4,515 results on '"Honore, A."'
Search Results
2. BERT-Based Approach for Automating Course Articulation Matrix Construction with Explainable AI
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Shiferaw, Natenaile Asmamaw, Leandre, Simpenzwe Honore, Sinha, Aman, and Rout, Dillip
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Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Computers and Society - Abstract
Course Outcome (CO) and Program Outcome (PO)/Program-Specific Outcome (PSO) alignment is a crucial task for ensuring curriculum coherence and assessing educational effectiveness. The construction of a Course Articulation Matrix (CAM), which quantifies the relationship between COs and POs/PSOs, typically involves assigning numerical values (0, 1, 2, 3) to represent the degree of alignment. In this study, We experiment with four models from the BERT family: BERT Base, DistilBERT, ALBERT, and RoBERTa, and use multiclass classification to assess the alignment between CO and PO/PSO pairs. We first evaluate traditional machine learning classifiers, such as Decision Tree, Random Forest, and XGBoost, and then apply transfer learning to evaluate the performance of the pretrained BERT models. To enhance model interpretability, we apply Explainable AI technique, specifically Local Interpretable Model-agnostic Explanations (LIME), to provide transparency into the decision-making process. Our system achieves accuracy, precision, recall, and F1-score values of 98.66%, 98.67%, 98.66%, and 98.66%, respectively. This work demonstrates the potential of utilizing transfer learning with BERT-based models for the automated generation of CAMs, offering high performance and interpretability in educational outcome assessment., Comment: 26 pages, 9 figures
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- 2024
3. Shotgun DNA sequencing for human identification: Dynamic SNP selection and likelihood ratio calculations accounting for errors
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Andersen, Mikkel Meyer, Kampmann, Marie-Louise, Jepsen, Alberte Honoré, Morling, Niels, Eriksen, Poul Svante, Børsting, Claus, and Andersen, Jeppe Dyrberg
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Statistics - Applications ,Quantitative Biology - Genomics - Abstract
In forensic genetics, short tandem repeats (STRs) are used for human identification (HID). Degraded biological trace samples with low amounts of short DNA fragments (low-quality DNA samples) pose a challenge for STR typing. Predefined single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) can be amplified on short PCR fragments and used to generate SNP profiles from low-quality DNA samples. However, the stochastic results from low-quality DNA samples may result in frequent locus drop-outs and insufficient numbers of SNP genotypes for convincing identification of individuals. Shotgun DNA sequencing potentially analyses all DNA fragments in a sample in contrast to the targeted PCR-based sequencing methods and may be applied to DNA samples of very low quality, like heavily compromised crime-scene samples and ancient DNA samples. Here, we developed a statistical model for shotgun sequencing, sequence alignment, and genotype calling. Results from replicated shotgun sequencing of buccal swab (high-quality samples) and hair samples (low-quality samples) were arranged in a genotype-call confusion matrix to estimate the calling error probability by maximum likelihood and Bayesian inference. We developed formulas for calculating the evidential weight as a likelihood ratio (LR) based on data from dynamically selected SNPs from shotgun DNA sequencing. The method accounts for potential genotyping errors. Different genotype quality filters may be applied to account for genotyping errors. An error probability of zero resulted in the forensically commonly used LR formula. When considering a single SNP marker's contribution to the LR, error probabilities larger than zero reduced the LR contribution of matching genotypes and increased the LR in the case of a mismatch. We developed an open-source R package, wgsLR, which implements the method, including estimating the calling error probability and calculating LR values., Comment: 25 pages, 9 figures
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- 2024
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4. Treatment Outcomes Among Patients With a Positive Candida Culture Close to Randomization Receiving Rezafungin or Caspofungin in the ReSTORE Study.
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Soriano, Alex, Honore, Patrick, Cornely, Oliver, Chayakulkeeree, Methee, Bassetti, Matteo, Haihui, Huang, Dupont, Hervé, Kim, Young, Kollef, Marin, Kullberg, Bart, Manamley, Nick, Pappas, Peter, Pullman, John, Sandison, Taylor, Dignani, Cecilia, Vazquez, Jose, and Thompson, George
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candidemia ,caspofungin ,echinocandin ,invasive candidiasis ,rezafungin ,Humans ,Caspofungin ,Echinocandins ,Antifungal Agents ,Male ,Female ,Middle Aged ,Double-Blind Method ,Treatment Outcome ,Adult ,Aged ,Candidemia ,Candida ,Candidiasis ,Invasive ,Candidiasis ,Young Adult - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rezafungin, a novel, once-weekly echinocandin for the treatment of candidemia and/or invasive candidiasis (IC) was noninferior to caspofungin for day 30 all-cause mortality (ACM) and day 14 global cure in the phase 3 ReSTORE trial (NCT03667690). We conducted preplanned subgroup analyses for patients with a positive culture close to randomization in ReSTORE. METHODS: ReSTORE was a multicenter, double-blind, double-dummy, randomized trial in patients aged ≥18 years with candidemia and/or IC treated with once-weekly intravenous rezafungin (400 mg/200 mg) or once-daily intravenous caspofungin (70 mg/50 mg). This analysis comprised patients with a positive blood culture drawn between 12 hours before and 72 hours after randomization or a positive culture from another normally sterile site sampled between 48 hours before and 72 hours after randomization. Efficacy endpoints included day 30 ACM, day 14 global cure rate, and day 5 and 14 mycological response. Adverse events were evaluated. RESULTS: This analysis included 38 patients randomized to rezafungin and 46 to caspofungin. In the rezafungin and caspofungin groups, respectively, day 30 ACM was 26.3% and 21.7% (between-group difference [95% confidence interval], 4.6% [-13.7%, 23.5%]), day 14 global response was 55.3% and 50.0% (between-group difference, 5.3% [-16.1%, 26.0%]), and day 5 mycological eradication was 71.1% and 50.0% (between-group difference, 21.1% [-0.2%, 40.2%]). Safety was comparable between treatments. CONCLUSIONS: These findings support the efficacy and safety of rezafungin compared with caspofungin for the treatment of candidemia and/or IC in patients with a positive culture close to randomization, with potential early treatment benefits for rezafungin.
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- 2024
5. IV Estimation of Panel Data Tobit Models with Normal Errors
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Honore, Bo E.
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Economics - Econometrics - Abstract
Amemiya (1973) proposed a ``consistent initial estimator'' for the parameters in a censored regression model with normal errors. This paper demonstrates that a similar approach can be used to construct moment conditions for fixed--effects versions of the model considered by Amemiya. This result suggests estimators for models that have not previously been considered., Comment: This is a very old unpublished draft that is relevant for the recent literature that constructs moment conditions in nonlinear panel data models
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- 2024
6. Compressed Sensing of Generative Sparse-latent (GSL) Signals
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Honoré, Antoine, Ghosh, Anubhab, and Chatterjee, Saikat
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Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence - Abstract
We consider reconstruction of an ambient signal in a compressed sensing (CS) setup where the ambient signal has a neural network based generative model. The generative model has a sparse-latent input and we refer to the generated ambient signal as generative sparse-latent signal (GSL). The proposed sparsity inducing reconstruction algorithm is inherently non-convex, and we show that a gradient based search provides a good reconstruction performance. We evaluate our proposed algorithm using simulated data., Comment: Accepted at 31st European Signal Processing Conference, EUSIPCO 2023
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- 2023
7. Schools of public health as a cornerstone for pandemic preparedness and response: the Africa COVID-19 experience
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Ndejjo, Rawlance, Mitonga, Honore Kabwebwe, Amde, Woldekidan, Lubega, Grace Biyinzika, Muula, Adamson S., Mariam, Damen Haile, Kabwama, Steven N., Patrick, Sean Mark, Haufiku, Desderius, Amour, Maryam, Bosonkie, Marc, Mukama, Trasias, Bello, Segun, Dwomoh, Duah, Nja, Glory Mbe Egom, Bulafu, Douglas, Halake, Dabo Galgalo, Frumence, Gasto, Leye, Mamadou Makhtar Mbacke, Katangolo-Nakashwa, Ndasilohenda, Abaya, Samson Wakuma, Diallo, Issakha, Egbende, Landry, Worku, Netsanet, Bassoum, Oumar, Mbunga, Branly, Musoke, David, Mohamed, Hussein, Seck, Ibrahima, Fobil, Julius, Kiwanuka, Suzanne N., Fawole, Olufunmilayo I., Mapatano, Mala Ali, Alfven, Tobias, Gilson, Lucy, Syombua Muinde, Jacinta Victoria, van Marwijk, Harm, Lehmann, Uta, Speybroeck, Niko, Kaseje, Margaret, and Wanyenze, Rhoda K.
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- 2024
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8. Interventions to improve appropriateness of laboratory testing in the intensive care unit: a narrative review
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Devis, Luigi, Catry, Emilie, Honore, Patrick M., Mansour, Alexandre, Lippi, Giuseppe, Mullier, François, and Closset, Mélanie
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- 2024
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9. Model order reduction for the input–output behavior of a geothermal energy storage
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Takam, Paul Honore and Wunderlich, Ralf
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- 2024
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10. Schools of public health as a cornerstone for pandemic preparedness and response: the Africa COVID-19 experience
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Rawlance Ndejjo, Honore Kabwebwe Mitonga, Woldekidan Amde, Grace Biyinzika Lubega, Adamson S. Muula, Damen Haile Mariam, Steven N. Kabwama, Sean Mark Patrick, Desderius Haufiku, Maryam Amour, Marc Bosonkie, Trasias Mukama, Segun Bello, Duah Dwomoh, Glory Mbe Egom Nja, Douglas Bulafu, Dabo Galgalo Halake, Gasto Frumence, Mamadou Makhtar Mbacke Leye, Ndasilohenda Katangolo-Nakashwa, Samson Wakuma Abaya, Issakha Diallo, Landry Egbende, Netsanet Worku, Oumar Bassoum, Branly Mbunga, David Musoke, Hussein Mohamed, Ibrahima Seck, Julius Fobil, Suzanne N. Kiwanuka, Olufunmilayo I. Fawole, Mala Ali Mapatano, Tobias Alfven, Lucy Gilson, Jacinta Victoria Syombua Muinde, Harm van Marwijk, Uta Lehmann, Niko Speybroeck, Margaret Kaseje, and Rhoda K. Wanyenze
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COVID-19 ,Schools of public health ,Africa ,Training ,Research ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background The Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic caused significant morbidity and mortality in Africa, in addition to other socio-economic consequences. Across the continent, Schools of Public Health (SPHs) played several roles in supporting national, regional, and global response to the pandemic. Following a published and grey literature search, this paper reviews and analyses the contribution of SPHs in Africa during the COVID-19 pandemic. Contribution of the Schools of Public Health SPH faculty in most countries contributed their expertise through COVID-19 task forces and advisory committees where they guided and supported decision-making. Faculty also supported the identification, review, and synthesis of rapidly evolving global and local evidence, adapting it to the local context to guide policy decisions. Through research, SPHs contributed to a better understanding of the disease epidemiology, response interventions, as well as prevention and control measures. SPHs engaged in training field epidemiologists, frontline health workers, and district response teams. SPH staff, students and field epidemiology trainees also supported field activities including surveillance, contact tracing, as well as managing quarantine facilities and points of entry. SPHs engaged in public education and awareness-raising initiatives to share information and dispel misinformation. In partnership with other stakeholders, SPHs also developed important innovations and technologies. Conclusion SPHs are a critical pillar for pandemic prevention, preparedness, and response, that support health systems with important functions. To further enhance their capacity, efforts to improve coordination of SPHs, strengthen collaboration among schools, harmonize training and curricula, and enhance capacity for advanced research are needed. There is also a need to bridge the inequities in capacity and resources that exist among SPHs across regions and countries.
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- 2024
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11. GENESIS ESA's Multi-Modal Space Mission to Improve Geodetic Applications
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Enderle, Werner, Schonemann, Eric, Gini, Francesco, Gidlund, Sara, Fusco, Gaia, Waller, Pierre, Honore-Livermore, Evelyn, Sakalauskaite, Evelina, and Navarro, Vicente
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Business ,Telecommunications industry ,European Space Agency. European Space Research and Technology Centre ,European Space Agency ,European Space Agency. European Space Operations Centre - Abstract
The combination of advanced technologies for precise orbit determination and timing as well as the scientific exploitation of GNSS signals opens major new opportunities for relevant, innovative in-orbit scientific experiments. [...]
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- 2024
12. Characterising The Atmospheric Dynamics Of HD209458b-like Hot Jupiters Using AI Driven Image Recognition/Categorisation
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Sainsbury-Martinez, F., Tremblin, P., Mancip, M., Donfack, S., Honore, E., and Bourenane, M.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
In-order to understand the results of recent observations of exoplanets, models have become increasingly complex. Unfortunately this increases both the computational cost and output size of said models. We intend to explore if AI-image-recognition can alleviate this burden. We used DYNAMICO to run a series of HD209458-like models with different orbital-radii. Training data for a number of features of interest was selected from the initial outputs of these models. This was used to train a pair of multi-categorisation convolutional-neural-networks (CNN), which we applied to our outer-atmosphere-equilibrated models. The features detected by our CNNs revealed that our models fall into two regimes: models with a shorter orbital-radii exhibit significant global mixing which shapes the entire atmospheres dynamics. Whereas, models with longer orbital-radii exhibit negligible mixing except at mid-pressures. Here, the initial non-detection of any trained features revealed a surprise: a night-side hot-spot. Analysis suggests that this occurs when rotational influence is sufficiently weak that divergent flows from the day-side to the night-side dominate over rotational-driven transport, such as the equatorial jet. We suggest that image-classification may play an important role in future, computational, atmospheric studies. However special care must be paid to the data feed into the model, from the colourmap, to training the CNN on features with enough breadth and complexity that the CNN can learn to detect them. However, by using preliminary-studies and prior-models, this should be more than achievable for future exascale calculations, allowing for a significant reduction in future workloads and computational resources., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2023
13. DANSE: Data-driven Non-linear State Estimation of Model-free Process in Unsupervised Learning Setup
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Ghosh, Anubhab, Honoré, Antoine, and Chatterjee, Saikat
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Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Systems and Control ,Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing - Abstract
We address the tasks of Bayesian state estimation and forecasting for a model-free process in an unsupervised learning setup. For a model-free process, we do not have any a-priori knowledge of the process dynamics. In the article, we propose DANSE -- a Data-driven Nonlinear State Estimation method. DANSE provides a closed-form posterior of the state of the model-free process, given linear measurements of the state. In addition, it provides a closed-form posterior for forecasting. A data-driven recurrent neural network (RNN) is used in DANSE to provide the parameters of a prior of the state. The prior depends on the past measurements as input, and then we find the closed-form posterior of the state using the current measurement as input. The data-driven RNN captures the underlying non-linear dynamics of the model-free process. The training of DANSE, mainly learning the parameters of the RNN, is executed using an unsupervised learning approach. In unsupervised learning, we have access to a training dataset comprising only a set of measurement data trajectories, but we do not have any access to the state trajectories. Therefore, DANSE does not have access to state information in the training data and can not use supervised learning. Using simulated linear and non-linear process models (Lorenz attractor and Chen attractor), we evaluate the unsupervised learning-based DANSE. We show that the proposed DANSE, without knowledge of the process model and without supervised learning, provides a competitive performance against model-driven methods, such as the Kalman filter (KF), extended KF (EKF), unscented KF (UKF), a data-driven deep Markov model (DMM) and a recently proposed hybrid method called KalmanNet. In addition, we show that DANSE works for high-dimensional state estimation., Comment: 12 pages, Accepted for publication in IEEE Transactions in Signal Processing
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- 2023
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14. Resistance to BRAF inhibition explored through single circulating tumour cell molecular profiling in BRAF-mutant non-small-cell lung cancer
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Mezquita, Laura, Oulhen, Marianne, Aberlenc, Agathe, Deloger, Marc, Aldea, Mihaela, Honore, Aurélie, Lecluse, Yann, Howarth, Karen, Friboulet, Luc, Besse, Benjamin, Planchard, David, and Farace, Françoise
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- 2024
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15. On the Input-Output Behavior of a Geothermal Energy Storage: Approximations by Model Order Reduction
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Takam, Paul Honore and Wunderlich, Ralf
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Mathematics - Numerical Analysis ,93A15, 93B11, 93C05, 93C15, 37M99 - Abstract
In this paper we consider a geothermal energy storage in which the spatio-temporal temperature distribution is modeled by a heat equation with a convection term. Such storages often are embedded in residential heating systems and control and management require the knowledge of some aggregated characteristics of that temperature distribution in the storage. They describe the input-output behaviour of the storage and the associated energy flows and their response to charging and discharging processes. We aim to derive an efficient approximative description of these characteristics by a low-dimensional system of ODEs. This leads to a model order reduction problem for a large scale linear system of ODEs arising from the semi-discretization of the heat equation combined with a linear algebraic output equation. In a first step we approximate the non time-invariant system of ODEs by a linear time-invariant system. Then we apply Lyapunov balanced truncation model order reduction to approximate the output by a reduced-order system with only a few state equations but almost the same input-output behavior. The paper presents results of extensive numerical experiments showing the efficiency of the applied model order reduction methods. It turns out that only a few suitable chosen ODEs are sufficient to produce good approximations of the input-output behaviour of the storage., Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2104.05116
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- 2022
16. Transport equations in H\'older space by vanishing viscosity and applications
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Honoré, Igor
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Mathematics - Analysis of PDEs ,Primary: 35K40, 35J75, Secondary: 35A02, 46E35 - Abstract
We obtain a sharp limit H\"older continuity of the solution for the transport equations thanks to a vanishing viscosity analysis. We also derive the same control for parabolic equations and for inviscid Burgers' equation. Eventually, under a structural hypothesis on the coefficients, we provide existence and uniqueness of a H\"older continuous solution.
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- 2022
17. Parabolic bootstrap for some non-linear equations
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Honoré, Igor
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Mathematics - Analysis of PDEs - Abstract
We obtain the well-posedness and Schauder estimates for a class of system of linear, quasi-linear and non-linear second order partial differential equations. We deduce existence and uniqueness of a global smooth solution of a non-linear and non-local equation that we call "semi" incompressible Navier Stokes equation in R 3 .
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- 2022
18. Simultaneity in Binary Outcome Models with an Application to Employment for Couples
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Honoré, Bo E., Hu, Luojia, Kyriazidou, Ekaterini, and Weidner, Martin
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Economics - Econometrics - Abstract
Two of Peter Schmidt's many contributions to econometrics have been to introduce a simultaneous logit model for bivariate binary outcomes and to study estimation of dynamic linear fixed effects panel data models using short panels. In this paper, we study a dynamic panel data version of the bivariate model introduced in Schmidt and Strauss (1975) that allows for lagged dependent variables and fixed effects as in Ahn and Schmidt (1995). We combine a conditional likelihood approach with a method of moments approach to obtain an estimation strategy for the resulting model. We apply this estimation strategy to a simple model for the intra-household relationship in employment. Our main conclusion is that the within-household dependence in employment differs significantly by the ethnicity composition of the couple even after one allows for unobserved household specific heterogeneity.
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- 2022
19. Timber traceability, determining effective methods to combat illegal logging in Africa: A review
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Tonouéwa, Jesugnon Fifamè Murielle Féty, Biaou, Samadori Sorotori Honoré, Assèdé, Eméline Sêssi Pélagie, Agossou, Hippolyte, and Balagueman, Rodrigue O.
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- 2024
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20. Traffic collisions and micromobility: A comparison between personal mobility devices and bicycles based on police reports
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Guesneau, Marianne, Cherta-Ballester, Oscar, Agier, Lydiane, Arnoux, Pierre-Jean, Wei, Wei, Vernet, Céline, Honoré, Valentin, and Bailly, Nicolas
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- 2024
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21. Examining the effect of economic complexity on energy justice
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Djeunankan, Ronald, Njangang, Henri, Tékam, Honoré, and Raghutla, Chandrashekar
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- 2024
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22. Antibacterial and antioxidant activities of a new phenolic coumpound from the roots barks of Cassia arereh Delile (Fabaceae)
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Chefo Kengne, Néomi, Wangso, Honoré, Silvère Gade, Isaac, Laya, Alphonse, Paul Bayang, Jean, Bargui Koubala, Benoît, Laurent, Sophie, Henoumont, Celine, and Talla, Emmanuel
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- 2024
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23. Interventions to improve appropriateness of laboratory testing in the intensive care unit: a narrative review
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Luigi Devis, Emilie Catry, Patrick M. Honore, Alexandre Mansour, Giuseppe Lippi, François Mullier, and Mélanie Closset
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Overuse ,Inappropriate ,Tests ,Intensive care unit ,Prescription ,Minimum retesting interval ,Medical emergencies. Critical care. Intensive care. First aid ,RC86-88.9 - Abstract
Abstract Healthcare expenses are increasing, as is the utilization of laboratory resources. Despite this, between 20% and 40% of requested tests are deemed inappropriate. Improper use of laboratory resources leads to unwanted consequences such as hospital-acquired anemia, infections, increased costs, staff workload and patient stress and discomfort. The most unfavorable consequences result from unnecessary follow-up tests and treatments (overuse) and missed or delayed diagnoses (underuse). In this context, several interventions have been carried out to improve the appropriateness of laboratory testing. To date, there have been few published assessments of interventions specific to the intensive care unit. We reviewed the literature for interventions implemented in the ICU to improve the appropriateness of laboratory testing. We searched literature from 2008 to 2023 in PubMed, Embase, Scopus, and Google Scholar databases between April and June 2023. Five intervention categories were identified: education and guidance (E&G), audit and feedback, gatekeeping, computerized physician order entry (including reshaping of ordering panels), and multifaceted interventions (MFI). We included a sixth category exploring the potential role of artificial intelligence and machine learning (AI/ML)-based assisting tools in such interventions. E&G-based interventions and MFI are the most frequently used approaches. MFI is the most effective type of intervention, and shows the strongest persistence of effect over time. AI/ML-based tools may offer valuable assistance to the improvement of appropriate laboratory testing in the near future. Patient safety outcomes are not impaired by interventions to reduce inappropriate testing. The literature focuses mainly on reducing overuse of laboratory tests, with only one intervention mentioning underuse. We highlight an overall poor quality of methodological design and reporting and argue for standardization of intervention methods. Collaboration between clinicians and laboratory staff is key to improve appropriate laboratory utilization. This article offers practical guidance for optimizing the effectiveness of an intervention protocol designed to limit inappropriate use of laboratory resources.
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- 2024
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24. SIM-SITU: A Framework for the Faithful Simulation of in-situ Workflows
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Honoré, Valentin, Do, Tu Mai Anh, Pottier, Loïc, da Silva, Rafael Ferreira, Deelman, Ewa, and Suter, Frédéric
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Computer Science - Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing - Abstract
The amount of data generated by numerical simulations in various scientific domains such as molecular dynamics, climate modeling, biology, or astrophysics, led to a fundamental redesign of application workflows. The throughput and the capacity of storage subsystems have not evolved as fast as the computing power in extreme-scale supercomputers. As a result, the classical post-hoc analysis of simulation outputs became highly inefficient. In-situ workflows have then emerged as a solution in which simulation and data analytics are intertwined through shared computing resources, thus lower latencies. Determining the best allocation, i.e., how many resources to allocate to each component of an in-situ workflow; and mapping, i.e., where and at which frequency to run the data analytics component, is a complex task whose performance assessment is crucial to the efficient execution of in-situ workflows. However, such a performance evaluation of different allocation and mapping strategies usually relies either on directly running them on the targeted execution environments, which can rapidly become extremely time-and resource-consuming, or on resorting to the simulation of simplified models of the components of an in-situ workflow, which can lack of realism. In both cases, the validity of the performance evaluation is limited. To address this issue, we introduce SIM-SITU, a framework for the faithful simulation of in-situ workflows. This framework builds on the SimGrid toolkit and benefits of several important features of this versatile simulation tool. We designed SIM-SITU to reflect the typical structure of in-situ workflows and thanks to its modular design, SIM-SITU has the necessary flexibility to easily and faithfully evaluate the behavior and performance of various allocation and mapping strategies for in-situ workflows. We illustrate the simulation capabilities of SIM-SITU on a Molecular Dynamics use case. We study the impact of different allocation and mapping strategies on performance and show how users can leverage SIM-SITU to determine interesting tradeoffs when designing their in-situ workflow.
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- 2021
25. An Exact Algorithm for the Linear Tape Scheduling Problem
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Honoré, Valentin, Simon, Bertrand, and Suter, Frédéric
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Computer Science - Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing ,Computer Science - Data Structures and Algorithms - Abstract
Magnetic tapes are often considered as an outdated storage technology, yet they are still used to store huge amounts of data. Their main interests are a large capacity and a low price per gigabyte, which come at the cost of a much larger file access time than on disks. With tapes, finding the right ordering of multiple file accesses is thus key to performance. Moving the reading head back and forth along a kilometer long tape has a non-negligible cost and unnecessary movements thus have to be avoided. However, the optimization of tape request ordering has then rarely been studied in the scheduling literature, much less than I/O scheduling on disks. For instance, minimizing the average service time for several read requests on a linear tape remains an open question. Therefore, in this paper, we aim at improving the quality of service experienced by users of tape storage systems, and not only the peak performance of such systems. To this end, we propose a reasonable polynomial-time exact algorithm while this problem and simpler variants have been conjectured NP-hard. We also refine the proposed model by considering U-turn penalty costs accounting for inherent mechanical accelerations. Then, we propose low-cost variants of our optimal algorithm by restricting the solution space, yet still yielding an accurate suboptimal solution. Finally, we compare our algorithms to existing solutions from the literature on logs of the mass storage management system of a major datacenter. This allows us to assess the quality of previous solutions and the improvement achieved by our low-cost algorithms. Aiming for reproducibility, we make available the complete implementation of the algorithms used in our evaluation, alongside the dataset of tape requests that is, to the best of our knowledge, the first of its kind to be publicly released.
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- 2021
26. NL-Augmenter: A Framework for Task-Sensitive Natural Language Augmentation
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Dhole, Kaustubh D., Gangal, Varun, Gehrmann, Sebastian, Gupta, Aadesh, Li, Zhenhao, Mahamood, Saad, Mahendiran, Abinaya, Mille, Simon, Shrivastava, Ashish, Tan, Samson, Wu, Tongshuang, Sohl-Dickstein, Jascha, Choi, Jinho D., Hovy, Eduard, Dusek, Ondrej, Ruder, Sebastian, Anand, Sajant, Aneja, Nagender, Banjade, Rabin, Barthe, Lisa, Behnke, Hanna, Berlot-Attwell, Ian, Boyle, Connor, Brun, Caroline, Cabezudo, Marco Antonio Sobrevilla, Cahyawijaya, Samuel, Chapuis, Emile, Che, Wanxiang, Choudhary, Mukund, Clauss, Christian, Colombo, Pierre, Cornell, Filip, Dagan, Gautier, Das, Mayukh, Dixit, Tanay, Dopierre, Thomas, Dray, Paul-Alexis, Dubey, Suchitra, Ekeinhor, Tatiana, Di Giovanni, Marco, Goyal, Tanya, Gupta, Rishabh, Hamla, Louanes, Han, Sang, Harel-Canada, Fabrice, Honore, Antoine, Jindal, Ishan, Joniak, Przemyslaw K., Kleyko, Denis, Kovatchev, Venelin, Krishna, Kalpesh, Kumar, Ashutosh, Langer, Stefan, Lee, Seungjae Ryan, Levinson, Corey James, Liang, Hualou, Liang, Kaizhao, Liu, Zhexiong, Lukyanenko, Andrey, Marivate, Vukosi, de Melo, Gerard, Meoni, Simon, Meyer, Maxime, Mir, Afnan, Moosavi, Nafise Sadat, Muennighoff, Niklas, Mun, Timothy Sum Hon, Murray, Kenton, Namysl, Marcin, Obedkova, Maria, Oli, Priti, Pasricha, Nivranshu, Pfister, Jan, Plant, Richard, Prabhu, Vinay, Pais, Vasile, Qin, Libo, Raji, Shahab, Rajpoot, Pawan Kumar, Raunak, Vikas, Rinberg, Roy, Roberts, Nicolas, Rodriguez, Juan Diego, Roux, Claude, S., Vasconcellos P. H., Sai, Ananya B., Schmidt, Robin M., Scialom, Thomas, Sefara, Tshephisho, Shamsi, Saqib N., Shen, Xudong, Shi, Haoyue, Shi, Yiwen, Shvets, Anna, Siegel, Nick, Sileo, Damien, Simon, Jamie, Singh, Chandan, Sitelew, Roman, Soni, Priyank, Sorensen, Taylor, Soto, William, Srivastava, Aman, Srivatsa, KV Aditya, Sun, Tony, T, Mukund Varma, Tabassum, A, Tan, Fiona Anting, Teehan, Ryan, Tiwari, Mo, Tolkiehn, Marie, Wang, Athena, Wang, Zijian, Wang, Gloria, Wang, Zijie J., Wei, Fuxuan, Wilie, Bryan, Winata, Genta Indra, Wu, Xinyi, Wydmański, Witold, Xie, Tianbao, Yaseen, Usama, Yee, Michael A., Zhang, Jing, and Zhang, Yue
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Computer Science - Computation and Language ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
Data augmentation is an important component in the robustness evaluation of models in natural language processing (NLP) and in enhancing the diversity of the data they are trained on. In this paper, we present NL-Augmenter, a new participatory Python-based natural language augmentation framework which supports the creation of both transformations (modifications to the data) and filters (data splits according to specific features). We describe the framework and an initial set of 117 transformations and 23 filters for a variety of natural language tasks. We demonstrate the efficacy of NL-Augmenter by using several of its transformations to analyze the robustness of popular natural language models. The infrastructure, datacards and robustness analysis results are available publicly on the NL-Augmenter repository (https://github.com/GEM-benchmark/NL-Augmenter)., Comment: 39 pages, repository at https://github.com/GEM-benchmark/NL-Augmenter
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- 2021
27. Evaluation of the productivity of maize (ATP) under different sowing dates in the western highlands of Cameroon
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Tsafack, Boris Junior, Beyegué Njonko, Honoré, Kengni, Lucas, Neba, Simplice CHE., and Tene Fongang, Brice
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- 2024
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28. Immunovirological status in people with perinatal and adult-acquired HIV-1 infection: a multi-cohort analysis from FranceResearch in context
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Rémonie Seng, Pierre Frange, Albert Faye, Catherine Dollfus, Jérôme le Chenadec, Faroudy Boufassa, Asma Essat, Tessa Goetghebuer, Elisa Arezes, Véronique Avettand-Fènoël, Jean-Joël Bigna, Stéphane Blanche, Cécile Goujard, Laurence Meyer, Josiane Warszawski, Jean-Paul Viard, H. Aumaitre, E. Froguel, F. Caby, S. Dellion, L. Gerard, F. Lucht, C. Chirouze, M. Dupon, Jl Schmit, C. Goujard, T. Allegre, B. Cazenave, G. Hittinger, P. De Truchis, J. Cailhol, C. Duvivier, A. Canestri, O. Bouchaud, M. Karmochkine, D. Salmon-Ceron, D. Zucman, E. Mortier, R. Tubiana, P.M. Girard, C. Pintado, A. Cabie, V. Rabier, P. Morlat, D. Neau, C. Genet, D. Makhloufi, S Bregigeon Ronot, J. Ghosn, V. Reliquet, P. Perré, Jl Pellegrin, C. Arvieux, C. Cheneau, L. Bernard, P. Delobel, R. Verdon, C. Jacomet, L. Piroth, F. Ajana, S. Bevilacqua, Y. Debab, A.L. Lecapitaine, L. Cotte, S. Mokhtari, P. Mercie, P. Poubeau, V. Garrait, Ma Khuong, G. Beck-Wirth, L. Blum, S. Blanche, F. Boccara, T. Prazuck, C. Barbuat, J.P. Viard, S. Stegmann-Planchard, B. Martha, J.M. Treluyer, E. Dore, C. Gaud, M. Niault, E. Fernandes, H. Hitoto, A. Compagnucci, N. Elenga, A. Faye, C. Dollfus, A. Chace, M. Levine, S.A. Martha, C. Floch-Tudal, K. Kebaïli, N. Entz-Werle, J. Tricoire, F. Mazingue, P. Bolot, P. Brazille, T. Goetghebuer, A.F. Gennotte, D. Van Der Linden, V. Schmitz, M. Moutschen, C. Crenn-Hebert, F. Habibi, A. Coursol, E. Guesdon, P.F. Ceccaldi, M. Dehlinger – Paul, E. Pannier, V. Marcou, C. Elleau, M. Achkar, M.O. Vareil, S. Couderc, C. Routier, M.A. Bouldouyre, L. Selleret, A. Chabrol, C. Bellahcene, C. Pluchart, A. Yangui, D. Vignes, A. Alissa, A. Johnson, E. Lachassinne, A. Benbara, L. Karaoui, A. Bongain, B. Yakeu, J.L. Schmit, L. Cravello, C. Hubert, P. Faucher, D. Pinquier, C. Borie, D. Rocchi, C. Brunet-Cartier, C. Briandet, J. Brouard, A. Chalvon-Demersay, M. Rajguru, K. Billiemaz, A. Fresard, A. Moulin, P. Fialaire, L. Mesnard, E. Werner, E. Vintejoux, J. Marian, S. Ranaivojaona, F. Bissuel, M. Abdelhadi, Y. Hammou, C. Genet-Villeger, Y. Hatchuel, G. Bachelard, M. Medus, J. Dendale – Nguyen, T.S. Guimard, A. Martha, M. Rouha, P. Perfezou, L. De Saint Martin, S. Jaffuel, R. Buzele, M. Gousseff, C. Cudeville, V. Vitrat, C. Michau, G. Palenzuela, M. Driessen, B. Heller-Roussin, J.M. Labaune, B. Muanza, J. Massardier, M. Partisani, I. Hau, C. Runel-Belliard, C. Brehin, K. Kebaili, M. Lalande, M. Lagree, K. Lacombe, J.-M. Molina, J. Reynes, O. Robineau, F. Raffi, A. Becker, L. Weiss, T. Allègre, G. Pialoux, F. Souala, A. Rami, C. Katlama, A. Cabié, J.-P. Viard, F. Bastides, C. Michel, D. Salmon, J-D Le Lièvre, A. Sotto, E. Rouveix, A. Naqvi, S. Brégigeon, R. Rodet, A. Simon-Coutelier, J.-L. Esnault, R. Buzelé, A. Stein, C. Godin-Colet, G. Pichancourt, P. Caraux-Paz, M Mohseni Zadeh, L. Gérard, C. Lascaux-Cametz, L. Bodard, J.-L. Pellegrin, N. Ettahar, A. Uludag, E. Rosenthal, F. Prevoteau du Clary, S. Jaureguiberry, P. Philibert, A.-L. Lecapitaine, E. Chakvetadze, H. Champagne, V. Daneluzzi, J. Goupil de Bouillé, A. Leprêtre, I. Lamaury, I. Darasteanu, B. Abraham, D. Garipuy, J.-L. Berger, J.-L. Schmit, K. Diallo, F. Gourdon, O. Vaillant, V. Gaborieau, J. Doll, D. Quinsat, L. Geffray, J.-J. Girard, D. Houlbert, V. Perronne, E. Klement, O. Antioniotti, C. Rouzioux, V. Avettand-Fenoel, O. Lortholary, S. Boucly, A. Maignan, R. Thiebaut, L. Meyer, F. Boufassa, M.A. Charles, R. Dray-Spira, C. Legeai, V. Amon, N. Benammar, R. Seng, L. Slama, P. Bonnard, C. Chakvetadze, T. L’Yavanc, J. Capeau, C. Vigouroux, S. Fellahi, J.P. Bastard, E. Oksenhendler, J.F. Bourge, V. Bajzik, D. Sereni, C. Lascoux-Combe, O. Taulera, L.V. Dien, J. Delgado, J.M. Molina, T. Saint-Marc, S. Ferret, J. Pavie, J.F. Bergmann, M. Parrinello, BLefebvre, C. Boudraa, B. Diallo, C. Lupin, S. Herson, A. Simon, N. Edeb, L. Guillevin, T. Tahi, M.P. Pietri, D. Tisne-Dessus, C. Jalbert, P. Yeni, S. Matheron, G. Pahlavan, B. Phung, N. El-Alami Talbi, Z. Ramani, G. Catalano, C. Godard, F. Boue, V. Chambrin, D. Bornarel, H. Schoen, R. Carlier, B. Fantin, C. Poder, R. Dhote, M. Bentata, P. Honore, Xuan Tuyet, J.F. Delfraissy, F. Chaix, M.T. Rannou, Y. Levy, A. Sobel, C. Dumont, S. Abel, S. Pierre-François, V. Beaujolais, I. Poizot-Martin, O. Zaegel-Faucher, C. Debreux, J. Moreau, E. Van Der Gheynst, M.C. Thiebaut-Drobacheff, A. Foltzer, B. Hoen, J.F. Faucher, H. Gil, J.M. Ragnaud, I. Raymond, I. Louis, M. Hessamfar, V. Baillat, C Merle De Boever, C. Tramoni, A. Soufflet, P. Guadagnin, P. Choutet, O. Mounoury, D. Brosseau, H. Hue, T. May, S. Wassoumbou, M. Stenzel, M.P. Bouillon, Y. Yazdanpanah, T. Huleux, E. Aissi, S. Pavel, D. Rey, P. Fischer, G. Blaison, M. Martinot, A. Pachart, F. Jeanblanc, J.L. Touraine, C. Trepo, P. Miailhes, K. Kouadjo, V. Thoirain, C. Brochier, P. Perre, S. Leautez, J.L. Esnault, and I. Suaud
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Perinatal HIV infection ,Cohort ,Viral failure ,Immunological outcome ,Epidemiology ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Summary: Background: No study has compared the virological and immunological status of young people with perinatally-acquired HIV infection (P-HIV) with that of people with HIV adulthood (A-HIV) having a similar duration of infection. Methods: 5 French cohorts of P-HIV and A-HIV patients with a known date of HIV-infection and receiving antiretroviral treatment (ART), were used to compare the following proportions of: virological failure (VF) defined as plasma HIV RNA ≥ 50 copies/mL, CD4 cell percentages and CD4:CD8 ratios, at the time of the most recent visit since 2012. The analysis was stratified on time since infection, and multivariate models were adjusted for demographics and treatment history. Findings: 310 P-HIV were compared to 1515 A-HIV (median current ages 20.9 [IQR:14.4–25.5] and 45.9 [IQR:37.9–53.5] respectively). VF at the time of the most recent evaluation was significantly higher among P-HIV (22.6%, 69/306) than A-HIV (3.3%, 50/1514); p ≤ 0.0001. The risk of VF was particularly high among the youngest children (2–5 years), adolescents (13–17 years) and young adults (18–24 years), compared to A-HIV with a similar duration of infection: adjusted Odds-Ratio (aOR) 7.0 [95% CI: 1.7; 30.0], 11.4 [4.2; 31.2] and 3.3 [1.0; 10.8] respectively. The level of CD4 cell percentages did not differ between P-HIV and A-HIV. P-HIV aged 6–12 and 13–17 were more likely than A-HIV to have a CD4:CD8 ratio ≥ 1: 84.1% vs. 58.8% (aOR = 3.5 [1.5; 8.3]), and 60.9% vs. 54.7% (aOR = 1.9 [0.9; 4.2]) respectively. Interpretation: P-HIV were at a higher risk of VF than A-HIV with a similar duration of infection, even after adjusting for treatment history, whereas they were not at a higher risk of immunological impairment. Exposure to viral replication among young patients living with HIV since birth or a very early age, probably because of lower adherence, could have an impact on health, raising major concerns about the selection of resistance mutations and the risk of HIV transmission. Funding: Inserm - ANRS MIE.
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- 2024
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29. Predicting the transmission of SARS-CoV-2 in Africa: the case of Namibia
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Okano, Justin T, Valdano, Eugenio, Mitonga, Honore K, and Blower, Sally
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Epidemiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Biodefense ,Prevention ,Pneumonia ,Infectious Diseases ,Vaccine Related ,Lung ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Good Health and Well Being ,COVID-19 ,Humans ,Namibia ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Public Health and Health Services ,Tourism ,Tropical Medicine ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
SARS-CoV-2 transmission models have been fairly inaccurate in their predictions for Africa. Here, based on an analysis of surveillance data from Namibia, we conclude that it is necessary to include spatial demography, and travel, in SARS-CoV-2 transmission models in order to make more accurate predictions for COVID-19 epidemics in Africa.
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- 2022
30. Report From The Trenches: A Case Study In Modernizing Software Development Practices
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Honoré, Houékpétodji Mahugnon, Anquetil, Nicolas, Ducasse, Stéphane, Djareddir, Fatiha, and Sudich, Jérôme
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Computer Science - Software Engineering ,D.2 - Abstract
One factor of success in software development companies is their ability to deliver good quality products, fast. For this, they need to improve their software development practices. We work with a medium-sized company modernizing its development practices. The company introduced several practices recommended in agile development. If the benefits of these practices are well documented, the impact of such changes on the developers is less well known. We follow this modernization before and during the COVID-19 outbreak. This paper presents an empirical study of the perceived benefit and drawback of these practices as well as the impact of COVID-19 on the company's employees. One of the conclusions, is the additional difficulties created by obsolete technologies to adapt the technology itself and the development practices it encourages to modern standards., Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables
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- 2021
31. Dynamic Ordered Panel Logit Models
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Honoré, Bo E., Muris, Chris, and Weidner, Martin
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Economics - Econometrics - Abstract
This paper studies a dynamic ordered logit model for panel data with fixed effects. The main contribution of the paper is to construct a set of valid moment conditions that are free of the fixed effects. The moment functions can be computed using four or more periods of data, and the paper presents sufficient conditions for the moment conditions to identify the common parameters of the model, namely the regression coefficients, the autoregressive parameters, and the threshold parameters. The availability of moment conditions suggests that these common parameters can be estimated using the generalized method of moments, and the paper documents the performance of this estimator using Monte Carlo simulations and an empirical illustration to self-reported health status using the British Household Panel Survey.
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- 2021
32. Normalizing Flow based Hidden Markov Models for Classification of Speech Phones with Explainability
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Ghosh, Anubhab, Honoré, Antoine, Liu, Dong, Henter, Gustav Eje, and Chatterjee, Saikat
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Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Computer Science - Computation and Language ,Computer Science - Sound ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Audio and Speech Processing - Abstract
In pursuit of explainability, we develop generative models for sequential data. The proposed models provide state-of-the-art classification results and robust performance for speech phone classification. We combine modern neural networks (normalizing flows) and traditional generative models (hidden Markov models - HMMs). Normalizing flow-based mixture models (NMMs) are used to model the conditional probability distribution given the hidden state in the HMMs. Model parameters are learned through judicious combinations of time-tested Bayesian learning methods and contemporary neural network learning methods. We mainly combine expectation-maximization (EM) and mini-batch gradient descent. The proposed generative models can compute likelihood of a data and hence directly suitable for maximum-likelihood (ML) classification approach. Due to structural flexibility of HMMs, we can use different normalizing flow models. This leads to different types of HMMs providing diversity in data modeling capacity. The diversity provides an opportunity for easy decision fusion from different models. For a standard speech phone classification setup involving 39 phones (classes) and the TIMIT dataset, we show that the use of standard features called mel-frequency-cepstral-coeffcients (MFCCs), the proposed generative models, and the decision fusion together can achieve $86.6\%$ accuracy by generative training only. This result is close to state-of-the-art results, for examples, $86.2\%$ accuracy of PyTorch-Kaldi toolkit [1], and $85.1\%$ accuracy using light gated recurrent units [2]. We do not use any discriminative learning approach and related sophisticated features in this article., Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures
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- 2021
33. Single-cell multiomics profiling reveals heterogeneous transcriptional programs and microenvironment in DSRCTs
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Henon, Clémence, Vibert, Julien, Eychenne, Thomas, Gruel, Nadège, Colmet-Daage, Léo, Ngo, Carine, Garrido, Marlène, Dorvault, Nicolas, Marques Da Costa, Maria Eugenia, Marty, Virginie, Signolle, Nicolas, Marchais, Antonin, Herbel, Noé, Kawai-Kawachi, Asuka, Lenormand, Madison, Astier, Clémence, Chabanon, Roman, Verret, Benjamin, Bahleda, Rastislav, Le Cesne, Axel, Mechta-Grigoriou, Fatima, Faron, Matthieu, Honoré, Charles, Delattre, Olivier, Waterfall, Joshua J., Watson, Sarah, and Postel-Vinay, Sophie
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- 2024
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34. Land use/land cover and plant community dynamics in the Benin's forest reserves: The effectiveness of participatory forest management
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Abdul Aziz, Soumanou, Émeline Sêssi Pelagie, Assèdé, Séverin, Biaou, Ogoulonou Rodrigue, Balagueman, Bertrand, Ayihouenou, and Samadori Sorotori Honoré, Biaou
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- 2024
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35. Immunovirological status in people with perinatal and adult-acquired HIV-1 infection: a multi-cohort analysis from France
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Aumaitre, H., Froguel, E., Caby, F., Dellion, S., Gerard, L., Lucht, F., Chirouze, C., Dupon, M., Schmit, Jl, Goujard, C., Allegre, T., Cazenave, B., Hittinger, G., De Truchis, P., Cailhol, J., Duvivier, C., Canestri, A., Bouchaud, O., Karmochkine, M., Salmon-Ceron, D., Zucman, D., Mortier, E., Tubiana, R., Girard, P.M., Pintado, C., Cabie, A., Rabier, V., Morlat, P., Neau, D., Genet, C., Makhloufi, D., Ronot, S Bregigeon, Ghosn, J., Reliquet, V., Perré, P., Pellegrin, Jl, Arvieux, C., Cheneau, C., Bernard, L., Delobel, P., Verdon, R., Jacomet, C., Piroth, L., Ajana, F., Bevilacqua, S., Debab, Y., Lecapitaine, A.L., Cotte, L., Mokhtari, S., Mercie, P., Poubeau, P., Garrait, V., Khuong, Ma, Beck-Wirth, G., Blum, L., Blanche, S., Boccara, F., Prazuck, T., Barbuat, C., Viard, J.P., Stegmann-Planchard, S., Martha, B., Treluyer, J.M., Dore, E., Gaud, C., Niault, M., Fernandes, E., Hitoto, H., Compagnucci, A., Elenga, N., Faye, A., Dollfus, C., Chace, A., Levine, M., Martha, S.A., Floch-Tudal, C., Kebaïli, K., Entz-Werle, N., Tricoire, J., Mazingue, F., Bolot, P., Brazille, P., Goetghebuer, T., Gennotte, A.F., Van Der Linden, D., Schmitz, V., Moutschen, M., Crenn-Hebert, C., Habibi, F., Coursol, A., Guesdon, E., Ceccaldi, P.F., Dehlinger – Paul, M., Pannier, E., Marcou, V., Elleau, C., Achkar, M., Vareil, M.O., Couderc, S., Routier, C., Bouldouyre, M.A., Selleret, L., Chabrol, A., Bellahcene, C., Pluchart, C., Yangui, A., Vignes, D., Alissa, A., Johnson, A., Lachassinne, E., Benbara, A., Karaoui, L., Bongain, A., Yakeu, B., Schmit, J.L., Cravello, L., Hubert, C., Faucher, P., Pinquier, D., Borie, C., Rocchi, D., Brunet-Cartier, C., Briandet, C., Brouard, J., Chalvon-Demersay, A., Rajguru, M., Billiemaz, K., Fresard, A., Moulin, A., Fialaire, P., Mesnard, L., Werner, E., Vintejoux, E., Marian, J., Ranaivojaona, S., Bissuel, F., Abdelhadi, M., Hammou, Y., Genet-Villeger, C., Hatchuel, Y., Bachelard, G., Medus, M., Dendale – Nguyen, J., Guimard, T.S., Martha, A., Rouha, M., Perfezou, P., De Saint Martin, L., Jaffuel, S., Buzele, R., Gousseff, M., Cudeville, C., Vitrat, V., Michau, C., Palenzuela, G., Driessen, M., Heller-Roussin, B., Labaune, J.M., Muanza, B., Massardier, J., Partisani, M., Hau, I., Runel-Belliard, C., Brehin, C., Kebaili, K., Lalande, M., Lagree, M., Lacombe, K., Molina, J.-M., Reynes, J., Robineau, O., Raffi, F., Becker, A., Weiss, L., Allègre, T., Pialoux, G., Souala, F., Rami, A., Katlama, C., Cabié, A., Viard, J.-P., Bastides, F., Michel, C., Salmon, D., Lièvre, J-D Le, Sotto, A., Rouveix, E., Naqvi, A., Brégigeon, S., Rodet, R., Simon-Coutelier, A., Esnault, J.-L., Buzelé, R., Stein, A., Godin-Colet, C., Pichancourt, G., Caraux-Paz, P., Zadeh, M Mohseni, Gérard, L., Lascaux-Cametz, C., Bodard, L., Pellegrin, J.-L., Ettahar, N., Uludag, A., Rosenthal, E., Prevoteau du Clary, F., Jaureguiberry, S., Philibert, P., Lecapitaine, A.-L., Chakvetadze, E., Champagne, H., Daneluzzi, V., Goupil de Bouillé, J., Leprêtre, A., Lamaury, I., Darasteanu, I., Abraham, B., Garipuy, D., Berger, J.-L., Schmit, J.-L., Diallo, K., Gourdon, F., Vaillant, O., Gaborieau, V., Doll, J., Quinsat, D., Geffray, L., Girard, J.-J., Houlbert, D., Perronne, V., Klement, E., Antioniotti, O., Rouzioux, C., Avettand-Fenoel, V., Lortholary, O., Boucly, S., Maignan, A., Thiebaut, R., Meyer, L., Boufassa, F., Charles, M.A., Dray-Spira, R., Legeai, C., Amon, V., Benammar, N., Seng, R., Slama, L., Bonnard, P., Chakvetadze, C., L’Yavanc, T., Capeau, J., Vigouroux, C., Fellahi, S., Bastard, J.P., Oksenhendler, E., Bourge, J.F., Bajzik, V., Sereni, D., Lascoux-Combe, C., Taulera, O., Dien, L.V., Delgado, J., Molina, J.M., Saint-Marc, T., Ferret, S., Pavie, J., Bergmann, J.F., Parrinello, M., BLefebvre, Boudraa, C., Diallo, B., Lupin, C., Herson, S., Simon, A., Edeb, N., Guillevin, L., Tahi, T., Pietri, M.P., Tisne-Dessus, D., Jalbert, C., Yeni, P., Matheron, S., Pahlavan, G., Phung, B., El-Alami Talbi, N., Ramani, Z., Catalano, G., Godard, C., Boue, F., Chambrin, V., Bornarel, D., Schoen, H., Carlier, R., Fantin, B., Poder, C., Dhote, R., Bentata, M., Honore, P., Tuyet, Xuan, Delfraissy, J.F., Chaix, F., Rannou, M.T., Levy, Y., Sobel, A., Dumont, C., Abel, S., Pierre-François, S., Beaujolais, V., Poizot-Martin, I., Zaegel-Faucher, O., Debreux, C., Moreau, J., Van Der Gheynst, E., Thiebaut-Drobacheff, M.C., Foltzer, A., Hoen, B., Faucher, J.F., Gil, H., Ragnaud, J.M., Raymond, I., Louis, I., Hessamfar, M., Baillat, V., De Boever, C Merle, Tramoni, C., Soufflet, A., Guadagnin, P., Choutet, P., Mounoury, O., Brosseau, D., Hue, H., May, T., Wassoumbou, S., Stenzel, M., Bouillon, M.P., Yazdanpanah, Y., Huleux, T., Aissi, E., Pavel, S., Rey, D., Fischer, P., Blaison, G., Martinot, M., Pachart, A., Jeanblanc, F., Touraine, J.L., Trepo, C., Miailhes, P., Kouadjo, K., Thoirain, V., Brochier, C., Perre, P., Leautez, S., Esnault, J.L., Suaud, I., Seng, Rémonie, Frange, Pierre, Faye, Albert, Dollfus, Catherine, le Chenadec, Jérôme, Boufassa, Faroudy, Essat, Asma, Goetghebuer, Tessa, Arezes, Elisa, Avettand-Fènoël, Véronique, Bigna, Jean-Joël, Blanche, Stéphane, Goujard, Cécile, Meyer, Laurence, Warszawski, Josiane, and Viard, Jean-Paul
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- 2024
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36. Pharyngeal carriage of beta-haemolytic 'Streptococcus 'species and seroprevalence of anti-streptococcal antibodies in children in Bouake, Cote d'Ivoire
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Monemo, Pacome, Demba, Nadia, Toure, Fidele S, Traore, Adjartou, Avi, Christelle, N'Guessan, Micheline A, Tadet, Juste O, Gobey, Arthur R, Anoh, Augustin E, Diarrassouba, Abdoulaye, Tuo, Marie N, Cisse, Amadou, Saric, Jasmina, Utzinger, Jurg, Tia, Honore, Kouassi-N'Djeundo, Judith, Becker, Soren L, and Akoua-Koffi, Chantal
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- 2020
37. Short-Term Behavior of a Geothermal Energy Storage: Numerical Applications
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Takam, Paul Honore, Wunderlich, Ralf, and Pamen, Olivier Menoukeu
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Mathematics - Numerical Analysis ,65M06, 65M12, 97M50 - Abstract
This paper is devoted to numerical simulations of the short-term behavior of the spatial temperature distribution in a geothermal energy storage. Such simulations are needed for the optimal control and management of residential heating systems equipped with an underground thermal storage. We apply numerical methods derived in our companion paper [15] in which we study the governing initial boundary value problem for a linear heat equation with convection. Further, we perform extensive numerical experiments in order to investigate properties of the spatio-temporal temperature distribution and of its aggregated characteristics., Comment: 29 pages. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2104.05005
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- 2021
38. Short-Term Behavior of a Geothermal Energy Storage: Modeling and Theoretical Results
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Takam, Paul Honore, Wunderlich, Ralf, and Pamen, Olivier Menoukeu
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Mathematics - Numerical Analysis ,65M06, 65M12, 97M50 - Abstract
This paper investigates numerical methods for simulations of the short-term behavior of a geothermal energy storage. Such simulations are needed for the optimal control and management of residential heating systems equipped with an underground thermal storage. There a given volume under or aside of a building is filled with soil and insulated to the surrounding ground. The thermal energy is stored by raising the temperature of the soil inside the storage. It is charged and discharged via pipe heat exchangers filled with a moving fluid. Simulations of geothermal energy storages aim to determine how much energy can be stored in or taken from the storage within a given short period of time. The latter depends on the dynamics of the spatial temperature distribution in the storage which is governed by a linear heat equation with convection and appropriate boundary and interface conditions. We consider semi- and full discretization of that PDE using finite difference schemes and study associated stability problems. Numerical results based on the derived methods are presented in the companion paper [17]., Comment: 26 pages
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- 2021
39. Robust Classification using Hidden Markov Models and Mixtures of Normalizing Flows
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Ghosh, Anubhab, Honoré, Antoine, Liu, Dong, Henter, Gustav Eje, and Chatterjee, Saikat
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Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing - Abstract
We test the robustness of a maximum-likelihood (ML) based classifier where sequential data as observation is corrupted by noise. The hypothesis is that a generative model, that combines the state transitions of a hidden Markov model (HMM) and the neural network based probability distributions for the hidden states of the HMM, can provide a robust classification performance. The combined model is called normalizing-flow mixture model based HMM (NMM-HMM). It can be trained using a combination of expectation-maximization (EM) and backpropagation. We verify the improved robustness of NMM-HMM classifiers in an application to speech recognition., Comment: 6 pages. Accepted at MLSP 2020
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- 2021
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40. Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors in the Curative Setting: Pre-clinical and Clinical Data
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Beyaert, Simon, Honoré, Natasha, Machiels, Jean-Pascal, Vermorken, Jan B., editor, Budach, Volker, editor, Leemans, C. René, editor, Machiels, Jean-Pascal, editor, Nicolai, Piero, editor, and O'Sullivan, Brian, editor
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- 2023
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41. Rezafungin versus Caspofungin in a Phase 2, Randomized, Double-Blind Study for the Treatment of Candidemia and Invasive Candidiasis- The STRIVE Trial
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Thompson, George R, Soriano, Alex, Skoutelis, Athanasios, Vazquez, Jose A, Honore, Patrick M, Horcajada, Juan P, Spapen, Herbert, Bassetti, Matteo, Ostrosky-Zeichner, Luis, Das, Anita F, Viani, Rolando M, Sandison, Taylor, and Pappas, Peter G
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Infectious Diseases ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Sepsis ,Hematology ,Clinical Research ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Adult ,Antifungal Agents ,Candidemia ,Candidiasis ,Invasive ,Caspofungin ,Double-Blind Method ,Echinocandins ,Humans ,Treatment Outcome ,echinocandins ,rezafungin ,candidemia ,systemic antifungal therapy ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Microbiology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundRezafungin (RZF) is a novel echinocandin exhibiting distinctive pharmacokinetics/pharmacodynamics. STRIVE was a phase 2, double-blind, randomized trial designed to compare the safety and efficacy of RZF once weekly (QWk) to caspofungin (CAS) once daily for treatment of candidemia and/or invasive candidiasis (IC).MethodsAdults with systemic signs and mycological confirmation of candidemia and/or IC were randomized to RZF 400 mg QWk (400 mg), RZF 400 mg on week 1 then 200 mg QWk (400/200 mg), or CAS 70 mg as a loading dose followed by 50 mg daily for ≤4 weeks. Efficacy assessments included overall cure (resolution of signs of candidemia/IC + mycological eradication) at day 14 (primary endpoint), investigator-assessed clinical response at day 14, and 30-day all-cause mortality (ACM) (secondary endpoints), and time to negative blood culture. Safety was evaluated by adverse events and ACM through follow-up.ResultsOf 207 patients enrolled, 183 were in the microbiological intent-to-treat population (~21% IC). Overall cure rates were 60.5% (46/76) for RZF 400 mg, 76.1% (35/46) for RZF 400/200 mg, and 67.2% (41/61) for CAS; investigator-assessed clinical cure rates were 69.7% (53/76), 80.4% (37/46), and 70.5% (43/61), respectively. In total, 30-day ACM was 15.8% for RZF 400 mg, 4.4% for RZF 400/200 mg, and 13.1% for CAS. Candidemia was cleared in 19.5 and 22.8 hours in RZF and CAS patients, respectively. No concerning safety trends were observed; ACM through follow-up was 15.2% (21/138) for RZF and 18.8% (13/69) for CAS.ConclusionsRZF was safe and efficacious in the treatment of candidemia and/or IC.Clinical trials registrationNCT02734862.
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- 2021
42. Phospholipase A2 enzymes represent a shared pathogenic pathway in psoriasis and pityriasis rubra pilaris
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Shao, Shuai, Chen, Jiaoling, Swindell, William R, Tsoi, Lam C, Xing, Xianying, Ma, Feiyang, Uppala, Ranjitha, Sarkar, Mrinal K, Plazyo, Olesya, Billi, Allison C, Wasikowski, Rachael, Smith, Kathleen M, Honore, Prisca, Scott, Victoria E, Maverakis, Emanual, Kahlenberg, J Michelle, Wang, Gang, Ward, Nicole L, Harms, Paul W, and Gudjonsson, Johann E
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Genetics ,Psoriasis ,Autoimmune Disease ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Skin ,Animals ,Humans ,Mice ,Phospholipases A2 ,Pityriasis Rubra Pilaris ,Autoimmune diseases ,Dermatology ,Immunology ,Innate immunity - Abstract
Altered epidermal differentiation along with increased keratinocyte proliferation is a characteristic feature of psoriasis and pityriasis rubra pilaris (PRP). However, despite this large degree of overlapping clinical and histologic features, the molecular signatures these skin disorders share are unknown. Using global transcriptomic profiling, we demonstrate that plaque psoriasis and PRP skin lesions have high overlap, with all differentially expressed genes in PRP relative to normal skin having complete overlap with those in psoriasis. The major common pathway shared between psoriasis and PRP involves the phospholipases PLA2G2F, PLA2G4D, and PLA2G4E, which were found to be primarily expressed in the epidermis. Gene silencing each of the 3 PLA2s led to reduction in immune responses and epidermal thickness both in vitro and in vivo in a mouse model of psoriasis, establishing their proinflammatory roles. Lipidomic analyses demonstrated that PLA2s affect mobilization of a phospholipid-eicosanoid pool, which is altered in psoriatic lesions and functions to promote immune responses in keratinocytes. Taken together, our results highlight the important role of PLA2s as regulators of epidermal barrier homeostasis and inflammation, identify PLA2s as a shared pathogenic mechanism between PRP and psoriasis, and as potential therapeutic targets for both diseases.
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- 2021
43. Clinical and mycological outcomes of candidaemia and/or invasive candidiasis by Candida spp. and antifungal susceptibility: pooled analyses of two randomized trials of rezafungin versus caspofungin
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Soriano, Alex, Locke, Jeffrey B., Cornely, Oliver A., Roilides, Emmanuel, Ramos-Martinez, Antonio, Honoré, Patrick M., Castanheira, Mariana, Carvalhaes, Cecilia G., Nseir, Saad, Bassetti, Matteo, Manamley, Nick, Sandison, Taylor, and Arendrup, Maiken C.
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- 2024
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44. Can Islamic finance enhance the innovation capacity of Cameroonian SMEs? Empirical evidence based on a multivariate probit approach
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Haruna, Ali, Oumbé, Honoré Tekam, Kountchou, Armand Mboutchouang, and Pilag Kakeu, Charles Bertin
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- 2024
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45. 97 BUILD EXITO: a successful collaborative training program for STEM undergraduates to improve workforce diversity
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De’Sha Wolf, Thomas Keller, Matt Honore, Shandee Dixon, and Cynthia Morris
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Medicine - Abstract
OBJECTIVES/GOALS: To truly improve health equity and accessibility, we must develop a diverse and inclusive workforce. The BUILD EXITO program developed as a collaboration between a network of undergraduate programs and a CTSA hub and now has become a sustainable resource that will outlive NIH funding. We will disseminate our successful model. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: The BUILD EXITO program has completed 10 years of NIH funding, a partnership between OCTRI and Portland State University (PSU), to create a new model of research training for underrepresented and disadvantaged students. This model provides an opportunity to learn about clinical and translational research academic careers; participate in a research enhancement and professional development curriculum;have a long-term authentic research experience; and receive enhanced mentorship. BUILD EXITO includes PSU, and local and 3 US Pacific territory 2-year colleges. We have developed a sustainable plan that includes these core elements after NIH support for the program ends. We have tracked long-term student outcomes for entry into graduate programs and the research workforce. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: We will describe the experimental model and the network of university and community colleges in BUILD EXITO, including PSU, U of Alaska, and colleges in US territories of Guam, Northern Mariana Islands, and American Samoa. All these universities and colleges have high proportions of underrepresented and disadvantaged students. We will present data on characteristics of the >600 students who have participated in BUILD EXITO to demonstrate the diversity of the cohort. We will also describe 4-year degree completion, engagement in the research workforce, and entry into graduate or professional programs. We will show how this has positively affected faculty inclusion of students in research, institutional policies at the 2-year and 4-year programs, and how this model has become sustainable. DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE: The BUILD EXITO program developed as a collaboration of the CTSA hub at OHSU and a highly diverse undergraduate programs. We have developed a successful model for training a diverse research workforce and will disseminate this sustainable model.
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- 2024
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46. Guidelines for the prescription of standard hematology and biochemistry clinical laboratory tests in the intensive care unit: A scoping review protocol.
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Luigi L Devis, Emilie Catry, Michael Hardy, Alexandre Mansour, Patrick M Honore, Giuseppe Lippi, Mélanie Closset, and François Mullier
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
ObjectiveThis scoping review protocol describes the strategy for a scoping review that aims to provide a comprehensive overview of published guidelines for the prescription of standard laboratory tests performed in intensive care unit (ICU) patients.BackgroundThe use of clinical laboratories is constantly increasing. However, there is evidence of inappropriate use. Inappropriate laboratory testing has the potential to harm patients, increase costs, burden staff, and has an environmental impact. Effective management can be achieved through demand managing strategies, such as providing guidelines on performing the appropriate test, for the right patient, at the right time. Although national and international guidelines exist for individual tests, a comprehensive summary of available recommendations for laboratory testing in the ICU is currently unavailable.Inclusion criteriaThis scoping review will incorporate documents that provide explicit advice on which test to perform in ICU patients. We selected 34 tests routinely ordered in the ICU. This review will consider any document type that matches our concept and context. We will consider gray literature with appropriate adherence to guidelines methodology. We will not limit the review by geographical location, but will only include articles published in English.Search strategyOur scoping review will follow the Joanna Brigg Institute (JBI) methodology. We will search Medline (PubMed), Embase, Scopus, Google Scholar, and Google. Our search strategy adheres to the JBI 3-step construction approach for systematic reviews. We will search for keywords related to guidelines, laboratory testing, and the 34 selected tests. We will report our study using the S1 Checklist. Review registration number: osf.io/yfs9z.
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- 2024
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47. Erratum: Epidemiology and factors associated with diarrhoea among children under five years of age in the Engela District in the Ohangwena Region, Namibia
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Maria F. Bauleth, Honore K. Mitonga, and Lusia N. Pinehas
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epidemiology ,factors ,diarrhoea ,under five year’s children ,engela district ,ohangwena region ,namibia ,Medicine ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
No abstract available.
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- 2024
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48. Moment Conditions for Dynamic Panel Logit Models with Fixed Effects
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Honoré, Bo E. and Weidner, Martin
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Economics - Econometrics - Abstract
This paper investigates the construction of moment conditions in discrete choice panel data with individual specific fixed effects. We describe how to systematically explore the existence of moment conditions that do not depend on the fixed effects, and we demonstrate how to construct them when they exist. Our approach is closely related to the numerical "functional differencing" construction in Bonhomme (2012), but our emphasis is to find explicit analytic expressions for the moment functions. We first explain the construction and give examples of such moment conditions in various models. Then, we focus on the dynamic binary choice logit model and explore the implications of the moment conditions for identification and estimation of the model parameters that are common to all individuals.
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- 2020
49. Potential confounders in linking elevated S100A8/A9 to left ventricular dysfunction in septic shock patients
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Honore, Patrick M., Perriens, Emily, and Blackman, Sydney
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- 2023
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50. Study claiming target in sepsis with erythromycin has no effect upon mortality and secondary outcomes includes patients with CRRT and RRT
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Honore, Patrick M., Blackman, Sydney, Perriens, Emily, and Bousbiat, Ibrahim
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- 2023
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