33,729 research outputs found
Supplement_files – Supplemental material for Cytotoxin-associated gene A increases carcinogenicity of helicobacter pylori in colorectal adenoma
Supplemental material, Supplement_files for Cytotoxin-associated gene A increases carcinogenicity of helicobacter pylori in colorectal adenoma by Heng Zhang, Yusheng Liao, Hongfeng Zhang, Jie Wu, Dan Zheng and Zhitao Chen in The International Journal of Biological Markers</p
†Chuchinolepididae Zhang 1978
Family †Chuchinolepididae Zhang 1978, spelling in prevailing recent practice †Chuchinolepidae Zhang 1978a: 296 (family) † Chuchinolepis Zhang 1978 [family name also seen as †Chuchinolepididae; author also seen as Chang] †Qujinolepidae Zhang 1978b: 173 (family) † Qujinolepis Zhang 1978 [family name sometimes seen as † Qujinolepididae] †Procondylolepidae Zhang 1984: 82 (family) † Procondylolepis Zhang 1984Published as part of Laan, Richard Van Der, 2018, Family-group names of fossil fishes, pp. 1-167 in European Journal of Taxonomy 466 on page 27, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2018.466, http://zenodo.org/record/555755
An enhanced author name dataset for PubMed/MEDLINE
<p>The incompleteness of author names is a well-known issue in the MEDLINE database. It was since 2002, the full author name has been systematically indexed in MEDLINE. Although many full author names have been added to MEDLINE, we still found a significant number of abbreviated names in papers published after 2002.</p>
<p>Here we built an enhanced author name dataset for MEDLINE, called EAN, achieved by linking the whole PubMed to other large literature databases and conducting a large-scale name comparison and restoration with obtained multi-sources author names. Our evaluation shows that more than 90% of author names in EAN are complete as compared to the ratio of ~60% in MEDLINE.</p>
An enhanced author name dataset for PubMed/MEDLINE
<p>The incompleteness of author names is a well-known issue in the MEDLINE database. It was since 2002, the full author name has been systematically indexed in MEDLINE. Although many full author names have been added to MEDLINE, we still found a significant number of abbreviated names in papers published after 2002.</p>
<p>Here we built an enhanced author name dataset for MEDLINE, called EAN, achieved by linking the whole PubMed to other large literature databases and conducting a large-scale name comparison and restoration with obtained multi-sources author names. Our evaluation shows that more than 90% of author names in EAN are complete as compared to the ratio of ~60% in MEDLINE.</p>
Astragalus wui M. Idrees & Z. Y. Zhang 2021, nom. nov.
Astragalus wui M. Idrees & Z.Y. Zhang, nom. nov. Replaced name:— Astragalus sylvaticus Y.H. Wu (2015: 718), nom. illeg., non A. sylvaticus (Pall.) Willd. (1802: 1300). Type:— CHINA. Xinjiang: Yecheng Country, Sukepiya, in border forest, alt. 3000 m, 15 Aug. 1987, Exped. Qinghai-Tibet Wu Yuhu 1067 (holotype: QTPMB, not seen). Etymology:—The specific epithet honours Prof. Dr. Wu Yuhu (Northwest Institute of Plateau Biology, Chinese Academy of Science, Xining, China), author of the replaced name, who first described this new species.Published as part of Idrees, Muhammad & Zhang, Zhiyong, 2021, Astragalus wui, a new replacement name for A. sylvaticus Y. H. Wu (Galegeae, Papilionoideae, Fabaceae), pp. 210-211 in Phytotaxa 524 (3) on page 210, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.524.3.6, http://zenodo.org/record/564936
Professor Zhang Weihua's Clinical Experience in the Application of Yongquan Acupoint
Summarizing Professor Zhang Weihua's understanding of the bidirectional regulation function of Yongquan Point and his clinical application experience, the author believes that Yongquan is a meeting place of Yin and Yang qi, and both Yin and Yang qi are rooted here, which can be used to balance Yin and Yang, and proposes that Yongquan is the key point of bidirectional regulation, which has the functions of bidirectional regulation, bidirectional lifting, bidirectional replenishing. At the same time, Professor Zhang believes that Yongquan point should be combined with the corresponding stimulation method in the treatment of different diseases, which provides a new idea for the clinical treatment of some difficult diseases
In Memoriam: Prof. Jingdong Zhang
Celebrating the electrochemistry legacy: Prof. Zhang was a member of the Editorial Board of ChemElectroChem as well as a valued author and reviewer. Together with her friends and colleagues Christian Engelbrekt, Xinxin Xiao and Jens Ulstrup (Technical University of Denmark) as well as Bingwei Mao (Xiamen University, China), we hope to commemorate Prof Zhang′s contributions to the electrochemical sciences by this Special ChemElectroChem Collection on the theme of “Electrochemical Materials and Interfaces”
From expectation-3-maximization to bayesian expectation-3-maximization: A latent mixture modeling-based bayesian algorithm for the 4-parameter logistic model
There is renewed interest in the four-parameter logistic model (4PLM), but the lack of a user-friendly calibration method constitutes a major barrier to its widespread application. In the present study, this researcher reformulated the 4PLM from a latent mixture modeling view and developed the Expectation-Maximization-Maximization-Maximization (EMMM) method. Combining the EMMM with the Bayesian approach, allowed the Bayesian Expectation-Maximization-Maximization-Maximization (BEMMM) algorithm to be proposed. First, the author compared the EMMM with BEMMM to confirm that the BEMMM method reduced the number of implausible estimates in EMMM. Next, when comparing the BEMMM with the Markov Chain Monte Carlo method (Culpepper, 2016) and Bayesian Modal Estimation (Waller & Feuerstahler, 2017), the results from a simulation study and a real-world data calibration indicated that the BEMMM and the MCMC are more accurate than the BME, while the BEMMM is much faster than the MCMC.Submission published under a 24 month embargo labeled 'Closed Access', the embargo will last until 2020-05-01The student, Ci Zhang, accepted the attached license on 2018-04-11 at 15:29.The student, Ci Zhang, submitted this Thesis for approval on 2018-04-11 at 15:36.This Thesis was approved for publication on 2018-04-13 at 11:03.DSpace SAF Submission Ingestion Package generated from Vireo submission #12194 on 2018-08-31 at 17:27:19Made available in DSpace on 2018-09-04T20:47:03Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2
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Previous issue date: 2018-04-13Embargo set by: Seth Robbins for item 107382
Lift date: 2020-09-04T20:47:38Z
Reason: Author requested closed access (OA after 2yrs) in Vireo ETD systemEmbargo set by: Seth Robbins for item 107382
Lift date: 2020-09-04T20:50:11Z
Reason: Author requested closed access (OA after 2yrs) in Vireo ETD systemLimited Restriction Lifted for Item 107382 on 2020-09-05T09:15:09Z
Frank Zhang: Hipster Extraordinaire
After the delicate deliberation of the characters of the series Heroes of Olympus by Rick Riordan, it was decided by both writers that Frank Zhang, son of Mars, is the ultimate hipster demigod. The structure of this essay was based on a simple argument, and carefully dissects the full series in order to really convey who Frank Zhang really is. It was additionally concluded by both writers that as complicated and intricate a character as Frank Zhang is, we wanted the audience to be able to not only imagine the illustrations of the character, but to further empathize with the character\u27s emotions. Through the attendance of two separate classes, a review from the professor, and careful editing, the essay comes to a complete conclusion demonstrating our perspective on the author\u27s ultimate purpose
Thereomyia yunnanica Chao & Zhang 1988
Thereomyia yunnanica Chao & Zhang, 1988 a: 279. China, Yunnan, Lijiang, Shigu. Originally included specimen: Described from one male. Name-bearing type: Holotype ♂: Yunnan, Lijiang, Shigu/ 1900 M/ Chinese Academy of Sciences [white label in Chinese, in black print except “Lijiang, Shigu/ 1900 M” handwritten in black ink]// 1981. VII. 30 / Collected by X.Z. Zhang [“ 1981. VII. 30 ” handwritten in black ink, remaining in black print, in Chinese]// HOLOTYPE [red label, in black print]// IOZ(E) 216070 [blue label, in black print]// ♂ [white label, in black print]// Thereomyia / yunnanica Chao et Zhang / Identified by C.M. Chao [“Identified by C.M. Chao” in black print, in Chinese, remaining handwritten in blue-black ink]. Holotype in good condition except left mid leg missing and terminalia extracted. Current identity: Protomiltogramma yunnanica (Chao & Zhang, 1988), as correctly listed by Pape (1996) and as treated by Xue & Chao (1998). Remarks: Chao & Zhang (1988 a) compared this species with P. fasciata (Meigen), but the male terminalia are so different that a confusion is hardly possible (see Rohdendorf, 1935, fig. 65; Povolný & Verves, 1997, fig. 14). Comparisons with habitus photographs and illustrations of terminalia provided for species of Protomiltogramma described recently (Kurahashi & Chaiwong, 2007; Kurahashi & Leh, 2008) also support considering P. yunnanica as a valid species. Chao & Zhang (1988 a) has two original spellings of the species epithet: yunnanica (p. 279, 287) and yunnaniac (p. 279, in figure caption). We consider the latter to be a simple error, which is in agreement with the use of the spelling Protomiltogramma yunnanicum by Xue & Chao (1998: 1555). In more formal terms the latter may be considered as a First Reviser action under Article 24.2. 4 of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN, 1999), where Chao as the original author by using only one of the two original spellings of the species epithet selected Thereomyia yunnanica to be the correct original spelling. Redescription of Male: Body length 9.3 mm (Fig. 15 A). Eye bare, red. Fronto-orbital plate, parafacial and postocular strip black with goldenish yellow pollinosity; parafacial with fine bristles, about as broad as frontoorbital plate. Frontal vitta yellow, 1.4 × as broad as fronto-orbital plate at the narrowest point; frons at vertex 0.37 × head width (Fig. 15 C); frontal row of 13–15 bristles; outer vertical bristle differentiated from postocular bristles, four proclinate orbital bristles. Ocellar bristles fine and directed antero-laterally. Gena ground color black, with black bristles, height 0.05 × eye height in lateral view (Fig. 15 E). Antenna reddish yellow, not reaching the level of vibrissal insertion, first flagellomere 1.85 × as long as pedicel (Fig. 15 C, D); arista bare, with basal half swollen, postocular bristles in 7–9 rows; vibrissa developed. Palpus yellow, not expanded in distal part (Fig. 15 E). Thorax ground color black; scutum pollinosity yellowish gray. Chaetotaxy: acrostichals 0+ 1, dorsocentrals 0+ 3, intra-alars 0+ 1, supra-alars 1, postalars 2, postpronotals 3, notopleurals 2, scutellum with 1 apical (strong), 1 subapical, 1 basal and 2 marginal bristles. Pleuron with meropleurals 6 or 7, katepisternal bristles 1: 1 (2), prosternum, metasternum and proepisternum bare, postalar wall with 3 or 4 fine bristles. Wing hyaline; subcostal sclerite and basicosta yellow, bare; tegula black, with black fine bristles; costal spine not differentiated (Fig. 15 A); vein R 1 bare, two or three ventral and three dorsal setae at node of R 2 + 3 -R 4 + 5, lower calypter yellowish white. Legs black; fore femur with five rows of long bristles along posterodorsal, posterior, and posteroventral surface, fore tibia with one apical dorsal bristle, fore first tarsomere with spines on the ventral base, without any slender bristle (Fig. 15 G); mid femur with one row of anterior bristles and one row of posterior bristles, two apical posterodorsal bristles, mid tibia with one sub-median anterodorsal, one sub-median ventral, one sub-median posterior and two posterodorsal bristles; hind femur with one row of anterodorsal bristles and several rows of ventral bristles, hind tibia with one row of anterodorsal bristles (about 12) and one row of posterodorsal bristles (about 7), four median ventral bristles. Abdomen long oval with lightly yellowish gray pollinosity; tergites 1 + 2 completely black, tergites 3–5 with complete row of marginal bristles (Fig. 15 F). Terminalia: cercus gently curved forward in the apex, surstylus long with a posterior concavity in the distal part, the phallus also with an extension in anterior part (Fig. 15 B).Published as part of Zhang, Dong, Zhang, Ming, Li, Zijuan & Pape, Thomas, 2015, The Sarcophagidae (Insecta: Diptera) described by Chien-ming Chao and Xue-zhong Zhang, pp. 451-509 in Zootaxa 3946 (4) on pages 477-479, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3946.4.1, http://zenodo.org/record/25388
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