8,377 results on '"Elliot, J."'
Search Results
252. Dimensions
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Gindis, Elliot J., primary and Kaebisch, Robert C., additional
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- 2022
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253. Isometric drawing
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Gindis, Elliot J., primary and Kaebisch, Robert C., additional
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- 2022
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254. Options, Shortcuts, CUI, Design Center, and Express Tools
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Gindis, Elliot J., primary and Kaebisch, Robert C., additional
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- 2022
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255. Advanced UCS, Views, Text, and Dimensions in 3D
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Gindis, Elliot J., primary and Kaebisch, Robert C., additional
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- 2022
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256. Layers, colors, linetypes, and properties
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Gindis, Elliot J., primary and Kaebisch, Robert C., additional
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- 2022
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257. Advanced dimensions
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Gindis, Elliot J., primary and Kaebisch, Robert C., additional
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- 2022
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258. Importing and exporting data
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Gindis, Elliot J., primary and Kaebisch, Robert C., additional
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- 2022
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259. Blocks, Wblocks, dynamic blocks, groups, and purge
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Gindis, Elliot J., primary and Kaebisch, Robert C., additional
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- 2022
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260. Polar, rectangular, and path arrays
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Gindis, Elliot J., primary and Kaebisch, Robert C., additional
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- 2022
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261. Optimizing Grouped Convolutions on Edge Devices.
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Perry Gibson, José Cano 0001, Jack Turner, Elliot J. Crowley, Michael F. P. O'Boyle, and Amos J. Storkey
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- 2020
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262. Substituting Convolutions for Neural Network Compression.
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Elliot J. Crowley, Gavin Gray, Jack Turner, and Amos J. Storkey
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- 2021
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263. Motor interference on lateral pelvis shifting towards the paretic leg during walking and its cortical mechanisms in persons with stroke.
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Lim, Hyosok, Yan, Shijun, Dee, Weena, Pech, Velarie, Hameeduddin, Iram, Roth, Elliot J., Rymer, William Z., and Wu, Ming
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RESISTIVE force ,STROKE ,PELVIS ,ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY ,TREADMILLS ,LEG muscles ,ANKLE - Abstract
Motor interference, where new skill acquisition disrupts the performance of a previously learned skill, is a critical yet underexplored factor in gait rehabilitation post‐stroke. This study investigates the interference effects of two different practice schedules, applying interleaved (ABA condition) and intermittent (A‐A condition) pulling force to the pelvis during treadmill walking, on lateral pelvis shifting towards the paretic leg in individuals with stroke. Task A involved applying resistive pelvis force (pulling towards the non‐paretic side), and Task B applied assistive force (pulling towards the paretic side) at the stance phase of the paretic leg during walking. Sixteen individuals with chronic stroke were tested for gait pattern changes, including lateral pelvis shifting and spatiotemporal gait parameters, and neurophysiological changes, including muscle activity in the paretic leg and beta band absolute power in the lesioned cortical areas. A‐A condition demonstrated increased lateral pelvis shifting towards the paretic side, extended paretic stance time and longer non‐paretic step length after force release while ABA condition did not show any changes. These changes in gait pattern after A‐A condition were accompanied by increased muscle activities of the ankle plantarflexors, and hip adductors/abductors. A‐A condition demonstrated greater changes in beta band power in the sensorimotor regions compared to ABA condition. These findings suggest that while walking practice with external force to the pelvis can improve lateral pelvis shifting towards the paretic leg post‐stroke, practicing a new pelvis shifting task in close succession may hinder the performance of a previously obtained lateral pelvis shifting pattern during walking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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264. Assessing the Potential of Tortistilus (Hemiptera: Membracidae) from Northern California Vineyards as Vector Candidates of Grapevine Red Blotch Virus.
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Hoyle, Victoria J., McGinnity Schneider, Elliot J., McLane, Heather L., Wunsch, Anna O., Fendell-Hummel, Hannah G., Cooper, Monica L., and Fuchs, Marc F.
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GRAPES , *SALIVARY glands , *GRAPE diseases & pests , *VINEYARDS , *HEMIPTERA - Abstract
Simple Summary: Tortistilus and Spissistilus are two genera of cryptic treehoppers from the Ceresini tribe. S. festinus is a vector of grapevine red blotch virus (GRBV) in vineyards in northern California, USA; however, the transmission capabilities of Tortistilus spp. are unknown. In this study, we determined the species of Tortistilus found in vineyards in Napa Valley, California, as T. wickhami, and determined that only a few specimens but no dissected heads with salivary glands tested positive for GRBV in PCR and qPCR. These results suggested that T. wickhami is an unlikely vector of GRBV in northern California vineyards. Ceresini treehoppers are present in northern California vineyard ecosystems, including the closely related Spissistilus and Tortistilus (Hemiptera: Membracidae). These membracids are not direct pests of wine grapes, but S. festinus is a vector of grapevine red blotch virus (GRBV). No information is available on the ability of Tortistilus spp. to transmit GRBV. In this study, Tortistilus were collected on yellow panel cards across 102 vineyard sites and surrounding areas in Napa Valley, California, USA in 2021–2023. Specimens were morphotyped, sexed and tested for GRBV ingestion and acquisition by multiplex PCR or qPCR. Phylogenetic analysis of the partial sequence of mt-COI and ITS gene fragments of a subset of 40 Tortistilus specimens revealed clustering in a monophyletic clade with T. wickhami with the former barcode sequence. Only 6% (48/758) of the T. wickhami tested positive for GRBV, but none of the heads with salivary glands (0%, 0/50) of the dissected specimens tested positive for GRBV, indicating no virus acquisition. In contrast, half of the dissected heads with salivary glands of S. festinus (52%, 12/23), from the same collection vineyard sites, tested positive for GRBV. Together, our findings confirmed the presence of T. wickhami in northern California vineyards and suggested a dubious role of this treehopper as a vector of GRBV. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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265. Excitotoxic glutamate levels cause the secretion of resident endoplasmic reticulum proteins.
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Dossat, Amanda M., Trychta, Kathleen A., Glotfelty, Elliot J., Hinkle, Joshua J., Fortuno, Lowella V., Gore, Lana N., Richie, Christopher T., and Harvey, Brandon K.
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BRAIN injuries ,ENDOPLASMIC reticulum ,INTRACELLULAR calcium ,CALCIUM ions ,STROKE - Abstract
Dysregulation of synaptic glutamate levels can lead to excitotoxicity such as that observed in stroke, traumatic brain injury, and epilepsy. The role of increased intracellular calcium (Ca2+) in the development of excitotoxicity is well established. However, less is known regarding the impact of glutamate on endoplasmic reticulum (ER)‐Ca2+‐mediated processes such as proteostasis. To investigate this, we expressed a secreted ER Ca2+ modulated protein (SERCaMP) in primary cortical neurons to monitor exodosis, a phenomenon whereby ER calcium depletion causes the secretion of ER‐resident proteins that perform essential functions to the ER and the cell. Activation of glutamatergic receptors (GluRs) led to an increase in SERCaMP secretion indicating that normally ER‐resident proteins are being secreted in a manner consistent with ER Ca2+ depletion. Antagonism of ER Ca2+ channels attenuated the effects of glutamate and GluR agonists on SERCaMP release. We also demonstrate that endogenous proteins containing an ER retention/retrieval sequence (ERS) are secreted in response to GluR activation supporting that neuronal activation by glutamate promotes ER exodosis. Ectopic expression of KDEL receptors attenuated the secretion of ERS‐containing proteins caused by GluR agonists. Taken together, our data indicate that excessive GluR activation causes disruption of neuronal proteostasis by triggering the secretion of ER‐resident proteins through ER Ca2+ depletion and describes a new facet of excitotoxicity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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266. Feasibility of Telerehabilitation-Monitored Functional Electrical Stimulation on Walking and Quality of Life in People With Multiple Sclerosis: A Case Series.
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Gann, Elliot J., Mañago, Mark M., Allen, Diane D., Celnikier, Elie, and Block, Valerie J.
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PATIENT compliance ,MULTIPLE sclerosis ,NEUROMUSCULAR diseases ,PATIENT safety ,RESEARCH funding ,CLINICAL trials ,TELEREHABILITATION ,FUNCTIONAL status ,GAIT in humans ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,WALKING ,ELECTRIC stimulation ,QUALITY of life ,CASE studies ,PATIENT satisfaction ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,DATA analysis software ,PERONEAL nerve ,PHYSICAL mobility ,DISEASE complications - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Foot drop in people with multiple sclerosis (MS) commonly leads to decreased mobility and quality of life (QOL). Functional electrical stimulation (FES) of the peroneal nerve can improve the gait of people with foot drop, yet various barriers restrict widespread use. The purpose of this case series was to examine the feasibility of a telerehabilitationmonitored FES device and report changes in functional mobility and QOL in people with moderate MS-related disability. METHODS: FES use was progressed over 8 weeks via 3 telerehabilitation sessions. Feasibility of telerehabilitation was assessed by percentage of telerehabilitation visits completed and participant-reported satisfaction. At baseline and study completion, functional mobility with and without FES were assessed by the Timed 25-Foot Walk (T25FW), Timed Up and Go (TUG), and 2-Minute Walk Test (2MWT), Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale (MSIS-29), and the 12-item Multiple Sclerosis Walking Scale (MSWS-12). Fatigue was assessed via the Modified Fatigue Impact Scale (MFIS) before and after the intervention. RESULTS: Eleven participants (mean age = 50.4 years [SD 10.8]; 2 males) completed the study. All (33/33) telerehabilitation visits were completed and participants attained high levels of satisfaction with no adverse events. At 8 weeks, compared to baseline, there were clinically meaningful improvements on the T25FW, 2MWT, and TUG for 45%, 55%, and 82% of participants, respectively. Clinically meaningful improvements on the MSIS-29 and MSWS-12 were also recorded for 64% and 36% of participants, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Telerehabilitation was safe and feasible for FES intervention, and improvements in functional mobility and QOL were observed. Telerehabilitation to monitor FES may improve access and reduce patient burden; therefore, studying its efficacy is warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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267. Analytical and computational studies predict negligible risk of cell death from eddy generation off flat surfaces in cell culture flow systems.
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Morley, Elliot J., Brockett, Claire L., and Verbruggen, Stefaan W.
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- 2024
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268. Signature for Pain Recovery IN Teens (SPRINT): protocol for a multisite prospective signature study in chronic musculoskeletal pain
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Fiona Campbell, Jennifer Stinson, Sara E Williams, Christopher D King, Laura Simons, Massieh Moayedi, Robert C Coghill, Martin S Angst, Nima Aghaeepour, Brice Gaudilliere, Marina López-Solà, Marie-Eve Hoeppli, Emma Biggs, Ed Ganio, Kenneth R Goldschneider, Danielle Ruskin, Elliot J Krane, Suellen Walker, Gillian Rush, and Marissa Heirich
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Medicine - Published
- 2022
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269. Seasonal pattern of basking activity in Nerodia sipedon (Serpentes: Colubridae) along a western Michigan lakeshore, USA
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Elliot J. Hoinville and Geoffrey R. Smith
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Basking ,Diel activity ,Environmental conditions ,Northern Water Snake ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Published
- 2022
270. Prevalence and correlates of skin self-examination practices among cutaneous malignant melanoma survivors
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Manne, Sharon L., Heckman, Carolyn J., Kashy, Deborah, Lozada, Carolina, Gallo, Joseph, Ritterband, Lee, and Coups, Elliot J.
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- 2020
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271. Preoperative imaging characteristics predict poor survival and inadequate resection for left-sided pancreatic adenocarcinoma: a multi-institutional analysis
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Alemi, Farzad, Jutric, Zeljka, Marshall, George R., Scott, Elliot J., Grendar, Jan, Roch, Alexandra M., Pereira, Lucio L., Cheng, An-Lin, Hansen, Paul D., Ceppa, Eugene P., Asbun, Horacio J., Warner, Susanne, and Alseidi, Adnan A.
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- 2020
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272. Copper stabilizes antiparallel β-sheet fibrils of the amyloid β40 (Aβ40)-Iowa variant
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Crooks, Elliot J., Irizarry, Brandon A., Ziliox, Martine, Kawakami, Toru, Victor, Tiffany, Xu, Feng, Hojo, Hironobu, Chiu, Kelley, Simmerling, Carlos, Van Nostrand, William E., Smith, Steven O., and Miller, Lisa M.
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- 2020
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273. Survivors of Chronic Stroke Experience Continued Impairment of Dexterity But Not Strength in the Nonparetic Upper Limb
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Barry, Alexander J., Triandafilou, Kristen M., Stoykov, Mary Ellen, Bansal, Naveen, Roth, Elliot J., and Kamper, Derek G.
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- 2020
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274. Intravascular Healing Is Not Affected by Approaches in Contemporary CTO PCI: The CONSISTENT CTO Study
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Walsh, Simon J., Hanratty, Colm G., McEntegart, Margaret, Strange, Julian W., Rigger, Johannes, Henriksen, Peter A., Smith, Elliot J., Wilson, Simon J., Hill, Jonathan M., Mehmedbegovic, Zlatko, Chevalier, Bernard, Morice, Marie-Claude, and Spratt, James C.
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- 2020
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275. Association of Primary Care Team Composition and Clinician Burnout in a Primary Care Practice Network
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Bruhl, Elliot J., MacLaughlin, Kathy L., Allen, Summer V., Horn, Jennifer L., Angstman, Kurt B., Garrison, Gregory M., Maxson, Julie A., McCauley, Debra K., Lampman, Michelle A., and Thacher, Tom D.
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- 2020
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276. Neurotrophic and neuroprotective effects of a monomeric GLP-1/GIP/Gcg receptor triagonist in cellular and rodent models of mild traumatic brain injury
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Li, Yazhou, Glotfelty, Elliot J., Namdar, Inbar, Tweedie, David, Olson, Lars, Hoffer, Barry J., DiMarchi, Richard D., Pick, Chagi G., and Greig, Nigel H.
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- 2020
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277. Microdroplet screening rapidly profiles a biocatalyst to enable its AI-assisted engineering
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Gantz, Maximilian, primary, Mathis, Simon V., additional, Nintzel, Friederike E. H., additional, Zurek, Paul J., additional, Knaus, Tanja, additional, Patel, Elie, additional, Boros, Daniel, additional, Weberling, Friedrich-Maximilian, additional, Kenneth, Matthew R. A., additional, Klein, Oskar J., additional, Medcalf, Elliot J., additional, Moss, Jacob, additional, Herger, Michael, additional, Kaminski, Tomasz S., additional, Mutti, Francesco G., additional, Lio, Pietro, additional, and Hollfelder, Florian, additional
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- 2024
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278. Quantifying the fitness effects of resistance alleles with and without anthelmintic selection pressure usingCaenorhabditis elegans
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Shaver, Amanda O., primary, Miller, Isabella R., additional, Schaye, Etta S., additional, Moya, Nicolas D., additional, Collins, J.B., additional, Wit, Janneke, additional, Blanco, Alyssa H., additional, Shao, Fiona M., additional, Andersen, Elliot J., additional, Khan, Sharik A., additional, Paredes, Gracie, additional, and Andersen, Erik C., additional
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- 2024
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279. Sexual Addiction and Custody Disputes.
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Wiener, Elliot J.
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Parent and child (Law) -- Laws, regulations and rules -- Remedies ,Best interests of the child doctrine -- Analysis ,Sexual addiction -- Care and treatment -- Laws, regulations and rules -- Remedies ,Custody of children -- Laws, regulations and rules -- Remedies ,Government regulation - Abstract
If an "addiction" is a chronic condition that involves an inability to control behavior despite its negative consequences, then sexual conduct fits this category no less than an addiction to [...]
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- 2024
280. Note from the Editors
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Breytenbach, Cilliers, Thom, Johan C., and Elliot, J. K.
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- 2020
281. Parallel programming of an ionic floating-gate memory array for scalable neuromorphic computing
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Fuller, Elliot J., Keene, Scott T., Melianas, Armantas, Wang, Zhongrui, Agarwal, Sapan, Li, Yiyang, Tuchman, Yaakov, James, Conrad D., Marinella, Matthew J., Yang, J. Joshua, Salleo, Alberto, and Talin, A. Alec
- Published
- 2019
282. Micro- and nano-soft lithography for the fabrication of photonic devices
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Richardson, Elliot J. W.
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621.36 - Abstract
This thesis presents the application of two soft lithographic tools for direct patterning of (soft) photonic materials at the micro- and nano-scale. Inkjet printing and Dip-Pen Nanolithography, respectively, have been used to pattern organic molecules, photoresists, and conductive inks to create optically active structures and devices. A series of light emitting polymers (LEPs), blended with a photo-curable host system, have been integrated as colour converters with an array of matrix-addressable gallium nitride (GaN) micro LEDs to form a red-green-blue (RGB) emitting array. Surface structure and conversion efficiency have been explored in detail with peak colour conversion efficiencies of 31.6% being obtained. Inkjet printing of silver conductive inks has been used in conjunction with mask-free ultraviolet direct writing to generate an 8 x 8 GaN LED array. The smallest feature achieved with the mask-free writing set up is 1 μm and the conductive ink was used to form a contact with the n-GaN to enable wire-bonding and characterisation of the LED. This mask-free process is attractive as fabrication of conventional masks for photolithography is both costly and lengthy. Possessing the ability for define LED patterns “free form” on photoresist and subsequently producing a common n-contact with the silver ink allows for rapid prototyping for novel and experimental LED designs. Two techniques were explored for utilising the potential of Dip-Pen Nanolithography; deposition of liquid inks (positive) and removal of dried material (negative). Photoresist inks were used to generate nanoscale features (560nm) on a planar LED structure. Subsequent exposure to a CHF3 plasma treatment deactivated the Mg doped GaN which was not protected by the photoresist; LEDs with 3 μm diameter at full-width half-maximum were fabricated in this manner. Utilising dip-pen nanolithography for negative patterning allows for grating structures to be created via the displacement and removal of material. 1D and 2D structures were generated using a lasing polymer as the optically active gain medium. When optically pumped it was found that these structures lased and the grating structures acted as Distributed Bragg Reflectors (DBRs).Key advantages for the techniques used throughout this thesis are that they allow the patterning of sensitive materials that otherwise would not survive classical lithography due to aggressive chemical treatment or high UV exposure. In addition all of the techniques used are readily programmable and require no masks to be fabricated thus allowing for rapid prototype production and experimental designs to be implemented without delays or incurring extra costs.
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- 2016
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283. Bilateral renal forniceal rupture due to retroperitoneal hematoma after femoral venous access
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Alexander D. DiBartolomeo, MD, Jessica M. Titus, MD, Bjorn I. Engstrom, MD, and Elliot J. Stephenson, MD
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Surgery ,RD1-811 ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Retroperitoneal hematoma is a potential complication of femoral venous access that rarely leads to bilateral ureteral obstruction. We present the case of a 73-year-old woman who underwent an ablation procedure for atrial fibrillation complicated by laceration of an aberrant obturator artery during femoral venous cannulation, leading to a compressive retroperitoneal hematoma, bilateral ureteral obstruction, acute renal failure, and renal forniceal rupture. The patient was successfully treated with embolization of the inferior epigastric artery and aberrant obturator artery, hematoma evacuation, and ureteral stent placement. This case illustrates a rare complication of arterial laceration during femoral venous access without ultrasound guidance. Keywords: Forniceal rupture, Retroperitoneal hematoma, Vascular access
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- 2020
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284. Nonvolatile Electrochemical Random-Access Memory Under Short Circuit.
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Diana Kim, Virgil Watkins, Laszlo Cline, Jingxian Li, Kai Sun, Joshua D. Sugar, Elliot J. Fuller, A. Alec Talin, and Yiyang Li
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- 2022
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285. Plug and Play Active Learning for Object Detection.
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Chenhongyi Yang, Lichao Huang, and Elliot J. Crowley
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- 2022
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286. GPViT: A High Resolution Non-Hierarchical Vision Transformer with Group Propagation.
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Chenhongyi Yang, Jiarui Xu, Shalini De Mello, Elliot J. Crowley, and Xiaolong Wang 0004
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- 2022
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287. Integrating growth and survival models for flexible estimation of size‐dependent survival in a cryptic, endangered snake
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Jonathan P. Rose, Richard Kim, Elliot J. Schoenig, Patrick C. Lien, and Brian J. Halstead
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capture–mark–recapture ,demographic rate estimation ,hierarchical model ,integrated model ,San Francisco gartersnake ,Thamnophis sirtalis tetrataenia ,Ecology ,QH540-549.5 - Abstract
Abstract Estimates of demographic rates for animal populations and individuals have many applications for ecological and conservation research. In many animals, survival is size‐dependent, but estimating the form of the size–survival relationship presents challenges. For elusive species with low recapture rates, individuals’ size will be unknown at many points in time. Integrating growth and capture–mark–recapture models in a Bayesian framework empowers researchers to impute missing size data, with uncertainty, and include size as a covariate of survival, capture probability, and presence on‐site. If there is no theoretical expectation for the shape of the size–survival relationship, spline functions can allow for fitting flexible, data‐driven estimates. We use long‐term capture–mark–recapture data from the endangered San Francisco gartersnake (Thamnophis sirtalis tetrataenia) to fit an integrated growth–survival model. Growth models showed that females reach longer asymptotic lengths than males and that the magnitude of sexual size dimorphism differed among populations. The capture probability and availability of San Francisco gartersnakes for capture increased with snout–vent length. The survival rate of female snakes exhibits a nonlinear relationship with snout–vent length (SVL), with survival flat between 300 mm and 550 mm SVL before decreasing for females between 550 mm and 700 mm SVL. For male snakes, survival decreased for adult males >550 mm SVL. The survival rates of the smallest and largest San Francisco gartersnakes were highly uncertain because recapture rates were very low for these sizes. By integrating growth and survival models and using penalized splines, we found support for size‐dependent survival in San Francisco gartersnakes. Our results have applications for devising management activities for this endangered subspecies, and our methods could be applied broadly to the study of size‐dependent demography among animals.
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- 2022
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288. Left Ventricular Hypertrophy and Biomarkers of Cardiac Damage and Stress in Aortic Stenosis
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Elliot J. Stein, William F. Fearon, Sammy Elmariah, Juyong B. Kim, Samir Kapadia, Dharam J. Kumbhani, Linda Gillam, Brian Whisenant, Nishath Quader, Alan Zajarias, Frederick G. Welt, Anthony A. Bavry, Megan Coylewright, Robert N. Piana, Ravinder R. Mallugari, Daniel E. Clark, Jay N. Patel, Holly Gonzales, Deepak K. Gupta, Anna Vatterott, Natalie Jackson, Shi Huang, and Brian R. Lindman
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biomarkers ,left ventricular hypertrophy ,mortality ,NT‐proBNP ,transcatheter aortic valve implantation ,transcatheter aortic valve replacement ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Background Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) is associated with increased mortality risk and rehospitalization after transcatheter aortic valve replacement among those with severe aortic stenosis. Whether cardiac troponin (cTnT) and NT‐proBNP (N‐terminal pro‐B‐type natriuretic peptide) risk stratify patients with aortic stenosis and without LVH is unknown. Methods and Results In a multicenter prospective registry of 923 patients with severe aortic stenosis undergoing transcatheter aortic valve replacement, we included 674 with core‐laboratory‐measured LV mass index, cTnT, and NT‐proBNP. LVH was defined by sex‐specific guideline cut‐offs and elevated biomarker levels were based on age and sex cut‐offs. Adjusted Cox proportional hazards models evaluated associations between LVH and biomarkers and all‐cause death out to 5 years. Elevated cTnT and NT‐proBNP were present in 82% and 86% of patients with moderate/severe LVH, respectively, as compared with 66% and 69% of patients with no/mild LVH, respectively (P
- Published
- 2022
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289. Ocean crustal veins record dynamic interplay between plate-cooling-induced cracking and ocean chemistry
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Evans, Aled D., Coggon, Rosalind M., Harris, Michelle, Carter, Elliot J., Albers, Elmar, Guérin, Gilles M., Belgrano, Thomas M., Jonnalagadda, Mallika, Grant, Lewis J.C., Kempton, Pamela D., Sanderson, David J., Milton, James A., Henstock, Timothy J., Alt, Jeff C., and Teagle, Damon A.H.
- Published
- 2025
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290. Defining the competencies for laparoscopic transabdominal adrenalectomy: An investigation of intraoperative behaviors and decisions of experts
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Madani, Amin, Grover, Karan, Kuo, Jennifer H., Mitmaker, Elliot J., Shen, Wen, Beninato, Toni, Livhits, Masha, Smith, Philip W., Miller, Barbra S., Sippel, Rebecca S., Duh, Quan-Yang, and Lee, James A.
- Published
- 2020
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291. Perioperative Nonsteroidal Anti-inflammatory Drugs (NSAID) Administration and Acute Kidney Injury (AKI) in Major Gastrointestinal Surgery: A Prospective, Multicenter, Propensity Matched Cohort Study
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Writing Committee, Drake, TM, Ahmed, WUR, Baker, D, Mills, E, Khaw, R, Kamarajah, S, McLean, KA, Glasbey, JC, Nepogodiev, D, Data analysis, McLean, KA, Drake, TM, Steering Committee, Glasbey, JC, Borakati, A, Drake, TM, Kamarajah, S, McLean, KA, Bath, MF, Claireaux, HA, Gundogan, B, Mohan, M, Deekonda, P, Kong, C, Joyce, H, Mcnamee, L, Woin, E, Burke, J, Khatri, C, Fitzgerald, JE, Harrison, EM, Bhangu, A, Nepogodiev, D, Advisory group, Arulkumaran, N, Bell, S, Duthie, F, Hughes, J, Pinkney, TD, Prowle, J, Richards, T, Thomas, M, Regional Leads, Dynes, K, Patel, M, Patel, P, Wigley, C, Suresh, R, Shaw, A, Klimach, S, Jull, P, Evans, D, Preece, R, Ibrahim, I, Manikavasagar, V, Smith, R, Brown, F S, Deekonda, P, Teo, R, Sim, D P Y, Borakati, A, Logan, A E, Barai, I, Amin, H, Suresh, S, Sethi, R, Bolton, W, Corbridge, O, Horne, L, Attalla, M, Morley, R, Robinson, C, Hoskins, T, McAllister, R, Lee, S, Dennis, Y, Nixon, G, Heywood, E, Wilson, H, Ng, L, Samaraweera, S, Mills, A, Doherty, C, Woin, E, Belchos, J, Phan, V, Collaborators & validators, Chouari, T, Gardner, T, Goergen, N, Hayes, J D B, MacLeod, C S, McCormack, R, McKinley, A, McKinstry, S, Milligan, W, Ooi, L, Rafiq, N M, Sammut, T, Sinclair, E, Smith, M, Baker, C, Boulton, A P R, Collins, J, Copley, H C, Fearnhead, N, Fox, H, Mah, T, McKenna, J, Naruka, V, Nigam, N, Nourallah, B, Perera, S, Qureshi, A, Saggar, S, Sun, L, Wang, X, Yang, D D, Caroll, P, Doyle, C, Elangovan, S, Falamarzi, A, Perai, K Gascon, Greenan, E, Jain, D, Lang-Orsini, M, Lim, S, OʼByrne, L, Ridgway, P, Van der Laan, S, Wong, J, Arthur, J, Barclay, J, Bradley, P, Edwin, C, Finch, E, Hayashi, E, Hopkins, M, Kelly, D, Kelly, M, McCartan, N, Ormrod, A, Pakenham, A, Hayward, J, Hitchen, C, Kishore, A, Martins, T, Philomen, J, Rao, R, Rickards, C, Burns, N, Copeland, M, Durand, C, Dyal, A, Ghaffar, A, Gidwani, A, Grant, M, Gribbon, C, Gruhn, A, Leer, M, Ahmad, K, Beattie, G, Beatty, M, Campbell, G, Donaldson, G, Graham, S, Holmes, D, Kanabar, S, Liu, H, McCann, C, Stewart, R, Vara, S, Ajibola-Taylor, O, Andah, E J E, Ani, C, Cabdi, N M O, Ito, G, Jones, M, Komoriyama, A, Patel, P, Titu, L, Basra, M, Gallogly, P, Harinath, G, Leong, S H, Pradhan, A, Siddiqui, I, Zaat, S, Ali, A, Galea, M, Looi, W L, Ng, J C K, Atkin, G, Azizi, A, Cargill, Z, China, Z, Elliot, J, Jebakumar, R, Lam, J, Mudalige, G, Onyerindu, C, Renju, M, Shankar Babu, V, Hussain, M, Joji, N, Lovett, B, Mownah, H, Ali, B, Cresswell, B, Dhillon, A K, Dupaguntla, Y S, Hungwe, C, Lowe-Zinola, J D, Tsang, J C H, Bevan, K, Cardus, C, Duggal, A, Hossain, S, McHugh, M, Scott, M, Chan, F, Evans, R, Gurung, E, Haughey, B, Jacob-Ramsdale, B, Kerr, M, Lee, J, McCann, E, OʼBoyle, K, Reid, N, Hayat, F, Hodgson, S, Johnston, R, Jones, W, Khan, M, Linn, T, Long, S, Seetharam, P, Shaman, S, Smart, B, Anilkumar, A, Davies, J, Griffith, J, Hughes, B, Islam, Y, Kidanu, D, Mushaini, N, Qamar, I, Robinson, H, Schramm, M, Tan, C Yan, Apperley, H, Billyard, C, Blazeby, J M, Cannon, S P, Carse, S, Göpfert, A, Loizidou, A, Parkin, J, Sanders, E, Sharma, S, Slade, G, Telfer, R, Whybrow Huppatz, I, Worley, E, Chandramoorthy, L, Friend, C, Harris, L, Jain, P, Karim, M J, Killington, K, McGillicuddy, J, Rafferty, C, Rahunathan, N, Rayne, T, Varathan, Y, Verma, N, Zanichelli, D, Arneill, M, Brown, F, Campbell, B, Crozier, L, Henry, J, McCusker, C, Prabakaran, P, Wilson, R, Asif, U, Connor, M, Dindyal, S, Math, N, Pagarkar, A, Saleem, H, I, Seth, S Sharma, Standfield, N, Swartbol, T, Adamson, R, Choi, J E, El Tokhy, O, Ho, W, Javaid, N R, Kelly, M, Mehdi, A S, Menon, D, Plumptre, I, Sturrock, S, Turner, J, Warren, O, Crane, E, Ferris, B, Gadsby, C, Smallwood, J, Vipond, M, Wilson, V, Amarnath, T, Doshi, A, Gregory, C, Kandiah, K, Powell, B, Spoor, H, Toh, C, Vizor, R, Common, M, Dunleavy, K, Harris, S, Luo, C, Mesbah, Z, Kumar, A Prem, Redmond, A, Skulsky, S, Walsh, T, Daly, D, Deery, L, Epanomeritakis, E, Harty, M, Kane, D, Khan, K, Mackey, R, McConville, J, McGinnity, K, Nixon, G, Ang, A, Kee, J Y, Leung, E, Norman, S, Palaniappan, S V, Sarathy, P Partha, Yeoh, T, Frost, J, Hazeldine, P, Jones, L, Karbowiak, M, Macdonald, C, Mutarambirwa, A, Omotade, A, Runkel, M, Ryan, G, Sawers, N, Searle, C, Suresh, S, Vig, S, Ahmad, A, McGartland, R, Sim, R, Song, A, Wayman, J, Brown, R, Chang, L H, Concannon, K, Crilly, C, Arnold, T J, Burgin, A, Cadden, F, Choy, C H, Coleman, M, Lim, D, Luk, J, Mahankali-Rao, P, Prudence-Taylor, A J, Ramakrishnan, D, Russell, J, Fawole, A, Gohil, J, Green, B, Hussain, A, McMenamin, L, McMenamin, L, Tang, M, Azmi, F, Benchetrit, S, Cope, T, Haque, A, Harlinska, A, Holdsworth, R, Ivo, T, Martin, J, Nisar, T, Patel, A, Sasapu, K, Trevett, J, Vernet, G, Aamir, A, Bird, C, Durham-Hall, A, Gibson, W, Hartley, J, May, N, Maynard, V, Johnson, S, McDonald Wood, C, OʼBrien, M, Orbell, J, Stringfellow, T D, Tenters, F, Tresidder, S, Cheung, W, Grant, A, Tod, N, Bews-Hair, M, Lim, Z H, Lim, S W, Vella-Baldacchino, M, Auckburally, S, Chopada, A, Easdon, S, Goodson, R, McCurdie, F, Narouz, M, Radford, A, Rea, E, Taylor, O, Yu, T, Alfa-Wali, M, Amani, L, Auluck, I, Bruce, P, Emberton, J, Kumar, R, Lagzouli, N, Mehta, A, Murtaza, A, Raja, M, Dennahy, I S, Frew, K, Given, A, He, Y Y, Karim, M A, MacDonald, E, McDonald, E, McVinnie, D, Ng, S K, Pettit, A, Sim, D P Y, Berthaume-Hawkins, S D, Charnley, R, Fenton, K, Jones, D, Murphy, C, Ng, J Q, Reehal, R, Robinson, H, Seraj, S S, Shang, E, Tonks, A, White, P, Yeo, A, Chong, P, Gabriel, R, Patel, N, Richardson, E, Symons, L, Aubrey-Jones, D, Dawood, S, Dobrzynska, M, Faulkner, S, Griffiths, H, Mahmood, F, Patel, P, Perry, M, Power, A, Simpson, R, Ali, A, Brobbey, P, Burrows, A, Elder, P, Ganyani, R, Horseman, C, Hurst, P, Mann, H, Marimuthu, K, McBride, S, Pilsworth, E, Powers, N, Stanier, P, Innes, R, Kersey, T, Kopczynska, M, Langasco, N, Patel, N, Rajagopal, R, Atkins, B, Beasley, W, Lim, Z Cheng, Gill, A, Ang, H Li, Williams, H, Yogeswara, T, Carter, R, Fam, M, Fong, J, Latter, J, Long, M, Mackinnon, S, McKenzie, C, Osmanska, J, Raghuvir, V, Shafi, A, Tsang, K, Walker, L, Bountra, K, Coldicutt, O, Fletcher, D, Hudson, S, Iqbal, S, Bernal, T Lopez, Martin, J W B, Moss-Lawton, F, Smallwood, J, Vipond, M, Cardwell, A, Edgerton, K, Laws, J, Rai, A, Robinson, K, Waite, K, Ward, J, Youssef, H, Knight, C, Koo, P Y, Lazarou, A, Stanger, S, Thorn, C, Triniman, M C, Botha, A, Boyles, L, Cumming, S, Deepak, S, Ezzat, A, Fowler, A J, Gwozdz, A M, Hussain, S F, Khan, S, Li, H, Morrell, B Lu, Neville, J, Nitiahpapand, R, Pickering, O, Sagoo, H, Sharma, E, Welsh, K, Denley, S, Khan, S, Agarwal, M, Al-Saadi, N, Bhambra, R, Gupta, A, Jawad, Z A R, Jiao, L R, Khan, K, Mahir, G, Singagireson, S, Thoms, B L, Tseu, B, Wei, R, Yang, N, Britton, N, Leinhardt, D, Mahfooz, M, Palkhi, A, Price, M, Sheikh, S, Barker, M, Bowley, D, Cant, M, Datta, U, Farooqi, M, Lee, A, Morley, G, Naushad Amin, M, Parry, A, Patel, S, Strang, S, Yoganayagam, N, Adlan, A, Chandramoorthy, S, Choudhary, Y, Das, K, Feldman, M, France, B, Grace, R, Puddy, H, Soor, P, Ali, M, Dhillon, P, Faraj, A, Gerard, L, Glover, M, Imran, H, Kim, S, Patrick, Y, Peto, J, Prabhudesai, A, Smith, R, Tang, A, Vadgama, N, Dhaliwal, R, Ecclestone, T, Harris, A, Ong, D, Patel, D, Philp, C, Stewart, E, Wang, L, Wong, E, Xu, Y, Ashaye, T, Fozard, T, Galloway, F, Kaptanis, S, Mistry, P, Nguyen, T, Olagbaiye, F, Osman, M, Philip, Z, Rembacken, R, Tayeh, S, Theodoropoulou, K, Herman, A, Lau, J, Saha, A, Trotter, M, Adeleye, O, Cave, D, Gunwa, T, Magalhães, J, Makwana, S, Mason, R, Parish, M, Regan, H, Renwick, P, Roberts, G, Salekin, D, Sivakumar, C, Tariq, A, Liew, I, McDade, A, Stewart, D, Hague, M, Hudson-Peacock, N, Jackson, C E S, James, F, Pitt, J, Walker, E Y, Aftab, R, Ang, J J, Anwar, S, Battle, J, Budd, E, Chui, J, Crook, H, Davies, P, Easby, S, Hackney, E, Ho, B, Imam, S Z, Rammell, J, Andrews, H, Perry, C, Schinle, P, Ahmed, P, Aquilina, T, Balai, E, Church, M, Cumber, E, Curtis, A, Davies, G, Dennis, Y, Dumann, E, Greenhalgh, S, Kim, P, King, S, Metcalfe, K H M, Passby, L, Redgrave, N, Soonawalla, Z, Waters, S, Zornoza, A, Gulzar, I, Hole, J, Hull, K, Ishaq, H, Karaj, J, Kelkar, A, Love, E, Patel, S, Thakrar, D, Vine, M, Waterman, A, Dib, N P, Francis, N, Hanson, M, Ingleton, R, Sadanand, K S, Sukirthan, N, Arnell, S, Ball, M, Bassam, N, Beghal, G, Chang, A, Dawe, V, George, A, Huq, T, Hussain, A, Ikram, B, Kanapeckaite, L, Khan, M, Ramjas, D, Rushd, A, Sait, S, Serry, M, Yardimci, E, Capella, S, Chenciner, L, Episkopos, C, Karam, E, McCarthy, C, Moore-Kelly, W, Watson, N, Ahluwalia, V, Barnfield, J, Ben-Gal, O, Bloom, I, Gharatya, A, Khodatars, K, Merchant, N, Moonan, A, Moore, M, Patel, K, Spiers, H, Sundaram, K, Turner, J, Bath, M F, Black, J, Chadwick, H, Huisman, L, Ingram, H, Khan, S, Martin, L, Metcalfe, M, Sangal, P, Seehra, J, Thatcher, A, Venturini, S, Whitcroft, I, Afzal, Z, Brown, S, Gani, A, Gomaa, A, Hussein, N, Oh, S Y, Pazhaniappan, N, Sharkey, E, Sivagnanasithiyar, T, Williams, C, Yeung, J, Cruddas, L, Gurjar, S, Pau, A, Prakash, R, Randhawa, R, Chen, L, Eiben, I, Naylor, M, Osei-Bordom, D, Trenear, R, Bannard-Smith, J, Griffiths, N, Patel, B Y, Saeed, F, Abdikadir, H, Bennett, M, Church, R, Clements, S E, Court, J, Delvi, A, Hubert, J, Macdonald, B, Mansour, F, Patel, R R, Perris, R, Small, S, Betts, A, Brown, N, Chong, A, Croitoru, C, Grey, A, Hickland, P, Ho, C, Hollington, D, McKie, L, Nelson, A R, Stewart, H, Eiben, P, Nedham, M, Ali, I, Brown, T, Cumming, S, Hunt, C, Joyner, C, McAlinden, C, Roberts, J, Rogers, D, Thachettu, A, Tyson, N, Vaughan, R, Verma, N, Yasin, T, Andrew, K, Bhamra, N, Leong, S, Mistry, R, Noble, H, Rashed, F, Walker, N R, Watson, L, Worsfold, M, Yarham, E, Abdikadir, H, Arshad, A, Barmayehvar, B, Cato, L, Chan-lam, N, Do, V, Leong, A, Sheikh, Z, Zheleniakova, T, Coppel, J, Hussain, S T, Mahmood, R, Nourzaie, R, Prowle, J, Sheik-Ali, S, Thomas, A, Alagappan, A, Ashour, R, Bains, H, Diamond, J, Gordon, J, Ibrahim, B, Khalil, M, Mittapalli, D, Neo, Y N, Patil, P, Peck, F S, Reza, N, Swan, I, Whyte, M, Chaudhry, S, Hernon, J, Khawar, H, OʼBrien, J, Pullinger, M, Rothnie, K, Ujjal, S, Bhatte, S, Curtis, J, Green, S, Mayer, A, Watkinson, G, Chapple, K, Hawthorne, T, Khaliq, M, Majkowski, L, Malik, T A M, Mclauchlan, K, Wei En, B Ng, OʼConnor, T, Parton, S, Robinson, S D, Saat, M I, Shurovi, B N, Varatharasasingam, K, Ward, A E, Behranwala, K, Bertelli, M, Cohen, J, Duff, F, Fafemi, O, Gupta, R, Manimaran, M, Mayhew, J, Peprah, D, Wong, M H Y, Farmer, N, Houghton, C, Kandhari, N, Khan, K, Ladha, D, Mayes, J, McLennan, F, Panahi, P, Seehra, H, Agrawal, R, Ahmed, I, Ali, S, Birkinshaw, F, Choudhry, M, Gokani, S, Harrogate, S, Jamal, S, Nawrozzadeh, F, Swaray, A, Szczap, A, Warusavitarne, J, Abdalla, M, Asemota, N, Cullum, R, Hartley, M, Maxwell-Armstrong, C, Mulvenna, C, Phillips, J, Yule, A, Ahmed, L, Clement, K D, Craig, N, Elseedawy, E, Gorman, D, Kane, L, Livie, J, Livie, V, Moss, E, Naasan, A, Ravi, F, Shields, P, Zhu, Y, Archer, M, Cobley, H, Dennis, R, Downes, C, Guevel, B, Lamptey, E, Murray, H, Radhakrishnan, A, Saravanabavan, S, Sardar, M, Shaw, C, Tilliridou, V, Wright, R, Ye, W, Alturki, N, Helliwell, R, Jones, E, Kelly, D, Lambotharan, S, Scott, K, Sivakumar, R, Victor, L, Boraluwe-Rallage, H, Froggatt, P, Haynes, S, Hung, Y M A, Keyte, A, Matthews, L, Evans, E, Haray, P, John, I, Mathivanan, A, Morgan, L, Oji, O, Okorocha, C, Rutherford, A, Spiers, H, Stageman, N, Tsui, A, Whitham, R, Amoah-Arko, A, Cecil, E, Dietrich, A, Fitzpatrick, H, Guy, C, Hair, J, Hilton, J, Jawad, L, McAleer, E, Taylor, Z, Yap, J, Akhbari, M, Debnath, D, Dhir, T, Elbuzidi, M, Elsaddig, M, Glace, S, Khawaja, H, Koshy, R, Lal, K, Lobo, L, McDermott, A, Meredith, J, Qamar, M A, Vaidya, A, Acquaah, F, Barfi, L, Carter, N, Gnanappiragasam, D, Ji, C, Kaminski, F, Lawday, S, Mackay, K, Sulaiman, S K, Webb, R, Ananthavarathan, P, Dalal, F, Farrar, E, Hashemi, R, Hossain, M, 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Lunt, A J, Manley, L, Marks, M, Phillips, C F E, Agnew, C J F, Barr, C J, Benons, N, Hart, S J, Kandage, D, Krysztopik, R, Mahalingam, P, Mock, J, Rajendran, S, Stoddart, M T, Clements, B, Gillespie, H, Lee, S, McDougall, R, Murray, C, OʼLoane, R, Periketi, S, Tan, S, Amoah, R, Bhudia, R, Dudley, B, Gilbert, A, Griffiths, B, Khan, H, McKigney, N, Roberts, B, Samuel, R, Seelarbokus, A, Stubbing-Moore, A, Thompson, G, Williams, P, Ahmed, N, Akhtar, R, Chandler, E, Chappelow, I, Gil, H, Gower, T, Kale, A, Lingam, G, Rutler, L, Sellahewa, C, Sheikh, A, Stringer, H, Taylor, R, Aglan, H, Ashraf, M R, Choo, S, Das, E, Epstein, J, Gentry, R, Mills, D, Poolovadoo, Y, Ward, N, Bull, K, Cole, A, Hack, J, Khawari, S, Lake, C, Mandishona, T, Perry, R, Sleight, S, Sultan, S, Thornton, T, Williams, S, Arif, T, Castle, A, Chauhan, P, Chesner, R, Eilon, T, Kamarajah, S, Kambasha, C, Lock, L, Loka, T, Mohammad, F, Motahariasl, S, Roper, L, Sadhra, S S, Sheikh, A, Toma, T, Wadood, Q, Yip, J, Ainger, E, Busti, S, Cunliffe, L, Flamini, T, Gaffing, S, Moorcroft, C, Peter, M, Simpson, L, Stokes, E, Stott, G, Wilson, J, York, J, Yousaf, A, Borakati, A, Brown, M, Goaman, A, Hodgson, B, Ijeomah, A, Iroegbu, U, Kaur, G, Lowe, C, Mahmood, S, Sattar, Z, Sen, P, Szuman, A, Abbas, N, Al-Ausi, M, Anto, N, Bhome, R, Eccles, L, Elliott, J, Hughes, E J, Jones, A, Karunatilleke, A S, Knight, J S, Manson, C C F, Mekhail, I, Michaels, L, Noton, T M, Okenyi, E, Reeves, T, Yasin, I H, Banfield, D A, Harris, R, Lim, D, Mason-Apps, C, Roe, T, Sandhu, J, Shafiq, N, Stickler, E, Tam, J P, Williams, L M, Ainsworth, P, Boualbanat, Y, Doull, C, Egan, E, Evans, L, Hassanin, K, Ninkovic-Hall, G, Odunlami, W, Shergill, M, Traish, M, Cummings, D, Kershaw, S, Ong, J, Reid, F, Toellner, H, Alwandi, A, Amer, M, George, D, Haynes, K, Hughes, K, Peakall, L, Premakumar, Y, Punjabi, N, Ramwell, A, Sawkins, H, Ashwood, J, Baker, A, Baron, C, Bhide, I, Blake, E, De Cates, C, Esmail, R, Hosamuddin, H, Kapp, J, Nguru, N, Raja, M, Thomson, F, Ahmed, H, Aishwarya, G, Al-Huneidi, R, Ali, S, Aziz, R, Burke, D, Clarke, B, Kausar, A, Maskill, D, Mecia, L, Myers, L, Smith, A C D, Walker, G, Wroe, N, Donohoe, C, Gibbons, D, Jordan, P, Keogh, C, Kiely, A, Lalor, P, McCrohan, M, Powell, C, Foley, M Power, Reynolds, J, Silke, E, Thorpe, O, Tseun Han Kong, J, White, C, Ali, Q, Dalrymple, J, Ge, Y, Khan, H, Luo, R S, Paine, H, Paraskeva, B, Parker, L, Pillai, K, Salciccioli, J, Selvadurai, S, Sonagara, V, Springford, L R, Tan, L, Appleton, S, Leadholm, N, Zhang, Y, Ahern, D, Cotter, M, Cremen, S, Durrigan, T, Flack, V, Hrvacic, N, Jones, H, Jong, B, Keane, K, OʼConnell, P R, Oʼsullivan, J, Pek, G, Shirazi, S, Barker, C, Brown, A, Carr, W, Chen, Y, Guillotte, C, Harte, J, Kokayi, A, Lau, K, McFarlane, S, Morrison, S, Broad, J, Kenefick, N, Makanji, D, Printz, V, Saito, R, Thomas, O, Breen, H, Kirk, S, Kong, C H, OʼKane, A, Eddama, M, Engledow, A, Freeman, S K, Frost, A, Goh, C, Lee, G, Poonawala, R, Suri, A, Taribagil, P, Brown, H, Christie, S, Dean, S, Gravell, R, Haywood, E, Holt, F, Pilsworth, E, Rabiu, R, Roscoe, H W, Shergill, S, Sriram, A, Sureshkumar, A, Tan, L C, Tanna, A, Vakharia, A, Bhullar, S, Brannick, S, Dunne, E, Frere, M, Kerin, M, Kumar, K Muthu, Pratumsuwan, T, Quek, R, Salman, M, Van Den Berg, N, Wong, C, Ahluwalia, J, Bagga, R, Borg, C M, Calabria, C, Draper, A, Farwana, M, Joyce, H, Khan, A, Mazza, M, Pankin, G, Sait, M S, Sandhu, N, Virani, N, Wong, J, Woodhams, K, Croghan, N, Ghag, S, Hogg, G, Ismail, O, John, N, Nadeem, K, Naqi, M, Noe, S M, Sharma, A, Tan, S, Begum, F, Best, R, Collishaw, A, Glasbey, J, Golding, D, Gwilym, B, Harrison, P, Jackman, T, Lewis, N, Luk, Y L, Porter, T, Potluri, S, Stechman, M, Tate, S, Thomas, D, Walford, B, Auld, F, Bleakley, A, Johnston, S, Jones, C, Khaw, J, Milne, S, OʼNeill, S, Singh, K K R, Smith, R, Swan, A, Thorley, N, Yalamarthi, S, Yin, Z D, Ali, A, Balian, V, Bana, R, Clark, K, Livesey, C, McLachlan, G, Mohammad, M, Pranesh, N, Richards, C, Ross, F, Sajid, M, Brooke, M, Francombe, J, Gresly, J, Hutchinson, S, Kerrigan, K, Matthews, E, Nur, S, Parsons, L, Sandhu, A, Vyas, M, White, F, Zulkifli, A, Zuzarte, L, Al-Mousawi, A, Arya, J, Azam, S, Azri Yahaya, A, Gill, K, Hallan, R, Hathaway, C, Leptidis, I, McDonagh, L, Mitrasinovic, S, Mushtaq, N, Pang, N, Peiris, G B, Rinkoff, S, Chan, L, Christopher, E, Farhan-Alanie, M M H, Gonzalez-Ciscar, A, Graham, C J, Lim, H, McLean, K A, Paterson, H M, Rogers, A, Roy, C, Rutherford, D, Smith, F, Zubikarai, G, Al-Khudairi, R, Bamford, M, Chang, M, Cheng, J, Hedley, C, Joseph, R, Mitchell, B, Perera, S, Rothwell, L, Siddiqui, A, Smith, J, Taylor, K, Wright, O Wroe, Baryan, H K, Boyd, G, Conchie, H, Cox, L, Davies, J, Gardner, S, Hill, N, Krishna, K, Lakin, F, Scotcher, S, Alberts, J, Asad, M, Barraclough, J, Campbell, A, Marshall, D, Wakeford, W, Cronbach, P, DʼSouza, F, Gammeri, E, Houlton, J, Hall, M, Kethees, A, Patel, R, Perera, M, Prowle, J, Shaid, M, Webb, E, Beattie, S, Chadwick, M, El-Taji, O, Haddad, S, Mann, M, Patel, M, Popat, K, Rimmer, L, Riyat, H, Smith, H, Anandarajah, C, Cipparrone, M, Desai, K, Gao, C, Goh, E T, Howlader, M, Jeffreys, N, Karmarkar, A, Mathew, G, Mukhtar, H, Ozcan, E, Renukanthan, A, Sarens, N, Sinha, C, Woolley, A, Bogle, R, Komolafe, O, Loo, F, Waugh, D, Zeng, R, Crewe, A, Mathias, J, Mills, A, Owen, A, Prior, A, Saunders, I, Baker, A, Crilly, L, McKeon, J, Ubhi, H K, Adeogun, A, Carr, R, Davison, C, Devalia, S, Hayat, A, Karsan, R B, Osborne, C, Scott, K, Weegenaar, C, Wijeyaratne, M, Babatunde, F, Barnor-Ahiaku, E, Beattie, G, Chitsabesan, P, Dixon, O, Hall, N, Ilenkovan, N, Mackrell, T, Nithianandasivam, N, Orr, J, Palazzo, F, Saad, M, Sandland-Taylor, L, Sherlock, J, Ashdown, T, Chandler, S, Garsaa, T, Lloyd, J, Loh, S Y, Ng, S, Perkins, C, Powell-Chandler, A, Smith, F, and Underhill, R
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- 2022
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292. EgoPoseFormer: A Simple Baseline for Egocentric 3D Human Pose Estimation
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Yang, Chenhongyi, Tkach, Anastasia, Hampali, Shreyas, Zhang, Linguang, Crowley, Elliot J., Keskin, Cem, Yang, Chenhongyi, Tkach, Anastasia, Hampali, Shreyas, Zhang, Linguang, Crowley, Elliot J., and Keskin, Cem
- Abstract
We present EgoPoseFormer, a simple yet effective transformer-based model for stereo egocentric human pose estimation. The main challenge in egocentric pose estimation is overcoming joint invisibility, which is caused by self-occlusion or a limited field of view (FOV) of head-mounted cameras. Our approach overcomes this challenge by incorporating a two-stage pose estimation paradigm: in the first stage, our model leverages the global information to estimate each joint's coarse location, then in the second stage, it employs a DETR style transformer to refine the coarse locations by exploiting fine-grained stereo visual features. In addition, we present a deformable stereo operation to enable our transformer to effectively process multi-view features, which enables it to accurately localize each joint in the 3D world. We evaluate our method on the stereo UnrealEgo dataset and show it significantly outperforms previous approaches while being computationally efficient: it improves MPJPE by 27.4mm (45% improvement) with only 7.9% model parameters and 13.1% FLOPs compared to the state-of-the-art. Surprisingly, with proper training techniques, we find that even our first-stage pose proposal network can achieve superior performance compared to previous arts. We also show that our method can be seamlessly extended to monocular settings, which achieves state-of-the-art performance on the SceneEgo dataset, improving MPJPE by 25.5mm (21% improvement) compared to the best existing method with only 60.7% model parameters and 36.4% FLOPs., Comment: Tech Report
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- 2024
293. Changes to virus taxonomy and the Statutes ratified by the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (2020)
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Walker, Peter J., Siddell, Stuart G., Lefkowitz, Elliot J., Mushegian, Arcady R., Adriaenssens, Evelien M., Dempsey, Donald M., Dutilh, Bas E., Harrach, Balázs, Harrison, Robert L., Hendrickson, R. Curtis, Junglen, Sandra, Knowles, Nick J., Kropinski, Andrew M., Krupovic, Mart, Kuhn, Jens H., Nibert, Max, Orton, Richard J., Rubino, Luisa, Sabanadzovic, Sead, Simmonds, Peter, Smith, Donald B., Varsani, Arvind, Zerbini, Francisco Murilo, and Davison, Andrew J.
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- 2020
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294. Binomial nomenclature for virus species: a consultation
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Siddell, Stuart G., Walker, Peter J., Lefkowitz, Elliot J., Mushegian, Arcady R., Dutilh, Bas E., Harrach, Balázs, Harrison, Robert L., Junglen, Sandra, Knowles, Nick J., Kropinski, Andrew M., Krupovic, Mart, Kuhn, Jens H., Nibert, Max L., Rubino, Luisa, Sabanadzovic, Sead, Simmonds, Peter, Varsani, Arvind, Zerbini, Francisco Murilo, and Davison, Andrew J.
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- 2020
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295. Performance Aware Convolutional Neural Network Channel Pruning for Embedded GPUs.
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Valentin Radu, Kuba Kaszyk, Yuan Wen, Jack Turner, José Cano 0001, Elliot J. Crowley, Björn Franke, Amos J. Storkey, and Michael F. P. O'Boyle
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- 2019
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296. Cardiovascular–renal axis disorders in the domestic dog and cat: a veterinary consensus statement
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Pouchelon, JL, Atkins, CE, Bussadori, C, Oyama, MA, Vaden, SL, Bonagura, JD, Chetboul, V, Cowgill, LD, Elliot, J, Francey, T, Grauer, GF, Fuentes, V Luis, Moise, N Sydney, Polzin, DJ, Van Dongen, AM, and Van Israël, N
- Subjects
Kidney Disease ,Cardiovascular ,Animals ,Cardio-Renal Syndrome ,Cat Diseases ,Cats ,Consensus ,Delphi Technique ,Dog Diseases ,Dogs ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Veterinary Medicine ,Veterinary Sciences - Abstract
ObjectivesThere is a growing understanding of the complexity of interplay between renal and cardiovascular systems in both health and disease. The medical profession has adopted the term "cardiorenal syndrome" (CRS) to describe the pathophysiological relationship between the kidney and heart in disease. CRS has yet to be formally defined and described by the veterinary profession and its existence and importance in dogs and cats warrant investigation. The CRS Consensus Group, comprising nine veterinary cardiologists and seven nephrologists from Europe and North America, sought to achieve consensus around the definition, pathophysiology, diagnosis and management of dogs and cats with "cardiovascular-renal disorders" (CvRD). To this end, the Delphi formal methodology for defining/building consensus and defining guidelines was utilised.MethodsFollowing a literature review, 13 candidate statements regarding CvRD in dogs and cats were tested for consensus, using a modified Delphi method. As a new area of interest, well-designed studies, specific to CRS/CvRD, are lacking, particularly in dogs and cats. Hence, while scientific justification of all the recommendations was sought and used when available, recommendations were largely reliant on theory, expert opinion, small clinical studies and extrapolation from data derived from other species.ResultsOf the 13 statements, 11 achieved consensus and 2 did not. The modified Delphi approach worked well to achieve consensus in an objective manner and to develop initial guidelines for CvRD.DiscussionThe resultant manuscript describes consensus statements for the definition, classification, diagnosis and management strategies for veterinary patients with CvRD, with an emphasis on the pathological interplay between the two organ systems. By formulating consensus statements regarding CvRD in veterinary medicine, the authors hope to stimulate interest in and advancement of the understanding and management of CvRD in dogs and cats. The use of a formalised method for consensus and guideline development should be considered for other topics in veterinary medicine.
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- 2015
297. De-biased Populations of Kuiper Belt Objects from the Deep Ecliptic Survey
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Adams, E. R., Gulbis, A. A. S., Elliot, J. L., Benecchi, S. D., Buie, M. W., Trilling, D. E., and Wasserman, L. H.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
The Deep Ecliptic Survey (DES) discovered hundreds of Kuiper Belt objects from 1998-2005. Follow-up observations yielded 304 objects with good dynamical classifications (Classical, Scattered, Centaur, or 16 mean-motion resonances with Neptune). The DES search fields are well documented, enabling us to calculate the probability of detecting objects with particular orbital parameters and absolute magnitudes at a randomized point in each orbit. Grouping objects together by dynamical class leads, we estimate the orbital element distributions (a, e, i) for the largest three classes (Classical, 3:2, and Scattered) using maximum likelihood. Using H-magnitude as a proxy for the object size, we fit a power law to the number of objects for 8 classes with at least 5 detected members (246 objects). The best Classical slope is alpha=1.02+/-0.01 (observed from 5<=H<=7.2). Six dynamical classes (Scattered plus 5 resonances) are consistent in slope with the Classicals, though the absolute number of objects is scaled. The exception to the power law relation are the Centaurs (non-resonant with perihelia closer than Neptune, and thus detectable at smaller sizes), with alpha=0.42+/-0.02 (7.5
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- 2013
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298. Sex-based differences in the activation of peripheral blood monocytes in early Parkinson disease
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Carlisle, Samantha M., Qin, Hongwei, Hendrickson, R. Curtis, Muwanguzi, Jordana E., Lefkowitz, Elliot J., Kennedy, Richard E., Yan, Zhaoqi, Yacoubian, Talene A., Benveniste, Etty N., West, Andrew B., Harms, Ashley S., and Standaert, David G.
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- 2021
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299. Mining for natural product antileishmanials in a fungal extract library
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Mbekeani, A.J., Jones, R.S., Bassas Llorens, M., Elliot, J., Regnault, C., Barrett, M.P., Steele, J., Kebede, B., Wrigley, S.K., Evans, L., and Denny, P.W.
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- 2019
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300. Juvenile fish habitat across the inner Danish waters: Habitat association models and habitat growth models for European plaice, flounder and common sole informed by a targeted survey
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Brown, Elliot J., Kokkalis, Alexandros, and Støttrup, Josianne G.
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- 2019
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