12,428 results on '"Paddock BE"'
Search Results
102. Epinephrine inhibits PI3Kα via the Hippo kinases
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Lin, Ting-Yu, Ramsamooj, Shakti, Perrier, Tiffany, Liberatore, Katarina, Lantier, Louise, Vasan, Neil, Karukurichi, Kannan, Hwang, Seo-Kyoung, Kesicki, Edward A., Kastenhuber, Edward R., Wiederhold, Thorsten, Yaron, Tomer M., Huntsman, Emily M., Zhu, Mengmeng, Ma, Yilun, Paddock, Marcia N., Zhang, Guoan, Hopkins, Benjamin D., McGuinness, Owen, Schwartz, Robert E., Ersoy, Baran A., Cantley, Lewis C., Johnson, Jared L., and Goncalves, Marcus D.
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- 2023
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103. 'Digital Bodies': A Controlled Evaluation of a Brief Classroom-Based Intervention for Reducing Negative Body Image among Adolescents in the Digital Age
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Bell, Beth T., Taylor, Caitlin, Paddock, Danielle, and Bates, Adam
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Background: A growing body of research has linked social media use to negative body image. Aims: The present research aimed to evaluate the efficacy of "Digital Bodies," a brief classroom-based intervention that aims to improve adolescents' body image. Methods: British adolescents (N = 290; Age M = 12.81; SD = 0.40; Range = 12-13; Female = 151) were cluster randomized to intervention or waiting list control groups. Measures of body satisfaction, appearance ideal internalization (thin and athletic ideal internalization) and self-objectification were completed at baseline (T1), 1-week post-intervention (T2) and 8-week follow-up (T3). Results: Multi-level modelling showed adolescents in the intervention group reported improved body satisfaction at T2, in comparison to the control, and crucially this effect was sustained at T3. Additionally, girls reported less thin ideal internalization at T2 relative to the control, but this effect was not sustained at T3. No other intervention effects were found. Conclusions: Overall, the findings provide initial support for the efficacy of "Digital Bodies" as an intervention for improving adolescents' body satisfaction.
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- 2022
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104. Molecular Dynamics Study of the Green Solvent Polyethylene Glycol with Water Impurities
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Markus M. Hoffmann, Matthew D. Too, Nathaniel A. Paddock, Robin Horstmann, Sebastian Kloth, Michael Vogel, and Gerd Buntkowsky
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polyethylene glycol ,ethylene glycol oligomers ,water impurity ,hydrogen bonding ,radial distribution functions ,density ,Organic chemistry ,QD241-441 - Abstract
Polyethylene glycol (PEG) is one of the environmentally benign solvent options for green chemistry. It readily absorbs water when exposed to the atmosphere. The Molecular Dynamics (MD) simulations of PEG200, a commercial mixture of low molecular weight polyethyelene glycol oligomers, as well as di-, tetra-, and hexaethylene glycol are presented to study the effect of added water impurities up to a weight fraction of 0.020, which covers the typical range of water impurities due to water absorption from the atmosphere. Each system was simulated a total of four times using different combinations of two force fields for the water (SPC/E and TIP4P/2005) and two force fields for the PEG and oligomer (OPLS-AA and modified OPLS-AA). The observed trends in the effects of water addition were qualitatively quite robust with respect to these force field combinations and showed that the water does not aggregate but forms hydrogen bonds at most between two water molecules. In general, the added water causes overall either no or very small and nuanced effects in the simulation results. Specifically, the obtained water RDFs are mostly identical regardless of the water content. The added water reduces oligomer hydrogen bonding interactions overall as it competes and forms hydrogen bonds with the oligomers. The loss of intramolecular oligomer hydrogen bonding is in part compensated by oligomers switching from inter- to intramolecular hydrogen bonding. The interplay of the competing hydrogen bonding interactions leads to the presence of shallow extrema with respect to the water weight fraction dependencies for densities, viscosities, and self-diffusion coefficients, in contrast to experimental measurements, which show monotonous dependencies. However, these trends are very small in magnitude and thus confirm the experimentally observed insensitivity of these physical properties to the presence of water impurities.
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- 2024
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105. Epinephrine inhibits PI3Kα via the Hippo kinases
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Ting-Yu Lin, Shakti Ramsamooj, Tiffany Perrier, Katarina Liberatore, Louise Lantier, Neil Vasan, Kannan Karukurichi, Seo-Kyoung Hwang, Edward A. Kesicki, Edward R. Kastenhuber, Thorsten Wiederhold, Tomer M. Yaron, Emily M. Huntsman, Mengmeng Zhu, Yilun Ma, Marcia N. Paddock, Guoan Zhang, Benjamin D. Hopkins, Owen McGuinness, Robert E. Schwartz, Baran A. Ersoy, Lewis C. Cantley, Jared L. Johnson, and Marcus D. Goncalves
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CP: Molecular biology ,CP: Metabolism ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Summary: The phosphoinositide 3-kinase p110α is an essential mediator of insulin signaling and glucose homeostasis. We interrogated the human serine, threonine, and tyrosine kinome to search for novel regulators of p110α and found that the Hippo kinases phosphorylate p110α at T1061, which inhibits its activity. This inhibitory state corresponds to a conformational change of a membrane-binding domain on p110α, which impairs its ability to engage membranes. In human primary hepatocytes, cancer cell lines, and rodent tissues, activation of the Hippo kinases MST1/2 using forskolin or epinephrine is associated with phosphorylation of T1061 and inhibition of p110α, impairment of downstream insulin signaling, and suppression of glycolysis and glycogen synthesis. These changes are abrogated when MST1/2 are genetically deleted or inhibited with small molecules or if the T1061 is mutated to alanine. Our study defines an inhibitory pathway of PI3K signaling and a link between epinephrine and insulin signaling.
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- 2023
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106. 999 The PTPN2/N1 small molecule inhibitor ABBV-CLS-484 promotes NK cell activity driving primary tumor regression and preventing metastasis
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Chirag Patel, Meng Sun, Yue Liu, Jonathan Powell, Kyle Halliwill, Jennifer M Frost, Robert T Manguso, Kathleen B Yates, Hakimeh Ebrahimi-Nik, Christina K Baumgartner, Keith M Hamel, Kira Olander, Kathleen A McGuire, Audrey J Muscato, Kelly Klinge, Joseph Klahn, Jacqueline Aguado, Payal Tiwari, Kayla J Colvin, Marcia N Paddock, Philip R Kym, Omar Avila-Monge, and Alexander Schutte
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Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Published
- 2023
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107. 1403-A PTPN2/N1 inhibitor ABBV-CLS-484 unleashes potent anti-tumor immunity
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Wei Qiu, Qi Sun, Yi Yang, Chirag Patel, Meng Sun, Yue Liu, Kyle Halliwill, Sarah Kim, Rebecca Mathew, Jennifer M Frost, Jennifer A Roth, Domenick Kennedy, Robert T Manguso, Kathleen B Yates, Hakimeh Ebrahimi-Nik, Christina K Baumgartner, Arvin Iracheta-Vellve, Keith M Hamel, Kira Olander, Thomas GR Davis, Kathleen A McGuire, Geoff T Halvorsen, Omar I Avila, Ashwin V Kammula, Audrey J Muscato, Prasanthi Geda, Kelly Klinge, Zhaoming Xiong, Ryan Duggan, Liang Mu, Mitchell D Yeary, James C Patti, Tyler M Balon, Carey Backus, Angeline Chen, Kenton Longenecker, Joseph Klahn, Cara Hrusch, Navasona Krishnan, Charles W Hutchins, Jacqueline Aguado, Marinka Bulic, Payal Tiwari, Kayla J Colvin, Cun Lan Chuong, Ian C Kohnle, Matthew G Rees, Andrew Boghossian, Melissa Ronan, Meng-Ju Wu, Debattama R Sen, Gabriel K Griffin, Nabeel El-Bardeesy, Patricia Trusk, Joshua H Decker, Stacey Fossey, Marcia N Paddock, Elliot P Farney, Clay Beauregard, and Philip R Kym
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Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Published
- 2023
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108. The PanEDM Neutron Electric Dipole Moment Experiment at the ILL
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Wurm, David, Beck, Douglas H., Chupp, Tim, Degenkolb, Skyler, Fierlinger, Katharina, Fierlinger, Peter, Filter, Hanno, Ivanov, Sergey, Klau, Christopher, Kreuz, Michael, Lelièvre-Berna, Eddy, Lins, Tobias, Meichelböck, Joachim, Neulinger, Thomas, Paddock, Robert, Röhrer, Florian, Rosner, Martin, Serebrov, Anatolii P., Singh, Jaideep Taggart, Stoepler, Rainer, Stuiber, Stefan, Sturm, Michael, Taubenheim, Bernd, Tonon, Xavier, Tucker, Mark, van der Grinten, Maurits, and Zimmer, Oliver
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The neutron's permanent electric dipole moment $d_n$ is constrained to below $3\times10^{-26} e~\text{cm}$ (90% C.L.) [ arXiv:hep-ex/0602020, arXiv:1509.04411 ], by experiments using ultracold neutrons (UCN). We plan to improve this limit by an order of magnitude or more with PanEDM, the first experiment exploiting the ILL's new UCN source SuperSUN. SuperSUN is expected to provide a high density of UCN with energies below 80 neV, implying extended statistical reach with respect to existing sources, for experiments that rely on long storage or spin-precession times. Systematic errors in PanEDM are strongly suppressed by passive magnetic shielding, with magnetic field and gradient drifts at the single fT level. A holding-field homogeneity on the order of $10^{-4}$ is achieved in low residual fields, via a high static damping factor and built-in coil system. No comagnetometer is needed for the first order-of-magnitude improvement in $d_n$, thanks to high magnetic stability and an assortment of sensors outside the UCN storage volumes. PanEDM will be commissioned and upgraded in parallel with SuperSUN, to take full advantage of the source's output in each phase. Commissioning is ongoing in 2019, and a new limit in the mid $10^{-27} e~\text{cm}$ range should be possible with two full reactor cycles of data in the commissioned apparatus., Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures; submitted to the Proceedings of the International Workshop on Particle Physics at Neutron Sources PPNS 2018, Grenoble, France, May 24-26, 2018
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- 2019
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109. Epigenetic memory of coronavirus infection in innate immune cells and their progenitors
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Cheong, Jin-Gyu, Ravishankar, Arjun, Sharma, Siddhartha, Parkhurst, Christopher N., Grassmann, Simon A., Wingert, Claire K., Laurent, Paoline, Ma, Sai, Paddock, Lucinda, Miranda, Isabella C., Karakaslar, Emin Onur, Nehar-Belaid, Djamel, Thibodeau, Asa, Bale, Michael J., Kartha, Vinay K., Yee, Jim K., Mays, Minh Y., Jiang, Chenyang, Daman, Andrew W., Martinez de Paz, Alexia, Ahimovic, Dughan, Ramos, Victor, Lercher, Alexander, Nielsen, Erik, Alvarez-Mulett, Sergio, Zheng, Ling, Earl, Andrew, Yallowitz, Alisha, Robbins, Lexi, LaFond, Elyse, Weidman, Karissa L., Racine-Brzostek, Sabrina, Yang, He S., Price, David R., Leyre, Louise, Rendeiro, André F., Ravichandran, Hiranmayi, Kim, Junbum, Borczuk, Alain C., Rice, Charles M., Jones, R. Brad, Schenck, Edward J., Kaner, Robert J., Chadburn, Amy, Zhao, Zhen, Pascual, Virginia, Elemento, Olivier, Schwartz, Robert E., Buenrostro, Jason D., Niec, Rachel E., Barrat, Franck J., Lief, Lindsay, Sun, Joseph C., Ucar, Duygu, and Josefowicz, Steven Z.
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- 2023
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110. Suprathermal Electrons from the Anti-Stokes Langmuir Decay Instability Cascade
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Feng, Q. S., Aboushelbaya, R., Mayr, M. W., Spiers, B. T., Paddock, R. W., Ouatu, I., Timmis, R., Wang, R. H. W., Cao, L. H., Liu, Z. J., Zheng, C. Y., He, X. T., and Norreys, P. A.
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Physics - Plasma Physics - Abstract
The study of parametric instabilities has played a crucial role in understanding energy transfer to plasma and, with that, the development of key applications such as inertial confinement fusion. When the densities are between $0.108n_c\lesssim n_e\lesssim 0.138n_c$ and the electron temperature is $T_e=$2.5 keV, anomalous hot electrons with kinetic energies above 100 keV are generated. Here, a new electron acceleration mechanism - the anti-Stokes Langmuir decay instability cascade of forward stimulated Raman scattering - is investigated. This mechanism not only explains anomalous energetic electron generation in indirectly driven inertial confinement fusion experiments (and, with that, future mitigation strategies for experiments on the National Ignition Facility), it also provides a new way of accelerating electrons to higher energy for applications such as novel X-ray sources., Comment: 19 pages, 21 figures
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- 2019
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111. Constraining the neutral fraction of hydrogen in the IGM at redshift 7.5
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Hoag, Austin, Bradač, Maruša, Huang, Kuang-Han, Mason, Charlotte, Treu, Tommaso, Schmidt, Kasper B., Trenti, Michele, Strait, Victoria, Lemaux, Brian C., Finney, Emily, and Paddock, Maia
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a large spectroscopic campaign with Keck/MOSFIRE targeting Lyman-alpha emission (Ly$\alpha$) from intrinsically faint Lyman-break Galaxies (LBGs) behind 12 efficient galaxy cluster lenses. Gravitational lensing allows us to probe the more abundant faint galaxy population to sensitive Ly$\alpha$ equivalent width limits. During the campaign we targeted 70 LBG candidates with MOSFIRE Y-band, selected photometrically to cover Ly$\alpha$ over the range $7
5$ emission lines in 2 of these galaxies and find that they are likely Ly$\alpha$ at $z=7.148\pm0.001$ and $z=7.161\pm0.001$. We present new lens models for 4 of the galaxy clusters, using our previously published lens models for the remaining clusters to determine the magnification factors for the source galaxies. Using a Bayesian framework that employs large scale reionization simulations of the intergalactic medium (IGM) as well as realistic properties of the interstellar medium and circumgalactic medium, we infer the volume-averaged neutral hydrogen fraction, $\overline{x}_{\mathrm{HI}}$, in the IGM during reionization to be $\overline{x}_{\mathrm{HI}}=0.88^{+0.05}_{-0.10}$ at $z=7.6\pm0.6$. Our result is consistent with a late and rapid reionization scenario inferred by Planck. - Published
- 2019
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112. Bombs Rain Down in Myanmar as Junta Evades Sanctions to Buy Jet Fuel
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Paddock, Richard C.
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Trading companies -- Military aspects ,Jet planes -- Fuel and fuel systems ,Bombs -- Military aspects ,Civilian casualties -- Military aspects ,General interest - Abstract
Byline: Richard C. Paddock The military has stepped up a campaign of airstrikes, and killed more civilians, to fend off rebel advances. The family ducked for cover when junta jets [...]
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- 2024
113. Junta Evading Sanctions To Fuel Its War on Rebels
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Paddock, Richard C.
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Rebels -- Investigations ,Civilian casualties -- Investigations ,Company legal issue ,General interest ,News, opinion and commentary - Abstract
The military has stepped up a campaign of airstrikes, and killed more civilians, to fend off rebel advances. The family ducked for cover when junta jets roared over their home [...]
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- 2024
114. Vietnam's President Takes Over, For Now, After Top Leader Dies
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Paddock, Richard C.
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Communist Party of Vietnam -- Officials and employees ,Presidents -- Appointments, resignations and dismissals ,Vietnam -- Political aspects - Abstract
The country's political workings are notably opaque, but for now the president, who was until recently minister of public security, is carrying out the duties of general secretary. With the […]
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- 2024
115. Death of Vietnam’s Top Leader Raises Questions of Succession
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Paddock, Richard C.
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Cabinet officers ,News, opinion and commentary - Abstract
The country’s political workings are notably opaque, but for now the president, who was until recently minister of public security, is carrying out the duties of general secretary. With the [...]
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- 2024
116. Indonesia Court Acquits Ex-Official Accused of Enslaving Nearly 700 People
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Paddock, Richard C. and Suhartono, Muktita
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Human smuggling ,Plantations ,General interest ,News, opinion and commentary - Abstract
The ex-regent had been accused of imprisoning hundreds of people under the guise of drug treatment and forcing them to work at his plantation and factory. A former official accused [...]
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- 2024
117. Indonesian Court Acquits Former Official Accused of Enslaving Addicts
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Paddock, Richard C. and Suhartono, Muktita
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Slavery ,News, opinion and commentary - Abstract
The ex-regent had been accused of imprisoning hundreds of people under the guise of drug treatment and forcing them to work at his plantation and factory. A former official accused [...]
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- 2024
118. As Inflation Soars, Myanmar Shop Owners Are Jailed for Raising Wages
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Paddock, Richard C.
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Inflation (Finance) -- Myanmar -- Thailand ,Wages -- Laws, regulations and rules -- Economic aspects -- Statistics ,Government regulation ,Salary ,Company pricing policy ,General interest - Abstract
Byline: Richard C. Paddock Myanmar's junta, facing a growing popular rebellion, has plunged the country into economic crisis, reversing gains from a decade of civilian leadership. With Myanmar's currency plunging [...]
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- 2024
119. Los comerciantes en Birmania son encarcelados por subir los salarios
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Paddock, Richard C.
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News, opinion and commentary - Abstract
Para la junta de Birmania, la decisión de los comerciantes perturba “la paz y el orden de la comunidad”. El país está sumido en una crisis económica desde que el [...]
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- 2024
120. As Inflation Soars, Myanmar's Military Punishes Business Owners
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Paddock, Richard C.
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Inflation (Finance) -- Forecasts and trends -- Myanmar ,Economic conditions -- Forecasts and trends ,Business owners -- Forecasts and trends ,Economic policy -- Evaluation ,Labor supply -- Forecasts and trends ,Sanctions (International law) -- Economic aspects ,Market trend/market analysis ,General interest ,News, opinion and commentary - Abstract
Myanmar's junta, facing a growing popular rebellion, has plunged the country into economic crisis, reversing gains from a decade of civilian leadership. With Myanmar's currency plunging and inflation soaring, the [...]
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- 2024
121. Radiotherapy after radical prostatectomy: Effect of timing of postprostatectomy radiation on functional outcomes
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Huelster, Heather L, Laviana, Aaron A, Joyce, Daniel D, Huang, Li-Ching, Zhao, Zhiguo, Koyama, Tatsuki, Hoffman, Karen E, Conwill, Ralph, Goodman, Michael, Hamilton, Ann S, Wu, Xiao-Cheng, Paddock, Lisa E, Stroup, Antoinette, Cooperberg, Matthew, Hashibe, Mia, O'Neil, Brock B, Kaplan, Sherrie H, Greenfield, Sheldon, Penson, David F, and Barocas, Daniel A
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Aging ,Cancer ,Prostate Cancer ,Clinical Research ,Urologic Diseases ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Management of diseases and conditions ,6.4 Surgery ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Aged ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,Postoperative Period ,Prospective Studies ,Prostatectomy ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Time Factors ,Treatment Outcome ,Prostate cancer ,Outcomes ,Radiation ,Erectile function ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Urology & Nephrology - Abstract
Introduction and objectiveThe timing of radiotherapy (RT) after prostatectomy is controversial, and its effect on sexual, urinary, and bowel function is unknown. This study seeks to compare patient-reported functional outcomes after radical prostatectomy (RP) and postprostatectomy radiation as well as elucidate the timing of radiation to allow optimal recovery of function.MethodsThe Comparative Effectiveness Analysis of Surgery and Radiation (CEASAR) study is a prospective, population-based, observational study of men with localized prostate cancer. Patient-reported sexual, urinary, and bowel functional outcomes were measured using the 26-item Expanded Prostate Index Composite at baseline and at 6, 12, 36, and 60 months after enrollment. Functional outcomes were compared among men undergoing RP alone, post-RP adjuvant radiation (RP + aRT), and post-RP salvage radiation (RP + sRT) using multivariable models controlling for baseline clinical, demographic, and functional characteristics.ResultsAmong 1,482 CEASAR participants initially treated with RP for clinically localized prostate cancer, 11.5% (N = 170) received adjuvant (aRT, N = 57) or salvage (sRT, N = 113) radiation. Men who received post-RP RT had worse scores in all domains (sexual function [-9.0, 95% confidence interval {-14.5, -3.6}, P < 0.001], incontinence [-8.8, {-14.0, -3.6}, P < 0.001], irritative voiding [-5.9, {-9.0, -2.8}, P < 0.001], bowel irritative [-3.5, {-5.8, -1.2}, P = 0.002], and hormonal function [-4.5, {-7.2, -1.7}, P = 0.001]) compared to RP alone at 5 years of follow-up. Compared to men treated with RP alone in an adjusted linear model, sRT was associated with significantly worse scores in all functional domains. aRT was associated with significantly worse incontinence, urinary irritation, and hormonal function domain scores compared to RP alone at 5 years of follow-up. On multivariable modeling, RT administered approximately 24 months after RP was associated with the smallest decline in sexual domain score, with an adjusted mean decrease of 8.85 points (95% confidence interval [-19.8, 2.1]) from post-RP, pre-RT baseline.ConclusionsIn men with localized prostate cancer, post-RP RT was associated with significantly worse sexual, urinary, and bowel function domain scores at 5 years compared to RP alone. Radiation delayed for approximately 24 months after RP may be optimal for preserving erectile function compared to radiation administered closer to the time of RP.
- Published
- 2020
122. Development and Internal Validation of a Web-based Tool to Predict Sexual, Urinary, and Bowel Function Longitudinally After Radiation Therapy, Surgery, or Observation.
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Laviana, Aaron A, Zhao, Zhiguo, Huang, Li-Ching, Koyama, Tatsuki, Conwill, Ralph, Hoffman, Karen, Goodman, Michael, Hamilton, Ann S, Wu, Xiao-Cheng, Paddock, Lisa E, Stroup, Antoinette, Cooperberg, Matthew R, Hashibe, Mia, O'Neil, Brock B, Kaplan, Sherrie H, Greenfield, Sheldon, Penson, David F, and Barocas, Daniel A
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Intestines ,Urinary Tract ,Humans ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Prognosis ,Prospective Studies ,Sexuality ,Internet ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,Male ,Urinary Tract Physiological Phenomena ,Watchful Waiting ,Comparative effectiveness ,Disease risk ,Nomogram ,Patient-reported function ,Prostate cancer ,Urologic Diseases ,Clinical Research ,Cancer ,Aging ,Prostate Cancer ,Patient Safety ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Prevention ,7.3 Management and decision making ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Management of diseases and conditions ,Good Health and Well Being ,Clinical Sciences ,Urology & Nephrology - Abstract
BackgroundShared decision making to guide treatment of localized prostate cancer requires delivery of the anticipated quality of life (QOL) outcomes of contemporary treatment options (including radical prostatectomy [RP], intensity-modulated radiation therapy [RT], and active surveillance [AS]). Predicting these QOL outcomes based on personalized features is necessary.ObjectiveTo create an easy-to-use tool to predict personalized sexual, urinary, bowel, and hormonal function outcomes after RP, RT, and AS.Design, setting, and participantsA prospective, population-based cohort study was conducted utilizing US cancer registries of 2563 men diagnosed with localized prostate cancer in 2011-2012.InterventionPatient-reported urinary, sexual, and bowel function up to 5 yr after treatment.Outcome measurements and statistical analysisPatient-reported urinary, sexual, bowel, and hormonal function through 5 yr after treatment were collected using the 26-item Expanded Prostate Index Composite (EPIC-26) questionnaire. Comprehensive models to predict domain scores were fit, which included age, race, D'Amico classification, body mass index, EPIC-26 baseline function, treatment, and standardized scores measuring comorbidity, general QOL, and psychosocial health. We reduced these models by removing the instrument scores and replacing D'Amico classification with prostate-specific antigen (PSA) and Gleason score. For the final model, we performed bootstrap internal validation to assess model calibration from which an easy-to-use web-based tool was developed.Results and limitationsThe prediction models achieved bias-corrected R-squared values of 0.386, 0.232, 0.183, 0.214, and 0.309 for sexual function, urinary incontinence, urinary irritative, bowel, and hormonal domains, respectively. Differences in R-squared values between the comprehensive and parsimonious models were small in magnitude. Calibration was excellent. The web-based tool is available at https://statez.shinyapps.io/PCDSPred/.ConclusionsFunctional outcomes after treatment for localized prostate cancer can be predicted at the time of diagnosis based on age, race, PSA, biopsy grade, baseline function, and a general question regarding overall health. Providers and patients can use this prediction tool to inform shared decision making.Patient summaryIn this report, we studied patient-reported sexual, urinary, hormonal, and bowel function through 5 yr after treatment with radical prostatectomy, radiation therapy, or active surveillance for localized prostate cancer. We developed a web-based predictive tool that can be used to predict one's outcomes after treatment based on age, race, prostate-specific antigen, biopsy grade, pretreatment baseline function, and a general question regarding overall health. We hope both patients and providers can use this tool to better understand expected outcomes after treatment, further enhancing shared decision making between providers and patients.
- Published
- 2020
123. Association between body mass index and localized prostate cancer management and disease‐specific quality of life
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Nathan L. Samora, Christopher J. D. Wallis, Li‐Ching Huang, Jacob E. Tallman, Zhiguo Zhao, Karen Hoffman, Alicia Morgans, Matthew Cooperberg, Michael Goodman, Sheldon Greenfield, Ann S. Hamilton, Mia Hashibe, Sherrie Kaplan, Brock O'Neil, Lisa E. Paddock, Antoinette Stroup, Xiao‐Cheng Wu, Tatsuki Koyama, David F. Penson, and Daniel A. Barocas
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active surveillance ,obesity ,patient reported outcome measures ,prostatectomy ,prostatic neoplasms ,radiotherapy ,Diseases of the genitourinary system. Urology ,RC870-923 - Abstract
Abstract Purpose The purpose of this work is to describe the association between body mass index (BMI) and (1) management option for localized prostate cancer (PCa) and (2) disease‐specific quality of life (ds‐QoL) after treatment or active surveillance. Subjects/patients and methods We analysed data from men with localized PCa managed with radical prostatectomy (RP), radiation therapy (RT), or active surveillance (AS) in a prospective, population‐based cohort study. We evaluated the association between BMI and management option with multivariable multinomial logistic regression analysis. The association between BMI and ds‐QoL was assessed using multivariable longitudinal linear regression. Regression models were adjusted for baseline domain scores, demographics, and clinicopathologic characteristics. Results A total of 2378 men were included (medians [quartiles]: age 64 [59–69] years; BMI 27 kg/m2; 77% were non‐Hispanic white); 29% were obese (BMI ≥ 30). Accounting for demographic and clinicopathologic features, BMI ≥ 28 kg/m2 was inversely associated with the likelihood of receiving RP (compared with RT) and became statistically significant at BMI ≥ 33 kg/m2 (maximum adjusted relative risk ratio = 0.80, 95% CI 0.67 to 0.95, p = 0.013 for BMI ≥ 33 vs. 25). Conversely, BMI was not significantly associated with the likelihood of receiving AS compared with RT. After stratification by management option, obese men who underwent definitive treatment were not found to have clinically worse ds‐QoL. Obese men initially on AS appeared to have worse urinary incontinence than nonobese men, but this was not significant on an as‐treated sensitivity analysis. Conclusions Among men with localized PCa, those with BMI ≥ 33 kg/m2 were less likely to receive surgery than radiation. Obesity was not associated with ds‐QoL in men undergoing definitive treatment, nor in men who remained on AS.
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- 2023
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124. BeeDNA: Microfluidic environmental DNA metabarcoding as a tool for connecting plant and pollinator communities
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Lynsey R. Harper, Matthew L. Niemiller, Joseph B. Benito, Lauren E. Paddock, E. Knittle, Brenda Molano‐Flores, and Mark A. Davis
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arthropods ,community ecology ,ecosystem assessment ,eDNA ,mutualistic interactions ,pollinators ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,Microbial ecology ,QR100-130 - Abstract
Abstract Pollinators are declining globally, and this loss can reduce plant reproduction, erode critical ecosystem services and resilience, and drive economic losses. Monitoring pollinator biodiversity trends is essential for adaptive conservation and management, but conventional surveys are often costly, time‐consuming, and requires considerable taxonomic expertise. Environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding surveys are booming due to their rapidity, nondestructiveness, and cost efficiency. Microfluidic technology allows multiple primer sets from different markers to be used in eDNA metabarcoding for more comprehensive inventories, minimizing associated primer bias. We evaluated microfluidic eDNA metabarcoding for pollinator community monitoring in both controlled greenhouse and natural field settings. Using a variety of sampling, preservation, and extraction methods, we assessed pollinator communities with a number of markers using microfluidic metabarcoding. In greenhouse experiments, microfluidic eDNA metabarcoding detected the target bumblebee in two of four focal flower species as well as greenhouse insects in all focal flower species. In the field, numerous common regional arthropods, including some directly observed, were detected. Pollinator detection was maximized using whole flower heads preserved in ATL buffer and extracted with a modified Qiagen® DNeasy protocol for amplification with COI primers. eDNA surveillance could enhance pollinator assessment by detecting protected and endangered species and being more applicable to remote, inaccessible locations, whilst reducing survey time, effort, and expense. Microfluidic eDNA metabarcoding requires optimization to address remaining efficacy concerns, but this approach shows potential in revealing complex networks underpinning critical ecosystem functions and services, enabling more accurate assessments of ecosystem resilience.
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- 2023
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125. Feasibility of visualizing cancer incidence data at sub-county level: Findings from 21 National Program of Cancer Registries
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Ellington, Taylor D., Werner, Angela K., Henley, S. Jane, Paddock, Lisa E., and Agovino, Pamela K.
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- 2023
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126. Rickettsia rickettsii (Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever)
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Paddock, Christopher D., primary and Alvarez-Hernández, Gerardo, additional
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- 2023
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127. Contributors
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Abzug, Mark J., primary, Adderson, Elisabeth E., additional, Agarwal, Aastha, additional, Agwu, Allison L., additional, Albenberg, Lindsey, additional, Albert, Jonathan, additional, Alby, Kevin, additional, Aldrovandi, Grace M., additional, Allen, Upton D., additional, Alvarez-Hernndez, Gerardo, additional, Ampofo, Krow, additional, Anderson, Evan J., additional, Appiah, Grace D., additional, Ardura, Monica I., additional, Arnon, Stephen S., additional, Aronson, Naomi E., additional, Arvin, Ann M., additional, Ashkenazi, Shai, additional, Ashkenazi-Hoffnung, Liat, additional, Asturias, Edwin J., additional, Aukstuolis, Kestutis, additional, Badalyan, Vahe, additional, Baker, Carol J., additional, Balakrishnan, Karthik, additional, Barnett, Elizabeth D., additional, Bechtel, Kirsten, additional, Benitz, William E., additional, Berkovich, Rachel, additional, Berman, David M., additional, Bialek, Stephanie R., additional, Bijker, Else M., additional, Bizzarro, Matthew J., additional, Bloch, Karen C., additional, Bocchini, Joseph A., additional, Boyce, Thomas G., additional, Bradley, John S., additional, Bratcher, Denise F., additional, Braverman, Paula K., additional, Brook, Itzhak, additional, Brown, Kevin Edward, additional, Bryant, Kristina P., additional, Camacho-Gonzalez, Andres F., additional, Caete-Gibas, Connie F., additional, Cantey, Joseph B., additional, Cantey, Paul, additional, Cardemil, Cristina V., additional, Caserta, Mary T., additional, Castagnini, Luis A., additional, Cataldi, Jessica R., additional, Chadwick, Ellen Gould, additional, Chancey, Rebecca J., additional, Cherry, Cara C., additional, Chiang, Silvia S., additional, Choi, Mary, additional, Christenson, John C., additional, Coffin, Susan E., additional, Cohn, Amanda, additional, Contopoulos-Ioannidis, Despina G., additional, Conway, James H., additional, Cortese, Margaret M., additional, Creech, C. Buddy, additional, Crews, Jonathan D., additional, Curtis, Donna, additional, Curtis, Nigel, additional, Danziger-Isakov, Lara A., additional, Darville, Toni, additional, Dasch, Gregory A., additional, Daskalaki, Irini, additional, Davies, H. Dele, additional, Dawood, Fatimah S., additional, Day, J. Christopher, additional, Teresa de la Morena, M., additional, DeMuri, Gregory P., additional, Despommier, Dickson D., additional, Dodson, Daniel S., additional, Dolgner, Stephen J., additional, Dunn, Clinton, additional, Dyal, Jonathan, additional, Edwards, Kathryn M., additional, Edwards, Morven S., additional, Eichenfield, Dawn Z., additional, Eichenfield, Lawrence F., additional, Elston, Dirk M., additional, Emerson, Beth, additional, Enane, Leslie A., additional, Ephros, Moshe, additional, Erdem, Guliz, additional, Eremeeva, Marina E., additional, Esposito, Douglas H., additional, Farley, Monica M., additional, Feingold, Anat R., additional, Feja, Kristina N., additional, Finn, Adam, additional, Fischer, Marc, additional, Fisher, Brian T., additional, Fisher, Randall G., additional, Flynn, Patricia Michele, additional, Foster, Monique A., additional, Fox, LeAnne M., additional, Frank, Michael M., additional, Fredrick, Douglas R., additional, Frenck, Robert W., additional, Gaensbauer, James, additional, Gans, Hayley A., additional, Gauthier, Gregory M., additional, Gavigan, Patrick, additional, Gerber, Jeffrey S., additional, Gernez, Yael, additional, Gigliotti, Francis, additional, Gilger, Mark A., additional, Glaser, Carol A., additional, Gould, Jane M., additional, Graziano, James, additional, Green, Amanda M., additional, Green, Michael, additional, Griffin, Daniel, additional, Griffin, Patricia M., additional, Griffith, David C., additional, Gupta, Piyush, additional, Gutelius, Bruce J., additional, Gutman, Julie R., additional, Hall, Aron J., additional, Hamdy, Rana F., additional, Han, Jin-Young, additional, Handy, Lori K., additional, Hanisch, Benjamin, additional, Harper, Marvin B., additional, Harris, Aaron M., additional, Harrison, Christopher J., additional, Haslam, David B., additional, Haston, Julia C., additional, Hawkes, Sarah.J., additional, Heald-Sargent, Taylor, additional, Hendley, J. Owen, additional, Hersh, Adam L., additional, Hilinski, Joseph A., additional, Hills, Susan L., additional, Hong, David K., additional, Hotez, Peter J., additional, Hsu, Katherine K., additional, Huang, Felicia Scaggs, additional, Hunstad, David A., additional, Hunt, W. Garrett, additional, Hwang, Loris Y., additional, Ilboudo, Christelle M., additional, Jaggi, Preeti, additional, Jean, Sophonie, additional, Jhaveri, Ravi, additional, Jirk-Pomajbkov, Kateina, additional, Kadry, Nadia A., additional, Kamb, Mary L., additional, Kapadia, Ronak K., additional, Katz, Ben Z., additional, Katz, Sophie E., additional, Kaur, Ishminder, additional, Kersh, Gilbert J., additional, Khan, Muhammad Ali, additional, Khurana, Ananta, additional, Kimberlin, David W., additional, Klein, Bruce, additional, Kobayashi, Miwako, additional, Kociolek, Larry K., additional, Koh, Andrew Y., additional, Kotloff, Karen L., additional, Kroger, Andrew T., additional, Kronman, Matthew P., additional, Lalor, Leah, additional, Lauren, Christine T., additional, Leber, Amy, additional, Leshem, Eyal, additional, Lewis, David B., additional, Livingston, Robyn A., additional, Llata, Eloisa, additional, Lloyd, Kevin, additional, Loh, Katrina, additional, Long, Sarah S., additional, Lopman, Benjamin A., additional, Lucero, Yalda C., additional, Lugo, Debra J., additional, Lujn-Zilbermann, Jorge, additional, Maldonado, Yvonne A., additional, Manaloor, John J., additional, Manthiram, Kalpana, additional, Martin, Stacey W., additional, Mathew, Roshni, additional, Mazzulli, Tony, additional, McFarland, Elizabeth J., additional, McGann, Kathleen A., additional, McNamara, Lucy A., additional, Meislich, Debrah, additional, Meissner, H. Cody, additional, Mejias, Asuncion, additional, Mertsola, Jussi, additional, Messacar, Kevin, additional, Mhaissen, Mohammad Nael, additional, Michaels, Marian G., additional, Miller, Melissa B., additional, Miller-Handley, Hilary, additional, Mintz, Eric, additional, Mohan, Parvathi, additional, Montgomery, Susan P., additional, Montoya, Jose G., additional, Moorman, Anne C., additional, Moro, Pedro L., additional, Moscicki, Anna-Barbara, additional, Muller, William J., additional, Myers, Angela L., additional, Nadel, Simon, additional, Nayak, Jennifer Lynn, additional, Neely, Michael Noel, additional, Neil, Karen P., additional, Nelson, Christina A., additional, Nelson, Noele P., additional, Nichols, Megin, additional, Nicholson, William, additional, Nopper, Amy Jo, additional, Norton, Laura E., additional, Ochoa, Theresa J., additional, Olarte, Liset, additional, Onarecker, Timothy R., additional, Orenstein, Walter A., additional, ORyan, Miguel, additional, Otto, William R., additional, Ouellette, Christopher P., additional, Paddock, Christopher D., additional, Palazzi, Debra L., additional, Panuganti, Suresh Kumar, additional, Pappas, Diane E., additional, Paret, Michal, additional, Pastula, Daniel M., additional, Patterson, Thomas F., additional, Petersen, Brett W., additional, Petrosyan, Mikael, additional, Pickering, Larry K., additional, Pindyck, Talia, additional, Pinninti, Swetha, additional, Pittet, Laure F., additional, Planet, Paul J., additional, Pollard, Andrew J., additional, Posfay-Barbe, Klara M., additional, Poulsen, Casper S., additional, Poutanen, Susan M., additional, Powers, Ann M., additional, Prasanphanich, Nina Salinger, additional, Pritt, Bobbi S., additional, Prober, Charles G., additional, Puar, Neha, additional, Quilter, Laura A.S., additional, Ramilo, Octavio, additional, Rao, Suchitra, additional, Ratner, Adam J., additional, Rawstron, Sarah A., additional, Read, Jennifer S., additional, Relich, Ryan F., additional, Reller, Megan E., additional, Robinson, Candice L., additional, Romero, Jos R., additional, Rosen, David A., additional, Ross, Shannon A., additional, Rours, G. Ingrid J.G., additional, Rowe, Peter C., additional, Rowley, Anne H., additional, Rubin, Lorry G., additional, Ryan, Edward T., additional, Sacharok, Alexandra, additional, Sandora, Thomas J., additional, Sapp, Sarah G.H., additional, Sardana, Kabir, additional, Sauberan, Jason B., additional, Schaffzin, Joshua K., additional, Schillie, Sarah, additional, Schuster, Jennifer E., additional, Schwartz, Kevin L., additional, Sederdahl, Bethany K., additional, Serpa-Alvarez, Jose, additional, Shah, Kara N., additional, Shah, Samir S., additional, Shaikh, Nader, additional, Shane, Andi L., additional, Shapiro, Eugene D., additional, Shaw, Jana, additional, Shetty, Avinash K., additional, Shope, Timothy R., additional, Dairiki Shortliffe, Linda M., additional, Shulman, Stanford T., additional, Shust, Gail F., additional, Siberry, George Kelly, additional, Siegel, Jane D., additional, Siegel, Robert David, additional, Simonsen, Kari A., additional, Singh, Upinder, additional, Smith, Christiana, additional, Smith, Lauren L., additional, Song, Eunkyung, additional, Souder, Emily, additional, Spearman, Paul, additional, St. Geme, Joseph W., additional, Staat, Mary Allen, additional, Staples, J. Erin, additional, Starke, Jeffrey R., additional, Statler, Victoria A., additional, Steinbach, William J., additional, Stensvold, Christen Rune, additional, Stokes, Erin K., additional, Stoner, Bradley P., additional, Storch, Gregory A., additional, Straily, Anne, additional, Sullivan, Kathleen E., additional, Swanson, Douglas S., additional, Tanz, Robert R., additional, Taormina, Gillian, additional, Tate, Jacqueline E., additional, Taveras, Jeanette, additional, Tebruegge, Marc, additional, Teshale, Eyasu H., additional, Thompson, George R., additional, Thompson-Stone, Robert, additional, Thomsen, Isaac, additional, Thomson, Richard B., additional, Thorell, Emily A., additional, Tien, Vivian, additional, Tobin, Nicole H., additional, Toltzis, Philip, additional, Treat, James, additional, Troy, Stephanie B., additional, Van Dvke, Russell B., additional, Vaz, Louise Elaine, additional, Vijayan, Vini, additional, Vodzak, Jennifer, additional, Wagner, Thor A., additional, Wald, Ellen R., additional, Wallihan, Rebecca, additional, Wang, Huanyu, additional, Wangu, Zoon, additional, Washam, Matthew, additional, Waters, Valerie, additional, Watson, Joshua R., additional, Weatherhead, Jill E., additional, Weinberg, Geoffrey A., additional, Weng, Mark K., additional, Wiederhold, Nathan P., additional, Wiesenfeld, Harold C., additional, Williams, Cydni, additional, Williams, John V., additional, Willoughby, Rodney E., additional, Wittler, Robert R., additional, Wood, James B., additional, Woods, Charles Reece, additional, Workowski, Kimberly A., additional, Wright, Terry W., additional, Wu, Hsi-Yang, additional, Xu, Huan, additional, Yagupsky, Pablo, additional, Yi, Jumi, additional, Yoder, Jonathan, additional, Young, Edward J., additional, Zaenglein, Andrea L., additional, Zimmermann, Petra, additional, and Zong, Wenjing, additional
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- 2023
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128. A Computational Tsirelson's Theorem for the Value of Compiled XOR Games.
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David Cui, Giulio Malavolta, Arthur Mehta, Anand Natarajan, Connor Paddock, Simon Schmidt, Michael Walter, and Tina Zhang
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- 2024
129. Subtle Approach to the Mores of the Navajo Nation
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Bennett, Erica C., Paddock, Ethan, Ferguson, Mark K., Series Editor, Lonchyna, Vassyl A., editor, Kelley, Peggy, editor, and Angelos, Peter, editor
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- 2022
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130. SDG 12: RESPONSIBLE CONSUMPTION AND PRODUCTION
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Paddock, LeRoy
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Heads of state -- Environmental policy -- Comparative analysis ,Environmental sustainability -- Methods -- Management ,Natural resources -- Laws, regulations and rules -- Political aspects ,Government regulation ,Company business management ,Environmental issues ,Law ,United Nations. Sustainable Development Goals for 2030. (G. 12) - Abstract
SUMMARY In 2015, the United Nations Member States, including the United States, unanimously approved 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to be achieved by 2030. In a forthcoming book, leading legal [...]
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- 2023
131. Risk perception, adaptation, and resilience during the COVID-19 pandemic in Southeast Alaska Natives
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van Doren, Taylor P., Zajdman, Deborah, Brown, Ryan A., Gandhi, Priya, Heintz, Ron, Busch, Lisa, Simmons, Callie, and Paddock, Raymond
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- 2023
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132. Understanding cancer genetic risk assessment motivations in a remote tailored risk communication and navigation intervention randomized controlled trial
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Circe Gray Le Compte, Shou-En Lu, Julianne Ani, Jean McDougall, Scott T. Walters, Deborah Toppmeyer, Tawny W. Boyce, Antoinette Stroup, Lisa Paddock, Sherry Grumet, Yong Lin, Emily Heidt, and Anita Y. Kinney
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Genetic testing ,genetic counseling ,cancer ,hereditary breast and ovarian cancer ,Medicine ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
ABSTRACTBackground: National guidelines recommend cancer genetic risk assessment (CGRA) (i.e. genetic counseling prior to genetic testing) for women at increased risk for hereditary breast and ovarian cancer (HBOC). Less than one-half of eligible women obtain CGRA, leaving thousands of women and their family members without access to potentially life-saving cancer prevention interventions.Purpose: The Genetic Risk Assessment for Cancer Education and Empowerment Project (GRACE) addressed this translational gap, testing the efficacy of a tailored counseling and navigation (TCN) intervention vs. a targeted print brochure vs. usual care on CGRA intentions. Selected behavioral variables were theorized to mediate CGRA intentions.Methods: Breast and ovarian cancer survivors meeting criteria for guideline-based CGRA were recruited from three state cancer registries (N = 654), completed a baseline survey, and were randomized. TCN and targeted print arms received the brochure; TCN also participated in a tailored, telephone-based decision coaching and navigation session grounded in the Extended Parallel Process Model and Ottawa Decision Support Framework. Participants completed a one-month assessment. Logistic regression was used to compare the rate of CGRA intentions. CGRA intentions and theorized mediator scores (continuous level variables) were calculated using mixed model analysis.Results: CGRA intentions increased for TCN (53.2%) vs. targeted print (26.7%) (OR = 3.129; 95% CI: 2.028, 4.827, p
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- 2022
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133. Needle-free, spirulina-produced Plasmodium falciparum circumsporozoite vaccination provides sterile protection against pre-erythrocytic malaria in mice
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Tracy Saveria, Chaitra Parthiban, Annette M. Seilie, Colin Brady, Anissa Martinez, Ridhima Manocha, Esha Afreen, Hui Zhao, Ashley Krzeszowski, Jeremy Ferrara, Troy Paddock, James Roberts, Brad C. Stone, Michael Tasch, and Sean C. Murphy
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Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Antibodies against the Plasmodium falciparum circumsporozoite protein (PfCSP) can block hepatocyte infection by sporozoites and protect against malaria. Needle-free vaccination strategies are desirable, yet most PfCSP-targeted vaccines like RTS,S require needle-based administration. Here, we evaluated the edible algae, Arthrospira platensis (commonly called ‘spirulina’) as a malaria vaccine platform. Spirulina were genetically engineered to express virus-like particles (VLPs) consisting of the woodchuck hepatitis B core capsid protein (WHcAg) displaying a (NANP)15 PfCSP antigen on its surface. PfCSP-spirulina administered to mice intranasally followed by oral PfCSP-spirulina boosters resulted in a strong, systemic anti-PfCSP immune response that was protective against subcutaneous challenge with PfCSP-expressing P. yoelii. Unlike male mice, female mice did not require Montanide adjuvant to reach high antibody titers or protection. The successful use of spirulina as a vaccine delivery system warrants further development of spirulina-based vaccines as a useful tool in addressing malaria and other diseases of global health importance.
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- 2022
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134. Chromobacterium Csp_P biopesticide is toxic to larvae of three Diabrotica species including strains resistant to Bacillus thuringiensis
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Adriano E. Pereira, Man P. Huynh, Kyle J. Paddock, José L. Ramirez, Eric P. Caragata, George Dimopoulos, Hari B. Krishnan, Sharon K. Schneider, Kent S. Shelby, and Bruce E. Hibbard
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract The development of new biopesticides to control the western corn rootworm (WCR), Diabrotica virgifera virgifera LeConte, is urgent due to resistance evolution to various control methods. We tested an air-dried non-live preparation of Chromobacterium species Panama (Csp_P), against multiple corn rootworm species, including Bt-resistant and -susceptible WCR strains, northern (NCR, D. barberi Smith & Lawrence), and southern corn rootworm (SCR, D. undecimpunctata howardi Barber), in diet toxicity assays. Our results documented that Csp_P was toxic to all three corn rootworms species based on lethal (LC50), effective (EC50), and molt inhibition concentration (MIC50). In general, toxicity of Csp_P was similar among all WCR strains and ~ 3-fold less toxic to NCR and SCR strains. Effective concentration (EC50) was also similar among WCR and SCR strains, and 5-7-fold higher in NCR strains. Molt inhibition (MIC50) was similar among all corn rootworm strains except NCR diapause strain that was 2.5–6-fold higher when compared to all other strains. There was no apparent cross-resistance between Csp_P and any of the currently available Bt proteins. Our results indicate that Csp_P formulation was effective at killing multiple corn rootworm strains including Bt-resistant WCR and could be developed as a potential new management tool for WCR control.
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- 2022
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135. The impact of interventions involving electronic monitoring on young people and adults who offend
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Paddock, E. L.
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364.6 ,HV Social pathology. Social and public welfare - Abstract
This thesis provides an overview of interventions using supervision and surveillance methods in managing young people who have been convicted of an offence in the community. A range of approaches including a systematic review, a single case report and an empirical quantitative study were used to explore this research area. Following a brief introduction to the thesis in chapter 1, chapter 2 critically reviews the use of electronic monitoring (EM) as a surveillance method during intensive supervision in the management of offenders in the community. Chapter 3 systematically reviews the impact of interventions including electronic monitoring for individuals who offend and assesses the quality of the existing research in this area. Of the 16 included studies, only nine (56.25%) could be considered to have shown lower recidivism rates for EM offenders that were statistically significant. Chapter 4 provides an outline of how EM is used in an intensive community programme, and describes the importance of reviewing the impact of interventions involving EM to manage young people who offend in the community. In chapter 5, a case report is used to display the range of intensive interventions used together with EM, whilst a young person is supervised on an ISS order. His history and psychometric testing informed the assessment, formulation and treatment provided by myself and the multi-agency team at the YOT. Chapter 6 presents an empirical research study which explores an Intensive Supervision and Surveillance (ISS) programme, using EM for surveillance. The findings indicate that intensive supervision programmes in the community cannot cease offending behaviour, but can contribute to reducing the severity of offences. The final chapter of the thesis provides a general discussion of the findings and implications in relation to the management of young people who offend in the community.
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- 2019
136. Positive Feedback Relationship between Lipid Peroxidation and Amyloidogenesis Offers Insights into the Pathogenesis of Alzheimer's Disease
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Paddock, Brie and Davenport, Caty
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Alzheimer's disease is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder characterized by amyloid plaques, synapse dysfunction, and memory loss. The production and accumulation of A[beta] peptides, a major component of the amyloid plaques, is sensitive to many genetic and environmental factors. Recently, research has focused on the role of oxidative stress in initiating or exacerbating the neurodegeneration associated with A[beta] production. Lipid peroxidation, a type of oxidative stress that results in damaging cellular products such as 4-hydroxynonenal (HNE), has been demonstrated to increase the concentration of A[beta] peptides through several mechanisms. In addition to their association with memory loss and synapse dysfunction, these A[beta] peptides cause lipid peroxidation. This positive feedback relationship between lipid peroxidation and A[beta] peptides may be the causative sequence of events initiating the pathogenic cascade of AD. This article examines the relationship between lipid peroxidation and amyloidogenesis in order to determine the sequence of events leading to A[beta]-plaque deposition and potential treatments with antioxidants targeting lipid peroxidation and its products.
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- 2017
137. Memorials
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Paddock, Jeremiah
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Library and information science ,Publishing industry - Abstract
Chizmar, Richard. Memorials. Gallery. Oct. 2024. 480p. ISBN 9781668009192. $29.99. HORROR Chizmar's (Chasing the Boogeyman) latest is an immersive and engrossing slow-burn horror feast. When three college students in the [...]
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- 2024
138. Split Scream, Vol. Six: Two Novelettes
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Paddock, Jeremiah
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Library and information science ,Publishing industry - Abstract
Corse, David & Ryan T. Jenkins. Split Scream, Vol. Six: Two Novelettes. Tenebrous. Nov. 2024. 192p. ISBN 9781959790259. pap. $15.99. HORROR This book offers a disturbingly fun read from two [...]
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- 2024
139. Correction to: Prostate volume, baseline urinary function, and their association with treatment choice and post-treatment urinary function in men treated for localized prostate cancer
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Tallman, Jacob E., Wallis, Christopher J. D., Zhao, Zhiguo, Huang, Li-Ching, Penson, David F., Koyama, Tatsuki, Goodman, Michael, Hamilton, Ann S., Wu, Xiao-Cheng, Paddock, Lisa E., Stroup, Antoinette, Cooperberg, Matthew R., Hashibe, Mia, O’Neil, Brock B., Kaplan, Sherrie H., Greenfield, Sheldon, Hoffman, Karen E., and Barocas, Daniel A.
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- 2023
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140. Urban Transformations: From Liberalism to Corporatism in Greater Berlin 1871â1933 by <string-name><given-names>Parker Daly</given-names> <surname>Everett</surname></string-name> (review)
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Paddock, Troy R.E.
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- 2022
141. Cardinal Virtue Habituation as Liberal Citizenship Education
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Paddock, Caroline
- Abstract
I argue that Rawlsian liberals should consider cardinal virtue habituation as a legitimate form of moral education and citizenship education in publicly funded schools. In "Political Liberalism," Rawls acknowledges that a liberal government can and should promote certain virtues or traits of moral character in citizens, but only those traits that are justified by their conducing to the stability of the constitutional liberal democracy over time. I argue that the cardinal moral virtues--courage, justice, practical wisdom and moderation--are indeed necessary for democratic stability. Furthermore, these virtues are less likely to violate Rawlsian 'neutrality of aim' than some more robustly liberal programmes of moral and citizenship education. So cardinal virtue habituation should be a serious candidate for inclusion in the curriculum in publicly funded schools.
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- 2021
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142. Interpretation of Domain Scores on the EPIC-How Does the Domain Score Translate into Functional Outcomes?
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Laviana, Aaron A, Hernandez, Agustin, Huang, Li-Ching, Zhao, Zhiguo, Koyama, Tatsuki, Conwill, Ralph, Hoffman, Karen, Feurer, Irene D, Goodman, Michael, Hamilton, Ann S, Wu, Xiao-Cheng, Paddock, Lisa E, Stroup, Antoinette, Cooperberg, Matthew R, Hashibe, Mia, O'Neil, Brock B, Kaplan, Sherrie H, Greenfield, Sheldon, Penson, David F, and Barocas, Daniel A
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Cancer ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Urologic Diseases ,Prostate Cancer ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,Prospective Studies ,Prostatectomy ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Quality of Life ,Radiotherapy ,Recovery of Function ,Risk Factors ,prostatic neoplasms ,patient reported outcome measures ,quality of life ,urinary incontinence ,penile erection - Abstract
PurposeThe EPIC-26 (Expanded Prostate Cancer Index Composite-Short Form) is a validated questionnaire for measuring health related quality of life. However, the relationship between domain scores and functional outcomes remains unclear, leading to potential confusion about expectations after treatment. For instance, does a sexual function domain score of 80 mean that a patient can achieve erection sufficient for intercourse? Consequently we sought to determine the relationship between the domain score and the response to obtaining the best possible outcome for each question.Materials and methodsUsing data from the CEASAR (Comparative Effectiveness Analysis of Surgery and Radiation) study, a multicenter, prospective study of men diagnosed with localized prostate cancer, we analyzed 11,464 EPIC-26 questionnaires from a total of 2,563 men at baseline through 60 months of followup who were treated with robotic prostatectomy, radiotherapy or active surveillance. We dichotomized every item into its best possible outcome and assessed the percent of men at each domain score who achieved the best result.ResultsFor every EPIC-26 item the frequency of the best possible outcome was reported by domain score category. For example, a score of 80 to 100 on sexual function corresponded to 97% of men reporting erections sufficient for intercourse while at a score of 40 to 60 only 28% reported adequate erections. Also, at a score of 80 to 100 on the urinary incontinence domain 93% of men reported rarely or never leaking vs 6% at a score of 61 to 80.ConclusionsOur findings indicate a novel way to interpret EPIC-26 domain scores, demonstrating large variations in the percent of respondents reporting the best possible outcomes over narrow domain score differences. This information may be valuable when counseling men on treatment options.
- Published
- 2019
143. Unbiased Assessment of Abundance of Rhipicephalus sanguineus sensu lato Ticks, Canine Exposure to Spotted Fever Group Rickettsia, and Risk Factors in Mexicali, México.
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Foley, Janet, Tinoco-Gracia, Luis, Rodriguez-Lomelí, Moises, Estrada-Guzmán, Julia, Fierro, Maria, Mattar-Lopez, Elva, Peterson, Amy, Pascoe, Emily, Gonzalez, Yolanda, Hori-Oshima, Sawako, Armstrong, Paige A, Lopez, Gilberto, Jacome-Ibarra, Mariana, Paddock, Christopher D, and Zazueta, Oscar E
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Genetics ,Biodefense ,Vaccine Related ,Prevention ,Infectious Diseases ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Vector-Borne Diseases ,Animals ,Arachnid Vectors ,Dog Diseases ,Dogs ,Humans ,Mexico ,Rhipicephalus sanguineus ,Rickettsia rickettsii ,Risk Factors ,Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever ,Seroepidemiologic Studies ,Tick Infestations ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Tropical Medicine ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
An epidemic of Rocky Mountain spotted fever (RMSF) is ongoing in Mexicali, México. We visited 100 neighborhoods with diagnosed human cases and 100 control neighborhoods to evaluate knowledge of the epidemic; obtain data on the spatial distribution of dogs, canine seroprevalence and active infection, tick infestations, and presence of rickettsial DNA in ticks; and evaluate risk factors for human cases, seropositivity, and tick infestation within an unbiased study design. The majority (80%) of residents had heard of RMSF, but only 48% used acaricides in the home or on dogs. Case neighborhoods and those with high canine seroprevalence tended to be on the city periphery or in the agricultural valley. No dogs were polymerase chain reaction (PCR) positive for Rickettsia rickettsii, and the overall seroprevalence was 65% (titers from 64 to 1,024). PCR prevalence in ticks was 0.70%, confirmed by DNA sequencing as R. rickettsii; neighborhood prevalence ranged from 0.7% to 6.1%. Twelve percent of dogs had high tick burdens, and all ticks were Rhipicephalus sanguineus. Epidemiologically significant risk factors were ground covering for a neighborhood having a human case; dogs having poor body condition and weighing < 10 kg for canine seropositivity; dogs living at the home for the number of ticks in the environment; and being near canals, having trash on the patio, and a dog being thin for tick burdens on dogs. A One Health approach is crucial to understanding RMSF and brown dog ticks.
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- 2019
144. Increased Space for Comments on Endof- Shift Card Associated with Longer Comments
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Nelson, J, Hegarty, C, Barringer, K, Grall, K, Henry, K, Hernandez, B, Miller, P, Paddock, M, Willenbring, B, and Woster, C
- Published
- 2019
145. CMS Proposes To Amend Overpayment Rule-Questions Remain Regarding How The Rule Will Be Implemented Should CMS Adopt The False Claims Act's 'Reckless Disregard Or Deliberate Ignorance' Standard
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Paddock, Michael
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United States. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services -- Powers and duties ,Medicare -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Prospective payment systems (Medical care) -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Government regulation ,Business, international ,False Claims Act - Abstract
Listen to this post On July 10, 2024, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services ('CMS') issued a proposed rule ('Proposed Rule') in which it outlined proposed amendments to the [...]
- Published
- 2024
146. Knife crime offender characteristics and interventions – A systematic review
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Browne, K.D., Green, K., Jareno-Ripoll, S., and Paddock, E.
- Published
- 2022
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147. Variable trust in public health messaging during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic in Southeast Alaska
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Taylor P. van Doren, Ryan A. Brown, Max Izenberg, Ron Heintz, Callie Simmons, and Raymond Paddock
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,public health ,trust ,information sources ,Southeast Alaska ,survey analysis ,Communication. Mass media ,P87-96 - Abstract
Public health messaging in the United States during the COVID-19 pandemic has been variable in effectiveness. Different levels of governmental institutions have different goals and methods; it is unclear how messaging from these disparate levels is received, trusted, and implemented. We investigate the degrees of trust of Alaska Native and non-Alaska Native people in Southeast Alaska for the U.S. federal, Alaska state, and local Southeast Alaskan governments to parse how Southeast Alaskans feel about relative preparation, actions, and public health messaging. We use data collected in two waves of a regional survey: the first in April-June 2020, and the second in November 2020-February 2021. Results indicate that trust in the federal government was significantly lower than in the Alaska state government for each time period, and trust in both federal and state government significantly decreased between the two periods. Trust in the local governments of Southeast Alaska were significantly higher than both state and federal levels, and increased between the two survey waves, albeit insignificantly. We discuss potential drivers of these observations and outline how this can be leveraged for more comprehensive research into how relatively small communities with a large Native presence perceive public health messaging from different sources.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
148. Manipulation of glycogen and sucrose synthesis increases photosynthetic productivity in cyanobacteria
- Author
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Michael Cantrell, Melissa Cano, Jacob Sebesta, Troy Paddock, Wei Xiong, Katherine J. Chou, and Jianping Yu
- Subjects
photosynthesis ,cyanobacteria ,glycogen ,sucrose ,ATP ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
Photosynthetic productivity is limited by low energy conversion efficiency in naturally evolved photosynthetic organisms, via multiple mechanisms that are not fully understood. Here we show evidence that extends recent findings that cyanobacteria use “futile” cycles in the synthesis and degradation of carbon compounds to dissipate ATP. Reduction of the glycogen cycle or the sucrose cycle in the model cyanobacterium Synechocystis 6803 led to redirection of cellular energy toward faster growth under simulated outdoor light conditions in photobioreactors that was accompanied by higher energy charge [concentration ratio of ATP/(ATP + ADP)]. Such manipulation of energy metabolism may have potential in engineering microalgal chassis cells to increase productivity of biomass or target metabolites.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
149. Glass Interposer for High-Density Photonic Packaging.
- Author
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Lars Brusberg, Jason R. Grenier, Sükrü Ekin Kocabas, Aramais R. Zakharian, Lucas W. Yeary, Daniel W. Levesque, Barry J. Paddock, Robert A. Bellman, Robin M. Force, Chad C. Terwilliger, Clifford G. Sutton, Jeffrey S. Clark, and Katerina Rousseva
- Published
- 2022
150. A 21st Century Appraisal of Whipple’s Disease and Tropheryma whipplei
- Author
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Paddock, Christopher D., Fenollar, Florence, Lagier, Jean-Christophe, and Raoult, Didier
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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