206,100 results on '"Stuart, A."'
Search Results
2. A WIL Assessment Meta-Framework for Discipline-Specific Employability Learning
- Author
-
Karen Young, Kelly Miller, Sharon La Fontaine, Stuart Palmer, and Malcolm Campbell
- Abstract
Work integrated learning (WIL), particularly placement-based WIL (P-WIL), has gained momentum in Higher Education over the last decade as an educational strategy for enhancing student employability. However, there is very limited guidance on effective ways to embed and scaffold WIL assessments across courses (degree programs). We present the findings from an action-research study, purposed with building academic confidence to review and re-design existing assessments to have intentional and explicit employability foci. Key to the study was the sharing of existing WIL frameworks to build practitioner expertise. What arose was a notable intersection of similar, but unplanned assessments focused on career development learning, authentic assessment, and/or demonstrations of theory-to-practice performance during WIL activities. What was lacking was a means for designing an intentional holistic schema that tagged a suite of assessments dedicated to the development and demonstration of student employability across the course. An outcome was the creation of a novel meta-assessment WIL framework (WAM-F) that supported and purposefully integrated previously independent items: 1) career development learning; 2) transferable skills development; 3) reflections from professional practice theory-to-practice WIL experiences; and explicitly tethered these to the discipline orientation of the course. The overt tethering of discipline-specific learning outcomes to a range of WIL activities, via a course-wide approach, not only assures the regulatory requirement for all WIL experiences to contribute to, scaffold and develop the learning outcomes of a course, but also makes sense of emerging educational approaches for STEM teaching teams not always familiar or confident with how to embed fit-for-purpose employability learning. more...
- Published
- 2024
Catalog
3. 'It's Just Good Teaching': Black Educators Respond to the So-Called 'Anti-Critical Race Theory' Backlash in K-12 Schools
- Author
-
Leana Cabral, Siettah Parks, and Amy Stuart Wells
- Abstract
As sociologists of education, we're deeply concerned about the growing censorship in our schools and the attack on teaching the truth about our history and present-day inequality. We also recognize how an educational past mired in antiblack practices and policies remains with us today and thus why teachers are still faced with navigating censorship and constraints on what they know are critical and proven pedagogies. This article explores the continued need for "fugitive" practices to employ educational models that de-center Eurocentric narratives and center Black or other marginalized cultures and ways of knowing. We argue that educators committed to antiracist teaching can learn from the legacy of the art of Black teaching and how it was subversively taken up and put into practice by Black teachers over time (Gay, 2002; Givens, 2021; Walker, 2018). more...
- Published
- 2024
4. Novice Decision Making during Creation of Electric Go-Kart Racing Educational Material
- Author
-
Stuart White
- Abstract
In 2017 Purdue evGrand Prix hired a K-12 Indiana public educator (the author) to write instructional material that could be implemented into participating teams' high school science and engineering classrooms. The goal was to create science-based integrated STEM learning experiences that complement the construction and racing of a 48-volt electric go-kart. Over the next four years, the instructional designer learned how to implement instructional design techniques and theories while navigating the changing dynamics of a fledgling educational program. Personal experience with woodworking, classroom instruction, and classroom curriculum development played a huge role in instructional design decisions. Early decision-making processes were rooted in making slight modifications to existing educational resources. Here, minor edits were made for application to motorsports generally, and go-kart racing specifically. When specific go-kart educational materials were not available, educational and classroom best practices became the raw material for creating new and innovative instructional material. Collaboration with peers, professionals, and subject matter experts became the norm, while feedback from participating schools helped develop a single-minded focus to meet both teacher and student needs. Formalized training within an instructional design and technology course provided much-needed organizational and methodological skills associated with the transition from a teacher designing classroom resources to an instructional design professional. more...
- Published
- 2024
5. A School-Wide Digital Programme Has Context Specific Impacts on Self-Regulation but Not Social Skills
- Author
-
Stuart McNaughton, Naomi Alexandra Rosedale, Tong Zhu, Lin Sophie Teng, Rebecca Jesson, Jacinta Oldehaver, Rashina Hoda, and Rachel Williamson
- Abstract
It is assumed that digital tools with ubiquitous classroom use have affordances for student agency and a range of social skills. However, few studies have explored the generalised impact of everyday digital classrooms on self-regulation and empathy, perspective taking and prosocial skills. Ten and 11 year old students' (n = 115) ratings of self-regulation, social skills and personality were examined in relationship to school-wide practices and instructional foci in two groups of schools (n = 9) involved in a digital innovation serving low-SES culturally diverse communities. In an early adopting group, students had received a high dosage of three or 4 years of 1:1 digital pedagogy, and in a later adopting group of schools, students had received a low dosage of only 6 months. This natural experiment revealed a context specific effect where high dosage students rated their regulation in digital contexts higher, but not in more general non-digital contexts. However, personality scores particularly those related to self-regulation, were higher for the high dosage students. There were no differences in social skills. The differences were related to the strong focus in the digital innovation on aspects of self-regulation. There was less focus on social skills in the digital innovation. More deliberate teacher augmentation and instructional designs for social skills may be required to capitalise on the affordances of digital tools. School-wide practices, while necessary may not be sufficient to enable the generalisation of skills without this deliberate teacher focus. more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. (Not) Going out and Barriers to Leaving the House for People with Intellectual Disabilities through the COVID-19 Pandemic in the UK
- Author
-
Sue Caton, Chris Hatton, Jill Bradshaw, Andrew Jahoda, Rosemary Kelly, Roseann Maguire, Edward Oloidi, Laurence Taggart, Stuart Todd, Richard P. Hastings, and the Coronavirus and People with Learning Disabilities Study Team more...
- Abstract
Background: People with intellectual disabilities commonly experience multiple barriers to 'going out'. Aims: This paper explores what barriers prevented people from going out, and if the extent and nature of going out changed over time for people with intellectual disabilities as the COVID-19 pandemic progressed. Methods: Data are drawn from a wider study that explored, at four time points, the experiences of people with intellectual disabilities through the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom. Findings: The number of people leaving the house for almost all reasons increased over time through the pandemic, except for some outdoor participation and exercise. However, there was a significant decrease in outdoor exercise at the final time point of the study. Reliance on other people and a lack of availability of support were identified as barriers. Conclusion: A combination of factors restricted the extent to which people were going out even after COVID-19 protections were lifted. more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Volunteering Trajectories and the COVID-19 Pandemic: Persistent, Emergent, and Former Volunteers and Personal, Moral, and Prudential Reasoning
- Author
-
Emma M. Grant, Jillian I. French, Marija Bolic, and Stuart I. Hammond
- Abstract
Although trajectories of youth volunteering were disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic, nevertheless some youth persisted in volunteering, and others emerged as volunteers. To understand volunteering trajectories, the present mixed method study proposed a model adapted from prior literature and examined volunteer trajectories during the pandemic. Youths' volunteer trajectories were categorized (as persistent, emergent, or former volunteer, or persistent non-volunteer), and their justifications for their volunteer decisions were classified using social domain theory (personal, social, moral, and prudential). A sample of 461 youth (M[subscript age] = 19.26; 68.8% female; 41.6% European or North American) from a large Canadian university completed a retrospective survey on pandemic volunteering and volunteer decisions. Volunteer decisions were coded using conventional and directed qualitative content analysis. Although the pandemic disrupted the volunteering trajectories of former volunteers, overall, more youth persisted or emerged as volunteers during the pandemic, a finding framed in both the trajectory and emergency and disaster literature. Volunteers were more likely to use "moral" justifications, whereas "prudential" justifications were more frequent among non-volunteers. The present study offers insight into the impact of the pandemic on youth volunteering and is one of the first studies to find a substantive role for prudential reasoning in youth decision making. more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Sustainable Careers within Greening Economies
- Author
-
Veronica Hopner, Stuart C. Carr, and Julia Wloch
- Abstract
Sustainable Livelihoods are more adaptable than precarious jobs, for career development through Decent Work. An essential element for Career Sustainability is Climate action, that includes Just Transitions from carbon-intensive to carbon-neutral or regenerative work. This paper analyses a municipal transition from coal-mining to a more carbon-neutral, city economy, which has foregrounded just transition for miners, and improved the wider ecosystem. The Polish city of Katowice in Poland illustrates how work and career structures, in this case municipal, can work for people in everyday life and their future careers. The case may also serve as a lighthouse project for future just transitions, as part of sustainable career development, by greening economies and supporting access to decent work for all. more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Exploring Views of South African Research Ethics Committees on Pandemic Preparedness and Response during COVID-19
- Author
-
Theresa Burgess, Stuart Rennie, and Keymanthri Moodley
- Abstract
South African research ethics committees (RECs) faced significant challenges during the COVID-19 pandemic. Research ethics committees needed to find a balance between careful consideration of scientific validity and ethical merit of protocols, and review with the urgency normally associated with public health emergency research. We aimed to explore the views of South African RECs on their pandemic preparedness and response during COVID-19. We conducted in-depth interviews with 21 participants from RECs that were actively involved in the review of COVID-19 related research, at seven academic institutions across South Africa. Interviews were conducted remotely using an in-depth interview guide that included questions regarding REC preparedness and response to COVID-19. Interviews were conducted until data saturation, and audio-recordings were transcribed verbatim and coded. An inductive approach to thematic analysis was used to organise data into themes and sub-themes. This study focused on three main themes: coping during COVID-19, building REC capacity during pandemic times and a consistently cautious approach to mutual recognition of REC reviews. Despite an initial sense of unpreparedness, RECs were able to adapt and maintain careful ethical oversight of both COVID and non-COVID research, and the rigour of REC reviews. Several important lessons for preparedness and response to future pandemics were identified, including heightened awareness of publication, funding and political pressures, the importance of regular training for RECs and researchers, and strategies to enhance moral resilience of REC members. Incremental steps are needed to build trust and authentic partnerships among RECs in inter-pandemic times, to facilitate collaboration during future public health emergencies. more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. What's Colour Got to Do with It? A Psychometric Assessment of Peggy Mcintosh's White Privilege
- Author
-
John Ehrich and Stuart Woodcock
- Abstract
Peggy McIntosh's ("White privilege and male privilege: A personal account of coming to see correspondences through work in women's studies," Working Paper 189, Wellesley Center for Research on Women, 1988) list of 50 racial privileges, which purportedly benefit persons of white skin colour, has had enormous impact on social science research and educational curriculum and pedagogy. Surprisingly, to date, no attempt has been made to empirically explore the validity and reliability of her list of racial privileges. To address this issue, we conducted a psychometric analysis on McIntosh's list of racial privileges with 204 adult Australian university students. Using a combination of factor analyses and Rasch modelling on McIntosh's list of racial privileges we identified a 27-item multidimensional scale consisting of three well-functioning and reliable subscales (i.e. a 15-item Racial Representation, a six-item Social Interaction and a six-item Culture and Politics subscale). Moreover, the derived multi-dimensional white privilege instrument was found to have good criterion validity in that persons' experiences of racism significantly predicted white privilege (i.e. the more racism experienced the less white privilege experienced and vice versa). Finally, analysis of variance comparisons indicated that persons with white skin colour had significantly more white privilege than persons with black skin colour and Asians, while Asians had more white privilege than persons with black skin colour. Overall, this study presents evidence of a psychometrically valid and reliable 27-item multi-dimensional white privilege instrument and lends empirical support to the theoretical underpinnings of McIntosh's contentions. more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Why so many Hemiptera invasions?
- Author
-
Liebhold, Andrew M., Turner, Rebecca M., Bartlett, Charles R., Bertelsmeier, Cleo, Blake, Rachael E., Brockerhoff, Eckehard G., Causton, Charlotte E., Matsunaga, Janis N., McKamey, Stuart H., Nahrung, Helen F., Owen, Christopher L., Pureswaran, Deepa S., Roques, Alain, Schneider, Scott A., Sanborn, Allen F., and Yamanaka, Takehiko more...
- Published
- 2024
12. In situ observations of large amplitude Alfv\'en waves heating and accelerating the solar wind
- Author
-
Rivera, Yeimy J., Badman, Samuel T., Stevens, Michael L., Verniero, Jaye L., Stawarz, Julia E., Shi, Chen, Raines, Jim M., Paulson, Kristoff W., Owen, Christopher J., Niembro, Tatiana, Louarn, Philippe, Livi, Stefano A., Lepri, Susan T., Kasper, Justin C., Horbury, Timothy S., Halekas, Jasper S., Dewey, Ryan M., De Marco, Rossana, and Bale, Stuart D. more...
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Plasma Physics ,Physics - Space Physics - Abstract
After leaving the Sun's corona, the solar wind continues to accelerate and cools, but more slowly than expected for a freely expanding adiabatic gas. We use in situ measurements from the Parker Solar Probe and Solar Orbiter spacecrafts to investigate a stream of solar wind as it traverses the inner heliosphere. The observations show heating and acceleration of the the plasma between the outer edge of the corona and near the orbit of Venus, in connection to the presence of large amplitude Alfv\'en waves. Alfv\'en waves are perturbations in the interplanetary magnetic field that transport energy. Our calculations show the damping and mechanical work performed by the Alfv\'en waves is sufficient to power the heating and acceleration of the fast solar wind in the inner heliosphere., Comment: This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of the AAAS for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Science on August 30 2024, DOI: 10.1126/science.adk6953 more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Properties of outer solar system pebbles during planetesimal formation from meteor observations
- Author
-
Jenniskens, Peter, Estrada, Paul R., Pilorz, Stuart, Gural, Peter S., Samuels, Dave, Rau, Steve, Abbott, Timothy M. C., Albers, Jim, Austin, Scott, Avner, Dan, Baggaley, Jack W., Beck, Tim, Blomquist, Solvay, Boyukata, Mustafa, Breukers, Martin, Cooney, Walt, Cooper, Tim, De Cicco, Marcelo, Devillepoix, Hadrien, Egland, Eric, Fahl, Elize, Gialluca, Megan, Grigsby, Bryant, Hanke, Toni, Harris, Barbara, Heathcote, Steve, Hemmelgarn, Samantha, Howell, Andy, Jehin, Emmanuel, Johannink, Carl, Juneau, Luke, Kisvarsanyi, Erika, Mey, Philip, Moskovitz, Nick, Odeh, Mohammad, Rachford, Brian, Rollinson, David, Scott, James M., Towner, Martin C., Unsalan, Ozan, van Wyk, Rynault, Wood, Jeff, Wray, James D., Pavao, C., and Lauretta, Dante S. more...
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,85 - Abstract
In the late stages of accretion leading up to the formation of planetesimals, particles grew to pebbles the size of 1-mm to tens of cm. That is the same size range that dominates the present-day comet mass loss. Meteoroids that size cause visible meteors on Earth. Here, we hypothesize that the size distribution and the physical and chemical properties of young meteoroid streams still contain information about the conditions in the solar nebula during these late stages of accretion. From observations of 47 young meteor showers, we find that freshly ejected meteoroids from long-period comets tend to have low bulk density and are distributed with equal surface area per log-mass interval (magnitude distribution index chi ~ 1.85), suggesting gentle accretion conditions. Jupiter-family comets, on the other hand, mostly produce meteoroids twice as dense and distributed with a steeper chi ~ 2.15 or even chi ~ 2.5, which implies that those pebbles grew from particles fragmenting in a collisional cascade or by catastrophic collisions, respectively. Both comet populations contain an admixture of compact materials that are sometimes sodium-poor, but Jupiter-family comets show a higher percentage (~8% on average) than long-period comet showers (~4%), and a wider range. While there are exceptions in both groups, the implication is that most long-period comets formed under gentle particle growth conditions, possibly near the 30 AU edge of the Trans Neptunian Disk, while most Jupiter family comets formed closer to the Sun where pebbles reached or passed the fragmentation barrier. This is possible if the Scattered Disk represents all objects scattered by Neptune during its migration, while the present-day outer Oort cloud formed only during and after the Sun had moved away from sibling stars., Comment: 82 pages, 14 figures, 3 tables more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. The impact of the FREDDA dedispersion algorithm on $H_0$ estimations with FRBs
- Author
-
Hoffmann, Jordan, James, Clancy W., Qiu, Hao, Glowacki, Marcin, Bannister, Keith W., Gupta, Vivek, Prochaska, Jason X., Bera, Apurba, Deller, Adam T., Gourdji, Kelly, Marnoch, Lachlan, Ryder, Stuart D., Scott, Danica R., Shannon, Ryan M., and Tejos, Nicolas more...
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Fast radio bursts (FRBs) are transient radio signals of extragalactic origins that are subjected to propagation effects such as dispersion and scattering. It follows then that these signals hold information regarding the medium they have traversed and are hence useful as cosmological probes of the Universe. Recently, FRBs were used to make an independent measure of the Hubble Constant $H_0$, promising to resolve the Hubble tension given a sufficient number of detected FRBs. Such cosmological studies are dependent on FRB population statistics, cosmological parameters and detection biases, and thus it is important to accurately characterise each of these. In this work, we empirically characterise the sensitivity of the Fast Real-time Engine for Dedispersing Amplitudes (FREDDA) which is the current detection system for the Australian Square Kilometer Array Pathfinder (ASKAP). We coherently redisperse high-time resolution data of 13 ASKAP-detected FRBs and inject them into FREDDA to determine the recovered signal-to-noise ratios as a function of dispersion measure (DM). We find that for 11 of the 13 FRBs, these results are consistent with injecting idealised pulses. Approximating this sensitivity function with theoretical predictions results in a systematic error of 0.3$\,$km$\,$s$^{-1}\,$Mpc$^{-1}$ on $H_0$ when it is the only free parameter. Allowing additional parameters to vary could increase this systematic by up to $\sim1\,$km$\,$s$^{-1}\,$Mpc$^{-1}$. We estimate that this systematic will not be relevant until $\sim$400 localised FRBs have been detected, but will likely be significant in resolving the Hubble tension., Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, Published in MNRAS more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Operator Learning Using Random Features: A Tool for Scientific Computing
- Author
-
Nelsen, Nicholas H. and Stuart, Andrew M.
- Subjects
Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Mathematics - Numerical Analysis ,Statistics - Machine Learning ,68T05, 65D40, 62J07, 62M45, 68W20, 35R60 - Abstract
Supervised operator learning centers on the use of training data, in the form of input-output pairs, to estimate maps between infinite-dimensional spaces. It is emerging as a powerful tool to complement traditional scientific computing, which may often be framed in terms of operators mapping between spaces of functions. Building on the classical random features methodology for scalar regression, this paper introduces the function-valued random features method. This leads to a supervised operator learning architecture that is practical for nonlinear problems yet is structured enough to facilitate efficient training through the optimization of a convex, quadratic cost. Due to the quadratic structure, the trained model is equipped with convergence guarantees and error and complexity bounds, properties that are not readily available for most other operator learning architectures. At its core, the proposed approach builds a linear combination of random operators. This turns out to be a low-rank approximation of an operator-valued kernel ridge regression algorithm, and hence the method also has strong connections to Gaussian process regression. The paper designs function-valued random features that are tailored to the structure of two nonlinear operator learning benchmark problems arising from parametric partial differential equations. Numerical results demonstrate the scalability, discretization invariance, and transferability of the function-valued random features method., Comment: 36 pages, 1 table, 9 figures. SIGEST version of SIAM J. Sci. Comput. Vol. 43 No. 5 (2021) pp. A3212-A3243, hence text overlap with arXiv:2005.10224 more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Reduced decay in Josephson coupling across ferromagnetic junctions with spin-orbit coupling layers
- Author
-
Kindiak, Ivan, Mishra, Swapna Sindhu, Migliorini, Andrea, Pal, Banabir, and Parkin, Stuart S. P.
- Subjects
Condensed Matter - Superconductivity ,Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
The generation of $S_z=1$ triplet Cooper pairs has been predicted theoretically in superconducting-ferromagnetic hybrid heterostructures in the presence of spin-orbit coupling [F. S. Bergeret and I. V. Tokatly, Phys. Rev. B 89, 134517 (2014) and Jacobsen et al., Sci. Rep. 6, 23926 (2016)]. In this study, we experimentally investigate vertical Josephson junctions where the weak link is formed from a ferromagnetic layer with perpendicular magnetic anisotropy sandwiched by two non-magnetic layers with weak or strong spin-orbit coupling. We find that the decay of the Josephson coupling is reduced in the latter case, possibly indicating the presence of $S_z=1$ spin-triplet correlations. We speculate that the canted magnetization required for these correlations is provided by the interaction of magnetization with Meissner effect in the superconducting layers. more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Constraining modified gravity scenarios with the 6dFGS and SDSS galaxy peculiar velocity datasets
- Author
-
Lyall, Stuart, Blake, Chris, and Turner, Ryan J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The detailed nature of dark energy remains a mystery, leaving the possibility that its effects might be explained by changes to the laws of gravity on large scales. The peculiar velocities of galaxies directly trace the strength of gravity on cosmic scales and provide a means to further constrain such models. We generate constraints on different scenarios of gravitational physics by measuring peculiar velocity and galaxy clustering two-point correlations, using redshifts and distances from the 6-degree Field Galaxy Survey and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Peculiar Velocity samples, and fitting them against models characteristic of different cosmologies. Our best-fitting results are all found to be in statistical agreement with General Relativity, in which context we measure the low-redshift growth of structure to be $f\sigma_8 = 0.329^{+0.081}_{-0.083}$, consistent with the prediction of the standard $\Lambda$CDM model. We also fit the modified gravity scenarios of Dvali-Gabadadze-Porrati (nDGP) and a Hu-Sawicki model of $f(R)$ gravity, finding the $2\sigma$ limit of their characteristic parameters to be $r_cH_0/c>6.987$ and $-\log_{10}(|f_{R0}|)>4.703$, respectively. These constraints are comparable to other literature values, though it should be noted that they are significantly affected by the prior adopted for their characteristic parameters. When applied to much larger upcoming peculiar velocity surveys such as DESI, this method will place rapidly-improving constraints on modified gravity models of cosmic expansion and growth., Comment: 13 pages, 10 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in MNRAS more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. New Radiative and Collisional Atomic Data for Sr {\sc ii} and Y {\sc ii} with application to Kilonova modelling
- Author
-
Mulholland, Leo, McElroy, Niall, McNeill, Fiona, Sim, Stuart, Ballance, Connor, and Ramsbottom, Catherine
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Atomic Physics ,Physics - Chemical Physics - Abstract
The spectra of singly ionised Strontium and Yttrium (Sr {\sc ii} and Y {\sc ii}) have been proposed as identifications of certain spectral features in the AT2017gfo spectrum. With the growing demand for NLTE simulations of Kilonovae, there is a increasing need for atomic data for these and other $r$-process elements. Our goal is to expand upon the current set of atomic data for $r$-process elements, by presenting transition probabilities and Maxwellian-averaged effective collision strengths for Sr {\sc ii} and Y {\sc ii}. The Breit-Pauli and DARC $R$-matrix codes are employed to calculate the appropriate collision strengths, which are thermally averaged according to a Maxwellian distribution to calculate excitation and de-excitation rates. The {\sc tardis} and {\sc ColRadPy} packages are subsequently used to perform LTE and NLTE modelling respectively. A complete set of transition probabilities and effective collision strengths involving levels for Sr {\sc ii} and Y {\sc ii} have been calculated for temperature ranges compatible with kilonova plasma conditions. Forbidden transitions were found to disagree heavily with the Axelrod approximation, an approximation which is currently employed by other models within the literature. Theoretically important spectral lines are identified with both LTE and NLTE modelling codes. LTE simulations in {\sc tardis} reveal no new significant changes to the full synthetic spectra. NLTE simulations in {\sc ColRadPy} provide indications of which features are expected to be strong for a range of regimes, and we include luminosity estimates. Synthetic emission spectra over KNe densities and temperatures reveal potentially interesting spectral lines in the NIR. more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Greenspace and us: Exploring co-design approaches to increase engagement with nature by girls and young women
- Author
-
Cole, Stuart, Goodenough, Jessica, Haniff, Melissa, Hussain, Nafeesa, Ibrahim, Sahar, Jani, Anant, Jiggens, Emily, Khan, Ansa, Langford, Pippa, Montgomery, Louise, Moore, Lizzie, Rowe, Rosie, and Skinner, Sam more...
- Published
- 2024
20. Statistics Anxiety or Statistics Fear? A Reinforcement Sensitivity Theory Perspective on Psychology Students' Statistics Anxiety, Attitudes, and Self-Efficacy
- Author
-
Renata A. Mendes, Natalie J. Loxton, Jaimee Stuart, Alexander W. O'Donnell, and Matthew J. Stainer
- Abstract
This research investigates the role of reinforcement sensitivity theory (RST) in statistics education among two distinct samples of undergraduate psychology students. In Study 1, 318 students in a third-year statistics course completed self-report measures of RST, anxiety, attitudes, and self-efficacy concerning the study of statistics. In Study 2, 577 students from first-, second-, and third-year statistics courses participated. Controlling for age and gender, both studies found students who were high in goal-drive persistence reported lower statistics anxiety, higher statistics self-efficacy and more favourable attitudes toward learning statistics, while students who were high in the tendency to avoid threat reported higher statistics anxiety. Those with a more sensitive behavioural inhibition system reported greater statistics anxiety and less favourable attitudes, in Study 2 but not Study 1. Results indicate that RST dimensions account for as much as 23% of additional variance in statistics anxiety, 18% in statistics self-efficacy, and 11% in attitudes, after controlling for age and gender. These studies highlight the utility of RST dimensions, notably goal-drive persistence, threat sensitivity, and behavioural inhibition, in providing critical information as to personality differences among students that need to be considered when developing programs targeting statistics anxiety, attitudes, and self-efficacy. more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Supporting the Health, Education and Wellbeing of Children and Families: A Priority-Setting Study with the Service System in Logan, Queensland
- Author
-
Michelle A. Krahe, Jaimee Stuart, Sara Branch, and Mandy Gibson
- Abstract
Priority-setting is a collective responsibility centred around inclusive engagement and alignment with the needs and desired outcomes of the community. In this study, we leveraged the collective expertise of stakeholders from the child and family service system, to identify priorities for supporting the health, education and wellbeing of children and families living in Logan, Queensland. A pragmatic approach combining a modified nominal group technique and consensus methodology was undertaken. Key system factors were identified and consolidated into 10 priority areas, which were ranked via an online questionnaire. The top three priority areas were identified by the service system as (i) early family and child support programs, (ii) support and resourcing of existing services, and (iii) recognition and support of a diverse community. These results present an opportunity to leverage the local knowledge and expertise of the service system to design solutions that address the greatest challenges for children and families in place. more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Infant Sleep and Anxiety Disorders in Early Childhood: Findings from an Australian Pregnancy Cohort Study
- Author
-
Kelli K. MacMillan, Declan Bourke, Stuart J. Watson, Andrew J. Lewis, Douglas M. Teti, Helen L. Ball, and Megan Galbally
- Abstract
Emphasis on continuous infant sleep overnight may be driven by parental concern of risk to child mental health outcomes. The Mercy Pregnancy and Emotional Wellbeing Study (MPEWS) examined whether infant sleep at 6 and 12 months postpartum predicts anxiety disorders at 2-4 years, and whether this is moderated by maternal depression, active physical comforting (APC) or maternal cognitions about infant sleep. Data included 349 women and infants. Infant sleep was measured using the Brief Infant Sleep Questionnaire and child anxiety disorders by the Preschool Age Psychiatric Assessment. The risk of developing generalised anxiety or social phobia disorders at 3-4 years was reduced by 42% (p = 0.001) and 31% (p = 0.001), respectively, for a one standard deviation increase in total sleep at 12 months. No other infant sleep outcomes were associated. Maternal depression, APC and cognitions about infant sleep did not significantly moderate these relationships. Focus may need to be on total infant sleep, rather than when sleep is achieved. more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. 'Careering' -- Toward Radicalism in Radical Times: Links to Human Security and Sustainable Livelihoods
- Author
-
Veronica Hopner and Stuart Colin Carr
- Abstract
In this Age of the Anthropocene, the world of work is being radically disrupted by mass precarity, rising wage and income inequality, habitat destruction, and the rise of artificial intelligence. Facing such insecurity, people, we show, are careering toward radical ways of making a living. They range from radical professionals to social media influencing and environmental activism. Human security is fundamentally enhanced by sustainable livelihoods, and we explore ways not only to de-radicalise, but also to accept and embrace radical careering, if and whenever it serves the purpose of making people's livelihoods more sustainable for society, economies, and ecosystems. The article concludes by introducing an Index of Sustainable Livelihoods (SL-I). Success to the successful. The Sustainable Livelihoods Index (SL-I) is designed to be a 'visible hand' for end-users, including career counsellors, students, and workers undergoing career transitions, by Corporate Responsibility Officers, and by government ministries supporting just workforce transitions into sustainable livelihoods. more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Focusing Resources to Promote Student Well-Being: Associations of Malleable Psychosocial Factors with College Academic Performance and Distress and Suicidality
- Author
-
Chris Brownson, Brittany P. Boyer, Chris Runyon, Ashley E. Boynton, Erika Jonietz, Ben I. Spear, Stuart A. Irvin, Sarah K. Christman, Michael J. Balsan, and David J. Drum
- Abstract
College students' mental health concerns have dramatically increased in prevalence and severity over the past decade, overwhelming the capacity of counseling centers to meet demand for services. In response, institutions of higher education (IHEs) increasingly emphasize prevention, education, and outreach efforts aimed at improving well-being. Although this focus has prompted an increase in research on student well-being, few studies have investigated the unique contributions of malleable psychosocial factors on student outcomes. This study aims to address this gap in the literature by examining the relative impact of an array of psychosocial factors--adaptive and maladaptive perfectionism, coping self-efficacy, social connectedness, perceived burdensomeness, grit, resilience, and meaning in life--on academic performance and distress and suicidality in a sample of 7505 students from 15 U.S. IHEs. Controlling for institutional selectivity and non-malleable aspects of students' identities and pre-college experiences, facets of perfectionism, grit, and emotion-focused coping self-efficacy were the psychosocial factors most strongly associated with GPA, and perceived burdensomeness, social connectedness, emotion-focused coping self-efficacy, and resilience were most strongly associated with distress and suicidality. Among non-malleable factors, race/ethnicity explained the most variance in GPA and gender identity explained the most variance in distress and suicidality. Results are discussed in light of persistent, identity-based disparities in academic achievement and suicide risk and the potential of psychosocial factors as intervention targets to improve academic performance and reduce suicide risk. more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Barriers to Healthcare and a 'Triple Empathy Problem' May Lead to Adverse Outcomes for Autistic Adults: A Qualitative Study
- Author
-
Sebastian C. K. Shaw, Laura Carravallah, Mona Johnson, Jane O'Sullivan, Nicholas Chown, Stuart Neilson, and Mary Doherty
- Abstract
Autistic people experience more co-occurring health conditions and, on average, die younger than non-autistic people. Despite growing awareness of health inequities, autistic people still report barriers to accessing healthcare. We aimed to explore the experiences of autistic people accessing healthcare, shining a light on the complex interplay of relevant factors and to explain, at least in part, the possible reasons underling health disparities and adverse health outcomes. This is a qualitative study from an autistic research team. Data were collected from 1248 autistic adults as part of a large, mixed-methods, international survey exploring barriers to primary healthcare. This article reports the qualitative findings, following a thematic analysis. Using our exploratory findings, we then constructed a model to explain the reported experiences. Respondents reported a variety of barriers. Here, our article gives voice to their stories, in their own words. Themes included: early barriers; communication mismatch; doubt -- in oneself and from doctors; helplessness and fear; and healthcare avoidance and serious adverse health outcomes. Our constructed model outlines a chronological journey through which healthcare access barriers may lead to adverse health outcomes. Our findings also build on the double empathy problem, situating this in a medical context, proposing a triple empathy problem. more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Assessing and Advancing the Potential of Quantum Computing: A NASA Case Study
- Author
-
Rieffel, Eleanor G., Asanjan, Ata Akbari, Alam, M. Sohaib, Anand, Namit, Neira, David E. Bernal, Block, Sophie, Brady, Lucas T., Cotton, Steve, Izquierdo, Zoe Gonzalez, Grabbe, Shon, Gustafson, Erik, Hadfield, Stuart, Lott, P. Aaron, Maciejewski, Filip B., Mandrà, Salvatore, Marshall, Jeffrey, Mossi, Gianni, Bauza, Humberto Munoz, Saied, Jason, Suri, Nishchay, Venturelli, Davide, Wang, Zhihui, and Biswas, Rupak more...
- Subjects
Quantum Physics - Abstract
Quantum computing is one of the most enticing computational paradigms with the potential to revolutionize diverse areas of future-generation computational systems. While quantum computing hardware has advanced rapidly, from tiny laboratory experiments to quantum chips that can outperform even the largest supercomputers on specialized computational tasks, these noisy-intermediate scale quantum (NISQ) processors are still too small and non-robust to be directly useful for any real-world applications. In this paper, we describe NASA's work in assessing and advancing the potential of quantum computing. We discuss advances in algorithms, both near- and longer-term, and the results of our explorations on current hardware as well as with simulations, including illustrating the benefits of algorithm-hardware co-design in the NISQ era. This work also includes physics-inspired classical algorithms that can be used at application scale today. We discuss innovative tools supporting the assessment and advancement of quantum computing and describe improved methods for simulating quantum systems of various types on high-performance computing systems that incorporate realistic error models. We provide an overview of recent methods for benchmarking, evaluating, and characterizing quantum hardware for error mitigation, as well as insights into fundamental quantum physics that can be harnessed for computational purposes., Comment: 27 pages, 0 figures more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Quantum rates in dissipative systems with spatially varying friction
- Author
-
Bridge, Oliver, Lazzaroni, Paolo, Martinazzo, Rocco, Rossi, Mariana, Althorpe, Stuart C., and Litman, Yair
- Subjects
Physics - Chemical Physics - Abstract
We investigate whether making the friction spatially dependent on the reaction coordinate introduces quantum effects into the thermal reaction rates for dissipative reactions. Quantum rates are calculated using the numerically exact multi-configuration time-dependent Hartree (MCTDH) method, as well as the approximate ring-polymer molecular dynamics (RPMD), ring-polymer instanton (RPI) methods, and classical mechanics. By conducting simulations across a wide range of temperatures and friction strengths, we can identify the various regimes that govern the reactive dynamics. At high temperatures, in addition to the spatial-diffusion and energy-diffusion regimes predicted by Kramer's rate theory, a (coherent) tunnelling-dominated regime is identified at low friction. At low temperatures, incoherent tunnelling dominates most of Kramer's curve, except at very low friction when coherent tunnelling becomes dominant. Unlike in classical mechanics, the bath's influence changes the equilibrium time-independent properties of the system, leading to a complex interplay between spatially dependent friction and nuclear quantum effects even at high temperatures. More specifically, a realistic friction profile can lead to an increase (decrease) of the quantum (classical) rates with friction within the spatial-diffusion regime, showing that classical and quantum rates display qualitatively different behaviours. Except at very low frictions, we find that RPMD captures most of the quantum effects in the thermal reaction rates. more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Squeezing the quantum noise of a gravitational-wave detector below the standard quantum limit
- Author
-
Jia, Wenxuan, Xu, Victoria, Kuns, Kevin, Nakano, Masayuki, Barsotti, Lisa, Evans, Matthew, Mavalvala, Nergis, Abbott, Rich, Abouelfettouh, Ibrahim, Adhikari, Rana, Ananyeva, Alena, Appert, Stephen, Arai, Koji, Aritomi, Naoki, Aston, Stuart, Ball, Matthew, Ballmer, Stefan, Barker, David, Berger, Beverly, Betzwieser, Joseph, Bhattacharjee, Dripta, Billingsley, Garilynn, Bode, Nina, Bonilla, Edgard, Bossilkov, Vladimir, Branch, Adam, Brooks, Aidan, Brown, Daniel, Bryant, John, Cahillane, Craig, Cao, Huy-tuong, Capote, Elenna, Chen, Yanbei, Clara, Filiberto, Collins, Josh, Compton, Camilla, Cottingham, Robert, Coyne, Dennis, Crouch, Ryan, Csizmazia, Janos, Cullen, Torrey, Dartez, Louis, Demos, Nicholas, Dohmen, Ezekiel, Driggers, Jenne, Dwyer, Sheila, Effler, Anamaria, Ejlli, Aldo, Etzel, Todd, Feicht, Jon, Frey, Raymond, Frischhertz, William, Fritschel, Peter, Frolov, Valery, Fulda, Paul, Fyffe, Michael, Ganapathy, Dhruva, Gateley, Bubba, Giaime, Joe, Giardina, Dwayne, Glanzer, Jane, Goetz, Evan, Jones, Aaron, Gras, Slawomir, Gray, Corey, Griffith, Don, Grote, Hartmut, Guidry, Tyler, Hall, Evan, Hanks, Jonathan, Hanson, Joe, Heintze, Matthew, Helmling-cornell, Adrian, Huang, Hsiang-yu, Inoue, Yuki, James, Alasdair, Jennings, Austin, Karat, Srinath, Kasprzack, Marie, Kawabe, Keita, Kijbunchoo, Nutsinee, Kissel, Jeffrey, Kontos, Antonios, Kumar, Rahul, Landry, Michael, Lantz, Brian, Laxen, Michael, Lee, Kyung-ha, Lesovsky, Madeline, Llamas, Francisco, Lormand, Marc, Loughlin, Hudsonalexander, Macas, Ronaldas, Macinnis, Myron, Makarem, Camille, Mannix, Benjaminrobert, Mansell, Georgia, Martin, Rodica, Maxwell, Nyath, Mccarrol, Garrett, Mccarthy, Richard, Mcclelland, David, Mccormick, Scott, Mcculler, Lee, Mcrae, Terry, Mera, Fernando, Merilh, Edmond, Meylahn, Fabian, Mittleman, Richard, Moraru, Dan, Moreno, Gerardo, Mould, Matthew, Mullavey, Adam, Nelson, Timothy, Neunzert, Ansel, Oberling, Jason, Ohanlon, Timothy, Osthelder, Charles, Ottaway, David, Overmier, Harry, Parker, William, Pele, Arnaud, Pham, Huyen, Pirello, Marc, Quetschke, Volker, Ramirez, Karla, Reyes, Jonathan, Richardson, Jonathan, Robinson, Mitchell, Rollins, Jameson, Romie, Janeen, Ross, Michael, Sadecki, Travis, Sanchez, Anthony, Sanchez, Eduardo, Sanchez, Luis, Savage, Richard, Schaetzl, Dean, Schiworski, Mitchell, Schnabel, Roman, Schofield, Robert, Schwartz, Eyal, Sellers, Danny, Shaffer, Thomas, Short, Ryan, Sigg, Daniel, Slagmolen, Bram, Soni, Siddharth, Sun, Ling, Tanner, David, Thomas, Michael, Thomas, Patrick, Thorne, Keith, Torrie, Calum, Traylor, Gary, Vajente, Gabriele, Vanosky, Jordan, Vecchio, Alberto, Veitch, Peter, Vibhute, Ajay, Vonreis, Erik, Warner, Jim, Weaver, Betsy, Weiss, Rainer, Whittle, Chris, Willke, Benno, Wipf, Christopher, Yamamoto, Hiro, Yu, Haocun, Zhang, Liyuan, and Zucker, Michael more...
- Subjects
General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Quantum Physics - Abstract
Precision measurements of space and time, like those made by the detectors of the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO), are often confronted with fundamental limitations imposed by quantum mechanics. The Heisenberg uncertainty principle dictates that the position and momentum of an object cannot both be precisely measured, giving rise to an apparent limitation called the Standard Quantum Limit (SQL). Reducing quantum noise below the SQL in gravitational-wave detectors, where photons are used to continuously measure the positions of freely falling mirrors, has been an active area of research for decades. Here we show how the LIGO A+ upgrade reduced the detectors' quantum noise below the SQL by up to 3 dB while achieving a broadband sensitivity improvement, more than two decades after this possibility was first presented. more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. A model for galaxy-galaxy strong lensing statistics in surveys
- Author
-
Ferrami, Giovanni and Wyithe, Stuart
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Photometric wide-area observations in the next decade will be capable of detecting a large number of galaxy-scale strong gravitational lenses, increasing the gravitational lens sample size by orders of magnitude. To aid in forecasting and analysis of these surveys, we construct a flexible model based on observed distributions for the lens and source properties and test it on the results of past lens searches, including SL2S, SuGOHI and searches on the COSMOS HST and DES fields. We use this model to estimate the expected yields of some current and planned surveys, including Euclid Wide, Vera Rubin LSST, and Roman High Latitude Wide Area. The model proposed includes a set of free parameters to constrain on the identifiability of a lens in an image, allowing construction of prior probability distributions for different lens detection methods. The code used in this work is made publicly available., Comment: 18 pages, 15 figures. Accepted in MNRAS more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. FORECASTING A SUMMER OF EXTREMES : BUILDING STAKEHOLDER RESPONSE CAPACITY TO MARINE HEATWAVES
- Author
-
Hobday, Alistair J., Spillman, Claire M., Allnutt, Jamie, Coleman, Melinda A., Bailleul, Fred, Blamey, Laura K., Brodie, Stephanie, Chandrapavan, Arani, Hartog, Jason R., Maynard, David, Mundy, Craig, Plagányi, Éva E., Seaborn, Frances, Smith, Grant A., and Stuart-Smith, Jemina more...
- Published
- 2024
31. Identification of Glandular (Acinar)/Tubule Formation in Invasive Carcinoma of the Breast. A Study to Determine Concordance Using the World Health Organization Definition
- Author
-
Lo, Yungtai, Lester, Susan C., Ellis, Ian O., Lanjewar, Sonali, Laurini, Javier, Patel, Ami, Bhattarai, Ava, Ustun, Berrin, Harmon, Bryan, Kleer, Celina G., Ross, Dara, Amin, Ali, Wang, Yihong, Bradley, Robert, Turashvili, Gulisa, Zeng, Jennifer, Baum, Jordan, Singh, Kamaljeet, Hakima, Laleh, Harigopal, Malini, Komforti, Miglena, Shin, Sandra J., Abbott, Sara E., Jaffer, Shabnam, Badve, Sunil Shankar, Khoury, Thaer, D'Alfonso, Timothy M., Ginter, Paula S., Collins, Victoria, Towne, William, Gan, Yujun, Nassar, Aziza, Sahin, Aysegul A., Flieder, Andrea, Aldrees, Rana, Ngo, Marie-Helene, Edema, Ukuemi, Sapna, Fnu, Schnitt, Stuart J., and Fineberg, Susan A. more...
- Subjects
Breast tumors -- Diagnosis -- Care and treatment -- Development and progression ,Histology, Pathological -- Research -- Standards - Abstract
Context.-The Nottingham Grading System (NGS) developed by Elston and Ellis is used to grade invasive breast cancer (IBC). Glandular (acinar)/tubule formation is a component of NGS. Objective.-To investigate the ability of pathologists to identify individual structures that should be classified as glandular (acinar)/tubule formation. Design.-A total of 58 hematoxylin-eosin photographic images of IBC with 1 structure circled were classified as tubules (41 cases) or nontubules (17 cases) by Professor Ellis. Images were sent as a PowerPoint (Microsoft) file to breast pathologists, who were provided with the World Health Organization definition of a tubule and asked to determine if a circled structure represented a tubule. Results.-Among 35 pathologists, the [kappa] statistic for assessing agreement in evaluating the 58 images was 0.324 (95% CI, 0.314-0.335). The median concordance rate between a participating pathologist and Professor Ellis was 94.1% for evaluating 17 nontubule cases and 53.7% for 41 tubule cases. A total of 41% of the tubule cases were classified correctly by less than 50% of pathologists. Structures classified as tubules by Professor Ellis but often not recognized as tubules by pathologists included glands with complex architecture, mucinous carcinoma, and the "inverted tubule" pattern of micropapillary carcinoma. A total of 80% of participants reported that they did not have clarity on what represented a tubule. Conclusions.-We identified structures that should be included as tubules but that were not readily identified by pathologists. Greater concordance for identification of tubules might be obtained by providing more detailed images and descriptions of the types of structures included as tubules. (Arch Pathol Lab Med. 2024;148:1119-1125; doi: 10.5858/arpa.2023-0163-OA), Histologic grading of invasive breast carcinoma (IBC) represents a morphologic assessment of the degree of tumor differentiation and is routinely reported in the pathologic assessment of IBC. Histologic grade is [...] more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Interprofessional education: Building social capital among faculty. Are we there yet?
- Author
-
van Diggele, Christie, Roberts, Chris, Bloomfield, Jacqueline, and Lane, Stuart
- Published
- 2024
33. Additive manufacturing for mass oroduction: a new model to estimate the crystallinity and tensile properties of polypropylene by multi-jet fusion
- Author
-
Khorasani, Mahyar, Noronha, Jordan, MacDonald, Eric, Kafi, Abdullah, Downing, David, Ghasemi, Amirhossein, Gibson, Ian, Brandt, Milan, Bateman, Stuart, and Leary, Martin
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. The mnemonic potency of functional facts
- Author
-
Wilson, Stuart
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Evaluating mixing methods for FFF-printed PLA-HA composites: Towards high-performance composites and advancements in additive manufacturing
- Author
-
Sardar, Muhammad Zaryyab, Gide, Kunal Manoj, Stuart, Alexander, Rostobaya, Violetta, Zarrabinia, Kian, Beheshti, Ali, and Bagheri, Shaghayegh
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Validation of a peer observation and evaluation tool for online teaching in the U.S.: Validation of a peer observation and evaluation...
- Author
-
Jia, Yuane, Spagnolo, Amy B., Barrett, Nora, Murphy, Ann A., Basto, Peter M., Rothpletz-Puglia, Pamela, and Luther, Stuart
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Incorporating Resource Constraints in Health Economic Evaluations: Overview and Methodological Considerations: Incorporating Resource Constraints in Health Economic Evaluations
- Author
-
Thokala, Praveen, Duarte, Henrique, Wright, Stuart, Husereau, Don, Durand-Zaleski, Isabelle, Lindgren, Peter, Postema, Roelien, Machnicki, Gerardo, and Garrison, Louis
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. MAFLD but not MASLD increases risk of all-cause mortality in regional Australia, with components of metabolic syndrome exacerbating factors: 20 year longitudinal, cohort study
- Author
-
Vaz, Karl, Kemp, William, Majeed, Ammar, Lubel, John, Magliano, Dianna J., Glenister, Kristen M., Bourke, Lisa, Simmons, David, and Roberts, Stuart K.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Neurosurgical application of olaparib from a thermo-responsive paste potentiates DNA damage to prolong survival in malignant glioma
- Author
-
Serra, Riccardo, Smith, Stuart J., Rowlinson, Jonathan, Gorelick, Noah, Moloney, Cara, McCrorie, Phoebe, Veal, Gareth J., Berry, Philip, Chalmers, Anthony J., Suk, Ian, Shakesheff, Kevin M., Alexander, Cameron, Grundy, Richard G., Brem, Henry, Tyler, Betty M., and Rahman, Ruman more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Bots and baddies: supporting the integrity of online survey research in the face of a growing challenge
- Author
-
Hitches, Elizabeth, Dudley, Dean, Johnstone, Melissa, and Woodcock, Stuart
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Measuring aspects of stigma cultures in healthcare settings
- Author
-
Stuart, Heather and Knaak, Stephanie
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The Effect of Gallium Addition on the Microstructure and Superconducting Properties of In-Bi-Sn Solder Alloys
- Author
-
Zhou, Jiye, Shahbazi, Mahboobeh, Poitras, Jordan T., Tan, Xin Fu, McDonald, Stuart D., and Nogita, Kazuhiro
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Effect of sorghum flour-containing pasta on postprandial glycemia, appetite and energy intake in healthy individuals
- Author
-
Khan, Imran, Johnson, Stuart K., Yousif, Adel M., Gamlath, Shirani, Ahmad, Jamil, and Almajwal, Ali Madi
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Adverse Drug Events in Ambulatory Care: A Cross-Sectional Study: Adverse Drug Events in Ambulatory Care
- Author
-
Plasek, Joseph M., Amato, Mary G., Salem, Abigail, Foer, Dinah, Lipsitz, Stuart, Jackson, Gretchen Purcell, Bates, David W., and Zhou, Li
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Paleoclimatic Controls on Clay Mineral Distribution in the Early Cretaceous (Barremian): The Wessex Basin, Southeast England
- Author
-
Akinlotan, Oladapo O., Moghalu, Ogechukwu A., Hatter, Stuart J., Jolly, Byami A., and Anyiam, Okwudiri A.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Controllable orbital angular momentum monopoles in chiral topological semimetals
- Author
-
Yen, Yun, Krieger, Jonas A., Yao, Mengyu, Robredo, Iñigo, Manna, Kaustuv, Yang, Qun, McFarlane, Emily C., Shekhar, Chandra, Borrmann, Horst, Stolz, Samuel, Widmer, Roland, Gröning, Oliver, Strocov, Vladimir N., Parkin, Stuart S. P., Felser, Claudia, Vergniory, Maia G., Schüler, Michael, and Schröter, Niels B. M. more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Use of urine neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin for nephrotoxic medication acute kidney injury screening in neonates
- Author
-
Slagle, Cara L., Hemmelgarn, Trina, Gavigan, Hailey W., Krallman, Kelli A., and Goldstein, Stuart L.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The Impact of COVID-19 on Immigration Attitudes in the US
- Author
-
Madrigal, Guadalupe and Soroka, Stuart
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Costs and cost-effectiveness of the Kerala pilot screening programme for diabetic retinopathy in the public health system
- Author
-
Wittenberg, Raphael, Anderson, Robert, Redding, Stuart, Gopal, Bipin, Sadanandan, Rajeev, Sahasranamam, Vasudeva Iyer, George, Simon, Premnazir, Lakshmi, Netuveli, Gopalakrishnan, Srinath, Jyotsna, Ramakrishnan, Radha, Conroy, Dolores, and Sivaprasad, Sobha more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Genome-wide association analysis provides insights into the molecular etiology of dilated cardiomyopathy
- Author
-
Zheng, Sean L., Henry, Albert, Cannie, Douglas, Lee, Michael, Miller, David, McGurk, Kathryn A., Bond, Isabelle, Xu, Xiao, Issa, Hanane, Francis, Catherine, De Marvao, Antonio, Theotokis, Pantazis I., Buchan, Rachel J., Speed, Doug, Abner, Erik, Adams, Lance, Aragam, Krishna G., Ärnlöv, Johan, Raja, Anna Axelsson, Backman, Joshua D., Baksi, John, Barton, Paul J. R., Biddinger, Kiran J., Boersma, Eric, Brandimarto, Jeffrey, Brunak, Søren, Bundgaard, Henning, Carey, David J., Charron, Philippe, Cook, James P., Cook, Stuart A., Denaxas, Spiros, Deleuze, Jean-François, Doney, Alexander S., Elliott, Perry, Erikstrup, Christian, Esko, Tõnu, Farber-Eger, Eric H., Finan, Chris, Garnier, Sophie, Ghouse, Jonas, Giedraitis, Vilmantas, Guðbjartsson, Daniel F., Haggerty, Christopher M., Halliday, Brian P., Helgadottir, Anna, Hemingway, Harry, Hillege, Hans L., Kardys, Isabella, Lind, Lars, Lindgren, Cecilia M., Lowery, Brandon D., Manisty, Charlotte, Margulies, Kenneth B., Moon, James C., Mordi, Ify R., Morley, Michael P., Morris, Andrew D., Morris, Andrew P., Morton, Lori, Noursadeghi, Mahdad, Ostrowski, Sisse R., Owens, Anjali T., Palmer, Colin N. A., Pantazis, Antonis, Pedersen, Ole B. V., Prasad, Sanjay K., Shekhar, Akshay, Smelser, Diane T., Srinivasan, Sundararajan, Stefansson, Kari, Sveinbjörnsson, Garðar, Syrris, Petros, Tammesoo, Mari-Liis, Tayal, Upasana, Teder-Laving, Maris, Thorgeirsson, Guðmundur, Thorsteinsdottir, Unnur, Tragante, Vinicius, Trégouët, David-Alexandre, Treibel, Thomas A., Ullum, Henrik, Valdes, Ana M., van Setten, Jessica, van Vugt, Marion, Veluchamy, Abirami, Verschuren, W. M. Monique, Villard, Eric, Yang, Yifan, Asselbergs, Folkert W., Cappola, Thomas P., Dube, Marie-Pierre, Dunn, Michael E., Ellinor, Patrick T., Hingorani, Aroon D., Lang, Chim C., Samani, Nilesh J., Shah, Svati H., Smith, J. Gustav, Vasan, Ramachandran S., O’Regan, Declan P., Holm, Hilma, Noseda, Michela, Wells, Quinn, Ware, James S., and Lumbers, R. Thomas more...
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.