909 results on '"Hobbs L"'
Search Results
2. Studying Pre-Kindergarten Upstart in Rural Great Plains States: Impact, Implementation, Cost-Effectiveness and Scale-Up Findings
- Author
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Evaluation and Training Institute (ETI), Hobbs, L. Jon, and Coordt, Allison
- Abstract
"The Upstart Great Plains TASK Force: Taking All to Success in Kindergarten" was a five-year Education, Innovation and Research (EIR) expansion grant (U411A180001) funded through the US Department of Education Office of Elementary and Secondary Education. Four research studies were conducted during the grant period of 2018 to 2023: a Student Impact Study, a Program Implementation Study, a Program Scale-Up Study and a Program Cost Effectiveness Study. The Student Impact Study was conducted to assess the effectiveness of the Upstart school readiness program on pre-kindergarteners' emerging literacy and social-emotional skills using an RCT research design. Results revealed significantly higher group mean scores on measures of early literacy following the pre-kindergarten program year for the treatment condition compared to the control condition. The Program Implementation Study was conducted to determine if key program activities were achieved during the grant as planned. The Scale-Up Study assessed the overall plan to expand and develop funding, partnerships and resources required to continue Upstart's mission and serve a broader population after the grant was over. The Program Cost Effectiveness Study was conducted to calculate average costs-per-student for standardized effect sizes across multiple early literacy domains.
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- 2023
3. Impact of the UPSTART Program on Forestalling Summer Learning Loss
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Evaluation and Training Institute (ETI), Hobbs, L. Jon, and Overby, Melanie
- Abstract
The UPSTART Summer program is a federally funded i3 validation project that uses a computer-based program to maintain and develop the literacy skills of elementary school students in rural Utah during the summer months when school is out of session. Researchers used a quasi-experimental design to evaluate the impact of the program in forestalling literacy learning loss during several summer periods. Students in the treatment group participated in the UPSTART Summer program, in the summer periods after kindergarten, first grade, and/or second grade. A second group of children, who were not enrolled in the program served as a comparison. Statistical matching procedures were used to create separate treatment and comparison analytic samples for each outcome measure that were equivalent on baseline scores and demographic variables (e.g., school, gender, race, language learner status, household income, Title 1 school enrollment, etc.). Standardized literacy assessments of letter knowledge, phonics, and reading fluency were administered prior to program commencement at the end of the academic school year and upon program completion at the beginning of the following school year. Results revealed that the UPSTART Summer program had a significant impact in reducing literacy learning loss in rising first graders on assessments of letter naming fluency, nonsense word fluency (correct letter sounds), and a reading composite score when compared to a matched comparison group. There were no differences in learning loss rates between rising first graders and comparison students on assessments measuring phoneme segmentation fluency or nonsense word reading (whole words read). Additionally, the UPSTART Summer program did not have an impact on literacy learning loss prevention in rising second or third grade students as measured by assessments of nonsense word reading, oral reading fluency, or overall reading composites. Taken together these results suggest that the UPSTART program helps to maintain early literacy skills in the summer months between Kindergarten and first grade.
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- 2019
4. Supporting organizations to improve migrants’ access to health services in New York City
- Author
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Cravero, Kathleen, Hobbs, L. Ansley, Figueroa, Elisabeth Manipoud, and Romero, Diana
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- 2024
- Full Text
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5. Volumetric heating of nanowire arrays to keV temperatures using kilojoule-scale petawatt laser interactions
- Author
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Hill, M. P., Humphries, O., Royle, R., Williams, B., Ramsay, M. G., Miscampbell, A., Allan, P., Brown, C. R. D., Hobbs, L. M. R., James, S. F., Hoarty, D. J., Marjoribanks, R. S., Park, J., London, R. A., Tommasini, R., Pukhov, A., Bargsten, C., Hollinger, R., Shlyaptsev, V. N., Capeluto, M. G., Rocca, J. J., and Vinko, S. M.
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Physics - Plasma Physics - Abstract
We present picosecond-resolution streaked K-shell spectra from 400 nm-diameter nickel nanowire arrays, demonstrating the ability to generate large volumes of high energy density plasma when combined with the longer pulses typical of the largest short pulse lasers. After irradiating the wire array with 100 J, 600 fs ultra-high-contrast laser pulses focussed to $>10^{20}$ W/cm$^{2}$ at the Orion laser facility, we combine atomic kinetics modeling of the streaked spectra with 2D collisional particle-in-cell simulations to describe the evolution of material conditions within these samples for the first time. We observe a three-fold enhancement of helium-like emission compared to a flat foil in a near-solid-density plasma sustaining keV temperatures for tens of picoseconds, the result of strong electric return currents heating the wires and causing them to explode and collide., Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures
- Published
- 2020
6. A global research priority agenda to advance public health responses to fatty liver disease
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Lazarus, Jeffrey V., Mark, Henry E., Allen, Alina M., Arab, Juan Pablo, Carrieri, Patrizia, Noureddin, Mazen, Alazawi, William, Alkhouri, Naim, Alqahtani, Saleh A., Arrese, Marco, Bataller, Ramon, Berg, Thomas, Brennan, Paul N., Burra, Patrizia, Castro-Narro, Graciela E., Cortez-Pinto, Helena, Cusi, Kenneth, Dedes, Nikos, Duseja, Ajay, Francque, Sven M., Hagström, Hannes, Huang, Terry T-K., Wajcman, Dana Ivancovsky, Kautz, Achim, Kopka, Christopher J., Krag, Aleksander, Miller, Veronica, Newsome, Philip N., Rinella, Mary E., Romero, Diana, Sarin, Shiv Kumar, Silva, Marcelo, Spearman, C. Wendy, Tsochatzis, Emmanuel A., Valenti, Luca, Villota-Rivas, Marcela, Zelber-Sagi, Shira, Schattenberg, Jörn M., Wong, Vincent Wai-Sun, Younossi, Zobair M., Aberg, Fredrik, Adams, Leon, Al-Naamani, Khalid, Albadawy, Reda M., Alexa, Zinaida, Allison, Michael, Alnaser, Faisal A., Alswat, Khalid, Alvares-da-Silva, Mario Reis, Alvaro, Domenico, Alves-Bezerra, Michele, Andrade, Raul J., Anstee, Quentin M., Awuku, Yaw Asante, Baatarkhuu, Oidov, Baffy, Gyorgy, Bakieva, Shokhista, Bansal, Meena B., Barouki, Robert, Batterham, Rachel L., Behling, Cynthia, Belfort-DeAguiar, Renata, Berzigotti, Annalisa, Betel, Michael, Bianco, Cristiana, Bosi, Emanuele, Boursier, Jerome, Brunt, Elizabeth M., Bugianesi, Elisabetta, Byrne, Christopher J., Cabrera Cabrejos, Maria Cecilia, Caldwell, Stephen, Carr, Rotonya, Castellanos Fernández, Marlen Ivón, Castera, Laurent, Castillo-López, Maria Gabriela, Caussy, Cyrielle, Cerda-Reyes, Eira, Ceriello, Antonio, Chan, Wah- Kheong, Chang, Yoosoo, Charatcharoenwitthaya, Phunchai, Chavez-Tapia, Norberto, Chung, Raymond T., Colombo, Massimo, Coppell, Kirsten, Cotrim, Helma P., Craxi, Antonio, Crespo, Javier, Dassanayake, Anuradha, Davidson, Nicholas O., De Knegt, Robert, de Ledinghen, Victor, Demir, Münevver, Desalegn, Hailemichael, Diago, Moises, Dillon, John F., Dimmig, Bruce, Dirac, M. Ashworth, Dirchwolf, Melisa, Dufour, Jean-François, Dvorak, Karel, Ekstedt, Mattias, El-Kassas, Mohamed, Elsanousi, Osama M., Elsharkawy, Ahmed M., Elwakil, Reda, Eskridge, Wayne, Eslam, Mohammed, Esmat, Gamal, Fan, Jian- Gao, Ferraz, Maria Lucia, Flisiak, Robert, Fortin, Davide, Fouad, Yasser, Freidman, Scott L., Fuchs, Michael, Gadano, Adrian, Gastaldelli, Amalia, Geerts, Anja, Geier, Andreas, George, Jacob, Gerber, Lynn H., Ghazinyan, Hasmik, Gheorghe, Liana, Kile, Denise Giangola, Girala, Marcos, Boon Bee, George Goh, Goossens, Nicolas, Graupera, Isabel, Grønbæk, Henning, Hamid, Saeed, Hebditch, Vanessa, Henry, Zachary, Hickman, Ingrid J., Hobbs, L. Ansley, Hocking, Samantha L., Hofmann, Wolf Peter, Idilman, Ramazan, Iruzubieta, Paula, Isaacs, Scott, Isakov, Vasily A., Ismail, Mona H., Jamal, Mohammad H., Jarvis, Helen, Jepsen, Peter, Jornayvaz, François, Sudhamshu, K.C., Kakizaki, Satoru, Karpen, Saul, Kawaguchi, Takumi, Keating, Shelley E., Khader, Yousef, Kim, Seung Up, Kim, Won, Kleiner, David E., Koek, Ger, Joseph Komas, Narcisse Patrice, Kondili, Loreta A., Koot, Bart G., Korenjak, Marko, Kotsiliti, Eleni, Koulla, Yiannoula, Kugelmas, Carina, Kugelmas, Marcelo, Labidi, Asma, Lange, Naomi F., Lavine, Joel E., Lazo, Mariana, Leite, Nathalie, Lin, Han-Chieh, Lkhagvaa, Undram, Long, Michelle T., Lopez-Jaramillo, Patricio, Lozano, Adelina, Macedo, Maria Paula, Malekzadeh, Reza, Marchesini, Giulio, Marciano, Sebastian, Martinez, Kim, Martínez Vázquez, Sophia E., Mateva, Lyudmila, Mato, José M., Nlombi, Charles Mbendi, McCary, Alexis Gorden, McIntyre, Jeff, McKee, Martin, Mendive, Juan M., Mikolasevic, Ivana, Miller, Pamela S., Milovanovic, Tamara, Milton, Terri, Moreno-Alcantar, Rosalba, Morgan, Timothy R., Motala, Ayesha, Muris, Jean, Musso, Carla, Nava-González, Edna J., Negro, Francesco, Nersesov, Alexander V., Neuschwander-Tetri, Brent A., Nikolova, Dafina, Norris, Suzanne, Novak, Katja, Ocama, Ponsiano, Ong, Janus P., Ong-Go, Arlinking, Onyekwere, Charles, Padilla, Martin, Pais, Raluca, Pan, Calvin, Panduro, Arturo, Panigrahi, Manas K., Papatheodoridis, Georgios, Paruk, Imran, Patel, Keyur, Gonçalves, Carlos Penha, Figueroa, Marlene Pérez, Pérez-Escobar, Juanita, Pericàs, Juan M., Perseghin, Gianluca, Pessoa, Mário Guimarães, Petta, Salvatore, Marques Souza de Oliveira, Claudia Pinto, Prabhakaran, Dorairaj, Pyrsopoulous, Nikolaos, Rabiee, Atoosa, Ramji, Alnoor, Ratziu, Vlad, Ravendhran, Natarajan, Ray, Katrina, Roden, Michael, Romeo, Stefano, Romero-Gómez, Manuel, Rotman, Yaron, Rouabhia, Samir, Rowe, Ian A., Sadirova, Shakhlo, Alkhatry, Maryam Salem, Salupere, Riina, Satapathy, Sanjaya K., Schwimmer, Jeffrey B., Sebastiani, Giada, Seim, Lynn, Seki, Yosuke, Serme, Abdel Karim, Shapiro, David, Sharvadze, Lali, Shaw, Jonathan E., Shawa, Isaac Thom, Shenoy, Thrivikrama, Shibolet, Oren, Shimakawa, Yusuke, Shubrook, Jay H., Singh, Shivaram Prasad, Sinkala, Edford, Skladany, Lubomir, Skrypnyk, Igor, Song, Myeong Jun, Sookoian, Silvia, Sridharan, Kannan, Stefan, Norbert, Stine, Jonathan G., Stratakis, Nikolaos, Sheriff, Dhastagir Sultan, Sundaram, Shikha S., Svegliati-Baroni, Gianluca, Swain, Mark G., Tacke, Frank, Taheri, Shahrad, Tan, Soek-Siam, Tapper, Elliot B., Targher, Giovanni, Tcaciuc, Eugen, Thiele, Maja, Tiniakos, Dina, Tolmane, Ieva, Torre, Aldo, Torres, Esther A., Treeprasertsuk, Sombat, Trenell, Michael, Turcan, Svetlana, Turcanu, Adela, Valantinas, Jonas, van Kleef, Laurens A., Velarde Ruiz Velasco, Jose Antonio, Vesterhus, Mette, Vilar-Gomez, Eduardo, Waked, Imam, Wattacheril, Julia, Wedemeyer, Heiner, Wilkins, Fonda, Willemse, José, Wong, Robert J., Yilmaz, Yusuf, Yki-Järvinen, Hannele, Yu, Ming-Lung, Yumuk, Volkan, Zeybel, Müjdat, Zheng, Kenneth I., Zheng, Ming-Hua, and Huang, Terry T.-K.
- Published
- 2023
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7. The Apache Point Observatory Catalog of Optical Diffuse Interstellar Bands
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Fan, Haoyu, Hobbs, L. M., Dahlstrom, Julie A., Welty, Daniel E., York, Donald G., Rachford, Brian, Snow, Theodore P., Sonnentrucker, Paule, Baskes, Noah, and Zhao, Gang
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Aiming for a new and more comprehensive DIB catalog between 4,000 and 9,000{\AA}, we revisited the Atlas Catalog based on the observations of HD 183143 and HD 204827 (Hobbs et al. 2008 and 2009). Twenty-five medium-to-highly reddened sight lines were selected, sampling a variety of spectral types of the background star and the interstellar environments. The median SNR of these spectra is ~ 1,300 around 6,400{\AA}. Compared to the Atlas Catalog, 22 new DIBs were found, and the boundaries of 27 (sets) of DIBs were adjusted, resulting in an updated catalog containing 559 DIBs that we refer to as the Apache Point Observatory Catalog of Optical Diffuse Interstellar Bands. Measurements were then made based on this catalog. We found our survey most sensitive between 5,500 and 7,000{\AA} due largely to the local SNR of the spectra, the relative absence of interfering stellar lines, and the weakness of telluric residuals. For our data sample, the number of DIBs detected in a given sight line is mostly dependent on EB-V and less on the spectral type of the background star. Some dependence on fH2 is observed, but less well-determined due to the limited size of the data sample. The variations of the wavelengths of each DIB in different sight lines are generally larger than those of the known interstellar lines CH+, CH, and K I. Those variations could be due to the inherent error in the measurement, or to differences in the velocity components among sight lines.
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- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Evaluating the Impact of the Investing in Innovation Fund (i3) UPSTART Project on Rural Preschoolers' Early Literacy Skills
- Author
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Evaluation and Training Institute (ETI), Hobbs, L. Jon, and Overby, Melanie
- Abstract
UPSTART is a federally funded i3 validation project that uses a computer-based program to develop the school readiness skills of preschool children in rural Utah. Researchers used a randomized control trial design to evaluate the impact of the program in advancing children's early literacy skills. Preschoolers in the experimental group were randomly assigned to the UPSTART Reading software, while control group students were assigned to UPSTART Math. Standardized early literacy assessments were administered prior to program commencement and upon completion. Results revealed that there was a significant difference in children's mean scores on measures of letter knowledge and phonological awareness, after controlling for prior knowledge, missing pre-test data, and children's school district between those who participated in UPSTART Reading and those in the comparison group. There were no differences between the two groups on assessments measuring vocabulary and oral language or listening comprehension.
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- 2017
9. What happens to gender diverse young people who are referred to an Adult Gender Identity Service from a Child and Adolescent Service? : a cross-sectional look at intervention choices and outcomes
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Hobbs, L.
- Subjects
150 - Abstract
Background: In recent years there has been an explosion of referrals to child and adolescent gender identity services. There is a paucity of research on the experiences and outcomes of young adults referred from child and adolescent services to adult services, and with such large increases in referrals it is vital we understand more about the intervention pathways, satisfaction and longer-term outcomes of these gender diverse young people. The findings will enable better tailoring of gender identity services for young people, and be an important step towards ensuring that the support and intervention provided meets the needs of this diverse and growing population. Aim: The aim was to determine the intervention pathways, satisfaction levels and longer-term outcomes of the young people who attended the Gender Identity Development Service (GIDS), and who were referred on to the Charing Cross Adult Gender Identity Clinic (CCGIC). Method All attendees of the GIDS who were referred to the CCGIC between 2011 and 2016 were sent an invite to participate in an online questionnaire, which asked about their emerging gender awareness, prevalence of gender affirming interventions, factors influencing intervention decisions, satisfaction with the intervention process, feelings about gender identity, body image and wellbeing. Results: Of the 365 ex-GIDS clients who were referred to CCGIC, 72 completed the questionnaire. Overall, 59% were taking/had taken hormone blockers; 67% were/had taken cross-sex hormones and 27% intended to start taking them in the future; and 34% had undergone top or bottom surgery, with 56% intending to have surgical intervention in the future. Factors influential in the decision-making process were identified. Participants were generally satisfied with their intervention decisions and the decision-making process. However, areas of dissatisfaction were identified and are discussed. Conclusion The study shows that a higher number of young adults who are referred from child and adolescent services to adult services do pursue (or intend to pursue) medical and surgical interventions. Many who do are largely satisfied with the intervention process, but there are areas that require improvement.
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- 2018
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10. “The perfect storm”: community worker perspectives on the impact of COVID-19 on New York City immigrants and migrant-serving organizations
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Hobbs, L. Ansley, primary, Masoud, Dima, additional, Cravero, Kathleen, additional, Figueroa, Elisabeth Manipoud, additional, and Romero, Diana, additional
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- 2024
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11. Enhanced Fluorescence from X-Ray Line Coincidence Pumping
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Nilsen, J., Burridge, D., Hobbs, L. M. R., Hoarty, D., Beiersdorfer, P., Brown, G. V., Hell, N., Panchenko, D., Gu, M. F., Saunders, A. M., Scott, H. A., Hatfield, P., Hill, M. P., Wilson, L., Charles, R., Brown, C. R. D., Rose, S., Kozlová, Michaela, editor, and Nejdl, Jaroslav, editor
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- 2020
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12. Growing Our Mindset: A Diversity Summit Assessment
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Carter, T. L., Hobbs, L., and Wiley, Z.
- Abstract
In 2003, the Kansas State University College of Agriculture established a diversity programs office to assist the college with recruitment, retention, and graduation of underrepresented students. The Kansas State University Tilford Group has established standards for multicultural competency development that are founded in three primary discussion areas: knowledge, personal attributes, and skills. After several campus incidents, a university-wide event, KSUnite, was created to educate students and improve campus climate. Because diversity is an invaluable element of education, the Kansas State University College of Agriculture Diversity Programs Office seeks to educate students, faculty, and staff in the areas of cultural competency. To attain this objective, the Kansas State University College of Agriculture Diversity Programs Office co-hosted a diversity summit entitled "Growing Our Mindset" in the fall of 2017. At the conclusion of the summit, participants completed a Likert scale questionnaire that measured their development of cultural competencies as a result of forum participation. Questionnaire results and demographic information were analyzed using descriptive statistics. Overall, attendees responded favorably to the forum and indicated that diversity discussions should continue via an ongoing series. To continue this effort, the diversity programs office will utilize the obtained information to further develop cultural competencies within the College of Agriculture.
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- 2019
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13. Psychotherapeutic interventions for sexual problems delivered via the Internet : effectiveness, acceptability and reach
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Hobbs, L. J., Murray, Elizabeth, and Bailey, Julia
- Subjects
362.1 - Abstract
Background: There is a high prevalence of people with sexual difficulties and many do not seek help for them. Sexual difficulties can have a negative impact on sexual and psychological wellbeing and interpersonal relationships. Interactive Digital Interventions (IDIs) for sexual difficulties have the potential to provide a convenient, wide-reaching and costeffective alternative to face-to-face therapy, but research in this area is in its infancy. Currently little is known about their effectiveness, reach and acceptability. Aim: To investigate the use of the internet to deliver psychotherapeutic interventions for sexual difficulties, and determine their effectiveness, reach and acceptability. Methods 1. A systematic review of the effectiveness of IDIs for adults with sexual difficulties. 2. A secondary data analysis of the data from the third National Survey of Sexual Attitudes and Lifestyles to investigate the potential reach of IDIs and explore the characteristics of people who seek help for their sex lives 3. A qualitative interview study to explore users' views of an IDI for sexual difficulties before and after using one. Results: IDIs can be effective for sexual difficulties, but the current evidence-base is small, and contains studies that are methodologically flawed, so more research is needed to be sure of these effects. With approximately 427,000-762,000 British people reportedly distressed about their sex lives and looking for information and support online, it appears that IDIs have considerable potential to reach their intended audience. The sextherapylondon website appeared to be acceptable to users as it met many of their wants and needs with regards to features, design, usability, user experience and perceived outcomes. Conclusion: Overall, this thesis suggests that IDIs could have a valuable place in providing an alternative help source for people with sexual difficulties, especially in the light of further cuts to sexual health services.
- Published
- 2016
14. Voices in a pandemic: using deep mapping to explore children's sense of place during the COVID-19 pandemic in UK.
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Webber, Amanda D., Jones, V., McEwen, L., Deave, T., Gorell Barnes, L., Williams, S., Hobbs, L., Fogg-Rogers, L., and Gopinath, D.
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COVID-19 pandemic ,SOCIAL marginality ,EQUALITY ,DIGITAL technology ,SOCIAL history - Abstract
Children's sense of place is important for wellbeing, development and belonging in a community or place. The VIP-CLEAR (Voices in a Pandemic – Children's Lockdown Experiences Applied to Recovery) project used creative methods and repeat engagement to capture children's experiences of the COVID-19 pandemic in socially disadvantaged, urban settings, in Bristol, UK. This paper focuses on findings from the two-phased 'deep mapping' activity conducted in schools with 6–11-year-olds to consider children's sense of place at this time. Children's maps showed how their mobility was restricted to the home and/or adult-controlled, looped routes for functional tasks rather than child-directed exploration. Key locations - including school, family houses, and parks - were disconnected and highlighted as sites of 'absence', where children were excluded. These places were given meaning due to pre-COVID practice, sensory experience, and/or their relationship with valued people. As pandemic mitigation relaxed, children's maps showed increasing connections and greater visibility of the community and non-essential activities. As places changed, the amplification of existing social inequalities became apparent. In both phases, sense of place evolved and digital and natural spaces (through animals) showed potential for children to increase practice and connections with place. A strong sense of place may support adaptation to change, and this paper contributes to limited research on how children's sense of place is dynamic, altering with fluctuating social and environmental conditions, e.g. mitigation of a global pandemic. The implications of findings on future recovery planning involving children are also considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. A global research priority agenda to advance public health responses to fatty liver disease
- Author
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Lazarus, J, Mark, H, Allen, A, Arab, J, Carrieri, P, Noureddin, M, Alazawi, W, Alkhouri, N, Alqahtani, S, Arrese, M, Bataller, R, Berg, T, Brennan, P, Burra, P, Castro-Narro, G, Cortez-Pinto, H, Cusi, K, Dedes, N, Duseja, A, Francque, S, Hagstrom, H, Huang, T, Wajcman, D, Kautz, A, Kopka, C, Krag, A, Miller, V, Newsome, P, Rinella, M, Romero, D, Sarin, S, Silva, M, Spearman, C, Tsochatzis, E, Valenti, L, Villota-Rivas, M, Zelber-Sagi, S, Schattenberg, J, Wong, V, Younossi, Z, Aberg, F, Adams, L, Al-Naamani, K, Albadawy, R, Alexa, Z, Allison, M, Alnaser, F, Alswat, K, Alvares-da-Silva, M, Alvaro, D, Alves-Bezerra, M, Andrade, R, Anstee, Q, Awuku, Y, Baatarkhuu, O, Baffy, G, Bakieva, S, Bansal, M, Barouki, R, Batterham, R, Behling, C, Belfort-DeAguiar, R, Berzigotti, A, Betel, M, Bianco, C, Bosi, E, Boursier, J, Brunt, E, Bugianesi, E, Byrne, C, Cabrera Cabrejos, M, Caldwell, S, Carr, R, Castellanos Fernandez, M, Castera, L, Castillo-Lopez, M, Caussy, C, Cerda-Reyes, E, Ceriello, A, Chan, W, Chang, Y, Charatcharoenwitthaya, P, Chavez-Tapia, N, Chung, R, Colombo, M, Coppell, K, Cotrim, H, Craxi, A, Crespo, J, Dassanayake, A, Davidson, N, De Knegt, R, de Ledinghen, V, Demir, M, Desalegn, H, Diago, M, Dillon, J, Dimmig, B, Dirac, M, Dirchwolf, M, Dufour, J, Dvorak, K, Ekstedt, M, El-Kassas, M, Elsanousi, O, Elsharkawy, A, Elwakil, R, Eskridge, W, Eslam, M, Esmat, G, Fan, J, Ferraz, M, Flisiak, R, Fortin, D, Fouad, Y, Freidman, S, Fuchs, M, Gadano, A, Gastaldelli, A, Geerts, A, Geier, A, George, J, Gerber, L, Ghazinyan, H, Gheorghe, L, Kile, D, Girala, M, Boon Bee, G, Goossens, N, Graupera, I, Gronbaek, H, Hamid, S, Hebditch, V, Henry, Z, Hickman, I, Hobbs, L, Hocking, S, Hofmann, W, Idilman, R, Iruzubieta, P, Isaacs, S, Isakov, V, Ismail, M, Jamal, M, Jarvis, H, Jepsen, P, Jornayvaz, F, Sudhamshu, K, Kakizaki, S, Karpen, S, Kawaguchi, T, Keating, S, Khader, Y, Kim, S, Kim, W, Kleiner, D, Koek, G, Joseph Komas, N, Kondili, L, Koot, B, Korenjak, M, Kotsiliti, E, Koulla, Y, Kugelmas, C, Kugelmas, M, Labidi, A, Lange, N, Lavine, J, Lazo, M, Leite, N, Lin, H, Lkhagvaa, U, Long, M, Lopez-Jaramillo, P, Lozano, A, Macedo, M, Malekzadeh, R, Marchesini, G, Marciano, S, Martinez, K, Martinez Vazquez, S, Mateva, L, Mato, J, Nlombi, C, Mccary, A, Mcintyre, J, Mckee, M, Mendive, J, Mikolasevic, I, Miller, P, Milovanovic, T, Milton, T, Moreno-Alcantar, R, Morgan, T, Motala, A, Muris, J, Musso, C, Nava-Gonzalez, E, Negro, F, Nersesov, A, Neuschwander-Tetri, B, Nikolova, D, Norris, S, Novak, K, Ocama, P, Ong, J, Ong-Go, A, Onyekwere, C, Padilla, M, Pais, R, Pan, C, Panduro, A, Panigrahi, M, Papatheodoridis, G, Paruk, I, Patel, K, Goncalves, C, Figueroa, M, Perez-Escobar, J, Pericas, J, Perseghin, G, Pessoa, M, Petta, S, Marques Souza de Oliveira, C, Prabhakaran, D, Pyrsopoulous, N, Rabiee, A, Ramji, A, Ratziu, V, Ravendhran, N, Ray, K, Roden, M, Romeo, S, Romero-Gomez, M, Rotman, Y, Rouabhia, S, Rowe, I, Sadirova, S, Alkhatry, M, Salupere, R, Satapathy, S, Schwimmer, J, Sebastiani, G, Seim, L, Seki, Y, Serme, A, Shapiro, D, Sharvadze, L, Shaw, J, Shawa, I, Shenoy, T, Shibolet, O, Shimakawa, Y, Shubrook, J, Singh, S, Sinkala, E, Skladany, L, Skrypnyk, I, Song, M, Sookoian, S, Sridharan, K, Stefan, N, Stine, J, Stratakis, N, Sheriff, D, Sundaram, S, Svegliati-Baroni, G, Swain, M, Tacke, F, Taheri, S, Tan, S, Tapper, E, Targher, G, Tcaciuc, E, Thiele, M, Tiniakos, D, Tolmane, I, Torre, A, Torres, E, Treeprasertsuk, S, Trenell, M, Turcan, S, Turcanu, A, Valantinas, J, van Kleef, L, Velarde Ruiz Velasco, J, Vesterhus, M, Vilar-Gomez, E, Waked, I, Wattacheril, J, Wedemeyer, H, Wilkins, F, Willemse, J, Wong, R, Yilmaz, Y, Yki-Jarvinen, H, Yu, M, Yumuk, V, Zeybel, M, Zheng, K, Zheng, M, Lazarus J. V., Mark H. E., Allen A. M., Arab J. P., Carrieri P., Noureddin M., Alazawi W., Alkhouri N., Alqahtani S. A., Arrese M., Bataller R., Berg T., Brennan P. N., Burra P., Castro-Narro G. E., Cortez-Pinto H., Cusi K., Dedes N., Duseja A., Francque S. M., Hagstrom H., Huang T. T. -K., Wajcman D. I., Kautz A., Kopka C. J., Krag A., Miller V., Newsome P. N., Rinella M. E., Romero D., Sarin S. K., Silva M., Spearman C. W., Tsochatzis E. A., Valenti L., Villota-Rivas M., Zelber-Sagi S., Schattenberg J. M., Wong V. W. -S., Younossi Z. M., Aberg F., Adams L., Al-Naamani K., Albadawy R. M., Alexa Z., Allison M., Alnaser F. A., Alswat K., Alvares-da-Silva M. R., Alvaro D., Alves-Bezerra M., Andrade R. J., Anstee Q. M., Awuku Y. A., Baatarkhuu O., Baffy G., Bakieva S., Bansal M. B., Barouki R., Batterham R. L., Behling C., Belfort-DeAguiar R., Berzigotti A., Betel M., Bianco C., Bosi E., Boursier J., Brunt E. M., Bugianesi E., Byrne C. J., Cabrera Cabrejos M. C., Caldwell S., Carr R., Castellanos Fernandez M. I., Castera L., Castillo-Lopez M. G., Caussy C., Cerda-Reyes E., Ceriello A., Chan W. -K., Chang Y., Charatcharoenwitthaya P., Chavez-Tapia N., Chung R. T., Colombo M., Coppell K., Cotrim H. P., Craxi A., Crespo J., Dassanayake A., Davidson N. O., De Knegt R., de Ledinghen V., Demir M., Desalegn H., Diago M., Dillon J. F., Dimmig B., Dirac M. A., Dirchwolf M., Dufour J. -F., Dvorak K., Ekstedt M., El-Kassas M., Elsanousi O. M., Elsharkawy A. M., Elwakil R., Eskridge W., Eslam M., Esmat G., Fan J. -G., Ferraz M. L., Flisiak R., Fortin D., Fouad Y., Freidman S. L., Fuchs M., Gadano A., Gastaldelli A., Geerts A., Geier A., George J., Gerber L. H., Ghazinyan H., Gheorghe L., Kile D. G., Girala M., Boon Bee G. G., Goossens N., Graupera I., Gronbaek H., Hamid S., Hebditch V., Henry Z., Hickman I. J., Hobbs L. A., Hocking S. L., Hofmann W. P., Idilman R., Iruzubieta P., Isaacs S., Isakov V. A., Ismail M. H., Jamal M. H., Jarvis H., Jepsen P., Jornayvaz F., Sudhamshu K. C., Kakizaki S., Karpen S., Kawaguchi T., Keating S. E., Khader Y., Kim S. U., Kim W., Kleiner D. E., Koek G., Joseph Komas N. P., Kondili L. A., Koot B. G., Korenjak M., Kotsiliti E., Koulla Y., Kugelmas C., Kugelmas M., Labidi A., Lange N. F., Lavine J. E., Lazo M., Leite N., Lin H. -C., Lkhagvaa U., Long M. T., Lopez-Jaramillo P., Lozano A., Macedo M. P., Malekzadeh R., Marchesini G., Marciano S., Martinez K., Martinez Vazquez S. E., Mateva L., Mato J. M., Nlombi C. M., McCary A. G., McIntyre J., McKee M., Mendive J. M., Mikolasevic I., Miller P. S., Milovanovic T., Milton T., Moreno-Alcantar R., Morgan T. R., Motala A., Muris J., Musso C., Nava-Gonzalez E. J., Negro F., Nersesov A. V., Neuschwander-Tetri B. A., Nikolova D., Norris S., Novak K., Ocama P., Ong J. P., Ong-Go A., Onyekwere C., Padilla M., Pais R., Pan C., Panduro A., Panigrahi M. K., Papatheodoridis G., Paruk I., Patel K., Goncalves C. P., Figueroa M. P., Perez-Escobar J., Pericas J. M., Perseghin G., Pessoa M. G., Petta S., Marques Souza de Oliveira C. P., Prabhakaran D., Pyrsopoulous N., Rabiee A., Ramji A., Ratziu V., Ravendhran N., Ray K., Roden M., Romeo S., Romero-Gomez M., Rotman Y., Rouabhia S., Rowe I. A., Sadirova S., Alkhatry M. S., Salupere R., Satapathy S. K., Schwimmer J. B., Sebastiani G., Seim L., Seki Y., Serme A. K., Shapiro D., Sharvadze L., Shaw J. E., Shawa I. T., Shenoy T., Shibolet O., Shimakawa Y., Shubrook J. H., Singh S. P., Sinkala E., Skladany L., Skrypnyk I., Song M. J., Sookoian S., Sridharan K., Stefan N., Stine J. G., Stratakis N., Sheriff D. S., Sundaram S. S., Svegliati-Baroni G., Swain M. G., Tacke F., Taheri S., Tan S. -S., Tapper E. B., Targher G., Tcaciuc E., Thiele M., Tiniakos D., Tolmane I., Torre A., Torres E. A., Treeprasertsuk S., Trenell M., Turcan S., Turcanu A., Valantinas J., van Kleef L. A., Velarde Ruiz Velasco J. A., Vesterhus M., Vilar-Gomez E., Waked I., Wattacheril J., Wedemeyer H., Wilkins F., Willemse J., Wong R. J., Yilmaz Y., Yki-Jarvinen H., Yu M. -L., Yumuk V., Zeybel M., Zheng K. I., Zheng M. -H., Lazarus, J, Mark, H, Allen, A, Arab, J, Carrieri, P, Noureddin, M, Alazawi, W, Alkhouri, N, Alqahtani, S, Arrese, M, Bataller, R, Berg, T, Brennan, P, Burra, P, Castro-Narro, G, Cortez-Pinto, H, Cusi, K, Dedes, N, Duseja, A, Francque, S, Hagstrom, H, Huang, T, Wajcman, D, Kautz, A, Kopka, C, Krag, A, Miller, V, Newsome, P, Rinella, M, Romero, D, Sarin, S, Silva, M, Spearman, C, Tsochatzis, E, Valenti, L, Villota-Rivas, M, Zelber-Sagi, S, Schattenberg, J, Wong, V, Younossi, Z, Aberg, F, Adams, L, Al-Naamani, K, Albadawy, R, Alexa, Z, Allison, M, Alnaser, F, Alswat, K, Alvares-da-Silva, M, Alvaro, D, Alves-Bezerra, M, Andrade, R, Anstee, Q, Awuku, Y, Baatarkhuu, O, Baffy, G, Bakieva, S, Bansal, M, Barouki, R, Batterham, R, Behling, C, Belfort-DeAguiar, R, Berzigotti, A, Betel, M, Bianco, C, Bosi, E, Boursier, J, Brunt, E, Bugianesi, E, Byrne, C, Cabrera Cabrejos, M, Caldwell, S, Carr, R, Castellanos Fernandez, M, Castera, L, Castillo-Lopez, M, Caussy, C, Cerda-Reyes, E, Ceriello, A, Chan, W, Chang, Y, Charatcharoenwitthaya, P, Chavez-Tapia, N, Chung, R, Colombo, M, Coppell, K, Cotrim, H, Craxi, A, Crespo, J, Dassanayake, A, Davidson, N, De Knegt, R, de Ledinghen, V, Demir, M, Desalegn, H, Diago, M, Dillon, J, Dimmig, B, Dirac, M, Dirchwolf, M, Dufour, J, Dvorak, K, Ekstedt, M, El-Kassas, M, Elsanousi, O, Elsharkawy, A, Elwakil, R, Eskridge, W, Eslam, M, Esmat, G, Fan, J, Ferraz, M, Flisiak, R, Fortin, D, Fouad, Y, Freidman, S, Fuchs, M, Gadano, A, Gastaldelli, A, Geerts, A, Geier, A, George, J, Gerber, L, Ghazinyan, H, Gheorghe, L, Kile, D, Girala, M, Boon Bee, G, Goossens, N, Graupera, I, Gronbaek, H, Hamid, S, Hebditch, V, Henry, Z, Hickman, I, Hobbs, L, Hocking, S, Hofmann, W, Idilman, R, Iruzubieta, P, Isaacs, S, Isakov, V, Ismail, M, Jamal, M, Jarvis, H, Jepsen, P, Jornayvaz, F, Sudhamshu, K, Kakizaki, S, Karpen, S, Kawaguchi, T, Keating, S, Khader, Y, Kim, S, Kim, W, Kleiner, D, Koek, G, Joseph Komas, N, Kondili, L, Koot, B, Korenjak, M, Kotsiliti, E, Koulla, Y, Kugelmas, C, Kugelmas, M, Labidi, A, Lange, N, Lavine, J, Lazo, M, Leite, N, Lin, H, Lkhagvaa, U, Long, M, Lopez-Jaramillo, P, Lozano, A, Macedo, M, Malekzadeh, R, Marchesini, G, Marciano, S, Martinez, K, Martinez Vazquez, S, Mateva, L, Mato, J, Nlombi, C, Mccary, A, Mcintyre, J, Mckee, M, Mendive, J, Mikolasevic, I, Miller, P, Milovanovic, T, Milton, T, Moreno-Alcantar, R, Morgan, T, Motala, A, Muris, J, Musso, C, Nava-Gonzalez, E, Negro, F, Nersesov, A, Neuschwander-Tetri, B, Nikolova, D, Norris, S, Novak, K, Ocama, P, Ong, J, Ong-Go, A, Onyekwere, C, Padilla, M, Pais, R, Pan, C, Panduro, A, Panigrahi, M, Papatheodoridis, G, Paruk, I, Patel, K, Goncalves, C, Figueroa, M, Perez-Escobar, J, Pericas, J, Perseghin, G, Pessoa, M, Petta, S, Marques Souza de Oliveira, C, Prabhakaran, D, Pyrsopoulous, N, Rabiee, A, Ramji, A, Ratziu, V, Ravendhran, N, Ray, K, Roden, M, Romeo, S, Romero-Gomez, M, Rotman, Y, Rouabhia, S, Rowe, I, Sadirova, S, Alkhatry, M, Salupere, R, Satapathy, S, Schwimmer, J, Sebastiani, G, Seim, L, Seki, Y, Serme, A, Shapiro, D, Sharvadze, L, Shaw, J, Shawa, I, Shenoy, T, Shibolet, O, Shimakawa, Y, Shubrook, J, Singh, S, Sinkala, E, Skladany, L, Skrypnyk, I, Song, M, Sookoian, S, Sridharan, K, Stefan, N, Stine, J, Stratakis, N, Sheriff, D, Sundaram, S, Svegliati-Baroni, G, Swain, M, Tacke, F, Taheri, S, Tan, S, Tapper, E, Targher, G, Tcaciuc, E, Thiele, M, Tiniakos, D, Tolmane, I, Torre, A, Torres, E, Treeprasertsuk, S, Trenell, M, Turcan, S, Turcanu, A, Valantinas, J, van Kleef, L, Velarde Ruiz Velasco, J, Vesterhus, M, Vilar-Gomez, E, Waked, I, Wattacheril, J, Wedemeyer, H, Wilkins, F, Willemse, J, Wong, R, Yilmaz, Y, Yki-Jarvinen, H, Yu, M, Yumuk, V, Zeybel, M, Zheng, K, Zheng, M, Lazarus J. V., Mark H. E., Allen A. M., Arab J. P., Carrieri P., Noureddin M., Alazawi W., Alkhouri N., Alqahtani S. A., Arrese M., Bataller R., Berg T., Brennan P. N., Burra P., Castro-Narro G. E., Cortez-Pinto H., Cusi K., Dedes N., Duseja A., Francque S. M., Hagstrom H., Huang T. T. -K., Wajcman D. I., Kautz A., Kopka C. J., Krag A., Miller V., Newsome P. N., Rinella M. E., Romero D., Sarin S. K., Silva M., Spearman C. W., Tsochatzis E. A., Valenti L., Villota-Rivas M., Zelber-Sagi S., Schattenberg J. M., Wong V. W. -S., Younossi Z. M., Aberg F., Adams L., Al-Naamani K., Albadawy R. M., Alexa Z., Allison M., Alnaser F. A., Alswat K., Alvares-da-Silva M. R., Alvaro D., Alves-Bezerra M., Andrade R. J., Anstee Q. M., Awuku Y. A., Baatarkhuu O., Baffy G., Bakieva S., Bansal M. B., Barouki R., Batterham R. L., Behling C., Belfort-DeAguiar R., Berzigotti A., Betel M., Bianco C., Bosi E., Boursier J., Brunt E. M., Bugianesi E., Byrne C. J., Cabrera Cabrejos M. C., Caldwell S., Carr R., Castellanos Fernandez M. I., Castera L., Castillo-Lopez M. G., Caussy C., Cerda-Reyes E., Ceriello A., Chan W. -K., Chang Y., Charatcharoenwitthaya P., Chavez-Tapia N., Chung R. T., Colombo M., Coppell K., Cotrim H. P., Craxi A., Crespo J., Dassanayake A., Davidson N. O., De Knegt R., de Ledinghen V., Demir M., Desalegn H., Diago M., Dillon J. F., Dimmig B., Dirac M. A., Dirchwolf M., Dufour J. -F., Dvorak K., Ekstedt M., El-Kassas M., Elsanousi O. M., Elsharkawy A. M., Elwakil R., Eskridge W., Eslam M., Esmat G., Fan J. -G., Ferraz M. L., Flisiak R., Fortin D., Fouad Y., Freidman S. L., Fuchs M., Gadano A., Gastaldelli A., Geerts A., Geier A., George J., Gerber L. H., Ghazinyan H., Gheorghe L., Kile D. G., Girala M., Boon Bee G. G., Goossens N., Graupera I., Gronbaek H., Hamid S., Hebditch V., Henry Z., Hickman I. J., Hobbs L. A., Hocking S. L., Hofmann W. P., Idilman R., Iruzubieta P., Isaacs S., Isakov V. A., Ismail M. H., Jamal M. H., Jarvis H., Jepsen P., Jornayvaz F., Sudhamshu K. C., Kakizaki S., Karpen S., Kawaguchi T., Keating S. E., Khader Y., Kim S. U., Kim W., Kleiner D. E., Koek G., Joseph Komas N. P., Kondili L. A., Koot B. G., Korenjak M., Kotsiliti E., Koulla Y., Kugelmas C., Kugelmas M., Labidi A., Lange N. F., Lavine J. E., Lazo M., Leite N., Lin H. -C., Lkhagvaa U., Long M. T., Lopez-Jaramillo P., Lozano A., Macedo M. P., Malekzadeh R., Marchesini G., Marciano S., Martinez K., Martinez Vazquez S. E., Mateva L., Mato J. M., Nlombi C. M., McCary A. G., McIntyre J., McKee M., Mendive J. M., Mikolasevic I., Miller P. S., Milovanovic T., Milton T., Moreno-Alcantar R., Morgan T. R., Motala A., Muris J., Musso C., Nava-Gonzalez E. J., Negro F., Nersesov A. V., Neuschwander-Tetri B. A., Nikolova D., Norris S., Novak K., Ocama P., Ong J. P., Ong-Go A., Onyekwere C., Padilla M., Pais R., Pan C., Panduro A., Panigrahi M. K., Papatheodoridis G., Paruk I., Patel K., Goncalves C. P., Figueroa M. P., Perez-Escobar J., Pericas J. M., Perseghin G., Pessoa M. G., Petta S., Marques Souza de Oliveira C. P., Prabhakaran D., Pyrsopoulous N., Rabiee A., Ramji A., Ratziu V., Ravendhran N., Ray K., Roden M., Romeo S., Romero-Gomez M., Rotman Y., Rouabhia S., Rowe I. A., Sadirova S., Alkhatry M. S., Salupere R., Satapathy S. K., Schwimmer J. B., Sebastiani G., Seim L., Seki Y., Serme A. K., Shapiro D., Sharvadze L., Shaw J. E., Shawa I. T., Shenoy T., Shibolet O., Shimakawa Y., Shubrook J. H., Singh S. P., Sinkala E., Skladany L., Skrypnyk I., Song M. J., Sookoian S., Sridharan K., Stefan N., Stine J. G., Stratakis N., Sheriff D. S., Sundaram S. S., Svegliati-Baroni G., Swain M. G., Tacke F., Taheri S., Tan S. -S., Tapper E. B., Targher G., Tcaciuc E., Thiele M., Tiniakos D., Tolmane I., Torre A., Torres E. A., Treeprasertsuk S., Trenell M., Turcan S., Turcanu A., Valantinas J., van Kleef L. A., Velarde Ruiz Velasco J. A., Vesterhus M., Vilar-Gomez E., Waked I., Wattacheril J., Wedemeyer H., Wilkins F., Willemse J., Wong R. J., Yilmaz Y., Yki-Jarvinen H., Yu M. -L., Yumuk V., Zeybel M., Zheng K. I., and Zheng M. -H.
- Abstract
Background & aims: An estimated 38% of adults worldwide have non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). From individual impacts to widespread public health and economic consequences, the implications of this disease are profound. This study aimed to develop an aligned, prioritised fatty liver disease research agenda for the global health community. Methods: Nine co-chairs drafted initial research priorities, subsequently reviewed by 40 core authors and debated during a three-day in-person meeting. Following a Delphi methodology, over two rounds, a large panel (R1 n = 344, R2 n = 288) reviewed the priorities, via Qualtrics XM, indicating agreement using a four-point Likert-scale and providing written feedback. The core group revised the draft priorities between rounds. In R2, panellists also ranked the priorities within six domains: epidemiology, models of care, treatment and care, education and awareness, patient and community perspectives, and leadership and public health policy. Results: The consensus-built fatty liver disease research agenda encompasses 28 priorities. The mean percentage of ‘agree’ responses increased from 78.3 in R1 to 81.1 in R2. Five priorities received unanimous combined agreement (‘agree’ + ‘somewhat agree’); the remaining 23 priorities had >90% combined agreement. While all but one of the priorities exhibited at least a super-majority of agreement (>66.7% ‘agree’), 13 priorities had [removed]90% combined agreement. Conclusions: Adopting this multidisciplinary consensus-built research priorities agenda can deliver a step-change in addressing fatty liver disease, mitigating against its individual and societal harms and proactively altering its natural history through prevention, identification, treatment, and care. This agenda should catalyse the global health community's efforts to advance and accelerate responses to this widespread and fast-growing public health threat. Impact and implications: An estimated 38% of adults and 13% o
- Published
- 2023
16. Anomalous Diffuse Interstellar Bands in the Spectrum of Herschel 36. I. Observations of Rotationally Excited CH and CH+ Absorption and Strong, Extended Redward Wings on Several DIBs
- Author
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Dahlstrom, Julie, York, Donald G., Welty, Daniel E., Oka, Takeshi, Hobbs, L. M., Johnson, Sean, Friedman, Scott D., Jiang, Zihao, Rachford, Brian L., Sherman, Reid, Snow, Theodore P., and Sonnentrucker, Paule
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Anomalously broad diffuse interstellar bands (DIBs) at 5780.5, 5797.1, 6196.0, and 6613.6 A are found in absorption along the line of sight to Herschel 36, the star illuminating the bright Hourglass region of the H II region Messier 8. Interstellar absorption from excited CH+ in the J=1 level and from excited CH in the J=3/2 level is also seen. To our knowledge, neither those excited molecular lines nor such strongly extended DIBs have previously been seen in absorption from interstellar gas. These unusual features appear to arise in a small region near Herschel 36 which contains most of the neutral interstellar material in the sight line. The CH+ and CH in that region are radiatively excited by strong far-IR radiation from the adjacent infrared source Her 36 SE. Similarly, the broadening of the DIBs toward Herschel 36 may be due to radiative pumping of closely spaced high-J rotational levels of relatively small, polar carrier molecules. If this picture of excited rotational states for the DIB carriers is correct and applicable to most DIBs, the 2.7 degree cosmic microwave background may set the minimum widths (about 0.35 A) of known DIBs, with molecular processes and/or local radiation fields producing the larger widths found for the broader DIBs. Despite the intense local UV radiation field within the cluster NGC 6530, no previously undetected DIBs stronger than 10 mA in equivalent width are found in the optical spectrum of Herschel 36, suggesting that neither dissociation nor ionization of the carriers of the known DIBs by this intense field creates new carriers with easily detectable DIB-like features. Possibly related profile anomalies for several other DIBs are noted., Comment: 36 pages; 8 figures; accepted to ApJ; higher quality versions of figures 1 and 2 may be found at http://astro.uchicago.edu/~dwelty/Her36/
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- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Anomalous Diffuse Interstellar Bands in the Spectrum of Herschel 36. II. Analysis of Radiatively Excited CH+, CH, and DIBs
- Author
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Oka, Takeshi, Welty, Daniel E., Johnson, Sean, York, Donald G., Dahlstrom, Julie, and Hobbs, L. M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Absorption spectra toward Herschel 36 for the A^1Pi <-- X^1Sigma transitions of CH+ in the J=1 excited rotational level and the A^2Delta <-- X^2Pi transition of CH in the J=3/2 excited fine structure level have been analyzed. These excited levels are above their ground levels by 40.1 K and ~25.7 K and indicate high radiative temperatures of the environment, 14.6 K and 6.7 K, respectively. The effect of the high radiative temperature is more spectacular in some diffuse interstellar bands (DIBs) observed toward Her 36; remarkable extended tails toward red (ETR) were observed. We interpret these ETRs as due to a small decrease of rotational constants upon excitation of excited electronic states. Along with radiative pumping of a great many high-J rotational levels, this causes the ETRs. In order to study this effect quantitatively, we have developed a model calculation in which the effects of collision and radiation are treated simultaneously. The simplest case of linear molecules is considered. It has been found that the ETR is reproduced if the fraction of the variation of the rotational constant, beta = (B'-B)/B, is sufficiently high (3-5%) and the radiative temperature is high (T_r > 50 K). Although modeling for general molecules is beyond the scope of this paper, the results indicate that the prototypical DIBs at 5780.5, 5797.1, and 6613.6 A which show the pronounced ETRs are due to polar molecules sensitive to the radiative excitation. The requirement of high beta favors relatively small molecules with 3-6 heavy atoms. DIBs at 5849.8, 6196.0, and 6379.3 A which do not show the pronounced ETRs are likely due to non-polar molecules or large polar molecules with small beta., Comment: 35 pages; 5 figures; accepted to ApJ; corrected minor errors in eqns. 3, 6, and 8 and fig. 4; conclusions unchanged
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- 2013
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18. Geometry and velocity structure of HD 44179's bipolar jet
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Thomas, Joshua D., Witt, Adolf N., Aufdenberg, Jason P., Bjorkman, J. E., Dahlstrom, Julie A., Hobbs, L. M., and York, Donald G.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
In this paper we analyse a set of 33 optical spectra, which were acquired with the ARCES echelle spectrograph (R = 38,000) on the 3.5-m telescope at the Apache Point Observatory. We examine the H{\alpha} profile in each of these observations in order to determine the geometry and velocity structure of the previously discovered bipolar jet, which originates from the secondary star of HD 44179 located at the centre of the Red Rectangle nebula. Using a 3D geometric model we are able to determine the orbital coverage during which the jet occults the primary star. During the occultation, part of the H{\alpha} line profile appears in absorption. The velocity structure of the jet was determined by modelling the absorption line profile using the Sobolev approximation for each orbital phase during which we have observations. The results indicate the presence of a wide angle jet, likely responsible for observed biconical structure of the outer nebula. Furthermore, we were able to determine a likely velocity structure and rule out several others. We find that the jet is comprised of low-density, high-velocity, central region and a higher-density, lower-velocity, conical shell., Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures
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- 2012
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19. Studies of Diffuse Interstellar Bands. V. Pairwise Correlations of Eight Strong DIBs and Neutral Hydrogen, Molecular Hydrogen, and Color Excess
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Friedman, Scott D., York, Donald G., McCall, Benjamin J., Dahlstrom, Julie, Sonnentrucker, Paule, Welty, Daniel E., Drosback, Meredith M., Hobbs, L. M., Rachford, Brian L., and Snow, Theodore P.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We establish correlations between equivalent widths of eight diffuse interstellar bands (DIBs), and examine their correlations with atomic hydrogen, molecular hydrogen, and EB-V . The DIBs are centered at \lambda\lambda 5780.5, 6204.5, 6283.8, 6196.0, 6613.6, 5705.1, 5797.1, and 5487.7, in decreasing order of Pearson\^as correlation coefficient with N(H) (here defined as the column density of neutral hydrogen), ranging from 0.96 to 0.82. We find the equivalent width of \lambda 5780.5 is better correlated with column densities of H than with E(B-V) or H2, confirming earlier results based on smaller datasets. We show the same is true for six of the seven other DIBs presented here. Despite this similarity, the eight strong DIBs chosen are not well enough correlated with each other to suggest they come from the same carrier. We further conclude that these eight DIBs are more likely to be associated with H than with H2, and hence are not preferentially located in the densest, most UV shielded parts of interstellar clouds. We suggest they arise from different molecules found in diffuse H regions with very little H (molecular fraction f<0.01). Of the 133 stars with available data in our study, there are three with significantly weaker \lambda 5780.5 than our mean H-5780.5 relationship, all of which are in regions of high radiation fields, as previously noted by Herbig. The correlations will be useful in deriving interstellar parameters when direct methods are not available. For instance, with care, the value of N(H) can be derived from W{\lambda}(5780.5)., Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal; 37 pages, 11 figures, 6 tables
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- 2010
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20. Li I and K I Scatter in Cool Pleiades Dwarfs
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King, J. R., Schuler, S. C., Hobbs, L. M., and Pinsonneault, M. H.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We utilize high-resolution (R~60,000), high S/N (~100) spectroscopy of 17 cool Pleiades dwarfs to examine the confounding star-to-star scatter in the 6707 Li I line strengths in this young cluster. Our Pleiads, selected for their small projected rotational velocity and modest chromospheric emission, evince substantial scatter in the linestrengths of 6707 Li I feature that is absent in the 7699 K I resonance line. The Li I scatter is not correlated with that in the high-excitation 7774 O I feature, and the magnitude of the former is greater than the latter despite the larger temperature sensitivity of the O I feature. These results suggest that systematic errors in linestrength measurements due to blending, color (or color-based T_eff) errors, or line formation effects related to an overlying chromosphere are not the principal source of Li I scatter in our stars. There do exist analytic spot models that can produce the observed Li scatter without introducing scatter in the K I line strengths or the color-magnitude diagram. However, these models predict factor of >3 differences in abundances derived from the subordinate 6104 and resonance 6707 Li I features; we find no difference in the abundances determined from these two features. These analytic spot models also predict CN line strengths significantly larger than we observe in our spectra. The simplest explanation of the Li, K, CN, and photometric data is that there must be a real abundance component to the Pleiades Li dispersion. We suggest that this real abundance component is the manifestation of relic differences in erstwhile pre-main-sequence Li burning caused by effects of surface activity on stellar structure. We discuss observational predictions of these effects., Comment: 35 pages, 7 figures; accepted by ApJ
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- 2010
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21. Studies of the Diffuse Interstellar Bands. III. HD 183143
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Hobbs, L. M., York, D. G., Thorburn, J. A., Snow, T. P., Bishof, M., Friedman, S. D., McCall, B. J., Oka, T., Rachford, B., Sonnentrucker, P., and Welty, D. E.
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Astrophysics - Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
Echelle spectra of HD 183143 [B7Iae, E(B-V) = 1.27] were obtained on three nights, at a resolving power R = 38,000 and with a signal-to-noise ratio ~1000 at 6400 A in the final, combined spectrum. A catalog is presented of 414 diffuse interstellar bands (DIBs) measured between 3900 and 8100 A in this spectrum. The central wavelengths, the widths (FWHM), and the equivalent widths of nearly all of the bands are tabulated, along with the minimum uncertainties in the latter. Among the 414 bands, 135 (or 33%) were not reported in four previous, modern surveys of the DIBs in the spectra of various stars, including HD 183143. The principal result of this study is that the great majority of the bands in the catalog are very weak and fairly narrow. Typical equivalent widths amount to a few mA, and the bandwidths (FWHM) are most often near 0.7 A. No preferred wavenumber spacings among the 414 bands are identified which could provide clues to the identities of the large molecules thought to cause the DIBs. At generally comparable detection limits in both spectra, the population of DIBs observed toward HD 183143 is systematically redder, broader, and stronger than that seen toward HD 204827 (Paper II). In addition, interstellar lines of C2 molecules have not been detected toward HD 183143, while a very high value of N(C2)/E(B-V) is observed toward HD 204827. Therefore, either the abundances of the large molecules presumed to give rise to the DIBs, or the physical conditions in the absorbing clouds, or both, must differ significantly between the two cases., Comment: Additional data and figures available at http://dibdata.org. To appear as Astrophysical Journal, 705, 32-45 (Nov. 1, 2009)
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- 2009
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22. Interstellar Metastable Helium Absorption as a Probe of the Cosmic-Ray Ionization Rate
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Indriolo, Nick, Hobbs, L. M., Hinkle, K. H., and McCall, Benjamin J.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The ionization rate of interstellar material by cosmic rays has been a major source of controversy, with different estimates varying by three orders of magnitude. Observational constraints of this rate have all depended on analyzing the chemistry of various molecules that are produced following cosmic-ray ionization, and in many cases these analyses contain significant uncertainties. Even in the simplest case (H3+) the derived ionization rate depends on an (uncertain) estimate of the absorption path length. In this paper we examine the feasibility of inferring the cosmic-ray ionization rate using the 10830 A absorption line of metastable helium. Observations through the diffuse clouds toward HD 183143 are presented, but yield only an upper limit on the metastable helium column density. A thorough investigation of He+ chemistry reveals that only a small fraction of He+ will recombine into the triplet state and populate the metastable level. In addition, excitation to the triplet manifold of helium by secondary electrons must be accounted for as it is the dominant mechanism which produces He* in some environments. Incorporating these various formation and destruction pathways, we derive new equations for the steady state abundance of metastable helium. Using these equations in concert with our observations, we find zeta_He < 1.2*10^-15 s^-1, an upper limit about 5 times larger than the ionization rate previously inferred for this sight line using H3+. While observations of interstellar He* are extremely difficult at present..., Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2009
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23. The Red Rectangle: Its Shaping Mechanism and its Source of Ultraviolet Photons
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Witt, Adolf N., Vijh, Uma P., Hobbs, L. M., Aufdenberg, Jason P., Thorburn, Julie A., and York, Donald G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The proto-planetary Red Rectangle nebula is powered by HD 44179, a spectroscopic binary (P = 318 d), in which a luminous post-AGB component is the primary source of both luminosity and current mass loss. Here, we present the results of a seven-year, eight-orbit spectroscopic monitoring program of HD 44179, designed to uncover new information about the source of the Lyman/far-ultraviolet continuum in the system as well as the driving mechanism for the bipolar outflow producing the current nebula. Our observations of the H-alpha line profile around the orbital phase of superior conjunction reveal the secondary component to be the origin of the fast (max. v~560$ km s$^{-1}$) bipolar outflow in the Red Rectangle. The variation of total H-alpha flux from the central H II region with orbital phase also identifies the secondary or its surroundings as the source of the far-ultraviolet ionizing radiation in the system. The estimated mass of the secondary (~0.94 M$\sun$) and the speed of the outflow suggest that this component is a main sequence star and not a white dwarf, as previously suggested. We identify the source of the Lyman/far-ultraviolet continuum in the system as the hot, inner region (T$_{max} \ge 17,000$ K) of an accretion disk surrounding the secondary, fed by Roche lobe overflow from the post-AGB primary at a rate of about $2 - 5\times10^{-5}$ M$\sun$ yr$^{-1}$. The total luminosity of the accretion disk around the secondary is estimated to be at least 300 L$\sun$, about 5% of the luminosity of the entire system. (abridged), Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ
- Published
- 2008
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24. Spatial and Temporal Variations in Interstellar Absorption toward HD 72127AB
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Welty, Daniel E., Simon, Thuso, and Hobbs, L. M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
New optical spectra of Ca II and Na I toward HD 72127AB provide additional evidence for both spatial and temporal variations in the complex interstellar absorption along the two sight lines; archival UV spectra yield information on the abundances, depletions, and physical conditions in the gas toward HD 72127A. Similarities in the strengths of various tracers of interstellar material in the two lines of sight suggest that the total hydrogen column densities [N(H) ~ 2.5 x 10^{20} cm^{-2}] and the depletions and ionization in the main components at low LSR velocities also are similar. Toward HD 72127A, the main components are relatively cool (T < 900 K), but with depletions resembling those found in warm, diffuse disc clouds; the generally weaker components at higher velocities have much milder depletions, more like those found in halo clouds. Several trace neutral species -- Ca I, Cr I, and Fe I -- are much stronger toward HD 72127B, however. The column density of Cr I, for example, is about 30 times the value determined toward zeta Oph (the only previous detection of that species in the ISM). Dielectronic recombination in warmer gas (T > 5000 K) may be largely responsible for the enhanced abundances of those trace neutral species toward HD 72127B. If the main components toward HD 72127AB are associated with material in the Vela SNR, the differences in abundances and physical conditions occur on scales of about 1100 AU., Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, accepted to MNRAS
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- 2008
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25. A Catalog of Diffuse Interstellar Bands in the Spectrum of HD 204827
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Hobbs, L. M., York, D. G., Snow, T. P., Oka, T., Thorburn, J. A., Bishof, M., Friedman, S. D., McCall, B. J., Rachford, B., Sonnentrucker, P., and Welty, D. E.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Echelle spectra of the double-lined spectroscopic binary HD 204827 were obtained on five nights, at a resolving power R = 38,000 and with a S/N ratio = 750 near 6000 A in the final, combined spectrum. The stars show E(B-V) = 1.11 and spectral types near O9.5V and B0.5III. A catalog is presented of 380 diffuse interstellar bands (DIBs) measured between 3900 and 8100 A in the stars' spectrum. The central wavelengths, the widths (FWHM), and the equivalent widths of nearly all of the bands are tabulated, along with the minimum uncertainties in the latter. The reliable removal of very weak stellar lines from the catalog, and of some stellar lines from the less severe blends with DIBs, is made generally easy by the highly variable radial velocities of both stars. The principal result of this investigation is that the great majority of the bands in the catalog are very weak and relatively narrow. Typical equivalent widths amount to a few mA, and the band widths (FWHM) are most often near 0.55 A. Therefore, most of these DIBs can be detected only in spectra obtained at a resolving power and a S/N ratio at least comparable to those used here. In addition, the anomalous interstellar reddening and the very high value of the ratio N(C2)/E(B-V) seen toward HD 204827 indicate that the physical conditions in one or more of the several interstellar clouds seen in this direction differ significantly from those found toward the prototypical DIB target HD 183143, for example. Probably primarily for these reasons, 113 of the 380 bands, or 30%, were not detected in four previous, modern surveys of the DIBs seen in the spectra of stars other than HD 204827. Both the tabulated data for the DIBs and a plot of our spectrum of HD 204827 are available online at http://dibdata.org, Comment: 85 pages (17 of text, 14 of tables, 54 of figures). To appear in the Astrophysical Journal
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- 2008
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26. Pan-Arctic diel vertical migration during the polar night
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Hobbs, L., Cottier, F. R., Last, K. S., and Berge, J.
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- 2018
27. Oxygen from the Lambda 7774 High-Excitation Triplet in Open Cluster Dwarfs: Hyades
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Schuler, Simon C., King, Jeremy R., Terndrup, Donald M., Pinsonneault, Marc H., Murray, Norman, and Hobbs, L. M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Oxygen abundances have been derived from the near-IR, high-excitation Lambda 7774 O I triplet in high-resolution, high signal-to-noise spectra of 45 Hyades dwarfs using standard one dimensional, plane-parallel LTE models. Effective temperatures of the stellar sample range from 4319-6301 K, and the derived relative O abundances as a function of T_eff evince a trichotomous morphology. At T_eff > 6100 K, there is evidence of an increase in the O abundances with increasing T_eff, consistent with non-LTE (NLTE) predictions. At intermediate T_eff (5450 < T_eff < 6100 K), the O abundances are flat, and star-to-star values are in good agreement, having a mean value of [O/H] = +0.25 +/- 0.02; however, systematic errors at the ~0.10 dex level might exist. The O abundances for stars with T_eff < 5450 K show a striking increase with decreasing T_eff, in stark contrast to expectations and canonical NLTE calculations. The cool Hyades triplet results are compared to those recently reported for dwarfs in the Pleiades cluster and the UMa moving group; qualitative differences between the trends observed in these stellar aggregates point to a possible age-related diminution of triplet abundance trends in cool open cluster dwarfs. Correlations with age-related phenomena, i.e., chromospheric activity and photospheric spots, faculae, and/or plages, are investigated. No correlation with Ca II H+K chromospheric activity indicators is observed. Multi-component LTE ``toy'' models have been constructed in order to simulate photospheric temperature inhomogeneities that could arise from the presence of starspots, and we demonstrate that photospheric spots are a plausible source of the triplet trends among the cool dwarfs., Comment: 40 pages, 7 figures; Accepted for publication in ApJ
- Published
- 2005
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28. Endocrine and haemodynamic changes in resistant hypertension, and blood pressure responses to spironolactone or amiloride: the PATHWAY-2 mechanisms substudies
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Balakrishnan, K, Burton, T, Cannon, J, Collier, D, Coughlan, C, D'Souza, R, Enobakhare, E, Findlay, E, Gardiner-Hill, C, Gupta, P, Helmy, J, Helmy, C, Hobbs, L, Hobbs, R, Hood, S, Iles, R, Kean, S, Kwok, S, Lacy, P, MacIntyre, I, Mackay, J, Markandu, N, Martin, U, McCallum, L, McCann, G, McGinnis, A, Melville, V, Muir, S, Myint, KS, Nazir, S, Palmer, J, Papworth, R, Rutkowski, K, Saxena, M, Schumann, A, Soran, H, Stanley, A, Thom, S, Webb, A, White, C, Wilson, R, Zak, A, Williams, Bryan, MacDonald, Thomas M, Morant, Steve V, Webb, David J, Sever, Peter, McInnes, Gordon T, Ford, Ian, Cruickshank, J Kennedy, Caulfield, Mark J, Padmanabhan, Sandosh, Mackenzie, Isla S, Salsbury, Jackie, and Brown, Morris J
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- 2018
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29. High-Resolution Observations of Interstellar Ca I Absorption -- Implications for Depletions and Electron Densities in Diffuse Clouds
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Welty, Daniel E., Hobbs, L. M., and Morton, Donald C.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present high-resolution (FWHM ~ 0.3-1.5 km/s) spectra of interstellar Ca I absorption toward 30 Galactic stars. Comparisons of the column densities of Ca I, Ca II, K I, and other species -- for individual components identified in the line profiles and also when integrated over entire lines of sight -- yield information on relative electron densities and depletions. There is no obvious relationship between the ratio N(Ca I)/N(Ca II) [equal to n_e/(Gamma/alpha_r) for photoionization equilibrium] and the fraction of hydrogen in molecular form f(H2) (often taken to be indicative of the local density n_H). For a smaller sample of sightlines for which the thermal pressure (n_H T) and local density can be estimated via analysis of the C I fine-structure excitation, the average electron density inferred from C, Na, and K (assuming photoionization equilibrium) seems to be independent of n_H and n_H T. While the n_e obtained from the ratio N(Ca I)/N(Ca II) is often significantly higher than the values derived from other elements, the patterns of relative n_e derived from different elements show both similarities and differences for different lines of sight -- suggesting that additional processes besides photoionization and radiative recombination commonly and significantly affect the ionization balance of heavy elements in diffuse IS clouds. Such additional processes may also contribute to the (apparently) larger than expected fractional ionizations (n_e/n_H) found for some lines of sight with independent determinations of n_H. In general, inclusion of ``grain-assisted'' recombination does reduce the inferred n_e, but it does not reconcile the n_e estimated from different elements. The depletion of calcium may have a much weaker dependence on density than was suggested by earlier comparisons with CH and CN., Comment: aastex, 70 pages, accepted to ApJS
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- 2003
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30. Unusually Weak Diffuse Interstellar Bands toward HD 62542
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Snow, T. P., Welty, D. E., Thorburn, J., Hobbs, L. M., McCall, B. J., Sonnentrucker, P., and York, D. G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
As part of an extensive survey of diffuse interstellar bands (DIBs), we have obtained optical spectra of the moderately reddened B5V star HD 62542, which is known to have an unusual UV extinction curve of the type usually identified with dark clouds. The typically strongest of the commonly catalogued DIBs covered by the spectra -- those at 5780, 5797, 6270, 6284, and 6614 A -- are essentially absent in this line of sight, in marked contrast with other lines of sight of similar reddening. We compare the HD 62542 line of sight with others exhibiting a range of extinction properties and molecular abundances and interpret the weakness of the DIBs as an extreme case of deficient DIB formation in a dense cloud whose more diffuse outer layers have been stripped away. We comment on the challenges these observations pose for identifying the carriers of the diffuse bands., Comment: 20 pages, 4 figures; aastex; accepted by ApJ
- Published
- 2002
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31. Rejection of the C7- Diffuse Interstellar Band Hypothesis
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McCall, B. J., Thorburn, J., Hobbs, L. M., Oka, T., and York, D. G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Using the new high resolution (~ 8 km/s) echelle spectrograph on the 3.5-m telescope at the Apache Point Observatory, we have begun a high sensitivity survey of the diffuse interstellar bands in a large sample of reddened stars. Now that we are two years into this long-term survey, our sample includes over 20 reddened stars which show at least one of the DIBs that had been suggested to be caused by C7-, based on the gas phase measurement of the C7- spectrum by J. P. Maier's group. The high quality astronomical data from this larger sample of stars, along with the spectroscopic constants from the new laboratory work recently reported by Maier's group, have enabled us to examine more carefully the agreement between C7- and the DIBs. We find that none of the C7- bands matches the DIBs in wavelength or expected profile. One of the DIBs (lambda5748) attributed to C7- is actually a stellar line. The two strongest DIBs attributed to C7- (lambda 6270 and lambda4964) do not vary together in strength, indicating that they do not share the same carrier. On the whole, we find no evidence supporting the hypothesis that C7- is a carrier of the diffuse interstellar bands.
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- 2001
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32. Measurement and simulation of the temperature evolution of a short pulse laser heated buried layer target
- Author
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Marley, E.V., Shepherd, R., Beiersdorfer, P., Brown, G., Chen, H., Dunn, J., Foord, M., Scott, H., London, R., Steel, A.B., Hoarty, D., James, S., Brown, C.R.D., Hill, M., Allan, P., and Hobbs, L.
- Published
- 2017
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33. Possible spectral lines from the gaseous Beta Pictoris disk
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Etangs, A. Lecavelier des, Hobbs, L. M., Vidal-Madjar, A., Beust, H., Feldman, P. D., Ferlet, R., Lagrange, A. -M., Moos, W., and McGrath, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results of exploratory HST observations to detect the emission lines of ions in the Beta Pic disk with the spectrograph slit placed off the star. Possible emission lines from FeII have been detected at $\sim 10^{-14}$erg cm-2 s-1 at 0.5 arcsec from Beta Pic, which would suggest a total FeII density of > 2.$10^{-2}$ cm-3 at 10 AU. This detection needs confirmation. If real, it requires a large production rate of gas and dust equivalent to the total disruption of ten bodies 30 kilometers in radius per year., Comment: Research Note, submitted to Astronomy & Astrophysics, 4 figures, 4 pages
- Published
- 1999
34. The Diffuse Interstellar Clouds toward 23 Orionis
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Welty, D. E., Hobbs, L. M., Lauroesch, J. T., Morton, D. C., Spitzer, L., and York, D. G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Spectra obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope GHRS are combined with high-resolution optical spectra and UV spectra from Copernicus to study the abundances and physical conditions in the diffuse interstellar clouds seen along the line of sight to the star 23 Ori. Strong low-velocity (SLV) absorption, due to cool, moderately dense neutral gas and representing about 92% of the total N(H I), is seen for various neutral and singly ionized species at +20 km/s < v < +26 km/s. Weaker low-velocity absorption, probably largely due to warmer neutral gas, is seen primarily for various singly ionized species at 0 km/s < v < +30 km/s. Absorption from a number of singly and doubly ionized species, perhaps due to a radiative shock, is seen at -108 km/s < v < -83 km/s. Weak absorption components from ionized gas are seen at intermediate velocities (-43 km/s < v < -4 km/s). The large range in n_e (from 0.04 cm^{-3} to 0.95 cm^{-3}) derived independently from nine pairs of neutral and singly ionized species in the SLV gas suggests that additional processes besides simple photoionization and radiative recombination affect the ionization balance. The adopted average SLV electron density, n_e = 0.15+/-0.05 cm^{-3}, implies a relatively large n_e/n_H ~ 0.01, and thus some ionization of hydrogen in these predominantly neutral components. Comparisons of the SLV depletions and n_H with those found for the strong ``component B'' (v ~ -14 km/s) blend toward zeta Oph hint at a possible relationship between depletion and local density for relatively cold interstellar clouds. Calcium appears to be more severely depleted in warm, low density gas than has generally been assumed. An appendix summarizes the most reliable oscillator strengths currently available for a number of the interstellar absorption lines analyzed in this work., Comment: 73 pages, Latex, aaspp4.sty; to appear in ApJS, vol. 124 (1999 Oct); also available from ftp://astro.uchicago.edu/pub/astro/welty/23ori/23ori9.ps.gz
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- 1999
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35. International outbreak of multiple Salmonella serotype infections linked to sprouted chia seed powder – USA and Canada, 2013–2014
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HARVEY, R. R., MARSHALL, K. E. HEIMAN, BURNWORTH, L., HAMEL, M., TATARYN, J., CUTLER, J., MEGHNATH, K., WELLMAN, A., IRVIN, K., ISAAC, L., CHAU, K., LOCAS, A., KOHL, J., HUTH, P. A., NICHOLAS, D., TRAPHAGEN, E., SOTO, K., MANK, L., HOLMES-TALBOT, K., NEEDHAM, M., BARNES, A., ADCOCK, B., HONISH, L., CHUI, L., TAYLOR, M., GAULIN, C., BEKAL, S., WARSHAWSKY, B., HOBBS, L., TSCHETTER, L. R., SURIN, A., LANCE, S., WISE, M. E., WILLIAMS, I., and GIERALTOWSKI, L.
- Published
- 2017
36. From polar night to midnight sun : Diel vertical migration, metabolism and biogeochemical role of zooplankton in a high Arctic fjord (Kongsfjorden, Svalbard)
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Darnis, G., Hobbs, L., Geoffroy, M., Grenvald, J. C., Renaud, P. E., Berge, J., Cottier, F., Kristiansen, S., Daase, M., Søreide, J. E., Wold, A., Morata, N., and Gabrielsen, T.
- Published
- 2017
37. Boron in the very metal-poor star BD-13 3442
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Duncan, D. K., Rebull, L. M., Primas, F., Boesgaard, A. M., Deliyannis, C. P., Hobbs, L. M., King, J. R., and Ryan, S. G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The Goddard High Resolution Spectrograph (GHRS) of the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) has been used to observe the boron 2500 A region of BD-13 3442. At a metallicity of [Fe/H]=-3.00, this is the most metal-poor star ever observed for B. Nearly 26 hours of exposure time resulted in a detection. Spectrum synthesis using the latest Kurucz model atmospheres yields an LTE boron abundance of log e(B)=0.01 +/- 0.20. This value is consistent with the linear relation of slope ~1.0 between log e(B[LTE]) and [Fe/H] found for 10 halo and disk stars by Duncan et al. 1997. Using the NLTE correction of Kiselman and Carlsson (1996), the NLTE boron abundance is log e(B)=0.93 +/- 0.20. This is also consistent with the NLTE relation determined by Duncan et al. (1997) where the slope of log e(B[NLTE]) vs. [Fe/H] is ~0.7. These data support a model in which most production of B and Be comes from the spallation of energetic C and O nuclei onto protons and He nuclei, probably in the vicinity of massive supernovae in star-forming regions, rather than the spallation of cosmic ray protons and alpha particles onto CNO nuclei in the general interstellar medium., Comment: 7 pages, 6 figs; in press A&A
- Published
- 1998
38. Time evolution of transient plasma states from nanowire arrays irradiated at relativistic intensities
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Humphries, O. S., Allan, P., Brown, C. R. D., Hobbs, L. M. R., James, S. F., Ramsay, M. G., Williams, B., Hoarty, D. J., Hill, M. P., and Vinko, S. M.
- Published
- 2020
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39. The Influence of Sea Ice Cover and Atlantic Water Advection on Annual Particle Export North of Svalbard
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Dybwad, C., primary, Lalande, C., additional, Bodur, Y. V., additional, Henley, S. F., additional, Cottier, F., additional, Ershova, E. A., additional, Hobbs, L., additional, Last, K. S., additional, Dąbrowska, A. M., additional, and Reigstad, M., additional
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- 2022
- Full Text
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40. Shine a light: Under-ice light and its ecological implications in a changing Arctic Ocean
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Castellani, G., Veyssiere, G., Karcher, M., Stroeve, J., Banas, S.N., Bouman, A.H., Brierley, S.A., Connan, S., Cottier, F., Große, F., Hobbs, L., Katlein, C., Light, B., McKee, D., Orkney, A., Proud, R., Schourup-Kristensen, V., Castellani, G., Veyssiere, G., Karcher, M., Stroeve, J., Banas, S.N., Bouman, A.H., Brierley, S.A., Connan, S., Cottier, F., Große, F., Hobbs, L., Katlein, C., Light, B., McKee, D., Orkney, A., Proud, R., and Schourup-Kristensen, V.
- Abstract
The Arctic marine ecosystem is shaped by the seasonality of the solar cycle, spanning from 24-h light at the sea surface in summer to 24-h darkness in winter. The amount of light available for under-ice ecosystems is the result of different physical and biological processes that affect its path through atmosphere, snow, sea ice and water. In this article, we review the present state of knowledge of the abiotic (clouds, sea ice, snow, suspended matter) and biotic (sea ice algae and phytoplankton) controls on the underwater light field. We focus on how the available light affects the seasonal cycle of primary production (sympagic and pelagic) and discuss the sensitivity of ecosystems to changes in the light field based on model simulations. Lastly, we discuss predicted future changes in under-ice light as a consequence of climate change and their potential ecological implications, with the aim of providing a guide for future research.
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- 2022
41. Investing in the future of science:Assessing UK environmental science engagement with school-aged children
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Hobbs, L., Stevens, C., Hobbs, L., and Stevens, C.
- Abstract
Societal Impact Statement: Currently, there is no national overview of environmental science engagement in the United Kingdom. Children are key stakeholders in the future of science more generally and environmental science specifically. Appraising the situation immediately before the United Kingdom first entered lockdown due to the COVID-19 pandemic allows both assessment of the achievements of the UK environmental science engagement field before the impacts of the changes resulting from the pandemic, and an up-to-date baseline by which to assess those impacts and identify existing gaps to be addressed post-pandemic. Results indicate that support is needed to increase reach and recognition of the importance of engagement, particularly in rural areas and outside Southeast England. Summary: Scoping research was carried out as the first step towards addressing knowledge gaps around engagement of school-aged children with environmental science in the United Kingdom. Key objectives were identifying which institutions carry out this engagement, its scope and where further engagement is needed, and assessing visibility of projects. Examples of good practice were also highlighted to inform the wider community. This was carried out via systematic online searches and an online survey of UK-based environmental science engagement professionals, February to March 2020. Most projects were operating locally with a smaller proportion also operating nationally or internationally. Remote engagement comprised a low proportion of delivery, with most projects engaging children in school during school time, using practical sessions. Universities, charities, trusts and societies comprised the majority of hosting institutions. Visiting a low number of schools, a low number of times per year was common, although some projects reached thousands of children in many schools. There was a focus on reaching children aged 7–14 years, relatively evenly split between primary and secondary phases. Al
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- 2022
42. Multisite sentinel surveillance of self-harm in New Zealand: protocol for an observational study.
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Fortune, S, Hetrick, S, Sharma, V, McDonald, G, Scott, KM, Mulder, RT, Hobbs, L, Fortune, S, Hetrick, S, Sharma, V, McDonald, G, Scott, KM, Mulder, RT, and Hobbs, L
- Abstract
INTRODUCTION: New Zealand (NZ) has a persistently high rate of suicide, particularly among young people. Hospital presentation for self-harm (SH) is one of the strongest predictors of death by suicide. Improving the monitoring of SH and suicide is a key recommendation for suicide prevention by WHO. This study will establish the first ever sentinel surveillance for SH at several large hospitals and a monthly survey of all practicing paediatricians in NZ. The study will provide robust information about the epidemiology of SH, factors associated with SH and the types of interventions required for those presenting to hospital with SH. METHOD AND ANALYSIS: This observational study will establish SH surveillance in the emergency departments of three public hospitals for the first time in NZ, where study population will include individuals of all ages who present with SH or suicidal ideation. The study methodology is in line with the WHO Best Practice guidelines and international collaborators in Australia and Europe. Electronic triage records will be reviewed manually by the research team to identify potential cases that meet inclusion criteria. For all eligible cases, variables of interest will be extracted from routine clinical records by the research team and recorded on a secure web-based survey application. Additionally, SH surveillance data for the national paediatric population (<15 years) will be obtained via the New Zealand Paediatric Surveillance Unit (NZPSU); paediatricians will report on included cases using the same variables using a secure survey application. A deidentified dataset will be produced for aggregated statistical analysis. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The University of Otago Health Ethics Committee granted ethical approval for this study in addition to local ethics approval at participating hospital sites. The study findings will be disseminated to relevant stakeholders in NZ, in addition to international audiences through publications in peer-revie
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- 2022
43. Stakeholder perceptions of mentoring in developing girls' STEM identities: 'you do not have to be the textbook scientist with a white coat'
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Millar, V, Hobbs, L, Speldewinde, C, van Driel, J, Millar, V, Hobbs, L, Speldewinde, C, and van Driel, J
- Abstract
Purpose Girls are underrepresented in many school science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) subjects, leading to ongoing gender disparity in STEM careers. This issue is not new and has seen a range of initiatives implemented in an attempt to increase girls’ STEM participation. In Australia, a number of these initiatives have emphasised role models and mentors. This paper seeks to understand the influence of role models and mentors on girls’ STEM identities. Design/methodology/approach This paper presents qualitative research undertaken with STEM experts into the influences on girls’ STEM identities. Data were collected through three phases involving semi-structured interviews, a forum and focus groups. Thematic analysis identified the importance of mentoring and role modelling in shaping girls’ STEM participation and identities. Findings This paper provides a basis for rethinking how and when role models and mentors can assist girls in making decisions about STEM. In particular, it reveals the need for role models and mentors to consider the role of relatability in developing girls’ STEM identities and the need to do this at multiple points throughout girls’ lives. Originality/value This article captures the perspectives of multiple experts involved in a variety of STEM professions on the topic of how mentors and role models can influence girls to consider STEM professions. Utilising the concept of identity, this paper sheds new light on girls’ interactions with role models and mentors and the value of storying in role modelling and mentoring relationships as an important component of girls’ identity work in relation to STEM.
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- 2022
44. Urinanalyse von Neurotransmitter-Mustern bei kaniner Epilepsie
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Schmidt, T, additional, Meller, S, additional, Talbot, R S, additional, Berk, A B, additional, Law, H T, additional, Hobbs, L S, additional, Packer, A RM, additional, and Volk, A H, additional
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- 2022
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45. The Evolution of the Galactic Lithium Abundance
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Hobbs, L. M., Sato, K., editor, and Audouze, J., editor
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- 1991
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46. Limits to natural variation: implications for systemic management
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Fowler, C. W. and Hobbs, L.
- Subjects
Systemic management ,Limits ,Variation ,Ecosystems ,Single species ,Resources ,Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
Collectively, the tenets and principles of management emphasize the importance of recognizing and understanding limits. These tenets require the demonstration, measurement and practical use of information about limits to natural variation. It is important to identify limits so as not to incur the risks and loss of integrity when limits are exceeded. Thus, by managing within natural limits, humans (managers) simultaneously can achieve sustainability and minimize risk, as well as account for complexity. This is at the heart of systemic management. Systemic management embodies the basic tenets of management. One tenet requires that management ensure that nothing exceed the limits observed in its natural variation. This tenet is based on the principle that variation is constrained by a variety of limiting factors, many of which involve risks. Another tenet of management requires that such factors be considered simultaneously, exhaustively, and in proportion to their relative importance. These factors, in combination, make up the complexity that managers are required to consider in applying the basic principles of management. This combination of elements is reflected in observed limits to natural variation that account for each factor and its relative importance. This paper summarizes conclusions from the literature that has addressed the concept of limits to natural variation, especially in regard to management. It describes: 1. How such limits are inherent to complex systems; 2. How limits have been recognized to be important to the process of management; 3. How they can be used in management. The inherent limits include both those set by the context in which systems occur (extrinsic factors) as well as those set by the components and processes within systems (intrinsic factors). This paper shows that information about limits is of utility in guiding human action to fit humans within the normal range of natural variation. This is part of systemic management: finding an integral and sustainable place for humans in systems such as ecosystems and the biosphere. Another part of sustainability, however, involves action to promote systems capable of sustainably supporting humans and human activities, not only as individuals, but also as a species. It is important to distinguish what can and what can not be done in this regard.
- Published
- 2002
47. Fructose content and composition of commercial HFCS-sweetened carbonated beverages
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White, J S, Hobbs, L J, and Fernandez, S
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- 2015
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48. Versioning Biological Cells for Trustworthy Cell Engineering
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Elena Velázquez, Steven Woods, Hobbs L, Natalio Krasnogor, de Lorenzo, Pelechova L, and Jonathan Tellechea-Luzardo
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Trustworthiness ,Traceability ,business.industry ,Digital footprint ,Cloud computing ,Transparency (human–computer interaction) ,business ,Software engineering ,Automation ,Software versioning ,TRACE (psycholinguistics) - Abstract
“Full-stack”biotechnology platforms for cell line (re)programming are on the horizon, due mostly to (a) advances in gene synthesis and editing techniques as well as (b) the growing integration with informatics, the internet of things and automation. These emerging platforms will accelerate the production and consumption of biological products. Hence, transparency, traceability and -ultimately-trustworthiness is required -from cradle to grave- for engineered cell lines and their engineering processes. We report here the first version control system for cell engineering that integrates a new cloud-based version control software for cell lines’ digital footprint with molecular barcoding of living samples. We argue that version control for cell engineering marks a significant step towards more open, reproducible, easier to trace and share, and more trustworthy engineering biology.One Sentence SummaryWe demonstrate a transparent and open way of engineering and sharing cell lines.
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- 2021
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49. A Study of Interstitial Clusters in Irradiated Alkali Halides Using Direct Electron Microscopy
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Hobbs, L. W., Hughes, A. E., and Pooley, D.
- Published
- 1973
50. Prevention of self-harm and suicide in young people up to the age of 25 in education settings
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Fortune, S, Sharma, V, Bowden, L, Hobbs, L, Marshall, D, Mitchell, C, Clarke, A, Robinson, J, Shave, R, Macleod, E, Witt, KG, Hawton, K, Jordan, V, Hetrick, SE, Fortune, S, Sharma, V, Bowden, L, Hobbs, L, Marshall, D, Mitchell, C, Clarke, A, Robinson, J, Shave, R, Macleod, E, Witt, KG, Hawton, K, Jordan, V, and Hetrick, SE
- Published
- 2021
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