-resident mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) that triggers the aggressiveness or elimination of IRISOE TNBC tumors. Methods We analyzed the effect of silencing or inactivating IRIS on the bi-directional interaction between IRISOE TNBC cells and MSCs on tumor formation and progression. We analyzed the downstream signaling in MSCs induced by IL-6 secreted from IRISOE TNBC cells. We compared the effect of MSCs on the formation and progression of IRIS-proficient and deficient-TNBC cells/tumors using in vitro and in vivo models. Finally, we analyzed the association between IL-6, PTGER2, and PTGER4 overexpression and breast cancer subtype; hormone receptor status; and distant metastasis-free or overall survival. Results We show high-level IL-6 secreted from IRISOE TNBC cells that enhances expression of its receptor (IL-6R) in MSCs, their proliferation, and migration toward IRISOE, in vitro, and recruitment into IRISOE TNBC tumors, in vivo. In serum-free medium, recombinant IL-6 and the IL-6-rich IRISOE TNBC cell condition media (CM) decreased STAT3Y705 phosphorylation (p-STAT3Y705) in MSCs. Inhibiting IRIS expression or activity prolonged STAT3Y705 phosphorylation in MSCs. The interaction with IRISOE TNBC cells skewed MSC differentiation toward prostaglandin E2 (PGE2)-secreting pro-aggressiveness cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs). Accordingly, co-injecting human or mouse MSCs with IRISOE TNBC tumor cells promoted the formation of aggressive mammary tumors, high circulating IL-6 and PGE2 levels, and reduced overall survival. In contrast, IRIS-silenced or inactivated cells showed reduced tumor formation ability, limited MSC recruitment into tumors, reduced circulating IL-6 and PGE2 levels, and prolonged overall survival. A positive correlation between IL-6, PTGER2, and PTGER4 expression and basal phenotype; ER-negativity; distant metastasis-free and overall survival in basal; or BRCAmutant carriers was observed. Finally, the bi-directional interaction with MSCs triggered death rather than growth of IRIS-silenced TNBC cells, in vitro and in vivo. Conclusions The IL-6/PGE2-positive feedback loop between IRISOE TNBC tumor cells and MSCs enhances tumor aggressiveness. Inhibiting IRIS expression limits TNBC tumor growth and progression through an MSC-induced death of IRIS-silenced/inactivated TNBC cells.
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- 2019
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44. Why Governments Should Invest More To Educate Girls. Center Discussion Paper.
- Author
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Yale Univ., New Haven, CT. Economic Growth Center. and Schultz, T. Paul
- Abstract
Women and men often receive the same percentage increase in their wage rates with advances in schooling. Because these returns decline with more schooling, the marginal returns for women will tend to exceed those for men, especially in countries where women are much less educated. The health and schooling of children are more closely related to their mother's education than to their father's. More educated women work more hours in the market labor force, broadening the tax base and potentially reducing tax distortions. These three conditions, it is argued, justify the disproportionate allocation of public expenditures toward women's education. Countries that have equalized their educational achievements for men and women in the last several decades have on the average grown faster. (Contains 8 notes and 104 references.) (BT)
- Published
- 2001
45. School Subsidies for the Poor: Evaluating the Mexican Progresa Poverty Program. Center Discussion Paper.
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Yale Univ., New Haven, CT. Economic Growth Center. and Schultz, T. Paul
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In rural Mexico, the Progresa program provided educational grants to poor mothers of children enrolled in grades 3-9 and attending 85 percent of the school days. Payments were increased at the higher grades, a premium was paid for girls enrolled in grades 7-9, and every 6 months the grants were adjusted upward to compensate for inflation. The grants were substantial; a family with a ninth-grade daughter received an amount equal to 44 percent of a typical day-laborer's wage. This paper evaluates the program's effect on enrollment in 1998-2000, during which the program was implemented randomly in 314 of the 495 poorest rural villages in central and southern Mexico. Analysis focused on a panel sample of 19,716 children who could be followed and matched in five household surveys conducted between October 1997 and November 1999. Before the program started, Progresa villages and control villages did not differ significantly in enrollment rates of poor children. In the 3 survey rounds collected after September 1998, Progresa had a significant impact on the enrollment of each group of children who had completed grades 1-6 the previous year, with differences often greater for girls than boys. The cumulative cohort effect on schooling attainment was estimated to be 0.66 years. Progresa also significantly reduced the poor-nonpoor inequality in enrollment rates for grades 4-6. An appendix analyzes Progresa's effects on child labor and fertility rates. (Contains 29 references, 24 footnotes, 24 tables, and 4 figures.) (SV)
- Published
- 2001
46. Unanticipated Cleavage of 2‑Nitrophenyl-Substituted N‑Formyl Pyrazolines under Bechamp Conditions: Unveiling the Synthesis of 2‑Aryl Quinolines and Their Mechanistic Exploration via DFT Studies
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Gaurav Joshi, Aabid Abdullah Wani, Sahil Sharma, Priyadeep Bhutani, Prasad V. Bharatam, Atish T. Paul, and Raj Kumar
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Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Published
- 2018
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47. Correction to: A novel murine model of multi-day moderate ethanol exposure reveals increased intestinal dysfunction and liver inflammation with age
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Rachel H. McMahan, Kevin M. Najarro, Juliet E. Mullen, Madison T. Paul, David J. Orlicky, Holly J. Hulsebus, and Elizabeth J. Kovacs
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Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 ,Geriatrics ,RC952-954.6 - Published
- 2021
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48. Cortical alpha oscillations in cochlear implant users reflect subjective listening effort during speech-in-noise perception.
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Brandon T Paul, Joseph Chen, Trung Le, Vincent Lin, and Andrew Dimitrijevic
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Listening to speech in noise is effortful for individuals with hearing loss, even if they have received a hearing prosthesis such as a hearing aid or cochlear implant (CI). At present, little is known about the neural functions that support listening effort. One form of neural activity that has been suggested to reflect listening effort is the power of 8-12 Hz (alpha) oscillations measured by electroencephalography (EEG). Alpha power in two cortical regions has been associated with effortful listening-left inferior frontal gyrus (IFG), and parietal cortex-but these relationships have not been examined in the same listeners. Further, there are few studies available investigating neural correlates of effort in the individuals with cochlear implants. Here we tested 16 CI users in a novel effort-focused speech-in-noise listening paradigm, and confirm a relationship between alpha power and self-reported effort ratings in parietal regions, but not left IFG. The parietal relationship was not linear but quadratic, with alpha power comparatively lower when effort ratings were at the top and bottom of the effort scale, and higher when effort ratings were in the middle of the scale. Results are discussed in terms of cognitive systems that are engaged in difficult listening situations, and the implication for clinical translation.
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- 2021
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49. A Novel Cause of Bowel Obstruction in a Patient with Long-Standing Crohn’s Disease
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Satya V. Vedula, T. Paul Nickerson, and Douglas J. Grider
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Pathology ,RB1-214 - Abstract
Solitary fibrous tumors are rare tumors of mesenchymal origin. Although most often observed in the lung pleura, they have been reported in varied extrapleural sites. A 70-year-old male with complicated Crohn’s disease presented with 3 days of nausea, emesis, constipation, and abdominal pain. Computed Tomography (CT) demonstrated mucosal thickening of the middescending colon, consistent with fibrosing stricture. Surgical excision revealed an unusual, 5 cm mass originating in the subserosa. Histopathology of the lesion was notable for a proliferation of cells with spindle and stellate-shaped nuclei and no appreciable mitotic figures, which extended into the muscularis and submucosa. Immunohistochemistry was STAT6 nuclear positive and cytoplasmic CD34 positive, diagnostic for solitary fibrous tumor (SFT). In this case, the SFT infiltrating into the muscularis propria and subserosa caused the stricture and bowel obstruction. This illustrates that while fibrosing strictures are usually the etiology of bowel obstruction in the setting of Crohn’s disease, other rare possible causes should be considered.
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- 2021
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50. The POEMMA (Probe of Extreme Multi-Messenger Astrophysics) Observatory
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A. V. Olinto, J. Krizmanic, J. H. Adams, R. Aloisio, L. A. Anchordoqui, M. Bagheri, D. Barghini, M. Battisti, D. R. Bergman, M. E. Bertaina, P. F. Bertone, F. Bisconti, M. Bustamante, M. Casolino, K. Cerny, M. J. Christi, A. L. Cummings, I. de Mitri, R. Diesing, R. Engel, J. Eser, K. Fang, F. Fenu, G. Filippatos, E. Gazda, C. Guepin, A. Haungs, E. A. Hays, E. G. Judd, P. Klimov, V. Kungel, E. Kuznetsov, S. Mackovjak, D. Mandat, L. Marcelli, J. McEnery, G. Medina-Tanco, K. -D. Merenda, S. S. Meyer, J. W. Mitchell, H. Miyamoto, J. M. Nachtman, A. Neronov, F. Oikonomou, Y. Onel, A. N. Otte, E. Parizot, T. Paul, M. Pech, J. S. Perkins, P. Picozza, L. W. Piotrowski, Z. Plebaniak, G. Prevot, P. Reardon, M. H. Reno, M. Ricci, O. Romero Matamala, F. Sarazin, P. Schovanek, K. Shinozaki, J. F. Soriano, F. Stecker, Y. Takizawa, R. Ulrich, M. Unger, T. M. Venters, L. Wiencke, D. Winn, R. M. Young, and M. Zotov
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The Probe Of Extreme Multi-Messenger Astrophysics (POEMMA) is designed to accurately observe ultra-high-energy cosmic rays (UHECRs) and cosmic neutrinos from space with sensitivity over the full celestial sky. POEMMA will observe the air fluorescence produced by extensive air showers (EASs) from UHECRs and potentially UHE neutrinos above 20 EeV. Additionally, POEMMA has the ability to observe the Cherenkov signal from upward-moving EASs induced by Earth-interacting tau neutrinos above 20 PeV. The POEMMA spacecraft are designed to quickly re-orientate to follow up transient neutrino sources and obtain currently unparalleled neutrino flux sensitivity. Developed as a NASA Astrophysics Probe-class mission, POEMMA consists of two identical satellites flying in loose formation in 525 km altitude orbits. Each POEMMA instrument incorporates a wide field-of-view (45°) Schmidt telescope with an optical collecting area of over 6 sq. m. The hybrid focal surface of each telescope includes a fast (1 μs) near-ultraviolet camera for EAS fluorescence observations and an ultrafast (10 ns) optical camera for Cherenkov EAS observations. In a 5-year mission, POEMMA will provide measurements that open new multi-messenger windows onto the most energetic events in the universe, enabling the study of new astrophysics and particle physics at these extreme energies.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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