251 results on '"Bradley, L"'
Search Results
2. Using all-atom simulations in explicit solvent to study aggregation of amphipathic peptides into amyloid-like fibrils
- Author
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Jalali, Sharareh, Yang, Yanxing, Mahmoudinobar, Farbod, Singh, Shaneen M., Nilsson, Bradley L., and Dias, Cristiano
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
3. Transcriptional response of blood leukocytes from turkeys challenged with Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium UK1
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Monson, Melissa S., Bearson, Bradley L., Sylte, Matthew J., Looft, Torey, Lamont, Susan J., and Bearson, Shawn M.D.
- Published
- 2021
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4. Metabolic products of the intestinal microbiome and extremes of atherosclerosis
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Bogiatzi, Chrysi, Gloor, Gregory, Allen-Vercoe, Emma, Reid, Gregor, Wong, Ruth G., Urquhart, Bradley L., Dinculescu, Vincent, Ruetz, Kelsey N., Velenosi, Thomas J., Pignanelli, Michael, and Spence, J. David more...
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- 2018
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5. Arthroscopic-Assisted Lateral Extra-Articular Tenodesis With Knotless Anchor Fixation.
- Author
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Darville, Gregory L., Young, Bradley L., Lamplot, Joseph D., and Xerogeanes, John W.
- Abstract
Recent studies have reported the biomechanical and clinical advantages of lateral extraarticular augmentation procedures including the modified lateral extra-articular tenodesis (LET) in the setting of anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction. LET has been shown to significantly decrease re-rupture rates in high-risk patients and decrease anterior cruciate ligament graft forces during pivoting loads and instrumented anterior laxity testing. Many variations of the modified LET approaches have been described. However, concerns including lateral hematoma, wound-healing complications, and increased operative time exist. This minimally invasive, arthroscopic-assisted approach using a knotless, all-suture anchor allows for direct visualization through a 2-cm incision and inherently decreases the morbidity associated with traditional LET techniques. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] more...
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- 2023
- Full Text
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6. SWAT hydrologic model parameter uncertainty and its implications for hydroclimatic projections in snowmelt-dependent watersheds
- Author
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Ficklin, Darren L. and Barnhart, Bradley L.
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- 2014
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7. "Luggage Tag" Suture Modification for Closing the Quadriceps Tendon Autograft Harvest Site.
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Young, Bradley L. and Xerogeanes, John W.
- Abstract
The quadriceps tendon (QT) is increasingly used as an autograft for anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction. Closure of the harvest site helps with fluid extravasation from the joint for the duration of the procedure. In addition, closure of the QT removes the palpable defect noticed by many patients and prevents superficial infections from spreading deep to the joint. This Technical Note describes how to perform the "luggage tag" suture modification to efficiently and reproducibly close the QT harvest site with an arthroscopic self-retrieving suture passer. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] more...
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- 2023
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8. Host specific differences alter the requirement for certain Salmonella genes during swine colonization
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Bearson, Bradley L. and Bearson, Shawn M.D.
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- 2011
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9. Search for neutrino-induced cascades with five years of AMANDA data
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Abbasi, R., Abdou, Y., Abu-Zayyad, T., Actis, O., Adams, J., Aguilar, J.A., Ahlers, M., Andeen, K., Auffenberg, J., Bai, X., Baker, M., Barwick, S.W., Bay, R., Bazo Alba, J.L., Beattie, K., Beatty, J.J., Bechet, S., Becker, J.K., Becker, K.-H., Benabderrahmane, M.L., Berdermann, J., Berghaus, P., Berley, D., Bernardini, E., Bertrand, D., Besson, D.Z., Bissok, M., Blaufuss, E., Boersma, D.J., Bohm, C., Böser, S., Botner, O., Bradley, L., Braun, J., Buitink, S., Carson, M., Chirkin, D., Christy, B., Clem, J., Clevermann, F., Cohen, S., Colnard, C., Cowen, D.F., D’Agostino, M.V., Danninger, M., Davis, J.C., De Clercq, C., Demirörs, L., Depaepe, O., Descamps, F., Desiati, P., de Vries-Uiterweerd, G., DeYoung, T., Díaz-Vélez, J.C., Dreyer, J., Dumm, J.P., Duvoort, M.R., Ehrlich, R., Eisch, J., Ellsworth, R.W., Engdegård, O., Euler, S., Evenson, P.A., Fadiran, O., Fazely, A.R., Feusels, T., Filimonov, K., Finley, C., Foerster, M.M., Fox, B.D., Franckowiak, A., Franke, R., Gaisser, T.K., Gallagher, J., Ganugapati, R., Geisler, M., Gerhardt, L., Gladstone, L., Glüsenkamp, T., Goldschmidt, A., Goodman, J.A., Grant, D., Griesel, T., Groß, A., Grullon, S., Gunasingha, R.M., Gurtner, M., Ha, C., Hallgren, A., Halzen, F., Han, K., Hanson, K., Helbing, K., Herquet, P., Hickford, S., Hill, G.C., Hoffman, K.D., Homeier, A., Hoshina, K., Hubert, D., Huelsnitz, W., Hülß, J.-P., Hulth, P.O., Hultqvist, K., Hussain, S., Imlay, R.L., Ishihara, A., Jacobsen, J., Japaridze, G.S., Johansson, H., Joseph, J.M., Kampert, K.-H., Kappes, A., Karg, T., Karle, A., Kelley, J.L., Kemming, N., Kenny, P., Kiryluk, J., Kislat, F., Klein, S.R., Knops, S., Köhne, J.-H., Kohnen, G., Kolanoski, H., Köpke, L., Koskinen, D.J., Kowalski, M., Kowarik, T., Krasberg, M., Krings, T., Kroll, G., Kuehn, K., Kuwabara, T., Labare, M., Lafebre, S., Laihem, K., Landsman, H., Lauer, R., Lehmann, R., Lennarz, D., Lünemann, J., Madsen, J., Majumdar, P., Maruyama, R., Mase, K., Matis, H.S., Matusik, M., Meagher, K., Merck, M., Mészáros, P., Meures, T., Middell, E., Milke, N., Miller, J., Montaruli, T., Morse, R., Movit, S.M., Nahnhauer, R., Nam, J.W., Naumann, U., Nießen, P., Nygren, D.R., Odrowski, S., Olivas, A., Olivo, M., Ono, M., Panknin, S., Paul, L., Pérez de los Heros, C., Petrovic, J., Piegsa, A., Pieloth, D., Porrata, R., Posselt, J., Price, P.B., Prikockis, M., Przybylski, G.T., Rawlins, K., Redl, P., Resconi, E., Rhode, W., Ribordy, M., Rizzo, A., Rodrigues, J.P., Roth, P., Rothmaier, F., Rott, C., Roucelle, C., Ruhe, T., Rutledge, D., Ruzybayev, B., Ryckbosch, D., Sander, H.-G., Sarkar, S., Schatto, K., Schlenstedt, S., Schmidt, T., Schneider, D., Schukraft, A., Schultes, A., Schulz, O., Schunck, M., Seckel, D., Semburg, B., Seo, S.H., Sestayo, Y., Seunarine, S., Silvestri, A., Slipak, A., Spiczak, G.M., Spiering, C., Stamatikos, M., Stanev, T., Stephens, G., Stezelberger, T., Stokstad, R.G., Stoyanov, S., Strahler, E.A., Straszheim, T., Sullivan, G.W., Swillens, Q., Taboada, I., Tamburro, A., Tepe, A., Ter-Antonyan, S., Tilav, S., Toale, P.A., Tosi, D., Turčan, D., van Eijndhoven, N., Vandenbroucke, J., Van Overloop, A., van Santen, J., Voigt, B., Walck, C., Waldenmaier, T., Wallraff, M., Walter, M., Wendt, C., Westerhoff, S., Whitehorn, N., Wiebe, K., Wiebusch, C.H., Wikström, G., Williams, D.R., Wischnewski, R., Wissing, H., Woschnagg, K., Xu, C., Xu, X.W., Yodh, G., Yoshida, S., and Zarzhitsky, P. more...
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Measurement of acoustic attenuation in South Pole ice
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Abbasi, R., Abdou, Y., Abu-Zayyad, T., Adams, J., Aguilar, J.A., Ahlers, M., Andeen, K., Auffenberg, J., Bai, X., Baker, M., Barwick, S.W., Bay, R., Bazo Alba, J.L., Beattie, K., Beatty, J.J., Bechet, S., Becker, J.K., Becker, K.-H., Benabderrahmane, M.L., Berdermann, J., Berghaus, P., Berley, D., Bernardini, E., Bertrand, D., Besson, D.Z., Bissok, M., Blaufuss, E., Boersma, D.J., Bohm, C., Böser, S., Botner, O., Bradley, L., Braun, J., Buitink, S., Carson, M., Chirkin, D., Christy, B., Clem, J., Clevermann, F., Cohen, S., Colnard, C., Cowen, D.F., D’Agostino, M.V., Danninger, M., De Clercq, C., Demirörs, L., Depaepe, O., Descamps, F., Desiati, P., de Vries-Uiterweerd, G., DeYoung, T., Díaz-Vélez, J.C., Dreyer, J., Dumm, J.P., Duvoort, M.R., Ehrlich, R., Eisch, J., Ellsworth, R.W., Engdegård, O., Euler, S., Evenson, P.A., Fadiran, O., Fazely, A.R., Feusels, T., Filimonov, K., Finley, C., Foerster, M.M., Fox, B.D., Franckowiak, A., Franke, R., Gaisser, T.K., Gallagher, J., Ganugapati, R., Geisler, M., Gerhardt, L., Gladstone, L., Glüsenkamp, T., Goldschmidt, A., Goodman, J.A., Grant, D., Griesel, T., Groß, A., Grullon, S., Gunasingha, R.M., Gurtner, M., Gustafsson, L., Ha, C., Hallgren, A., Halzen, F., Han, K., Hanson, K., Helbing, K., Herquet, P., Hickford, S., Hill, G.C., Hoffman, K.D., Homeier, A., Hoshina, K., Hubert, D., Huelsnitz, W., Hülß, J.-P., Hulth, P.O., Hultqvist, K., Hussain, S., Imlay, R.L., Ishihara, A., Jacobsen, J., Japaridze, G.S., Johansson, H., Joseph, J.M., Kampert, K.-H., Kappes, A., Karg, T., Karle, A., Kelley, J.L., Kemming, N., Kenny, P., Kiryluk, J., Kislat, F., Klein, S.R., Knops, S., Köhne, J.-H., Kohnen, G., Kolanoski, H., Köpke, L., Koskinen, D.J., Kowalski, M., Kowarik, T., Krasberg, M., Krings, T., Kroll, G., Kuehn, K., Kuwabara, T., Labare, M., Lafebre, S., Laihem, K., Landsman, H., Lauer, R., Lehmann, R., Lennarz, D., Lünemann, J., Madsen, J., Majumdar, P., Maruyama, R., Mase, K., Matis, H.S., Matusik, M., Meagher, K., Merck, M., Mészáros, P., Meures, T., Middell, E., Milke, N., Montaruli, T., Morse, R., Movit, S.M., Nahnhauer, R., Nam, J.W., Naumann, U., Nießen, P., Nygren, D.R., Odrowski, S., Olivas, A., Olivo, M., Ono, M., Panknin, S., Paul, L., Pérez de los Heros, C., Petrovic, J., Piegsa, A., Pieloth, D., Porrata, R., Posselt, J., Price, P.B., Prikockis, M., Przybylski, G.T., Rawlins, K., Redl, P., Resconi, E., Rhode, W., Ribordy, M., Rizzo, A., Rodrigues, J.P., Roth, P., Rothmaier, F., Rott, C., Roucelle, C., Ruhe, T., Rutledge, D., Ruzybayev, B., Ryckbosch, D., Sander, H.-G., Sarkar, S., Schatto, K., Schlenstedt, S., Schmidt, T., Schneider, D., Schukraft, A., Schultes, A., Schulz, O., Schunck, M., Seckel, D., Semburg, B., Seo, S.H., Sestayo, Y., Seunarine, S., Silvestri, A., Slipak, A., Spiczak, G.M., Spiering, C., Stamatikos, M., Stanev, T., Stephens, G., Stezelberger, T., Stokstad, R.G., Stoyanov, S., Strahler, E.A., Straszheim, T., Sullivan, G.W., Swillens, Q., Taboada, I., Tamburro, A., Tarasova, O., Tepe, A., Ter-Antonyan, S., Tilav, S., Toale, P.A., Tosi, D., Turčan, D., van Eijndhoven, N., Vandenbroucke, J., Van Overloop, A., van Santen, J., Voigt, B., Walck, C., Waldenmaier, T., Wallraff, M., Walter, M., Wendt, C., Westerhoff, S., Whitehorn, N., Wiebe, K., Wiebusch, C.H., Wikström, G., Williams, D.R., Wischnewski, R., Wissing, H., Woschnagg, K., Xu, C., Xu, X.W., Yanez, J.P., Yodh, G., Yoshida, S., and Zarzhitsky, P. more...
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. We've all been wrong about provisional tic disorder.
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Grossen, Sarah C., Arbuckle, Amanda L., Bihun, Emily C., Koller, Jonathan M., Song, David Y., Reiersen, Angela M., Schlaggar, Bradley L., Greene, Deanna J., and Black, Kevin J.
- Abstract
Provisional Tic Disorder (PTD) is common in childhood. The received wisdom among clinicians is that PTD is short-lived and mild, with at most a few tics, and rarely includes complex tics, premonitory phenomena or comorbid illnesses. However, such conclusions come from clinical experience, with biased ascertainment and limited follow-up. Prospective study of 89 children with tics starting 0–9 months ago (median 4 months), fewer than half from clinical sources. Follow-up at 12 (± 24, 36, 48) months after the first tic. At study entry, many children had ADHD (39), an anxiety disorder (27), OCD (9) or enuresis (17). All had at least two current tics, with a mean total since onset of 6.9 motor and 2.0 phonic tics. Forty-one had experienced a complex tic, and 69 could suppress some tics. Tics were clinically meaningful: 64 had tics severe enough for a clinical trial, and 76 families sought medical attention for the tics. At 12 months, 79 returned, and 78 still had tics. Of these, 29 manifested no tics during history and extended examination, but only via audio-visual monitoring when the child was seated alone. Only 12/70 now had plans to see a doctor for tics. Most who returned at 2–4 years still had tics known to the child and family, but medical impact was low. Our results do not contradict previous data, but overturn clinical lore. The data strongly argue against the longstanding but arbitrary tradition of separating tic disorders into recent-onset versus chronic. • Provisional Tic Disorder is viewed as mild, uncomplicated, and unlike Tourette's. • But this prospective study shows most have clinically meaningful tics at onset. • Most have phonic tics, complex tics, and psychiatric comorbidity. • At 12 months, tics improve but are still present when child is alone. • Data now support lumping all primary tic disorders regardless of duration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. The energy spectrum of atmospheric neutrinos between 2 and 200 TeV with the AMANDA-II detector
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Abbasi, R., Abdou, Y., Abu-Zayyad, T., Adams, J., Aguilar, J.A., Ahlers, M., Andeen, K., Auffenberg, J., Bai, X., Baker, M., Barwick, S.W., Bay, R., Bazo Alba, J.L., Beattie, K., Beatty, J.J., Bechet, S., Becker, J.K., Becker, K.-H., Benabderrahmane, M.L., Berdermann, J., Berghaus, P., Berley, D., Bernardini, E., Bertrand, D., Besson, D.Z., Bissok, M., Blaufuss, E., Boersma, D.J., Bohm, C., Böser, S., Botner, O., Bradley, L., Braun, J., Buitink, S., Carson, M., Chirkin, D., Christy, B., Clem, J., Clevermann, F., Cohen, S., Colnard, C., Cowen, D.F., D’Agostino, M.V., Danninger, M., De Clercq, C., Demirörs, L., Depaepe, O., Descamps, F., Desiati, P., de Vries-Uiterweerd, G., DeYoung, T., Díaz-Vélez, J.C., Dreyer, J., Dumm, J.P., Duvoort, M.R., Ehrlich, R., Eisch, J., Ellsworth, R.W., Engdegård, O., Euler, S., Evenson, P.A., Fadiran, O., Fazely, A.R., Fedynitch, A., Feusels, T., Filimonov, K., Finley, C., Foerster, M.M., Fox, B.D., Franckowiak, A., Franke, R., Gaisser, T.K., Gallagher, J., Ganugapati, R., Geisler, M., Gerhardt, L., Gladstone, L., Glüsenkamp, T., Goldschmidt, A., Goodman, J.A., Grant, D., Griesel, T., Groß, A., Grullon, S., Gunasingha, R.M., Gurtner, M., Ha, C., Hallgren, A., Halzen, F., Han, K., Hanson, K., Helbing, K., Herquet, P., Hickford, S., Hill, G.C., Hoffman, K.D., Homeier, A., Hoshina, K., Hubert, D., Huelsnitz, W., Hülß, J.-P., Hulth, P.O., Hultqvist, K., Hussain, S., Imlay, R.L., Ishihara, A., Jacobsen, J., Japaridze, G.S., Johansson, H., Joseph, J.M., Kampert, K.-H., Kappes, A., Karg, T., Karle, A., Kelley, J.L., Kemming, N., Kenny, P., Kiryluk, J., Kislat, F., Klein, S.R., Knops, S., Köhne, J.-H., Kohnen, G., Kolanoski, H., Köpke, L., Koskinen, D.J., Kowalski, M., Kowarik, T., Krasberg, M., Krings, T., Kroll, G., Kuehn, K., Kuwabara, T., Labare, M., Lafebre, S., Laihem, K., Landsman, H., Lauer, R., Lehmann, R., Lennarz, D., Lünemann, J., Madsen, J., Majumdar, P., Maruyama, R., Mase, K., Matis, H.S., Matusik, M., Meagher, K., Merck, M., Mészáros, P., Meures, T., Middell, E., Milke, N., Montaruli, T., Morse, R., Movit, S.M., Münich, K., Nahnhauer, R., Nam, J.W., Naumann, U., Nießen, P., Nygren, D.R., Odrowski, S., Olivas, A., Olivo, M., Ono, M., Panknin, S., Paul, L., Pérez de los Heros, C., Petrovic, J., Piegsa, A., Pieloth, D., Porrata, R., Posselt, J., Price, P.B., Prikockis, M., Przybylski, G.T., Rawlins, K., Redl, P., Resconi, E., Rhode, W., Ribordy, M., Rizzo, A., Rodrigues, J.P., Roth, P., Rothmaier, F., Rott, C., Roucelle, C., Ruhe, T., Rutledge, D., Ruzybayev, B., Ryckbosch, D., Sander, H.-G., Sarkar, S., Schatto, K., Schlenstedt, S., Schmidt, T., Schneider, D., Schukraft, A., Schultes, A., Schulz, O., Schunck, M., Seckel, D., Semburg, B., Seo, S.H., Sestayo, Y., Seunarine, S., Silvestri, A., Slipak, A., Spiczak, G.M., Spiering, C., Stamatikos, M., Stanev, T., Stephens, G., Stezelberger, T., Stokstad, R.G., Stoyanov, S., Strahler, E.A., Straszheim, T., Sullivan, G.W., Swillens, Q., Taboada, I., Tamburro, A., Tarasova, O., Tepe, A., Ter-Antonyan, S., Tilav, S., Toale, P.A., Tosi, D., Turčan, D., van Eijndhoven, N., Vandenbroucke, J., Van Overloop, A., van Santen, J., Voigt, B., Walck, C., Waldenmaier, T., Wallraff, M., Walter, M., Wendt, C., Westerhoff, S., Whitehorn, N., Wiebe, K., Wiebusch, C.H., Wikström, G., Williams, D.R., Wischnewski, R., Wissing, H., Woschnagg, K., Xu, C., Xu, X.W., Yodh, G., Yoshida, S., and Zarzhitsky, P. more...
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Measurement of sound speed vs. depth in South Pole ice for neutrino astronomy
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Abbasi, R., Abdou, Y., Ackermann, M., Adams, J., Aguilar, J.A., Ahlers, M., Andeen, K., Auffenberg, J., Bai, X., Baker, M., Barwick, S.W., Bay, R., Bazo Alba, J.L., Beattie, K., Beatty, J.J., Bechet, S., Becker, J.K., Becker, K.-H., Benabderrahmane, M.L., Berdermann, J., Berghaus, P., Berley, D., Bernardini, E., Bertrand, D., Besson, D.Z., Bissok, M., Blaufuss, E., Boersma, D.J., Bohm, C., Bolmont, J., Böser, S., Botner, O., Bradley, L., Braun, J., Breder, D., Castermans, T., Chirkin, D., Christy, B., Clem, J., Cohen, S., Cowen, D.F., D’Agostino, M.V., Danninger, M., Day, C.T., De Clercq, C., Demirörs, L., Depaepe, O., Descamps, F., Desiati, P., de Vries-Uiterweerd, G., DeYoung, T., Diaz-Velez, J.C., Dreyer, J., Dumm, J.P., Duvoort, M.R., Edwards, W.R., Ehrlich, R., Eisch, J., Ellsworth, R.W., Engdegård, O., Euler, S., Evenson, P.A., Fadiran, O., Fazely, A.R., Feusels, T., Filimonov, K., Finley, C., Foerster, M.M., Fox, B.D., Franckowiak, A., Franke, R., Gaisser, T.K., Gallagher, J., Ganugapati, R., Gerhardt, L., Gladstone, L., Goldschmidt, A., Goodman, J.A., Gozzini, R., Grant, D., Griesel, T., Groß, A., Grullon, S., Gunasingha, R.M., Gurtner, M., Ha, C., Hallgren, A., Halzen, F., Han, K., Hanson, K., Hasegawa, Y., Heise, J., Helbing, K., Herquet, P., Hickford, S., Hill, G.C., Hoffman, K.D., Hoshina, K., Hubert, D., Huelsnitz, W., Hülß, J.-P., Hulth, P.O., Hultqvist, K., Hussain, S., Imlay, R.L., Inaba, M., Ishihara, A., Jacobsen, J., Japaridze, G.S., Johansson, H., Joseph, J.M., Kampert, K.-H., Kappes, A., Karg, T., Karle, A., Kelley, J.L., Kenny, P., Kiryluk, J., Kislat, F., Klein, S.R., Klepser, S., Knops, S., Kohnen, G., Kolanoski, H., Köpke, L., Kowalski, M., Kowarik, T., Krasberg, M., Kuehn, K., Kuwabara, T., Labare, M., Lafebre, S., Laihem, K., Landsman, H., Lauer, R., Leich, H., Lennarz, D., Lucke, A., Lundberg, J., Lünemann, J., Madsen, J., Majumdar, P., Maruyama, R., Mase, K., Matis, H.S., McParland, C.P., Meagher, K., Merck, M., Mészáros, P., Middell, E., Milke, N., Miyamoto, H., Mohr, A., Montaruli, T., Morse, R., Movit, S.M., Münich, K., Nahnhauer, R., Nam, J.W., Nießen, P., Nygren, D.R., Odrowski, S., Olivas, A., Olivo, M., Ono, M., Panknin, S., Patton, S., Pérez de los Heros, C., Petrovic, J., Piegsa, A., Pieloth, D., Pohl, A.C., Porrata, R., Potthoff, N., Price, P.B., Prikockis, M., Przybylski, G.T., Rawlins, K., Redl, P., Resconi, E., Rhode, W., Ribordy, M., Rizzo, A., Rodrigues, J.P., Roth, P., Rothmaier, F., Rott, C., Roucelle, C., Rutledge, D., Ryckbosch, D., Sander, H.-G., Sarkar, S., Satalecka, K., Schlenstedt, S., Schmidt, T., Schneider, D., Schukraft, A., Schulz, O., Schunck, M., Seckel, D., Semburg, B., Seo, S.H., Sestayo, Y., Seunarine, S., Silvestri, A., Slipak, A., Spiczak, G.M., Spiering, C., Stamatikos, M., Stanev, T., Stephens, G., Stezelberger, T., Stokstad, R.G., Stoufer, M.C., Stoyanov, S., Strahler, E.A., Straszheim, T., Sulanke, K.-H., Sullivan, G.W., Swillens, Q., Taboada, I., Tarasova, O., Tepe, A., Ter-Antonyan, S., Terranova, C., Tilav, S., Tluczykont, M., Toale, P.A., Tosi, D., Turčan, D., van Eijndhoven, N., Vandenbroucke, J., Van Overloop, A., Vogt, C., Voigt, B., Walck, C., Waldenmaier, T., Walter, M., Wendt, C., Westerhoff, S., Whitehorn, N., Wiebusch, C.H., Wiedemann, A., Wikström, G., Williams, D.R., Wischnewski, R., Wissing, H., Woschnagg, K., Xu, X.W., Yodh, G., and Yoshida, S. more...
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Room temperature Young's modulus, shear modulus, and Poisson's ratio of Ce 0.9Fe 3.5Co 0.5Sb 12 and Co 0.95Pd 0.05Te 0.05Sb 3 skutterudite materials
- Author
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Schmidt, Robert D., Ni, Jennifer E., Case, Eldon D., Sakamoto, Jeffery S., Kleinow, Daniel C., Wing, Bradley L., Stewart, Ryan C., and Timm, Edward J.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Calibration and characterization of the IceCube photomultiplier tube
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Abbasi, R., Abdou, Y., Abu-Zayyad, T., Adams, J., Aguilar, J.A., Ahlers, M., Andeen, K., Auffenberg, J., Bai, X., Baker, M., Barwick, S.W., Bay, R., Bazo Alba, J.L., Beattie, K., Beatty, J.J., Bechet, S., Becker, J.K., Becker, K.-H., Benabderrahmane, M.L., Berdermann, J., Berghaus, P., Berley, D., Bernardini, E., Bertrand, D., Besson, D.Z., Bissok, M., Blaufuss, E., Boersma, D.J., Bohm, C., Botner, O., Bradley, L., Braun, J., Buitink, S., Carson, M., Chirkin, D., Christy, B., Clem, J., Cohen, S., Colnard, C., Cowen, D.F., D’Agostino, M.V., Danninger, M., De Clercq, C., Demirörs, L., Depaepe, O., Descamps, F., Desiati, P., de Vries-Uiterweerd, G., DeYoung, T., Díaz-Vélez, J.C., Dreyer, J., Dumm, J.P., Duvoort, M.R., Ehrlich, R., Eisch, J., Ellsworth, R.W., Engdegård, O., Euler, S., Evenson, P.A., Fadiran, O., Fazely, A.R., Feusels, T., Filimonov, K., Finley, C., Foerster, M.M., Fox, B.D., Franckowiak, A., Franke, R., Gaisser, T.K., Gallagher, J., Ganugapati, R., Geisler, M., Gerhardt, L., Gladstone, L., Goldschmidt, A., Goodman, J.A., Grant, D., Griesel, T., Groß, A., Grullon, S., Gunasingha, R.M., Gurtner, M., Ha, C., Hallgren, A., Halzen, F., Han, K., Hanson, K., Hasegawa, Y., Haugen, J., Helbing, K., Herquet, P., Hickford, S., Hill, G.C., Hoffman, K.D., Homeier, A., Hoshina, K., Hubert, D., Huelsnitz, W., Hülß, J.-P., Hulth, P.O., Hultqvist, K., Hussain, S., Imlay, R.L., Inaba, M., Ishihara, A., Jacobsen, J., Japaridze, G.S., Johansson, H., Joseph, J.M., Kampert, K.-H., Kappes, A., Karg, T., Karle, A., Kelley, J.L., Kemming, N., Kenny, P., Kiryluk, J., Kislat, F., Kitamura, N., Klein, S.R., Knops, S., Kohnen, G., Kolanoski, H., Köpke, L., Koskinen, D.J., Kowalski, M., Kowarik, T., Krasberg, M., Krings, T., Kroll, G., Kuehn, K., Kuwabara, T., Labare, M., Lafebre, S., Laihem, K., Landsman, H., Lauer, R., Laundrie, A., Lehmann, R., Lennarz, D., Lünemann, J., Madsen, J., Majumdar, P., Maruyama, R., Mase, K., Matis, H.S., Matusik, M., Meagher, K., Merck, M., Mészáros, P., Meures, T., Middell, E., Milke, N., Miyamoto, H., Montaruli, T., Morse, R., Movit, S.M., Nahnhauer, R., Nam, J.W., Naumann, U., Nießen, P., Nygren, D.R., Odrowski, S., Olivas, A., Olivo, M., Ono, M., Panknin, S., Paul, L., Pérez de los Heros, C., Petrovic, J., Piegsa, A., Pieloth, D., Pohl, A.C., Porrata, R., Posselt, J., Price, P.B., Prikockis, M., Przybylski, G.T., Rawlins, K., Redl, P., Resconi, E., Rhode, W., Ribordy, M., Rizzo, A., Robl, P., Rodrigues, J.P., Roth, P., Rothmaier, F., Rott, C., Roucelle, C., Rutledge, D., Ruzybayev, B., Ryckbosch, D., Sander, H.-G., Sandstrom, P., Sarkar, S., Schatto, K., Schlenstedt, S., Schmidt, T., Schneider, D., Schukraft, A., Schultes, A., Schulz, O., Schunck, M., Seckel, D., Semburg, B., Seo, S.H., Sestayo, Y., Seunarine, S., Silvestri, A., Slipak, A., Spiczak, G.M., Spiering, C., Stamatikos, M., Stanev, T., Stephens, G., Stezelberger, T., Stokstad, R.G., Stoyanov, S., Strahler, E.A., Straszheim, T., Sullivan, G.W., Swillens, Q., Taboada, I., Tamburro, A., Tarasova, O., Tepe, A., Ter-Antonyan, S., Terranova, C., Tilav, S., Toale, P.A., Tosi, D., Turčan, D., van Eijndhoven, N., Vandenbroucke, J., Van Overloop, A., van Santen, J., Voigt, B., Wahl, D., Walck, C., Waldenmaier, T., Wallraff, M., Walter, M., Wendt, C., Westerhoff, S., Whitehorn, N., Wiebe, K., Wiebusch, C.H., Wikström, G., Williams, D.R., Wischnewski, R., Wissing, H., Woschnagg, K., Xu, C., Xu, X.W., Yodh, G., Yoshida, S., and Zarzhitsky, P. more...
- Published
- 2010
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16. Insights into genes involved in electricity generation in Geobacter sulfurreducens via whole genome microarray analysis of the OmcF-deficient mutant
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Kim, Byoung-Chan, Postier, Bradley L., DiDonato, Raymond J., Chaudhuri, Swades K., Nevin, Kelly P., and Lovley, Derek R.
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- 2008
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17. Improving program comprehension by combining code understanding with comment understanding
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Vinz, Bradley L. and Etzkorn, Letha H.
- Published
- 2008
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18. The development of methodology for clinical measurement of 5-lipoxygenase pathway intermediates from human peripheral blood mononuclear cells
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Willey, Mark B., Alborn, William E., Lutzke, Barry S., LeLacheur, Richard M., White, Robert J., Stavrakis, George, Konrad, Robert J., and Ackermann, Bradley L.
- Published
- 2008
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19. Searching for high alumina mare basalts using Clementine UVVIS and Lunar Prospector GRS data: Mare Fecunditatis and Mare Imbrium
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Kramer, Georgiana Y., Jolliff, Bradley L., and Neal, Clive R.
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Astronomy ,Aluminum oxide ,Astronomy ,Earth sciences - Abstract
To link to full-text access for this article, visit this link: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.icarus.2008.06.009 Byline: Georgiana Y. Kramer (a)(b), Bradley L. Jolliff (c), Clive R. Neal (b) Keywords: Moon; surface Abstract: In the context of sample evidence alone, the high-alumina (HA) basalts appear to be an unique, and rare variety of mare basalt. In addition to their distinct chemistry, radiometric dating reveals these basalts to be among the oldest sampled mare basalts. Yet, HA basalts were sampled by four missions spanning a lateral range of [approximately equal to]2400 km, with ages demonstrating that aluminous volcanism lasted at least 1 billion years. This evidence suggests that HA basalts may be a widespread phenomenon on the Moon. Knowing the distribution of HA mare basalts on the lunar surface has significance for models of the origin and the evolution of the Lunar Magma Ocean. Surface exposures of HA basalts can be detected with compositional remote sensing data from Lunar Prospector Gamma Ray Spectrometer and Clementine. We searched the lunar surface for regions of interest (ROIs) that correspond to the intersection of three compositional constraints taken from values of sampled HA basalts: 12-18 wt% FeO, 1.5-5 wt% TiO.sub.2, and 0-4 ppm Th. We then determined the 'true' (unobscured by regolith) composition of basalt units by analyzing the rims and proximal ejecta of small impacts (0.4-4 km in diameter) into the mare surface of these ROIs. This paper focuses on two ROIs that are the best candidates for sources of sampled HA basalts: Mare Fecunditatis, the landing site of Luna 16; and northern Mare Imbrium, hypothesized origin of the Apollo 14 HA basalts. We demonstrate our technique's ability for delineating discrete basalt units and determining which is the best compositional match to the HA basalts sampled by each mission. We identified two units in Mare Fecunditatis that spectrally resemble HA basalts, although only one unit (Iltm) is consistent with the compositional and relative age of the Luna 16 HA samples. Northern Mare Imbrium also reveals two units that are within the compositional constraints of HA basalts, with one (Iltm) best matching the composition of the basalts sampled by Apollo 14. Author Affiliation: (a) Bear Fight Center, 22 Fiddler's Rd, Winthrop, WA 98862, USA (b) Department of Civil Engineering and Geological Sciences, University of Notre Dame, IN 46556, USA (c) Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Washington University, St. Louis, MO 63130, USA Article History: Received 19 February 2008; Revised 24 May 2008 more...
- Published
- 2008
20. Development of letter-specific processing: The effect of reading ability
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Burgund, E. Darcy, Schlaggar, Bradley L., and Petersen, Steven E.
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- 2006
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21. Distal clavicle "A-frame" morphology: a reliable intraoperative guide for arthroscopic distal clavicle excision.
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Ruder, John A., Young, Bradley L., and Connor, Patrick M.
- Abstract
The purpose of this cadaveric study was to describe the characteristics of the "A-frame" morphology of the distal clavicle via computed tomography (CT) to determine whether it can be used as a reliable intraoperative guide for arthroscopic distal clavicle excision. Twenty-eight fresh-frozen human cadaveric clavicles underwent a 3-dimensional CT scan using 1.0-mm cuts. The distance from the most lateral aspect of the clavicle to the point at which the superior cortex of the clavicle paralleled the inferior cortex was measured. Measurements were performed in a blinded fashion by a single author on 2 separate occasions. The A-frame was present in all specimens (28 of 28). On the first measurement, the mean distance from the distal clavicle to the point at which the A-frame disappeared was 1.00 cm (range, 0.90-1.08 cm; standard deviation, 0.5 mm). On the second measurement, the mean distance was 1.02 cm (range, 0.90-1.11 cm; standard deviation, 0.6 mm). The intrarater reliability between measurement occasions was 0.65 (95% confidence interval, 0.36-0.82; P <.001). This study demonstrated that the cross-sectional A-frame morphology of the distal clavicle was consistently visualized on CT scans. The A-frame disappeared 1.00-1.02 cm medial to the most lateral extent of the clavicle on CT scans. The disappearance of the A-frame morphology of the distal clavicle can serve as a reliable intraoperative guide for arthroscopic distal clavicle excision. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] more...
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- 2022
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22. Culture and procedural justice: the influence of power distance on reactions to voice
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Brockner, Joel, Ackerman, Grant, Greenberg, Jerald, Gelfand, Michele J., Francesco, Anne Marie, Chen, Zhen Xiong, Leung, Kwok, Bierbgrauer, Gunter, Gomez, Carolina, Kirkman, Bradley L., and Shapiro, Debra more...
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Decision-making -- Social aspects ,Social psychology -- Research ,Organizational behavior -- Psychological aspects ,Psychology and mental health ,Sociology and social work - Abstract
Cross-cultural studies on the psychological aspects of decision-making in a social context are examined, focusing on how favorable reception to decisions may depend on individual participation in the decision and cultural norms. Topics include low power distance cultures such as the United States and Germany, where many expect to have a voice in decisions; high power distance cultures such as the Peole's Republic of China, Mexico, and Hong Kong, where few expect to have a voice in decisions; and implications for organizational management. more...
- Published
- 2001
23. Master curves for gas amplification in low vacuum and environmental scanning electron microscopy
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Thiel, Bradley L
- Published
- 2004
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24. High-throughput chromatographic approaches to liquid chromatographic/tandem mass spectrometric bioanalysis to support drug discovery and development
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Berna, Michael J, Ackermann, Bradley L, and Murphy, Anthony T
- Published
- 2004
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25. Outcomes of posterior labral repair with or without concomitant high-grade glenohumeral chondral pathology: a retrospective cohort with minimum 2-year follow-up.
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Young, Bradley L., Corpus, Keith T., Scarola, Gregory, Trofa, David P., Connor, Patrick M., Hamid, Nady, Piasecki, Dana P., Saltzman, Bryan M., and Fleischli, James E.
- Abstract
The purpose of this study was to compare outcomes of patients who underwent posterior labral repair with and without concomitant glenohumeral chondral pathology. A retrospective review was performed on patients aged ≥18 years who underwent primary posterior labral repair over 5 years. Charts were reviewed to determine the presence and location of high-grade (Outerbridge grade III or IV) pathology. Quick Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder, and Hand questionnaire (QuickDASH), Western Ontario Stability Index (WOSI), visual analog scale (VAS), and Simple Shoulder Test (SST) scores were collected at median 71.5-month follow-up and compared between patients with and without concomitant chondral pathology during the index procedure. Of 100 patients who underwent primary posterior labral repair, 43% had glenoid and/or humeral-sided high-grade chondral pathology. Patients with chondral pathology were older than those without (P <.001). A higher proportion of patients with chondral pathology underwent concomitant biceps tenodesis (19.3% vs. 37.2%, P =.046). The type of anchor (all-suture or solid body, P =.010) used was different between patients with and without chondral pathology at time of posterior labrum repair. There was no difference in reoperation rates at final follow-up between patients with and without chondral damage at time of index procedure (P =.200). All outcome scores were similar between all comer patients with and without chondral pathology. Isolated glenoid pathology was significantly associated with lower QuickDASH (P =.018), higher SST (P =.013), lower VAS (P =.016), and lower WOSI scores (P =.046) compared to patients with bipolar lesions. After stratifying by age, there was an association between chondral pathology and lower VAS and WOSI scores in patients aged <35 years, and there was an association between chondral pathology and lower SST scores in patients aged ≥35 years. Based on median QuickDASH, SST, WOSI, and VAS scores, subjective and functional outcomes after primary arthroscopic posterior labral repair were not negatively influenced by the presence of concomitant chondral damage at the time of surgery for patients aged <35 years at minimum 2-year follow-up. Although our primary outcome score, the QuickDASH, was not significantly associated with the presence of chondral damage in patients aged >35 years, SST scores were negatively influenced by concomitant chondral damage in this older cohort, but this may not be adequately powered. It appeared that patients with chondral damage localized to the glenoid tended to have better outcomes scores that those with bipolar damage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] more...
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
26. Development of a synthetic relaxin-3/INSL5 chimeric peptide ligand for NanoBiT complementation binding assays.
- Author
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Wu, Hongkang, Hoare, Bradley L., Handley, Thomas N.G., Akhter Hossain, Mohammed, and Bathgate, Ross A.D.
- Subjects
- *
BINDING site assay , *PEPTIDES , *PEPTIDE synthesis , *SOLID-phase synthesis , *CELL lines - Abstract
[Display omitted] INSL5 and relaxin-3 are relaxin family peptides with important roles in gut and brain function, respectively. They mediate their actions through the class A GPCRs RXFP4 and RXFP3. RXFP4 has been proposed to be a therapeutic target for colon motility disorders whereas RXFP3 targeting could be effective for neurological conditions such as anxiety. Validation of these targets has been limited by the lack of specific ligands and the availability of robust ligand-binding assays for their development. In this study, we have utilized NanoBiT complementation to develop a SmBiT-conjugated tracer for use with LgBiT-fused RXFP3 and RXFP4. The low affinity between LgBiT:SmBiT should result in a low non-specific luminescence signal and enable the quantification of binding without the tedious separation of non-bound ligands. We used solid-phase peptide synthesis to produce a SmBiT-labelled RXFP3/4 agonist, R3/I5, where SmBiT was conjugated to the B-chain N-terminus via a PEG 12 linker. Both SmBiT-R3/I5 and R3/I5 were synthesized and purified in high purity and yield. Stable HEK293T cell lines expressing LgBiT-RXFP3 and LgBiT-RXFP4 were produced and demonstrated normal signaling in response to the synthetic R3/I5 peptide. Binding was first characterized in whole-cell binding kinetic assays validating that the SmBiT-R3/I5 bound to both cell lines with nanomolar affinity with minimal non-specific binding without bound and free SmBiT-R3/I5 separation. We then optimized membrane binding assays, demonstrating easy and robust analysis of both saturation and competition binding from frozen membranes. These assays therefore provide an appropriate rigorous binding assay for the high-throughput analysis of RXFP3 and RXFP4 ligands. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] more...
- Published
- 2024
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27. L'emergence des sciences de la religion: La Monarchie de Juillet. Un moment fondateur
- Author
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Herling, Bradley L.
- Subjects
L'emergence des sciences de la religion: La Monarchie de Juillet, Un moment fondateur (Book) -- Book reviews ,Books -- Book reviews ,Philosophy and religion - Published
- 2005
28. Location matters: Historical racial segregation and intergenerational mobility
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Andrews, Rodney, Casey, Marcus, Hardy, Bradley L., and Logan, Trevon D.
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- 2017
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29. "It's a 7-Year Program"—Allostasis in Neurosurgical Training.
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Kolcun, John Paul G., Kolb, Bradley L., Mazza, Jacob M., Traynelis, Vincent C., Byrne, Richard W., and Fontes, Ricardo B.V.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Applications of environmental scanning electron microscopy to colloidal aggregation and film formation
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Donald, Athene M, He, Chaobin, Royall, C.Patrick, Sferrazza, Michele, Stelmashenko, Nadia A, and Thiel, Bradley L
- Published
- 2000
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31. Flame-assisted laser surface treatment of refractory materials for crack-free densification
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Bradley, L, Li, L, and Stott, F.H
- Published
- 2000
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32. Surface modification of alumina-based refractories using a xenon arc lamp
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Bradley, L, Li, L, and Stott, F.H
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. A review: Novel trends in hulled wheat processing for value addition.
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Kulathunga, Jayani, Reuhs, Bradley L., and Simsek, Senay
- Subjects
- *
WHEAT breeding , *WHEAT products , *RICE hulls , *WHEAT , *CEREAL products , *PASTA products , *BAKED products - Abstract
Hulled wheat species have gained increasing attention since several studies have suggested that they could present a healthier and a better nutritional profile than modern wheat. Therefore, hulled wheat species are of interest for producing health beneficial food products and also, they can be found as whole grain products. To gain the promising health benefits of ancient wheat, it is important to develop novel formulations and enhance the utilization of these wheat species. Review of the feasibility of producing novel hulled wheat products and discussion of the perspectives of the hulled wheat cultivation and processing which will aid in developing the future of the hulled wheat market. This review summarizes the processing of ancient wheat species, providing a summary of the studies that have thus far been published and sections are broken down into different products such as pan bread, specialty bread, pasta, breakfast cereals, and other baked goods, and beverages. In conclusion, the rediscovery of ancient wheat species offer new opportunities for farmers, millers, and bakers to produce specialty products that are associated with numerous health benefits. However, research efforts are essential to screen and assess ancient wheat species for breeding and processing to produce products with excellent nutritional and sensory properties. Image 1 • The increasing interest of consumers shown in natural and organic products has led to the reintroduction of hulled wheat. • Underutilized hulled wheat can serve as a valuable raw material to produce a variety of food products. • Hulled wheat products such as bulgur, grunken, sourdough bread, non-durum pasta, and breakfast cereals will aid in expanding the hulled wheat market. • Research and breeding efforts are still needed to assess the genetic diversity of hulled wheat for their proposed health benefits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] more...
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Potassium isotopic composition of the Moon.
- Author
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Tian, Zhen, Jolliff, Bradley L., Korotev, Randy L., Fegley, Bruce, Lodders, Katharina, Day, James M.D., Chen, Heng, and Wang, Kun
- Subjects
- *
MOON , *LUNAR surface , *ISOTOPIC fractionation , *POTASSIUM , *HELIUM isotopes , *STABLE isotopes , *ISOTOPIC signatures , *COPPER chlorides - Abstract
The Moon is depleted in water and other volatiles compared to Earth and the bulk solar composition. Such depletion of volatile elements and the stable isotope fractionations of these elements can be used to better understand the origin and early differentiation history of the Moon. In this study, we focus on the moderately volatile element, potassium, and we report the K elemental abundances and isotopic compositions (δ41K relative to NIST SRM 3141a) for nineteen Apollo lunar rocks and lunar meteorites (twenty-two subsamples), spanning all major geochemical and petrologic types of lunar materials. The K isotopic compositions of low-Ti and high-Ti basalts are indistinguishable, providing a lunar basalt average δ41K of –0.07 ± 0.09‰ (2SD), which we also consider to be the best estimate of the lunar mantle and the bulk silicate Moon. The significant enrichment of K in its heavier isotopes in the bulk silicate Moon, compared with the bulk silicate Earth (δ41K = –0.48 ± 0.03‰), is consistent with previous analyses of K isotopes and other moderately volatile elements (e.g. , Cl, Cu, Zn, Ga, and Rb). We also report analyses of K isotopes for lunar nonmare samples, which show large variations of K isotopic ratios compared to lunar basalts. We interpret this large K isotopic fractionation as the result of late-stage magma ocean degassing during urKREEP formation, which is also coupled with Cl isotope fractionation. Degassing of urKREEP likely triggered redistribution of K isotopes in the Moon, enriching the urKREEP reservoir in heavy K isotopes while implanting the light K isotopic signatures onto the lunar surface. This scenario suggests a heterogeneous distribution of K isotopes in the Moon as a consequence of its magmatic evolution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] more...
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Visualization of Concurrent Anterolateral and Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury on Magnetic Resonance Imaging.
- Author
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Young, Bradley L., Ruder, John A., Trofa, David P., and Fleischli, James E.
- Abstract
Purpose: To investigate the ability to visualize the anterolateral ligament (ALL) on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and identify ALL injuries in an intact- anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) and torn-ACL cohort. We also aimed to assess inter-rater reliability between 2 radiologists when it comes to the aforementioned assessment.Methods: MRIs that met inclusion and exclusion criteria were placed into a control (ACL-intact) or study (ACL-injured) cohort. MRIs were independently analyzed by 2 radiologists for data points pertaining to demographics, ALL visualization, presence of ALL injury, and concomitant knee abnormalities. Inter-rater reliabilities for visualizing the ALL and identifying ALL injuries were assessed.Results: The control and study groups consisted of 116 and 82 MRIs, respectively. Age varied between the 2 groups, but sex distribution was similar. With near-perfect agreement (kappa = 0.92), both radiologists visualized at least part of the ALL in more than 95% of MRIs irrespective of ACL integrity. The mean incidence of ALL injury in the ACL injured group was 53.05% with minimal inter-rater agreement (kappa = 0.38). Segond fractures were noted in a mean 13.95% of MRIs with concomitant ALL and ACL injuries.Conclusions: The ALL was reliably visualized on MRI irrespective of whether the ACL was intact or torn. However, ALL injuries were not reliably diagnosed on MRI in the setting of an ACL tear. Poor interobserver reliability shows the potential for false-positive and -negative interpretation. These findings suggest that, in this study, ALL injuries could not be accurately diagnosed in the presence of an ACL tear using MRI. On the basis of these findings, it is recommended that physicians should not rely on MRI to diagnose an ALL injury in the presence of an ACL injury.Level Of Evidence: Level III, retrospective comparative trial. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] more...- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Vegetation quality assessment: A sampling-based loss-gain accounting framework for native, disturbed and reclaimed vegetation.
- Author
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Boyle, Bradley L., Franklin, Warn, Burton, Alison, and Gullison, Raymond E.
- Subjects
- *
MONTE Carlo method , *LANDSCAPE assessment , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *BIOINDICATORS , *NATURAL landscaping , *DISTRIBUTION (Probability theory) - Abstract
• Vegetation Quality Assessment measures losses and gains in vegetation quality and extent. • An objective, repeatable workflow for quantifying impacts and monitoring restoration progress. • Stratified-random sampling reduces bias and enables estimation of error and uncertainty. • Quality measured by overlap between indicator distributions in impacted and undisturbed vegetation. • Distribution overlap provides a novel and intuitive index of similarity to benchmark. Governments and society increasingly are demanding that industrial projects result in a net positive impact (NPI) on biodiversity. Impacts are commonly measured in terms of losses and gains of area and quality of vegetation, where quality refers to how closely a site matches the condition of native vegetation in its undisturbed state. Existing vegetation quality frameworks share a number of limitations, including little or no replication, uncertain scope of inference, vulnerability to bias, and inability to measure error. Here we present the Vegetation Quality Assessment (VQA) framework, a sampling-based extension of Quality Hectares that measures vegetation quality in terms of overlap between the probability distributions of ecological indicators at a project site and in undisturbed (benchmark) vegetation of the same kind. Distribution overlap incorporates natural variation at the landscape scale and provides an intuitive measure of quality that varies between 0 and 1. Indicators are measured using a stratified-random sampling design that minimizes bias and supports inference at the scale of the project landscape. Confidence limits of quality and quality hectares are determined by bootstrapping; power and minimum sample sizes are estimated by Monte Carlo simulation. Multiple assessments track losses and gains of quality hectares and enable accurate accounting of progress to NPI. The VQA framework can be implemented using a variety of vegetation sampling methods, allowing existing vegetation databases to be leveraged as sources of data. We conclude by demonstrating the application of VQA at several mining operations in the Elk Valley of southeastern British Columbia, Canada. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Characteristics of the microstructures of alumina-based refractory materials treated with CO 2 and diode lasers
- Author
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Bradley, L, Li, L, and Stott, F.H
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The study of water in heterogeneous media using environmental scanning electron microscopy
- Author
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Thiel, Bradley L. and Donald, Athene M.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Editorial Commentary: Limited Preoperative Range of Motion Is Associated With Range of Motion Deficits After Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction: "If the Knee Is Not Straight, Wait".
- Author
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Young, Bradley L. and Hammond, Kyle E.
- Abstract
Optimal timing of anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR) remains under debate. Prolonging time between injury and ACLR risks damaging the meniscus and chondral surface, as well as delays return to play. Early ACLR may be associated with postoperative stiffness or arthrofibrosis. We emphasize that optimal timing for ACLR depends on criterion-based return of knee range of motion and quadriceps strength, not a quantitative temporal period. The length of time is far less important that the quality of prereconstruction care provided. Prereconstruction care includes "prehabilitation," including prone hangs focusing on optimizing knee range of motion, postinjury effusion resolution, and mentally preparing the patient for postoperative expectations. Defining preoperative criteria for proceeding with surgery is crucial to decrease the risk of arthrofibrosis. Some patients meet these criteria within 2 weeks, whereas others linger to 10 weeks. Reduction in arthrofibrosis requiring surgical intervention is multifactorial and not solely dependent on the length of time between injury and intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] more...
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Fluoroquinolone induction of phage-mediated gene transfer in multidrug-resistant Salmonella
- Author
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Bearson, Bradley L. and Brunelle, Brian W.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Accelerated instability testing reveals quantitative mass spectrometry overcomes specimen storage limitations associated with PD-L1 immunohistochemistry.
- Author
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Haragan, Alexander, Liebler, Daniel C., Das, Dimple M., Soper, Michael D., Morrison, Ryan D., Slebos, Robbert J. C., Ackermann, Bradley L., Fill, Jeff A., Schade, Andrew E., Gosney, John R., and Gruver, Aaron M. more...
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. RNAi therapeutic strategies for acute respiratory distress syndrome.
- Author
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Jagrosse, Melissa L., Dean, David A., Rahman, Arshad, and Nilsson, Bradley L.
- Abstract
Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), replacing the clinical term acute lung injury, involves serious pathophysiological lung changes that arise from a variety of pulmonary and nonpulmonary injuries and currently has no pharmacological therapeutics. RNA interference (RNAi) has the potential to generate therapeutic effects that would increase patient survival rates from this condition. It is the purpose of this review to discuss potential targets in treating ARDS with RNAi strategies, as well as to outline the challenges of oligonucleotide delivery to the lung and tactics to circumvent these delivery barriers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] more...
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. What determines the public's support for water quality regulations to mitigate agricultural runoff?
- Author
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Guo, Tian, Gill, Devin, Johengen, Thomas H., and Cardinale, Bradley L.
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AGRICULTURAL pollution ,WATER quality ,PUBLIC support ,RUNOFF ,RISK perception ,GOVERNMENT policy ,EUTROPHICATION ,DEBATE - Abstract
• Effectiveness of voluntary programs affect support for regulatory policies on nutrient runoff. • A prior beliefs, risk perceptions, and trust affect policy support. • Belief about regulation and accountability and trust in farmers are key predictors. For many freshwater systems, mitigating agricultural runoff of nutrients is a key requirement for curbing eutrophication and reducing subsequent ecological threats. However, defining the best way to achieve reductions in agricultural runoff can be a contentious issue. A policy debate is currently unfolding in Ohio focused on whether the state government should introduce regulatory policies on agriculture to reduce nutrient loadings from watersheds in an attempt to also reduce harmful algal blooms in Lake Erie. To inform policy development, we used a survey instrument to gauge public acceptance of regulatory policies and examined the psychological determinants of Ohio residents' support for a regulatory policy proposal that would introduce fines on excessive agricultural runoff. We designed a survey instrument with nine predictors of people's willingness to support regulations: 1) effectiveness of voluntary programs, 2) risk perception, 3) water quality perception, 4) trust in farmers, 5) trust in state government, 6) belief about fertilizer runoff as a major cause of HABs, 7) belief that farmers alone should not bear the burden to restore water quality in Lake Erie, 8) belief that regulation is necessary to keep farmers accountable, and 9) belief that regulation harms economy and employment. We also measured variables that represented different levels of self-interests, awareness of reduction goals, political party affiliation, and demographic characteristics. We collected a sample of 1000 respondents, who were representative of Ohio residents by age, gender, race, and education level. Most predictors were significant and in the directions hypothesized, with exception of water quality perception and belief about regulation and jobs. One's a priori belief that regulations are necessary to keep farmers accountable for their land management practices had the largest enhancing effect for accepting a regulatory policy of fines, while trust for farmers had the largest inhibiting effect. In comparison, water quality perception was not significant in predicting individual policy attitudes. This study informs the public engagement and communication efforts and suggest directions for future research on public policy support. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] more...
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- 2019
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44. Cross-protective Salmonella vaccine reduces cecal and splenic colonization of multidrug-resistant Salmonella enterica serovar Heidelberg.
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Bearson, Shawn M.D., Bearson, Bradley L., Sylte, Matthew J., Looft, Torey, Kogut, Michael H., and Cai, Guohong
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MULTIDRUG resistance in bacteria , *SALMONELLA enterica , *CECUM , *FOOD safety , *LEUCOCYTES - Abstract
Highlights • Salmonella vaccine BBS 866 is avirulent in turkeys. • Vaccination reduces cecal colonization by outbreak-associated MDR S. Heidelberg. • Vaccination limits systemic dissemination of S. Heidelberg to the turkey spleen. • BBS 866 cross-protects diverse animal species against different Salmonella serovars. Abstract Salmonella vaccine strategies for food-producing animals have typically focused on a specific serovar that either causes production losses due to morbidity/mortality or is an important food safety pathogen for a particular food commodity. The Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium BBS 866 vaccine strain was designed to reduce serovar specificity to provide cross-protection against diverse Salmonella serovars, thereby broadening its applicability for multiple animal and poultry species. We reported cross-protection of the BBS 866 vaccine in swine [ Vaccine 34:1241 – 6 ]. In the current study, we extend the efficacy of the Salmonella vaccine to a poultry commodity by revealing significant reduction of multidrug-resistant Salmonella enterica serovar Heidelberg colonization of the cecum and systemic dissemination to the spleen in BBS 866-vaccinated turkeys. Transcriptional analysis of whole blood from BBS 866-vaccinated turkeys revealed down-regulation of metabolic and immune genes (KCNAB1, ACOD1, GPR17, ADOR2AB, and IL-17RD), suggesting limited leukocyte activation without an overt peripheral inflammatory response to vaccination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] more...
- Published
- 2019
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45. Benign dermal iridophore aggregates in a crested gecko (Correlophus ciliatus).
- Author
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Rooney, Tess, Eshar, David, and Njaa, Bradley L.
- Abstract
A 1-year-old, female intact crested gecko was evaluated because of skin discoloration on her ventrum. Full-thickness biopsies were taken and evaluated histologically. Multifocally and regularly, there were collections of birefringent, granular material, localized primarily to the most superficial dermis subjacent to the overlying epithelium, throughout the length of examined sections. Polarized illumination revealed birefringent iridophores. This case either represents a benign aggregation of iridophores or simply regions of variable depigmentation, which may be considered as differential diagnoses when geckos are presented with similar clinical signs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] more...
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- 2020
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46. Modulation of porcine microRNAs associated with apoptosis and NF-κB signaling pathways in response to Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium.
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Shippy, Daniel C., Bearson, Bradley L., Cai, Guohong, Brunelle, Brain W., Kich, Jalusa D., and Bearson, Shawn M.D.
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SALMONELLA enterica serovar typhimurium , *MICRORNA , *NON-coding RNA , *NF-kappa B , *APOPTOSIS , *SWINE infections - Abstract
Abstract MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small, non-coding RNAs that regulate eukaryotic gene expression at the post-transcriptional level. In addition to their involvement in a variety of biological processes, miRNAs are implicated in the eukaryotic response to bacterial pathogens. The objective of this study was to identify miRNAs involved in the regulation of the porcine response to the human foodborne pathogen, Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium). Differential expression analysis from the whole blood of pigs over a 7-day period following S. Typhimurium challenge identified 50 miRNAs, many of which are implicated in functional pathways associated with NF-κB signaling and apoptosis (e.g., ssc-let-7c, ssc-miR-21). Transcriptional analyses of whole blood mRNA identified the differential expression of several genes involved in NF-κB signaling and apoptosis (e.g., IL10 , CBX4 , TGFB2) whose mRNAs are predicted targets of miRNAs identified in our study. Overall, our data identified porcine miRNAs that are differentially expressed following S. Typhimurium challenge, thereby defining regulatory factors to target for controlling the porcine response to this human foodborne pathogen. Highlights • miRNAs involved in the porcine response to Salmonella Typhimurium were identified. • These miRNAs are associated with apoptosis and NF-κB signaling pathways. • Genes involved in NF-κB signaling and apoptosis were also differentially expressed. • These miRNAs can serve as biomarkers of Salmonella infection in swine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] more...
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- 2018
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47. Embedding co-production and addressing uncertainty in watershed modeling decision-support tools: Successes and challenges.
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Barnhart, Bradley L., Golden, Heather E., Kasprzyk, Joseph R., Pauer, James J., Jones, Chas E., Sawicz, Keith A., Hoghooghi, Nahal, Simon, Michelle, McKane, Robert B., Mayer, Paul M., Piscopo, Amy N., Ficklin, Darren L., Halama, Jonathan J., Pettus, Paul B., and Rashleigh, Brenda more...
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DECISION support systems , *MANAGEMENT information systems , *PARTICIPATORY design , *WATERSHED management , *CONCEPTUAL models - Abstract
Abstract Decision-support tools (DSTs) are often produced from collaborations between technical experts and stakeholders to address environmental problems and inform decision making. Studies in the past two decades have provided key insights on the use of DSTs and the importance of bidirectional information flows among technical experts and stakeholders – a process that is variously referred to as co-production, participatory modeling, structured decision making, or simply stakeholder participation. Many of these studies have elicited foundational insights for the broad field of water resources management; however, questions remain on approaches for balancing co-production with uncertainty specifically for watershed modeling decision support tools. In this paper, we outline a simple conceptual model that focuses on the DST development process. Then, using watershed modeling case studies found in the literature, we discuss successful outcomes and challenges associated with embedding various forms of co-production into each stage of the conceptual model. We also emphasize the "3 Cs" (i.e., characterization, calculation, communication) of uncertainty and provide evidence-based suggestions for their incorporation in the watershed modeling DST development process. We conclude by presenting a list of best practices derived from current literature for achieving effective and robust watershed modeling decision-support tools. Highlights • Technical experts and stakeholders oftentimes co-produce decision-support tools. • We discuss co-production and uncertainty in watershed modeling DSTs. • We present a list of best practices derived from watershed modeling case studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] more...
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- 2018
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48. Subsurface oxidation of boron nitride coatings on silicon carbide fibers in SiC/SiC ceramic matrix composites.
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Wing, Bradley L. and Halloran, John W.
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BORON nitride , *METAL coating , *SILICON carbide fibers , *CERAMIC materials , *COMPOSITE materials , *OXIDATION - Abstract
In a SiC/SiC ceramic matrix composite, oxygen penetrates through unprotected ends of boron nitride coated silicon carbide fibers by ends-on oxidation in ambient air at 1200–1285 °C. For oxidation times and temperatures that cause only a few microns of oxide to form on the matrix, the boron nitride coatings can be oxidized to a depth of several hundred microns. Sub-surface oxide penetration is deeper for thicker coatings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] more...
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- 2018
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49. Relaxation of residual microstress in reaction bonded silicon carbide.
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Wing, Bradley L. and Halloran, John W.
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RESIDUAL stresses , *SILICON carbide , *CHEMICAL bonds , *HIGH temperature metallurgy , *METAL creep , *MONOLITHIC reactors - Abstract
High temperature annealing reduces the residual microstress in the silicon phase and silicon carbide phase in monolithic reaction bonded silicon carbide and in the matrix of melt-infitrated composites of silicon carbide reinforced with silicon carbide fibers. Stress relaxation is related to creep of the silicon carbide with power-law creep exponents similar to tensile creep in reaction bonded silicon carbide. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] more...
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- 2018
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50. Measurement properties of tools used to assess suicidality in autistic and general population adults: A systematic review.
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Cassidy, S.A., Bradley, L., Bowen, E., Wigham, S., and Rodgers, J.
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SUICIDAL behavior , *AUTISTIC people , *EARLY death , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *META-analysis , *DATABASES - Abstract
Adults diagnosed with autism are at significantly increased risk of suicidal thoughts, suicidal behaviours and dying by suicide. However, it is unclear whether any validated tools are currently available to effectively assess suicidality in autistic adults in research and clinical practice. This is crucial for understanding and preventing premature death by suicide in this vulnerable group. This two stage systematic review therefore aimed to identify tools used to assess suicidality in autistic and general population adults, evaluate these tools for their appropriateness and measurement properties, and make recommendations for appropriate selection of suicidality assessment tools in research and clinical practice. Three databases were searched (PsycInfo, Medline and Web of Knowledge). Four frequently used suicidality assessment tools were identified, and subsequently rated for quality of the evidence in support of their measurement properties using the COSMIN checklist. Despite studies having explored suicidality in autistic adults, none had utilised a validated tool. Overall, there was lack of evidence in support of suicidality risk assessments successfully predicting future suicide attempts. We recommend adaptations to current suicidality assessment tools and priorities for future research, in order to better conceptualise suicidality and its measurement in autism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] more...
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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