86 results on '"P. Schakel"'
Search Results
2. Macroscopic analysis and modelling of multi-class, flexible-lane traffic
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Knoop, Victor L., Schakel, Wouter J., van Oijen, Tim P., and Leclercq, Ludovic
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Physics - Physics and Society - Abstract
An excessive demand of vehicles to a motorway bottleneck leads to traffic jams. Motorbikes are narrow and can drive next to each other in a lane, or in-between lanes in low speeds. This paper analyses the resulting traffic characteristics and presents numerical scheme for a macroscopic traffic flow model for these two classes. The behavior included is as follows. If there are two motorbikes behind each other, they can travel next to each other in one lane, occupying the space of one car. Also, at low speeds of car traffic, they can go in between the main lanes, creating a so-called filtering lane. The paper numerically derives functions of class-specific speeds as function of the density of both classes, incorporating flexible lane usage dependent on the speed. The roadway capacity as function of the motorbike fraction is derived, which interesting can be in different types of phases (with motorbikes at higher speeds or not). We also present a numerical scheme to analyse the dynamics of this multi-class system. We apply the model to an example case, revealing the properties of the traffic stream , queue dynamics and class specific travel times. The model can help in showing the relative advantage in travel time of switching to a motorbike.
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- 2023
3. The multiple mediating effects of vision-specific factors and depression on the association between visual impairment severity and fatigue: a path analysis study
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Schakel, Wouter, Bode, Christina, van de Ven, Peter M., van der Aa, Hilde P. A., Hulshof, Carel T. J., van Rens, Gerardus H. M. B., and van Nispen, Ruth M. A.
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- 2024
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4. The multiple mediating effects of vision-specific factors and depression on the association between visual impairment severity and fatigue: a path analysis study
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Wouter Schakel, Christina Bode, Peter M. van de Ven, Hilde P. A. van der Aa, Carel T. J. Hulshof, Gerardus H. M. B. van Rens, and Ruth M. A. van Nispen
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Visual impairment ,Fatigue ,Depression ,Vision-specific quality of life ,Low vision ,Structural equation modeling ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Abstract Background Severe fatigue is a common symptom for people with visual impairment, with a detrimental effect on emotional functioning, cognition, work capacity and activities of daily living. A previous study found that depression was one of the most important determinants of fatigue, but less is known about disease-specific factors in this patient population. This study aimed to explore the association between visual impairment severity and fatigue in adults with low vision, both directly and indirectly, with vision-specific factors and depression as potential mediators. Methods Cross-sectional data were collected from 220 Dutch low vision service patients by telephone interviews. Fatigue was defined as a latent variable by severity and impact on daily life. Potential mediators included vision-related symptoms, adaptation to vision loss and depression. Hypothesized structural equation models were constructed in Mplus to test (in)direct effects of visual impairment severity (mild/moderate, severe, blindness) on fatigue through above mentioned variables. Results The final model explained 60% of fatigue variance and revealed a significant total effect of visual impairment severity on fatigue. Patients with severe visual impairment (reference group) had significantly higher fatigue symptoms compared to those with mild/moderate visual impairment (β = -0.50, 95% bias-corrected confidence interval [BC CI] [-0.86, -0.16]) and those with blindness (β = -0.44, 95% BC CI [-0.80, -0.07]). Eye strain & light disturbance, depression and vision-related mobility mediated the fatigue difference between the severe and mild/moderate visual impairment categories. The fatigue difference between the severe visual impairment and blindness categories was solely explained by eye strain & light disturbance. Moreover, depressive symptoms (β = 0.65, p
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- 2024
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5. Towards retrospective motion correction and reconstruction for clinical 3D brain MRI protocols with a reference contrast
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Rizzuti, Gabrio, Schakel, Tim, Huttinga, Niek R. F., Dankbaar, Jan Willem, van Leeuwen, Tristan, and Sbrizzi, Alessandro
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Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video Processing - Abstract
Motion artifacts often spoil the radiological interpretation of MR images, and in the most severe cases the scan needs be repeated, with additional costs for the provider. We discuss the application of a novel 3D retrospective rigid motion correction and reconstruction scheme for MRI, which leverages multiple scans contained in a MR session. Typically, in a multi-contrast MR session, motion does not equally affect all the scans, and some motion-free scans are generally available, so that we can exploit their anatomic similarity. The uncorrupted scan is used as a reference in a generalized rigid-motion registration problem to remove the motion artifacts affecting the corrupted scans. We discuss the potential of the proposed algorithm with a prospective in-vivo study and clinical 3D brain protocols. This framework can be easily incorporated into the existing clinical practice with no disruption to the conventional workflow.
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- 2023
6. Internationalisation and Study Success: Class Attendance and the Delicate Balance between Collaborative Learning and Being Lost in Translation
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Bijsmans, Patrick, Schakel, Arjan H., Baykal, Asena, and Hegewald, Sven
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The internationalisation of Higher Education is broadly seen as a positive development. It is a process that is said to contribute to intercultural skills acquisition, which is deemed crucial in today's globalised society. Yet, research has shown that the benefits of being confronted with other ideas and viewpoints can get lost in translation due to different languages and academic cultures. We set out to explore the impact of the international classroom on study success and argue that there might be an optimum level of internationalisation. Based on a dataset that includes more than 2822 GPA scores for 836 students from four first-year cohorts of an international Bachelor in European Studies, we find strong empirical evidence that students' study success is lower when there are few (below 3) or many (above 6) different nationalities in the classroom. We find the strongest effects of internationalisation for students who regularly attend class (i.e. 80-90%). Hence, we present strong evidence that internationalisation has a both a negative and a positive impact on students' study success but students will only experience these beneficial and detrimental effects of learning in an international environment when they attend class.
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- 2022
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7. Technical Design Report for the PANDA Endcap Disc DIRC
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Panda Collaboration, Davi, F., Erni, W., Krusche, B., Steinacher, M., Walford, N., Liu, H., Liu, Z., Liu, B., Shen, X., Wang, C., Zhao, J., Albrecht, M., Erlen, T., Feldbauer, F., Fink, M., Freudenreich, V., Fritsch, M., Heinsius, F. H., Held, T., Holtmann, T., Keshk, I., Koch, H., Kopf, B., Kuhlmann, M., Kümmel, M., Leiber, S., Musiol, P., Mustafa, A., Pelizäus, M., Pitka, A., Reicherz, G., Richter, M., Schnier, C., Schröder, T., Sersin, S., Sohl, L., Sowa, C., Steinke, M., Triffterer, T., Wiedner, U., Beck, R., Hammann, C., Hartmann, J., Ketzer, B., Kube, M., Rossbach, M., Schmidt, C., Schmitz, R., Thoma, U., Urban, M., Bianconi, A., Bragadireanu, M., Pantea, D., Czyzycki, W., Domagala, M., Filo, G., Jaworowski, J., Krawczyk, M., Lisowski, E., Lisowski, F., Michalek, M., Plazek, J., Korcyl, K., Kozela, A., Kulessa, P., Lebiedowicz, P., Pysz, K., Schäfer, W., Szczurek, A., Fiutowski, T., Idzik, M., Mindur, B., Swientek, K., Biernat, J., Kamys, B., Kistryn, S., Korcyl, G., Krzemien, W., Magiera, A., Moskal, P., Przygoda, W., Rudy, Z., Salabura, P., Smyrski, J., Strzempek, P., Wronska, A., Augustin, I., Böhm, R., Lehmann, I., Marinescu, D. Nicmorus, Schmitt, L., Varentsov, V., Al-Turany, M., Belias, A., Deppe, H., Veis, N. Divani, Dzhygadlo, R., Flemming, H., Gerhardt, A., Götzen, K., Karabowicz, R., Kurilla, U., Lehmann, D., Löchner, S., Lühning, J., Lynen, U., Nakhoul, S., Orth, H., Peters, K., Saito, T., Schepers, G., Schmidt, C. J., Schwarz, C., Schwiening, J., Täschner, A., Traxler, M., Voss, B., Wieczorek, P., Wilms, A., Abazov, V., Alexeev, G., Arefiev, V. A., Astakhov, V., Barabanov, M. Yu., Batyunya, B. V., Dodokhov, V. Kh., Efremov, A., Fechtchenko, A., Galoyan, A., Golovanov, G., Koshurnikov, E. K., Lobanov, Y. Yu., Lobanov, V. I., Malyshev, V., Olshevskiy, A. G., Piskun, A. A., Samartsev, A., Sapozhnikov, M. G., Skachkov, N. B., Skachkova, A. N., Strokovsky, E. A., Tokmenin, V., Uzhinsky, V., Verkheev, A., Vodopianov, A., Zhuravlev, N. I., Zinchenko, A., Branford, D., Glazier, D., Watts, D., Böhm, M., Eyrich, W., Lehmann, A., Miehling, D., Pfaffinger, M., Stelter, S., Uhlig, F., Dobbs, S., Seth, K., Tomaradze, A., Xiao, T., Bettoni, D., Ali, A., Hamdi, A., Krebs, M., Nerling, F., Akishina, V., Gorbunov, S., Kisel, I., Kozlov, G., Pugach, M., Zyzak, M., Bianchi, N., Gianotti, P., Guaraldo, C., Lucherini, V., Bracco, G., Bodenschatz, S., Brinkmann, K. T., Di Pietro, V., Diehl, S., Dormenev, V., Düren, M., Etzelmüller, E., Föhl, K., Galuska, M., Geßler, T., Gutz, E., Hahn, C., Hayrapetyan, A., Kesselkaul, M., Kühn, W., Kuske, T., Lange, J. S., Liang, Y., Metag, V., Moritz, M., Nanova, M., Novotny, R., Quagli, T., Riccardi, A., Rieke, J., Schmidt, M., Schnell, R., Stenzel, H., Strickert, M., Thöring, U., Wasem, T., Wohlfahrt, B., Zaunick, H. G., Tomasi-Gustafsson, E., Ireland, D., Rosner, G., Seitz, B., Deepak, P. N., Kulkarni, A., Apostolou, A., Babai, M., Kavatsyuk, M., Loehner, H., Messchendorp, J., Schakel, P., Tiemens, M., van der Weele, J. C., Vejdani, S., Dutta, K., Kalita, K., Sohlbach, H., Bai, M., Bianchi, L., Büscher, M., Derichs, A., Dosdall, R., Erven, A., Fracassi, V., Gillitzer, A., Goldenbaum, F., Grunwald, D., Jokhovets, L., Kemmerling, G., Kleines, H., Lai, A., Lehrach, A., Mikirtychyants, M., Orfanitski, S., Prasuhn, D., Prencipe, E., Pütz, J., Ritman, J., Rosenthal, E., Schadmand, S., Sefzick, T., Serdyuk, V., Sterzenbach, G., Stockmanns, T., Wintz, P., Wüstner, P., Xu, H., Zhou, Y., Li, Z., Ma, X., Rigato, V., Isaksson, L., Achenbach, P., Aycock, A., Corell, O., Denig, A., Distler, M., Hoek, M., Lauth, W., Merkel, H., Müller, U., Pochodzalla, J., Sanchez, S., Schlimme, S., Sfienti, C., Thiel, M., Zambrana, M., Ahmadi, H., Ahmed, S., Bleser, S., Capozza, L., Cardinali, M., Dbeyssi, A., Ehret, A., Fröhlich, B., Grasemann, P., Haasler, S., Izard, D., Jorge, J., Khaneft, D., Klasen, R., Kliemt, R., Köhler, J., Leithoff, H. H., Lin, D., Maas, F., Maldaner, S., Michel, M., Espi, M. C. Mora, Morales, C. Morales, Motzko, C., Noll, O., Pflüger, S., Pineiro, D. Rodriguez, Steinen, M., Walaa, E., Wolff, S., Zimmermann, I., Fedorov, A., Korzhik, M., Missevitch, O., Balanutsa, P., Chernetsky, V., Demekhin, A., Dolgolenko, A., Fedorets, P., Gerasimov, A., Goryachev, V., Kirin, D. Y., Matveev, V. A., Stavinskiy, A. V., Balashoff, A., Boukharov, A., Malyshev, O., Marishev, I., Chandratre, V., Datar, V., Jha, V., Kumawat, H., Mohanty, A. K., Parmar, A., Rai, A. K., Roy, B., Sonika, G., Fritzsch, C., Grieser, S., Hergemöller, A. K., Hetz, B., Hüsken, N., Khoukaz, A., Wessels, J. P., Herold, C., Khosonthongkee, K., Kobdaj, C., Limphirat, A., Srisawad, P., Yan, Y., Blinov, A. E., Kononov, S., Kravchenko, E. A., Antokhin, E., Barnyakov, M., Barnyakov, A. Yu., Beloborodov, K., Blinov, V. E., Bobrovnikov, V. S., Kuyanov, I. A., Onuchin, A. P., Pivovarov, S., Pyata, E., Serednyakov, S., Tikhonov, Y., Kunne, R., Marchand, D., Ramstein, B., van de Wiele, J., Wang, Y., Boca, G., Burian, V., Finger, M., Nikolovova, A., Pesek, M., Peskova, M., Pfeffer, M., Prochazka, I., Slunecka, M., Gallus, P., Jary, V., Novy, J., Tomasek, M., Virius, M., Vrba, V., Abramov, V., Belikov, N., Bukreeva, S., Davidenko, A., Derevschikov, A., Goncharenko, Y., Grishin, V., Kachanov, V., Kormilitsin, V., Levin, A., Melnik, Y., Minaev, N., Mochalov, V., Morozov, D., Nogach, L., Poslavskiy, S., Ryazantsev, A., Ryzhikov, S., Semenov, P., Shein, I., Uzunian, A., Vasiliev, A., Yakutin, A., Roy, U., Yabsley, B., Belostotski, S., Gavrilov, G., Izotov, A., Manaenkov, S., Miklukho, O., Veretennikov, D., Zhdanov, A., Bäck, T., Cederwall, B., Makonyi, K., Preston, M., Tegner, P. E., Wölbing, D., Godre, S., Bussa, M. P., Marcello, S., Spataro, S., Iazzi, F., Introzzi, R., Lavagno, A., Calvo, D., De Remigis, P., Filippi, A., Mazza, G., Rivetti, A., Wheadon, R., Martin, A., Calen, H., Andersson, W. Ikegami, Johansson, T., Kupsc, A., Marciniewski, P., Papenbrock, M., Pettersson, J., Regina, J., Schönning, K., Wolke, M., Diaz, J., Chackara, V. Pothodi, Chlopik, A., Kesik, G., Melnychuk, D., Slowinski, B., Trzcinski, A., Wojciechowski, M., Wronka, S., Zwieglinski, B., Bühler, P., Marton, J., Steinschaden, D., Suzuki, K., Widmann, E., Zimmermann, S., and Zmeskal, J.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
PANDA (anti-Proton ANnihiliation at DArmstadt) is planned to be one of the four main experiments at the future international accelerator complex FAIR (Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research) in Darmstadt, Germany. It is going to address fundamental questions of hadron physics and quantum chromodynamics using cooled antiproton beams with a high intensity and and momenta between 1.5 and 15 GeV/c. PANDA is designed to reach a maximum luminosity of 2x10^32 cm^2 s. Most of the physics programs require an excellent particle identification (PID). The PID of hadronic states at the forward endcap of the target spectrometer will be done by a fast and compact Cherenkov detector that uses the detection of internally reflected Cherenkov light (DIRC) principle. It is designed to cover the polar angle range from 5{\deg} to 22{\deg} and to provide a separation power for the separation of charged pions and kaons up to 3 standard deviations (s.d.) for particle momenta up to 4 GeV/c in order to cover the important particle phase space. This document describes the technical design and the expected performance of the novel PANDA Disc DIRC detector that has not been used in any other high energy physics experiment (HEP) before. The performance has been studied with Monte-Carlo simulations and various beam tests at DESY and CERN. The final design meets all PANDA requirements and guarantees suffcient safety margins., Comment: TDR for Panda/Fair to be published
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- 2019
8. Perinatal exposure to fluoxetine and maternal adversity affect myelin-related gene expression and epigenetic regulation in the corticolimbic circuit of juvenile rats
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Ramsteijn, Anouschka S., Verkaik-Schakel, Rikst Nynke, Houwing, Danielle J., Plösch, Torsten, and Olivier, Jocelien D. A.
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- 2022
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9. The political representation of left-nationalist voters
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Hakhverdian, Armen and Schakel, Wouter
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- 2022
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10. Feasibility of cardiac-synchronized quantitative T1 and T2 mapping on a hybrid 1.5 Tesla magnetic resonance imaging and linear accelerator system
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Osman Akdag, Stefano Mandija, Astrid L.H.M.W. van Lier, Pim T.S. Borman, Tim Schakel, Eveline Alberts, Oscar van der Heide, Rutger J. Hassink, Joost J.C. Verhoeff, Firdaus A.A. Mohamed Hoesein, Bas W. Raaymakers, and Martin F. Fast
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MR-linac ,MRI ,Quantitative cardiac MRI ,MRI-guided radiotherapy ,Cardiac MR-linac ,Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Background and Purpose: The heart is important in radiotherapy either as target or organ at risk. Quantitative T1 and T2 cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (qMRI) may aid in target definition for cardiac radioablation, and imaging biomarker for cardiotoxicity assessment. Hybrid MR-linac devices could facilitate daily cardiac qMRI of the heart in radiotherapy. The aim of this work was therefore to enable cardiac-synchronized T1 and T2 mapping on a 1.5 T MR-linac and test the reproducibility of these sequences on phantoms and in vivo between the MR-linac and a diagnostic 1.5 T MRI scanner. Materials and methods: Cardiac-synchronized MRI was performed on the MR-linac using a wireless peripheral pulse-oximeter unit. Diagnostically used T1 and T2 mapping sequences were acquired twice on the MR-linac and on a 1.5 T MR-simulator for a gel phantom and 5 healthy volunteers in breath-hold. Phantom T1 and T2 values were compared to gold-standard measurements and percentage errors (PE) were computed, where negative/positive PE indicate underestimations/overestimations. Manually selected regions-of-interest were used for in vivo intra/inter scanner evaluation. Results: Cardiac-synchronized T1 and T2 qMRI was enabled after successful hardware installation on the MR-linac. From the phantom experiments, the measured T1/T2 relaxation times had a maximum percentage error (PE) of −4.4%/−8.8% on the MR-simulator and a maximum PE of −3.2%/+8.6% on the MR-linac. Mean T1/T2 of the myocardium were 1012±34/51±2 ms on the MR-simulator and 1034±42/51±1 ms on the MR-linac. Conclusions: Accurate cardiac-synchronized T1 and T2 mapping is feasible on a 1.5 T MR-linac and might enable novel plan adaptation workflows and cardiotoxicity assessments.
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- 2022
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11. Using Cooperative Adaptive Cruise Control (CACC) to Form High-Performance Vehicle Streams. FINAL REPORT
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Liu, Hao, Xiao, Lin, Kan, Xingan (David), Shladover, Steven E., Lu, Xiao-Yun, Wang, Meng, Schakel, Wouter, and van Arem, Bart
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Freeway capacity and throughput can be significantly improved via CACC vehicle string operations. This research aims to provide authoritative predictions regarding impacts of CACC on traffic flow and quantitative estimations of the influences of CACC operation strategies that might create the capacity and throughput improvement in the freeway traffic stream. To this end, the PATH and Delft team have independently developed micro simulation platforms that represent the behaviors of CACC vehicles and their interactions with human drivers. The models have been calibrated using archived data from a complicated 13-mile long section of the northbound SR-99 freeway near Sacramento, California for an 8-hour period in which the traffic fluctuated between free-flow and congested conditions. Calibration results show extremely good agreement between field data and model predictions. The models have been cross-validated and produced similar macroscopic traffic performance. With the simulation platforms, we have explored the effects of CACC under various market penetrations and the impacts of a CACC managed lane (ML) strategy, a vehicle awareness device (VAD) strategy and discretionary lane change (DLC) restrictions on the traffic flow dynamics of a simple four-lane freeway section and the 13-mile freeway corridor.
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- 2018
12. Methylation of the serotonin reuptake transporter gene and non-motor symptoms in dystonia patients
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Timmers, Elze R., Plösch, Torsten, Smit, Marenka, Hof, Ingrid H., Verkaik-Schakel, Rikst Nynke, Tijssen, Marina A. J., de Koning, Tom J., and Niezen-Koning, Klary E.
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- 2022
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13. Feasibility study for the measurement of $\pi N$ TDAs at PANDA in $\bar{p}p\to J/\psi\pi^0$
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PANDA Collaboration, Singh, B., Erni, W., Krusche, B., Steinacher, M., Walford, N., Liu, H., Liu, Z., Liu, B., Shen, X., Wang, C., Zhao, J., Albrecht, M., Erlen, T., Fink, M., Heinsius, F. H., Held, T., Holtmann, T., Jasper, S., Keshk, I., Koch, H., Kopf, B., Kuhlmann, M., Kümmel, M., Leiber, S., Mikirtychyants, M., Musiol, P., Mustafa, A., Pelizäus, M., Pychy, J., Richter, M., Schnier, C., Schröder, T., Sowa, C., Steinke, M., Triffterer, T., Wiedner, U., Ball, M., Beck, R., Hammann, C., Ketzer, B., Kube, M., Mahlberg, P., Rossbach, M., Schmidt, C., Schmitz, R., Thoma, U., Urban, M., Walther, D., Wendel, C., Wilson, A., Bianconi, A., Bragadireanu, M., Caprini, M., Pantea, D., Patel, B., Czyzycki, W., Domagala, M., Filo, G., Jaworowski, J., Krawczyk, M., Lisowski, E., Lisowski, F., Michałek, M., Poznański, P., Płażek, J., Korcyl, K., Kozela, A., Kulessa, P., Lebiedowicz, P., Pysz, K., Schäfer, W., Szczurek, A., Fiutowski, T., Idzik, M., Mindur, B., Przyborowski, D., Swientek, K., Biernat, J., Kamys, B., Kistryn, S., Korcyl, G., Krzemien, W., Magiera, A., Moskal, P., Pyszniak, A., Rudy, Z., Salabura, P., Smyrski, J., Strzempek, P., Wronska, A., Augustin, I., Böhm, R., Lehmann, I., Marinescu, D. Nicmorus, Schmitt, L., Varentsov, V., Al-Turany, M., Belias, A., Deppe, H., Veis, N. Divani, Dzhygadlo, R., Ehret, A., Flemming, H., Gerhardt, A., Götzen, K., Gromliuk, A., Gruber, L., Karabowicz, R., Kliemt, R., Krebs, M., Kurilla, U., Lehmann, D., Löchner, S., Lühning, J., Lynen, U., Orth, H., Patsyuk, M., Peters, K., Saito, T., Schepers, G., Schmidt, C. J., Schwarz, C., Schwiening, J., Täschner, A., Traxler, M., Ugur, C., Voss, B., Wieczorek, P., Wilms, A., Zühlsdorf, M., Abazov, V., Alexeev, G., Arefiev, V. A., Astakhov, V., Barabanov, M. Yu., Batyunya, B. V., Davydov, Y., Dodokhov, V. Kh., Efremov, A., Fechtchenko, A., Fedunov, A. G., Galoyan, A., Grigoryan, S., Koshurnikov, E. K., Lobanov, Y. Yu., Lobanov, V. I., Makarov, A. F., Malinina, L. V., Malyshev, V., Olshevskiy, A. G., Perevalova, E., Piskun, A. A., Pocheptsov, T., Pontecorvo, G., Rodionov, V., Rogov, Y., Salmin, R., Samartsev, A., Sapozhnikov, M. G., Shabratova, G., Skachkov, N. B., Skachkova, A. N., Strokovsky, E. A., Suleimanov, M., Teshev, R., Tokmenin, V., Uzhinsky, V., Vodopianov, A., Zaporozhets, S. A., Zhuravlev, N. I., Zinchenko, A., Zorin, A. G., Branford, D., Glazier, D., Watts, D., Böhm, M., Britting, A., Eyrich, W., Lehmann, A., Pfaffinger, M., Uhlig, F., Dobbs, S., Seth, K., Tomaradze, A., Xiao, T., Bettoni, D., Carassiti, V., Ramusino, A. Cotta, Dalpiaz, P., Drago, A., Fioravanti, E., Garzia, I., Savrie, M., Akishina, V., Kisel, I., Kozlov, G., Pugach, M., Zyzak, M., Gianotti, P., Guaraldo, C., Lucherini, V., Bersani, A., Bracco, G., Macri, M., Parodi, R. F., Biguenko, K., Brinkmann, K. T., Di Pietro, V., Diehl, S., Dormenev, V., Drexler, P., Düren, M., Etzelmüller, E., Galuska, M., Gutz, E., Hahn, C., Hayrapetyan, A., Kesselkaul, M., Kühn, W., Kuske, T., Lange, J. S., Liang, Y., Metag, V., Moritz, M., Nanova, M., Nazarenko, S., Novotny, R., Quagli, T., Reiter, S., Riccardi, A., Rieke, J., Rosenbaum, C., Schmidt, M., Schnell, R., Stenzel, H., Thöring, U., Ullrich, T., Wagner, M. N., Wasem, T., Wohlfahrt, B., Zaunick, H. G., Tomasi-Gustafsson, E., Ireland, D., Rosner, G., Seitz, B., Deepak, P. N., Kulkarni, A., Apostolou, A., Babai, M., Kavatsyuk, M., Lemmens, P. J., Lindemulder, M., Loehner, H., Messchendorp, J., Schakel, P., Smit, H., Tiemens, M., van der Weele, J. C., Veenstra, R., Vejdani, S., Dutta, K., Kalita, K., Kumar, A., Roy, A., Sohlbach, H., Bai, M., Bianchi, L., Büscher, M., Cao, L., Cebulla, A., Dosdall, R., Gillitzer, A., Goldenbaum, F., Grunwald, D., Herten, A., Hu, Q., Kemmerling, G., Kleines, H., Lai, A., Lehrach, A., Nellen, R., Ohm, H., Orfanitski, S., Prasuhn, D., Prencipe, E., Pütz, J., Ritman, J., Schadmand, S., Sefzick, T., Serdyuk, V., Sterzenbach, G., Stockmanns, T., Wintz, P., Wüstner, P., Xu, H., Zambanini, A., Li, S., Li, Z., Sun, Z., Rigato, V., Isaksson, L., Achenbach, P., Corell, O., Denig, A., Distler, M., Hoek, M., Karavdina, A., Lauth, W., Merkel, H., Müller, U., Pochodzalla, J., Sanchez, S., Schlimme, S., Sfienti, C., Thiel, M., Ahmadi, H., Ahmed, S., Bleser, S., Capozza, L., Cardinali, M., Dbeyssi, A., Deiseroth, M., Feldbauer, F., Fritsch, M., Fröhlich, B., Kang, D., Khaneft, D., Klasen, R., Leithoff, H. H., Lin, D., Maas, F., Maldaner, S., Martínez, M., Michel, M., Espí, M. C. Mora, Morales, C. Morales, Motzko, C., Nerling, F., Noll, O., Pflüger, S., Pitka, A., Piñeiro, D. Rodríguez, Sanchez-Lorente, A., Steinen, M., Valente, R., Weber, T., Zambrana, M., Zimmermann, I., Fedorov, A., Korjik, M., Missevitch, O., Boukharov, A., Malyshev, O., Marishev, I., Balanutsa, V., Balanutsa, P., Chernetsky, V., Demekhin, A., Dolgolenko, A., Fedorets, P., Gerasimov, A., Goryachev, V., Chandratre, V., Datar, V., Dutta, D., Jha, V., Kumawat, H., Mohanty, A. K., Parmar, A., Roy, B., Sonika, G., Fritzsch, C., Grieser, S., Hergemöller, A. K., Hetz, B., Hüsken, N., Khoukaz, A., Wessels, J. P., Khosonthongkee, K., Kobdaj, C., Limphirat, A., Srisawad, P., Yan, Y., Barnyakov, A. Yu., Barnyakov, M., Beloborodov, K., Blinov, V. E., Bobrovnikov, V. S., Kuyanov, I. A., Martin, K., Onuchin, A. P., Serednyakov, S., Sokolov, A., Tikhonov, Y., Blinov, A. E., Kononov, S., Kravchenko, E. A., Atomssa, E., Kunne, R., Ma, B., Marchand, D., Ramstein, B., van de Wiele, J., Wang, Y., Boca, G., Costanza, S., Genova, P., Montagna, P., Rotondi, A., Abramov, V., Belikov, N., Bukreeva, S., Davidenko, A., Derevschikov, A., Goncharenko, Y., Grishin, V., Kachanov, V., Kormilitsin, V., Levin, A., Melnik, Y., Minaev, N., Mochalov, V., Morozov, D., Nogach, L., Poslavskiy, S., Ryazantsev, A., Ryzhikov, S., Semenov, P., Shein, I., Uzunian, A., Vasiliev, A., Yakutin, A., Roy, U., Yabsley, B., Belostotski, S., Gavrilov, G., Izotov, A., Manaenkov, S., Miklukho, O., Veretennikov, D., Zhdanov, A., Bäck, T., Cederwall, B., Makonyi, K., Preston, M., Tegner, P. E., Wölbing, D., Rai, A. K., Godre, S., Calvo, D., Coli, S., De Remigis, P., Filippi, A., Giraudo, G., Lusso, S., Mazza, G., Mignone, M., Rivetti, A., Wheadon, R., Amoroso, A., Bussa, M. P., Busso, L., De Mori, F., Destefanis, M., Fava, L., Ferrero, L., Greco, M., Hu, J., Lavezzi, L., Maggiora, M., Maniscalco, G., Marcello, S., Sosio, S., Spataro, S., Balestra, F., Iazzi, F., Introzzi, R., Lavagno, A., Olave, J., Birsa, R., Bradamante, F., Bressan, A., Martin, A., Calen, H., Andersson, W. Ikegami, Johansson, T., Kupsc, A., Marciniewski, P., Papenbrock, M., Pettersson, J., Schönning, K., Wolke, M., Galnander, B., Diaz, J., Chackara, V. Pothodi, Chlopik, A., Kesik, G., Melnychuk, D., Slowinski, B., Trzcinski, A., Wojciechowski, M., Wronka, S., Zwieglinski, B., Bühler, P., Marton, J., Steinschaden, D., Suzuki, K., Widmann, E., Zmeskal, J., and Semenov-Tian-Shansky, K. M.
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Nuclear Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
The exclusive charmonium production process in $\bar{p}p$ annihilation with an associated $\pi^0$ meson $\bar{p}p\to J/\psi\pi^0$ is studied in the framework of QCD collinear factorization. The feasibility of measuring this reaction through the $J/\psi\to e^+e^-$ decay channel with the PANDA (AntiProton ANnihilation at DArmstadt) experiment is investigated. Simulations on signal reconstruction efficiency as well as the background rejection from various sources including the $\bar{p}p\to\pi^+\pi^-\pi^0$ and $\bar{p}p\to J/\psi\pi^0\pi^0$ reactions are performed with PandaRoot, the simulation and analysis software framework of the PANDA experiment. It is shown that the measurement can be done at PANDA with significant constraining power under the assumption of an integrated luminosity attainable in four to five months of data taking at the maximum design luminosity., Comment: 25 pages, 22 figures
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- 2016
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14. Feasibility studies of time-like proton electromagnetic form factors at PANDA at FAIR
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PANDA Collaboration, Singh, B., Erni, W., Krusche, B., Steinacher, M., Walford, N., Liu, B., Liu, H., Liu, Z., Shen, X., Wang, C., Zhao, J., Albrecht, M., Erlen, T., Fink, M., Heinsius, F., Held, T., Holtmann, T., Jasper, S., Keshk, I., Koch, H., Kopf, B., Kuhlmann, M., Kümmel, M., Leiber, S., Mikirtychyants, M., Musiol, P., Mustafa, A., Pelizäus, M., Pychy, J., Richter, M., Schnier, C., Schröder, T., Sowa, C., Steinke, M., Triffterer, T., Wiedner, U., Ball, M., Beck, R., Hammann, C., Ketzer, B., Kube, M., Mahlberg, P., Rossbach, M., Schmidt, C., Schmitz, R., Thoma, U., Urban, M., Walther, D., Wendel, C., Wilson, A., Bianconi, A., Bragadireanu, M., Caprini, M., Pantea, D., Patel, B., Czyzycki, W., Domagala, M., Filo, G., Jaworowski, J., Krawczyk, M., Lisowski, F., Lisowski, E., Michałek, M., Poznański, P., Płażek, J., Korcyl, K., Kozela, A., Kulessa, P., Lebiedowicz, P., Pysz, K., Schäfer, W., Szczurek, A., Fiutowski, T., Idzik, M., Mindur, B., Przyborowski, D., Swientek, K., Biernat, J., Kamys, B., Kistryn, S., Korcyl, G., Krzemien, W., Magiera, A., Moskal, P., Pyszniak, A., Rudy, Z., Salabura, P., Smyrski, J., Strzempek, P., Wronska, A., Augustin, I., Böhm, R., Lehmann, I., Marinescu, D. Nicmorus, Schmitt, L., Varentsov, V., Al-Turany, M., Belias, A., Deppe, H., Dzhygadlo, R., Ehret, A., Flemming, H., Gerhardt, A., Götzen, K., Gromliuk, A., Gruber, L., Karabowicz, R., Kliemt, R., Krebs, M., Kurilla, U., Lehmann, D., Löchner, S., Lühning, J., Lynen, U., Orth, H., Patsyuk, M., Peters, K., Saito, T., Schepers, G., Schmidt, C. J., Schwarz, C., Schwiening, J., Täschner, A., Traxler, M., Ugur, C., Voss, B., Wieczorek, P., Wilms, A., Zühlsdorf, M., Abazov, V., Alexeev, G., Arefiev, V. A., Astakhov, V., Barabanov, M. Yu., Batyunya, B. V., Davydov, Y., Dodokhov, V. Kh., Efremov, A., Fechtchenko, A., Fedunov, A. G., Galoyan, A., Grigoryan, S., Koshurnikov, E. K., Lobanov, Y. Yu., Lobanov, V. I., Makarov, A. F., Malinina, L. V., Malyshev, V., Olshevskiy, A. G., Perevalova, E., Piskun, A. A., Pocheptsov, T., Pontecorvo, G., Rodionov, V., Rogov, Y., Salmin, R., Samartsev, A., Sapozhnikov, M. G., Shabratova, G., Skachkov, N. B., Skachkova, A. N., Strokovsky, E. A., Suleimanov, M., Teshev, R., Tokmenin, V., Uzhinsky, V., Vodopianov, A., Zaporozhets, S. A., Zhuravlev, N. I., Zorin, A. G., Branford, D., Glazier, D., Watts, D., Böhm, M., Britting, A., Eyrich, W., Lehmann, A., Pfaffinger, M., Uhlig, F., Dobbs, S., Seth, K., Tomaradze, A., Xiao, T., Bettoni, D., Carassiti, V., Ramusino, A. Cotta, Dalpiaz, P., Drago, A., Fioravanti, E., Garzia, I., Savrie, M., Akishina, V., Kisel, I., Kozlov, G., Pugach, M., Zyzak, M., Gianotti, P., Guaraldo, C., Lucherini, V., Bersani, A., Bracco, G., Macri, M., Parodi, R. F., Biguenko, K., Brinkmann, K., Di Pietro, V., Diehl, S., Dormenev, V., Drexler, P., Düren, M., Etzelmüller, E., Galuska, M., Gutz, E., Hahn, C., Hayrapetyan, A., Kesselkaul, M., Kühn, W., Kuske, T., Lange, J. S., Liang, Y., Metag, V., Nanova, M., Nazarenko, S., Novotny, R., Quagli, T., Reiter, S., Rieke, J., Rosenbaum, C., Schmidt, M., Schnell, R., Stenzel, H., Thöring, U., Ullrich, M., Wagner, M. N., Wasem, T., Wohlfahrt, B., Zaunick, H., Ireland, D., Rosner, G., Seitz, B., Deepak, P. N., Kulkarni, A., Apostolou, A., Babai, M., Kavatsyuk, M., Lemmens, P. J., Lindemulder, M., Loehner, H., Messchendorp, J., Schakel, P., Smit, H., Tiemens, M., van der Weele, J. C., Veenstra, R., Vejdani, S., Dutta, K., Kalita, K., Kumar, A., Roy, A., Sohlbach, H., Bai, M., Bianchi, L., Büscher, M., Cao, L., Cebulla, A., Dosdall, R., Gillitzer, A., Goldenbaum, F., Grunwald, D., Herten, A., Hu, Q., Kemmerling, G., Kleines, H., Lehrach, A., Nellen, R., Ohm, H., Orfanitski, S., Prasuhn, D., Prencipe, E., Pütz, J., Ritman, J., Schadmand, S., Sefzick, T., Serdyuk, V., Sterzenbach, G., Stockmanns, T., Wintz, P., Wüstner, P., Xu, H., Zambanini, A., Li, S., Li, Z., Sun, Z., Rigato, V., Isaksson, L., Achenbach, P., Corell, O., Denig, A., Distler, M., Hoek, M., Karavdina, A., Lauth, W., Merkel, H., Müller, U., Pochodzalla, J., Sanchez, S., Schlimme, S., Sfienti, C., Thiel, M., Ahmadi, H., Ahmed, S., Bleser, S., Capozza, L., Cardinali, M., Dbeyssi, A., Deiseroth, M., Feldbauer, F., Fritsch, M., Fröhlich, B., Jasinski, P., Kang, D., Khaneft, D., Klasen, R., Leithoff, H. H., Lin, D., Maas, F., Maldaner, S., Marta, M., Michel, M., Espí, M. C. Mora, Morales, C. Morales, Motzko, C., Nerling, F., Noll, O., Pflüger, S., Pitka, A., Piñeiro, D. Rodríguez, Sanchez-Lorente, A., Steinen, M., Valente, R., Weber, T., Zambrana, M., Zimmermann, I., Fedorov, A., Korjik, M., Missevitch, O., Boukharov, A., Malyshev, O., Marishev, I., Balanutsa, V., Balanutsa, P., Chernetsky, V., Demekhin, A., Dolgolenko, A., Fedorets, P., Gerasimov, A., Goryachev, V., Chandratre, V., Datar, V., Dutta, D., Jha, V., Kumawat, H., Mohanty, A. K., Parmar, A., Roy, B., Sonika, G., Fritzsch, C., Grieser, S., Hergemöller, A., Hetz, B., Hüsken, N., Khoukaz, A., Wessels, J. P., Khosonthongkee, K., Kobdaj, C., Limphirat, A., Srisawad, P., Yan, Y., Barnyakov, M., Barnyakov, A. Yu., Beloborodov, K., Blinov, A. E., Blinov, V. E., Bobrovnikov, V. S., Kononov, S., Kravchenko, E. A., Kuyanov, I. A., Martin, K., Onuchin, A. P., Serednyakov, S., Sokolov, A., Tikhonov, Y., Atomssa, E., Kunne, R., Marchand, D., Ramstein, B., van de Wiele, J., Wang, Y., Boca, G., Costanza, S., Genova, P., Montagna, P., Rotondi, A., Abramov, V., Belikov, N., Bukreeva, S., Davidenko, A., Derevschikov, A., Goncharenko, Y., Grishin, V., Kachanov, V., Kormilitsin, V., Levin, A., Melnik, Y., Minaev, N., Mochalov, V., Morozov, D., Nogach, L., Poslavskiy, S., Ryazantsev, A., Ryzhikov, S., Semenov, P., Shein, I., Uzunian, A., Vasiliev, A., Yakutin, A., Tomasi-Gustafsson, E., Roy, U., Yabsley, B., Belostotski, S., Gavrilov, G., Izotov, A., Manaenkov, S., Miklukho, O., Veretennikov, D., Zhdanov, A., Makonyi, K., Preston, M., Tegner, P., Wölbing, D., Bäck, T., Cederwall, B., Rai, A. K., Godre, S., Calvo, D., Coli, S., De Remigis, P., Filippi, A., Giraudo, G., Lusso, S., Mazza, G., Mignone, M., Rivetti, A., Wheadon, R., Balestra, F., Iazzi, F., Introzzi, R., Lavagno, A., Olave, J., Amoroso, A., Bussa, M. P., Busso, L., De Mori, F., Destefanis, M., Fava, L., Ferrero, L., Greco, M., Hu, J., Lavezzi, L., Maggiora, M., Maniscalco, G., Marcello, S., Sosio, S., Spataro, S., Birsa, R., Bradamante, F., Bressan, A., Martin, A., Calen, H., Andersson, W. Ikegami, Johansson, T., Kupsc, A., Marciniewski, P., Papenbrock, M., Pettersson, J., Schönning, K., Wolke, M., Galnander, B., Diaz, J., Chackara, V. Pothodi, Chlopik, A., Kesik, G., Melnychuk, D., Slowinski, B., Trzcinski, A., Wojciechowski, M., Wronka, S., Zwieglinski, B., Bühler, P., Marton, J., Steinschaden, D., Suzuki, K., Widmann, E., and Zmeskal, J.
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High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
Simulation results for future measurements of electromagnetic proton form factors at \PANDA (FAIR) within the PandaRoot software framework are reported. The statistical precision with which the proton form factors can be determined is estimated. The signal channel $\bar p p \to e^+ e^-$ is studied on the basis of two different but consistent procedures. The suppression of the main background channel, $\textit{i.e.}$ $\bar p p \to \pi^+ \pi^-$, is studied. Furthermore, the background versus signal efficiency, statistical and systematical uncertainties on the extracted proton form factors are evaluated using two different procedures. The results are consistent with those of a previous simulation study using an older, simplified framework. However, a slightly better precision is achieved in the PandaRoot study in a large range of momentum transfer, assuming the nominal beam conditions and detector performance.
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- 2016
15. Controlled Experiments for Word Embeddings
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Wilson, Benjamin J. and Schakel, Adriaan M. J.
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Computer Science - Computation and Language ,68T50 ,I.2.7 - Abstract
An experimental approach to studying the properties of word embeddings is proposed. Controlled experiments, achieved through modifications of the training corpus, permit the demonstration of direct relations between word properties and word vector direction and length. The approach is demonstrated using the word2vec CBOW model with experiments that independently vary word frequency and word co-occurrence noise. The experiments reveal that word vector length depends more or less linearly on both word frequency and the level of noise in the co-occurrence distribution of the word. The coefficients of linearity depend upon the word. The special point in feature space, defined by the (artificial) word with pure noise in its co-occurrence distribution, is found to be small but non-zero., Comment: Chagelog: Rerun experiment with subsampling turned off; re-interpreted results in light of Schnabel et al. (2015). 15 pages
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- 2015
16. Measuring Word Significance using Distributed Representations of Words
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Schakel, Adriaan M. J. and Wilson, Benjamin J.
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Computer Science - Computation and Language - Abstract
Distributed representations of words as real-valued vectors in a relatively low-dimensional space aim at extracting syntactic and semantic features from large text corpora. A recently introduced neural network, named word2vec (Mikolov et al., 2013a; Mikolov et al., 2013b), was shown to encode semantic information in the direction of the word vectors. In this brief report, it is proposed to use the length of the vectors, together with the term frequency, as measure of word significance in a corpus. Experimental evidence using a domain-specific corpus of abstracts is presented to support this proposal. A useful visualization technique for text corpora emerges, where words are mapped onto a two-dimensional plane and automatically ranked by significance., Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures
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- 2015
17. Differential Placental DNA Methylation of NR3C1 in Extremely Preterm Infants With Poorer Neurological Functioning
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Nienke H. van Dokkum, Sofia Bachini, Rikst Nynke Verkaik-Schakel, Dyvonne H. Baptist, Sahar Salavati, Karianne E. Kraft, Sicco A. Scherjon, Arend F. Bos, and Torsten Plösch
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placenta ,DNA methylation ,stress ,prematurity ,neurological functioning ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
BackgroundUnderstanding underlying mechanisms of neurodevelopmental impairment following preterm birth may enhance opportunities for targeted interventions. We aimed to assess whether placental DNA methylation of selected genes affected early neurological functioning in preterm infants.MethodsWe included 43 infants, with gestational age
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- 2022
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18. The Impact of Attendance on First-Year Study Success in Problem-Based Learning
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Bijsmans, Patrick and Schakel, Arjan H.
- Abstract
The literature on first-year study success has identified a host of factors that may affect a student's chances of succeeding, ranging from personal circumstances to educational environment. One of the factors that often emerges in this context is (non-)attendance of classes, lectures and tutorials. Intuitively, one would expect this to be all the more important in programmes that employ a student-centred and interactive approach to learning, such as problem-based learning. Interestingly, there is little dedicated research that looks into the importance of (non-)attendance in such a learning environment. This article addresses this gap in the literature by looking at the effect of (non-)attendance on the study success of three cohorts of Maastricht University's Bachelor in European Studies (annual intake of 325-350 students). Controlling for a range of factors, we find that attendance matters for several measures of study success and also for the committed and participating student.
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- 2018
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19. Audio-Visual Speech in Noise Perception in Dyslexia
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van Laarhoven, Thijs, Keetels, Mirjam, Schakel, Lemmy, and Vroomen, Jean
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Individuals with developmental dyslexia (DD) may experience, besides reading problems, other speech-related processing deficits. Here, we examined the influence of visual articulatory information (lip-read speech) at various levels of background noise on auditory word recognition in children and adults with DD. We found that children with a documented history of DD have deficits in their ability to gain benefit from lip-read information that disambiguates noise-masked speech. We show with another group of adult individuals with DD that these deficits persist into adulthood. These deficits could not be attributed to impairments in unisensory auditory word recognition. Rather, the results indicate a specific deficit in audio-visual speech processing and suggest that impaired multisensory integration might be an important aspect of DD.
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- 2018
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20. Hans Keman, Social democracy. A comparative account of the left-wing party family: Routledge, Abingdon, 2017, ISBN 978-0-415-57407-5, 29.99 GBP
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Schakel, Arjan H.
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- 2020
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21. The potential of ΛΞ- and ΛΞ- studies with PANDA at FAIR
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Barucca, G., Davì, F., Lancioni, G., Mengucci, P., Montalto, L., Natali, P. P., Paone, N., Rinaldi, D., Scalise, L., Erni, W., Krusche, B., Steinacher, M., Walford, N., Cao, N., Liu, Z., Liu, C., Liu, B., Shen, X., Sun, S., Tao, J., Xiong, X. A., Zhao, G., Zhao, J., Albrecht, M., Alkakhi, W., Bökelmann, S., Feldbauer, F., Fink, M., Frech, J., Freudenreich, V., Fritsch, M., Hagdorn, R., Heinsius, F. H., Held, T., Holtmann, T., Keshk, I., Koch, H., Kopf, B., Kuhlmann, M., Kümmel, M., Küßner, M., Li, J., Mustafa, A., Pelizäus, M., Pitka, A., Reher, J., Reicherz, G., Richter, M., Schnier, C., Sohl, L., Steinke, M., Triffterer, T., Wenzel, C., Wiedner, U., Denizli, H., Er, N., Beck, R., Hammann, C., Hartmann, J., Ketzer, B., Müllers, J., Rossbach, M., Salisbury, B., Schmidt, C., Thoma, U., Urban, M., Bianconi, A., Bragadireanu, M., Pantea, D., Domagala, M., Filo, G., Lisowski, E., Lisowski, F., Michałek, M., Poznański, P., Płażek, J., Korcyl, K., Kozela, A., Lebiedowicz, P., Pysz, K., Schäfer, W., Szczurek, A., Fiutowski, T., Idzik, M., Swientek, K., Terlecki, P., Korcyl, G., Lalik, R., Malige, A., Moskal, P., Nowakowski, K., Przygoda, W., Rathod, N., Rudy, Z., Salabura, P., Smyrski, J., Augustin, I., Böhm, R., Lehmann, I., Schmitt, L., Varentsov, V., Al-Turany, M., Belias, A., Deppe, H., Dzhygadlo, R., Flemming, H., Gerhardt, A., Götzen, K., Heinz, A., Jiang, P., Karabowicz, R., Koch, S., Kurilla, U., Lehmann, D., Lühning, J., Lynen, U., Orth, H., Peters, K., Rieger, J., Saito, T., Schepers, G., Schmidt, C. J., Schwarz, C., Schwiening, J., Täschner, A., Traxler, M., Voss, B., Wieczorek, P., Abazov, V., Alexeev, G., Arefiev, V. A., Astakhov, V., Barabanov, M. Yu., Batyunya, B. V., Dodokhov, V. Kh., Efremov, A., Fechtchenko, A., Galoyan, A., Golovanov, G., Koshurnikov, E. K., Lobanov, Y. Yu., Olshevskiy, A. G., Piskun, A. A., Samartsev, A., Shimanski, S., Skachkov, N. B., Skachkova, A. N., Strokovsky, E. A., Tokmenin, V., Uzhinsky, V., Verkheev, A., Vodopianov, A., Zhuravlev, N. I., Branford, D., Watts, D., Böhm, M., Eyrich, W., Lehmann, A., Miehling, D., Pfaffinger, M., Quin, N., Robison, L., Seth, K., Xiao, T., Bettoni, D., Ali, A., Hamdi, A., Himmelreich, M., Krebs, M., Nakhoul, S., Nerling, F., Belousov, A., Kisel, I., Kozlov, G., Pugach, M., Zyzak, M., Bianchi, N., Gianotti, P., Lucherini, V., Bracco, G., Bettner, Y., Bodenschatz, S., Brinkmann, K. T., Brück, L., Diehl, S., Dormenev, V., Düren, M., Erlen, T., Föhl, K., Hahn, C., Hayrapetyan, A., Hofmann, J., Kegel, S., Kesselkaul, M., Köseoglu, I., Kripko, A., Kühn, W., Lange, J. S., Metag, V., Moritz, M., Nanova, M., Novotny, R., Orsich, P., Pereira-de-Lira, J., Peter, M., Sachs, M., Schmidt, M., Schubert, R., Stenzel, H., Straube, M., Strickert, M., Thöring, U., Wasem, T., Wohlfahrt, B., Zaunick, H. G., Tomasi-Gustafsson, E., Glazier, D., Ireland, D., Seitz, B., Deepak, P. N., Kulkarni, A., Kappert, R., Kavatsyuk, M., Loehner, H., Messchendorp, J., Rodin, V., Schakel, P., Vejdani, S., Dutta, K., Kalita, K., Huang, G., Liu, D., Peng, H., Qi, H., Sun, Y., Zhou, X., Kunze, M., Azizi, K., Derichs, A., Dosdall, R., Esmail, W., Gillitzer, A., Goldenbaum, F., Grunwald, D., Jokhovets, L., Kannika, J., Kulessa, P., Orfanitski, S., Pérez Andrade, G., Prasuhn, D., Prencipe, E., Pütz, J., Ritman, J., Rosenthal, E., Schadmand, S., Schmitz, R., Scholl, A., Sefzick, T., Serdyuk, V., Stockmanns, T., Veretennikov, D., Wintz, P., Wüstner, P., Xu, H., Zhou, Y., Cao, X., Hu, Q., Li, Z., Li, H., Liang, Y., Ma, X., Rigato, V., Isaksson, L., Achenbach, P., Aycock, A., Corell, O., Denig, A., Distler, M., Hoek, M., Lauth, W., Leithoff, H. H., Liu, Z., Merkel, H., Müller, U., Pochodzalla, J., Schlimme, S., Sfienti, C., Thiel, M., Zambrana, M., Ahmed , S., Bleser, S., Bölting, M., Capozza, L., Dbeyssi, A., Ehret, A., Grasemann, P., Klasen, R., Kliemt, R., Maas, F., Maldaner, S., Morales Morales, C., Motzko, C., Noll, O., Pflüger, S., Rodríguez Piñeiro, D., Schupp, F., Steinen, M., Wolff, S., Zimmermann, I., Fedorov, A., Kazlou, D., Korzhik, M., Missevitch, O., Balashoff, A., Boukharov, A., Malyshev, O., Balanutsa, P., Chernetsky, V., Demekhin, A., Dolgolenko, A., Fedorets, P., Gerasimov, A., Golubev, A., Goryachev, V., Kantsyrev, A., Kirin, D. Y., Kristi, N., Ladygina, E., Luschevskaya, E., Matveev, V. A., Panjushkin, V., Stavinskiy, A. V., Basant, K. N., Kumawat, H., Roy, B., Saxena, A., Yogesh, S., Bonaventura, D., Brand, P., Fritzsch, C., Grieser, S., Hargens, C., Hergemöller, A. K., Hetz, B., Hüsken, N., Kellers, J., Khoukaz, A., Bumrungkoh, D., Herold, C., Khosonthongkee, K., Kobdaj, C., Limphirat, A., Manasatitpong, K., Nasawad, T., Pongampai, S., Simantathammakul, T., Srisawad, P., Wongprachanukul, N., Yan, Y., Yu, C., Zhang, X., Zhu, W., Blinov, A. E., Kononov, S., Kravchenko, E. A., Antokhin, E., Barnyakov, A. Yu., Beloborodov, K., Blinov, V. E., Kuyanov, I. A., Pivovarov, S., Pyata, E., Tikhonov, Y., Kunne, R., Ramstein, B., Hunter, G., Lattery, M., Pace, H., Boca, G., Duda, D., Finger, M., Finger, Jr., M., Kveton, A., Pesek, M., Peskova, M., Prochazka, I., Slunecka, M., Volf, M., Gallus, P., Jary, V., Korchak, O., Marcisovsky, M., Neue, G., Novy, J., Tomasek, L., Tomasek, M., Virius, M., Vrba, V., Abramov, V., Bukreeva, S., Chernichenko, S., Derevschikov, A., Ferapontov, V., Goncharenko, Y., Levin, A., Maslova, E., Melnik, Y., Meschanin, A., Minaev, N., Mochalov, V., Moiseev, V., Morozov, D., Nogach, L., Poslavskiy, S., Ryazantsev, A., Ryzhikov, S., Semenov, P., Shein, I., Uzunian, A., Vasiliev, A., Yakutin, A., Roy, U., Yabsley, B., Belostotski, S., Fedotov, G., Gavrilov, G., Izotov, A., Manaenkov, S., Miklukho, O., Zhdanov, A., Atac, A., Bäck, T., Cederwall, B., Makonyi, K., Preston, M., Tegner, P. E., Wölbing, D., Gandhi, K., Rai, A. K., Godre, S., Crede, V., Dobbs, S., Eugenio, P., Lersch, D., Calvo, D., De Remigis, P., Filippi, A., Mazza, G., Rivetti, A., Wheadon, R., Bussa, M. P., Spataro, S., Iazzi, F., Lavagno, A., Martin, A., Akram, A., Calen, H., Ikegami Andersson, W., Johansson, T., Kupsc, A., Marciniewski, P., Papenbrock, M., Regina, J., Schönning, K., Wolke, M., Diaz, J., Pothodi Chackara, V., Chlopik, A., Kesik, G., Melnychuk, D., Tarasiuk, J., Wojciechowski, M., Wronka, S., Zwieglinski, B., Amsler, C., Bühler, P., Kratochwil, N., Marton, J., Nalti, W., Steinschaden, D., Widmann, E., Zimmermann, S., and Zmeskal, J.
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- 2021
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22. DNA Methylation of TLR4, VEGFA, and DEFA5 Is Associated With Necrotizing Enterocolitis in Preterm Infants
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Daphne H. Klerk, Torsten Plösch, Rikst Nynke Verkaik-Schakel, Jan B. F. Hulscher, Elisabeth M. W. Kooi, and Arend F. Bos
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neonatology ,DNA methylation ,epigenetics ,preterm infant ,necrotizing enterocolitis ,Toll-like receptor 4 ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
Background: Epigenetic changes, such as DNA methylation, may contribute to an increased susceptibility for developing necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) in preterm infants. We assessed DNA methylation in five NEC-associated genes, selected from literature: EPO, VEGFA, ENOS, DEFA5, and TLR4 in infants with NEC and controls.Methods: Observational cohort study including 24 preterm infants who developed NEC (≥Bell Stage IIA) and 45 matched controls. DNA was isolated from stool samples and methylation measured using pyrosequencing. We investigated differences in methylation prior to NEC compared with controls. Next, in NEC infants, we investigated methylation patterns long before, a short time before NEC onset, and after NEC.Results: Prior to NEC, only TLR4 CpG 2 methylation was increased in NEC infants (median = 75.4%, IQR = 71.3–83.8%) versus controls (median = 69.0%, IQR = 64.5–77.4%, p = 0.025). In NEC infants, VEGFA CpG 3 methylation was 0.8% long before NEC, increasing to 1.8% a short time before NEC and 2.0% after NEC (p = 0.011; p = 0.021, respectively). A similar pattern was found in DEFA5 CpG 1, which increased from 75.4 to 81.4% and remained 85.3% (p = 0.027; p = 0.019, respectively). These changes were not present for EPO, ENOS, and TLR4.Conclusion: Epigenetic changes of TLR4, VEGFA, and DEFA5 are present in NEC infants and can differ in relation to the time of NEC onset. Differences in DNA methylation of TLR4, VEGFA, and DEFA5 may influence gene expression and increase the risk for developing NEC. This study also demonstrates the use of human DNA extraction from stool samples as a novel non-invasive method for exploring the bowel of preterm infants and which can also be used for necrotizing enterocolitis patients.
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- 2021
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23. Feasibility studies for the measurement of time-like proton electromagnetic form factors from p¯p→μ+μ-P¯ANDA at p¯p→μ+μ-P¯ANDA at FAIR
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Barucca, G., Davì, F., Lancioni, G., Mengucci, P., Montalto, L., Natali, P. P., Paone, N., Rinaldi, D., Scalise, L., Erni, W., Krusche, B., Steinacher, M., Walford, N., Cao, N., Liu, Z., Liu, C., Liu, B., Shen, X., Sun, S., Tao, J., Xiong, X. A., Zhao, G., Zhao, J., Albrecht, M., Alkakhi, W., Bökelmann, S., Coen, S., Feldbauer, F., Fink, M., Frech, J., Freudenreich, V., Fritsch, M., Grochowski, J., Hagdorn, R., Heinsius, F. H., Held, T., Holtmann, T., Keshk, I., Koch, H., Kopf, B., Kuhlmann, M., Kümmel, M., Küßner, M., Li, J., Linzen, L., Maldaner, S., Oppotsch, J., Pankonin, S., Pelizäus, M., Pflüger, S., Pitka, A., Reher, J., Reicherz, G., Schnier, C., Steinke, M., Triffterer, T., Wenzel, C., Wiedner, U., Denizli, H., Er, N., Keskin, U., Olgun, A. T., Yerlikaya, S., Yilmaz, A., Beck, R., Hammann, C., Hartmann, J., Ketzer, B., Müllers, J., Rossbach, M., Salisbury, B., Schmidt, C., Thoma, U., Urban, M., Bianconi, A., Bragadireanu, M., Pantea, D., Domagala, M., Filo, G., Lisowski, E., Lisowski, F., Michałek, M., Poznański, P., Płażek, J., Korcyl, K., Kozela, A., Lebiedowicz, P., Pysz, K., Schäfer, W., Szczurek, A., Firlej, M., Fiutowski, T., Idzik, M., Moron, J., Swientek, K., Terlecki, P., Korcyl, G., Lalik, R., Malige, A., Moskal, P., Nowakowski, K., Przygoda, W., Rathod, N., Rudy, Z., Salabura, P., Smyrski, J., Augustin, I., Böhm, R., Lehmann, I., Schmitt, L., Varentsov, V., Al-Turany, M., Belias, A., Deppe, H., Dzhygadlo, R., Flemming, H., Gerhardt, A., Götzen, K., Heinz, A., Jiang, P., Karabowicz, R., Koch, S., Kurilla, U., Lehmann, D., Lühning, J., Lynen, U., Orth, H., Peters, K., Saito, T., Schepers, G., Schmidt, C. J., Schwarz, C., Schwiening, J., Täschner, A., Traxler, M., Voss, B., Wieczorek, P., Abazov, V., Alexeev, G., Arefiev, V. A., Astakhov, V., Barabanov, M. Yu., Batyunya, B. V., Dodokhov, V. Kh., Efremov, A., Fechtchenko, A., Galoyan, A., Golovanov, G., Koshurnikov, E. K., Lobanov, Y. Yu., Olshevskiy, A. G., Piskun, A. A., Samartsev, A., Shimanski, S., Skachkov, N. B., Skachkova, A. N., Strokovsky, E. A., Tokmenin, V., Uzhinsky, V., Verkheev, A., Vodopianov, A., Zhuravlev, N. I., Branford, D., Watts, D., Böhm, M., Eyrich, W., Lehmann, A., Miehling, D., Pfaffinger, M., Quin, N., Robison, L., Seth, K., Xiao, T., Bettoni, D., Ali, A., Hamdi, A., Himmelreich, M., Krebs, M., Nakhoul, S., Nerling, F., Belousov, A., Kisel, I., Kozlov, G., Pugach, M., Zyzak, M., Bianchi, N., Gianotti, P., Lucherini, V., Bracco, G., Bettner, Y., Bodenschatz, S., Brinkmann, K. T., Brück, L., Diehl, S., Dormenev, V., Düren, M., Erlen, T., Föhl, K., Hahn, C., Hayrapetyan, A., Hofmann, J., Kegel, S., Kesselkaul, M., Köseoglu, I., Kripko, A., Kühn, W., Lange, J. S., Metag, V., Moritz, M., Nanova, M., Novotny, R., Orsich, P., Pereira-de-Lira, J., Peter, M., Sachs, M., Schmidt, M., Schubert, R., Stenzel, H., Straube, M., Strickert, M., Thöring, U., Wasem, T., Wohlfahrt, B., Zaunick, H. G., Tomasi-Gustafsson, E., Glazier, D., Ireland, D., Seitz, B., Deepak, P. N., Kulkarni, A., Kappert, R., Kavatsyuk, M., Loehner, H., Messchendorp, J., Rodin, V., Schakel, P., Vejdani, S., Dutta, K., Kalita, K., Huang, G., Liu, D., Peng, H., Qi, H., Sun, Y., Zhou, X., Kunze, M., Azizi, K., Tavukoglu, Z., Derichs, A., Dosdall, R., Esmail, W., Gillitzer, A., Goldenbaum, F., Grunwald, D., Jokhovets, L., Kannika, J., Kulessa, P., Orfanitski, S., Pérez Andrade, G., Prasuhn, D., Prencipe, E., Pütz, J., Ritman, J., Rosenthal, E., Schadmand, S., Schmitz, R., Scholl, A., Sefzick, T., Serdyuk, V., Stockmanns, T., Veretennikov, D., Wintz, P., Wüstner, P., Xu, H., Zhou, Y., Cao, X., Hu, Q., Li, Z., Li, H., Liang, Y., Ma, X., Rigato, V., Isaksson, L., Achenbach, P., Corell, O., Denig, A., Distler, M., Hoek, M., Lauth, W., Leithoff, H. H., Liu, Z., Merkel, H., Müller, U., Pochodzalla, J., Schlimme, S., Sfienti, C., Thiel, M., Zambrana, M., Ahmed , S., Bleser, S., Bölting, M., Capozza, L., Dbeyssi, A., Ehret, A., Klasen, R., Kliemt, R., Maas, F., Motzko, C., Noll, O., Piñeiro, D. Rodríguez, Schupp, F., Steinen, M., Wolff, S., Zimmermann, I., Fedorov, A., Kazlou, D., Korzhik, M., Missevitch, O., Balanutsa, P., Chernetsky, V., Demekhin, A., Dolgolenko, A., Fedorets, P., Gerasimov, A., Golubev, A., Goryachev, V., Kantsyrev, A., Kirin, D. Y., Kristi, N., Ladygina, E., Luschevskaya, E., Matveev, V. A., Panjushkin, V., Stavinskiy, A. V., Balashoff, A., Boukharov, A., Malyshev, O., Basant, K. N., Kumawat, H., Roy, B., Saxena, A., Yogesh, S., Bonaventura, D., Brand, P., Fritzsch, C., Grieser, S., Hargens, C., Hergemöller, A. K., Hetz, B., Hüsken, N., Kellers, J., Khoukaz, A., Mannweiler, C., Vestrick, S., Bumrungkoh, D., Herold, C., Khosonthongkee, K., Kobdaj, C., Limphirat, A., Manasatitpong, K., Nasawad, T., Pongampai, S., Simantathammakul, T., Srisawad, P., Wongprachanukul, N., Yan, Y., Yu, C., Zhang, X., Zhu, W., Blinov, A. E., Kononov, S., Kravchenko, E. A., Antokhin, E., Barnyakov, A. Yu., Beloborodov, K., Blinov, V. E., Kuyanov, I. A., Pivovarov, S., Pyata, E., Tikhonov, Y., Hunter, G., Lattery, M., Pace, H., Boca, G., Duda, D., Finger, M., Finger, Jr., M., Kveton, A., Pesek, M., Peskova, M., Prochazka, I., Slunecka, M., Volf, M., Gallus, P., Jary, V., Korchak, O., Marcisovsky, M., Neue, G., Novy, J., Tomasek, L., Tomasek, M., Virius, M., Vrba, V., Abramov, V., Bukreeva, S., Chernichenko, S., Derevschikov, A., Ferapontov, V., Goncharenko, Y., Levin, A., Maslova, E., Melnik, Y., Meschanin, A., Minaev, N., Mochalov, V., Moiseev, V., Morozov, D., Nogach, L., Poslavskiy, S., Ryazantsev, A., Ryzhikov, S., Semenov, P., Shein, I., Uzunian, A., Vasiliev, A., Yakutin, A., Roy, U., Yabsley, B., Belostotski, S., Fedotov, G., Gavrilov, G., Izotov, A., Manaenkov, S., Miklukho, O., Zhdanov, A., Atac, A., Bäck, T., Cederwall, B., Makonyi, K., Preston, M., Tegner, P. E., Wölbing, D., Gandhi, K., Rai, A. K., Godre, S., Crede, V., Dobbs, S., Eugenio, P., Lersch, D., Calvo, D., De Remigis, P., Filippi, A., Mazza, G., Rivetti, A., Wheadon, R., Bussa, M. P., Spataro, S., Iazzi, F., Lavagno, A., Martin, A., Akram, A., Calen, H., Andersson, W. Ikegami, Johansson, T., Kupsc, A., Marciniewski, P., Papenbrock, M., Regina, J., Rieger, J., Schönning, K., Wolke, M., Pothodi Chackara, V., Chlopik, A., Kesik, G., Melnychuk, D., Tarasiuk, J., Wojciechowski, M., Wronka, S., Zwieglinski, B., Amsler, C., Bühler, P., Marton, J., Nalti, W., Steinschaden, D., Widmann, E., Zimmermann, S., and Zmeskal, J.
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- 2021
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24. Gestational oxidative stress protects against adult obesity and insulin resistance
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Lidiya G. Dimova, Simone Battista, Torsten Plösch, Rosalie A. Kampen, Fan Liu, Rikst Nynke Verkaik-Schakel, Domenico Pratico, Henkjan J. Verkade, and Uwe J.F. Tietge
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Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Pregnancy complications such as preeclampsia cause increased fetal oxidative stress and fetal growth restriction, and associate with a higher incidence of adult metabolic syndrome. However, the pathophysiological contribution of oxidative stress per se is experimentally difficult to discern and has not been investigated. This study determined, if increased intrauterine oxidative stress (IUOx) affects adiposity, glucose and cholesterol metabolism in adult Ldlr−/−xSod2+/+ offspring from crossing male Ldlr−/−xSod2+/+ mice with Ldlr−/−xSod2 +/- dams (IUOx) or Ldlr−/−xSod2 +/- males with Ldlr−/−xSod2+/+ dams (control). At 12 weeks of age mice received Western diet for an additional 12 weeks. Adult male IUOx offspring displayed lower body weight and reduced adiposity associated with improved glucose tolerance compared to controls. Reduced weight gain in IUOx was conceivably due to increased energy dissipation in white adipose tissue conveyed by higher expression of Ucp1 and an accompanying decrease in DNA methylation in the Ucp1 enhancer region. Female offspring did not show comparable phenotypes. These results demonstrate that fetal oxidative stress protects against the obesogenic effects of Western diet in adulthood by programming energy dissipation in white adipose tissue at the level of Ucp1. Keywords: Fetal oxidative stress, Mitohormesis, Metabolic programming, Adiposity, Epigenetics, Methylation
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- 2020
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25. From blood to lung tissue: effect of cigarette smoke on DNA methylation and lung function
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Maaike de Vries, Diana A van der Plaat, Ivana Nedeljkovic, Rikst Nynke Verkaik-Schakel, Wierd Kooistra, Najaf Amin, Cornelia M van Duijn, Corry-Anke Brandsma, Cleo C van Diemen, Judith M Vonk, and H Marike Boezen
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Cigarette smoking ,Lung function ,DNA methylation ,EWAS ,Lung tissue ,Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 - Abstract
Abstract Background Genetic and environmental factors play a role in the development of COPD. The epigenome, and more specifically DNA methylation, is recognized as important link between these factors. We postulate that DNA methylation is one of the routes by which cigarette smoke influences the development of COPD. In this study, we aim to identify CpG-sites that are associated with cigarette smoke exposure and lung function levels in whole blood and validate these CpG-sites in lung tissue. Methods The association between pack years and DNA methylation was studied genome-wide in 658 current smokers with >5 pack years using robust linear regression analysis. Using mediation analysis, we subsequently selected the CpG-sites that were also associated with lung function levels. Significant CpG-sites were validated in lung tissue with pyrosequencing and expression quantitative trait methylation (eQTM) analysis was performed to investigate the association between DNA methylation and gene expression. Results 15 CpG-sites were significantly associated with pack years and 10 of these were additionally associated with lung function levels. We validated 5 CpG-sites in lung tissue and found several associations between DNA methylation and gene expression. Conclusion This study is the first to validate a panel of CpG-sites that are associated with cigarette smoking and lung function levels in whole blood in the tissue of interest: lung tissue.
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- 2018
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26. Fiscal rules, powerful levers for controlling the health budget? Evidence from 32 OECD countries
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Herman Christiaan Schakel, Erilia Hao Wu, and Patrick Jeurissen
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Health budgeting ,Fiscal rules ,Budgetary governance ,OECD ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Publicly funded healthcare forms an intricate part of government spending in most Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries, because of its reliance on entitlements and dedicated revenue streams. The impact of budgetary rules and procedures on publicly funded health care might thus be different from other spending categories. In this study we focus on the potential of fiscal rules to contain these costs and their design features. Methods We assess the relationship between fiscal rules and the level of public health care expenditure of 32 (OECD) countries between 1985 and 2014. Our dataset consists of health care expenditure data of the OECD and data on fiscal rules of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for that same period. Through a multivariate regression analysis, we estimate the association between fiscal rules and its subcategories and inflation adjusted public health care expenditure. We control for population, Gross Domestic Product (GDP), debt and whether countries received an IMF bailout for the specific period. In all our regressions we include country and year fixed effects. Results The presence of a fiscal rule on average is associated with a 3 % reduction of public health care expenditure. Supranational balanced budget rules are associated with some 8 % lower expenditure. Health service provision-oriented countries with more passive purchasing structures seem less capable of containing costs through fiscal rules. Fiscal rules demonstrate lagged effectiveness; the potential for expenditure reduction increases after one and two years of fiscal rule implementation. Finally, we find evidence that fiscal frameworks that incorporate multi-year expenditure ceilings show additional potential for cost control. Conclusions Our study shows that there seems a clear relationship between the potential of fiscal rules and budgeting health expenses. Using fiscal rules to contain the level of health care expenditure can thus be a necessary precondition for successful strategies for cost control.
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- 2018
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27. Evaluation of diffusion weighted imaging for tumor delineation in head-and-neck radiotherapy by comparison with automatically segmented 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography
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Tim Schakel, Boris Peltenburg, Jan-Willem Dankbaar, Carlos E. Cardenas, Michalis Aristophanous, Chris H.J. Terhaard, Johannes M. Hoogduin, and Marielle E.P. Philippens
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Medical physics. Medical radiology. Nuclear medicine ,R895-920 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Background and purpose: Diffusion weighted (DW) MRI may facilitate target volume delineation for head-and-neck (HN) radiation treatment planning. In this study we assessed the use of a dedicated, geometrically accurate, DW-MRI sequence for target volume delineation. The delineations were compared with semi-automatic segmentations on 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography (PET) images and evaluated for interobserver variation. Methods and materials: Fifteen HN cancer patients underwent both DW-MRI and FDG-PET for RT treatment planning. Target delineation on DW-MRI was performed by three observers, while for PET a semi-automatic segmentation was performed using a Gaussian mixture model. For interobserver variation and intermodality variation, volumes, overlap metrics and Hausdorff distances were calculated from the delineations. Results: The median volumes delineated by the three observers on DW-MRI were 10.8, 10.5 and 9.0 cm3 respectively, and was larger than the median PET volume (8.0 cm3). The median conformity index of DW-MRI for interobserver variation was 0.73 (range 0.38–0.80). Compared to PET, the delineations on DW-MRI by the three observers showed a median dice similarity coefficient of 0.71, 0.69 and 0.72 respectively. The mean Hausdorff distance was small with median (range) distances between PET and DW-MRI of 2.3 (1.5–6.8), 2.5 (1.6–6.9) and 2.0 (1.35–7.6) mm respectively. Over all patients, the median 95th percentile distances were 6.0 (3.0–13.4), 6.6 (4.0–24.0) and 5.3 (3.4–26.0) mm. Conclusion: Using a dedicated DW-MRI sequence, target volumes could be defined with good interobserver agreement and a good overlap with PET. Target volume delineation using DW-MRI is promising in head-and-neck radiotherapy, combined with other modalities, it can lead to more precise target volume delineation. Keywords: Radiotherapy, Head and neck, Target volume delineation, Diffusion MRI, PET
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- 2018
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28. Mid-gestation low-dose LPS administration results in female-specific excessive weight gain upon a western style diet in mouse offspring
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Dijkstra, Dorieke J., Verkaik-Schakel, Rikst Nynke, Eskandar, Sharon, Limonciel, Alice, Stojanovska, Violeta, Scherjon, Sicco A., and Plösch, Torsten
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- 2020
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29. The fetal programming effect of prenatal smoking on Igf1r and Igf1 methylation is organ- and sex-specific
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Karolin F. Meyer, Rikst Nynke Verkaik-Schakel, Wim Timens, Lester Kobzik, Torsten Plösch, and Machteld N. Hylkema
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dna methylation ,epigenetics ,liver ,lung ,mouse ,prenatal ,pyrosequencing ,Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
The impact of prenatal smoke exposure (PSE) on DNA methylation has been demonstrated in blood samples from children of smoking mothers, but evidence for sex-dependent smoke-induced effects is limited. As the identified differentially methylated genes can be associated with developmental processes, and insulin-like growth factors (IGFs) play a critical role in prenatal tissue growth, we hypothesized that PSE induces fetal programming of Igf1r and Igf1. Using a mouse model of smoking during pregnancy, we show that PSE alters promoter methylation of Igf1r and Igf1 and deregulates their gene expression in lung and liver of fetal (E17.5) and neonatal (D3) mouse offspring. By further comparing female versus male, lung versus liver, or fetal versus neonatal time point, our results demonstrate that CpG site-specific aberrant methylation patterns sex-dependently vary per organ and time point. Moreover, PSE reduces gene expression of Igf1r and Igf1, dependent on organ, sex, and offspring's age. Our results indicate that PSE may be a source of organ-specific rather than general systemic fetal programming. This is exemplified here by gene promoter methylation and mRNA levels of Igf1r and Igf1, together with a sex- and organ-specific naturally established correlation of both parameters that is affected by prenatal smoke exposure. Moreover, the comparison of fetuses with neonates suggests a CpG site-dependent reversibility/persistence of PSE-induced differential methylation patterns.
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- 2017
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30. The effects of a psychological intervention directed at optimizing immune function: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
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Lemmy Schakel, Dieuwke S. Veldhuijzen, Henriët van Middendorp, Corine Prins, Simone A. Joosten, Tom H. M. Ottenhoff, Leo G. Visser, and Andrea W. M. Evers
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BCG vaccination ,Immune system ,e-Health ,Cognitive behavioral therapy ,Serious gaming ,Psychophysiology ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Background Previous research has provided evidence for the link between psychological processes and psychophysiological health outcomes. Psychological interventions, such as face-to-face or online cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and serious games aimed at improving health, have shown promising results in promoting health outcomes. Few studies so far, however, have examined whether Internet-based CBT combined with serious gaming elements is effective in modulating health outcomes. Moreover, studies often did not incorporate psychophysiological or immunological challenges in order to gain insight into physiological responses to real-life challenges after psychological interventions. The overall aim of this study is to investigate the effects of a psychological intervention on self-reported and physiological health outcomes in response to immune and psychophysiological challenges. Methods/design In a randomized controlled trial, 60 healthy men are randomly assigned to either an experimental condition, receiving guided Internet-based (e-health) CBT combined with health-related serious gaming elements for 6 weeks, or a control condition receiving no intervention. After the psychological intervention, self-reported vitality is measured, and participants are given an immunological challenge in the form of a Mycobacterium bovis Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG) vaccination. One day after the vaccination, participants are asked to perform several psychophysiological tasks in order to explore the effects of the psychological intervention on participants’ stress response following the immune challenge. To assess the delayed effects of vaccination on self-reported and physiological health outcomes, a follow-up visit is planned 4 weeks later. Total study duration is approximately 14 weeks. The primary outcome measure is self-reported vitality measured directly after the intervention. Secondary outcome measures include inflammatory and endocrine markers, as well as psychophysiological measures of heart rate and skin conductance in response to the psychophysiological tasks after the BCG vaccination. Discussion The innovative design features of this study – e.g., combining guided e-health CBT with health-related serious gaming elements and incorporating immunological and psychophysiological challenges – will provide valuable information on the effects of a psychological intervention on both self-reported and physiological health outcomes. This study will offer further insights into the mechanisms underlying the link between psychological factors and health outcomes and is anticipated to contribute to the optimization of health care strategies. Trial registration Nederlands Trial Register, NTR5610 . Registered on 4 January 2016.
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- 2017
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31. Human sFLT1 Leads to Severe Changes in Placental Differentiation and Vascularization in a Transgenic hsFLT1/rtTA FGR Mouse Model
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Rebekka Vogtmann, Elisabeth Kühnel, Nikolai Dicke, Rikst Nynke Verkaik-Schakel, Torsten Plösch, Hubert Schorle, Violeta Stojanovska, Florian Herse, Angela Köninger, Rainer Kimmig, Elke Winterhager, and Alexandra Gellhaus
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human sFLT1 ,fetal growth restriction ,vascularization ,placenta ,transgenic mouse model ,Diseases of the endocrine glands. Clinical endocrinology ,RC648-665 - Abstract
The anti-angiogenic soluble fms-like tyrosine kinase 1 (sFLT1) is one of the candidates in the progression of preeclampsia, often associated with fetal growth restriction (FGR). Therapeutic agents against preeclampsia with/without FGR, as well as adequate transgenic sFLT1 mouse models for testing such agents, are still missing. Much is known about sFLT1–mediated endothelial dysfunction in several tissues; however, the influence of sFLT1 on placental and fetal development is currently unknown. We hypothesize that sFLT1 is involved in the progression of FGR by influencing placental differentiation and vascularization and is a prime candidate for interventional strategies. Therefore, we generated transgenic inducible human sFLT1/reverse tetracycline-controlled transactivator (hsFLT1/rtTA) mice, in which hsFLT1 is ubiquitously overexpressed during pregnancy in dams and according to the genetics in hsFLT1/rtTA homozygous and heterozygous fetuses. Induction of hsFLT1 led to elevated hsFLT1 levels in the serum of dams and on mRNA level in all placentas and hetero-/homozygous fetuses, resulting in FGR in all fetuses at term. The strongest effects in respect to FGR were observed in the hsFLT1/rtTA homozygous fetuses, which exhibited the highest hsFLT1 levels. Only fetal hsFLT1 expression led to impaired placental morphology characterized by reduced placental efficiency, enlarged maternal sinusoids, reduced fetal capillaries, and impaired labyrinthine differentiation, associated with increased apoptosis. Besides impaired placental vascularization, the expression of several transporter systems, such as glucose transporter 1 and 3 (Glut-1; Glut-3); amino acid transporters, solute carrier family 38, member one and two (Slc38a1; Slc38a2); and most severely the fatty acid translocase Cd36 and fatty acid binding protein 3 (Fabp3) was reduced upon hsFLT1 expression, associated with an accumulation of phospholipids in the maternal serum. Moreover, the Vegf pathway showed alterations, resulting in reduced Vegf, Vegfb, and Plgf protein levels and increased Bad and Caspase 9 mRNA levels. We suggest that hsFLT1 exerts an inhibitory influence on placental vascularization by reducing Vegf signaling, which leads to apoptosis in fetal vessels, impairing placental differentiation, and the nutrient exchange function of the labyrinth. These effects were more pronounced when both the dam and the fetus expressed hsFLT1 and ultimately result in FGR and resemble the preeclamptic phenotype in humans.
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- 2019
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32. Can verbal suggestions strengthen the effects of a relaxation intervention?
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Lemmy Schakel, Dieuwke S Veldhuijzen, Henriët van Middendorp, Meriem Manaï, Stefanie H Meeuwis, Pieter Van Dessel, and Andrea W M Evers
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Short stress management interventions such as relaxation therapy have demonstrated preliminary effectiveness in reducing stress-related problems. A promising tool to strengthen the effectiveness of relaxation-based interventions is the use of verbal suggestions, as previous research provided evidence that verbal suggestions can induce positive outcome expectancies, facilitate adaptive responses to stress and improve health outcomes. The present experimental proof-of-concept study aimed to investigate the effects of a brief relaxation intervention and specifically the role of verbal suggestions on stress-related outcomes assessed by self-report questionnaires and psychophysiological data. 120 participants (mean age = 22.1 years) were randomized to one of four intervention conditions: a brief relaxation intervention plus verbal suggestions condition, a brief relaxation intervention only condition, a verbal suggestions only condition, and a control condition. Afterwards, participants were subjected to a psychosocial stress challenge to assess reactivity to a stressful event. Immediately after both relaxation interventions (with and without verbal suggestions), lower self-reported state anxiety was found compared to the control condition, but no differences were observed in response to the stressor. The verbal suggestions only condition did not impact state anxiety. No significant effects were found for verbal suggestion interventions on cortisol, alpha amylase, heart rate and skin conductance. This is the first study investigating the role of verbal suggestions in the effectiveness of a brief relaxation intervention. Although this experimental proof-of-concept study provides support for the effectiveness of a brief relaxation intervention in lowering state anxiety directly after the intervention, the effects did not impact the response to a subsequent stressor and we did not observe any evidence for the add-on effectiveness of verbal suggestions. The effectiveness of brief relaxation interventions on stress responses should be investigated further in future research by incorporating interventions that are tailored to the specific stress challenge and various types of verbal suggestions.
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- 2019
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33. Understanding fatigue in adults with visual impairment: A path analysis study of sociodemographic, psychological and health-related factors.
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Wouter Schakel, Christina Bode, Peter M van de Ven, Hilde P A van der Aa, Carel T J Hulshof, Gerardus H M B van Rens, and Ruth M A van Nispen
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BACKGROUND:Fatigue is a disabling problem in patients with visual impairment, but its etiology is still poorly understood. Our objective was to identify the determinants of fatigue in adults with visual impairment compared to adults with normal sight. METHODS:Cross-sectional data on fatigue and sociodemographic, psychological and health-related factors was obtained with validated questionnaires. Structural equational modeling using hypothesized relationships and explorative analyses were used to identify (in)direct pathways contributing to fatigue in 247 adults with visual impairment. The model was then tested in a reference group of 151 adults with normal sight. RESULTS:The final model explained 64% of fatigue variance in participants with visual impairment and revealed the following factors to be directly associated with fatigue: depressive symptoms (β = 0.723, p
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- 2019
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34. Differential placental DNA methylation of VEGFA and LEP in small-for-gestational age fetuses with an abnormal cerebroplacental ratio.
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Iris Bekkering, Mariëtte Leeuwerke, Jozien C Tanis, Mirthe H Schoots, Rikst Nynke Verkaik-Schakel, Torsten Plösch, Caterina M Bilardo, Jasper J H Eijsink, Arend F Bos, and Sicco A Scherjon
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BackgroundIn Fetal Growth Restriction 'fetal programming' may take place via DNA methylation, which has implications for short-term and long-term health outcomes. Small-for-gestational age fetuses are considered fetal growth restricted, characterized by brain-sparing when fetal Doppler hemodynamics are abnormal, expressed as a cerebroplacental ratio (CPR) MethodsWe compared DNA methylation of six genes in 41 small-for-gestational age placentas with a normal or abnormal CPR. We selected EPO, HIF1A, VEGFA, LEP, PHLDA2, and DHCR24 for their role in angiogenesis, immunomodulation, and placental and fetal growth. DNA methylation was analyzed by pyrosequencing.ResultsGrowth restricted fetuses with an abnormal CPR showed hypermethylation of the VEGFA gene at one CpG (VEGFA-309, p = .001) and an overall hypomethylation of the LEP gene, being significant at two CpGs (LEP-123, p = .049; LEP-51, p = .020). No differences in methylation were observed for the other genes.ConclusionsVEGFA and LEP genes are differentially methylated in placentas of small-for-gestational age fetuses with brain-sparing. Hypermethylation of VEGFA-309 in abnormal CPR-placentas could indicate successful compensatory mechanisms. Methylation of LEP-51 is known to suppress LEP expression. Hypomethylation in small-for-gestational age placentas with abnormal CPR may result in hyperleptinemia and predispose to leptin-resistance later in life.
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- 2019
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35. Cross-Comparison and Calibration of Two Microscopic Traffic Simulation Models for Complex Freeway Corridors with Dedicated Lanes
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Xingan (David) Kan, Lin Xiao, Hao Liu, Meng Wang, Wouter J. Schakel, Xiao-Yun Lu, Bart van Arem, Steven E. Shladover, and Robert A. Ferlis
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Transportation engineering ,TA1001-1280 ,Transportation and communications ,HE1-9990 - Abstract
Realistic microscopic traffic simulation is essential for prospective evaluation of the potential impacts of new traffic control strategies. Freeway corridors with interacting bottlenecks and dedicated lanes generate complex traffic flow phenomena and congestion patterns, which are difficult to reproduce with existing microscopic simulation models. This paper discusses two alternative driving behavior models that are capable of modeling freeways with multiple bottlenecks and dedicated lanes over an extended period with varying demand levels. The models have been calibrated using archived data from a complicated 13-mile long section of the northbound SR99 freeway near Sacramento, California, for an 8-hour time period in which the traffic fluctuated from free-flow to congested conditions. The corridor includes multiple bottlenecks, multiple entry and exit ramps, and an HOV lane. Calibration results show extremely good agreement between field data and model predictions. The models have been cross-validated and produced similar macroscopic traffic performance. The main behavior that should be captured for successful modeling of such a complex corridor includes the anticipative and cooperative driver behavior near merges, lane preference in presence of dedicated lanes, and variations in desired headway along the corridor.
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- 2019
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36. Corrigendum to 'Hodgkin Lymphoma Cell Lines Are Characterized by a Specific miRNA Expression Profile.' Neoplasia 2009, Feb;11(2):167-176
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J.H. Gibcus, L.P. Tan, G. Harms, R.N. Schakel, D. de Jong, T. Blokzijl, P. Möller, S. Poppema, B.J. Kroesen, and A. van den Berg
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Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Published
- 2018
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37. The effects of a gamified approach avoidance training and verbal suggestions on food outcomes.
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Lemmy Schakel, Dieuwke S Veldhuijzen, Henriët van Middendorp, Pieter Van Dessel, Jan De Houwer, Rafael Bidarra, and Andrea W M Evers
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
There is initial support for the effectiveness of approach-avoidance trainings in altering food-related health behaviors. Furthermore, outcome expectancies induced by verbal suggestions might optimize the effectiveness of these interventions, as shown in placebo research. The present study investigated the effectiveness of a gamified approach-avoidance training on food-related outcomes and whether verbal suggestions could strengthen those effects. A total of 120 participants were randomly assigned to 1 of 4 conditions: serious gaming only, verbal suggestions only, serious gaming combined with verbal suggestions, or a gaming control condition. Virtual food preference and food choice were assessed with a food choice task, with pairs differing in healthiness or in healthiness and attractiveness. Implicit food preference was assessed with an Implicit Association Test and food intake with a bogus taste test. Participants in both serious gaming conditions made healthier food choices for pairs differing in healthiness and attractiveness and had healthier implicit food preferences compared to gaming control. No effects were found on food intake. These findings provide the first preliminary support for the effects of a gamified approach-avoidance training on virtual food choice and implicit food preference. Future studies should further elucidate these effects, also in other health domains such as physical activity.
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- 2018
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38. From blood to lung tissue: effect of cigarette smoke on DNA methylation and lung function
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de Vries, Maaike, van der Plaat, Diana A, Nedeljkovic, Ivana, Verkaik-Schakel, Rikst Nynke, Kooistra, Wierd, Amin, Najaf, van Duijn, Cornelia M, Brandsma, Corry-Anke, van Diemen, Cleo C, Vonk, Judith M, and Marike Boezen, H
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- 2018
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39. Fiscal rules, powerful levers for controlling the health budget? Evidence from 32 OECD countries
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Schakel, Herman Christiaan, Wu, Erilia Hao, and Jeurissen, Patrick
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- 2018
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40. Will Automated Vehicles Negatively Impact Traffic Flow?
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S. C. Calvert, W. J. Schakel, and J. W. C. van Lint
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Transportation engineering ,TA1001-1280 ,Transportation and communications ,HE1-9990 - Abstract
With low-level vehicle automation already available, there is a necessity to estimate its effects on traffic flow, especially if these could be negative. A long gradual transition will occur from manual driving to automated driving, in which many yet unknown traffic flow dynamics will be present. These effects have the potential to increasingly aid or cripple current road networks. In this contribution, we investigate these effects using an empirically calibrated and validated simulation experiment, backed up with findings from literature. We found that low-level automated vehicles in mixed traffic will initially have a small negative effect on traffic flow and road capacities. The experiment further showed that any improvement in traffic flow will only be seen at penetration rates above 70%. Also, the capacity drop appeared to be slightly higher with the presence of low-level automated vehicles. The experiment further investigated the effect of bottleneck severity and truck shares on traffic flow. Improvements to current traffic models are recommended and should include a greater detail and understanding of driver-vehicle interaction, both in conventional and in mixed traffic flow. Further research into behavioural shifts in driving is also recommended due to limited data and knowledge of these dynamics.
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- 2017
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41. Feasibility studies of time-like proton electromagnetic form factors at P ¯ ANDA at FAIR
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Singh, B., Erni, W., Krusche, B., Steinacher, M., Walford, N., Liu, B., Liu, H., Liu, Z., Shen, X., Wang, C., Zhao, J., Albrecht, M., Erlen, T., Fink, M., Heinsius, F., Held, T., Holtmann, T., Jasper, S., Keshk, I., Koch, H., Kopf, B., Kuhlmann, M., Kümmel, M., Leiber, S., Mikirtychyants, M., Musiol, P., Mustafa, A., Pelizäus, M., Pychy, J., Richter, M., Schnier, C., Schröder, T., Sowa, C., Steinke, M., Triffterer, T., Wiedner, U., Ball, M., Beck, R., Hammann, C., Ketzer, B., Kube, M., Mahlberg, P., Rossbach, M., Schmidt, C., Schmitz, R., Thoma, U., Urban, M., Walther, D., Wendel, C., Wilson, A., Bianconi, A., Bragadireanu, M., Caprini, M., Pantea, D., Patel, B., Czyzycki, W., Domagala, M., Filo, G., Jaworowski, J., Krawczyk, M., Lisowski, F., Lisowski, E., Michałek, M., Poznański, P., Płażek, J., Korcyl, K., Kozela, A., Kulessa, P., Lebiedowicz, P., Pysz, K., Schäfer, W., Szczurek, A., Fiutowski, T., Idzik, M., Mindur, B., Przyborowski, D., Swientek, K., Biernat, J., Kamys, B., Kistryn, S., Korcyl, G., Krzemien, W., Magiera, A., Moskal, P., Pyszniak, A., Rudy, Z., Salabura, P., Smyrski, J., Strzempek, P., Wronska, A., Augustin, I., Böhm, R., Lehmann, I., Nicmorus Marinescu, D., Schmitt, L., Varentsov, V., Al-Turany, M., Belias, A., Deppe, H., Dzhygadlo, R., Ehret, A., Flemming, H., Gerhardt, A., Götzen, K., Gromliuk, A., Gruber, L., Karabowicz, R., Kliemt, R., Krebs, M., Kurilla, U., Lehmann, D., Löchner, S., Lühning, J., Lynen, U., Orth, H., Patsyuk, M., Peters, K., Saito, T., Schepers, G., Schmidt, C. J., Schwarz, C., Schwiening, J., Täschner, A., Traxler, M., Ugur, C., Voss, B., Wieczorek, P., Wilms, A., Zühlsdorf, M., Abazov, V., Alexeev, G., Arefiev, V. A., Astakhov, V., Barabanov, M. Yu., Batyunya, B. V., Davydov, Y., Dodokhov, V. Kh., Efremov, A., Fechtchenko, A., Fedunov, A. G., Galoyan, A., Grigoryan, S., Koshurnikov, E. K., Lobanov, Y. Yu., Lobanov, V. I., Makarov, A. F., Malinina, L. V., Malyshev, V., Olshevskiy, A. G., Perevalova, E., Piskun, A. A., Pocheptsov, T., Pontecorvo, G., Rodionov, V., Rogov, Y., Salmin, R., Samartsev, A., Sapozhnikov, M. G., Shabratova, G., Skachkov, N. B., Skachkova, A. N., Strokovsky, E. A., Suleimanov, M., Teshev, R., Tokmenin, V., Uzhinsky, V., Vodopianov, A., Zaporozhets, S. A., Zhuravlev, N. I., Zorin, A. G., Branford, D., Glazier, D., Watts, D., Böhm, M., Britting, A., Eyrich, W., Lehmann, A., Pfaffinger, M., Uhlig, F., Dobbs, S., Seth, K., Tomaradze, A., Xiao, T., Bettoni, D., Carassiti, V., Cotta Ramusino, A., Dalpiaz, P., Drago, A., Fioravanti, E., Garzia, I., Savrie, M., Akishina, V., Kisel, I., Kozlov, G., Pugach, M., Zyzak, M., Gianotti, P., Guaraldo, C., Lucherini, V., Bersani, A., Bracco, G., Macri, M., Parodi, R. F., Biguenko, K., Brinkmann, K., Di Pietro, V., Diehl, S., Dormenev, V., Drexler, P., Düren, M., Etzelmüller, E., Galuska, M., Gutz, E., Hahn, C., Hayrapetyan, A., Kesselkaul, M., Kühn, W., Kuske, T., Lange, J. S., Liang, Y., Metag, V., Nanova, M., Nazarenko, S., Novotny, R., Quagli, T., Reiter, S., Rieke, J., Rosenbaum, C., Schmidt, M., Schnell, R., Stenzel, H., Thöring, U., Ullrich, M., Wagner, M. N., Wasem, T., Wohlfahrt, B., Zaunick, H., Ireland, D., Rosner, G., Seitz, B., Deepak, P. N., Kulkarni, A., Apostolou, A., Babai, M., Kavatsyuk, M., Lemmens, P. J., Lindemulder, M., Loehner, H., Messchendorp, J., Schakel, P., Smit, H., Tiemens, M., van der Weele, J. C., Veenstra, R., Vejdani, S., Dutta, K., Kalita, K., Kumar, A., Roy, A., Sohlbach, H., Bai, M., Bianchi, L., Büscher, M., Cao, L., Cebulla, A., Dosdall, R., Gillitzer, A., Goldenbaum, F., Grunwald, D., Herten, A., Hu, Q., Kemmerling, G., Kleines, H., Lehrach, A., Nellen, R., Ohm, H., Orfanitski, S., Prasuhn, D., Prencipe, E., Pütz, J., Ritman, J., Schadmand, S., Sefzick, T., Serdyuk, V., Sterzenbach, G., Stockmanns, T., Wintz, P., Wüstner, P., Xu, H., Zambanini, A., Li, S., Li, Z., Sun, Z., Xu, H., Rigato, V., Isaksson, L., Achenbach, P., Corell, O., Denig, A., Distler, M., Hoek, M., Karavdina, A., Lauth, W., Liu, Z., Merkel, H., Müller, U., Pochodzalla, J., Sanchez, S., Schlimme, S., Sfienti, C., Thiel, M., Ahmadi, H., Ahmed, S., Bleser, S., Capozza, L., Cardinali, M., Dbeyssi, A., Deiseroth, M., Feldbauer, F., Fritsch, M., Fröhlich, B., Jasinski, P., Kang, D., Khaneft, D., Klasen, R., Leithoff, H. H., Lin, D., Maas, F., Maldaner, S., Martínez, M., Michel, M., Mora Espí, M. C., Morales Morales, C., Motzko, C., Nerling, F., Noll, O., Pflüger, S., Pitka, A., Rodríguez Piñeiro, D., Sanchez-Lorente, A., Steinen, M., Valente, R., Weber, T., Zambrana, M., Zimmermann, I., Fedorov, A., Korjik, M., Missevitch, O., Boukharov, A., Malyshev, O., Marishev, I., Balanutsa, V., Balanutsa, P., Chernetsky, V., Demekhin, A., Dolgolenko, A., Fedorets, P., Gerasimov, A., Goryachev, V., Chandratre, V., Datar, V., Dutta, D., Jha, V., Kumawat, H., Mohanty, A. K., Parmar, A., Roy, B., Sonika, G., Fritzsch, C., Grieser, S., Hergemöller, A., Hetz, B., Hüsken, N., Khoukaz, A., Wessels, J. P., Khosonthongkee, K., Kobdaj, C., Limphirat, A., Srisawad, P., Yan, Y., Barnyakov, M., Barnyakov, A. Yu., Beloborodov, K., Blinov, A. E., Blinov, V. E., Bobrovnikov, V. S., Kononov, S., Kravchenko, E. A., Kuyanov, I. A., Martin, K., Onuchin, A. P., Serednyakov, S., Sokolov, A., Tikhonov, Y., Atomssa, E., Kunne, R., Marchand, D., Ramstein, B., van de Wiele, J., Wang, Y., Boca, G., Costanza, S., Genova, P., Montagna, P., Rotondi, A., Abramov, V., Belikov, N., Bukreeva, S., Davidenko, A., Derevschikov, A., Goncharenko, Y., Grishin, V., Kachanov, V., Kormilitsin, V., Levin, A., Melnik, Y., Minaev, N., Mochalov, V., Morozov, D., Nogach, L., Poslavskiy, S., Ryazantsev, A., Ryzhikov, S., Semenov, P., Shein, I., Uzunian, A., Vasiliev, A., Yakutin, A., Tomasi-Gustafsson, E., Roy, U., Yabsley, B., Belostotski, S., Gavrilov, G., Izotov, A., Manaenkov, S., Miklukho, O., Veretennikov, D., Zhdanov, A., Makonyi, K., Preston, M., Tegner, P., Wölbing, D., Bäck, T., Cederwall, B., Rai, A. K., Godre, S., Calvo, D., Coli, S., De Remigis, P., Filippi, A., Giraudo, G., Lusso, S., Mazza, G., Mignone, M., Rivetti, A., Wheadon, R., Balestra, F., Iazzi, F., Introzzi, R., Lavagno, A., Olave, J., Amoroso, A., Bussa, M. P., Busso, L., De Mori, F., Destefanis, M., Fava, L., Ferrero, L., Greco, M., Hu, J., Lavezzi, L., Maggiora, M., Maniscalco, G., Marcello, S., Sosio, S., Spataro, S., Birsa, R., Bradamante, F., Bressan, A., Martin, A., Calen, H., Ikegami Andersson, W., Johansson, T., Kupsc, A., Marciniewski, P., Papenbrock, M., Pettersson, J., Schönning, K., Wolke, M., Galnander, B., Diaz, J., Pothodi Chackara, V., Chlopik, A., Kesik, G., Melnychuk, D., Slowinski, B., Trzcinski, A., Wojciechowski, M., Wronka, S., Zwieglinski, B., Bühler, P., Marton, J., Steinschaden, D., Suzuki, K., Widmann, E., Zmeskal, J., and The PANDA Collaboration
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- 2016
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42. Phonetic recalibration of speech by text
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Keetels, Mirjam, Schakel, Lemmy, Bonte, Milene, and Vroomen, Jean
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- 2016
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43. Experimental access to Transition Distribution Amplitudes with the P̄ANDA experiment at FAIR
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Singh, B. P., Erni, W., Keshelashvili, I., Krusche, B., Steinacher, M., Liu, B., Liu, H., Liu, Z., Shen, X., Wang, C., Zhao, J., Albrecht, M., Fink, M., Heinsius, F. H., Held, T., Holtmann, T., Koch, H., Kopf, B., Kümmel, M., Kuhl, G., Kuhlmann, M., Leyhe, M., Mikirtychyants, M., Musiol, P., Mustafa, A., Pelizäus, M., Pychy, J., Richter, M., Schnier, C., Schröder, T., Sowa, C., Steinke, M., Triffterer, T., Wiedner, U., Beck, R., Hammann, C., Kaiser, D., Ketzer, B., Kube, M., Mahlberg, P., Rossbach, M., Schmidt, C., Schmitz, R., Thoma, U., Walther, D., Wendel, C., Wilson, A., Bianconi, A., Bragadireanu, M., Caprini, M., Pantea, D., Pietreanu, D., Vasile, M. E., Patel, B., Kaplan, D., Brandys, P., Czyzewski, T., Czyzycki, W., Domagala, M., Hawryluk, M., Filo, G., Krawczyk, M., Kwiatkowski, D., Lisowski, E., Lisowski, F., Fiutowski, T., Idzik, M., Mindur, B., Przyborowski, D., Swientek, K., Czech, B., Kliczewski, S., Korcyl, K., Kozela, A., Kulessa, P., Lebiedowicz, P., Malgorzata, K., Pysz, K., Schäfer, W., Siudak, R., Szczurek, A., Biernat, J., Jowzaee, S., Kamys, B., Kistryn, S., Korcyl, G., Krzemien, W., Magiera, A., Moskal, P., Palka, M., Psyzniak, A., Rudy, Z., Salabura, P., Smyrski, J., Strzempek, P., Wrońska, A., Augustin, I., Lehmann, I., Nicmorus, D., Schepers, G., Schmitt, L., Al-Turany, M., Cahit, U., Capozza, L., Dbeyssi, A., Deppe, H., Dzhygadlo, R., Ehret, A., Flemming, H., Gerhardt, A., Götzen, K., Karabowicz, R., Kliemt, R., Kunkel, J., Kurilla, U., Lehmann, D., Lühning, J., Maas, F., Morales Morales, C., Mora Espí, M. C., Nerling, F., Orth, H., Peters, K., Rodríguez Piñeiro, D., Saito, N., Saito, T., Sánchez Lorente, A., Schmidt, C. J., Schwarz, C., Schwiening, J., Traxler, M., Valente, R., Voss, B., Wieczorek, P., Wilms, A., Zühlsdorf, M., Abazov, V. M., Alexeev, G., Arefiev, A., Astakhov, V. I., Barabanov, M. Yu., Batyunya, B. V., Davydov, Yu. I., Dodokhov, V. Kh., Efremov, A. A., Fedunov, A. G., Festchenko, A. A., Galoyan, A. S., Grigoryan, S., Karmokov, A., Koshurnikov, E. K., Lobanov, V. I., Lobanov, Yu. Yu., Makarov, A. F., Malinina, L. V., Malyshev, V. L., Mustafaev, G. A., Olshevskiy, A., Pasyuk, M. A., Perevalova, E. A., Piskun, A. A., Pocheptsov, T. A., Pontecorvo, G., Rodionov, V. K., Rogov, Yu. N., Salmin, R. A., Samartsev, A. G., Sapozhnikov, M. G., Shabratova, G. S., Skachkov, N. B., Skachkova, A. N., Strokovsky, E. A., Suleimanov, M. K., Teshev, R. Sh., Tokmenin, V. V., Uzhinsky, V. V., Vodopyanov, A. S., Zaporozhets, S. A., Zhuravlev, N. I., Zorin, A. G., Branford, D., Glazier, D., Watts, D., Woods, P., Britting, A., Eyrich, W., Lehmann, A., Uhlig, F., Dobbs, S., Seth, K., Tomaradze, A., Xiao, T., Bettoni, D., Carassiti, V., Cotta Ramusino, A., Dalpiaz, P., Drago, A., Fioravanti, E., Garzia, I., Savriè, M., Stancari, G., Akishina, V., Kisel, I., Kulakov, I., Zyzak, M., Arora, R., Bel, T., Gromliuk, A., Kalicy, G., Krebs, M., Patsyuk, M., Zuehlsdorf, M., Bianchi, N., Gianotti, P., Guaraldo, C., Lucherini, V., Pace, E., Bersani, A., Bracco, G., Macri, M., Parodi, R. F., Bianco, S., Bremer, D., Brinkmann, K. T., Diehl, S., Dormenev, V., Drexler, P., Düren, M., Eissner, T., Etzelmüller, E., Föhl, K., Galuska, M., Gessler, T., Gutz, E., Hayrapetyan, A., Hu, J., Kröck, B., Kühn, W., Kuske, T., Lange, S., Liang, Y., Merle, O., Metag, V., Mülhheim, D., Münchow, D., Nanova, M., Novotny, R., Pitka, A., Quagli, T., Rieke, J., Rosenbaum, C., Schnell, R., Spruck, B., Stenzel, H., Thöring, U., Ullrich, M., Wasem, T., Werner, M., Zaunick, H. G., Ireland, D., Rosner, G., Seitz, B., Deepak, P. N., Kulkarni, A. V., Apostolou, A., Babai, M., Kavatsyuk, M., Lemmens, P., Lindemulder, M., Löhner, H., Messchendorp, J., Schakel, P., Smit, H., van der Weele, J. C., Tiemens, M., Veenstra, R., Vejdani, S., Kalita, K., Mohanta, D. P., Kumar, A., Roy, A., Sahoo, R., Sohlbach, H., Büscher, M., Cao, L., Cebulla, A., Deermann, D., Dosdall, R., Esch, S., Georgadze, I., Gillitzer, A., Goerres, A., Goldenbaum, F., Grunwald, D., Herten, A., Hu, Q., Kemmerling, G., Kleines, H., Kozlov, V., Lehrach, A., Leiber, S., Maier, R., Nellen, R., Ohm, H., Orfanitski, S., Prasuhn, D., Prencipe, E., Ritman, J., Schadmand, S., Schumann, J., Sefzick, T., Serdyuk, V., Sterzenbach, G., Stockmanns, T., Wintz, P., Wüstner, P., Xu, H., Li, S., Li, Z., Sun, Z., Xu, H., Rigato, V., Fissum, S., Hansen, K., Isaksson, L., Lundin, M., Schröder, B., Achenbach, P., Bleser, S., Cardinali, M., Corell, O., Deiseroth, M., Denig, A., Distler, M., Feldbauer, F., Fritsch, M., Jasinski, P., Hoek, M., Kangh, D., Karavdina, A., Lauth, W., Leithoff, H., Merkel, H., Michel, M., Motzko, C., Müller, U., Noll, O., Plueger, S., Pochodzalla, J., Sanchez, S., Schlimme, S., Sfienti, C., Steinen, M., Thiel, M., Weber, T., Zambrana, M., Dormenev, V. I., Fedorov, A. A., Korzihik, M. V., Missevitch, O. V., Balanutsa, P., Balanutsa, V., Chernetsky, V., Demekhin, A., Dolgolenko, A., Fedorets, P., Gerasimov, A., Goryachev, V., Varentsov, V., Boukharov, A., Malyshev, O., Marishev, I., Semenov, A., Konorov, I., Paul, S., Grieser, S., Hergemöller, A. K., Khoukaz, A., Köhler, E., Täschner, A., Wessels, J., Dash, S., Jadhav, M., Kumar, S., Sarin, P., Varma, R., Chandratre, V. B., Datar, V., Dutta, D., Jha, V., Kumawat, H., Mohanty, A. K., Roy, B., Yan, Y., Chinorat, K., Khanchai, K., Ayut, L., Pornrad, S., Barnyakov, A. Y., Blinov, A. E., Blinov, V. E., Bobrovnikov, V. S., Kononov, S. A., Kravchenko, E. A., Kuyanov, I. A., Onuchin, A. P., Sokolov, A. A., Tikhonov, Y. A., Atomssa, E., Hennino, T., Imre, M., Kunne, R., Le Galliard, C., Ma, B., Marchand, D., Ong, S., Ramstein, B., Rosier, P., Tomasi-Gustafsson, E., Van de Wiele, J., Boca, G., Costanza, S., Genova, P., Lavezzi, L., Montagna, P., Rotondi, A., Abramov, V., Belikov, N., Bukreeva, S., Davidenko, A., Derevschikov, A., Goncharenko, Y., Grishin, V., Kachanov, V., Kormilitsin, V., Melnik, Y., Levin, A., Minaev, N., Mochalov, V., Morozov, D., Nogach, L., Poslavskiy, S., Ryazantsev, A., Ryzhikov, S., Semenov, P., Shein, I., Uzunian, A., Vasiliev, A., Yakutin, A., Yabsley, B., Bäck, T., Cederwall, B., Makónyi, K., Tegnér, P. E., von Würtemberg, K. M., Belostotski, S., Gavrilov, G., Izotov, A., Kashchuk, A., Levitskaya, O., Manaenkov, S., Miklukho, O., Naryshkin, Y., Suvorov, K., Veretennikov, D., Zhadanov, A., Rai, A. K., Godre, S. S., Duchat, R., Amoroso, A., Bussa, M. P., Busso, L., De Mori, F., Destefanis, M., Fava, L., Ferrero, L., Greco, M., Maggiora, M., Maniscalco, G., Marcello, S., Sosio, S., Spataro, S., Zotti, L., Calvo, D., Coli, S., De Remigis, P., Filippi, A., Giraudo, G., Lusso, S., Mazza, G., Mingnore, M., Rivetti, A., Wheadon, R., Balestra, F., Iazzi, F., Introzzi, R., Lavagno, A., Younis, H., Birsa, R., Bradamante, F., Bressan, A., Martin, A., Clement, H., Gålnander, B., Caldeira Balkeståhl, L., Calén, H., Fransson, K., Johansson, T., Kupsc, A., Marciniewski, P., Pettersson, J., Schönning, K., Wolke, M., Zlomanczuk, J., Díaz, J., Ortiz, A., Vinodkumar, P. C., Parmar, A., Chlopik, A., Melnychuk, D., Slowinski, B., Trzcinski, A., Wojciechowski, M., Wronka, S., Zwieglinski, B., Bühler, P., Marton, J., Suzuki, K., Widmann, E., Zmeskal, J., Fröhlich, B., Khaneft, D., Lin, D., Zimmermann, I., Semenov-Tian-Shansky, K., and The P̄ANDA Collaboration
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- 2015
- Full Text
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44. Technical design report for the endcap disc DIRC
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F Davì, W Erni, B Krusche, M Steinacher, N Walford, H Liu, Z Liu, B Liu, X Shen, C Wang, J Zhao, M Albrecht, T Erlen, F Feldbauer, M Fink, V Freudenreich, M Fritsch, F H Heinsius, T Held, T Holtmann, I Keshk, H Koch, B Kopf, M Kuhlmann, M Kümmel, S Leiber, P Musiol, A Mustafa, M Pelizäus, A Pitka, G Reicherz, M Richter, C Schnier, T Schröder, S Sersin, L Sohl, C Sowa, M Steinke, T Triffterer, U Wiedner, R Beck, C Hammann, J Hartmann, B Ketzer, M Kube, M Rossbach, C Schmidt, R Schmitz, U Thoma, M Urban, A Bianconi, M Bragadireanu, D Pantea, W Czyzycki, M Domagala, G Filo, J Jaworowski, M Krawczyk, E Lisowski, F Lisowski, M Michałk, J Płażek, K Korcyl, A Kozela, P Kulessa, P Lebiedowicz, K Pysz, W Schäfer, A Szczurek, T Fiutowski, M Idzik, B Mindur, K Swientek, J Biernat, B Kamys, S Kistryn, G Korcyl, W Krzemien, A Magiera, P Moskal, W Przygoda, Z Rudy, P Salabura, J Smyrski, P Strzempek, A Wronska, I Augustin, R Böhm, I Lehmann, D Nicmorus Marinescu, L Schmitt, V Varentsov, M Al-Turany, A Belias, H Deppe, N Divani Veis, R Dzhygadlo, H Flemming, A Gerhardt, K Götzen, R Karabowicz, U Kurilla, D Lehmann, S Löchner, J Lühning, U Lynen, S Nakhoul, H Orth, K Peters, T Saito, G Schepers, C J Schmidt, C Schwarz, J Schwiening, A Täschner, M Traxler, B Voss, P Wieczorek, A Wilms, V Abazov, G Alexeev, V A Arefiev, V Astakhov, M Yu Barabanov, B V Batyunya, V Kh Dodokhov, A Efremov, A Fechtchenko, A Galoyan, G Golovanov, E K Koshurnikov, Y Yu Lobanov, V I Lobanov, V Malyshev, A G Olshevskiy, A A Piskun, A Samartsev, M G Sapozhnikov, N B Skachkov, A N Skachkova, E A Strokovsky, V Tokmenin, V Uzhinsky, A Verkheev, A Vodopianov, N I Zhuravlev, A Zinchenko, D Branford, D Glazier, D Watts, M Böhm, W Eyrich, A Lehmann, D Miehling, M Pfaffinger, S Stelter, F Uhlig, S Dobbs, K Seth, A Tomaradze, T Xiao, D Bettoni, A Ali, A Hamdi, M Krebs, F Nerling, V Akishina, S Gorbunov, I Kisel, G Kozlov, M Pugach, M Zyzak, N Bianchi, P Gianotti, C Guaraldo, V Lucherini, G Bracco, S Bodenschatz, K T Brinkmann, V Di Pietro, S Diehl, V Dormenev, M Düren, E Etzelmüller, K Föhl, M Galuska, T Geßler, E Gutz, C Hahn, A Hayrapetyan, M Kesselkaul, W Kühn, T Kuske, J S Lange, Y Liang, O Merle, V Metag, M Moritz, M Nanova, R Novotny, T Quagli, A Riccardi, J Rieke, M Schmidt, R Schnell, H Stenzel, M Strickert, U Thöring, T Wasem, B Wohlfahrt, H G Zaunick, E Tomasi-Gustafsson, D Ireland, G Rosner, B Seitz, P N Deepak, A Kulkarni, A Apostolou, M Babai, M Kavatsyuk, H Loehner, J Messchendorp, P Schakel, M Tiemens, J C van der Weele, S Vejdani, K Dutta, K Kalita, H Sohlbach, M Bai, L Bianchi, M Büscher, A Derichs, R Dosdall, A Erven, V Fracassi, A Gillitzer, F Goldenbaum, D Grunwald, L Jokhovets, G Kemmerling, H Kleines, A Lai, A Lehrach, M Mikirtychyants, S Orfanitski, D Prasuhn, E Prencipe, J Pütz, J Ritman, E Rosenthal, S Schadmand, T Sefzick, V Serdyuk, G Sterzenbach, T Stockmanns, P Wintz, P Wüstner, H Xu, Y Zhou, Z Li, X Ma, V Rigato, L Isaksson, P Achenbach, A Aycock, O Corell, A Denig, M Distler, M Hoek, W Lauth, H Merkel, U Müller, J Pochodzalla, S Sanchez, S Schlimme, C Sfienti, M Thiel, M Zambrana, H Ahmadi, S Ahmed, S Bleser, L Capozza, M Cardinali, A Dbeyssi, A Ehret, B Fröhlich, P Grasemann, S Haasler, D Izard, J Jorge, D Khaneft, R Klasen, R Kliemt, J Köhler, H H Leithoff, D Lin, F Maas, S Maldaner, M Michel, M C Mora Espí, C Morales Morales, C Motzko, O Noll, S Pflüger, D Rodríguez Piñeiro, M Steinen, E Walaa, S Wolff, I Zimmermann, A Fedorov, M Korzhik, O Missevitch, P Balanutsa, V Chernetsky, A Demekhin, A Dolgolenko, P Fedorets, A Gerasimov, V Goryachev, D Y Kirin, V A Matveev, A V Stavinskiy, A Balashoff, A Boukharov, O Malyshev, I Marishev, V Chandratre, V Datar, V Jha, H Kumawat, A K Mohanty, A Parmar, A K Rai, B Roy, G Sonika, C Fritzsch, S Grieser, A K Hergemöller, B Hetz, N Hüsken, A Khoukaz, J P Wessels, C Herold, K Khosonthongkee, C Kobdaj, A Limphirat, P Srisawad, Y Yan, A E Blinov, S Kononov, E A Kravchenko, E Antokhin, M Barnyakov, A Yu Barnyakov, K Beloborodov, V E Blinov, V S Bobrovnikov, I A Kuyanov, A P Onuchin, S Pivovarov, E Pyata, S Serednyakov, Y Tikhonov, R Kunne, D Marchand, B Ramstein, J van de Wiele, Y Wang, G Boca, V Burian, M Finger, A Nikolovova, M Pesek, M Peskova, M Pfeffer, I Prochazka, M Slunecka, P Gallus, V Jary, J Novy, M Tomasek, M Virius, V Vrba, V Abramov, N Belikov, S Bukreeva, A Davidenko, A Derevschikov, Y Goncharenko, V Grishin, V Kachanov, V Kormilitsin, A Levin, Y Melnik, N Minaev, V Mochalov, D Morozov, L Nogach, S Poslavskiy, A Ryazantsev, S Ryzhikov, P Semenov, I Shein, A Uzunian, A Vasiliev, A Yakutin, U Roy, B Yabsley, S Belostotski, G Gavrilov, A Izotov, S Manaenkov, O Miklukho, D Veretennikov, A Zhdanov, T Bäck, B Cederwall, K Makonyi, M Preston, P E Tegner, D Wölbing, S Godre, M P Bussa, S Marcello, S Spataro, F Iazzi, R Introzzi, A Lavagno, D Calvo, P De Remigis, A Filippi, G Mazza, A Rivetti, R Wheadon, A Martin, H Calen, W Ikegami Andersson, T Johansson, A Kupsc, P Marciniewski, M Papenbrock, J Pettersson, J Regina, K Schönning, M Wolke, J Diaz, V Pothodi Chackara, A Chlopik, G Kesik, D Melnychuk, B Slowinski, A Trzcinski, M Wojciechowski, S Wronka, B Zwieglinski, P Bühler, J Marton, D Steinschaden, K Suzuki, E Widmann, S Zimmermann, and J Zmeskal
- Subjects
Subatomär fysik ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,PANDA ,Subatomic Physics ,Acceleratorfysik och instrumentering ,technical design report ,particle identification ,Accelerator Physics and Instrumentation ,Cherenkov detector - Abstract
PANDA (anti-proton annihiliation at Darmstadt) is planned to be one of the four main experiments at the future international accelerator complex FAIR (Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research) in Darmstadt, Germany. It is going to address fundamental questions of hadron physics and quantum chromodynamics using cooled antiproton beams with a high intensity and and momenta between 1.5 and 15 GeV/c. PANDA is designed to reach a maximum luminosity of 2 × 1032 cm−2 s. Most of the physics programs require an excellent particle identification (PID). The PID of hadronic states at the forward endcap of the target spectrometer will be done by a fast and compact Cherenkov detector that uses the detection of internally reflected Cherenkov light (DIRC) principle. It is designed to cover the polar angle range from 5° to 22° and to provide a separation power for the separation of charged pions and kaons up to 3 standard deviations (s.d.) for particle momenta up to 4 GeV/c in order to cover the important particle phase space. This document describes the technical design and the expected performance of the novel PANDA disc DIRC detector that has not been used in any other high energy physics experiment before. The performance has been studied with Monte-Carlo simulations and various beam tests at DESY and CERN. The final design meets all PANDA requirements and guarantees sufficient safety margins.
- Published
- 2022
45. Integrated multimodal imaging of dynamic bone-tumor alterations associated with metastatic prostate cancer.
- Author
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Jean-Christophe Brisset, Benjamin A Hoff, Thomas L Chenevert, Jon A Jacobson, Jennifer L Boes, Stefanie Galbán, Alnawaz Rehemtulla, Timothy D Johnson, Kenneth J Pienta, Craig J Galbán, Charles R Meyer, Timothy Schakel, Klaas Nicolay, Ajjai S Alva, Maha Hussain, and Brian D Ross
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Bone metastasis occurs for men with advanced prostate cancer which promotes osseous growth and destruction driven by alterations in osteoblast and osteoclast homeostasis. Patients can experience pain, spontaneous fractures and morbidity eroding overall quality of life. The complex and dynamic cellular interactions within the bone microenvironment limit current treatment options thus prostate to bone metastases remains incurable. This study uses voxel-based analysis of diffusion-weighted MRI and CT scans to simultaneously evaluate temporal changes in normal bone homeostasis along with prostate bone metatastsis to deliver an improved understanding of the spatiotemporal local microenvironment. Dynamic tumor-stromal interactions were assessed during treatment in mouse models along with a pilot prospective clinical trial with metastatic hormone sensitive and castration resistant prostate cancer patients with bone metastases. Longitudinal changes in tumor and bone imaging metrics during delivery of therapy were quantified. Studies revealed that voxel-based parametric response maps (PRM) of DW-MRI and CT scans could be used to quantify and spatially visualize dynamic changes during prostate tumor growth and in response to treatment thereby distinguishing patients with stable disease from those with progressive disease (p
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- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Ongelijke politieke vertegenwoordiging van opleidingsgroepen in Nederland.
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Schakel, Wouter
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The potential of $\varLambda $ and $\varXi ^-$ studies with PANDA at FAIR
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M. Sachs, I. K. Keshk, Xi-Guang Cao, M. Traxler, Yan Liang, G. Mazza, C. Fritzsch, T. Holtmann, S. Godre, A. N. Skachkova, Edward Lisowski, E. Rosenthal, S. Yogesh, Y. K. Sun, H. Pace, D. A. Morozov, H. Deppe, J. Pütz, A. G. Denig, S. Ryzhikov, Hans-Georg Zaunick, Dirk Grunwald, A. Kantsyrev, Paolo Mengucci, Christoph Herold, P. Eugenio, Grzegorz Filo, A. Boukharov, M. Kesselkaul, Concettina Sfienti, A. Kulkarni, M. Lattery, J. Frech, A. Hayrapetyan, W. Zhu, A. A. Piskun, Zbigniew Rudy, V. E. Blinov, S. Spataro, Jens Hartmann, S. Schlimme, D. Branford, C. Schwarz, Michaela Thiel, G. Golovanov, T. Wasem, J. Schwiening, P. Wieczorek, E. Pyata, Ch. Hammann, D. Lehmann, Chinorat Kobdaj, V. Moiseev, P. Balanutsa, B. J. Liu, S. Bodenschatz, F. E. Maas, N. Wongprachanukul, Lorenzo Scalise, M. Hoek, A. K. Saxena, M. Virius, M. Steinke, N. Rathod, A.A. Efremov, A. Samartsev, I. Shein, Alexander Olshevskiy, Herbert Koch, V. Panjushkin, K. Nowakowski, S. Belostotski, S. Bukreeva, Ulrich Wiedner, U. Thöring, A.S. Vodopianov, J. Kellers, L. Robison, Ting Xiao, V. Crede, Egle Tomasi-Gustafsson, R. Karabowicz, P. Srisawad, F. Feldbauer, J. Reher, D. Kazlou, M. Yu. Barabanov, W. Kühn, M. Steinen, P. Wintz, D. Wölbing, A. Dbeyssi, M. Kunze, C. Hargens, A. Pitka, A. Lehmann, I. Augustin, Mathias Fink, P. Terlecki, A. E. Yakutin, Magnus Wolke, I. Kisel, V. Varentsov, U. Thoma, Nicola Bianchi, D. Bettoni, Antoni Szczurek, Dan Pantea, M. Slunecka, D. I. Glazier, H. H. Leithoff, Genady Gavrilov, P. Jiang, T. Simantathammakul, Felice Iazzi, E. Widmann, D. G. Ireland, C. Motzko, K.-T. Brinkmann, M. Schmidt, Johann Marton, J. Tao, W. Eyrich, M. Straube, Krzysztof Swientek, B. Krusche, N. K. Walford, S. Vejdani, G. Perez Andrade, Richard Wheadon, N. Kratochwil, H. Li, L. Jokhovets, S.G. Pivovarov, W. Ikegami Andersson, S. Grieser, A. Gerhardt, H. Qi, W. Lauth, S. Diehl, R. Beck, Krzysztof Korcyl, Angelo Rivetti, K. Makonyi, Yupeng Yan, P. P. Natali, G. Kesik, K. N. Basant, I. Lehmann, A. V. Stavinskiy, W. Esmail, M. Preston, A. Gillitzer, D. Calvo, Ayut Limphirat, A. Demekhin, J. Müllers, M. Pelizäus, Andrew Levin, Gianangelo Bracco, N. Quin, D. Lersch, V. Chernetsky, M. Domagala, N. Minaev, A. Balashoff, U. Müller, N. Hüsken, V. Abramov, Torbjörn Bäck, A. Ali, S. Pflüger, C. Yu, G. Boca, R. Klasen, N. Kristi, J. Zmeskal, T. Nasawad, A. Dolgolenko, A. Belousov, B. Wohlfahrt, H. Xu, R. Dosdall, E. Maslova, Gianni Barucca, M.P. Bussa, B. Seitz, J. S. Díaz, G. Hunter, M. Volf, V.Kh. Dodokhov, Piotr Lebiedowicz, A. Scholl, Grzegorz Korcyl, H. Loehner, Mohammed Al-Turany, Andrzej Kupsc, R. W. Novotny, L. Montalto, A. E. Blinov, J. Kannika, Andrey Uzunian, R. Lalik, P. N. Deepak, P.-E. Tegnér, E. Antokhin, A. Gerasimov, P. De Remigis, X. Zhou, Petr Gallus, P. Orsich, I. Prochazka, Valentino Rigato, S. Maldaner, M. Himmelreich, V. M. Abazov, J. Płażek, Kazem Azizi, James Ritman, S. Wolff, Andrea Bianconi, Nicola Paone, W. Nalti, S. Kegel, I. A. Kuyanov, M. Steinacher, A. Chlopik, V. Lucherini, A. Belias, K. K. Seth, Mario Bragadireanu, C. J. Schmidt, V. Freudenreich, A. Ehret, G. V. Fedotov, J. Li, A. Galoyan, G. Neue, P. Schakel, M. Wojciechowski, B. Kopf, C. Liu, P. Gianotti, X. Ma, R. Kappert, Oleg V. Missevitch, J. Pereira-de-Lira, X. Zhang, D. Melnychuk, Paweł Moskal, I. Köseoglu, Bo Cederwall, K. Götzen, M. Finger, M. Marcisovsky, A. Derevschikov, V. Goryachev, V. Jary, R. Kunne, Y. Zhou, G. Reicherz, C. Schnier, J. G. Messchendorp, M. Michałek, T. Erlen, D. Miehling, G. D. Alexeev, Hasko Stenzel, A. Fechtchenko, L. Schmitt, J. Rieger, M. Zyzak, Michael Papenbrock, F. Schupp, Sean A Dobbs, J. Pochodzalla, S. Chernichenko, S. Shimanski, A. Mustafa, K. Dutta, M. Kümmel, S. Bökelmann, S. Sun, Bruce Yabsley, I. Zimmermann, E.K. Koshurnikov, B. Zwieglinski, O. Malyshev, H. Flemming, O. Korchak, U. Kurilla, F. Nerling, M. Pugach, Claude Amsler, G. Huang, A. Akram, L. Sohl, B. J. Roy, S. Wronka, Andrey V. Izotov, Vaclav Vrba, A. Malige, M. Kuhlmann, E. Prencipe, R. Böhm, R. Schubert, Matthias Richter, M. Krebs, L. Nogach, Frank Goldenbaum, B. Ramstein, X. Y. Shen, Paul Alois Buhler, S. I. Manaenkov, A. Aycock, M. Küßner, A. Khoukaz, E. Luschevskaya, K. Khosonthongkee, C. Wenzel, M. Pfaffinger, J. Lühning, P. Poznański, Fabrizio Daví, S. Koch, O. Corell, M. Kavatsyuk, Bernd Voss, B. Hetz, Daniele Rinaldi, J. Regina, L. Capozza, J. Novy, V. Ferapontov, A. Kozela, D. Y. Kirin, U. Lynen, T. Johansson, S. Orfanitski, M. Tomasek, A. Derichs, Andrea Lavagno, Krisztian Peters, A. Ryazantsev, Daniel Duda, Valery Dormenev, M. Peskova, X. A. Xiong, O. Noll, M. Rossbach, M. Fritsch, N. I. Zhuravlev, Tomasz Fiutowski, S. Zimmermann, Y. Melnik, V. A. Matveev, A. Täschner, P. Salabura, S.A. Kononov, T. Triffterer, J. S. Lange, K. Pysz, K. Kalita, W. Erni, Ajay Kumar Rai, D. P. Watts, Lennart Isaksson, Utpal N. Roy, M. Strickert, M. Böhm, M. Albrecht, Y. Bettner, Boris Batyunya, A. Hamdi, J. Hofmann, Jize Zhao, R. Dzhygadlo, T. Held, V. V. Tokmenin, K. Manasatitpong, Andrei Fedorov, H. Orth, Hans Calén, M. Urban, G. Zhao, F. Lisowski, Witold Przygoda, D. Prasuhn, M. Zambrana, W. Schäfer, S. Bleser, A. K. Hergemöller, M. Pesek, Y. A. Tikhonov, A. Filippi, M. Peter, Volker Metag, M. Moritz, A. Kripko, J. Tarasiuk, S. Schadmand, G. Schepers, S. Poslavskiy, Andreas Martin Heinz, Anne-Laure Martin, L. Brück, Antonin Kveton, V. Mochalov, D. Steinschaden, M. Bölting, N. Er, Ch. Schmidt, Mikhail Korzhik, V. Astakhov, Konstantin Beloborodov, H. Denizli, T. Saito, R. Hagdorn, Pawel Marciniewski, D. Veretennikov, C. Morales Morales, Harphool Kumawat, Karin Schönning, Marek Idzik, M. O. Distler, A. Golubev, E. Ladygina, G. Kozlov, Tobias Stockmanns, C. Hahn, N. Cao, T. Sefzick, Giovanni Lancioni, V. Serdyuk, B. Ketzer, Jerzy Smyrski, D. Bonaventura, P. Wüstner, Yu. Yu. Lobanov, V. Pothodi Chackara, Mariana Nanova, B. Salisbury, E. A. Kravchenko, L. Tomasek, D. Bumrungkoh, Patrick Achenbach, W. Alkakhi, V. Uzhinsky, Y. Goncharenko, Harald Merkel, A. Atac, D. Rodríguez Piñeiro, A. Verkheev, P. Fedorets, S. Nakhoul, F. H. Heinsius, Q. Hu, N. B. Skachkov, S. Pongampai, R. Schmitz, E. A. Strokovsky, Zhiyong Liu, H. Peng, V. Arefiev, K. Föhl, D. Liu, P. Semenov, V. Rodin, Keval Gandhi, P. Kulessa, O. Miklukho, A. Vasiliev, P. Brand, A. A. Zhdanov, R. Kliemt, P. Grasemann, A. Yu. Barnyakov, Z. Li, A. Meschanin, Michael Düren, S. Ahmed, Institut de Recherches sur les lois Fondamentales de l'Univers (IRFU), Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Université Paris-Saclay, Institut de Physique Nucléaire d'Orsay (IPNO), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Université Paris-Sud - Paris 11 (UP11), PANDA, Université Paris-Sud - Paris 11 (UP11)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), BAİBÜ, Fen Edebiyat Fakültesi, Fizik Bölümü, Denizli, Haluk, and 0-Belirlenecek
- Subjects
+Antixi+Xi%22">anti-p p --> Antixi Xi ,Hadron ,hyperon: pair production ,correction: efficiency ,01 natural sciences ,13.30.-a ,symmetry: CP ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Subatomär fysik ,benchmark ,Subatomic Physics ,[PHYS.HEXP]Physics [physics]/High Energy Physics - Experiment [hep-ex] ,Electromagnetic Form-Factors ,Nuclear Experiment ,Spin-½ ,Physics ,Antihyperon Production ,Hyperon ,PANDA ,strong interaction ,Observable ,hyperon: production ,13.88.+ ,+Antilambda+Lambda%22">anti-p p --> Antilambda Lambda ,Production (computer science) ,Low-Energy ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Particle physics ,Cp-Violation ,+Lambda+pi%22">Xi- --> Lambda pi ,Bar (music) ,spin: correlation ,Strong interaction ,Hyperons ,nonperturbative ,13.60.R ,hyperon: decay ,0103 physical sciences ,anti-p p: scattering ,ddc:530 ,anti-p: beam ,010306 general physics ,polarization ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,background ,High Energy Physics::Phenomenology ,antihyperon ,[No Keywords] ,Exchange ,13.75.-n ,Decay ,hyperon: ground state ,Antiproton ,High Energy Physics::Experiment - Abstract
The antiproton experiment PANDA at FAIR is designed to bring hadron physics to a new level in terms of scope, precision and accuracy. In this work, its unique capability for studies of hyperons is outlined. We discuss ground-state hyperons as diagnostic tools to study non-perturbative aspects of the strong interaction, and fundamental symmetries. New simulation studies have been carried out for two benchmark hyperon-antihyperon production channels: $\bar{p}p \to \bar{\Lambda}\Lambda$ and $\bar{p}p \to \bar{\Xi}^+\Xi^-$. The results, presented in detail in this paper, show that hyperon-antihyperon pairs from these reactions can be exclusively reconstructed with high efficiency and very low background contamination. In addition, the polarisation and spin correlations have been studied, exploiting the weak, self-analysing decay of hyperons and antihyperons. Two independent approaches to the finite efficiency have been applied and evaluated: one standard multidimensional efficiency correction approach, and one efficiency independent approach. The applicability of the latter was thoroughly evaluated for all channels, beam momenta and observables. The standard method yields good results in all cases, and shows that spin observables can be studied with high precision and accuracy already in the first phase of data taking with PANDA., Comment: 26 pages, 16 figures. Changes: Revised title and abstract and corrections/clarifications in the text according to suggestions by journal referees
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- 2021
- Full Text
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48. Technology review of the Northern Bowen and Galilee basins
- Author
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Scott, Michael P., Johnson Jr, Raymond, Spilsbury-Schakel, Janny, and Garnett, Andrew
- Abstract
This paper reviews and summarises the work that has been conducted and the technology used in exploring and developing the Northern Bowen and Galilee basins in Queensland. It examines the methods operators have used in drilling, completing and testing wells through the varying stages of exploration, appraisal and development in the different parts of the basins. It examines all the work conducted in the Betts Creek Beds and Aramac Coal Measures throughout the Galilee Basin; the Moranbah Coal Measures, Rangal Coal Measures and Fort Cooper Coal Measures in the Moranbah area of the Bowen Basin; the Rangal Coal Measures, Burngrove Formation and Fairhill Formation in the Blackwater area; the conventional and coal seam gas developments in the Rolleston area, including the Bandanna Formation plays near Injune; and the Baralaba Coal Measures in the Moura area. Wells have been completed both open and cased hole with techniques including vertical wells, both with and without hydraulic fracturing and cavitation, as well as a variety of horizontal well designs including surface to inseam wells with vertical intercept wells and multiple lateral sections, chevron wells and both heel and toe intercepts. Operators have also implemented multiple wells on one pad. Throughout the Northern Bowen Basin, horizontal well drilling has been a key technology in commercial development. Generally, activities within the Galilee Basin have not progressed as far as the Bowen Basin, but nevertheless, horizontal wells are also emerging as a key technology.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Proton-and Neutron-Induced Single-Event Upsets in FPGAs for the PANDA Experiment
- Author
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M. Preston, P.-E. Tegnér, P. Schakel, Pawel Marciniewski, Hans Calén, M. Kavatsyuk, K. Makonyi, Tord Johansson, and Research unit Nuclear & Hadron Physics
- Subjects
Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Luminosity (scattering theory) ,Annihilation ,Proton ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,PANDA ,Monte Carlo method ,7. Clean energy ,01 natural sciences ,Field-programmable gate array (FPGA) configuration memory ,Monte Carlo simulations ,single-event upsets (SEUs) ,Momentum ,Nuclear physics ,Computer Science::Hardware Architecture ,Nuclear Energy and Engineering ,Antiproton ,0103 physical sciences ,Neutron ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Nuclear Experiment ,Energy (signal processing) - Abstract
Single-event upsets (SEUs) affecting the configuration memory of a 28-nm field-programmable gate array (FPGA) have been studied through experiments and Monte Carlo modeling. This FPGA will be used in the front-end electronics of the electromagnetic calorimeter in PANDA (Antiproton Annihilation at Darmstadt), an upcoming hadron-physics experiment. Results from proton and neutron irradiations of the FPGA are presented and shown to be in agreement with previous experimental results. To estimate the mean time between SEUs during operation of PANDA, a Geant4-based Monte Carlo model of the phenomenon has been used. This model describes the energy deposition by particles in a silicon volume, the subsequent drift and diffusion of charges in the FPGA memory cell, and the eventual collection of charges in the sensitive regions of the cell. The values of the two free parameters of the model, the sensitive volume side $d = 87$ nm and the critical charge $Q_{\text {crit}} = 0.23$ fC, were determined by fitting the model to the experimental data. The results of the model agree well with both the proton and neutron data and are also shown to correctly predict the cross sections for upsets induced by other particles. The model-predicted energy dependence of the cross section for neutron-induced upsets has been used to estimate the rate of SEUs during initial operation of PANDA. At a luminosity of $1\cdot 10^{31}$ cm $^{-2}\,\,\text{s}^{-1}$ , the predicted mean time between upsets (MTBU) is between 120 and 170 h per FPGA, depending on the beam momentum.
- Published
- 2020
50. Car-Following Properties of a Commercial Adaptive Cruise Control System: A Pilot Field Test
- Author
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Raju, Narayana, Schakel, Wouter, Reddy, Nagarjun, Dong, Yongqi, and Farah, Haneen
- Abstract
Automated driving systems, which can take over certain dynamic driving tasks from the driver, are becoming increasingly available in commercial vehicles. One of these automated driving systems widely introduced in commercial vehicles is adaptive cruise control (ACC). This system is designed to maintain certain desired driving speeds and time headways as chosen by drivers and based on the settings available within the system. The properties and actual performance of these systems will affect the traffic flow and its stability. However, the specific properties and their workings are rarely publicly available. Therefore, the main aim of this paper is to test the actual performance of a commercial ACC system under different desired speed and distance gap settings, as well as driving modes in a car-following situation. For this purpose, a pilot field test was conducted in the Netherlands in which two identical commercial vehicles equipped with ACC systems were driven simultaneously. The first vehicle was used to create a pre-specified speed profile by adapting the ACC system settings manually, whereas the second vehicle followed the lead vehicle when the ACC system was engaged to test its actual performance. The main findings indicate that the different system settings affect the car-following indicators, and system response times were found to be comparable to human response times. The eco mode was found to affect some of the car-following indicators, and it does not deteriorate safety below the safety level of driving with short headway setting in drive mode.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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