1,956 results on '"A. Todd, J"'
Search Results
2. The Solar Neighborhood LII: M Dwarf Twin Binaries -- Presumed Identical Twins Appear Fraternal in Variability, Rotation, H$\alpha$, and X-rays
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Couperus, Andrew A., Henry, Todd J., Osten, Rachel A., Jao, Wei-Chun, Vrijmoet, Eliot Halley, Kar, Aman, and Horch, Elliott
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present an investigation into the rotation and stellar activity of four fully convective M dwarf `twin' wide binaries. Components in each pair have (1) astrometry confirming they are common-proper-motion binaries, (2) Gaia $BP$, $RP$, and 2MASS $J$, $H$, and $K_s$ magnitudes matching within 0.10 mag, and (3) presumably the same age and composition. We report long-term photometry, rotation periods, multi-epoch H$\alpha$ equivalent widths, X-ray luminosities, time series radial velocities, and speckle observations for all components. Although it might be expected for the twin components to have matching magnetic attributes, this is not the case. Decade-long photometry of GJ 1183 AB indicates consistently higher spot activity on A than B, a trend matched by A appearing 58$\pm$9% stronger in $L_X$ and 26$\pm$9% stronger in H$\alpha$ on average -- this is despite similar rotation periods of A=0.86d and B=0.68d, thereby informing the range in activity for otherwise identical and similarly-rotating M dwarfs. The young $\beta$ Pic Moving Group member 2MA 0201+0117 AB displays a consistently more active B component that is 3.6$\pm$0.5 times stronger in $L_X$ and 52$\pm$19% stronger in H$\alpha$ on average, with distinct rotation at A=6.01d and B=3.30d. Finally, NLTT 44989 AB displays remarkable differences with implications for spindown evolution -- B has sustained H$\alpha$ emission while A shows absorption, and B is $\geq$39$\pm$4 times stronger in $L_X$, presumably stemming from the surprisingly different rotation periods of A=38d and B=6.55d. The last system, KX Com, has an unresolved radial velocity companion, and is therefore not a twin system., Comment: 40 pages, 17 figures, 6 tables, submitted to AJ on 2024-09-20
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- 2024
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3. Probiotic therapy modulates the brain-gut-liver microbiota axis in a mouse model of traumatic brain injury
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Amaral, Wellington Z, Kokroko, Natalie, Treangen, Todd J, Villapol, Sonia, and Gomez-Pinilla, Fernando
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Microbiology ,Biological Sciences ,Dietary Supplements ,Liver Disease ,Neurosciences ,Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) ,Complementary and Integrative Health ,Nutrition ,Biotechnology ,Traumatic Head and Spine Injury ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Digestive Diseases ,Brain Disorders ,Microbiome ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Oral and gastrointestinal ,Animals ,Probiotics ,Brain Injuries ,Traumatic ,Gastrointestinal Microbiome ,Mice ,Brain-Gut Axis ,Liver ,Disease Models ,Animal ,Male ,Mice ,Inbred C57BL ,Hippocampus ,Brain ,Microbiota ,Brain injury ,Gut ,Lipidomics ,Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,Medical Biochemistry and Metabolomics ,Clinical Sciences ,Biochemistry & Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry and cell biology ,Medical biochemistry and metabolomics - Abstract
The interplay between gut microbiota and host health is crucial for maintaining the overall health of the body and brain, and it is even more crucial how changes in the bacterial profile can influence the aftermath of traumatic brain injury (TBI). We studied the effects of probiotic treatment after TBI to identify potential changes in hepatic lipid species relevant to brain function. Bioinformatic analysis of the gut microbiota indicated a significant increase in the Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio in the probiotic-treated TBI group compared to sham and untreated TBI groups. Although strong correlations between gut bacteria and hepatic lipids were found in sham mice, TBI disrupted these links, and probiotic treatment did not fully restore them. Probiotic treatment influenced systemic glucose metabolism, suggesting altered metabolic regulation. Behavioral tests confirmed memory improvement in probiotic-treated TBI mice. While TBI reduced hippocampal mRNA expression of CaMKII and CREB, probiotics reversed these effects yet did not alter BDNF mRNA levels. Elevated pro-inflammatory markers TNF-α and IL1-β in TBI mice were not significantly affected by probiotic treatment, pointing to different mechanisms underlying the probiotic benefits. In summary, our study suggests that TBI induces dysbiosis, alters hepatic lipid profiles, and preemptive administration of Lactobacillus helveticus and Bifidobacterium longum probiotics can counter neuroplasticity deficits and memory impairment. Altogether, these findings highlight the potential of probiotics for attenuating TBI's detrimental cognitive and metabolic effects through gut microbiome modulation and hepatic lipidomic alteration, laying the groundwork for probiotics as a potential TBI therapy.
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- 2024
4. Attosecond Probing of Coherent Vibrational Dynamics in CBr$_4$
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Ou, Jen-Hao, Hait, Diptarka, Rupprecht, Patrick, Beetar, John E., Martínez, Todd J., and Leone, Stephen R.
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Physics - Chemical Physics - Abstract
A coherent vibrational wavepacket is launched and manipulated in the symmetric stretch (a$_1$) mode of CBr$_4$, by impulsive stimulated Raman scattering from non-resonant 400 nm laser pump pulses with various peak intensities on the order of tens of 10$^{12}$ W/cm$^2$. Extreme ultraviolet (XUV) attosecond transient absorption spectroscopy (ATAS) records the wavepacket dynamics as temporal oscillations in XUV absorption energy at the bromine M$_{4,5}$ 3d$_{3/2,5/2}$ edges around 70 eV. The results are augmented by nuclear time-dependent Schr\"odinger equation simulations. Slopes of the (Br-3d$_{3/2,5/2}$)$^{-1}$10a$_1^*$ core-excited state potential energy surface (PES) along the a$_1$ mode are calculated to be -9.4 eV/{\AA} from restricted open-shell Kohn-Sham calculations. Using analytical relations derived for the small-displacement limit with the calculated slopes of the core-excited state PES, a deeper insight into the vibrational dynamics is obtained by retrieving the experimental excursion amplitude of the vibrational wavepacket and the amount of population transferred to the vibrational first-excited state, as a function of pump-pulse peak intensity. Experimentally, the results show that XUV ATAS is capable of easily resolving oscillations in the XUV absorption energy on the order of few to tens of meV and tens of femtosecond time precision, limited only by the averaging times in the experimental scans. This corresponds to oscillations of C-Br bond length on the order of 10$^{-4}$ to 10$^{-3}$ {\AA}. The results and the analytic relationships offer a clear physical picture, on multiple levels of understanding, for how the pump-pulse intensity controls the vibrational dynamics launched by non-resonant ISRS in the small-displacement limit.
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- 2024
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5. Assessing Mitigation Translocation as a Tool to Reduce Human–great Horned owl Conflicts
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Washburn, Brian E., Massey, Benjamin J., Sonnek, Alec C., and Pitlik, Todd J.
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- 2025
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6. Extending GPU-Accelerated Gaussian Integrals in the TeraChem Software Package to f Type Orbitals: Implementation and Applications
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Wang, Yuanheng, Hait, Diptarka, Johnson, K. Grace, Fajen, O. Jonathan, Zhang, Juncheng Harry, Guerrero, Rubén D., and Martínez, Todd J.
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Physics - Chemical Physics ,Physics - Computational Physics - Abstract
The increasing availability of GPUs for scientific computing has prompted interest in accelerating quantum chemical calculations through their use. The complexity of integral kernels for high angular momentum basis functions however often limits the utility of GPU implementations with large basis sets or for metal containing systems. In this work, we report implementation of $f$ function support in the GPU-accelerated TeraChem software package through the development of efficient kernels for the evaluation of Hamiltonian integrals. The high efficiency of the resulting code is demonstrated through density functional theory (DFT) calculations on increasingly large organic molecules and transition metal complexes, as well as coupled cluster singles and doubles (CCSD) calculations on water clusters. Preliminary investigations into Ni(I) catalysis with DFT and the photochemistry of MnH(CH$_3$) with complete active space self-consistent field (CASSCF) are also carried out. Overall, our GPU-accelerated software appears to be well-suited for fast simulation of large transition metal containing systems, as well as organic molecules., Comment: Added additional data
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- 2024
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7. Application of Artificial Intelligence in the Headache Field
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Ihara, Keiko, Dumkrieger, Gina, Zhang, Pengfei, Takizawa, Tsubasa, Schwedt, Todd J., and Chiang, Chia-Chun
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- 2024
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8. Impact of age on comparative outcomes of decompression alone versus fusion for L4 degenerative spondylolisthesis
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Shahi, Pratyush, Singh, Sumedha, Morse, Kyle, Maayan, Omri, Subramanian, Tejas, Araghi, Kasra, Singh, Nishtha, Tuma, Olivia C., Asada, Tomoyuki, Korsun, Maximilian K., Dowdell, James, Sheha, Evan D., Sandhu, Harvinder, Albert, Todd J., Qureshi, Sheeraz A., and Iyer, Sravisht
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- 2024
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9. MetaCompass: Reference-guided Assembly of Metagenomes
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Luan, Tu, Cepeda, Victoria, Liu, Bo, Bowen, Zac, Ayyangar, Ujjwal, Almeida, Mathieu, Hill, Christopher M., Koren, Sergey, Treangen, Todd J., Porter, Adam, and Pop, Mihai
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Quantitative Biology - Genomics ,Quantitative Biology - Quantitative Methods - Abstract
Metagenomic studies have primarily relied on de novo assembly for reconstructing genes and genomes from microbial mixtures. While reference-guided approaches have been employed in the assembly of single organisms, they have not been used in a metagenomic context. Here we describe the first effective approach for reference-guided metagenomic assembly that can complement and improve upon de novo metagenomic assembly methods for certain organisms. Such approaches will be increasingly useful as more genomes are sequenced and made publicly available., Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures, 3 tables, one supplementary material
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- 2024
10. Unexpected hydrogen dissociation in thymine: predictions from a novel coupled cluster theory
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Kjønstad, Eirik F., Fajen, O. Jonathan, Paul, Alexander C., Angelico, Sara, Mayer, Dennis, Gühr, Markus, Wolf, Thomas J. A., Martínez, Todd J., and Koch, Henrik
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Physics - Chemical Physics - Abstract
The fate of thymine upon excitation by ultraviolet radiation has been the subject of intense debate over the past three decades. Today, it is widely believed that its ultrafast excited state decay stems from a radiationless transition from the bright ${\pi}{\pi}^*$ state to a dark $n{\pi}^*$ state. However, conflicting theoretical predictions have made the experimental data difficult to interpret. Here we simulate the ultrafast dynamics in thymine at the highest level of theory to date, performing wavepacket dynamics with a new coupled cluster method. Our simulation confirms an ultrafast ${\pi}{\pi}^*$ to $n{\pi}^*$ transition (${\tau} = 41 \pm 14$ fs). Furthermore, the predicted oxygen-edge X-ray absorption spectra agree quantitatively with the experimental results. Our simulation also predicts an as-yet uncharacterized photochemical pathway: a ${\pi}{\sigma}^*$ channel that leads to hydrogen dissociation at one of the two N-H bonds in thymine. Similar behavior has been identified in other heteroaromatic compounds, including adenine, and several authors have speculated that a similar pathway may exist in thymine. However, this was never confirmed theoretically or experimentally. This prediction calls for renewed efforts to experimentally identify or exclude the presence of this channel., Comment: 42 pages, 23 figures
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- 2024
11. The Solar Neighborhood LI: A Variability Survey of Nearby M Dwarfs with Planets from Months to Decades with TESS and the CTIO/SMARTS 0.9 m Telescope
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Kar, Aman, Henry, Todd J., Couperus, Andrew A., Vrijmoet, Eliot Halley, and Jao, Wei-Chun
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the optical photometric variability of 32 planet-hosting M dwarfs within 25 parsecs over timescales of months to decades. The primary goal of this project, ATLAS -- A Trail to Life Around Stars, is to follow the trail to life by revealing nearby M dwarfs with planets that are also "quiet", which may make them more amiable to habitability. There are 69 reported exoplanets orbiting the 32 stars discussed here, providing a rich sample of worlds for which environmental evaluations are needed. We examine the optical flux environments of these planets over month-long timescales for 23 stars observed by TESS, and find that 17 vary by less than 1% ($\sim$11 mmag). All 32 stars are being observed at the CTIO/SMARTS 0.9 m, with a median duration of 19.1 years of optical photometric data in the $VRI$ bands. We find over these extended timescales that six stars show optical flux variations less than 2%, 25 vary from 2--6% ($\sim$22-67 mmag), and only one, Proxima Centauri, varies by more than 6%. Overall, LHS 1678 exhibits the lowest optical variability levels measured over all timescales examined, thereby providing one of the most stable photometric environments among planets reported around M dwarfs within 25 parsecs. More than 600 of the nearest M dwarfs are being observed at the 0.9 m in the RECONS program that began in 1999, and many more planet hosts will undoubtedly be revealed, providing more destinations to be added to the ATLAS sample in the future., Comment: Published in the Astronomical Journal. 27 pages, 12 figures, 2 tables
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- 2024
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12. Prediction of Photodynamics of 200 nm Excited Cyclobutanone with Linear Response Electronic Structure and Ab Initio Multiple Spawning
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Hait, Diptarka, Lahana, Dean, Fajen, O. Jonathan, Paz, Amiel S. P., Unzueta, Pablo A., Rana, Bhaskar, Lu, Lixin, Wang, Yuanheng, and Martinez, Todd J.
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Physics - Chemical Physics - Abstract
Simulations of photochemical reaction dynamics have been a challenge to the theoretical chemistry community for some time. In an effort to determine the predictive character of current approaches, we predict the results of an upcoming ultrafast diffraction experiment on the photodynamics of cyclobutanone after excitation to the lowest lying Rydberg state (S$_2$). A picosecond of nonadiabatic dynamics is described with ab initio multiple spawning. We use both time dependent density functional theory and equation-of-motion coupled cluster for the underlying electronic structure theory. We find that the lifetime of the S$_2$ state is more than a picosecond (with both TDDFT and EOM-CCSD). The predicted UED spectrum exhibits numerous structural features, but weak time dependence over the course of the simulations.
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- 2024
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13. GraSSRep: Graph-Based Self-Supervised Learning for Repeat Detection in Metagenomic Assembly
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Azizpour, Ali, Balaji, Advait, Treangen, Todd J., and Segarra, Santiago
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Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
Repetitive DNA (repeats) poses significant challenges for accurate and efficient genome assembly and sequence alignment. This is particularly true for metagenomic data, where genome dynamics such as horizontal gene transfer, gene duplication, and gene loss/gain complicate accurate genome assembly from metagenomic communities. Detecting repeats is a crucial first step in overcoming these challenges. To address this issue, we propose GraSSRep, a novel approach that leverages the assembly graph's structure through graph neural networks (GNNs) within a self-supervised learning framework to classify DNA sequences into repetitive and non-repetitive categories. Specifically, we frame this problem as a node classification task within a metagenomic assembly graph. In a self-supervised fashion, we rely on a high-precision (but low-recall) heuristic to generate pseudo-labels for a small proportion of the nodes. We then use those pseudo-labels to train a GNN embedding and a random forest classifier to propagate the labels to the remaining nodes. In this way, GraSSRep combines sequencing features with pre-defined and learned graph features to achieve state-of-the-art performance in repeat detection. We evaluate our method using simulated and synthetic metagenomic datasets. The results on the simulated data highlight our GraSSRep's robustness to repeat attributes, demonstrating its effectiveness in handling the complexity of repeated sequences. Additionally, our experiments with synthetic metagenomic datasets reveal that incorporating the graph structure and the GNN enhances our detection performance. Finally, in comparative analyses, GraSSRep outperforms existing repeat detection tools with respect to precision and recall.
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- 2024
14. PROMIS-9 UE physical function demonstrates moderate responsiveness for patients following upper limb prosthesis intervention
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Todd J. Castleberry, Dwiesha L. England, Bretta L. Fylstra, Phillip M. Stevens, Amy E. Todd, Stephen A. Mandacina, and Shane R. Wurdeman
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Upper-limb prosthesis ,Patient-reported outcomes ,Physical function ,Prosthesis receipt ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Upper extremity physical function is an essential health domain in the rehabilitation care for patients with upper limb amputation or absence. The PROMIS-9 UE Physical Function short form is a recently established instrument designed for individuals with upper limb amputation or absence. The instrument’s responsiveness to changes after receiving a prosthesis has not been investigated. The current study aimed to evaluate the ability of the PROMIS-9 UE to detect changes in bimanual (two-handed) functional capacity after patients’ receipt of a prosthesis. Methodology A retrospective chart review was conducted on the longitudinal PROMIS-9 UE outcome measure scores completed between April 2016 and February 2024. Participants included individuals with an outcome collected before and after prosthesis receipt. Results The final sample size included 124 individuals (91 male, 33 female; 43.4 ± 15.0 years old, 34.4 ± 103.0 months since amputation, and 62.9% injury etiology). Analyses found significant improvement across all patients in the PROMIS-9 UE scores from baseline to post prosthesis intervention (baseline: 25.3 ± 8.6, post: 29.5 ± 9.6; p
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- 2025
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15. A novel translational bioinformatics framework for facilitating multimodal data analyses in preclinical models of neurological injury
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Hunter A. Gaudio, Viveknarayanan Padmanabhan, William P. Landis, Luiz E. V. Silva, Julia Slovis, Jonathan Starr, M. Katie Weeks, Nicholas J. Widmann, Rodrigo M. Forti, Gerard H. Laurent, Nicolina R. Ranieri, Frank Mi, Rinat E. Degani, Thomas Hallowell, Nile Delso, Hannah Calkins, Christiana Dobrzynski, Sophie Haddad, Shih-Han Kao, Misun Hwang, Lingyun Shi, Wesley B. Baker, Fuchiang Tsui, Ryan W. Morgan, Todd J. Kilbaugh, and Tiffany S. Ko
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Data engineering ,Data visualization ,Multimodal data processing ,Pediatric neurological injury ,Preclinical research ,Translational research ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Pediatric neurological injury and disease is a critical public health issue due to increasing rates of survival from primary injuries (e.g., cardiac arrest, traumatic brain injury) and a lack of monitoring technologies and therapeutics for treatment of secondary neurological injury. Translational, preclinical research facilitates the development of solutions to address this growing issue but is hindered by a lack of available data frameworks and standards for the management, processing, and analysis of multimodal datasets. Here, we present a generalizable data framework that was implemented for large animal research at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia to address this technological gap. The presented framework culminates in a custom, interactive dashboard for exploratory analysis and filtered dataset download. Compared with existing clinical and preclinical data management solutions, the presented framework better enables management of various data types (single measure, repeated measures, time series, and imaging), integration of datasets for comparison across experimental models, cohorts, and groups, and facilitation of predictive modeling from integrated datasets. Further, a predictive model development use case demonstrated utilization and value of the data framework. The general outline of a preclinical data framework presented here can serve as a template for other translational research labs that generate heterogeneous datasets and require a dynamic platform that can easily evolve alongside their research.
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- 2024
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16. Growth performance and immune response of broilers during active Eimeria infection are modified by dietary inclusion of canola meal or corn-DDGS in reduced-protein corn-soybean meal diets
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Revathi Shanmugasundaram, Adeleye M. Ajao, Shahna Fathima, Adelumola Oladeinde, Ramesh K. Selvaraj, Todd J. Applegate, and Oluyinka A. Olukosi
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Reduced-protein diet ,Eimeria ,Broiler chicken ,Growth ,Immune response ,Animal culture ,SF1-1100 - Abstract
The objective of this experiment was to study the effects of partial replacement of soybean meal (SBM) with canola meal (CM) or corn-distillers' dried grains with solubles (cDDGS) in reduced-protein (RP) diets for Eimeria-infected broilers. A total of 1120 broiler chicks were distributed in a 4 × 2 (4 diets × with or without infection) factorial arrangement with 7 replicates per treatment and 20 birds per replicate. The 4 diets, fed between d 7 and 42, were (i) a standard diet with crude protein at 200 g/kg (SP); (ii) a RP (crude protein at 160 g/kg) corn-SBM diet (RP-SBM); (iii) a RP diet in which 80 g/kg CM replaced 60 g/kg SBM (RP-CM); and (iv) a RP diet in which 100 g/kg cDDGS replaced 50 g/kg SBM (RP-cDDGS). On d 15, birds were infected with mixed Eimeria (+E) oocysts. Birds and feed were weighed at intervals for growth performance, and samples for immunology responses were collected on d 21. The results showed as follows: 1) during the acute infection phase, diet × Eimeria infection was shown by the diets having no effect in the uninfected group. In contrast, the RP-SBM diet tended to produce higher (P
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- 2024
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17. Photoinduced hydrogen dissociation in thymine predicted by coupled cluster theory
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Eirik F. Kjønstad, O. Jonathan Fajen, Alexander C. Paul, Sara Angelico, Dennis Mayer, Markus Gühr, Thomas J. A. Wolf, Todd J. Martínez, and Henrik Koch
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Science - Abstract
Abstract The fate of thymine upon excitation by ultraviolet radiation has been the subject of intense debate. Today, it is widely believed that its ultrafast excited state gas phase decay stems from a radiationless transition from the bright π π* state to a dark n π* state. However, conflicting theoretical predictions have made the experimental data difficult to interpret. Here we simulate the early gas phase ultrafast dynamics in thymine at the highest level of theory to date. This is made possible by performing wavepacket dynamics with a recently developed coupled cluster method. Our simulation confirms an ultrafast π π* to n π* transition (τ = 41 ± 14 fs). Furthermore, the predicted oxygen-edge X-ray absorption spectra agree quantitatively with experiment. We also predict an as-yet uncharacterized π σ* channel that leads to hydrogen dissociation at one of the two N-H bonds. Similar behavior has been identified in other heteroaromatic compounds, including adenine, and several authors have speculated that a similar pathway may exist in thymine. However, this was never confirmed theoretically or experimentally. This prediction calls for renewed efforts to experimentally identify or exclude the presence of this channel.
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- 2024
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18. Potent neutralization by a RBD antibody with broad specificity for SARS-CoV-2 JN.1 and other variants
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Michael S. Piepenbrink, Ahmed Magdy Khalil, Ana Chang, Ahmed Mostafa, Madhubanti Basu, Sanghita Sarkar, Simran Panjwani, Yaelyn H. Ha, Yao Ma, Chengjin Ye, Qian Wang, Todd J. Green, James L. Kizziah, Nathaniel B. Erdmann, Paul A. Goepfert, Lihong Liu, David D. Ho, Luis Martinez-Sobrido, Mark R. Walter, and James J. Kobie
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Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Abstract SARS-CoV-2 continues to be a public health burden, driven in-part by its continued antigenic diversification and resulting emergence of new variants. By increasing herd immunity, current vaccines have improved infection outcomes for many. However, prophylactic and treatment interventions that are not compromised by viral evolution of the Spike protein are still needed. Using a differential staining strategy with a rationally designed SARS-CoV-2 Receptor Binding Domain (RBD) – ACE2 fusion protein and a native Omicron RBD protein, we developed a recombinant human monoclonal antibody (hmAb) from a convalescent individual following SARS-CoV-2 Omicron infection. The resulting hmAb, 1301B7 potently neutralized a wide range of SARS-CoV-2 variants including the original Wuhan-1, the more recent Omicron JN.1 strain, and SARS-CoV. 1301B7 contacts the ACE2 binding site of RBD exclusively through its VH1-69 heavy chain. Broad specificity is achieved through 1301B7 binding to many conserved residues of Omicron variants including Y501 and H505. Consistent with its extensive binding epitope, 1301B7 is able to potently diminish viral burden in the upper and lower respiratory tract and protect mice from challenge with Omicron XBB1.5 and Omicron JN.1 viruses. These results suggest 1301B7 has broad potential to prevent or treat clinical SARS-CoV-2 infections and to guide development of RBD-based universal SARS-CoV-2 prophylactic vaccines and therapeutic approaches.
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- 2024
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19. Development and characterization of novel anti-acetylated tau monoclonal antibodies to probe pathogenic tau species in Alzheimer’s disease
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Miles R. Bryan III, Xu Tian, Jui-Heng Tseng, Baggio A. Evangelista, Joey V. Ragusa, Audra F. Bryan, Winifred Trotman, David Irwin, and Todd J. Cohen
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Alzheimer’s disease (AD) ,MAPT ,Posttranslational modification (PTM) ,Acetylation ,Tau ,Neurodegeneration ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Abstract Tauopathies, including Alzheimer’s disease (AD), are a class of neurodegenerative diseases characterized by the presence of insoluble tau inclusions. Tau phosphorylation has traditionally been viewed as the dominant post-translational modification (PTM) controlling tau function and pathogenesis in tauopathies. However, we and others have identified tau acetylation as a primary PTM regulating both normal tau function as well as abnormal pathogenic features including aggregation. Prior work showed robust tau acetylation in aggregation hotspots located within the 2nd and 3rd repeat regions of tau (residues K280 and K311) in tauopathy brains, including AD, compared to non-tauopathy controls. By screening thousands of hybridoma clones, we generated site-specific and modification-specific monoclonal antibodies targeting acetylated tau at residues K280 or K311. To validate these antibodies in a bona fide neuronal system, we targeted the acetyltransferase CBP to the cytoplasm of neurons to promote tau acetylation. Several antibody clones specifically detected CBP-acetylated tau and co-localized with ac-tau in neurons. Additionally, our lead optimal anti-acetylated-tau monoclonal antibodies detected robust tau pathology in tangles and neuritic plaques of human AD brains. Given the now emerging interest in acetylated tau as critical regulator of tau functions, these sensitive and highly specific tools will allow us to further unravel the tau PTM code and, importantly, could be deployed as diagnostic or disease-modifying agents.
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- 2024
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20. Impacts of a Marketing Core Course Concept Review on Peregrine Examination Gain Scores: Exploring Key Performance Drivers
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Todd J. Hostager, Christopher Knowles, and D. Alan Christopher
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Prior research explored the effects of receiving review sessions for business core courses on standardized test results obtained via the Major Field Test in Business (MFTB) and the Comprehensive Business Exam (CBE). The present study contributes to the literature by examining the impacts of single core course and topical area review sessions on Peregrine exam results, with half of the sample receiving a marketing core course concept review and the other half receiving a topical area review in business ethics. Student capability measures, achievement measures, and demographic variables were not significantly related to gain scores on the Peregrine Exam, despite the presence of individual differences in abilities, accomplishments, and traits.
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- 2024
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21. Olivar: towards automated variant aware primer design for multiplex tiled amplicon sequencing of pathogens
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Wang, Michael X., Lou, Esther G., Sapoval, Nicolae, Kim, Eddie, Kalvapalle, Prashant, Kille, Bryce, Elworth, R. A. Leo, Liu, Yunxi, Fu, Yilei, Stadler, Lauren B., and Treangen, Todd J.
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- 2024
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22. Early bolus epinephrine administration during pediatric cardiopulmonary resuscitation for bradycardia with poor perfusion: an ICU-resuscitation study
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O’Halloran, Amanda J., Reeder, Ron W., Berg, Robert A., Ahmed, Tageldin, Bell, Michael J., Bishop, Robert, Bochkoris, Matthew, Burns, Candice, Carcillo, Joseph A., Carpenter, Todd C., Dean, J. Michael, Diddle, J. Wesley, Federman, Myke, Fernandez, Richard, Fink, Ericka L., Franzon, Deborah, Frazier, Aisha H., Friess, Stuart H., Graham, Kathryn, Hall, Mark, Hehir, David A., Horvat, Christopher M., Huard, Leanna L., Kienzle, Martha F., Kilbaugh, Todd J., Maa, Tensing, Manga, Arushi, McQuillen, Patrick S., Meert, Kathleen L., Mourani, Peter M., Nadkarni, Vinay M., Naim, Maryam Y., Notterman, Daniel, Pollack, Murray M., Sapru, Anil, Schneiter, Carleen, Sharron, Matthew P., Srivastava, Neeraj, Tilford, Bradley, Topjian, Alexis A., Viteri, Shirley, Wessel, David, Wolfe, Heather A., Yates, Andrew R., Zuppa, Athena F., Sutton, Robert M., and Morgan, Ryan W.
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- 2024
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23. MethPhaser: methylation-based long-read haplotype phasing of human genomes
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Fu, Yilei, Aganezov, Sergey, Mahmoud, Medhat, Beaulaurier, John, Juul, Sissel, Treangen, Todd J., and Sedlazeck, Fritz J.
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- 2024
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24. Effect of dimethyl fumarate on mitochondrial metabolism in a pediatric porcine model of asphyxia-induced in-hospital cardiac arrest
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Piel, Sarah, McManus, Meagan J., Heye, Kristina N., Beaulieu, Forrest, Fazelinia, Hossein, Janowska, Joanna I., MacTurk, Bryce, Starr, Jonathan, Gaudio, Hunter, Patel, Nisha, Hefti, Marco M., Smalley, Martin E., Hook, Jordan N., Kohli, Neha V., Bruton, James, Hallowell, Thomas, Delso, Nile, Roberts, Anna, Lin, Yuxi, Ehinger, Johannes K., Karlsson, Michael, Berg, Robert A., Morgan, Ryan W., and Kilbaugh, Todd J.
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- 2024
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25. Brain structural and functional abnormalities associated with acute post-traumatic headache: iron deposition and functional connectivity
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Nikolova, Simona, Chong, Catherine, Li, Jing, Wu, Teresa, Dumkrieger, Gina, Ross, Katherine, Starling, Amaal, and Schwedt, Todd J.
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- 2024
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26. Crykey: Rapid identification of SARS-CoV-2 cryptic mutations in wastewater
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Liu, Yunxi, Sapoval, Nicolae, Gallego-García, Pilar, Tomás, Laura, Posada, David, Treangen, Todd J., and Stadler, Lauren B.
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- 2024
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27. Photophobia is associated with lower sleep quality in individuals with migraine: results from the American Registry for Migraine Research (ARMR)
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Sharp, Nina, Burish, Mark J, Digre, Kathleen B, Ailani, Jessica, Fani, Mahya, Lamp, Sophia, and Schwedt, Todd J.
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- 2024
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28. Correction to: Measures of performance and proficiency in robotic assisted surgery: a systematic review
- Author
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El‑Sayed, Charlotte, Yiu, A., Burke, J., Vaughan-Shaw, PG, Todd, J., Lin, P., Kasmani, Z., Munsch, C., Rooshenas, L., Campbell, M., and Bach, S. P.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Chemical control of excited-state reactivity of the anionic green fluorescent protein chromophore
- Author
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List, Nanna H., Jones, Chey M., and Martínez, Todd J.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Measures of performance and proficiency in robotic assisted surgery: a systematic review
- Author
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El-Sayed, Charlotte, Yiu, A., Burke, J., Vaughan-Shaw, P., Todd, J., Lin, P., Kasmani, Z., Munsch, C., Rooshenas, L., Campbell, M., and Bach, S. P.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Mind the Gap I: H$\alpha$ Activity of M Dwarfs Near the Partially/Fully Convective Boundary and a New H$\alpha$ Emission Deficiency Zone on the Main Sequence
- Author
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Jao, Wei-Chun, Henry, Todd J., White, Russel J., Nisak, Azmain H., Hubbard-James, Hodari-Sadiki, and Paredes, Leonardo A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Since identifying the gap in the H-R Diagram (HRD) marking the transition between partially and fully convective interiors, a unique type of slowly pulsating M dwarf has been proposed. These unstable M dwarfs provide new laboratories in which to understand how changing interior structures can produce potentially observable activity at the surface. In this work, we report the results of the largest high-resolution spectroscopic H$\alpha$ emission survey to date spanning this transition region, including 480 M dwarfs observed using the CHIRON spectrograph at CTIO/SMARTS 1.5-m. We find that M dwarfs with H$\alpha$ in emission are almost entirely found 0 to 0.5 magnitude above the top edge of the gap in the HRD, whereas effectively no stars in and below the gap show emission. Thus, the top edge of the gap marks a relatively sharp activity transition, and there is no anomalous H$\alpha$ activity for stars in the gap. We also identify a new region at 10.3 $
- Published
- 2023
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32. Enabling Exoplanet Demographics Studies with Standardized Exoplanet Survey Meta-Data
- Author
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Prepared by the ExoPAG Science Interest Group, Demographics, 2 on Exoplanet, Christiansen, Jessie L., Bennett, David P., Boss, Alan P., Bryson, Steve, Burt, Jennifer A., Fernandes, Rachel B., Henry, Todd J., Jao, Wei-Chun, Johnson, Samson A., Meyer, Michael R., Mulders, Gijs D., Mullally, Susan E., Nielsen, Eric L., Pascucci, Ilaria, Pepper, Joshua, Plavchan, Peter, Ragozzine, Darin, Rosenthal, Lee J., and Vrijmoet, Eliot Halley
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Goal 1 of the National Academies of Science, Engineering and Mathematics Exoplanet Science Strategy is "to understand the formation and evolution of planetary systems as products of the process of star formation, and characterize and explain the diversity of planetary system architectures, planetary compositions, and planetary environments produced by these processes", with the finding that "Current knowledge of the demographics and characteristics of planets and their systems is substantially incomplete." One significant roadblock to our ongoing efforts to improve our demographics analyses is the lack of comprehensive meta-data accompanying published exoplanet surveys. The Exoplanet Program Analysis Group (ExoPAG) Science Interest Group 2: Exoplanet Demographics has prepared this document to provide guidance to survey architects, authors, referees and funding agencies as to the most valuable such data products for five different exoplanet detection techniques - transit, radial velocity, direct imaging, microlensing and astrometry. We find that making these additional data easily available would greatly enhance the community's ability to perform robust, reproducible demographics analyses, and make progress on achieving the most important goals identified by the exoplanet and wider astronomical community., Comment: 21 pages, final report after community feedback addressed
- Published
- 2023
33. A Seven-Day Multi-Wavelength Flare Campaign on AU Mic I: High-Time Resolution Light Curves and the Thermal Empirical Neupert Effect
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Tristan, Isaiah I., Notsu, Yuta, Kowalski, Adam F., Brown, Alexander, Wisniewski, John P., Osten, Rachel A., Vrijmoet, Eliot H., White, Graeme L., Carter, Brad D., Grady, Carol A., Henry, Todd J., Hinojosa, Rodrigo H., Lomax, Jamie R., Neff, James E., Paredes, Leonardo A., and Soutter, Jack
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present light curves and flares from a seven day, multi-wavelength observational campaign of AU Mic, a young and active dM1e star with exoplanets and a debris disk. We report on 73 unique flares between the X-ray to optical data. We use high-time resolution NUV photometry and soft X-ray (SXR) data from XMM-Newton to study the empirical Neupert effect, which correlates the gradual and impulsive phase flaring emissions. We find that 65% (30 of 46) flares do not follow the Neupert effect, which is three times more excursions than seen in solar flares, and propose a four part Neupert effect classification (Neupert, Quasi-Neupert, Non-Neupert I & II) to explain the multi-wavelength responses. While the SXR emission generally lags behind the NUV as expected from the chromospheric evaporation flare models, the Neupert effect is more prevalent in larger, more impulsive flares. Preliminary flaring rate analysis with X-ray and U-band data suggests that previously estimated energy ratios hold for a collection of flares observed over the same time period, but not necessarily for an individual, multi-wavelength flare. These results imply that one model cannot explain all stellar flares and care should be taken when extrapolating between wavelength regimes. Future work will expand wavelength coverage using radio data to constrain the nonthermal empirical and theoretical Neupert effects to better refine models and bridge the gap between stellar and solar flare physics., Comment: 46 pages, 18 figures, 15 tables. Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal
- Published
- 2023
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34. Nectar‐Feeding Behavior in the Mallee Ringneck, Barnardius zonarius barnardi
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Amanda E. Hewes, Alejandro Rico‐Guevara, and Todd J. McWhorter
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Australia ,ecology ,feeding ,nectarivore ,parrot ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
ABSTRACT Opportunistic nectarivory occurs in many avian lineages around the world. In order to understand the implications of this behavior to plant reproduction via pollination and to other nectarivores via competition, more thorough descriptions of opportunistic nectar‐feeding behavior are necessary. We observed nectar feeding of the mallee ringneck, Barnardius zonarius barnardi, on flowers of the spotted emu bush, Eremophila maculata, in the temperate mallee of South Australia. Here, we describe the nectar‐feeding behavior of B. zonarius barnardi and discuss the implications for competition with honeyeaters and the reproduction of E. maculata. We also compare the morphology of the feeding apparatus of B. zonarius barnardi with that of nectarivorous parrots, lorikeets and lories, to determine whether they share convergent morphological features to facilitate the consumption of nectar. Finally, we suggest avenues for future natural history work to better document opportunistic avian nectarivory in Australian ecosystems.
- Published
- 2025
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35. Yerba mate (Ilex paraguariensis) genome provides new insights into convergent evolution of caffeine biosynthesis
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Federico A Vignale, Andrea Hernandez Garcia, Carlos P Modenutti, Ezequiel J Sosa, Lucas A Defelipe, Renato Oliveira, Gisele L Nunes, Raúl M Acevedo, German F Burguener, Sebastian M Rossi, Pedro D Zapata, Dardo A Marti, Pedro Sansberro, Guilherme Oliveira, Emily M Catania, Madeline N Smith, Nicole M Dubs, Satish Nair, Todd J Barkman, and Adrian G Turjanski
- Subjects
Ilex paraguariensis ,yerba mate ,genome ,caffeine ,convergent evolution ,whole-genome duplication ,Medicine ,Science ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Yerba mate (YM, Ilex paraguariensis) is an economically important crop marketed for the elaboration of mate, the third-most widely consumed caffeine-containing infusion worldwide. Here, we report the first genome assembly of this species, which has a total length of 1.06 Gb and contains 53,390 protein-coding genes. Comparative analyses revealed that the large YM genome size is partly due to a whole-genome duplication (Ip-α) during the early evolutionary history of Ilex, in addition to the hexaploidization event (γ) shared by core eudicots. Characterization of the genome allowed us to clone the genes encoding methyltransferase enzymes that catalyse multiple reactions required for caffeine production. To our surprise, this species has converged upon a different biochemical pathway compared to that of coffee and tea. In order to gain insight into the structural basis for the convergent enzyme activities, we obtained a crystal structure for the terminal enzyme in the pathway that forms caffeine. The structure reveals that convergent solutions have evolved for substrate positioning because different amino acid residues facilitate a different substrate orientation such that efficient methylation occurs in the independently evolved enzymes in YM and coffee. While our results show phylogenomic constraint limits the genes coopted for convergence of caffeine biosynthesis, the X-ray diffraction data suggest structural constraints are minimal for the convergent evolution of individual reactions.
- Published
- 2025
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36. Generative Adversarial Networks for Scintillation Signal Simulation in EXO-200
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Li, S., Ostrovskiy, I., Li, Z., Yang, L., Kharusi, S. Al, Anton, G., Badhrees, I., Barbeau, P. S., Beck, D., Belov, V., Bhatta, T., Breidenbach, M., Brunner, T., Cao, G. F., Cen, W. R., Chambers, C., Cleveland, B., Coon, M., Craycraft, A., Daniels, T., Darroch, L., Daugherty, S. J., Davis, J., Delaquis, S., Der Mesrobian-Kabakian, A., DeVoe, R., Dilling, J., Dolgolenko, A., Dolinski, M. J., Echevers, J., Fairbank Jr., W., Fairbank, D., Farine, J., Feyzbakhsh, S., Fierlinger, P., Fu, Y. S., Fudenberg, D., Gautam, P., Gornea, R., Gratta, G., Hall, C., Hansen, E. V., Hoessl, J., Hufschmidt, P., Hughes, M., Iverson, A., Jamil, A., Jessiman, C., Jewell, M. J., Johnson, A., Karelin, A., Kaufman, L. J., Koffas, T., Krücken, R., Kuchenkov, A., Kumar, K. S., Lan, Y., Larson, A., Lenardo, B. G., Leonard, D. S., Li, G. S., Licciardi, C., Lin, Y. H., MacLellan, R., McElroy, T., Michel, T., Mong, B., Moore, D. C., Murray, K., Njoya, O., Nusair, O., Odian, A., Perna, A., Piepke, A., Pocar, A., Retière, F., Robinson, A. L., Rowson, P. C., Runge, J., Schmidt, S., Sinclair, D., Skarpaas, K., Soma, A. K., Stekhanov, V., Tarka, M., Thibado, S., Todd, J., Tolba, T., Totev, T. I., and Tsang, R.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
Generative Adversarial Networks trained on samples of simulated or actual events have been proposed as a way of generating large simulated datasets at a reduced computational cost. In this work, a novel approach to perform the simulation of photodetector signals from the time projection chamber of the EXO-200 experiment is demonstrated. The method is based on a Wasserstein Generative Adversarial Network - a deep learning technique allowing for implicit non-parametric estimation of the population distribution for a given set of objects. Our network is trained on real calibration data using raw scintillation waveforms as input. We find that it is able to produce high-quality simulated waveforms an order of magnitude faster than the traditional simulation approach and, importantly, generalize from the training sample and discern salient high-level features of the data. In particular, the network correctly deduces position dependency of scintillation light response in the detector and correctly recognizes dead photodetector channels. The network output is then integrated into the EXO-200 analysis framework to show that the standard EXO-200 reconstruction routine processes the simulated waveforms to produce energy distributions comparable to that of real waveforms. Finally, the remaining discrepancies and potential ways to improve the approach further are highlighted., Comment: As accepted by JINST
- Published
- 2023
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37. Femtosecond electronic and hydrogen structural dynamics in ammonia imaged with ultrafast electron diffraction
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Champenois, Elio G., List, Nanna H., Ware, Matthew, Britton, Mathew, Bucksbaum, Philip H., Cheng, Xinxin, Centurion, Martin, Cryan, James P., Forbes, Ruaridh, Gabalski, Ian, Hegazy, Kareem, Hoffmann, Matthias C., Howard, Andrew J., Ji, Fuhao, Lin, Ming-Fu, Nunes, J. Pedro, Shen, Xiaozhe, Yang, Jie, Wang, Xijie, Martinez, Todd J., and Wolf, Thomas J. A.
- Subjects
Physics - Chemical Physics - Abstract
Directly imaging structural dynamics involving hydrogen atoms by ultrafast diffraction methods is complicated by their low scattering cross-sections. Here we demonstrate that megaelectronvolt ultrafast electron diffraction is sufficiently sensitive to follow hydrogen dynamics in isolated molecules. In a study of the photodissociation of gas phase ammonia, we simultaneously observe signatures of the nuclear and corresponding electronic structure changes resulting from the dissociation dynamics in the time-dependent diffraction. Both assignments are confirmed by ab initio simulations of the photochemical dynamics and the resulting diffraction observable. While the temporal resolution of the experiment is insufficient to resolve the dissociation in time, our results represent an important step towards the observation of proton dynamics in real space and time.
- Published
- 2023
38. Search for Two-neutrino Double-Beta Decay of $^{136}\rm Xe$ to the $0^+_1$ excited state of $^{136}\rm Ba$ with the Complete EXO-200 Dataset
- Author
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Collaboration, EXO-200, Kharusi, S. Al, Anton, G., Badhrees, I., Barbeau, P. S., Beck, D., Belov, V., Bhatta, T., Breidenbach, M., Brunner, T., Cao, G. F., Cen, W. R., Chambers, C., Cleveland, B., Coon, M., Craycraft, A., Daniels, T., Darroch, L., Daugherty, S. J., Davis, J., Delaquis, S., Der Mesrobian-Kabakian, A., DeVoe, R., Dilling, J., Dolgolenko, A., Dolinski, M. J., Echevers, J., Fairbank Jr., W., Fairbank, D., Farine, J., Feyzbakhsh, S., Fierlinger, P., Fu, Y. S., Fudenberg, D., Gautam, P., Gornea, R., Gratta, G., Hall, C., Hansen, E. V., Hoessl, J., Hufschmidt, P., Hughes, M., Iverson, A., Jamil, A., Jessiman, C., Jewell, M. J., Johnson, A., Karelin, A., Kaufman, L. J., Koffas, T., Krücken, R., Kuchenkov, A., Kumar, K. S., Lan, Y., Larson, A., Lenardo, B. G., Leonard, D. S., Li, G. S., Li, S., Li, Z., Licciardi, C., Lin, Y. H., MacLellan, R., McElroy, T., Michel, T., Mong, B., Moore, D. C., Murray, K., Njoya, O., Nusair, O., Odian, A., Ostrovskiy, I., Perna, A., Piepke, A., Pocar, A., Retière, F., Robinson, A. L., Rowson, P. C., Runge, J., Schmidt, S., Sinclair, D., Skarpaas, K., Soma, A. K., Stekhanov, V., Tarka, M., Thibado, S., Todd, J., Tolba, T., Totev, T. I., Tsang, R., Veenstra, B., Veeraraghavan, V., Vogel, P., Vuilleumier, J. -L., Wagenpfeil, M., Watkins, J., Weber, M., Wen, L. J., Wichoski, U., Wrede, G., Wu, S. X., Xia, Q., Yahne, D. R., Yang, L., Yen, Y. -R., Zeldovich, O. Ya., and Ziegler, T.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
A new search for two-neutrino double-beta ($2\nu\beta\beta$) decay of $^{136}\rm Xe$ to the $0^+_1$ excited state of $^{136}\rm Ba$ is performed with the full EXO-200 dataset. A deep learning-based convolutional neural network is used to discriminate signal from background events. Signal detection efficiency is increased relative to previous searches by EXO-200 by more than a factor of two. With the addition of the Phase II dataset taken with an upgraded detector, the median 90$\%$ confidence level half-life sensitivity of $2\nu\beta\beta$ decay to the $0^+_1$ state of $^{136}\rm Ba$ is $2.9 \times 10^{24}~\rm yr$ using a total $^{136}\rm Xe$ exposure of $234.1~\rm kg~yr$. No statistically significant evidence for $2\nu\beta\beta$ decay to the $0^+_1$ state is observed, leading to a lower limit of $T^{2\nu}_{1/2}(0^+ \rightarrow 0^+_1) > 1.4\times10^{24}~\rm yr$ at 90$\%$ confidence level, improved by 70$\%$ relative to the current world's best constraint., Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables
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- 2023
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39. Brainomaly: Unsupervised Neurologic Disease Detection Utilizing Unannotated T1-weighted Brain MR Images
- Author
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Siddiquee, Md Mahfuzur Rahman, Shah, Jay, Wu, Teresa, Chong, Catherine, Schwedt, Todd J., Dumkrieger, Gina, Nikolova, Simona, and Li, Baoxin
- Subjects
Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video Processing ,Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
Harnessing the power of deep neural networks in the medical imaging domain is challenging due to the difficulties in acquiring large annotated datasets, especially for rare diseases, which involve high costs, time, and effort for annotation. Unsupervised disease detection methods, such as anomaly detection, can significantly reduce human effort in these scenarios. While anomaly detection typically focuses on learning from images of healthy subjects only, real-world situations often present unannotated datasets with a mixture of healthy and diseased subjects. Recent studies have demonstrated that utilizing such unannotated images can improve unsupervised disease and anomaly detection. However, these methods do not utilize knowledge specific to registered neuroimages, resulting in a subpar performance in neurologic disease detection. To address this limitation, we propose Brainomaly, a GAN-based image-to-image translation method specifically designed for neurologic disease detection. Brainomaly not only offers tailored image-to-image translation suitable for neuroimages but also leverages unannotated mixed images to achieve superior neurologic disease detection. Additionally, we address the issue of model selection for inference without annotated samples by proposing a pseudo-AUC metric, further enhancing Brainomaly's detection performance. Extensive experiments and ablation studies demonstrate that Brainomaly outperforms existing state-of-the-art unsupervised disease and anomaly detection methods by significant margins in Alzheimer's disease detection using a publicly available dataset and headache detection using an institutional dataset. The code is available from https://github.com/mahfuzmohammad/Brainomaly., Comment: Accepted in WACV 2024
- Published
- 2023
40. Unveiling microbial diversity: harnessing long-read sequencing technology
- Author
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Agustinho, Daniel P., Fu, Yilei, Menon, Vipin K., Metcalf, Ginger A., Treangen, Todd J., and Sedlazeck, Fritz J.
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- 2024
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41. Beliefs influence argumentative essay writing
- Author
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Hart, Liam W., Wolfe, Michael B., Williams, Todd J., and Russell, Gregory M.
- Published
- 2024
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42. Dual and Pediatric En-Bloc Compared to Living Donor Kidney Transplant: A Single Center Retrospective Review
- Author
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Todd J. Robinson, Thierry Schöb, Paola A. Vargas, Caroline Schöb, Alp Demirag, and Jose Oberholzer
- Subjects
dual-kidney transplantation ,pediatric en-bloc transplantation ,single-kidney transplantation ,serum creatinine ,GFR ,graft survival ,Surgery ,RD1-811 - Abstract
Safely expanding the use of extended-criteria organ donors is critical to increase access to kidney transplantation and reduce wait list mortality. We performed a retrospective analysis of 24 pediatric en-bloc (PEB) compared to 13 dual-kidney transplantations (DKT) and 39 living donor kidney transplants (LDKT) at the University of Virginia hospital, performed between 2011 and 2019. All living donor kidney transplants were performed in 2017. This year was chosen so that 5-year outcomes data would be available. Primary outcomes were glomerular filtration rate and serum creatinine at 12 and 24 months postoperatively. Secondary outcomes were patient and graft survival. The 1-year creatinine levels (mL/min/1.73 m2) were lower in the PEB group (median 0.9, IQR 0.8–1.4) when compared to the DKT (median 1.4, IQR 1.2–1.5) and LDKT (median 1.3, IQR 1.1–1.5) groups (p < 0.001). The 2-year creatinine levels (mL/min/1.73 m2) were also lower in the PEB group (median 0.8, IQR 0.7–1.08) compared to the DKT (median 1.3, IQR 1.1–1.5) and LDKT (median 1.3, IQR 1.0–1.5) groups (p < 0.001). The glomerular filtration rates demonstrated similar results. Graft survival at 1, 3, and 5 years was 100/100/90, 100/92/69, and 96/96/91 for LDKT, DKT, and PEB, respectively (p = 0.27). Patient survival at 1, 3, and 5 years was 100/100/90, 100/100/88 and 100/100/95 for LDKT, DKT, and PEB, respectively (p = 0.78). Dual KT and PEB transplantation are two alternative techniques to safely expand the donor pool. PEB kidney transplantation, though technically more demanding, provides the best long-term graft function.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Generalizable Natural Language Processing Framework for Migraine Reporting from Social Media
- Author
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Guo, Yuting, Rajwal, Swati, Lakamana, Sahithi, Chiang, Chia-Chun, Menell, Paul C., Shahid, Adnan H., Chen, Yi-Chieh, Chhabra, Nikita, Chao, Wan-Ju, Chao, Chieh-Ju, Schwedt, Todd J., Banerjee, Imon, and Sarker, Abeed
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computation and Language - Abstract
Migraine is a high-prevalence and disabling neurological disorder. However, information migraine management in real-world settings could be limited to traditional health information sources. In this paper, we (i) verify that there is substantial migraine-related chatter available on social media (Twitter and Reddit), self-reported by migraine sufferers; (ii) develop a platform-independent text classification system for automatically detecting self-reported migraine-related posts, and (iii) conduct analyses of the self-reported posts to assess the utility of social media for studying this problem. We manually annotated 5750 Twitter posts and 302 Reddit posts. Our system achieved an F1 score of 0.90 on Twitter and 0.93 on Reddit. Analysis of information posted by our 'migraine cohort' revealed the presence of a plethora of relevant information about migraine therapies and patient sentiments associated with them. Our study forms the foundation for conducting an in-depth analysis of migraine-related information using social media data., Comment: Accepted by AMIA 2023 Informatics Summit
- Published
- 2022
44. Estimating the Convective Turnover Time
- Author
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Jao, Wei-Chun, Couperus, Andrew A, Vrijmoet, Eliot H., Wright, Nicholas J, and Henry, Todd J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The introduction of the Rossby number (R$_0$), which incorporates the convective turnover time ($\tau$), in 1984 was a pioneering idea for understanding the correlation between stellar rotation and activity. The convective turnover time, which cannot be measured directly, is often inferred using existing $\tau$-mass or $\tau$-color relations, typically established based on an ensemble of different types of stars by assuming that $\tau$ is a function of mass. In this work, we use {\it Gaia} Early Data Release 3 to demonstrate that the masses used to establish one of the most cited $\tau$-mass relations are overestimated for G type dwarfs and significantly underestimated for late M dwarfs, offsets that affect studies using this $\tau$-mass relation to draw conclusions. We discuss the challenges of creating such relations then and now. In the era of {\it Gaia} and other large datasets, stars used to establish these relations require characterization in a multi-dimensional space, rather than via the single-characteristic relations of the past. We propose that new multi-dimensional relations should be established based on updated theoretical models and all available stellar parameters for different interior structures from a set of carefully vetted single stars, so that the convective turnover time can be estimated more accurately., Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, 1 table. One of the figures is a 3D interactive plot, which is available in the online journal or at https://www.chara.gsu.edu/~jao/3D.html
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. The Solar Neighborhood L: Spectroscopic Discovery of K Dwarfs Younger Than 1 Gyr and New Binaries within 30 pc
- Author
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Hubbard-James, Hodari-Sadiki, Lesley, D. Xavier, Henry, Todd J., Paredes, Leonardo A., and Nisak, Azmain H.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
As part of a comprehensive effort to characterize the nearest stars, the CHIRON echelle spectrograph on the CTIO/SMARTS 1.5m telescope is being used to acquire high resolution (R = 80000) spectra of K dwarfs within 50 parsecs. This paper provides spectral details about 35 K dwarfs from five benchmark sets with estimated ages spanning 20 Myr -- 5.7 Gyr. Four spectral age and activity indicators are tested, three of which aligned with the estimated ages of the benchmark groups -- the Na I doublet (5889.95 $\r{A}$ and 5895.92 $\r{A}$), the H$\alpha$ line (6562.8 $\r{A}$), and the Li I resonance line (6707.8 $\r{A}$). The benchmark stars are then used to evaluate seven field K dwarfs exhibiting variable radial velocities for which initial CHIRON data did not show obvious companions. Two of these stars are estimated to be younger than 700 Myr, while one exhibits stellar activity unusual for older K dwarf field stars and is possibly young. The four remaining stars turn out to be spectroscopic binaries, two of which are being reported here for the first time with orbital periods found using CHIRON data. Spectral analysis of the combined sample of 42 benchmark and variable radial velocity stars indicates temperatures ranging from 3900--5300 K and metallicities from $-$0.4 $<$ [Fe/H] $<$ $+$0.2. We also determine $log g$ = 4.5--4.7 for main sequence K dwarfs. Ultimately, this study will target several thousand of the nearest K dwarfs, and provide results that will serve present and future studies of stellar astrophysics and exoplanet habitability., Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures, 4 tables, accepted to AJ
- Published
- 2022
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46. Kidney Outcomes in Children Receiving Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation: A Single-Center Acute Cohort From 2009 to 2019, Followed to 2021
- Author
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Strong, Amy E., Makeneni, Spandana, Campos, Diego, Fulchiero, Rosanna, Kilbaugh, Todd J., Connelly, James, Laskin, Benjamin L., Zee, Jarcy, and Denburg, Michelle R.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Multi-modal Predictive Model for MACE Risk Estimation in Patients with Migraine.
- Author
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Amara Tariq, Oana Dumitrascu, Man Luo, Gina Dumkrieger, Todd J. Schwedt, Catherine D. Chong, and Imon Banerjee
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. A Visual Quality Assessment Method for Raster Images in Scanned Document.
- Author
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Justin Yang, Peter Bauer, Todd J. Harris, Changhyung Lee, Hyeon Seok Seo, Jan P. Allebach, and Fengqing Zhu 0001
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. GraSSRep: Graph-Based Self-supervised Learning for Repeat Detection in Metagenomic Assembly.
- Author
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Ali Azizpour, Advait Balaji, Todd J. Treangen, and Santiago Segarra
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Brainomaly: Unsupervised Neurologic Disease Detection Utilizing Unannotated T1-weighted Brain MR Images.
- Author
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Md Mahfuzur Rahman Siddiquee, Jay Shah, Teresa Wu, Catherine D. Chong, Todd J. Schwedt, Gina Dumkrieger, Simona Nikolova, and Baoxin Li
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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