2,753 results on '"Reed, Mark"'
Search Results
2. Wordsworth, Coleridge, and the “Plan” of the Lyrical Ballads
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Reed, Mark L.
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- 2015
3. Substance-related diagnosis type predicts the likelihood and co-occurrence of preterm and cesarean delivery
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Courchesne-Krak, Natasia S, Zúñiga, María Luisa, Chambers, Christina, Reed, Mark B, Smith, Laramie R, Ballas, Jerasimos, and Marienfeld, Carla
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Midwifery ,Health Sciences ,Perinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Period ,Infant Mortality ,Substance Misuse ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Prevention ,Preterm ,Low Birth Weight and Health of the Newborn ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Good Health and Well Being ,Infant ,Newborn ,Female ,Pregnancy ,Humans ,Nicotine ,Cesarean Section ,Premature Birth ,Risk Factors ,Gestational Age ,Retrospective Studies ,Substance use ,pregnancy ,preterm delivery ,cesarean delivery ,electronic health record data ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology ,Substance Abuse ,Public health ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
This article aimed to evaluate whether a substance-related diagnosis (SRD; i.e., alcohol, opioids, cannabis, stimulants, nicotine) predicts the likelihood and co-occurrence of preterm (20-37 weeks' gestation) and cesarean delivery.This study reviewed electronic health record data on women (aged 18-44 years) who delivered a single live or stillbirth at ≥ 20 weeks of gestation from 2012 to 2019. Women with and without an SRD were matched on key demographic characteristics at a 1:1 ratio. Adjusting for covariates, odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals were calculated.Of the 19,346 deliveries, a matched cohort of 2,158 deliveries was identified. Of these, 1,079 (50%) had an SRD, 280 (13%) had a preterm delivery, 833 (39%) had a cesarean delivery, and 166 (8%) had a co-occurring preterm and cesarean delivery. An SRD was significantly associated with preterm and cesarean delivery (AOR = 1.84 [95% CI, 1.41-2.39], p-value=
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- 2023
4. Fluids and Electrolytes under Confinement in Single-Digit Nanopores
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Aluru, Narayana R, Aydin, Fikret, Bazant, Martin Z, Blankschtein, Daniel, Brozena, Alexandra H, de Souza, J Pedro, Elimelech, Menachem, Faucher, Samuel, Fourkas, John T, Koman, Volodymyr B, Kuehne, Matthias, Kulik, Heather J, Li, Hao-Kun, Li, Yuhao, Li, Zhongwu, Majumdar, Arun, Martis, Joel, Misra, Rahul Prasanna, Noy, Aleksandr, Pham, Tuan Anh, Qu, Haoran, Rayabharam, Archith, Reed, Mark A, Ritt, Cody L, Schwegler, Eric, Siwy, Zuzanna, Strano, Michael S, Wang, YuHuang, Yao, Yun-Chiao, Zhan, Cheng, and Zhang, Ze
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Engineering ,Affordable and Clean Energy ,Chemical Sciences ,General Chemistry ,Chemical sciences - Abstract
Confined fluids and electrolyte solutions in nanopores exhibit rich and surprising physics and chemistry that impact the mass transport and energy efficiency in many important natural systems and industrial applications. Existing theories often fail to predict the exotic effects observed in the narrowest of such pores, called single-digit nanopores (SDNs), which have diameters or conduit widths of less than 10 nm, and have only recently become accessible for experimental measurements. What SDNs reveal has been surprising, including a rapidly increasing number of examples such as extraordinarily fast water transport, distorted fluid-phase boundaries, strong ion-correlation and quantum effects, and dielectric anomalies that are not observed in larger pores. Exploiting these effects presents myriad opportunities in both basic and applied research that stand to impact a host of new technologies at the water-energy nexus, from new membranes for precise separations and water purification to new gas permeable materials for water electrolyzers and energy-storage devices. SDNs also present unique opportunities to achieve ultrasensitive and selective chemical sensing at the single-ion and single-molecule limit. In this review article, we summarize the progress on nanofluidics of SDNs, with a focus on the confinement effects that arise in these extremely narrow nanopores. The recent development of precision model systems, transformative experimental tools, and multiscale theories that have played enabling roles in advancing this frontier are reviewed. We also identify new knowledge gaps in our understanding of nanofluidic transport and provide an outlook for the future challenges and opportunities at this rapidly advancing frontier.
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- 2023
5. Engagement in the digital age: Understanding “what works” for participatory technologies in environmental decision-making
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Hafferty, Caitlin, Reed, Mark S., Brockett, Beth F.T., Orford, Scott, Berry, Robert, Short, Chris, and Davis, Joshua
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- 2024
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6. Sterol-like drugs potentiate statin-triggered prostate cancer cell death by inhibiting SREBP2 nuclear translocation
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dos Santos, Diandra Zipinotti, Elbaz, Mohamad, Branchard, Emily, Schormann, Wiebke, Brown, Carla E., Meek, Autumn R., Njar, Vincent C.O., Hamilton, Robert J., Reed, Mark A., Andrews, David W., and Penn, Linda Z.
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- 2024
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7. Association of alcohol and other substance‐related diagnoses with severe maternal morbidity
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Courchesne, Natasia S, Smith, Laramie R, Zúñiga, María Luisa, Chambers, Christina D, Reed, Mark B, Ballas, Jerasimos, and Marienfeld, Carla B
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Reproductive Medicine ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Substance Misuse ,Pediatric ,Alcoholism ,Alcohol Use and Health ,Perinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Period ,Clinical Research ,Brain Disorders ,Conditions Affecting the Embryonic and Fetal Periods ,Cardiovascular ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Alcoholism ,Arrhythmias ,Cardiac ,Cannabis ,Cohort Studies ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Eclampsia ,Female ,Humans ,Hysterectomy ,Nicotine ,Pregnancy ,Pregnancy Complications ,Pregnancy Outcome ,Retrospective Studies ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Stillbirth ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Thrombosis ,Young Adult ,alcohol use ,hemorrhage ,pregnancy ,severe maternal morbidity ,substance-related diagnosis ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Psychology ,Substance Abuse ,Clinical sciences ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
BackgroundPregnant women with a substance-related diagnosis, such as an alcohol use disorder, are a vulnerable population that may experience higher rates of severe maternal morbidity, such as hemorrhage and eclampsia, than pregnant women with no substance-related diagnosis.MethodsThis retrospective cross-sectional study reviewed electronic health record data on women (aged 18-44 years) who delivered a single live birth or stillbirth at ≥ 20 weeks of gestation from March 1, 2016, to August 30, 2019. Women with and without a substance-related diagnosis were matched on key demographic characteristics, such as age, at a 1:1 ratio. Adjusting for these covariates, odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals were calculated.ResultsA total of 10,125 deliveries met the eligibility criteria for this study. In the matched cohort of 1,346 deliveries, 673 (50.0%) had a substance-related diagnosis, and 94 (7.0%) had severe maternal morbidity. The most common indicators in women with a substance-related diagnosis included hysterectomy (17.7%), eclampsia (15.8%), air and thrombotic embolism (11.1%), and conversion of cardiac rhythm (11.1%). Having a substance-related diagnosis was associated with severe maternal morbidity (adjusted odds ratio = 1.81 [95% CI, 1.14-2.88], p-value = 0.0126). In the independent matched cohorts by substance type, an alcohol-related diagnosis was significantly associated with severe maternal morbidity (adjusted odds ratio = 3.07 [95% CI, 1.58-5.95], p-value = 0.0009), while the patterns for stimulant- and nicotine-related diagnoses were not as well resolved with severe maternal morbidity and opioid- and cannabis-related diagnoses were not associated with severe maternal morbidity.ConclusionWe found that an alcohol-related diagnosis, although lowest in prevalence of the substance-related diagnoses, had the highest odds of severe maternal morbidity of any substance-related diagnosis assessed in this study. These findings reinforce the need to identify alcohol-related diagnoses in pregnant women early to minimize potential harm through intervention and treatment.
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- 2021
8. Tau and β-Amyloid Burden Predict Actigraphy-Measured and Self-Reported Impairment and Misperception of Human Sleep.
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Winer, Joseph R, Morehouse, Allison, Fenton, Laura, Harrison, Theresa M, Ayangma, Lylian, Reed, Mark, Kumar, Samika, Baker, Suzanne L, Jagust, William J, and Walker, Matthew P
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Brain ,Humans ,tau Proteins ,Positron-Emission Tomography ,Sleep ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Aging ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Female ,Male ,Actigraphy ,Amyloid beta-Peptides ,Self Report ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Alzheimer's disease ,aging ,amyloid ,sleep ,tau ,Alzheimer's Disease including Alzheimer's Disease Related Dementias (AD/ADRD) ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Neurodegenerative ,Alzheimer's Disease ,Dementia ,Acquired Cognitive Impairment ,Sleep Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Neurosciences ,Brain Disorders ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Neurological ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
Alzheimer's disease is associated with poor sleep, but the impact of tau and β-amyloid (Aβ) pathology on sleep remains largely unknown. Here, we test the hypothesis that tau and Aβ predict unique impairments in objective and self-perceived human sleep under real-life, free-living conditions. Eighty-nine male and female cognitively healthy older adults received 18F-FTP-tau and 11C-PIB-Aβ PET imaging, 7 nights of sleep actigraphy and questionnaire measures, and neurocognitive assessment. Tau burden, but not Aβ, was associated with markedly worse objective sleep. In contrast, Aβ and tau were associated with worse self-reported sleep quality. Of clinical relevance, Aβ burden predicted a unique perceptual mismatch between objective and subject sleep evaluation, with individuals underestimating their sleep. The magnitude of this mismatch was further predicted by worse executive function. Thus, early-stage tau and Aβ deposition are linked with distinct phenotypes of real-world sleep impairment, one that includes a cognitive misperception of their own sleep health.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Alzheimer's disease is associated with sleep disruption, often before significant memory decline. Thus, real-life patterns of sleep behavior have the potential to serve as a window into early disease progression. In 89 cognitive healthy older adults, we found that tau burden was associated with worse wristwatch actigraphy-measured sleep quality, and that both tau and β-amyloid were independently predictive of self-reported sleep quality. Furthermore, individuals with greater β-amyloid deposition were more likely to underestimate their sleep quality, and sleep quality underestimation was associated with worse executive function. These data support the role of sleep impairment as a key marker of early Alzheimer's disease, and offer the possibility that actigraphy may be an affordable and scalable tool in quantifying Alzheimer's disease-related behavioral changes.
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- 2021
9. Re-thinking research impact: voice, context and power at the interface of science, policy and practice
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Reed, Mark S. and Rudman, Hannah
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- 2023
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10. Green Jobs and Skills Development for Disadvantaged Groups. Research Report. RR-A1603-1
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RAND Europe, Hofman, Joanna, Bruckmayer, Michaela, Feyerabend, Katrin, Larmour, Simon, Reed, Mark, and Lymperis, Lydia
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This study addresses the gap in evidence on employability of people from disadvantaged groups in the context of the greening of the economy. We focus in particular on people with low qualifications (i.e. those with at most a lower secondary qualification (level 2 or below in the International Standard Classification of Education (ISCED)). However, when looking at job opportunities for this group, we extend the scope to jobs requiring medium-level (ISCED 4) qualifications (ISCED 4), as these could be accessible for people with low qualifications with additional education, training, or work experience and help them break the cycle of poverty and disadvantage. The study also provides insights about the facilitators and barriers to green employment for other disadvantaged groups, including but not limited to women, young people and others. The study focuses on 10 ten European cities and regions across five European countries -- France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom. [Contributions to this report were provided by Giovanni Amodeo, Frederico Cardoso, Sam Cole, Megan Hughes, Giulia Lanfredi, Mafalda Pardal, and Pamina Smith.]
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- 2022
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11. Urbes Thraciarum in Late Antiquity : an archaeological assessment of the cities of Thracia from Diocletian to Maurice (284-602)
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Reed, Mark William Fraser, Crow, Jim, and Russell, Benjamin
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Thracian archaeology ,Late Antiquity ,Thracia ,Philippopolis ,Augusta Traiana-Beroe ,Diocletianopolis ,church foundation ,urban archaeology - Abstract
This thesis is a critical analysis of the archaeological remains of the major urban centres of the late antique province of Thracia between the late 3rd and early 7th century. The first part presents the material evidence that has been recovered through excavation and other means from the cities of Thracia and assesses the validity of conventional interpretations of urban character and development in the region. Thereafter, the second part examines areas in which features of the Thracian cities overlap and situates the urban centres within a wider regional context. Following the establishment of the province of Thracia in the late 3rd century, the region was dominated by three large urban centres: Philippopolis, Augusta Traiana-Beroe, and Diocletianopolis. In the 4th century, cities that existed prior to Late Antiquity displayed a high level of continuity with previous eras, particularly in their public buildings and infrastructure. The first Christian buildings also began to appear in the cities of Thracia during the mid-4 th century, although the development of a Christian urban topography truly accelerates only starting in the 5th century. Conversely, the private domestic buildings of the urban elite were some of the most varied elements of each Thracian city but no new residential buildings were built after the 4th century. Instead, the existing residences were maintained, repaired, or used for a different purpose. The division and repurposing of space was not limited to domestic areas, however, and was particularly prevalent in Thracian cities after the late 5th century. In the 6th and early 7th century, most of the public buildings are no longer in use but the cities continue to exhibit vitality and are inhabited into the later periods. Accordingly, the destructive effects of the various Gothic, Avar, and Slavic incursions on the fortified urban centres of Thracia are often overstated in modern literature.
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- 2020
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12. Sleep Disturbance Forecasts β-Amyloid Accumulation across Subsequent Years
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Winer, Joseph R, Mander, Bryce A, Kumar, Samika, Reed, Mark, Baker, Suzanne L, Jagust, William J, and Walker, Matthew P
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Neurosciences ,Acquired Cognitive Impairment ,Aging ,Brain Disorders ,Biomedical Imaging ,Sleep Research ,Dementia ,Neurodegenerative ,Alzheimer's Disease including Alzheimer's Disease Related Dementias (AD/ADRD) ,Clinical Research ,Alzheimer's Disease ,Neurological ,Aged ,Alzheimer Disease ,Amyloid beta-Peptides ,Brain ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Polysomnography ,Positron-Emission Tomography ,Protein Aggregates ,Risk Assessment ,Risk Factors ,Sleep Wake Disorders ,Sleep ,Slow-Wave ,Alzheimer's disease ,PET ,aging ,sleep ,slow-wave sleep ,β-amyloid ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Experimental sleep-wake disruption in rodents and humans causally modulates β-amyloid (Aβ) dynamics (e.g., [1-3]). This leads to the hypothesis that, beyond cross-sectional associations, impaired sleep structure and physiology could represent prospective biomarkers of the speed with which Aβ accumulates over time. Here, we test the hypothesis that initial baseline measures of non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep slow-wave activity (SWA) and sleep quality (efficiency) provide future forecasting sensitivity to the rate of Aβ accumulation over subsequent years. A cohort of clinically normal older adults was assessed using objective sleep polysomnography in combination with longitudinal tracking of Aβ accumulation with [11C]PiB positron emission tomography (PET) imaging. Both the proportion of NREM SWA below 1 Hz and the measure of sleep efficiency predicted the speed (slope) of subsequent Aβ deposition over time, and these associations remained robust when taking into account additional cofactors of interest (e.g., age, sex, sleep apnea). Moreover, these measures were specific, such that no other macro- and microphysiological architecture metrics of sleep demonstrated such sensitivity. Our data support the proposal that objective sleep markers could be part of a set of biomarkers that statistically forecast the longitudinal trajectory of cortical Aβ deposition in the human brain. Sleep may therefore represent a potentially affordable, scalable, repeatable, and non-invasive tool for quantifying of Aβ pathological progression, prior to cognitive symptoms of Alzheimer's disease (AD).
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- 2020
13. Multi-cell Hybrid Millimeter Wave Systems: Pilot Contamination and Interference Mitigation
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Zhao, Lou, Wei, Zhiqiang, Ng, Derrick Wing Kwan, Yuan, Jinhong, and Reed, Mark C.
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Computer Science - Information Theory - Abstract
In this paper, we investigate the system performance of a multi-cell multi-user (MU) hybrid millimeter wave (mmWave) communications in a multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) network. Due to the reuse of pilot symbols among different cells, the performance of channel estimation is expected to be degraded by pilot contamination, which is considered as a fundamental performance bottleneck of conventional multicell MU massive MIMO networks. To analyze the impact of pilot contamination to the system performance, we first derive the closed-form approximation of the normalized mean squared error (MSE) of the channel estimation algorithm proposed in [2] over Rician fading channels. Our analytical and simulation results show that the channel estimation error incurred by the impact of pilot contamination and noise vanishes asymptotically with an increasing number of antennas equipped at each radio frequency (RF) chain at the desired BS. Furthermore, by adopting zero-forcing (ZF) precoding in each cell for downlink transmission, we derive a tight closed-form approximation of the average achievable rate per user. Our results unveil that the intra-cell interference and inter-cell interference caused by pilot contamination over Rician fading channels can be mitigated effectively by simply increasing the number of antennas equipped at the desired BS., Comment: To appear in IEEE Transactions on Communications. 15 pages, 7 figures
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- 2018
14. Mitigating Pilot Contamination in Multi-cell Hybrid Millimeter Wave Systems
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Zhao, Lou, Wei, Zhiqiang, Ng, Derrick Wing Kwan, Yuan, Jinhong, and Reed, Mark C.
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Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing ,Computer Science - Information Theory - Abstract
In this paper, we investigate the system performance of a multi-cell multi-user (MU) hybrid millimeter wave (mmWave) multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) network adopting the channel estimation algorithm proposed in [1] for channel estimation. Due to the reuse of orthogonal pilot symbols among different cells, the channel estimation is expected to be affected by pilot contamination, which is considered as a fundamental performance bottleneck of conventional multicell MU massive MIMO networks. To analyze the impact of pilot contamination on the system performance, we derive the closed-form approximation expression of the normalized mean squared error (MSE) of the channel estimation performance. Our analytical and simulation results show that the channel estimation error incurred by the impact of pilot contamination and noise vanishes asymptotically with an increasing number of antennas equipped at each radio frequency (RF) chain deployed at the desired BS. Thus, pilot contamination is no longer the fundamental problem for multi-cell hybrid mmWave systems., Comment: Accepted to appear in ICC 2018, Kansas City, MO, 7 pages, 5 figures
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- 2018
15. Trade-offs between the natural environment and recreational infrastructure: A case study about peatlands under different management scenarios
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Martino, Simone, Kenter, Jasper O., Albers, Nora, Whittingham, Mark J., Young, Dylan M., Pearce-Higgins, James W., Martin-Ortega, Julia, Glenk, Klaus, and Reed, Mark S.
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- 2022
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16. Rare earth element systematics in boiled fluids from basalt-hosted geothermal systems
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Fowler, Andrew PG, Zierenberg, Robert A, Reed, Mark H, Palandri, James, Óskarsson, Finnbogi, and Gunnarsson, Ingvi
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Rare earth elements ,Boiling ,Geothermal ,Hydrothermal ,Geochemical modeling ,Aqueous speciation ,Apatite partitioning ,Geochemistry ,Geology ,Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience ,Geochemistry & Geophysics - Abstract
Hydrothermal processes that lead to REE fractionation and redistribution are important for understanding water-rock interactions in geothermal energy resources and mineral deposits, and for determining how submarine hydrothermal activity affects the composition of oceanic crust. Much previous work on REE transport and deposition has focused on submarine hydrothermal vents. We report REE concentrations in boiled fluids sampled from five subaerial, basalt-hosted geothermal fields, and explore controls on aqueous REE concentrations by ligand complexation and mineral supersaturation. Samples that boiled at pressures between 0.8 and 2.83 MPa were obtained from the Reykjanes, Svartsengi, Hellisheidi, and Nesjavellir geothermal systems in Iceland, and the Puna geothermal system in Hawaii. For comparison, we also report REE concentrations in hydrothermal fluids from the sediment hosted submarine Middle Valley hydrothermal system, which boiled at >250 MPa. The pH(25°C) values of the sampled subaerial geothermal fluids range from 3.94 to 6.77, and Cl concentrations range from near seawater (502 mmol/kg) to dilute (1.9 mmol/kg). La, Ce and Eu are the only REE present at levels above 5 picomole/kg (pmol/kg) in the boiled geothermal fluids; and there are notable CI chondrite normalized La and Eu anomalies in the saline fluids. REE concentrations in Middle Valley hydrothermal fluids fall within the typical range reported for submarine hydrothermal fluids and have around two orders of magnitude higher REE than the boiled subaerial geothermal fluids. Bulk samples of precipitates in pipes from the Reykjanes geothermal system have detectable REE, confirming that downhole fluids have lost REE during boiling and production of fluids for geothermal energy. Isenthalpic boiling models show that the proportions of La and Eu chloride complexes increase relative to other aqueous species as boiling progresses, attenuating the incorporation of La and Eu into precipitated well scale solids. Fluorapatite is calculated to precipitate on boiling of low pH and saline fluids and calcite is calculated to precipitate from dilute and near-neutral pH fluids, and these minerals likely sequester REE in boiled subaerial fluids. Submarine hydrothermal fluids are constrained to boiling at higher temperatures than subaerial geothermal fluids owing to pressure from overlying cold seawater, therefore secondary minerals and solids that incorporate REE are not extensively precipitated and REE concentrations in the fluids are higher.
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- 2019
17. What Can We Learn from Anthropological Practice to Conduct Socially Just Participatory Action Research?
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Vella, Steven, Carter, Claudia, and Reed, Mark S.
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This paper explores the potential for using approaches and methods from anthropology to address inequalities and work with marginalised, voiceless groups to engage actively in decisions that affect them. We test and illustrate participatory action research (PAR) methods from anthropology that seek to understand tacit/implicit knowledge and values that may only be revealed through the study of day-to-day practices, behaviours and discourse over longer timescales. This is done through a case study of a planned development in Malta that included 170 interviews supported by situated listening and observation, observational visits over a period of time to the site and surrounding areas and public/stakeholder formal/informal meetings and workshops. Ethnographic methods helped build trust during the planning process, creating a communicative bridge for knowledge sharing. This qualitative research provided new insights based on tacit and implicit knowledge and values, highlighting specific subtleties, critical awareness, empathy and observational capacity, which are essential ingredients in socially just PAR. This included new insights into the way participation was shaped by broader socio-political contexts. By eliciting, analysing and integrating 'knowledges' in this way, action researchers can contribute to more socially equitable opportunities to participate and share power in knowledge creation.
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- 2021
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18. A multicentre validation study of a smartphone application to screen hand arthritis
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Reed, Mark, Rampono, Broderick, Turner, Wallace, Harsanyi, Andreea, Lim, Andrew, Paramalingam, Shereen, Massasso, David, Thakkar, Vivek, Mundae, Maninder, and Rampono, Elliot
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- 2022
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19. Enabling high-performance cloud computing for the Community Multiscale Air Quality Model (CMAQ) version 5.3.3: performance evaluation and benefits for the user community.
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Efstathiou, Christos I., Adams, Elizabeth, Coats, Carlie J., Zelt, Robert, Reed, Mark, McGee, John, Foley, Kristen M., Sidi, Fahim I., Wong, David C., Fine, Steven, and Arunachalam, Saravanan
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AIR quality ,SCIENTIFIC community ,COMMUNITY support ,COMPUTER software ,DOCUMENTATION - Abstract
The Community Multiscale Air Quality Model (CMAQ) is a local- to hemispheric-scale numerical air quality modeling system developed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) and supported by the Community Modeling and Analysis System (CMAS) center. CMAQ is used for regulatory purposes by the USEPA program offices and state and local air agencies and is also widely used by the broader global research community to simulate and understand complex air quality processes and for computational environmental fate and transport and climate and health impact studies. Leveraging state-of-the-science cloud computing resources for high-performance computing (HPC) applications, CMAQ is now available as a fully tested, publicly available technology stack (HPC cluster and software stack) for two major cloud service providers (CSPs). Specifically, CMAQ configurations and supporting materials have been developed for use on their HPC clusters, including extensive online documentation, tutorials and guidelines to scale and optimize air quality simulations using their services. These resources allow modelers to rapidly bring together CMAQ, cloud-hosted datasets, and visualization and evaluation tools on ephemeral clusters that can be deployed quickly and reliably worldwide. Described here are considerations in CMAQ version 5.3.3 cloud use and the supported resources for each CSP, presented through a benchmark application suite that was developed as an example of a typical simulation for testing and verifying components of the modeling system. The outcomes of this effort are to provide findings from performing CMAQ simulations on the cloud using popular vendor-provided resources, to enable the user community to adapt this for their own needs, and to identify specific areas of potential optimization with respect to storage and compute architectures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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20. An evaluation of Flamigel® RT, Hydro-Active Colloid Gel, as a preventative management strategy for radiation-induced skin reactions for proton beam therapy.
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Pramod, Susy, Reed, Mark, and Simms, Leanne
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PROTON therapy ,SKIN care ,PHARMACEUTICAL gels ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SEVERITY of illness index ,COLLOIDS ,COMMERCIAL product evaluation ,CANCER chemotherapy ,RADIODERMATITIS - Abstract
To evaluate the efficacy of Flamigel® RT (Flen Health) in preventing radiation-induced skin reactions (RISR) during proton beam therapy (PBT), a study was conducted with 19 patients using Flamigel® RT. Results showed that by the end of treatment, 52% (n=10) of patients did not experience severe RISR. In children, 55% (n=6) and in adults, 38% (n=3) experienced severe RISR. The majority of the children, 83% (n=5), experienced severe RISR in their last week of treatment, whereas 67% (n=2) of adults did so around the midpoint of their therapy. Flamigel® RT was found to delay and, in some cases, prevent the onset of severe RISR in adults and children undergoing PBT. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
21. Self-Reported Drug Use and Hearing Measures in Young Adults
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Torre, Peter and Reed, Mark B.
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Purpose: The purpose of this study was to examine marijuana or other substance use on pure-tone thresholds and distortion product otoacoustic emissions (DPOAEs) in young adults. Method: Young adults (n = 243; 182 women, 61 men; M[subscript age] = 20.9 years, SD = 2.7 years) participated in this study. Survey data included personal music system use, marijuana use, and misuse of prescription medications. Otoscopy, tympanometry, pure-tone audiometry, and DPOAEs were obtained. Pure tones from octave frequencies of 0.25 through 8 kHz were obtained, and DPOAEs were recorded between f[subscript 2] frequencies of 1 and 6 kHz using two continuously presented stimulus tones swept in frequency. Results: Those who reported marijuana or stimulant use had similar pure-tone averages (0.5, 1, 2, and 4 kHz) compared to those who reported never using marijuana or stimulants. Women who reported marijuana use in the past 30 days > two times had statistically significant higher mean DPOAEs compared to women who reported [less than or equal to] two times or no marijuana use in the past 30 days. Men, however, who reported marijuana use in the past 30 days > two times had lower, but not statistically significant, mean DPOAEs compared to men who reported [less than or equal to] two times or no marijuana use in the past 30 days. Women who reported ever using stimulants had statistically significant higher mean DPOAEs compared to women who reported never using stimulants; for men, mean DPOAEs were similar between those who reported ever using stimulants and those who never used stimulants. Conclusions: The results of this study demonstrate different and contradictory associations between marijuana use, stimulant use, and hearing outcomes as a function of sex. Future research is needed to explore these associations utilizing larger sample sizes while accounting for additional harmful exposures to other noise exposures.
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- 2020
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22. Have farmers had enough of experts?
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Rust, Niki A., Stankovics, Petra, Jarvis, Rebecca M., Morris-Trainor, Zara, de Vries, Jasper R., Ingram, Julie, Mills, Jane, Glikman, Jenny A., Parkinson, Joy, Toth, Zoltan, Hansda, Regina, McMorran, Rob, Glass, Jayne, and Reed, Mark S.
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- 2022
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23. Sensing the electrical activity of single ion channels with top-down silicon nanoribbons.
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Zhou, Weiwei, Mu, Luye, Li, Jinfeng, Reed, Mark, and Burke, Peter
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electrophysiology ,ion channel ,nanowire - Abstract
Using top-down fabricated silicon nanoribbons, we measure the opening and closing of ion channels alamethicin and gramicidin A. A capacitive model of the system is proposed to demonstrate that the geometric capacitance of the nanoribbon is charged by ion channel currents. The integration of top-down nanoribbons with electrophysiology holds promise for integration of electrically active living systems with artificial electronics.
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- 2018
24. Learn to Meditate: An Innovative Program Teaching Mind-body Strategies to People with Parkinson’s Disease (P9-3.015)
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Mulukutla, Sarah, primary, Zawaly, Kristina, additional, Reed, Mark, additional, Ooi, Hwai, additional, and Sarva, Harini, additional
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- 2024
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25. Enabling High Performance Cloud Computing for the Community Multiscale Air Quality Model (CMAQ) version 5.3.3: Performance Evaluation and Benefits for the User Community
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Efstathiou, Christos I., primary, Adams, Elizabeth, additional, Coats, Carlie J., additional, Zelt, Robert, additional, Reed, Mark, additional, McGee, John, additional, Foley, Kristen M., additional, Sidi, Fahim I., additional, Wong, David C., additional, Fine, Steven, additional, and Arunachalam, Saravanan, additional
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- 2024
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26. Is this what success looks like? Mismatches between the aims, claims, and evidence used to demonstrate impact from knowledge exchange processes at the interface of environmental science and policy
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Karcher, Denis B., Cvitanovic, Christopher, Colvin, Rebecca M., van Putten, Ingrid E., and Reed, Mark S.
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- 2021
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27. Framing of sustainable agricultural practices by the farming press and its effect on adoption
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Rust, Niki A., Jarvis, Rebecca M., Reed, Mark S., and Cooper, Julia
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- 2021
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28. Linking ecosystem changes to their social outcomes: Lost in translation
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Martin-Ortega, Julia, Young, Dylan M., Glenk, Klaus, Baird, Andy J., Jones, Laurence, Rowe, Edwin C., Evans, Chris D., Dallimer, Martin, and Reed, Mark S.
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- 2021
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29. CMOS-compatible silicon nanowire field-effect transistors: Where nanotechnology pushes the limits in biosensing
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Nami, Mohsen, primary and Reed, Mark, additional
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- 2022
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30. Contributors
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Aslanoglou, Stella, primary, Belcher, Simon, additional, Boukherroub, Rabah, additional, Bussi, Yonit, additional, Caprettini, Valeria, additional, Chiappini, Ciro, additional, Coffer, Jeffery L., additional, Coffinier, Y., additional, Elnathan, Roey, additional, Huang, Yimin, additional, Le, Nguyen T., additional, Lestrell, Esther, additional, Lin, Hsin-I, additional, Nami, Mohsen, additional, Parekh, Kavita, additional, Reed, Mark, additional, Segal, Ester, additional, Shokouhi, Ali-Reza, additional, Thissen, Helmut, additional, Tian, Bozhi, additional, Voelcker, Nicolas H., additional, Wu, Ji, additional, Yang, Chen, additional, Yen, Ta-Jen, additional, Yoh, HaoZhe, additional, Zhang, Weixia, additional, and Zheng, Gengfeng, additional
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- 2022
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31. Associations Between Cigarette Print Advertising and Smoking Initiation Among African Americans
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Trinidad, Dennis R, Blanco, Lyzette, Emery, Sherry L, Fagan, Pebbles, White, Martha M, and Reed, Mark B
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Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Prevention ,Tobacco Smoke and Health ,Substance Misuse ,Tobacco ,Cancer ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adolescent Behavior ,Adult ,Advertising ,Black or African American ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Smoking ,Tobacco Products ,Young Adult ,Race/ethnicity ,African Americans ,Public Health and Health Services ,Public health - Abstract
ObjectivesThe objective of this study was to examine changes in the annual number of cigarette advertisements in magazines with a predominantly African-American audience following the broadcast ban on tobacco, and whether fluctuations in cigarette print advertising targeting African Americans during the late-1970s until the mid-1980s were associated with declines in smoking initiation.DesignWe tabulated the annual number of cigarette advertisements from magazines with large African-American readerships (Ebony, Essence, and Jet) from 1960 to 1990. Advertisements were coded depending on whether they featured African-American models. We calculated the incidence rate of regular smoking initiation from 1975 to 1990 for African-American 14-25 years old using data from the 1992-1993, 1995-1996, 1998-1999, and 2001-2002 Tobacco Use Supplements of the Current Population Survey. We examined whether trends in smoking initiation coincided with trends in cigarette advertising practices among African Americans.ResultsThe annual aggregated number of printed cigarette advertisements in Ebony, Essence, and Jet magazines increased at least five-fold starting in 1971, following the broadcast ban on cigarette advertising. A decrease in the percentage of ads by Brown & Williamson that showed African-American models was positively correlated (r = 0.30) with declines in the incidence rate of smoking initiation among African Americans from the late-1970s to the mid-1980s.ConclusionThe tobacco industry adapted quickly following the broadcast ban on cigarettes by increasing print advertising in African-American magazines. However, changes in print advertising practices by were associated with declines in smoking initiation among African Americans from the late-1970s to mid-1980s.
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- 2017
32. On the turbulence modelling of bubble plumes
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Pan, Qingqing, Johansen, Stein Tore, Olsen, Jan Erik, Reed, Mark, and Sætran, Lars Roar
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- 2021
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33. EXIT Chart Analysis of Turbo Compressed Sensing Using Message Passing De-Quantization
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Movahed, Amin, Reed, Mark C., and Tajbakhsh, Shahriar Etemadi
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Computer Science - Information Theory - Abstract
We propose an iterative decoding method, which we call turbo-CS, for the reception of concatenated source-channel encoded sparse signals transmitted over an AWGN channel. The turbo-CS encoder applies 1-bit compressed sensing as a source encoder concatenated serially with a convolutional channel encoder. At the turbo-CS decoder, an iterative joint source-channel decoding method is proposed for signal reconstruction. We analyze, for the first time, the convergence of turbo-CS decoder by determining an EXIT chart of the constituent decoders. We modify the soft-outputs of the decoder to improve the signal reconstruction performance of turbo-CS decoder. For a fixed signal reconstruction performance RSNR of 10 dB, we achieve more than 5 dB of improvement in the channel SNR after 6 iterations of the turbo-CS. Alternatively, for a fixed SNR of -1 dB, we achieve a 10 dB improvement in RSNR.
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- 2015
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34. Transforming knowledge systems for life on Earth: Visions of future systems and how to get there
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Fazey, Ioan, Schäpke, Niko, Caniglia, Guido, Hodgson, Anthony, Kendrick, Ian, Lyon, Christopher, Page, Glenn, Patterson, James, Riedy, Chris, Strasser, Tim, Verveen, Stephan, Adams, David, Goldstein, Bruce, Klaes, Matthias, Leicester, Graham, Linyard, Alison, McCurdy, Adrienne, Ryan, Paul, Sharpe, Bill, Silvestri, Giorgia, Abdurrahim, Ali Yansyah, Abson, David, Adetunji, Olufemi Samson, Aldunce, Paulina, Alvarez-Pereira, Carlos, Amparo, Jennifer Marie, Amundsen, Helene, Anderson, Lakin, Andersson, Lotta, Asquith, Michael, Augenstein, Karoline, Barrie, Jack, Bent, David, Bentz, Julia, Bergsten, Arvid, Berzonsky, Carol, Bina, Olivia, Blackstock, Kirsty, Boehnert, Joanna, Bradbury, Hilary, Brand, Christine, Böhme (born Sangmeister), Jessica, Bøjer, Marianne Mille, Carmen, Esther, Charli-Joseph, Lakshmi, Choudhury, Sarah, Chunhachoti-ananta, Supot, Cockburn, Jessica, Colvin, John, Connon, Irena L.C., Cornforth, Rosalind, Cox, Robin S., Cradock-Henry, Nicholas, Cramer, Laura, Cremaschi, Almendra, Dannevig, Halvor, Day, Catherine T., de Lima Hutchison, Cathel, de Vrieze, Anke, Desai, Vikas, Dolley, Jonathan, Duckett, Dominic, Durrant, Rachael Amy, Egermann, Markus, Elsner (Adams), Emily, Fremantle, Chris, Fullwood-Thomas, Jessica, Galafassi, Diego, Gobby, Jen, Golland, Ami, González-Padrón, Shiara Kirana, Gram-Hanssen, Irmelin, Grandin, Jakob, Grenni, Sara, Lauren Gunnell, Jade, Gusmao, Felipe, Hamann, Maike, Harding, Brian, Harper, Gavin, Hesselgren, Mia, Hestad, Dina, Heykoop, Cheryl Anne, Holmén, Johan, Holstead, Kirsty, Hoolohan, Claire, Horcea-Milcu, Andra-Ioana, Horlings, Lummina Geertruida, Howden, Stuart Mark, Howell, Rachel Angharad, Huque, Sarah Insia, Inturias Canedo, Mirna Liz, Iro, Chidinma Yvonne, Ives, Christopher D., John, Beatrice, Joshi, Rajiv, Juarez-Bourke, Sadhbh, Juma, Dauglas Wafula, Karlsen, Bea Cecilie, Kliem, Lea, Kläy, Andreas, Kuenkel, Petra, Kunze, Iris, Lam, David Patrick Michael, Lang, Daniel J., Larkin, Alice, Light, Ann, Luederitz, Christopher, Luthe, Tobias, Maguire, Cathy, Mahecha-Groot, Ana-Maria, Malcolm, Jackie, Marshall, Fiona, Maru, Yiheyis, McLachlan, Carly, Mmbando, Peter, Mohapatra, Subhakanta, Moore, Michele-Lee, Moriggi, Angela, Morley-Fletcher, Mark, Moser, Susanne, Mueller, Konstanze Marion, Mukute, Mutizwa, Mühlemeier, Susan, Naess, Lars Otto, Nieto-Romero, Marta, Novo, Paula, O’Brien, Karen, O'Connell, Deborah Anne, O'Donnell, Kathleen, Olsson, Per, Pearson, Kelli Rose, Pereira, Laura, Petridis, Panos, Peukert, Daniela, Phear, Nicky, Pisters, Siri Renée, Polsky, Matt, Pound, Diana, Preiser, Rika, Rahman, Md. Sajidur, Reed, Mark S., Revell, Philip, Rodriguez, Iokiñe, Rogers, Briony Cathryn, Rohr, Jascha, Nordbø Rosenberg, Milda, Ross, Helen, Russell, Shona, Ryan, Melanie, Saha, Probal, Schleicher, Katharina, Schneider, Flurina, Scoville-Simonds, Morgan, Searle, Beverley, Sebhatu, Samuel Petros, Sesana, Elena, Silverman, Howard, Singh, Chandni, Sterling, Eleanor, Stewart, Sarah-Jane, Tàbara, J. David, Taylor, Douglas, Thornton, Philip, Tribaldos, Theresa Margarete, Tschakert, Petra, Uribe-Calvo, Natalia, Waddell, Steve, Waddock, Sandra, van der Merwe, Liza, van Mierlo, Barbara, van Zwanenberg, Patrick, Velarde, Sandra Judith, Washbourne, Carla-Leanne, Waylen, Kerry, Weiser, Annika, Wight, Ian, Williams, Stephen, Woods, Mel, Wolstenholme, Ruth, Wright, Ness, Wunder, Stefanie, Wyllie, Alastair, and Young, Hannah R.
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- 2020
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35. Depression mediates the relationship between adverse childhood experiences and risky drinking among Hispanic young adults.
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Chavez, Sarah J., Reed, Mark B., Smith, Laramie R., Zúñiga, Maria L., Pitpitan, Eileen V., Trim, Ryan S., and Baweja, Harsimran S.
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- *
YOUNG adults , *ADVERSE childhood experiences , *HISPANIC American youth , *DRINKING behavior , *MEXICAN Americans , *MENTAL depression - Abstract
Background and Objectives: Hispanic young adults in the United States have consistently high rates of risky drinking, adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), depression, and anxiety. There is a positive association between ACEs and alcohol use among Hispanic populations; it is unknown if mental health symptomatology mediates this relationship. The purpose of this study was to test whether depression and anxiety mediated the relationship between ACEs and risky drinking among Hispanic young adults who engage in risky drinking. Methods: Data from 264 Hispanic young adults, ages 19 to 30, were collected via an online questionnaire. Participants were recruited via social media, emails/listservs across colleges, the community, and web‐panels. The questionnaire assessed ACEs, risky drinking, depression, and anxiety. We conducted a mediational analysis to test whether depression and anxiety mediated the relationship between ACEs and risky drinking. Results: Of the sample, 59.8% identified as female and 40.2% as male. The average age was 24.37 (SD = 3.069). Participants (61%) identified as Mexican, Mexican American, or Chicano, and 84.1% identified as second‐generation. ACEs were positively associated with risky drinking, depression, and anxiety. Depression mediated the relationship between ACEs and risky drinking. Conclusion and Scientific Significance: Depression explained the association between ACEs and risky drinking among Hispanic young adults, adding to our understanding of how mediators can illustrate pathways that lead from ACEs to risky drinking. Practitioners and interventionists should continue supporting Hispanic youth by integrating them into early prevention programs to mitigate the mental health consequences of ACEs that could lead to risky drinking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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36. Courtroom decorum and the rules of conduct: accounts of homicide co-victims' experiences during criminal justice proceedings.
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Reed, Mark D.
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CONDUCT of court proceedings ,CRIMINAL procedure ,HOMICIDE ,CRIME victims ,DRESS codes ,METROPOLITAN areas - Abstract
The right to be present for criminal justice proceedings is one of the key rights afforded crime victims and their families. A neglected but important area of investigation pertains to the adherence to rules of conduct in order to safeguard court decorum. This qualitative study explores what rules of conduct are commonly experienced by and, in some cases, enforced against homicide co-victims while attending such proceedings. The sample consists of 27 co-victims connected to 23 separate cases where the homicides occurred in a major metropolitan area in the southeastern United States. Drawing upon focus group data, NVivo 12 was employed to identify and illustrate themes associated with rules of conduct. About one-half of the co-victims reported facing dilemmas or restrictions when particular rules were not followed or upheld by themselves or the defendants' families. Though infrequent, some co-victims were warned or removed from court for wearing inappropriate attire or failing to control one's emotions. For some rules, co-victims felt that they were treated differently from the defendant and defendant's family. The study concludes by discussing ways that courts can better balance the needs of homicide co-victims with the rights of the accused in maintaining etiquette in the courtroom. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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37. Extending Voronoi-diagram based modeling of oil slick spreading to surface tension-viscous spreading regime
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Durgut, Ismail, Erdoğan, Metehan, and Reed, Mark
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- 2020
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38. Is Inhaled Furosemide a Potential Therapeutic for COVID-19?
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Brennecke, Anja, Villar, Laura, Wang, Zhiyu, Doyle, Lisa M., Meek, Autumn, Reed, Mark, Barden, Christopher, and Weaver, Donald F.
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- 2020
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39. Ti-in-quartz: Evaluating the role of kinetics in high temperature crystal growth experiments
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Acosta, Marisa D., Watkins, James M., Reed, Mark H., Donovan, John J., and DePaolo, Donald J.
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- 2020
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40. DNA Nanotechnology for Nucleic Acid Analysis: Sensing of Nucleic Acids with DNA Junction-Probes
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Foguel, Marcos V., primary, Zamora, Victor, additional, Ojeda, Julio, additional, Reed, Mark, additional, Bennett, Alexander, additional, Calvo-Marzal, Percy, additional, Gerasimova, Yulia, additional, Kolpashchikov, Dmitry M, additional, and Chumbimuni-Torres, Karin, additional
- Published
- 2024
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41. Chemical reactions of seawater-originated hydrothermal solutions during upflow in the Fushime geothermal system , Kyushu, Japan
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Akaku, Kohei, primary and Reed, Mark H., additional
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- 2021
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42. Rethinking Appropriateness of Actions in Environmental Decisions: Connecting Interest and Identity Negotiation with Plural Valuation
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Raymond, Christopher M., primary, Hirsch, Paul, additional, Norton, Bryan, additional, Scott, Andrew, additional, and Reed, Mark S., additional
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- 2023
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43. Alzheimer’s Disease as an Innate Autoimmune Disease Regulated by Tryptophan and Arginine Metabolism
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Meek, Autumn, primary, Wang, Yanfei, additional, Wu, Fan, additional, Reed, Mark, additional, Barden, Christopher, additional, and Weaver, Donald F, additional
- Published
- 2023
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44. Iterative Detection for Compressive Sensing:Turbo CS
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Movahed, Amin and Reed, Mark C.
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Computer Science - Information Theory - Abstract
We consider compressive sensing as a source coding method for signal transmission. We concatenate a convolutional coding system with 1-bit compressive sensing to obtain a serial concatenated system model for sparse signal transmission over an AWGN channel. The proposed source/channel decoder, which we refer to as turbo CS, is robust against channel noise and its signal reconstruction performance at the receiver increases considerably through iterations. We show 12 dB improvement with six turbo CS iterations compared to a non-iterative concatenated source/channel decoder., Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, IEEE ICC 2014
- Published
- 2014
45. A Gd@C82 single-molecule electret
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Zhang, Kangkang, Wang, Cong, Zhang, Minhao, Bai, Zhanbin, Xie, Fang-Fang, Tan, Yuan-Zhi, Guo, Yilv, Hu, Kuo-Juei, Cao, Lu, Zhang, Shuai, Tu, Xuecou, Pan, Danfeng, Kang, Lin, Chen, Jian, Wu, Peiheng, Wang, Xuefeng, Wang, Jinlan, Liu, Junming, Song, You, Wang, Guanghou, Song, Fengqi, Ji, Wei, Xie, Su-Yuan, Shi, Su-Fei, Reed, Mark A., and Wang, Baigeng
- Published
- 2020
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46. Coverage and Throughput Analysis with a Non-Uniform Small Cell Deployment
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Wang, He, Zhou, Xiangyun, and Reed, Mark C.
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Computer Science - Information Theory ,Computer Science - Networking and Internet Architecture - Abstract
Small cell network (SCN) offers, for the first time, a low-cost and scalable mechanism to meet the forecast data-traffic demand. In this paper, we propose a non-uniform SCN deployment scheme. The small cell base stations (BSs) in this scheme will not be utilized in the region within a prescribed distance away from any macrocell BSs, defined as the inner region. Based upon the analytical framework provided in this work, the downlink coverage and single user throughput are precisely characterized. Provided that the inner region size is appropriately chosen, we find that the proposed non-uniform SCN deployment scheme can maintain the same level of cellular coverage performance even with 50% less small cell BSs used than the uniform SCN deployment, which is commonly considered in the literature. Furthermore, both the coverage and the single user throughput performance will significantly benefit from the proposed scheme, if its average small cell density is kept identical to the uniform SCN deployment. This work demonstrates the benefits obtained from a simple non-uniform SCN deployment, thus highlighting the importance of deploying small cells selectively., Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, to be published in IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications
- Published
- 2013
47. Analytical Evaluation of Coverage-Oriented Femtocell Network Deployment
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Wang, He, Zhou, Xiangyun, and Reed, Mark C.
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Computer Science - Information Theory ,Computer Science - Networking and Internet Architecture - Abstract
This paper proposes a coverage-oriented femtocell network deployment scheme, in which the femtocell base stations (BSs) can decide whether to be active or inactive depending on their distances from the macrocell BSs. Specifically, as the areas close to the macrocell BSs already have satisfactory cellular coverage, the femtocell BSs located inside such areas are kept to be inactive. Thus, all the active femtocells are located in the poor macrocell coverage areas. Based on a stochastic geometric framework, the coverage probability can be analyzed with tractable results. Surprisingly, the results show that the proposed scheme, although with a lower defacto femtocell density, can achieve better coverage performance than that keeping all femtocells in the entire network to be active. The analytical results further identify the achievable optimal performance of the new scheme, which provides mobile operators a guideline for femtocell deployment and operation., Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures, published in IEEE International Conference on Communications (ICC'13)
- Published
- 2013
48. Physical Layer Security in Cellular Networks: A Stochastic Geometry Approach
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Wang, He, Zhou, Xiangyun, and Reed, Mark C.
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Computer Science - Information Theory - Abstract
This paper studies the information-theoretic secrecy performance in large-scale cellular networks based on a stochastic geometry framework. The locations of both base stations and mobile users are modeled as independent two-dimensional Poisson point processes. We consider two important features of cellular networks, namely, information exchange between base stations and cell association, to characterize their impact on the achievable secrecy rate of an arbitrary downlink transmission with a certain portion of the mobile users acting as potential eavesdroppers. In particular, tractable results are presented under diverse assumptions on the availability of eavesdroppers' location information at the serving base station, which captures the benefit from the exchange of the location information between base stations., Comment: To appear in IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications
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- 2013
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49. Pathways to Policy Impact: A New Approach for Planning and Evidencing Research Impact
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Reed, Mark S., Bryce, Rosalind, and Machen, Ruth
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Background: The use of research in policy settings is complex, unpredictable and influenced by a range of poorly understood social factors. This makes it difficult to plan for, facilitate and evaluate policy impacts arising from research. Aims and Objectives: 1. Propose and test tools for planning for and facilitating research impact, based on a new logic model combined with a novel approach to public/stakeholder analysis. 2. Propose and test methods for establishing causal links between research and policy impacts. 3. Use case study findings to provide new empirical insights into the social processes that mediate the generation of impact from research. Methods: Social Network Analysis, qualitative analysis of semi-structured interviews, and analysis of secondary data were used in a case study of peatland climate change research in Scottish Government policy. Findings: Boundary organisations and centrally-positioned, well-trusted individuals, were crucial to the development of a trusted body of research in which policymakers were sufficiently confident as the basis for policy. Discussion and conclusions: The non-linear social dynamics that characterise science-policy networks can be understood and evaluated. By using the tools described in this paper, researchers and other stakeholders can better plan, facilitate and evaluate research impact.
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- 2018
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50. Stakeholder engagement in the study and management of invasive alien species
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Shackleton, Ross T., Adriaens, Tim, Brundu, Giuseppe, Dehnen-Schmutz, Katharina, Estévez, Rodrigo A., Fried, Jana, Larson, Brendon M.H., Liu, Shuang, Marchante, Elizabete, Marchante, Hélia, Moshobane, Moleseng C., Novoa, Ana, Reed, Mark, and Richardson, David M.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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