1,799 results on '"Morales, Daniel"'
Search Results
2. Strong Converse Inequalities for Bernstein Polynomials with Explicit Asymptotic Constants
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Adell, José A. and Cárdenas-Morales, Daniel
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Mathematics - Classical Analysis and ODEs ,Mathematics - Numerical Analysis ,Mathematics - Probability ,41A10, 41A25, 41A27, 41A36, 60E05 - Abstract
We obtain strong converse inequalities for the Bernstein polynomials with explicit asymptotic constants. We give different estimation procedures in the central and non-central regions of [0,1]. The main ingredients in our approach are the following: representation of the derivatives of the Bernstein polynomials in terms of the Krawtchouk polynomials, estimates of different inverse moments of various random variables, sharp estimates of both absolute central moments of Bernstein polynomials and the total variation distance between binomial and Poisson distributions, and iterates of the Bernstein polynomials, together with their probabilistic representations., Comment: 18 pages
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- 2024
3. Signatures of a Spin-Active Interface and Locally Enhanced Zeeman field in a Superconductor-Chiral Material Heterostructure
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Chen, Cliff, Tran, Jason, McFadden, Anthony, Simmonds, Raymond, Saito, Keisuke, Chu, En-De, Morales, Daniel, Suezaki, Varrick, Hou, Yasen, Aumentado, Joe, Lee, Patrick A., Moodera, Jagadeesh S., and Wei, Peng
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Condensed Matter - Superconductivity ,Quantum Physics - Abstract
A localized Zeeman field, intensified at heterostructure interfaces, could play a crucial role in a broad area including spintronics and unconventional superconductors. Conventionally, the generation of a local Zeeman field is achieved through magnetic exchange coupling with a magnetic material. However, magnetic elements often introduce defects, which could weaken or destroy superconductivity. Alternatively, the coupling between a superconductor with strong spin-orbit coupling and a non-magnetic chiral material could serve as a promising approach to generate a spin active interface. In this study, we leverage an interface superconductor, namely induced superconductivity in noble metal surface states, to probe the spin active interface. Our results unveil an enhanced interface Zeeman field, which selectively closes the surface superconducting gap while preserving the bulk superconducting pairing. The chiral material, i.e. trigonal tellurium, also induces Andreev bound states (ABS) exhibiting spin polarization. The field dependence of ABS manifests a substantially enhanced interface Land\'e g-factor (g_eff ~ 12), thereby corroborating the enhanced interface Zeeman energy., Comment: 27 pages, 11 figures
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- 2024
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4. Perspectives of non-physician partners on barriers and facilitators to AYA cancer care in Latin America.
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Wong, Samantha, Alvarez, Elysia, Johnston, Emily, Romero, Crystal, Rossell, Nuria, Rios, Ligia, Gómez García, Wendy, Antillon-Klussmann, Federico, Fu, Ligia, Fuentes-Alabi, Soad, Delgado, Karina, Morales, Daniel, Rodriguez-Loza, Carolina, Lopez, Salvador, Gosdin, Melissa, Malogolowkin, Marcio, and Friedrich, Paola
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Caribbean ,Central America ,Latin America ,adolescent and young adult ,barriers ,oncology ,Humans ,Neoplasms ,Latin America ,Young Adult ,Adolescent ,Female ,Male ,Health Services Accessibility ,Adult ,Health Personnel ,Delivery of Health Care - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cancer is the fourth leading cause of death in adolescents and young adults (AYA) worldwide. Although successful treatment of cancer in AYA has increased in recent years in most of the world, this is not true for many low- and middle-income countries (LMIC) where over 80% of all AYA live. This study investigated the needs of AYA with cancer in parts of Latin America (LATAM) through the perspectives of non-physician health care providers and partners. METHODS: Semi-structured interviews (in Spanish) were conducted with non-physician partners from Mexico, Peru, Central America, and the Caribbean over Zoom. Participants were recruited through previously identified local physicians and international non-physician professionals working in these countries. Transcripts were coded and key themes identified until thematic saturation was reached (Atlas.ti). FINDINGS: Thirty participants representing eight countries were interviewed, providing 1202 min of transcript data. Data were organized into barriers, facilitators, and strategies to improve the delivery of health care for AYA with cancer in LATAM at the patient- (e.g., financial barriers, continued schooling), parent- (e.g., limited medical literacy, advocacy), and hospital-level (e.g., structural barriers, increasing funding). INTERPRETATION: There are many similarities in the barriers and facilitators to AYA care between LATAM and high-income countries (HIC); however, some characteristics are more unique to LATAM, for example, strict age restrictions for pediatric care and abandonment of therapy. As LATAM countries continue to build cancer control programs, there is an opportunity to consider our identified barriers, facilitators, and strategies to address the unique needs of AYA with cancer.
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- 2024
5. Implementation of the COVID-19 Vulnerability Index Across an International Network of Health Care Data Sets: Collaborative External Validation Study
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Reps, Jenna M, Kim, Chungsoo, Williams, Ross D, Markus, Aniek F, Yang, Cynthia, Duarte-Salles, Talita, Falconer, Thomas, Jonnagaddala, Jitendra, Williams, Andrew, Fernández-Bertolín, Sergio, DuVall, Scott L, Kostka, Kristin, Rao, Gowtham, Shoaibi, Azza, Ostropolets, Anna, Spotnitz, Matthew E, Zhang, Lin, Casajust, Paula, Steyerberg, Ewout W, Nyberg, Fredrik, Kaas-Hansen, Benjamin Skov, Choi, Young Hwa, Morales, Daniel, Liaw, Siaw-Teng, Abrahão, Maria Tereza Fernandes, Areia, Carlos, Matheny, Michael E, Lynch, Kristine E, Aragón, María, Park, Rae Woong, Hripcsak, George, Reich, Christian G, Suchard, Marc A, You, Seng Chan, Ryan, Patrick B, Prieto-Alhambra, Daniel, and Rijnbeek, Peter R
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Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
BackgroundSARS-CoV-2 is straining health care systems globally. The burden on hospitals during the pandemic could be reduced by implementing prediction models that can discriminate patients who require hospitalization from those who do not. The COVID-19 vulnerability (C-19) index, a model that predicts which patients will be admitted to hospital for treatment of pneumonia or pneumonia proxies, has been developed and proposed as a valuable tool for decision-making during the pandemic. However, the model is at high risk of bias according to the “prediction model risk of bias assessment” criteria, and it has not been externally validated. ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to externally validate the C-19 index across a range of health care settings to determine how well it broadly predicts hospitalization due to pneumonia in COVID-19 cases. MethodsWe followed the Observational Health Data Sciences and Informatics (OHDSI) framework for external validation to assess the reliability of the C-19 index. We evaluated the model on two different target populations, 41,381 patients who presented with SARS-CoV-2 at an outpatient or emergency department visit and 9,429,285 patients who presented with influenza or related symptoms during an outpatient or emergency department visit, to predict their risk of hospitalization with pneumonia during the following 0-30 days. In total, we validated the model across a network of 14 databases spanning the United States, Europe, Australia, and Asia. ResultsThe internal validation performance of the C-19 index had a C statistic of 0.73, and the calibration was not reported by the authors. When we externally validated it by transporting it to SARS-CoV-2 data, the model obtained C statistics of 0.36, 0.53 (0.473-0.584) and 0.56 (0.488-0.636) on Spanish, US, and South Korean data sets, respectively. The calibration was poor, with the model underestimating risk. When validated on 12 data sets containing influenza patients across the OHDSI network, the C statistics ranged between 0.40 and 0.68. ConclusionsOur results show that the discriminative performance of the C-19 index model is low for influenza cohorts and even worse among patients with COVID-19 in the United States, Spain, and South Korea. These results suggest that C-19 should not be used to aid decision-making during the COVID-19 pandemic. Our findings highlight the importance of performing external validation across a range of settings, especially when a prediction model is being extrapolated to a different population. In the field of prediction, extensive validation is required to create appropriate trust in a model.
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- 2021
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6. Improved reverse bias stability in p–i–n perovskite solar cells with optimized hole transport materials and less reactive electrodes
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Jiang, Fangyuan, Shi, Yangwei, Rana, Tanka R., Morales, Daniel, Gould, Isaac E., McCarthy, Declan P., Smith, Joel A., Christoforo, M. Greyson, Yaman, Muammer Y., Mandani, Faiz, Terlier, Tanguy, Contreras, Hannah, Barlow, Stephen, Mohite, Aditya D., Snaith, Henry J., Marder, Seth R., MacKenzie, J. Devin, McGehee, Michael D., and Ginger, David S.
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- 2024
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7. METTL3 alters capping enzyme expression and its activity on ribosomal proteins
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del Valle-Morales, Daniel, Romano, Giulia, Nigita, Giovanni, Saviana, Michela, La Ferlita, Alessandro, Le, Patricia, Brown, Rachel, Micalo, Lavender, Li, Howard, Nana-Sinkam, Patrick, and Acunzo, Mario
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- 2024
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8. Strong Converse Inequalities for Bernstein Operators via Krawtchouk Polynomials
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Adell, José A. and Cárdenas-Morales, Daniel
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Mathematics - Classical Analysis and ODEs ,41A10, 41A25, 41A27, 41A36, 60E05 - Abstract
We obtain strong converse inequalities for the Bernstein operators with explicit constants. One of the main ingredients in our approach is the representation of the derivatives of the Bernstein operators in terms of the orthogonal polynomials with respect to the binomial distribution, namely, the Krawtchouk polynomials, Comment: We found an error in Lemma 4, namely, the factor m! is missed in formula (32). This implies that the results given in Section 4 are wrong, and therefore the proof of our main result is also wrong
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- 2023
9. Architecture Optimization Dramatically Improves Reverse Bias Stability in Perovskite Solar Cells: A Role of Polymer Hole Transport Layers
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Jiang, Fangyuan, Shi, Yangwei, Rana, Tanka R., Morales, Daniel, Gould, Isaac, McCarthy, Declan P., Smith, Joel, Christoforo, Grey, Contreras, Hannah, Barlow, Stephen, Mohite, Aditya D., Snaith, Henry, Marder, Seth R., MacKenzie, J. Devin, McGehee, Michael D., and Ginger, David S.
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Physics - Chemical Physics - Abstract
We report that device architecture engineering has a substantial impact on the reverse bias instability that has been reported as a critical issue in commercializing perovskite solar cells. We demonstrate breakdown voltages exceeding -15 V in typical pin structured perovskite solar cells via two steps: i) using polymer hole transporting materials; ii) using a more electrochemically stable gold electrode. While device degradation can be exacerbated by higher reverse bias and prolonged exposure, our as-fabricated perovskite solar cells completely recover their performance even after stressing at -7 V for 9 hours both in the dark and under partial illumination. Following these observations, we systematically discuss and compare the reverse bias driven degradation pathways in perovskite solar cells with different device architectures. Our model highlights the role of electrochemical reaction rates and species in dictating the reverse bias stability of perovskite solar cells.
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- 2023
10. An Immigration Law for Abolitionists (and Reactionaries)
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Morales, Daniel I
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Immigration law gets most things wrong and satisfies no one—not immigrants, not moderates, not restrictionists, and not abolitionists (the #AbolishICE crowd). It is bad law premised on skewed epistemic inputs—the fantasies of U.S. citizens—and enforced by a national agency with bloated resources tasked with solving a problem (illegal immigration) that causes no material harm. Migration law’s biggest failing is that it admits far fewer immigrants than our country has the capacity to take in, as the decades-long, peaceful, and productive presence of twelve million undocumented immigrants definitively proves. The bankruptcy of immigration law has been obvious for a few decades at least, yet comprehensive immigration reform has been impossible to enact over the same time frame. Now, with the death of the most promising legislative reform effort in a generation at the hands of the unelected Senate parliamentarian, it’s past time for a reassessment of immigration law and the ends and strategy of immigration reform.In this Article, I argue that the reasons for the impasse on reform are structural and require a structural overhaul: a reconstruction of immigration law that destroys one-size-fitsall, national control and places chunks of the immigration power back in local precincts in metro areas, counties, or towns. This decentralized approach can increase our immigrant carrying capacity by allowing places that want and need immigrants to invite and attend to as many as they like. With time, some pro-immigrant locales might even cultivate an abolitionist, open-borders immigration politics from the bottom up. It wouldn’t be the first time. The abolition of slavery and the gay rights movements were both nurtured in sub-national jurisdictions with special cultures and characteristics. Only after consciousness raising and proof of concept were secured were these radically new norms and modes of being scaled up.A local immigration law may also better sate the needs of American reactionaries. Social scientists teach that many of us are dyed-in-the-wool authoritarians triggered by social and racial pluralism. This personality type can only be soothed with a restoration of a sense of “oneness or sameness.” Locating debates about racial and social pluralism—i.e., the immigration debate—at the national level constantly and unnecessarily triggers authoritarians. Many authoritarians live in places that are racially and socially homogenous. A more local immigration power would allow this group to sate their thirst for homogeneity without imperiling the benefits of immigration for the rest of us: the majority of Americans that enjoy and thrive in a pluralist, multiracial order.
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- 2023
11. Towards Sustainable Forest Operations: Optimal Kinematic Design of a Forwarder Crane
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Mendoza-Trejo, Omar, Padilla-García, Erick A., Morales, Daniel Ortiz, Lindroos, Ola, Hera, Pedro La, Ceccarelli, Marco, Series Editor, Agrawal, Sunil K., Advisory Editor, Corves, Burkhard, Advisory Editor, Glazunov, Victor, Advisory Editor, Hernández, Alfonso, Advisory Editor, Huang, Tian, Advisory Editor, Jauregui Correa, Juan Carlos, Advisory Editor, Takeda, Yukio, Advisory Editor, and Okada, Masafumi, editor
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- 2024
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12. Niche modeling of bumble bee species (Hymenoptera, Apidae, Bombus) in Colombia reveals highly fragmented potential distribution for some species
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Rojas Arias, Laura Alexandra, Gómez Morales, Daniel Leonardo, Stiegel, Stephanie, Ospina, Rodulfo, and Pensoft Publishers
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Biogeography ,Distribution ,Maxent ,native bees ,pollinators - Published
- 2023
13. Contextualising adverse events of special interest to characterise the baseline incidence rates in 24 million patients with COVID-19 across 26 databases: a multinational retrospective cohort study
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Voss, Erica A, Shoaibi, Azza, Lai, Lana Yin Hui, Blacketer, Clair, Alshammari, Thamir, Makadia, Rupa, Haynes, Kevin, Sena, Anthony G, Rao, Gowtham, van Sandijk, Sebastiaan, Fraboulet, Clement, Boyer, Laurent, Le Carrour, Tanguy, Horban, Scott, Morales, Daniel R, Roldán, Jordi Martínez, Ramírez-Anguita, Juan Manuel, Mayer, Miguel A, de Wilde, Marcel, John, Luis H, Duarte-Salles, Talita, Roel, Elena, Pistillo, Andrea, Kolde, Raivo, Maljković, Filip, Denaxas, Spiros, Papez, Vaclav, Kahn, Michael G, Natarajan, Karthik, Reich, Christian, Secora, Alex, Minty, Evan P, Shah, Nigam H, Posada, Jose D, Morales, Maria Teresa Garcia, Bosca, Diego, Juanino, Honorio Cadenas, Holgado, Antonio Diaz, Jiménez, Miguel Pedrera, Balazote, Pablo Serrano, Barrio, Noelia García, Şen, Selçuk, Üresin, Ali Yağız, Erdogan, Baris, Belmans, Luc, Byttebier, Geert, Malbrain, Manu LNG, Dedman, Daniel J, Cuccu, Zara, Vashisht, Rohit, Butte, Atul J, Patel, Ayan, Dahm, Lisa, Han, Cora, Bu, Fan, Arshad, Faaizah, Ostropolets, Anna, Nyberg, Fredrik, Hripcsak, George, Suchard, Marc A, Prieto-Alhambra, Dani, Rijnbeek, Peter R, Schuemie, Martijn J, and Ryan, Patrick B
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Lung ,Brain Disorders ,Patient Safety ,Hematology ,Infectious Diseases ,2.4 Surveillance and distribution ,Aetiology ,Good Health and Well Being ,COVID-19 ,Observational research ,OMOP CDM ,Adverse events of special interest - Abstract
BackgroundAdverse events of special interest (AESIs) were pre-specified to be monitored for the COVID-19 vaccines. Some AESIs are not only associated with the vaccines, but with COVID-19. Our aim was to characterise the incidence rates of AESIs following SARS-CoV-2 infection in patients and compare these to historical rates in the general population.MethodsA multi-national cohort study with data from primary care, electronic health records, and insurance claims mapped to a common data model. This study's evidence was collected between Jan 1, 2017 and the conclusion of each database (which ranged from Jul 2020 to May 2022). The 16 pre-specified prevalent AESIs were: acute myocardial infarction, anaphylaxis, appendicitis, Bell's palsy, deep vein thrombosis, disseminated intravascular coagulation, encephalomyelitis, Guillain- Barré syndrome, haemorrhagic stroke, non-haemorrhagic stroke, immune thrombocytopenia, myocarditis/pericarditis, narcolepsy, pulmonary embolism, transverse myelitis, and thrombosis with thrombocytopenia. Age-sex standardised incidence rate ratios (SIR) were estimated to compare post-COVID-19 to pre-pandemic rates in each of the databases.FindingsSubstantial heterogeneity by age was seen for AESI rates, with some clearly increasing with age but others following the opposite trend. Similarly, differences were also observed across databases for same health outcome and age-sex strata. All studied AESIs appeared consistently more common in the post-COVID-19 compared to the historical cohorts, with related meta-analytic SIRs ranging from 1.32 (1.05 to 1.66) for narcolepsy to 11.70 (10.10 to 13.70) for pulmonary embolism.InterpretationOur findings suggest all AESIs are more common after COVID-19 than in the general population. Thromboembolic events were particularly common, and over 10-fold more so. More research is needed to contextualise post-COVID-19 complications in the longer term.FundingNone.
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- 2023
14. Views of Non-Physician Stakeholders on Barriers & Facilitators to AYA Cancer Care in Latin America
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Wong, Samatha, Naz, Hiba, Johnston, Emily E, Romero, Crystal, Challinor, Julia, Rossell, Nuria, Gomez Garcia, Wendy, Fuentes Alabi, Soad, Fucarrasco, Ligia, Quintero Delgado, Karina, Guillermo Antillon Klussmann, Federico, Ortiz-Morales, Daniel, Bobadilla,, Ligia, Rios Lopez, Ligia, Malogolowkin, Marcio, Carolina Apesoa-Varano,, Ester, Friedrich, Paola, and Alvarez, Elysia
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Cancer is the fourth leading cause of death in adolescent and young adults (AYA: ages15-39) worldwide. Over 90% of AYAs with cancer live in low-and-middle-incomecountries (LMIC). Little is known about thecurrent landscape of AYA oncology care in these settings. Guidelines for the care of thisunique population in LMIC in Latin America are lacking.
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- 2023
15. Treatment of systemic lupus erythematosus: Analysis of treatment patterns in adult and paediatric patients across four European countries
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Du, Mike, Dernie, Francesco, Català, Martí, Delmestri, Antonella, Man, Wai Yi, Brash, James T., van Ballegooijen, Hanne, Mercadé-Besora, Núria, Duarte-Salles, Talita, Mayer, Miguel-Angel, Leis, Angela, Ramírez-Anguita, Juan Manuel, Griffier, Romain, Verdy, Guillaume, Prats-Uribe, Albert, Pacurariu, Alexandra, Morales, Daniel R., De Lisa, Roberto, Galluzzo, Sara, Egger, Gunter F., Prieto-Alhambra, Daniel, and Tan, Eng Hooi
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- 2024
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16. Suicide by different methods in Toronto: A quantitative study examining of 23-years of coronial records
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Men, Vera Yu, Chan, Prudence Po Ming, Schaffer, Ayal, Sanchez Morales, Daniel, Steinberg, Rosalie, Mitchell, Rachel Hana, and Sinyor, Mark
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- 2024
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17. High School-University Collaborations for Latinx Student Success: Navigating the Political Reality
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Bettencourt, Genia M., Mwangi, Chrystal A. George, Green, Keisha L., and Morales, Daniel Morales
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Latinx students are a growing population in postsecondary education but attain degrees at a pace behind their non-Latinx peers. This research examines a partnership between a research university (RU) and career and technical education (CTE) high school, Hillside Technical High School (HTHS). Through a 2-year ethnographic case study, we found that different logistics and cultural values were primary contributors to the bifurcated pathway between high school and college. These pathways were most successfully connected through strategies such as flexibility, personal relationships, and incorporation of community resources as well as viewing the students as resources. Our study suggests a need to reframe partnerships in recognition of the assets that students bring to these efforts, while also creating opportunities for additional faculty support and community involvement.
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- 2020
18. The Butterfly lemma
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Castillo, Jesús M. F. and Morales, Daniel
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Mathematics - Functional Analysis - Abstract
The Butterfly lemma we present can be considered a reiteration theorem for differentials generated from a complex interpolation process for families of K\"othe spaces. The lemma will be used to clarify the effect of different configurations in the resulting differential (because although interpolation is an orientation-free process, the obtention of differentials is not) and to round off a few aspects of Kalton's interpolation theorem., Comment: This paper is to appear in Nonlinear Analisis - TMA
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- 2021
19. The care of patients with psychiatric symptoms in general hospitalisation units: A phenomenological study
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Zaraza-Morales, Daniel Ricardo, Duque-Ortiz, Camilo, Castañeda-Palacio, Hellen Lucia, Hinestrosa Montoya, Liliana María, Chica Chica, Maria Isabel, and Hernández Sánchez, Lina Marcela
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- 2024
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20. El Cuidado de Pacientes con Síntomas Psiquiátricos en Unidades de Hospitalización General: un Estudio Fenomenológico
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Zaraza-Morales, Daniel Ricardo, Duque-Ortiz, Camilo, Castañeda-Palacio, Hellen Lucia, Hinestrosa Montoya, Liliana María, Chica Chica, Maria Isabel, and Hernández Sánchez, Lina Marcela
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- 2024
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21. Seek COVER: using a disease proxy to rapidly develop and validate a personalized risk calculator for COVID-19 outcomes in an international network.
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Williams, Ross, Markus, Aniek, Yang, Cynthia, Duarte-Salles, Talita, DuVall, Scott, Falconer, Thomas, Jonnagaddala, Jitendra, Kim, Chungsoo, Rho, Yeunsook, Williams, Andrew, Machado, Amanda, An, Min, Aragón, María, Areia, Carlos, Burn, Edward, Choi, Young, Drakos, Iannis, Abrahão, Maria, Fernández-Bertolín, Sergio, Hripcsak, George, Kaas-Hansen, Benjamin, Kandukuri, Prasanna, Kors, Jan, Kostka, Kristin, Liaw, Siaw-Teng, Lynch, Kristine, Machnicki, Gerardo, Matheny, Michael, Morales, Daniel, Nyberg, Fredrik, Park, Rae, Prats-Uribe, Albert, Pratt, Nicole, Rao, Gowtham, Reich, Christian, Rivera, Marcela, Seinen, Tom, Shoaibi, Azza, Spotnitz, Matthew, Steyerberg, Ewout, Suchard, Marc, You, Seng, Zhang, Lin, Zhou, Lili, Ryan, Patrick, Prieto-Alhambra, Daniel, Reps, Jenna, and Rijnbeek, Peter
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COVID-19 ,Patient-level prediction modelling ,Risk score ,COVID-19 ,COVID-19 Testing ,Humans ,Influenza ,Human ,Pneumonia ,SARS-CoV-2 ,United States - Abstract
BACKGROUND: We investigated whether we could use influenza data to develop prediction models for COVID-19 to increase the speed at which prediction models can reliably be developed and validated early in a pandemic. We developed COVID-19 Estimated Risk (COVER) scores that quantify a patients risk of hospital admission with pneumonia (COVER-H), hospitalization with pneumonia requiring intensive services or death (COVER-I), or fatality (COVER-F) in the 30-days following COVID-19 diagnosis using historical data from patients with influenza or flu-like symptoms and tested this in COVID-19 patients. METHODS: We analyzed a federated network of electronic medical records and administrative claims data from 14 data sources and 6 countries containing data collected on or before 4/27/2020. We used a 2-step process to develop 3 scores using historical data from patients with influenza or flu-like symptoms any time prior to 2020. The first step was to create a data-driven model using LASSO regularized logistic regression, the covariates of which were used to develop aggregate covariates for the second step where the COVER scores were developed using a smaller set of features. These 3 COVER scores were then externally validated on patients with 1) influenza or flu-like symptoms and 2) confirmed or suspected COVID-19 diagnosis across 5 databases from South Korea, Spain, and the United States. Outcomes included i) hospitalization with pneumonia, ii) hospitalization with pneumonia requiring intensive services or death, and iii) death in the 30 days after index date. RESULTS: Overall, 44,507 COVID-19 patients were included for model validation. We identified 7 predictors (history of cancer, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, diabetes, heart disease, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, kidney disease) which combined with age and sex discriminated which patients would experience any of our three outcomes. The models achieved good performance in influenza and COVID-19 cohorts. For COVID-19 the AUC ranges were, COVER-H: 0.69-0.81, COVER-I: 0.73-0.91, and COVER-F: 0.72-0.90. Calibration varied across the validations with some of the COVID-19 validations being less well calibrated than the influenza validations. CONCLUSIONS: This research demonstrated the utility of using a proxy disease to develop a prediction model. The 3 COVER models with 9-predictors that were developed using influenza data perform well for COVID-19 patients for predicting hospitalization, intensive services, and fatality. The scores showed good discriminatory performance which transferred well to the COVID-19 population. There was some miscalibration in the COVID-19 validations, which is potentially due to the difference in symptom severity between the two diseases. A possible solution for this is to recalibrate the models in each location before use.
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- 2022
22. Characteristics and outcomes of COVID-19 patients with COPD from the United States, South Korea, and Europe
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Moreno-Martos, David, Verhamme, Katia, Ostropolets, Anna, Kostka, Kristin, Duarte-Sales, Talita, Prieto-Alhambra, Daniel, Alshammari, Thamir M, Alghoul, Heba, Ahmed, Waheed-Ul-Rahman, Blacketer, Clair, DuVall, Scott, Lai, Lana, Matheny, Michael, Nyberg, Fredrik, Posada, Jose, Rijnbeek, Peter, Spotnitz, Matthew, Sena, Anthony, Shah, Nigam, Suchard, Marc, You, Seng Chan, Hripcsak, George, Ryan, Patrick, and Morales, Daniel
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease ,Infectious Diseases ,Lung ,Clinical Research ,Cardiovascular ,Respiratory ,Good Health and Well Being ,COPD ,COVID ,SARS-CoV-2 ,coronavirus ,epidemiology. ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
Background: Characterization studies of COVID-19 patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are limited in size and scope. The aim of the study is to provide a large-scale characterization of COVID-19 patients with COPD. Methods: We included thirteen databases contributing data from January-June 2020 from North America (US), Europe and Asia. We defined two cohorts of patients with COVID-19 namely a 'diagnosed' and 'hospitalized' cohort. We followed patients from COVID-19 index date to 30 days or death. We performed descriptive analysis and reported the frequency of characteristics and outcomes among COPD patients with COVID-19. Results: The study included 934,778 patients in the diagnosed COVID-19 cohort and 177,201 in the hospitalized COVID-19 cohort. Observed COPD prevalence in the diagnosed cohort ranged from 3.8% (95%CI 3.5-4.1%) in French data to 22.7% (95%CI 22.4-23.0) in US data, and from 1.9% (95%CI 1.6-2.2) in South Korean to 44.0% (95%CI 43.1-45.0) in US data, in the hospitalized cohorts. COPD patients in the hospitalized cohort had greater comorbidity than those in the diagnosed cohort, including hypertension, heart disease, diabetes and obesity. Mortality was higher in COPD patients in the hospitalized cohort and ranged from 7.6% (95%CI 6.9-8.4) to 32.2% (95%CI 28.0-36.7) across databases. ARDS, acute renal failure, cardiac arrhythmia and sepsis were the most common outcomes among hospitalized COPD patients. Conclusion: COPD patients with COVID-19 have high levels of COVID-19-associated comorbidities and poor COVID-19 outcomes. Further research is required to identify patients with COPD at high risk of worse outcomes.
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- 2022
23. Unraveling COVID-19: A Large-Scale Characterization of 4.5 Million COVID-19 Cases Using CHARYBDIS
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Kostka, Kristin, Duarte-Salles, Talita, Prats-Uribe, Albert, Sena, Anthony G, Pistillo, Andrea, Khalid, Sara, Lai, Lana YH, Golozar, Asieh, Alshammari, Thamir M, Dawoud, Dalia M, Nyberg, Fredrik, Wilcox, Adam B, Andryc, Alan, Williams, Andrew, Ostropolets, Anna, Areia, Carlos, Jung, Chi Young, Harle, Christopher A, Reich, Christian G, Blacketer, Clair, Morales, Daniel R, Dorr, David A, Burn, Edward, Roel, Elena, Tan, Eng Hooi, Minty, Evan, DeFalco, Frank, de Maeztu, Gabriel, Lipori, Gigi, Alghoul, Hiba, Zhu, Hong, Thomas, Jason A, Bian, Jiang, Park, Jimyung, Roldán, Jordi Martínez, Posada, Jose D, Banda, Juan M, Horcajada, Juan P, Kohler, Julianna, Shah, Karishma, Natarajan, Karthik, Lynch, Kristine E, Liu, Li, Schilling, Lisa M, Recalde, Martina, Spotnitz, Matthew, Gong, Mengchun, Matheny, Michael E, Valveny, Neus, Weiskopf, Nicole G, Shah, Nigam, Alser, Osaid, Casajust, Paula, Park, Rae Woong, Schuff, Robert, Seager, Sarah, DuVall, Scott L, You, Seng Chan, Song, Seokyoung, Fernández-Bertolín, Sergio, Fortin, Stephen, Magoc, Tanja, Falconer, Thomas, Subbian, Vignesh, Huser, Vojtech, Ahmed, Waheed-Ul-Rahman, Carter, William, Guan, Yin, Galvan, Yankuic, He, Xing, Rijnbeek, Peter R, Hripcsak, George, Ryan, Patrick B, Suchard, Marc A, and Prieto-Alhambra, Daniel
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Clinical Research ,Infectious Diseases ,Prevention ,2.4 Surveillance and distribution ,Aetiology ,Good Health and Well Being ,OHDSI ,OMOP CDM ,descriptive epidemiology ,real world data ,real world evidence ,open science ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services - Abstract
PurposeRoutinely collected real world data (RWD) have great utility in aiding the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic response. Here we present the international Observational Health Data Sciences and Informatics (OHDSI) Characterizing Health Associated Risks and Your Baseline Disease In SARS-COV-2 (CHARYBDIS) framework for standardisation and analysis of COVID-19 RWD.Patients and methodsWe conducted a descriptive retrospective database study using a federated network of data partners in the United States, Europe (the Netherlands, Spain, the UK, Germany, France and Italy) and Asia (South Korea and China). The study protocol and analytical package were released on 11th June 2020 and are iteratively updated via GitHub. We identified three non-mutually exclusive cohorts of 4,537,153 individuals with a clinical COVID-19 diagnosis or positive test, 886,193 hospitalized with COVID-19, and 113,627 hospitalized with COVID-19 requiring intensive services.ResultsWe aggregated over 22,000 unique characteristics describing patients with COVID-19. All comorbidities, symptoms, medications, and outcomes are described by cohort in aggregate counts and are readily available online. Globally, we observed similarities in the USA and Europe: more women diagnosed than men but more men hospitalized than women, most diagnosed cases between 25 and 60 years of age versus most hospitalized cases between 60 and 80 years of age. South Korea differed with more women than men hospitalized. Common comorbidities included type 2 diabetes, hypertension, chronic kidney disease and heart disease. Common presenting symptoms were dyspnea, cough and fever. Symptom data availability was more common in hospitalized cohorts than diagnosed.ConclusionWe constructed a global, multi-centre view to describe trends in COVID-19 progression, management and evolution over time. By characterising baseline variability in patients and geography, our work provides critical context that may otherwise be misconstrued as data quality issues. This is important as we perform studies on adverse events of special interest in COVID-19 vaccine surveillance.
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- 2022
24. CFD Modeling of Thin Sheet Product Using the Horizontal Single Belt Casting Method
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Gonzalez-Morales, Daniel R., Isac, Mihaiela M., Guthrie, Roderick I. L., and Broek, Stephan, editor
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- 2023
- Full Text
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25. COVID-19 in patients with autoimmune diseases: characteristics and outcomes in a multinational network of cohorts across three countries
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Tan, Eng Hooi, Sena, Anthony G, Prats-Uribe, Albert, You, Seng Chan, Ahmed, Waheed-Ul-Rahman, Kostka, Kristin, Reich, Christian, Duvall, Scott L, Lynch, Kristine E, Matheny, Michael E, Duarte-Salles, Talita, Bertolin, Sergio Fernandez, Hripcsak, George, Natarajan, Karthik, Falconer, Thomas, Spotnitz, Matthew, Ostropolets, Anna, Blacketer, Clair, Alshammari, Thamir M, Alghoul, Heba, Alser, Osaid, Lane, Jennifer CE, Dawoud, Dalia M, Shah, Karishma, Yang, Yue, Zhang, Lin, Areia, Carlos, Golozar, Asieh, Recalde, Martina, Casajust, Paula, Jonnagaddala, Jitendra, Subbian, Vignesh, Vizcaya, David, Lai, Lana YH, Nyberg, Fredrik, Morales, Daniel R, Posada, Jose D, Shah, Nigam H, Gong, Mengchun, Vivekanantham, Arani, Abend, Aaron, Minty, Evan P, Suchard, Marc, Rijnbeek, Peter, Ryan, Patrick B, and Prieto-Alhambra, Daniel
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Infectious Diseases ,Lung ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Pneumonia & Influenza ,Clinical Research ,Influenza ,Autoimmune Disease ,Cardiovascular ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Autoimmune Diseases ,COVID-19 ,Cohort Studies ,Female ,Hospitalization ,Humans ,Influenza ,Human ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Prevalence ,Prognosis ,Republic of Korea ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Spain ,United States ,Young Adult ,autoimmune condition ,mortality ,hospitalization ,open science ,Observational Health Data Sciences and Informatics ,Observational Medical Outcomes Partnership ,Clinical Sciences ,Immunology ,Public Health and Health Services ,Arthritis & Rheumatology - Abstract
ObjectivePatients with autoimmune diseases were advised to shield to avoid coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), but information on their prognosis is lacking. We characterized 30-day outcomes and mortality after hospitalization with COVID-19 among patients with prevalent autoimmune diseases, and compared outcomes after hospital admissions among similar patients with seasonal influenza.MethodsA multinational network cohort study was conducted using electronic health records data from Columbia University Irving Medical Center [USA, Optum (USA), Department of Veterans Affairs (USA), Information System for Research in Primary Care-Hospitalization Linked Data (Spain) and claims data from IQVIA Open Claims (USA) and Health Insurance and Review Assessment (South Korea). All patients with prevalent autoimmune diseases, diagnosed and/or hospitalized between January and June 2020 with COVID-19, and similar patients hospitalized with influenza in 2017-18 were included. Outcomes were death and complications within 30 days of hospitalization.ResultsWe studied 133 589 patients diagnosed and 48 418 hospitalized with COVID-19 with prevalent autoimmune diseases. Most patients were female, aged ≥50 years with previous comorbidities. The prevalence of hypertension (45.5-93.2%), chronic kidney disease (14.0-52.7%) and heart disease (29.0-83.8%) was higher in hospitalized vs diagnosed patients with COVID-19. Compared with 70 660 hospitalized with influenza, those admitted with COVID-19 had more respiratory complications including pneumonia and acute respiratory distress syndrome, and higher 30-day mortality (2.2-4.3% vs 6.32-24.6%).ConclusionCompared with influenza, COVID-19 is a more severe disease, leading to more complications and higher mortality.
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- 2021
26. Characteristics and Outcomes of Over 300,000 Patients with COVID-19 and History of Cancer in the United States and SpainCharacteristics of 300,000 COVID-19 Individuals with Cancer
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Roel, Elena, Pistillo, Andrea, Recalde, Martina, Sena, Anthony G, Fernández-Bertolín, Sergio, Aragón, Maria, Puente, Diana, Ahmed, Waheed-Ul-Rahman, Alghoul, Heba, Alser, Osaid, Alshammari, Thamir M, Areia, Carlos, Blacketer, Clair, Carter, William, Casajust, Paula, Culhane, Aedin C, Dawoud, Dalia, DeFalco, Frank, DuVall, Scott L, Falconer, Thomas, Golozar, Asieh, Gong, Mengchun, Hester, Laura, Hripcsak, George, Tan, Eng Hooi, Jeon, Hokyun, Jonnagaddala, Jitendra, Lai, Lana YH, Lynch, Kristine E, Matheny, Michael E, Morales, Daniel R, Natarajan, Karthik, Nyberg, Fredrik, Ostropolets, Anna, Posada, José D, Prats-Uribe, Albert, Reich, Christian G, Rivera, Donna R, Schilling, Lisa M, Soerjomataram, Isabelle, Shah, Karishma, Shah, Nigam H, Shen, Yang, Spotniz, Matthew, Subbian, Vignesh, Suchard, Marc A, Trama, Annalisa, Zhang, Lin, Zhang, Ying, Ryan, Patrick B, Prieto-Alhambra, Daniel, Kostka, Kristin, and Duarte-Salles, Talita
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Breast Cancer ,Patient Safety ,Infectious Diseases ,Rare Diseases ,Hematology ,Cancer ,Urologic Diseases ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Aetiology ,2.4 Surveillance and distribution ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,COVID-19 ,Child ,Cohort Studies ,Comorbidity ,Databases ,Factual ,Female ,Hospitalization ,Humans ,Immunosuppression Therapy ,Influenza ,Human ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Neoplasms ,Outcome Assessment ,Health Care ,Pandemics ,Prevalence ,Risk Factors ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Spain ,United States ,Young Adult ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Epidemiology ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
BackgroundWe described the demographics, cancer subtypes, comorbidities, and outcomes of patients with a history of cancer and coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Second, we compared patients hospitalized with COVID-19 to patients diagnosed with COVID-19 and patients hospitalized with influenza.MethodsWe conducted a cohort study using eight routinely collected health care databases from Spain and the United States, standardized to the Observational Medical Outcome Partnership common data model. Three cohorts of patients with a history of cancer were included: (i) diagnosed with COVID-19, (ii) hospitalized with COVID-19, and (iii) hospitalized with influenza in 2017 to 2018. Patients were followed from index date to 30 days or death. We reported demographics, cancer subtypes, comorbidities, and 30-day outcomes.ResultsWe included 366,050 and 119,597 patients diagnosed and hospitalized with COVID-19, respectively. Prostate and breast cancers were the most frequent cancers (range: 5%-18% and 1%-14% in the diagnosed cohort, respectively). Hematologic malignancies were also frequent, with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma being among the five most common cancer subtypes in the diagnosed cohort. Overall, patients were aged above 65 years and had multiple comorbidities. Occurrence of death ranged from 2% to 14% and from 6% to 26% in the diagnosed and hospitalized COVID-19 cohorts, respectively. Patients hospitalized with influenza (n = 67,743) had a similar distribution of cancer subtypes, sex, age, and comorbidities but lower occurrence of adverse events.ConclusionsPatients with a history of cancer and COVID-19 had multiple comorbidities and a high occurrence of COVID-19-related events. Hematologic malignancies were frequent.ImpactThis study provides epidemiologic characteristics that can inform clinical care and etiologic studies.
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- 2021
27. Student survey after ten years of continuous blended teaching of echocardiography
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Parra, Víctor M., Fita, Guillermina, Azqueta, Manel, González, Mauricio, Aranda, Fernando, Maestre, M. Luz, Silva, Jorge, Hortal, Javier, Morales, Daniel, Bórquez, Emiliano, Adasme, Fabián, Real, María Isabel, Mercadal, Jordi, Zelada, Pamela, Riobó, Gonzalo, Galdames, Katia, and Domenech, Raúl J.
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- 2024
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28. The Effect of Raster Pattern and Acetic Acid Exposure on the Mechanical and Failure Properties of Additively Manufactured PLA and PLA-wood Composite Specimens
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Lares Carrillo, Luis E., Salazar, Jose F., Hitter, Mckenna M., Luna, Victoria C., Alvarez, Damian E., Arana Contreras, Mario, Contreras Guerrero, Veronica G., Hitter, Jordan S., Morales, Daniel A., Nunez, Alan, Villegas, Arturo, and Roberson, David A.
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- 2023
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29. A-to-I edited miR-411-5p targets MET and promotes TKI response in NSCLC-resistant cells
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Romano, Giulia, Le, Patricia, Nigita, Giovanni, Saviana, Michela, Micalo, Lavender, Lovat, Francesca, del Valle Morales, Daniel, Li, Howard, Nana-Sinkam, Patrick, and Acunzo, Mario
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- 2023
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30. Co-deposition of hole-selective contact and absorber for improving the processability of perovskite solar cells
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Zheng, Xiaopeng, Li, Zhen, Zhang, Yi, Chen, Min, Liu, Tuo, Xiao, Chuanxiao, Gao, Danpeng, Patel, Jay B., Kuciauskas, Darius, Magomedov, Artiom, Scheidt, Rebecca A., Wang, Xiaoming, Harvey, Steven P., Dai, Zhenghong, Zhang, Chunlei, Morales, Daniel, Pruett, Henry, Wieliczka, Brian M., Kirmani, Ahmad R., Padture, Nitin P., Graham, Kenneth R., Yan, Yanfa, Nazeeruddin, Mohammad Khaja, McGehee, Michael D., Zhu, Zonglong, and Luther, Joseph M.
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- 2023
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31. Some more twisted Hilbert spaces
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Morales, Daniel and Suárez, Jesús
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Mathematics - Functional Analysis ,46B20, 46B06, 46B70, 46M18, 46B45 - Abstract
We provide three new examples of twisted Hilbert spaces by considering properties that are "close" to Hilbert. We denote them $Z(\mathcal J)$, $Z(\mathcal S^2)$ and $Z(\mathcal T_s^2)$. The first space is asymptotically Hilbertian but not weak Hilbert. On the opposite side, $Z(\mathcal S^2)$ and $Z(\mathcal T_s^2)$ are not asymptotically Hilbertian. Moreover, the space $Z(\mathcal T_s^2)$ is a HAPpy space and the technique to prove it gives a "twisted" version of a theorem of Johnson and Szankowski (Ann. of Math. 176:1987--2001, 2012). This is, we can construct a nontrivial twisted Hilbert space such that the isomorphism constant from its $n$-dimensional subspaces to $\ell_2^n$ grows to infinity as slowly as we wish when $n\to \infty$.
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- 2020
32. Impact of data source choice on multimorbidity measurement: a comparison study of 2.3 million individuals in the Welsh National Health Service
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MacRae, Clare, Morales, Daniel, Mercer, Stewart W., Lone, Nazir, Lawson, Andrew, Jefferson, Emily, McAllister, David, van den Akker, Marjan, Marshall, Alan, Seth, Sohan, Rawlings, Anna, Lyons, Jane, Lyons, Ronan A., Mizen, Amy, Abubakar, Eleojo, Dibben, Chris, and Guthrie, Bruce
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- 2023
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33. External validation of the QLifetime cardiovascular risk prediction tool: population cohort study
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Livingstone, Shona, Morales, Daniel R., Fleuriot, Jacques, Donnan, Peter T., and Guthrie, Bruce
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- 2023
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34. Risk of depression, suicide and psychosis with hydroxychloroquine treatment for rheumatoid arthritis: a multinational network cohort study
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Lane, Jennifer CE, Weaver, James, Kostka, Kristin, Duarte-Salles, Talita, Abrahao, Maria Tereza F, Alghoul, Heba, Alser, Osaid, Alshammari, Thamir M, Areia, Carlos, Biedermann, Patricia, Banda, Juan M, Burn, Edward, Casajust, Paula, Fister, Kristina, Hardin, Jill, Hester, Laura, Hripcsak, George, Kaas-Hansen, Benjamin Skov, Khosla, Sajan, Kolovos, Spyros, Lynch, Kristine E, Makadia, Rupa, Mehta, Paras P, Morales, Daniel R, Morgan-Stewart, Henry, Mosseveld, Mees, Newby, Danielle, Nyberg, Fredrik, Ostropolets, Anna, Park, Rae Woong, Prats-Uribe, Albert, Rao, Gowtham A, Reich, Christian, Rijnbeek, Peter, Sena, Anthony G, Shoaibi, Azza, Spotnitz, Matthew, Subbian, Vignesh, Suchard, Marc A, Vizcaya, David, Wen, Haini, de Wilde, Marcel, Xie, Junqing, You, Seng Chan, Zhang, Lin, Lovestone, Simon, Ryan, Patrick, Prieto-Alhambra, Daniel, and consortium, for the OHDSI-COVID-19
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Brain Disorders ,Autoimmune Disease ,Serious Mental Illness ,Mental Health ,Suicide ,Depression ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Arthritis ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Suicide Prevention ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Aged ,Antirheumatic Agents ,Arthritis ,Rheumatoid ,Cohort Studies ,Female ,Germany ,Humans ,Hydroxychloroquine ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Psychoses ,Substance-Induced ,Risk Assessment ,Suicidal Ideation ,United Kingdom ,United States ,Young Adult ,COVID-19 Drug Treatment ,HCQ ,safety ,epidemiology ,RA ,psychosis ,depression ,OHDSI-COVID-19 consortium ,epidemiology ,RA ,Clinical Sciences ,Immunology ,Public Health and Health Services ,Arthritis & Rheumatology - Abstract
ObjectivesConcern has been raised in the rheumatology community regarding recent regulatory warnings that HCQ used in the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic could cause acute psychiatric events. We aimed to study whether there is risk of incident depression, suicidal ideation or psychosis associated with HCQ as used for RA.MethodsWe performed a new-user cohort study using claims and electronic medical records from 10 sources and 3 countries (Germany, UK and USA). RA patients ≥18 years of age and initiating HCQ were compared with those initiating SSZ (active comparator) and followed up in the short (30 days) and long term (on treatment). Study outcomes included depression, suicide/suicidal ideation and hospitalization for psychosis. Propensity score stratification and calibration using negative control outcomes were used to address confounding. Cox models were fitted to estimate database-specific calibrated hazard ratios (HRs), with estimates pooled where I2
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- 2021
35. But, Do I Need a College Degree?: Understanding Perceptions of College and Career Readiness among Students Enrolled in a Career and Technical High School
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Bettencourt, Genia M., George Mwangi, Chrystal A., Green, Keisha L., and Morales, Daniel Morales
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Career and technical education (CTE) and college preparation curriculum in high school are often treated as mutually exclusive options rather than integrated, symbiotic tracks. However, increasingly career fields require some postsecondary education, and access to four-year college degrees are important for long-term earnings and mobility. In this two-year case study, we examined how 16 juniors enrolled in a CTE high school described and perceived their college and career aspirations. Our findings revealed that participants saw vocational and academic goals as mutually beneficial but experienced them through distinctive pathways, a disconnect amplified by a lack of resources in our sample site. While mechanisms to promote college-going existed, they were often only available to subsets of students and of limited utility. From this research, we suggest that the education system should expand dual enrollment opportunities, provide mentorship of diverse career possibilities, and begin integration between college and career planning earlier in students' schooling. Moreover, we examine the possibilities demonstrated by this case study for K-16 pathways and how postsecondary institutions can meaningfully engage with CTE schools to support this integration.
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- 2022
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36. Use of repurposed and adjuvant drugs in hospital patients with covid-19: multinational network cohort study.
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Prats-Uribe, Albert, Sena, Anthony G, Lai, Lana Yin Hui, Ahmed, Waheed-Ul-Rahman, Alghoul, Heba, Alser, Osaid, Alshammari, Thamir M, Areia, Carlos, Carter, William, Casajust, Paula, Dawoud, Dalia, Golozar, Asieh, Jonnagaddala, Jitendra, Mehta, Paras P, Gong, Mengchun, Morales, Daniel R, Nyberg, Fredrik, Posada, Jose D, Recalde, Martina, Roel, Elena, Shah, Karishma, Shah, Nigam H, Schilling, Lisa M, Subbian, Vignesh, Vizcaya, David, Zhang, Lin, Zhang, Ying, Zhu, Hong, Liu, Li, Cho, Jaehyeong, Lynch, Kristine E, Matheny, Michael E, You, Seng Chan, Rijnbeek, Peter R, Hripcsak, George, Lane, Jennifer Ce, Burn, Edward, Reich, Christian, Suchard, Marc A, Duarte-Salles, Talita, Kostka, Kristin, Ryan, Patrick B, and Prieto-Alhambra, Daniel
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Humans ,Ceftriaxone ,Azithromycin ,Ritonavir ,Hydroxychloroquine ,Fluoroquinolones ,Adrenal Cortex Hormones ,Enoxaparin ,Vitamin D ,Drug Combinations ,Treatment Outcome ,Chemotherapy ,Adjuvant ,Cohort Studies ,Safety ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Middle Aged ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Infant ,Infant ,Newborn ,Inpatients ,United States ,China ,Spain ,Female ,Male ,Young Adult ,Republic of Korea ,Electronic Health Records ,Drug Repositioning ,Lopinavir ,Administrative Claims ,Healthcare ,COVID-19 ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Administrative Claims ,Healthcare ,and over ,Chemotherapy ,Adjuvant ,Preschool ,Newborn ,General & Internal Medicine ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services - Abstract
ObjectiveTo investigate the use of repurposed and adjuvant drugs in patients admitted to hospital with covid-19 across three continents.DesignMultinational network cohort study.SettingHospital electronic health records from the United States, Spain, and China, and nationwide claims data from South Korea.Participants303 264 patients admitted to hospital with covid-19 from January 2020 to December 2020.Main outcome measuresPrescriptions or dispensations of any drug on or 30 days after the date of hospital admission for covid-19.ResultsOf the 303 264 patients included, 290 131 were from the US, 7599 from South Korea, 5230 from Spain, and 304 from China. 3455 drugs were identified. Common repurposed drugs were hydroxychloroquine (used in from
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- 2021
37. Improving the barrier properties of tin oxide in metal halide perovskite solar cells using ozone to enhance nucleation
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Johnson, Samuel A., White, Keith P., Tong, Jinhui, You, Shuai, Magomedov, Artiom, Larson, Bryon W., Morales, Daniel, Bramante, Rosemary, Dunphy, Erin, Tirawat, Robert, Perkins, Craig L., Werner, Jérémie, Lahti, Gabriella, Velez, Christian, Toney, Michael F., Zhu, Kai, McGehee, Michael D., Berry, Joseph J., and Palmstrom, Axel F.
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- 2023
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38. A framework to develop and test a model-free motion control system for a forestry crane
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La Hera, Pedro, Mendoza-Trejo, Omar, Lideskog, Håkan, and Morales, Daniel Ortíz
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- 2023
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39. Intranasal steroid use and COVID-19 mortality among patients with asthma and COPD: A retrospective cohort study
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Hernandez Santiago, Virginia, Fagbamigbe, Adeniyi Francis, Sullivan, Frank M, Agrawal, Utkarsh, Morales, Daniel, McCowan, Colin, and Lipworth, Brian
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- 2023
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40. Physical and reactive absorption of CO2 in capillaries: Mass transfer, modelling and produced chemical species
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Morales, Daniel O., Regalado-Méndez, Alejandro, Pérez-Alonso, César, and Natividad, Reyna
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- 2023
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41. The expression of Oct3/4A mRNA and not its isoforms is upregulated by the HPV16 E7 oncoprotein
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Gómez-Gómez, Yazmín, Organista-Nava, Jorge, Clemente-Periván, Sayuri Itzel, Lagunas-Martínez, Alfredo, Salmerón-Bárcenas, Eric Genaro, Villanueva-Morales, Daniel, Ayala-Reyna, Dania Yahaira, del Carmen Alarcón-Romero, Luz, Ortiz-Ortiz, Julio, Jiménez-López, Marco Antonio, Bello-Rios, Ciresthel, Leyva-Vázquez, Marco Antonio, and Illades‑Aguiar, Berenice
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- 2023
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42. Carga cognitiva y retención de información mediante 2 técnicas de video en un aula invertida: estudio aleatorizado controlado
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Barrios, Rodolfo, Morales, Daniel, and Domínguez, Luis Carlos
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- 2023
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43. Antipsychotic drug prescribing and mortality in people with dementia before and during the COVID-19 pandemic: a retrospective cohort study in Wales, UK
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Schnier, Christian, McCarthy, Aoife, Morales, Daniel R, Akbari, Ashley, Sofat, Reecha, Dale, Caroline, Takhar, Rohan, Mamas, Mamas A, Khunti, Kamlesh, Zaccardi, Francesco, Sudlow, Cathie LM, and Wilkinson, Tim
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- 2023
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44. Private set intersection: A systematic literature review
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Morales, Daniel, Agudo, Isaac, and Lopez, Javier
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- 2023
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45. Deep phenotyping of 34,128 adult patients hospitalised with COVID-19 in an international network study.
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Burn, Edward, You, Seng Chan, Sena, Anthony G, Kostka, Kristin, Abedtash, Hamed, Abrahão, Maria Tereza F, Alberga, Amanda, Alghoul, Heba, Alser, Osaid, Alshammari, Thamir M, Aragon, Maria, Areia, Carlos, Banda, Juan M, Cho, Jaehyeong, Culhane, Aedin C, Davydov, Alexander, DeFalco, Frank J, Duarte-Salles, Talita, DuVall, Scott, Falconer, Thomas, Fernandez-Bertolin, Sergio, Gao, Weihua, Golozar, Asieh, Hardin, Jill, Hripcsak, George, Huser, Vojtech, Jeon, Hokyun, Jing, Yonghua, Jung, Chi Young, Kaas-Hansen, Benjamin Skov, Kaduk, Denys, Kent, Seamus, Kim, Yeesuk, Kolovos, Spyros, Lane, Jennifer CE, Lee, Hyejin, Lynch, Kristine E, Makadia, Rupa, Matheny, Michael E, Mehta, Paras P, Morales, Daniel R, Natarajan, Karthik, Nyberg, Fredrik, Ostropolets, Anna, Park, Rae Woong, Park, Jimyung, Posada, Jose D, Prats-Uribe, Albert, Rao, Gowtham, Reich, Christian, Rho, Yeunsook, Rijnbeek, Peter, Schilling, Lisa M, Schuemie, Martijn, Shah, Nigam H, Shoaibi, Azza, Song, Seokyoung, Spotnitz, Matthew, Suchard, Marc A, Swerdel, Joel N, Vizcaya, David, Volpe, Salvatore, Wen, Haini, Williams, Andrew E, Yimer, Belay B, Zhang, Lin, Zhuk, Oleg, Prieto-Alhambra, Daniel, and Ryan, Patrick
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Humans ,Pneumonia ,Viral ,Coronavirus Infections ,Hospitalization ,Prevalence ,Cohort Studies ,Age Factors ,Comorbidity ,Sex Factors ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Middle Aged ,United States ,Spain ,Female ,Male ,Influenza ,Human ,Young Adult ,Republic of Korea ,Pandemics ,COVID-19 ,and over ,Influenza ,Human ,Pneumonia ,Viral - Abstract
Comorbid conditions appear to be common among individuals hospitalised with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) but estimates of prevalence vary and little is known about the prior medication use of patients. Here, we describe the characteristics of adults hospitalised with COVID-19 and compare them with influenza patients. We include 34,128 (US: 8362, South Korea: 7341, Spain: 18,425) COVID-19 patients, summarising between 4811 and 11,643 unique aggregate characteristics. COVID-19 patients have been majority male in the US and Spain, but predominantly female in South Korea. Age profiles vary across data sources. Compared to 84,585 individuals hospitalised with influenza in 2014-19, COVID-19 patients have more typically been male, younger, and with fewer comorbidities and lower medication use. While protecting groups vulnerable to influenza is likely a useful starting point in the response to COVID-19, strategies will likely need to be broadened to reflect the particular characteristics of individuals being hospitalised with COVID-19.
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- 2020
46. Longitudinal Metabolome-Wide Signals Prior to the Appearance of a First Islet Autoantibody in Children Participating in the TEDDY Study
- Author
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Li, Qian, Parikh, Hemang, Butterworth, Martha D, Lernmark, Åke, Hagopian, William, Rewers, Marian, She, Jin-Xiong, Toppari, Jorma, Ziegler, Anette-G, Akolkar, Beena, Fiehn, Oliver, Fan, Sili, Krischer, Jeffrey P, Barbour, Aaron, Bautista, Kimberly, Baxter, Judith, Felipe-Morales, Daniel, Driscoll, Kimberly, Frohnert, Brigitte I, Stahl, Marisa, Gesualdo, Patricia, Hoffman, Michelle, Karban, Rachel, Liu, Edwin, Norris, Jill, Peacock, Stesha, Shorrosh, Hanan, Steck, Andrea, Stern, Megan, Villegas, Erica, Waugh, Kathleen, Simell, Olli G, Adamsson, Annika, Ahonen, Suvi, Åkerlund, Mari, Hakola, Leena, Hekkala, Anne, Holappa, Henna, Hyöty, Heikki, Ikonen, Anni, Ilonen, Jorma, Jäminki, Sinikka, Jokipuu, Sanna, Karlsson, Leena, Kero, Jukka, Kähönen, Miia, Knip, Mikael, Koivikko, Minna-Liisa, Koskinen, Merja, Koreasalo, Mirva, Kurppa, Kalle, Kytölä, Jarita, Latva-aho, Tiina, Lindfors, Katri, Lönnrot, Maria, Mäntymäki, Elina, Mattila, Markus, Miettinen, Maija, Multasuo, Katja, Mykkänen, Teija, Niininen, Tiina, Niinistö, Sari, Nyblom, Mia, Oikarinen, Sami, Ollikainen, Paula, Othmani, Zhian, Pohjola, Sirpa, Rajala, Petra, Rautanen, Jenna, Riikonen, Anne, Riski, Eija, Pekkola, Miia, Romo, Minna, Ruohonen, Satu, Simell, Satu, Sjöberg, Maija, Stenius, Aino, Tossavainen, Päivi, Vähä-Mäkilä, Mari, Vainionpää, Sini, Varjonen, Eeva, Veijola, Riitta, Viinikangas, Irene, Virtanen, Suvi M, Schatz, Desmond, Hopkins, Diane, Steed, Leigh, Bryant, Jennifer, Silvis, Katherine, Haller, Michael, Gardiner, Melissa, McIndoe, Richard, Sharma, Ashok, Anderson, Stephen W, Jacobsen, Laura, Marks, John, and Towe, PD
- Subjects
Pediatric ,Autoimmune Disease ,Diabetes ,Prevention ,Nutrition ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Alanine ,Amino Acids ,Branched-Chain ,Autoantibodies ,Child ,Preschool ,Dehydroascorbic Acid ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 1 ,Fatty Acids ,Female ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Glutamate Decarboxylase ,Humans ,Infant ,Infant ,Newborn ,Insulin Antibodies ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Metabolome ,Methionine ,Phosphatidylethanolamines ,Prodromal Symptoms ,Proline ,Risk ,Triglycerides ,gamma-Aminobutyric Acid ,TEDDY Study Group ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Endocrinology & Metabolism - Abstract
Children at increased genetic risk for type 1 diabetes (T1D) after environmental exposures may develop pancreatic islet autoantibodies (IA) at a very young age. Metabolic profile changes over time may imply responses to exposures and signal development of the first IA. Our present research in The Environmental Determinants of Diabetes in the Young (TEDDY) study aimed to identify metabolome-wide signals preceding the first IA against GAD (GADA-first) or against insulin (IAA-first). We profiled metabolomes by mass spectrometry from children's plasma at 3-month intervals after birth until appearance of the first IA. A trajectory analysis discovered each first IA preceded by reduced amino acid proline and branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs), respectively. With independent time point analysis following birth, we discovered dehydroascorbic acid (DHAA) contributing to the risk of each first IA, and γ-aminobutyric acid (GABAs) associated with the first autoantibody against insulin (IAA-first). Methionine and alanine, compounds produced in BCAA metabolism and fatty acids, also preceded IA at different time points. Unsaturated triglycerides and phosphatidylethanolamines decreased in abundance before appearance of either autoantibody. Our findings suggest that IAA-first and GADA-first are heralded by different patterns of DHAA, GABA, multiple amino acids, and fatty acids, which may be important to primary prevention of T1D.
- Published
- 2020
47. An atomically smooth container: Can the native oxide promote supercooling of liquid gallium?
- Author
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Joshipura, Ishan D., Nguyen, Chung Kim, Quinn, Colette, Yang, Jiayi, Morales, Daniel H., Santiso, Erik, Daeneke, Torben, Truong, Vi Khanh, and Dickey, Michael D.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Contextualising adverse events of special interest to characterise the baseline incidence rates in 24 million patients with COVID-19 across 26 databases: a multinational retrospective cohort study
- Author
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Voss, Erica A., Shoaibi, Azza, Yin Hui Lai, Lana, Blacketer, Clair, Alshammari, Thamir, Makadia, Rupa, Haynes, Kevin, Sena, Anthony G., Rao, Gowtham, van Sandijk, Sebastiaan, Fraboulet, Clement, Boyer, Laurent, Le Carrour, Tanguy, Horban, Scott, Morales, Daniel R., Martínez Roldán, Jordi, Ramírez-Anguita, Juan Manuel, Mayer, Miguel A., de Wilde, Marcel, John, Luis H., Duarte-Salles, Talita, Roel, Elena, Pistillo, Andrea, Kolde, Raivo, Maljković, Filip, Denaxas, Spiros, Papez, Vaclav, Kahn, Michael G., Natarajan, Karthik, Reich, Christian, Secora, Alex, Minty, Evan P., Shah, Nigam H., Posada, Jose D., Garcia Morales, Maria Teresa, Bosca, Diego, Cadenas Juanino, Honorio, Diaz Holgado, Antonio, Pedrera Jiménez, Miguel, Serrano Balazote, Pablo, García Barrio, Noelia, Şen, Selçuk, Üresin, Ali Yağız, Erdogan, Baris, Belmans, Luc, Byttebier, Geert, Malbrain, Manu L.N.G., Dedman, Daniel J., Cuccu, Zara, Vashisht, Rohit, Butte, Atul J., Patel, Ayan, Dahm, Lisa, Han, Cora, Bu, Fan, Arshad, Faaizah, Ostropolets, Anna, Nyberg, Fredrik, Hripcsak, George, Suchard, Marc A., Prieto-Alhambra, Dani, Rijnbeek, Peter R., Schuemie, Martijn J., and Ryan, Patrick B.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Digital twin development through auto-linking to manage legacy assets in nuclear power plants
- Author
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Edwards, Chloe, Morales, Daniel López, Haas, Carl, Narasimhan, Sriram, and Cascante, Giovanni
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Predicted Back-Meniscus Stability for Horizontal Single Belt Casting (HSBC) Using a Single Impingement Feeding System
- Author
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Gonzalez-Morales, Daniel R., Isac, Mihaiela M., Guthrie, Roderick I. L., and Eskin, Dmitry, editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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