19,432 research outputs found

    sj-docx-1-han-10.1177_15589447241231311 – Supplemental material for Predictors of True Scaphoid Fractures in Children

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    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-han-10.1177_15589447241231311 for Predictors of True Scaphoid Fractures in Children by Daniel Milad, Aneesh Karir, Kevin Smit, Sasha Carsen and Kevin Cheung in HAND</p

    TonEBP and SMIT expression in human placenta

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    Tonicity-responsive enhancer binding protein (TonEBP) is a signal transcription factor of transporters such as sodium-myo-inositol cotransporter (SMIT), aldose reductase. TonEBP has a variety of functions such as control of intracellular osmolytes and immunomodulating. It is known that TonEBP is abundant in the placenta, but location and function aren???t known. The aim of this study is to describe the localization of TonEBP in the placenta. We assayed the immunohistochemistry of TonEBP and performed in situ hybridization of SMIT in normal human full term placenta. In normal human full term placenta, TonEBP was in villous trophoblasts, extravillous trophoblasts and some endothelial cells. The result of the in situ hybridization of SMIT was similar to that of immunohistochemistry of TonEBP. Neither TonEBP nor SMIT was present in TonEBP knockout mouse placenta. This shows TonEBP is a key factor in SMIT transcription. TonEBP may play an important role in transporting of inositol to fetus in placenta.clos

    Dataset to support the article &quot;High-resolution &#x1D719;-OFDR using phase unwrap and nonlinearity suppression&quot;

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    This dataset is used for realizing high resolution of phase-sensitive Optical Frequency Domain Reflectometer. It is associated with the research paper: Guo Z, Yan J, Han G, Yu Y, Greenwood D and Marco J (2023) &quot;High-Resolution &phi;-OFDR Using Phase Unwrap and Nonlinearity Suppression&quot;. Journal of Lightwave Technology, 41 (9), 2885-2891. (https://doi.org/10.1109/JLT.2023.3236775). The data is presented as an excel file: High_resolution_OFDR_using_phase_unwrap_and_nonlinearity_suppression.xlsx This work was funded by High Value Manufacturing Catapult and the Engineer and Physical Sciences Research Council - EPSRC EP/V000624/1. The author Gaoce Han would like to acknowledge the China Scholarship Council for sponsoring.</span

    Han Suyin (Chinese author) speaking at Dallas Brookes Hall.

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    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/276390Han Suyin (Chinese author) speaking at Dallas Brookes Hall.200056 Item: [1999.0081.00439] "Han Suyin (Chinese author) speaking at Dallas Brookes Hall.

    A Study on the mathematics textbooks in the era of the Great Han Empire

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    이 글은 갑오경장(1894)과 경술 국치(1910) 사이에 간행된 산학(수학) 교재류의 목록을 확인하고, 각 텍스트의 출판과 관련된 사항, 소장처, 이본 등의 서지적 정보와 함께 이 시기 산학 교재류의 국어사 자료로서의 의의를 언어 사용 상의 측면에 초점을 두어 정리하는 것을 목적으로 한다. 이는 현대 한국어 태동기의 분과 학문의 도입 양상에 대한 연구의 일환인 한편, 학술 용어의 번역과 정착을 중심으로 이 시기의 한국어의 어휘 확장 양상을 확인하는 데에 필요한 기초 자료를 정리하는 작업의 한 부분이다. 본 연구에 앞선 산학(수학) 교재류에 대한 연구로는 산학 교재류의 서지 사항에 대해 기술한 강윤호(1973:187-199), 김봉희(1992:247-253), 한길준(2009), 오채환 외(2010) 등이 있고, 한국 수학사를 기술하면서 교재류를 함께 다룬 것으로 김용운·김용국(1982)와 이상구(2013)이 있다.This paper aims to make a whole list of the mathematics textbooks in the era of the Great Han Empire and summerize bibliographical data and linguistic characteristics in view of Korean history. In chapter 1, the author reviewed former studies which deals with the mathematics textbooks in the era of the Great Han Empire. In chapter 2, the author summerized bibliographical data of 45 volumes of 32 kinds textbooks. In chapter 3, the author described linguistic characteristics of the textbooks, especially focusing on writing systems, the use of Arabic numerals, horizontal writing, and presence of index or glossary

    Also By The Same Author: AKTiveAuthor, a Citation Graph Approach to Name Disambiguation

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    The desire for definitive data and the semantic web drive for inference over heterogeneous data sources requires co-reference resolution to be performed on those data. In particular, name disambiguation is required to allow accurate publication lists, citation counts and impact measures to be determined. This paper describes a graph-based approach to author disambiguation on large-scale citation networks. Using self-citation, co-authorship and document source analyses, AKTiveAuthor clusters papers, achieving precision of 0.997 and recall of 0.818 over a test group of eight surname clusters

    Dataset to support the article &quot;High Sensing Accuracy Realisation with Millimetre/sub-Millimetre Resolution in Optical Frequency Domain Reflectometer&quot;

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    This dataset is used for realizing high sensing accuracy and sub-millimetre resolution of Optical Frequency Domain Reflectometer. It is associated with the research paper &quot;High Sensing Accuracy Realisation with Millimetre sub-Millimetre Resolution in Optical Frequency Domain Reflectometer&quot; in Journal: Journal of Lightwave Technology. This work was funded by High Value Manufacturing Catapult, grant reference, 160080 CORE (WMG), titled &lsquo;Smart Sensing for Future Batteries&rsquo; and the EPSRC (Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council), grant reference EP/R004927/1, titled &lsquo;Prosperity Partnership&rsquo;. The author Gaoce Han would like to acknowledge the China Scholarship Council for sponsoring.</span

    Howison et al 2017 Bioturbation Biocompaction

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    TITLE: Biotically driven vegetation mosaics in grazing ecosystems: the battle between bioturbation and biocompaction AUTHORS: Ruth A. Howison, Han Olff, Johan van de Koppel, and Christian Smit Corresponding author: Ruth A. Howison ([email protected]) BifurcationModel.zip Bifurcation model resulting in figures 2 and 3, designed and written by Johan van de Koppel and Ruth Howison, using R. R Core Team (2015). R: A language and environment for statistical computing. R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria. URL https://www.R-project.org/. Phase planes depicting the bifurcation analysis of simple plant-herbivore models, showing the more classical A) Herbivore-plant quality feedback, and B) Water-infiltration feedback. Phase planes depicting the bifurcation analysis of plant-herbivore models with bioturbation, showing that the interplay between bioturbation and biocompaction strongly expands the conditions under which heterogeneity can persist in grazing ecosystems, with A) only bioturbation feedback and B) the consequence of combining bioturbation and biocompaction feedbacks." GIS_Rainfall_Texture_Analysis.zip Analysis by Ruth Howison and Han Olff, using ESRI ArcMap 10.3 for Desktop Global prediction of the regions where patchiness generated by bioturbation and biocompaction is possible, eliminating for unsuitable conditions, specifically certain soil characteristics and rainfall. Incompatible soils include; permafrost, sand (> 70% sand fraction and 20% organic material dry mass), and rainfall 1200 mm/yr and representing limits to forage quantity and quality required to maintain large herbivores. Data sources used: harmonized world soil database (HWSD) version 1.21, 2) Rainfall parameters were delineated using the global precipitation surface available from BioClim.org (Hijmans et al. 2005

    A new species of the genus Psilota Meigen, 1822 (Diptera: Syrphidae) from China

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    Zhao, Le, Liu, Xin, Smit, John T., Li, Gang, Liu, Han-Yue, Dang, Li-Hong, Huo, Ke-Ke (2022): A new species of the genus Psilota Meigen, 1822 (Diptera: Syrphidae) from China. Zootaxa 5154 (2): 225-238, DOI: https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5154.2.

    Scale-dependent effects of grazing and topographic heterogeneity on plant species richness in a Dutch salt marsh ecosystem

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    QuestionFor over three decades, low-intensity grazing has been used to maintain or increase plant species richness in European natural areas, but the effects are highly variable. Thus far, good predictors of whether grazing will have positive effects on plant species richness are limited. How does the interplay between low-intensity grazing and topographic heterogeneity affect plant species richness at different spatial scales? LocationLong-term grazed and ungrazed salt marshes of the Dutch Wadden Sea island of Schiermonnikoog. MethodsWe selected ten plots of 2200m(2) in grazed and ungrazed areas of our study sites, and recorded and compared plant species richness in 0.1, 1, 10, 100 and 1000m(2) subplots. Topographic heterogeneity was quantified at the plot scale using the standard deviation of the elevation derived from a high-resolution (5mx5m) digital elevation model. We calculated species-area relationships to analyse our data. ResultsWe found that large-scale topographic heterogeneity (based on the whole plot of 2200m(2)) positively affects plant species richness at all scales (even at the smallest 0.1-m(2) scale), and that grazing has a positive additive effect at the small scales (0.1 and 10m(2)). While grazing also had a positive effect on species richness at larger scales (1000m(2)), the strength of the effect was dependent on the topographic heterogeneity at that scale. The effectiveness of grazing for increased plant species richness was highest at low topographic heterogeneity, and lowest at intermediate topographic heterogeneity. Effects of intermediate heterogeneity were probably counterbalanced by the effects of grazing. ConclusionsOur results suggest that the variation in elevation is an important predictor of whether low-intensity grazing has positive effects on plant species richness or not. Grazing appears most beneficial at low topographic heterogeneity, but whether these findings hold for other grazed ecosystems will depend on several factors, most importantly, the relationship between topographic and abiotic heterogeneity. Results of our study are highly relevant for the application of low-intensity grazing as tool for conservation management in salt marshes and other natural areas
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