23 results on '"H. J. Ho"'
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2. Algorithms and Complexity for Weighted Hypergraph Embedding in a Cycle.
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S. L. Lee and H.-J. Ho
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- 2002
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3. Minimizing energy consumption with QoS constraints over IEEE 802.16e networks.
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C.-Y. Wu, H.-J. Ho, and S. L. Lee
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- 2012
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4. Daratumumab, bortezomib, and dexamethasone in relapsed or refractory multiple myeloma: subgroup analysis of CASTOR based on cytogenetic risk
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Weisel, K. (Katja), Spencer, A. (Andrew), Lentzsch, S. (Suzanne), Avet-Loiseau, H., Mark, T.M. (Tomer M.), Spicka, I. (Ivan), Masszi, T. (Tamás), Lauri, B. (Birgitta), Levin, M.-D. (Mark-David), Bosi, A. (Alberto), Hungria, V., Cavo, M. (Michele), Lee, J.-J. (Je-Jung), Nooka, A.K. (Ajay), Quach, H. (Hang), Munder, M. (Markus), Lee, C. (Cindy), Barreto, W. (Wolney), Corradini, P. (P.), Min, C.-K. (Chang-Ki), Chanan-Khan, A. (Asher Alban), Horvath, N. (Noemi), Capra, M. (Marcelo), Beksaç, M. (Meral), Ovilla, R. (Roberto), Jo, J.-C. (Jae-Cheol), Shin, H.-J. (Ho-Jin), Sonneveld, P. (Pieter), Casneuf, T. (Tineke), DeAngelis, N. (Nikki), Amin, H. (Himal), Ukropec, J. (Jon), Kobos, R. (Rachel), Mateos, M.V., Weisel, K. (Katja), Spencer, A. (Andrew), Lentzsch, S. (Suzanne), Avet-Loiseau, H., Mark, T.M. (Tomer M.), Spicka, I. (Ivan), Masszi, T. (Tamás), Lauri, B. (Birgitta), Levin, M.-D. (Mark-David), Bosi, A. (Alberto), Hungria, V., Cavo, M. (Michele), Lee, J.-J. (Je-Jung), Nooka, A.K. (Ajay), Quach, H. (Hang), Munder, M. (Markus), Lee, C. (Cindy), Barreto, W. (Wolney), Corradini, P. (P.), Min, C.-K. (Chang-Ki), Chanan-Khan, A. (Asher Alban), Horvath, N. (Noemi), Capra, M. (Marcelo), Beksaç, M. (Meral), Ovilla, R. (Roberto), Jo, J.-C. (Jae-Cheol), Shin, H.-J. (Ho-Jin), Sonneveld, P. (Pieter), Casneuf, T. (Tineke), DeAngelis, N. (Nikki), Amin, H. (Himal), Ukropec, J. (Jon), Kobos, R. (Rachel), and Mateos, M.V.
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Multiple myeloma (MM) patients with high cytogenetic risk have poor outcomes. In CASTOR, daratumumab plus bortezomib/dexamethasone (D-Vd) prolonged progression-free survival (PFS) versus bortezomib/dexamethasone (Vd) alone and exhibited tolerability in patients with relapsed or refractory MM (RRMM). METHODS: This subgroup analysis evaluated D-Vd versus Vd in CASTOR based on cytogenetic risk, determined using fluorescence in situ hybridization and/or karyotype testing performed locally. High-risk patients had t(4;14), t(14;16), and/or del17p abnormalities. Minimal residual disease (MRD; 10-5 sensitivity threshold) was assessed via the clonoSEQ® assay V2.0. Of the 498 patients randomized, 40 (16%) in the D-Vd group and 35 (14%) in the Vd group were categorized as high risk. RESULTS: After a median follow-up of 40.0 months, D-Vd prolonged median PFS versus Vd in patients with standard (16.6 vs 6.6 months; HR, 0.26; 95% CI, 0.19-0.37; P < 0.0001) and high (12.6 vs 6.2 months; HR, 0.41; 95% CI, 0.21-0.83; P = 0.0106) cytogenetic risk. D-Vd achieved deep responses, including higher rates of MRD negativity and sustained MRD negativity versus Vd, regardless of cytogenetic risk. The safety profile was consistent with the overall population of CASTOR. CONCLUSION: These updated data reinforce the effectiveness and tolerability of daratumumab-based regimens for RRMM, regardless of cytogenetic risk status. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02136134 . Registered 12 May 2014.
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- 2020
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5. Latent classes based on clinical symptoms of military recruits with mental health issues and their clinical responses to treatment over 12 months
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D.-I. Jon, J. Eo, E. H. Park, and H. J. Hong
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Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Introduction In South Korea, all men at the age of 18 or older are required to serve at military for a certain period as an obligation. These recruits should be able to withstand psychological stress and pressures of rapid adaptation of the unique and new environment in military. The number of military recruits facing adaptation issues has been on the rise, necessitating an evaluation for active service. In our previous study (Park et al., in press 2023), we classified the military recruits with mental issues according to latent profile analysis (LPA) and examined the treatment response during six months. Objectives In this study, we further examined clinical characteristics over the next six months. Methods Ninety-two participants were analyzed with LPA using MMPI-2 clinical profiles in the previous study. The three classes were identified: mild maladjustment (Class 1, n=14), neurotic depression and anxiety (Class 2, n=36), high vulnerability and hypervigilance (Class 3, n=42). At 12 months, Clinical Global Impression-Severity and Global Assessment of Functioning were assessed to test their long-term changes. Results While Class 1 and 2 significantly improved over 6 months, Class 3 showed little or no improvement even with more medications in our previous study. During the 6-month follow-up period, 50% of Class 1, 38.9% of Class 2, and 41.5% of Class 3 were dropped. It was during this period that their level of military service was decided. Class 1 and 2 which showed marked improvement up to initial 6 months, did not demonstrate substantial further improvement during follow-up period with a considerable portion stopped visiting hospital. Subjects in Class 3, who showed little or no improvement during initial 6 months, demonstrated continued improvement in this study, although their symptoms still appeared relatively severe. Conclusions This study suggests clinical implications for treatment plan and intervention of each subgroup classified based on MMPI-2 clinical profiles of military recruits who might show maladjustment to serve. The long-term continuous treatment for Class 3 patients will be needed, even after exemption from active duty. Disclosure of Interest None Declared
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- 2024
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6. EUFOREA summit in Brussels 2023: inspiring the future of allergy & respiratory care
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P. W. Hellings, S. Lau, G. K. Scadding, L. Bjermer, V. Backer, A. M. Chaker, D. M. Conti, E. De Corso, Z. Diamant, R. Djukanovic, W. Fokkens, P. Gevaert, C. L. Gray, J. K. Han, L. G. Heaney, H. J. Hoffmann, M. Jesenak, P. Johansen, M. S. Kumaran, M. McDonald, E. Melén, J. Mullol, S. Reitsma, D. Ryan, G. Scadding, P. Schmid-Grendelmeier, T. Teeling, M. Odemyr, and U. Wahn
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EUFOREA ,asthma ,allergic rhinitis ,rhinosinusitis ,paediatrics ,allergen immunotherapy ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
In March 2023, the European Forum for Research and Education in Allergy and Airways diseases (EUFOREA) organized its bi-annual Summit in Brussels with expert panel members of EUFOREA, representatives of the EUFOREA patient advisory board, and the EUFOREA board and management teams. Its aim was to define the research, educational and advocacy initiatives to be developed by EUFOREA over the next 2 years until the 10th anniversary in 2025. EUFOREA is an international non-for-profit organization forming an alliance of all stakeholders dedicated to reducing the prevalence and burden of chronic allergic and respiratory diseases via research, education, and advocacy. Based on its medical scientific core competency, EUFOREA offers an evidence-supported platform to introduce innovation and education in healthcare leading to optimal patient care, bridging the gap between latest scientific evidence and daily practice. Aligned with the mission of improving health care, the expert panels of asthma, allergic rhinitis (AR), chronic rhinosinusitis (CRS) & European Position Paper on Rhinosinusitis and Nasal Polyps (EPOS), allergen immunotherapy (AIT) and paediatrics have proposed and elaborated a variety of activities that correspond to major unmet needs in the allergy and respiratory field. The current report provides a concise overview of the achievements, ambitions, and action plan of EUFOREA for the future, allowing all stakeholders in the allergy and respiratory field to be up-dated and inspired to join forces in Europe and beyond.
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- 2023
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7. Development and preliminary validation of a systemic lupus erythematosus-specific quality-of-life instrument (SLEQOL)
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L. C. Chew, Siew Pang Chan, Hiok Hee Chng, T. Y. Lian, W. G. Law, Khai Pang Leong, Bernard Yu-Hor Thong, N. Sangeetha, E T Koh, Tang Ching Lau, K. O. Kong, Y. K. Cheng, H. J. Ho, Hwee Siew Howe, L. Y. Pong, L. S. Hoi, C. L. Teh, and Humeira Badsha
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Activities of daily living ,Psychometrics ,SF-36 ,Severity of Illness Index ,Rheumatology ,Cronbach's alpha ,Quality of life ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Activities of Daily Living ,medicine ,Content validity ,Health Status Indicators ,Humans ,Lupus Erythematosus, Systemic ,Pharmacology (medical) ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Lupus erythematosus ,Rasch model ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,humanities ,Quality of Life ,Physical therapy ,Factor Analysis, Statistical ,business ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Objectives. Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), a chronic illness with an unpredictable and variable course, profoundly affects the quality of life (QOL). General health questionnaires are used to assess QOL in SLE, but a disease-specific instrument could offer enhanced responsiveness and content validity. We detail the steps we took to develop and validate a new SLE-specific QOL instrument, SLEQOL. Methods. Rheumatology professionals nominated items that they felt were important determinants of QOL of SLE patients. One hundred SLE patients were asked to assess the importance and frequency of occurrence of these items and to suggest those that had not been listed. Item reduction was performed using Rasch model and factor analyses to create a new questionnaire in English. This final questionnaire was administered to a cohort of 275 patients to study its psychometric properties. Results. Fifty-one items covering a wide range of QOL concerns were identified. The patients’ responses led to the elimination of 11. The new questionnaire of 40 items was found to have Cronbach’s alpha of 0.95 and to consist of eight domains covering physical, mental and social QOL issues. It has good test–retest reliability, poor to fair cross-sectional correlation with the SF-36, with poor correlation with lupus activity or damage indices. The SLEQOL was more responsive to change than the SF-36. Conclusions. We have developed a new 40-item SLEQOL in English and showed that it is valid for use in SLE patients in Singapore. It offers better content validity and responsiveness to change than the SF-36.
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- 2005
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8. Latent classes based on clinical symptoms of military recruits with mental health issues and their distinctive clinical responses to treatment over a 6-month duration
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D.-I. Jon, E.-H. Park, H. J. Hong, M. H. Jung, and N. Hong
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Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Introduction In South Korea, all men at the age of 18 or older are required to serve at military for a certain period as an obligation. These recruits should be able to withstand psychological stress and pressures of rapid adaptation of the unique and new environment in military. Objectives The current study attempted to identify distinct subgroups of patients referred for military service suitability and further to investigate whether there is a difference in clinical features such as treatment responsiveness and prognosis among those subgroups. Methods Subjects were male patients aged 18 to 28 years who visited the department of psychiatry at the University Hospital for evaluating mental health problems related to military service. We conducted a latent profile analysis (LPA) using 10 clinical scales of MMPI-2 as an indicator variable to investigate the subgroups of subjects. The clinical state of subjects was assessed with CGI-S and GAF scale for three time point (0, 3, and 6 month). Results The results showed that the best fitting model corresponded to a three-class model: each class was named ‘Class 1: mild maladjustment’, ‘Class 2: neurotic depression and anxiety’, and ‘Class 3: highly vulnerable and hypervigilant’ respectively. Subsequent analysis was also carried out to identify changes in clinical symptoms and functional level across treatment time of each subgroup identified in LPA. We demonstrated that the three subgroups displayed differential characteristics in treatment responsiveness and clinical course evaluated by CGI-S and GAF over a treatment period of 6 months. Three subgroups indicated significant differences in the number of medications prescribed as well. Class 3 had more antidepressants and anxiolytics on use than Class 1 and 2. Antipsychotic agents and a combination of three antidepressants were prescribed more frequently in Class 3 than in Class 1 and 2. Conclusions While Class 1 and 2 significantly improved over 6 months, Class 3 showed little or no improvement in our clinical parameters even with more medications. This study has a clinical significance that it has classified qualitatively different subgroups within the sample by conducting LPA with clinical profiles of MMPI-2 and provides a basis for comprehensively understanding their differentiated clinical features. This study suggests clinical implications for treatment plan and intervention of each subgroup classified based on MMPI-2 clinical profiles of military recruits who might show maladjustment to serve. Disclosure of Interest None Declared
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- 2023
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9. Child and Adolescent Suicide Rates and Economic Crisis in South Korea using Hierarchical Age-Period-Cohort Analysis
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J. Song, B. R. Roh, and H. J. Hong
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Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Introduction Suicide is a complex problem in which individual, family social factors are interrelated. The 1997 Asian financial crisis caused a major economic crisis in Korea, and Korea received bailout support from the International Monetary Funds(IMF) from December 23, 1997 to August 23, 1997. Objectives This study aimed to investigate the relationship between the suicide rate of children and adolescents who grew up during this economic crisis in Korea. Methods Suicide rates are calculated according to gender, region, and age of 5 years (10-14 years old, 15-19 years old, 20-24 years old) using suicide death data from the Korea National Statistical Office from 2000 to 2017. The cohort of interest in the study is the group that was in childhood and early adolescence between 1997-2000 and corresponds to 1986-1995 in terms of birth year. Cohorts are divided into 1986-1989 (G1), 1990-1992 (G2), and 1993-1995 (G3) according to birth year. These groups were 8-14 years old for G1 and 5-10 years old for G2, 2-7 years old for G3 during 1997-2000, during the economic crisis. The Age-Period-Cohort analysis and linear mixed-effects regression models are used and the moderating effect on region and age is also analyzed. Results The 10-24 year-old suicide rate was higher in males than females, in older age groups, earlier in birth years in the birth cohort, and in rural than urban areas. Suicide rates between the ages of 20-24 years were particularly high among men living in rural areas. During the national economic crisis, the suicide rate was higher among adolescents than preschoolers (G3 < G1) (p
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- 2023
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10. Gas-Phase Adsorption of VOC by GAC and Activated Carrbon Fiber
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F. M. Hsu, S. H. Lin, and H. J. Ho
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Isopropyl alcohol ,General Medicine ,digestive system ,digestive system diseases ,Solvent ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Adsorption ,chemistry ,Chemical engineering ,Desorption ,Acetone ,medicine ,Environmental Chemistry ,Organic chemistry ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Tetrahydrofuran ,Water Science and Technology ,Activated carbon ,medicine.drug ,BET theory - Abstract
Gas-phase adsorption and desorption of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) by granular activated carbon (GAC) and activated carbon fibres (ACFs) is investigated. Acetone, isopropyl alcohol (IPA) and tetrahydrofuran (THF) were employed as model VOCs for this study. Experimental results indicated that adsorption of VOCs by GAC and ACF is influenced by the BET surface area of adsorbent and the molecular weight and polarity of the adsorbate. It was also observed in those results that the exhausted GAC and ACF can be effectively regenerated at 150°C with over 98% desorption efficiency of adsorbed impurity or solvent. In terms of the total amount of VOCs adsorbed, the time to reach equilibrium adsorption and the time for complete desorption, ACFs outperform GAC by a significant margin.
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- 1995
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11. Grounding zone subglacial properties from calibrated active-source seismic methods
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H. J. Horgan, L. van Haastrecht, R. B. Alley, S. Anandakrishnan, L. H. Beem, K. Christianson, A. Muto, and M. R. Siegfried
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Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
The grounding zone of Whillans Ice Stream, West Antarctica, exhibits an abrupt transition in basal properties from the grounded ice to the ocean cavity over distances of less than 0.5–1 km. Active-source seismic methods reveal the downglacier-most grounded portion of the ice stream is underlain by a relatively stiff substrate (relatively high shear wave velocities of 1100±430 m s−1) compared to the deformable till found elsewhere beneath the ice stream. Changes in basal reflectivity in our study area cannot be explained by the stage of the tide. Several kilometres upstream of the grounding zone, layers of subglacial water are detected, as are regions that appear to be water layers but are less than the thickness resolvable by our technique. The presence of stiff subglacial sediment and thin water layers upstream of the grounding zone supports previous studies that have proposed the dewatering of sediment within the grounding zone and the trapping of subglacial water upstream of the ocean cavity. The setting enables calibration of our methodology using returns from the floating ice shelf. This allows a comparison of different techniques used to estimate the sizes of the seismic sources, a constraint essential for the accurate recovery of subglacial properties. We find a strong correlation (coefficient of determination=0.46) between our calibrated method and a commonly used multiple-bounce method, but our results also highlight the incomplete knowledge of other factors affecting the amplitude of seismic sources and reflections in the cryosphere.
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- 2021
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12. Profound difference in pharmacokinetics between morin and its isomer quercetin in rats
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Yu-Chi Hou, C C Wen, Su-Lan Hsiu, H J Ho, and Pei-Dawn Lee Chao
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Male ,Metabolite ,Flavonoid ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Administration, Oral ,Morin ,Pharmacology ,Intestinal absorption ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,Flavonols ,Pharmacokinetics ,Isomerism ,Animals ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Flavonoids ,Bioavailability ,Rats ,chemistry ,Intestinal Absorption ,Area Under Curve ,Quercetin ,Half-Life - Abstract
Morin and quercetin are isomeric antioxidant flavonols widely distributed in plant foods and herbs. The pharmacokinetics of both flavonols at two doses were investigated and compared in rats. Parent forms and their glucuronides and sulfates in serum were determined by HPLC before and after enzymatic hydrolysis, respectively. After oral dosing of morin, both the parent form, morin, and its glucuronides and sulfates were present in the bloodstream. The conjugated metabolites predominated at the dose of 25 mg kg−1, whereas the parent form was predominant at the dose of 50 mg kg−1. Moreover, the AUC of morin parent form increased by a factor of 37 when the dose doubled, indicating that morin showed nonlinear pharmacokinetics. On the other hand, quercetin presented only as glucuronides and sulfates in the blood, indicating negligible bioavailability of quercetin, and the metabolites showed linear pharmacokinetics at the two doses studied. When considering the total AUC of parent form with conjugated metabolites, the extent of absorption of morin was 3 fold that of quercetin at the dose of 50 mg kg−1. The results indicated that the difference in hydroxylation pattern on B-ring of flavonol markedly affected their fates in rats.
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- 2003
13. DeepBedMap: a deep neural network for resolving the bed topography of Antarctica
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W. J. Leong and H. J. Horgan
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Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
To resolve the bed elevation of Antarctica, we present DeepBedMap – a novel machine learning method that can produce Antarctic bed topography with adequate surface roughness from multiple remote sensing data inputs. The super-resolution deep convolutional neural network model is trained on scattered regions in Antarctica where high-resolution (250 m) ground-truth bed elevation grids are available. This model is then used to generate high-resolution bed topography in less surveyed areas. DeepBedMap improves on previous interpolation methods by not restricting itself to a low-spatial-resolution (1000 m) BEDMAP2 raster image as its prior image. It takes in additional high-spatial-resolution datasets, such as ice surface elevation, velocity and snow accumulation, to better inform the bed topography even in the absence of ice thickness data from direct ice-penetrating-radar surveys. The DeepBedMap model is based on an adapted architecture of the Enhanced Super-Resolution Generative Adversarial Network, chosen to minimize per-pixel elevation errors while producing realistic topography. The final product is a four-times-upsampled (250 m) bed elevation model of Antarctica that can be used by glaciologists interested in the subglacial terrain and by ice sheet modellers wanting to run catchment- or continent-scale ice sheet model simulations. We show that DeepBedMap offers a rougher topographic profile compared to the standard bicubically interpolated BEDMAP2 and BedMachine Antarctica and envision it being used where a high-resolution bed elevation model is required.
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- 2020
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14. Trends in working conditions and health across three cohorts of older workers in 1993, 2003 and 2013: a cross-sequential study
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M. van der Noordt, H. J. Hordijk, W. IJzelenberg, T. G. van Tilburg, S. van der Pas, and D. J. H. Deeg
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Working conditions ,Physical functioning ,Cognitive functioning ,Psychological functioning ,Cohorts ,Older workers ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Over the past decades, the number of older workers has increased tremendously. This study examines trends from 1993 to 2013 in physical, cognitive and psychological functioning among three successive cohorts of Dutch older workers. The contribution of the changes in physical and psychosocial work demands and psychosocial work resources to change in functioning is examined. Insight in health of the older working population, and in potential explanatory variables, is relevant in order to reach sustainable employability. Methods Data from three cohorts (observations in 1993, 2003 and 2013) of the Longitudinal Aging Study Amsterdam (LASA) were used. Individuals aged 55–65 with a paid job were included (N = 1307). Physical functioning was measured using the Timed Chair Stand Test, cognitive functioning by a Coding Task and psychological functioning by the positive affect scale from the CES-D. Working conditions were deduced from a general population job exposure matrix. Linear and logistic regression analyses were performed. Results From 1993 to 2013, time needed to perform the Timed Chair Stand Test increased with 1.3 s (95%CI = 0.89–1.71), to a mean of 11.5 s. Coding Task scores increased with 1.7 points (95%CI = 0.81–2.59), to a mean of 31 points. The proportion of workers with low positive affect increased non-significantly from 15 to 20% (p = 0.088). Only the improvement in cognitive functioning was associated with the change in working conditions. The observed decrease of physically demanding jobs and increase of jobs with higher psychosocial resources explained 8% of the improvement. Conclusions Changes in working conditions may not contribute to improved physical and psychological functioning, but do contribute to improved cognitive functioning to some extent. Further adjustment of physical work demands and psychosocial work resources may help to reach sustainable employability of older workers.
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- 2019
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15. Rapid prenatal diagnosis of Hb Bart's hydrops fetalis in southeast Asia area by polymerase chain reaction
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J G, Chang, C P, Chen, H J, Ho, C P, Lin, L S, Lee, and P H, Chen
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Base Sequence ,Hemoglobins, Abnormal ,Hydrops Fetalis ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Diagnosis, Differential ,Fetal Diseases ,alpha-Thalassemia ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Pregnancy ,Prenatal Diagnosis ,Humans ,Female ,Asia, Southeastern - Abstract
We used the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to amplify the breakpoint area of alpha-thalassemia-1 of Southeast Asia type and several parts of the alpha-globin gene cluster to make a differential diagnosis between alpha-thalassemia-1 and Hb Bart's hydrops fetalis. The procedure involved three primers to detect the homozygote of alpha-thalassemia-1, then amplifies the other alpha-globin gene cluster with three other pairs of primers to double check the results. The PCR products were checked again by allele specific probes. Twenty-two cases were diagnosed prenatally, two were normal, 17 were alpha-thalassemia-1, and three Hb Bart's hydrops fetalis. All cases were confirmed either by Southern blot hybridization or follow-up by sonography or after delivery. No false positive or false negative results were obtained by our strigent procedure. We conclude it to be a rapid, accurate and economic method.
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- 1992
16. P-41: Advanced Anti-Double Edge Overdriving Scheme
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Y. R. Shen, L. C. Chien, H. J. Ho, Y. J. Wong, C. H. Hsu, and C. J. Chen
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Scheme (programming language) ,Artifact (error) ,Liquid-crystal display ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Oscillation ,8-bit ,Frame rate ,Grayscale ,law.invention ,law ,Electronic engineering ,Computer vision ,Artificial intelligence ,Enhanced Data Rates for GSM Evolution ,business ,computer ,computer.programming_language - Abstract
In this paper, we report an advanced anti-double edge overdriving method. This method overcomes artifacts from conventional overdriving schemes, such as double edge artifact, overshooting and undershooting. New artifacts also are reported and photo to explain the performance of our new algorithm. Edge oscillation artifact is reported in the paper for the first time. As we strongly overdrove the conventional feed backward overdriving method, these new artifacts occurred. Our advanced anti-double edge overdriving method successfully eliminates these artifacts and overdrives the spec of grayscale response to less than one frame time. IPS, MVA and fast TN LCD panels are all evaluated from commercial monitor to TV products by our new driving method. 8 ms grayscale switching performance over exact 8 bit to 8 bit transition can be achieved at 60 Hz frame rate.
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- 2004
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17. Drop size measurement techniques for sprays: Comparison of image analysis, phase Doppler particle analysis, and laser diffraction
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R. Sijs, S. Kooij, H. J. Holterman, J. van de Zande, and D. Bonn
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Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
Four different methods for measuring droplet size distributions are evaluated: the Image Analysis VisiSizer technique, a stroboscopic imaging method developed in-house, phase Doppler particle analysis (PDPA), and laser diffraction (Malvern Spraytec). We find that the larger the droplets, the bigger the differences between the results obtained by the different methods. The Image Analysis VisiSizer technique yields results that are comparable with those of the stroboscopic imaging method, provided that the raw Visisizer data are used, as the VisiSizer software makes corrections that can skew the results. Our measurements confirm how the limitations of PDPA can influence its outcomes; the presence of air bubbles inside droplets will cause PDPA to mistake them for smaller droplets. The fact that PDPA reports no droplets larger than 1200 μm might be caused by large drops often not being spherical. The results of the laser diffraction technique are influenced by its fitting method to obtain the droplet size distribution and by overestimation of the number of small droplets due to their low velocity and thus higher concentration in the sample volume. Our results emphasize the need for selecting the size measurement technique to fit the physical nature and expected range of droplet parameters.
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- 2021
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18. Successful Debridement of a Knee Joint Prosthesis Infected with Listeria Monocytogenes. Case Report and Review of Current Literature
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W. v. der, C. M. Verduin, M. Graumans, and H. J. Hoekstra
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Orthopedic surgery ,RD701-811 - Abstract
According to the relevant literature, prosthetic joint infections caused by Listeria monocytogenes require two stage revision surgery or prosthesis removal for a successful outcome. We present the case of a patient who suffered such an infection after Total Knee Replacement surgery and was successfully treated with antibiotics, joint lavage, debridement and retention of the prosthesis.
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- 2018
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19. Node arrangement optimisation in linear multihop lightwave networks
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H.-J. Ho and S.-L. Lee
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Network architecture ,business.industry ,ComputerSystemsOrganization_COMPUTER-COMMUNICATIONNETWORKS ,Optical communication ,Network topology ,Upper and lower bounds ,Telecommunications network ,Wavelength-division multiplexing ,Computer Science::Networking and Internet Architecture ,Network performance ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Transceiver ,business ,Mathematics ,Computer network - Abstract
Virtual topologies of WDM-based multihop networks can be arranged by assigning wavelengths to tunable transceivers of nodes. An optimal node arrangement problem in multihop lightwave networks with linearly virtual topologies is considered. For a given traffic matrix, this problem is to arrange node locations to adapt traffic patterns and optimise network performance. However, the problem of node arrangement for constructing optimised linear virtual topologies has been proved as NP-complete. Two lower bounds are proposed for this problem according to the traffic-weighted mean hop distance and the maximum link flow, respectively. An efficient node arrangement algorithm, called k-ENA, is also proposed. The performance of the k-ENA algorithm is compared with the best algorithms in previous work. Simulation results indicate that the k-ENA algorithm generally yields the best solutions.
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- 2001
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20. Optimal virtual circuit routing in computer networks
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Y.-J. Chang, J.-L.C. Wu, and H.-J. Ho
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Mathematical optimization ,Computer science ,Virtual circuit ,Simulated annealing ,Metric (mathematics) ,General Engineering ,Benchmark (computing) ,Destination-Sequenced Distance Vector routing ,Routing (electronic design automation) ,Flow network ,Telecommunications network - Abstract
Routing for virtual circuit mode services has been identified as a multicommodity network flow problem, and proves to be at least as hard as NP-complete problems. This paper proposes two approaches to this problem. The first is simulated annealing, which is known to be timeconsuming but suitable to probe the global optimum of combinatorial problems. An annealing method might not be practical to implement routing functions, but it can serve as a way to examine to what degree a routing algorithm can approach the global optimum. The other approach is the flow deviation (FD) method, which can be dated to as early as 1973. However, a new optimal metric is used to steer flow deviation. The metric is simple to calculate but proves to be sufficient for a solution to be a local minimum. With this metric, the FD approach is compared to the annealing method, and previous results found in the literature are also contrasted. Using benchmark test examples, it is shown that numerical experiments of both methods on various networks give satisfactory solutions.
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- 1992
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21. Multiple mechanisms of adenosine toxicity in an adenosine sensitive mutant of baby hamster kidney (BHK) cells
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V L, Chan and H J, Ho
- Subjects
S-Adenosylmethionine ,Adenosine ,Thionucleosides ,Deoxyadenosines ,Cytidine Triphosphate ,Drug Resistance ,Uridine Triphosphate ,Kidney ,S-Adenosylhomocysteine ,Cell Line ,Adenosine Triphosphate ,Cricetinae ,Mutation ,Animals ,Guanosine Triphosphate ,Adenosine Kinase ,Vidarabine - Abstract
A class of arabinosyladenine-resistant baby hamster kidney (BHK) cell mutants, isolated in our laboratory, shows cross-resistance to deoxyadenosine, alteration of adenosine kinase, elevation of spontaneous mutation rate, and extreme sensitivity to adenosine. One of these adenosine sensitive mutants, ara-s10d, was isolated spontaneously and studies with Ador revertants suggest the involvement of a single pleiotropic mutation. The enhanced adenosine toxicity in ara-s10d cells can be attributed to pyrimidine nucleotide starvation and to at least one other mechanism, which is associated with a 200-fold elevation of IMP, 3-5 fold elevation of ATP, GTP, S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) and methylthioadenosine (MeSAdo).
- Published
- 1985
22. Comparison of rotazyme, Slidex Rota-Kit, counterimmunoelectrophoresis with solid-phase immune electron microscopy for the detection of human rotavirus
- Author
-
C N, Lee, C L, Kao, H J, Ho, and C Y, Lee
- Subjects
Rotavirus ,Counterimmunoelectrophoresis ,Feces ,Microscopy, Electron ,Humans ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Latex Fixation Tests - Published
- 1987
23. Skull Repair after Major Crush Injury
- Author
-
H. Sudhoff, H. J. Hoff, and M. Lehmann
- Subjects
Otorhinolaryngology ,RF1-547 - Abstract
Reconstructive surgery after trauma of the head and neck is a wide field in ENT surgery. The repair of bony defects often requires implantation of engineered prostheses. We present the case of a 48-year-old male patient who had suffered a major crush injury to his head resulting in a complex bony defect. A computer-assisted designed (CAD/CAM) Titanium implant was used for reconstruction. Direct prefabrication of the individually designed implant led to an excellent coverage of the bony defect and easy adaptation to the defect margins. Results. Treatment plan and surgery as well as implant design and manufacturing were performed in a multidisciplinary team. Skin expander implantation prior to reconstructive surgery ensured a tension-free closure. This team approach led to a satisfactory outcome for this patient. This case illustrates the necessity of a multidisciplinary approach for the optimum management of complex head and neck injuries.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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