2,172 results on '"A. Brickhouse"'
Search Results
2. Detection of New Galaxy Candidates at $z\ >$ 11 in the JADES Field Using JWST NIRCam
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Chakraborty, Priyanka, Sarkar, Arnab, Wolk, Scott, Schneider, Benjamin, Brickhouse, Nancy, Lanzetta, Kenneth, Foster, Adam, and Smith, Randall
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We report the detection of seven new galaxy candidates with redshift $z$ $>$ 11 within the JWST Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey (JADES) GOODS-S and GOODS-N fields. These new candidates are detected through meticulous analysis of NIRCam photometry in eight filters spanning a wavelength range of 0.8-5.0 $\mu$m. Photometric redshifts of these galaxy candidates are independently measured utilizing spectral energy distribution (SED) fitting techniques using \texttt{EAZY} and \texttt{BAGPIPES} codes, followed by visual scrutiny. Two of these galaxy candidates are located in GOODS-S field, while the remaining five galaxies are located in GOODS-N field. Our analysis reveals that the stellar masses of these galaxies typically range from log $M_{\ast}$/$M_{\odot}$ = 7.75--8.75. Futhermore, these galaxies are typically young with their mass-weighted ages spanning from 80 to 240 Myr. Their specific star formation rates (sSFR), quantified as $\log (\text{sSFR}/\text{Gyr}$), are measured to vary between $\sim 0.95$ to 1.46. These new galaxy candidates offer a robust sample for probing the physical properties of galaxies within the first few hundred Myr of the history of the Universe. We also analyze the relationship between star formation rate (SFR) and stellar mass ($M_\ast$) within our sample. Using linear regression, our analysis yields a slope of $0.71 \pm 0.12$, which we then compare with results from previous studies. Continued investigation through spectroscopic analysis using JWST/NIRSpec is needed to spectroscopically confirm these high-redshift galaxy candidates and investigate further into their physical properties. We plan to follow up on these candidates with future NIRSpec observations., Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, Submitted to MNRAS
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- 2024
3. A Cryogen-Free Electron Beam Ion Trap for Astrophysically Relevant Spectroscopic Studies
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Gall, A. C., Foster, A., Yang, Y., Takacs, E., Brickhouse, N. S., Silver, E., and Smith, R. K.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Physics - Atomic Physics ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
The detailed design and operation of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory's EBIT are described for the first time, including recent design upgrades that have led to improved system stability and greater user control, increasing the scope of possible experiments. Measurements of emission from highly charged Ar were taken to determine the spatial distribution of the ion cloud and electron beam. An optical setup consisting of two lenses, a narrow band filter, and a CCD camera was used to image visible light, while an X-ray pinhole and CCD camera were used to image X-rays. Measurements were used to estimate an effective electron density of 1.77 x 10$^{10}$ cm$^{-3}$. Additionally, observations of X-ray emission from background EBIT gases were measured with a Silicon Lithium detector. Measurements indicate the presence of Ba and Si, which are both easily removed by dumping the trap every 2 s or less.
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- 2024
4. Investigating the impact of atomic data uncertainties on measured physical parameters of the Perseus galaxy cluster
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Chakraborty, Priyanka, Hemmer, Rachel, Foster, Adam R., Raymond, John, Sarkar, Arnab, Smith, Randall, and Brickhouse, Nancy
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Accurate atomic data and plasma models are essential for interpreting the upcoming high-quality spectra from missions like XRISM and Athena. Estimating physical quantities, like temperature, abundance, turbulence, and resonance scattering factor, is highly dependent on the underlying atomic data. We use the AtomDB tool variableapec to estimate the impact of atomic data uncertainties in Einstein A coefficients, collisional rate coefficient, ionization and recombination rates in H-, He- and Li-like iron in modeling the spectrum of Perseus observed by Hitomi. The best-fit temperature, abundance, resonance scattering factor, and turbulence including atomic data uncertainties, varied approximately 17%, 35%, 30%, and 3%, respectively, from the best-fit temperature, abundance, resonance scattering factor, and turbulence estimated without atomic data uncertainties. This indicates that, approximately 32%, 35%, and 25% of the best-fit temperatures, abundances, and resonance scattering factors, including uncertainties lie outside the 3$\sigma$ error regions of their corresponding best-fit values computed with zero atomic data error. Expanding the energy range to 1.8-20.0 keV shows less variability, with 26% of the abundances and 22% of the resonance scattering factors lying outside the 3$\sigma$ error of the best-fit values. We also studied correlations between physical parameters and atomic rate uncertainties to identify key atomic quantities requiring precise lab measurements. We report negative correlations between best-fit temperature and z (1s.2s $^{3}\rm S_{1}\rightarrow 1s^{2}$) collisional rate coefficient, abundance and y (1s.2p $^{3}\rm P_{1}\rightarrow 1s^{2}$) collisional rate coefficient, abundance and z collisional rate coefficient, and positive correlation between resonance scattering factor and w (1s.2p $^{1}\rm P_{1}\rightarrow 1s^{2}$) collisional rate coefficient., Comment: Accepted for Publication in The Astrophysical Journal
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- 2023
5. Sudden Transition to Online Instruction for ESL Instructors: A Phenomenological Study
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Brickhouse, Asli
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In March of 2020, educational institutions worldwide experienced mass school closures mandated to prevent the spread of COVID-19 as part of public health efforts. Millions of educators and students around the world began to teach and study through distance education. In order to deliver high-quality instruction, educators were required to adapt to remote teaching tools and methodologies in a short amount of time. The majority of college instructors who teach remotely at community colleges had not received training prior to the online teaching transition. The purpose of this phenomenological study was to explore the lived experiences of 15 English as a second language (ESL) instructors who taught at a community college in the northeast section of the United States during and immediately after the COVID-19 pandemic. During the data analysis, critical themes such as strong emotional reactions, technological difficulties, increased workload and exhaustion, teacher-formed learning communities, and learning by trial and error emerged. The contribution of this phenomenological study may benefit higher education administrators and instructors by helping them make informed decisions in case of a sudden transition. The data derived from this study might serve as a guide to schools in similar settings. This information could be shared in workshops and seminars to equip faculty as well as prepare future faculty and staff members. As a result of the study, educational institutions can evaluate their practices to increase the faculty's readiness to teach remotely under emergency conditions.
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- 2023
6. New resonance scattering model in AtomDB: application to line suppression in galaxy clusters and elliptical galaxies
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Chakraborty, Priyanka, Foster, Adam, Smith, Randall, Brickhouse, Nancy, and Raymond, John
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
In this paper, we present a simple, one-step, self-consistent, and fast resonance scattering model rsapec based on the AtomDB database. This model can be used as an alternative to the commonly used APEC model for fitting such X-ray spectra with optically thick lines. The current model is intended, in general, for verifying the presence of the effect and for spectral modeling of galaxy clusters and elliptical galaxies under applicable assumptions. We test rsapec to derive the line suppression in the elliptical galaxy NGC 4636 and the Perseus cluster of galaxies and obtain resonance suppression of ~ 1.24 and ~ 1.30, respectively., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2023
7. Twenty-Five Years of Accretion onto the Classical T Tauri Star TW Hya
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Herczeg, Gregory J., Chen, Yuguang, Donati, Jean-Francois, Dupree, Andrea K., Walter, Frederick M., Hillenbrand, Lynne A., Johns-Krull, Christopher M., Manara, Carlo F., Guenther, Hans Moritz, Fang, Min, Schneider, P. Christian, Valenti, Jeff A., Alencar, Silvia H. P., Venuti, Laura, Alcala, Juan Manuel, Frasca, Antonio, Arulanantham, Nicole, Linsky, Jeffrey L., Bouvier, Jerome, Brickhouse, Nancy S., Calvet, Nuria, Espaillat, Catherine C., Campbell-White, Justyn, Carpenter, John M., Chang, Seok-Jun, Cruz, Kelle L., Dahm, S. E., Eisloeffel, Jochen, Edwards, Suzan, Fischer, William J., Guo, Zhen, Henning, Thomas, Ji, Tao, Jose, Jesse, Kastner, Joel H., Launhardt, Ralf, Principe, David A., Robinson, Conner E., Serna, Javier, Siwak, Michal, Sterzik, Michael F., and Takasao, Shinsuke
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Accretion plays a central role in the physics that governs the evolution and dispersal of protoplanetary disks. The primary goal of this paper is to analyze the stability over time of the mass accretion rate onto TW Hya, the nearest accreting solar-mass young star. We measure veiling across the optical spectrum in 1169 archival high-resolution spectra of TW Hya, obtained from 1998--2022. The veiling is then converted to accretion rate using 26 flux-calibrated spectra that cover the Balmer jump. The accretion rate measured from the excess continuum has an average of $2.51\times10^{-9}$~M$_\odot$~yr$^{-1}$ and a Gaussian distribution with a FWHM of 0.22 dex. This accretion rate may be underestimated by a factor of up to 1.5 because of uncertainty in the bolometric correction and another factor of 1.7 because of excluding the fraction of accretion energy that escapes in lines, especially Ly$\alpha$. The accretion luminosities are well correlated with He line luminosities but poorly correlated with H$\alpha$ and H$\beta$ luminosity. The accretion rate is always flickering over hours but on longer timescales has been stable over 25 years. This level of variability is consistent with previous measurements for most, but not all, accreting young stars., Comment: Accepted by ApJ. 31 pages
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- 2023
8. Survey of COVID-19 Isolation Cases at a Major University Campus in the United States
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Mark Brickhouse, Jeffrey Gassen, Benjamin J. Ryan, and Michael P. Muehlenbein
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Objective: Baylor University established a surveillance system to assess the needs of students and faculty in isolation from SARS-CoV-2 as well as any longer-term symptoms. Participants: Overall, there were 309 responses between March 20 and May 19, 2021. Methods: A survey covering experience in isolation, symptoms, vaccination, and demographic characteristics was emailed to individuals on Day 7 of isolation; a follow-up health survey was sent 30 days later. Results: Only 9.6% of respondents reported needing assistance while in isolation. Nearly 75% of respondents experienced COVID-19 symptoms in isolation, and 31.9% had remaining symptoms after isolation. Older age, being male, and more severe symptoms were associated with longer symptom duration. Those vaccinated had lower odds of developing symptoms and having symptoms remaining post-isolation. Conclusions: The present study adds to our understanding of long-COVID in young adult populations, while providing a framework for similar institutions to sustain operations during a global pandemic.
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- 2024
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9. Atrophy in behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia spans multiple large-scale prefrontal and temporal networks.
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Eldaief, Mark, Brickhouse, Michael, Katsumi, Yuta, Rosen, Howard, Carvalho, Nicole, Touroutoglou, Alexandra, and Dickerson, Bradford
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behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia (bvTD) ,control network ,default-mode network ,limbic network ,salience network ,Humans ,Frontotemporal Dementia ,Reproducibility of Results ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Brain ,Atrophy - Abstract
The identification of a neurodegenerative disorders distributed pattern of atrophy-or atrophy signature-can lend insights into the cortical networks that degenerate in individuals with specific constellations of symptoms. In addition, this signature can be used as a biomarker to support early diagnoses and to potentially reveal pathological changes associated with said disorder. Here, we characterized the cortical atrophy signature of behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD). We used a data-driven approach to estimate cortical thickness using surface-based analyses in two independent, sporadic bvFTD samples (n = 30 and n = 71, total n = 101), using age- and gender-matched cognitively and behaviourally normal individuals. We found highly similar patterns of cortical atrophy across the two independent samples, supporting the reliability of our bvFTD signature. Next, we investigated whether our bvFTD signature targets specific large-scale cortical networks, as is the case for other neurodegenerative disorders. We specifically asked whether the bvFTD signature topographically overlaps with the salience network, as previous reports have suggested. We hypothesized that because phenotypic presentations of bvFTD are diverse, this would not be the case, and that the signature would cross canonical network boundaries. Consistent with our hypothesis, the bvFTD signature spanned rostral portions of multiple networks, including the default mode, limbic, frontoparietal control and salience networks. We then tested whether the signature comprised multiple anatomical subtypes, which themselves overlapped with specific networks. To explore this, we performed a hierarchical clustering analysis. This yielded three clusters, only one of which extensively overlapped with a canonical network (the limbic network). Taken together, these findings argue against the hypothesis that the salience network is preferentially affected in bvFTD, but rather suggest that-at least in patients who meet diagnostic criteria for the full-blown syndrome-neurodegeneration in bvFTD encompasses a distributed set of prefrontal, insular and anterior temporal nodes of multiple large-scale brain networks, in keeping with the phenotypic diversity of this disorder.
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- 2023
10. The Sporadic Early‐onset Alzheimer's Disease Signature Of Atrophy: Preliminary Findings From The Longitudinal Early‐onset Alzheimer's Disease Study (LEADS) Cohort
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Touroutoglou, Alexandra, Katsumi, Yuta, Brickhouse, Michael, Zaitsev, Alexander, Eckbo, Ryan, Aisen, Paul, Beckett, Laurel, Dage, Jeffrey L, Eloyan, Ani, Foroud, Tatiana, Ghetti, Bernardino, Griffin, Percy, Hammers, Dustin, Jack, Clifford R, Kramer, Joel H, Iaccarino, Leonardo, La Joie, Renaud, Mundada, Nidhi S, Koeppe, Robert, Kukull, Walter A, Murray, Melissa E, Nudelman, Kelly, Polsinelli, Angelina J, Rumbaugh, Malia, Soleimani‐Meigooni, David N, Toga, Arthur, Vemuri, Prashanthi, Atri, Alireza, Day, Gregory S, Duara, Ranjan, Graff‐Radford, Neill R, Honig, Lawrence S, Jones, David T, Masdeu, Joseph C, Mendez, Mario F, Musiek, Erik, Onyike, Chiadi U, Riddle, Meghan, Rogalski, Emily, Salloway, Stephen, Sha, Sharon, Turner, R Scott, Wingo, Thomas S, Wolk, David A, Womack, Kyle, Carrillo, Maria C, Rabinovici, Gil D, Apostolova, Liana G, Dickerson, Bradford C, and Consortium, the LEADS
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Biological Psychology ,Psychology ,Alzheimer's Disease including Alzheimer's Disease Related Dementias (AD/ADRD) ,Dementia ,Brain Disorders ,Aging ,Alzheimer's Disease ,Neurosciences ,Acquired Cognitive Impairment ,Neurodegenerative ,Biomedical Imaging ,4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Neurological ,Humans ,Alzheimer Disease ,Reproducibility of Results ,Temporal Lobe ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Atrophy ,Biomarkers ,disease signature ,early-onset Alzheimer's disease ,magnetic resonance imaging ,LEADS Consortium ,Clinical Sciences ,Geriatrics ,Clinical sciences ,Biological psychology - Abstract
IntroductionMagnetic resonance imaging (MRI) research has advanced our understanding of neurodegeneration in sporadic early-onset Alzheimer's disease (EOAD) but studies include small samples, mostly amnestic EOAD, and have not focused on developing an MRI biomarker.MethodsWe analyzed MRI scans to define the sporadic EOAD-signature atrophy in a small sample (n = 25) of Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) EOAD patients, investigated its reproducibility in the large longitudinal early-onset Alzheimer's disease study (LEADS) sample (n = 211), and investigated the relationship of the magnitude of atrophy with cognitive impairment.ResultsThe EOAD-signature atrophy was replicated across the two cohorts, with prominent atrophy in the caudal lateral temporal cortex, inferior parietal lobule, and posterior cingulate and precuneus cortices, and with relative sparing of the medial temporal lobe. The magnitude of EOAD-signature atrophy was associated with the severity of cognitive impairment.DiscussionThe EOAD-signature atrophy is a reliable and clinically valid biomarker of AD-related neurodegeneration that could be used in clinical trials for EOAD.HighlightsWe developed an early-onset Alzheimer's disease (EOAD)-signature of atrophy based on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans. EOAD signature was robustly reproducible across two independent patient cohorts. EOAD signature included prominent atrophy in parietal and posterior temporal cortex. The EOAD-signature atrophy was associated with the severity of cognitive impairment. EOAD signature is a reliable and clinically valid biomarker of neurodegeneration.
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- 2023
11. Transcranial magnetic stimulation improves language and language network functional connectivity in a patient with logopenic primary progressive aphasia
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Alexandra Touroutoglou, Yuta Katsumi, Neguine Rezaii, Thiago Paranhos, Amelia Jones, Daisy Hochberg, Megan Quimby, Shalom K. Henderson, Bonnie Wong, Michael Brickhouse, Joan A. Camprodon, Bradford C. Dickerson, and Mark C. Eldaief
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Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Published
- 2024
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12. The 2023 SEA Common Reading Forum: On Toni Morrison's A Mercy
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Brickhouse, Anna, Langley, April, and Tonti, Kaitlin
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Conferences and conventions -- Conferences, meetings and seminars - Abstract
a mercy if you don't read this no one will. (one question: can you read?) this story begins in a language I can't recall but I will try to build [...]
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- 2024
13. Reducing Poverty and Building Capacity—Perceived Child and Family Impacts of the Child Tax Credit Expansion
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Dugger, R., Weaver, R. G., Bean, M. K., Brickhouse, T. H., Brice, P., Siceloff, E. R., Armstrong, B., Beets, M., and Adams, E. L.
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- 2023
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14. Mobilizing and Delivering Essential Meals to Children and Families Affected by School Closures during COVID-19 and Beyond
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Ryan, Benjamin J., Telford, Victoria, Brickhouse, Mark, Campbell, Jacqueline, Crowe, Connor, Fink, Rok, Hatch, Kristy, Hatch, Tim, Jones, Reiley, Cruz, Andrea S., Allen, Cara, Krey, Kathy, Everett, Jeremy, Kanitz, Lori A., and Brooks, Bryan W.
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Background: The closure of schools in response to COVID-19 compromised access to essential meals for many students. The Emergency Meals-to-You program, a public/private partnership, was set up to address this challenge. More than 38.7 million meals were delivered between April and August 2020. This study explores lessons learned and identifies strategies for strengthening food access and security at schools and beyond. Methods: Qualitative research methods were used. This included interviews and focus groups with participants involved in setting up and delivering the Emergency Meals-to-You program. Data were thematically analyzed using key phrases, ideas, and concepts, and interpreted. Results: The program leveraged a multisectoral approach. Components relied on each other and included: schools, public/private partnership, eligibility, relationships, experience, centralized communication, food quality and branding, logistics, and transport. Strategies identified to strengthen food access focused on integration with emergency management structures, understanding food needs at the school level, building a fully procurable menu, and allowing distribution to be rapidly scaled. Conclusions: The lessons identified and strategies recommended provide a framework for working across the emergency management spectrum (school to national level) to strengthen food access and availability for students and their families affected by a pandemic, disaster, or crisis situation.
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- 2022
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15. 2018 NASA Laboratory Astrophysics Workshop: Scientific Organizing Committee Report
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Brickhouse, N., Ferland, G. J., Milam, S., Sciamma-O'Brien, E., Smale, A., Spyrou, A., Stancil, P. C., Storrie-Lombardi, L., and Wahlgren, G. M.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
This report provides detailed findings on the critical laboratory astrophysics data needs that are required to maximize the scientific return for NASA's current and near-term planned astrophysics missions. It also provides prioritized rankings on said laboratory astrophysics data, generally by waveband. The Report is based on community input gathered at the 2018 NASA Laboratory Astrophysics Workshop (LAW) from presentations, from discussions during workshop breakout sessions, and from other solicited input deemed appropriate by the Scientific Organizing Committee (SOC) obtained prior to and after the meeting. Hence, the Report is a direct reflection of the spirit and participant make-up of LAW 2018. The Report also outlines specific opportunities and threats facing NASA's Laboratory Astrophysics Program, and articulates concrete actions by which the Agency can capitalize on the opportunities and mitigate the challenges. The Report was prepared by the SOC, with help from some invited speakers, and input and review from community members.
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- 2020
16. Correction to: Reducing Poverty and Building Capacity—Perceived Child and Family Impacts of the Child Tax Credit Expansion
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Dugger, R., Weaver, R. G., Bean, M. K., Brickhouse, T. H., Brice, P., Siceloff, E. R., Armstrong, B., Beets, M., and Adams, E. L.
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- 2023
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17. Understanding Galactic Star Formation with Next Generation X-ray Spectroscopy and Imaging
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Wolk, Scott J., Osten, Rachel, Brickhouse, Nancy, Günther, Moritz, Lopez, Laura A., Drake, Jeremy, Williams, Benjamin F., Winston, Elaine, Leahy, Denis, Tzanavaris, Panayiotis, and Principe, David A.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
This white paper is motivated by open questions in star formation, which can be uniquely addressed by high resolution X-ray imaging and require an X-ray observatory with large collecting area along good spectral resolution. A complete census of star-forming regions in X-rays, combined with well matched infrared (IR) data, will advance our understanding of disk survival times and dissipation mechanisms. In addition, we will be able to directly observe the effects of X-ray irradiation on circumstellar grain growth to compare with grain evolution models in both high- and low-UV environments. X-rays are native to stars at all phases of star formation and affect planet-forming disks especially through flares. Moreover, X-rays trace magnetic fields which weave through the flares, providing a unique, non-gravitational feedback mechanism between disk and star. Finally, the bright X-ray emission emanating from hot plasma associated with massive stars can have large scale impacts on the topology of star-forming regions and their interface with the interstellar medium (ISM)., Comment: Astro2020 Science White Paper, 3 figures
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- 2019
18. Unlocking the Capabilities of Future High-Resolution X-ray Spectroscopy Missions Through Laboratory Astrophysics
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Betancourt-Martinez, Gabriele, Akamatsu, Hiroki, Barret, Didier, Bautista, Manuel, Bernitt, Sven, Bianchi, Stefano, Bodewits, Dennis, Brickhouse, Nancy, Brown, Gregory V., Costantini, Elisa, Coreno, Marcello, López-Urrutia, José R. Crespo, Cumbee, Renata, Eckart, Megan, Ferland, Gary, Fiore, Fabrizio, Fogle, Michael, Foster, Adam, Garcia, Javier, Gorczyca, Tom, Grinberg, Victoria, Grosso, Nicolas, Gu, Liyi, Gu, Ming Feng, Guainazzi, Matteo, Hell, Natalie, Herder, Jan-Willem den, Kaastra, Jelle, Kallman, Timothy, Lee, Julia, Leutenegger, Maurice, Marler, Joan, McCammon, Dan, Nakashima, Shinya, Nicastro, Fabrizio, Paerels, Frits, Pajot, François, Pointecouteau, Etienne, Porquet, Delphine, Porter, F. Scott, Savin, Daniel Wolf, Sawada, Makoto, Shah, Chintan, Simionescu, Aurora, de Simone, Monica, Sosolik, Chad, Stancil, Phillip, Steinbrügge, René, and Yamaguchi, Hiroya
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Thanks to high-resolution and non-dispersive spectrometers onboard future X-ray missions such as XRISM and Athena, we are finally poised to answer important questions about the formation and evolution of galaxies and large-scale structure. However, we currently lack an adequate understanding of many atomic processes behind the spectral features we will soon observe. Large error bars on parameters as critical as transition energies and atomic cross sections can lead to unacceptable uncertainties in the calculations of e.g., elemental abundance, velocity, and temperature. Unless we address these issues, we risk limiting the full scientific potential of these missions. Laboratory astrophysics, which comprises theoretical and experimental studies of the underlying physics behind observable astrophysical processes, is therefore central to the success of these missions., Comment: Science white paper submitted to the Astro2020 Decadal Survey
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- 2019
19. Increasing the Discovery Space in Astrophysics - A Collation of Six Submitted White Papers
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Fabbiano, G., Elvis, M., Accomazzi, A., Berriman, G. B., Brickhouse, N., Bose, S., Carrera, D., Chilingarian, I., Civano, F., Czerny, B., D'Abrusco, R., Diemer, B., Drake, J., Meibody, R. Emami, Farah, J. R., Fazio, G. G., Feigelson, E., Fornasini, F., Gallagher, Jay, Grindlay, J., Hernquist, L., James, D. J., Karovska, M., Kashyap, V., Kim, D. -W., Lacy, G. M., Lazio, J., Lusso, E., Maksym, W. P., Galarza, R. Martinez, Mazzarella, J., Ntampaka, M., Risaliti, G., Sanders, D., Scoville, N., Shapiro, I., Siemiginowska, A., Smth, A., Smith, S., Szentgyorgyi, A., Tacchella, S., Thakar, A., Tolls, V., Vrtilek, S., Wilkes, B., Wilner, D., Willner, S. P., Wolk, S. J., and Zhao, J. -H.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We write in response to the call from the 2020 Decadal Survey to submit white papers illustrating the most pressing scientific questions in astrophysics for the coming decade. We propose exploration as the central question for the Decadal Committee's discussions.The history of astronomy shows that paradigm changing discoveries are not driven by well formulated scientific questions, based on the knowledge of the time. They were instead the result of the increase in discovery space fostered by new telescopes and instruments. An additional tool for increasing the discovery space is provided by the analysis and mining of the increasingly larger amount of archival data available to astronomers. Revolutionary observing facilities, and the state of the art astronomy archives needed to support these facilities, will open up the universe to new discovery. Here we focus on exploration for compact objects and multi messenger science. This white paper includes science examples of the power of the discovery approach, encompassing all the areas of astrophysics covered by the 2020 Decadal Survey.
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- 2019
20. Physical therapy consultation in the emergency department for older adults with falls: A qualitative study
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Chary, Anita, Brickhouse, Elise, Torres, Beatrice, Cameron‐Comasco, Lauren, Lee, Sangil, Punches, Brittany, Skains, Rachel M., Naik, Aanand D., Quatman‐Yates, Catherine C., Kennedy, Maura, Southerland, Lauren T., and Liu, Shan
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- 2023
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21. Gray to white matter signal ratio as a novel biomarker of neurodegeneration in Alzheimer’s disease
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Putcha, Deepti, Katsumi, Yuta, Brickhouse, Michael, Flaherty, Ryn, Salat, David H., Touroutoglou, Alexandra, and Dickerson, Bradford C.
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- 2023
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22. High Resolution Near-Infrared Spectroscopy of Cool Dwarf Stars
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Dupree, Andrea, Brickhouse, Nancy, Irwin, Jonathan, Kurucz, Robert, and Newton, Elisabeth
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present results from a near infrared survey of the He I line (10830 Angstrom) in cool dwarf stars taken with the PHOENIX spectrograph at the 4-m Mayall telescope at Kitt Peak National Observatory. Spectral synthesis of this region reproduces some but not all atomic and molecular features. The equivalent width of the He line appears directly correlated with the soft X-ray stellar surface flux except among the coolest M dwarf stars, where the helium is surprisingly weak., Comment: 4 pages; in Proceedings of The 20th Cambridge Workshop on Cool Stars, Stellar Systems, and the Sun, ed. S. Wolk
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- 2018
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23. GD358: three decades of observations for the in-depth asteroseismology of a DBV star
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Bischoff-Kim, Agnes, Provencal, J. L., Bradley, P. A., Montgomery, M. H., Shipman, H. L., Harrold, Samuel T., Howard, B., Strickland, W., Chandler, D., Campbell, D., Arredondo, A., Linn, R., Russell, D. P., Doyle, D., Brickhouse, A., Peters, D., Kim, S. -L., Jiang, X. J., Mao, Y-N., Kusakin, A. V., Sergeev, A. V., Andreev, M., Velichko, S., Janulis, R., Pakstiene, E., Alicavus, F., Horoz, N., Zola, S., Ogloza, W., Koziel-Wierzbowska, D., Kundera, T., Jableka, D., Debski, B., Baran, A., Meingast, S., Nagel, T., Loebling, L., Heinitz, C., Hoyer, D., Bognar, Zs., and Castanheira, B. G.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on the analysis of 34 years of photometric observations of the pulsating helium atmosphere white dwarf GD358. The complete data set includes archival data from 1982-2006, and 1195.2 hours of new observations from 2007- 2016. From this data set, we extract 15 frequencies representing g-mode pulsation modes, adding 4 modes to the 11 modes known previously. We present evidence that these 15 modes are ell = 1 modes, 13 of which belong to a consecutive sequence in radial overtone k. We perform a detailed asteroseismic analysis using models that include parameterized, complex carbon and oxygen core composition profiles to fit the periods. Recent spectroscopic analyses place GD358 near the red edge of the DBV instability strip, at 24,000 plus or minus 500 K and a log g of 7.8 plus or minus 0.08 dex. The surface gravity translates to a mass range of 0.455 to 0.540 solar masses. Our best fit model has a temperature of 23,650 K and a mass of 0.5706 solar masses. That is slightly more massive than suggested by most the recent spectroscopy. We find a pure helium layer mass of 10^-5.50, consistent with the result of previous studies and the outward diffusion of helium over time., Comment: 94 pages, 14 figures, 7 tables, Accepted for publication in the ApJ
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- 2018
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24. Elsewhere Catastrophe
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Brickhouse, Anna
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- 2022
25. The Indian Slave Trade in Unca Eliza Winkfield's The Female American
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Brickhouse, Anna
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- 2022
26. The OVI mystery: mismatch between X-ray and UV column densities
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Mathur, Smita, Nicastro, Fabrizio, Gupta, Anjali, Krongold, Yair, McLaughlin, Brendan, Brickhouse, Nancy, and Pradhan, Anil
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The UV spectra of Galactic and extragalactic sightlines often show OVI absorption lines at a range of redshifts, and from a variety of sources from the Galactic circumgalactic medium to AGN outflows. Inner shell OVI absorption is also observed in X-ray spectra (at lambda=22.03 AA), but the column density inferred from the X-ray line was consistently larger than that from the UV line. Here we present a solution to this discrepancy for the z=0 systems. The OII K-beta line ^4S^0 --> (^3D)3p ^4P at 562.40 eV (==22.04 AA) is blended with the OVI K-alpha line in X-ray spectra. We estimate the strength of this OII line in two different ways and show that in most cases the OII line accounts for the entire blended line. The small amount of OVI equivalent width present in some cases has column density entirely consistent with the UV value. This solution to the OVI discrepancy, however, does not apply to the high column density systems like AGN outflows. We discuss other possible causes to explain their UV/X-ray mismatch. The OVI and OII lines will be resolved by gratings on-board the proposed mission Arcus and the concept mission Lynx and would allow detection of weak OVI lines not just at z=0 but also at higher redshift., Comment: ApJ Letters, in press
- Published
- 2017
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27. Afterword: Translational historicism.
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Brickhouse, Anna
- Subjects
- *
TRANSLATIONS , *IMPERIALISM , *RESISTANCE (Philosophy) , *HISTORICISM , *PHILOSOPHY of history - Abstract
The article focuses on the role of translation and mistranslation in shaping historical narratives, particularly in the context of colonialism and resistance. Topics include the concept of "motivated mistranslation" as a political act, the function of translation in colonial Latin America as both a tool of empire and a form of Indigenous resistance, and the broader implications of translational historicism in reinterpreting historical events.
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- 2024
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28. Survey of COVID-19 isolation cases at a major university campus in the United States.
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Brickhouse, Mark, Gassen, Jeffrey, Ryan, Benjamin J., and Muehlenbein, Michael P.
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PUBLIC health surveillance ,RESEARCH funding ,POST-acute COVID-19 syndrome ,SEX distribution ,COLLEGE teachers ,AGE distribution ,SYMPTOM burden ,QUARANTINE ,SURVEYS ,ODDS ratio ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,COLLEGE students ,NEEDS assessment ,PUBLIC health ,COVID-19 ,SYMPTOMS - Abstract
Objective: Baylor University established a surveillance system to assess the needs of students and faculty in isolation from SARS-CoV-2 as well as any longer-term symptoms. Participants: Overall, there were 309 responses between March 20 and May 19, 2021. Methods: A survey covering experience in isolation, symptoms, vaccination, and demographic characteristics was emailed to individuals on Day 7 of isolation; a follow-up health survey was sent 30 days later. Results: Only 9.6% of respondents reported needing assistance while in isolation. Nearly 75% of respondents experienced COVID-19 symptoms in isolation, and 31.9% had remaining symptoms after isolation. Older age, being male, and more severe symptoms were associated with longer symptom duration. Those vaccinated had lower odds of developing symptoms and having symptoms remaining post-isolation. Conclusions: The present study adds to our understanding of long-COVID in young adult populations, while providing a framework for similar institutions to sustain operations during a global pandemic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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29. Implementation of delirium screening in the emergency department: A qualitative study with early adopters.
- Author
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Chary, Anita N., Bhananker, Annika R., Brickhouse, Elise, Torres, Beatrice, Santangelo, Ilianna, Godwin, Kyler M., Naik, Aanand D., Carpenter, Christopher R., Liu, Shan W., and Kennedy, Maura
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DIAGNOSIS of delirium ,WORK ,NURSES ,RESEARCH funding ,QUALITATIVE research ,EARLY medical intervention ,SYSTEMS development ,INTERVIEWING ,CONTENT analysis ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,SOUND recordings ,ALLIED health personnel ,RESEARCH methodology ,DELIRIUM ,EARLY diagnosis ,PHYSICIANS ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,EXPERIENTIAL learning - Abstract
Introduction: Delirium affects 15% of older adults presenting to emergency departments (EDs) but is detected in only one‐third of cases. Evidence‐based guidelines for ED delirium screening exist, but are underutilized. Frontline staff perceptions about delirium and time and resource constraints are known barriers to ED delirium screening uptake. Early adopters of ED delirium screening can offer valuable lessons about successful implementation. Methods: We conducted semi‐structured interviews with clinician‐administrators leading ED delirium screening initiatives from 20 EDs in the United States and Canada. Interviews focused on experiences of planning and implementing ED delirium screening. Interviews lasted 15 to 50 minutes and were digitally recorded and transcribed. To identify factors that commonly impacted implementation of ED delirium screening, we used constructs from the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR), an Implementation Science framework widely used to evaluate healthcare improvement initiatives. Results: Overall, notable facilitators of successful implementation were having institutional and ED leadership support and designated clinical champions to longitudinally engage and educate frontline staff. We found specific examples of factors affecting implementation drawn from the following seven CFIR constructs: (1) intervention complexity, (2) intervention adaptability, (3) external policies and incentives, (4) peer pressure from other institutions, (5) the implementation climate of the ED, (6) staff knowledge and beliefs, and (7) engaging deliverers of intervention, that is, frontline ED staff. Conclusion: Implementing ED delirium screening is complex and requires institutional resources as well as clinical champions to engage frontline staff in a sustained fashion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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30. Investigating the Impact of Atomic Data Uncertainties on the Measured Physical Parameters of the Perseus Galaxy Cluster
- Author
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Priyanka Chakraborty, Rachel Hemmer, Adam R. Foster, John Raymond, Arnab Sarkar, Randall Smith, and Nancy Brickhouse
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X-ray astronomy ,Galaxy clusters ,Atomic spectroscopy ,Astrophysics ,QB460-466 - Abstract
Accurate atomic data and plasma models are essential for interpreting the upcoming high-quality spectra from missions like XRISM and Athena. Estimating physical quantities, like temperature, abundance, turbulence, and the resonance scattering factor, is highly dependent on the underlying atomic data. We use the AtomDB tool variableapec to estimate the impact of atomic data uncertainties in Einstein A coefficients, collisional rate coefficients, and the ionization and recombination rates of H-, He-, and Li-like iron in modeling the spectrum of Perseus observed by Hitomi. The best-fit temperatures, abundances, resonance scattering factors, and turbulence parameters including atomic data uncertainties vary by approximately 17%, 35%, 30%, and 3%, respectively, from the best-fit temperatures, abundances, RS factors, and turbulence parameters estimated without atomic data uncertainties. These indicate that approximately 32%, 35%, and 25% of the best-fit temperatures, abundances, and resonance scattering factors when including uncertainties lie outside the 3 σ error regions of their corresponding best-fit values computed with zero atomic data errors. Expanding the energy range to 1.8–20.0 keV shows less variability, with 26% of the abundances and 22% of the resonance scattering factors lying outside the 3 σ errors of the best-fit values. We also studied correlations between physical parameters and atomic rate uncertainties to identify key atomic quantities requiring precise lab measurements. We report negative correlations between the best-fit temperatures and the z (1s2s ^3 S _1 → 1s ^2 ) collisional rate coefficients, abundances and y (1s2p ^3 P _1 → 1s ^2 ) collisional rate coefficients, and abundances and z collisional rate coefficients, and a positive correlation between the resonance scattering factors and the w (1s2p ^1 P _1 → 1s ^2 ) collisional rate coefficients.
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- 2024
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31. Melville and The Torrid Zone
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Brickhouse, Anna
- Published
- 2021
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32. Training
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Seedhouse, Erik, Brickhouse, Anthony, Szathmary, Kimberly, Williams, E. David, Seedhouse, Erik, Brickhouse, Anthony, Szathmary, Kimberly, and Williams, E. David
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- 2020
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33. Displays
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Seedhouse, Erik, Brickhouse, Anthony, Szathmary, Kimberly, Williams, E. David, Seedhouse, Erik, Brickhouse, Anthony, Szathmary, Kimberly, and Williams, E. David
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- 2020
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34. Communication
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Seedhouse, Erik, Brickhouse, Anthony, Szathmary, Kimberly, Williams, E. David, Seedhouse, Erik, Brickhouse, Anthony, Szathmary, Kimberly, and Williams, E. David
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- 2020
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35. Information Processing
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Seedhouse, Erik, Brickhouse, Anthony, Szathmary, Kimberly, Williams, E. David, Seedhouse, Erik, Brickhouse, Anthony, Szathmary, Kimberly, and Williams, E. David
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- 2020
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36. Vision
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Seedhouse, Erik, Brickhouse, Anthony, Szathmary, Kimberly, Williams, E. David, Seedhouse, Erik, Brickhouse, Anthony, Szathmary, Kimberly, and Williams, E. David
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- 2020
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37. Altitude and G-Forces
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Seedhouse, Erik, Brickhouse, Anthony, Szathmary, Kimberly, Williams, E. David, Seedhouse, Erik, Brickhouse, Anthony, Szathmary, Kimberly, and Williams, E. David
- Published
- 2020
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38. Fatigue
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Seedhouse, Erik, Brickhouse, Anthony, Szathmary, Kimberly, Williams, E. David, Seedhouse, Erik, Brickhouse, Anthony, Szathmary, Kimberly, and Williams, E. David
- Published
- 2020
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39. Health and Fitness
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Seedhouse, Erik, Brickhouse, Anthony, Szathmary, Kimberly, Williams, E. David, Seedhouse, Erik, Brickhouse, Anthony, Szathmary, Kimberly, and Williams, E. David
- Published
- 2020
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40. Human Factors: An Introduction
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Seedhouse, Erik, Brickhouse, Anthony, Szathmary, Kimberly, Williams, E. David, Seedhouse, Erik, Brickhouse, Anthony, Szathmary, Kimberly, and Williams, E. David
- Published
- 2020
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41. Flight Crew System-Based Training
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Seedhouse, Erik, Brickhouse, Anthony, Szathmary, Kimberly, Williams, E. David, Seedhouse, Erik, Brickhouse, Anthony, Szathmary, Kimberly, and Williams, E. David
- Published
- 2020
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42. Earthquake History of the Americas
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Brickhouse, Anna
- Published
- 2021
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43. The impact of dental Medicaid reform on dental care provider activity and market penetration of dental support organizations
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Brickhouse, Tegwyn H., Dahman, Bassam A., Peters, Barrett W.R., Liu, Hangcheng, and Kumar, Anita M.
- Published
- 2021
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44. Celeste Ng’s Little Fires Everywhere and the Burning House of American Literature
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Brickhouse, Anna, primary
- Published
- 2022
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45. Transoceanic America: Risk, Writing, and Revolution in the Global Pacific by Michelle Burnham (review)
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Brickhouse, Anna
- Published
- 2020
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46. Regional prefrontal cortical atrophy predicts specific cognitive-behavioral symptoms in ALS-FTD
- Author
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Ratti, Elena, Domoto-Reilly, Kimiko, Caso, Christina, Murphy, Alyssa, Brickhouse, Michael, Hochberg, Daisy, Makris, Nikos, Cudkowicz, Merit E., and Dickerson, Bradford C.
- Published
- 2021
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47. Testing the cooling flow model in the intermediate polar EX Hydrae
- Author
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Luna, G. J. M., Raymond, J. C., Brickhouse, N. S., Mauche, C. W., and Suleimanov, V.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We use the best available X-ray data from the intermediate polar EX Hydrae to study the cooling-flow model often applied to interpret the X-ray spectra of these accreting magnetic white dwarf binaries. First, we resolve a long-standing discrepancy between the X-ray and optical determinations of the mass of the white dwarf in EX Hya by applying new models of the inner disk truncation radius. Our fits to the X-ray spectrum now agree with the white dwarf mass of 0.79 M$_{\odot}$sun determined using dynamical methods through spectroscopic observations of the secondary. We use a simple isobaric cooling flow model to derive the emission line fluxes, emission measure distribution, and H-like to He-like line ratios for comparison with the 496 ks Chandra High Energy Transmission Grating observation of EX Hydrae. We find that the H/He ratios are not well reproduced by this simple isobaric cooling flow model and show that while H-like line fluxes can be accurately predicted, fluxes of lower-Z He-like lines are significantly underestimated. This discrepancy suggests that some extra heating mechanism plays an important role at the base of the accretion column, where cooler ions form. We thus explored more complex cooling models including the change of gravitational potential with height in the accretion column and a magnetic dipole geometry. None of these modifications to the standard cooling flow model are able to reproduce the observed line ratios. While a cooling flow model with subsolar (0.1 $\odot$) abundances is able to reproduce the line ratios by reducing the cooling rate at temperatures lower than $\sim 10^{7.3}$ K, the predicted line-to-continuum ratios are much lower than observed. We discuss and discard mechanisms such as photoionization, departures from constant pressure, resonant scattering, different electron-ion temperatures, and Compton cooling. [Abridged], Comment: Accepted in Astronomy & Astrophysics, modified version after referee comments and proof corrections
- Published
- 2015
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48. Artificial intelligence classifies primary progressive aphasia from connected speech.
- Author
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Rezaii, Neguine, Hochberg, Daisy, Quimby, Megan, Wong, Bonnie, Brickhouse, Michael, Touroutoglou, Alexandra, Dickerson, Bradford C, and Wolff, Phillip
- Subjects
GENERATIVE artificial intelligence ,LANGUAGE models ,NATURAL language processing ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,CEREBRAL atrophy - Abstract
Neurodegenerative dementia syndromes, such as primary progressive aphasias (PPA), have traditionally been diagnosed based, in part, on verbal and non-verbal cognitive profiles. Debate continues about whether PPA is best divided into three variants and regarding the most distinctive linguistic features for classifying PPA variants. In this cross-sectional study, we initially harnessed the capabilities of artificial intelligence and natural language processing to perform unsupervised classification of short, connected speech samples from 78 pateints with PPA. We then used natural language processing to identify linguistic features that best dissociate the three PPA variants. Large language models discerned three distinct PPA clusters, with 88.5% agreement with independent clinical diagnoses. Patterns of cortical atrophy of three data-driven clusters corresponded to the localization in the clinical diagnostic criteria. In the subsequent supervised classification, 17 distinctive features emerged, including the observation that separating verbs into high- and low-frequency types significantly improved classification accuracy. Using these linguistic features derived from the analysis of short, connected speech samples, we developed a classifier that achieved 97.9% accuracy in classifying the four groups (three PPA variants and healthy controls). The data-driven section of this study showcases the ability of large language models to find natural partitioning in the speech of patients with PPA consistent with conventional variants. In addition, the work identifies a robust set of language features indicative of each PPA variant, emphasizing the significance of dividing verbs into high- and low-frequency categories. Beyond improving diagnostic accuracy, these findings enhance our understanding of the neurobiology of language processing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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49. Prenatal smoking and the risk of early childhood caries: A prospective cohort study
- Author
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Akinkugbe, Aderonke A., Brickhouse, Tegwyn H., Nascimento, Marcelle M., and Slade, Gary D.
- Published
- 2020
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50. Word retrieval across the biomarker-confirmed Alzheimer's disease syndromic spectrum
- Author
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Putcha, Deepti, Dickerson, Bradford C., Brickhouse, Michael, Johnson, Keith A., Sperling, Reisa A., and Papp, Kathryn V.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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