1,690 Works

Solar wind in situ data for creating catalogs and statistics of interplanetary coronal mass ejections and high speed streams (Solar Orbiter, Parker Solar Probe, STEREO-A/B, MAVEN, Wind, MESSENGER, VEX, Ulysses) 1995-2022

Christian Moestl, Andreas Weiss, Rachel Bailey, Cyril Simon Wedlund, David Stansby, Martin Reiss & Reka Winslow
These are solar wind in situ data arrays in python pickle format suitable for creating catalogs, plots and movies of interplanetary coronal mass ejections.
See AAREADME_insitu.txt for more explanation.
If you use these data for peer reviewed scientific publications, please get in touch via chris.moestl@outlook.com or twitter @chrisoutofspace concerning usage and possible co-authorship.
Made with https://github.com/cmoestl/heliocats

Supplementary Table 2: number of stone artefacts per litre of sediment per years of occupation represented by the archaeolgical context

Ceri Shipton, Shimona Kealy & Sue O‘Connor
Supplementary Table 2 for
Pleistocene and early Holocene occupation on the eastern Wallacean islands
In the Oxford Handbook of Island and Coastal Archaeology
This dataset is comprised of the archipelago, island, site, archaeological context (layer/phase/spit and horizontal metre square), median Bayesian modelled start and end dates for the context, and the number of stone artefacts in that context. This allows the calculation of stone artefacts per m2 per annum for each archaeological...

Simulink Models for flapping wing systems via slider crank and direct drive

Moonsoo Park & Ali Abolfathi
Those MATLAB files include the mathematical model for a flapping wing aerial vehicle via a direct-drive mechanism and slider crank mechanism. They allow for estimating the powers, forces, and efficiencies of each system.

ACT-Discover: identifying karyotype heterogeneity in pancreatic cancer evolution using ctDNA

Ariana Huebner, James R. M. Black, Francesca Sarno, Roberto Pazo, Ignacio Juez, Laura Medina, Rocio Garcia-Carbonero, Carmen Guillén, Jaime Feliú, Carolina Alonso, Carlota Arenillas, Ana Belén Moreno-Cárdenas, Helena Verdaguer, Teresa Macarulla, Manuel Hidalgo, Nicholas McGranahan & Rodrigo A. Toledo
Abstract Background Liquid biopsies and the dynamic tracking of somatic mutations within circulating tumour DNA (ctDNA) can provide insight into the dynamics of cancer evolution and the intra-tumour heterogeneity that fuels treatment resistance. However, identifying and tracking dynamic changes in somatic copy number alterations (SCNAs), which have been associated with poor outcome and metastasis, using ctDNA is challenging. Pancreatic adenocarcinoma is a disease which has been considered to harbour early punctuated events in its evolution,...

Additional file 1 of ACT-Discover: identifying karyotype heterogeneity in pancreatic cancer evolution using ctDNA

Ariana Huebner, James R. M. Black, Francesca Sarno, Roberto Pazo, Ignacio Juez, Laura Medina, Rocio Garcia-Carbonero, Carmen Guillén, Jaime Feliú, Carolina Alonso, Carlota Arenillas, Ana Belén Moreno-Cárdenas, Helena Verdaguer, Teresa Macarulla, Manuel Hidalgo, Nicholas McGranahan & Rodrigo A. Toledo
Additional file 1. All supplementary figures.

The patterns and driving forces of dengue invasions in China

Zhe Zhao, Yujuan Yue, Xiaobo Liu, Chuanxi Li, Wei Ma & Qiyong Liu
Abstract Background Global connectivity and environmental change pose continuous threats to dengue invasions from worldwide to China. However, the intrinsic relationship on introduction and outbreak risks of dengue driven by the landscape features are still unknown. This study aimed to map the patterns on source-sink relation of dengue cases and assess the driving forces for dengue invasions in China. Methods We identified the local and imported cases (2006–2020) and assembled the datasets on environmental conditions....

The evolution of lung cancer and impact of subclonal selection in TRACERx.

Alexander M Frankell, Michelle Dietzen, Maise Al Bakir, Emilia L Lim, Takahiro Karasaki, Sophia Ward, Selvaraju Veeriah, Emma Colliver, Ariana Huebner, Abigail Bunkum, Mark S Hill, Kristiana Grigoriadis, David A Moore, James RM Black, Wing Kin Liu, Kerstin Thol, Oriol Pich, Thomas BK Watkins, Cristina Naceur-Lombardelli, Daniel E Cook, Roberto Salgado, Gareth A Wilson, Chris Bailey, Mihaela Angelova, Robert Bentham … & Charles Swanton
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-associated mortality worldwide1. Here we analysed 1,644 tumour regions sampled at surgery or during follow-up from the first 421 patients with non-small cell lung cancer prospectively enrolled into the TRACERx study. This project aims to decipher lung cancer evolution and address the primary study endpoint: determining the relationship between intratumour heterogeneity and clinical outcome. In lung adenocarcinoma, mutations in 22 out of 40 common cancer genes were under...

sj-docx-1-jpx-10.1177_23743735231166501 - Supplemental material for Changes in Patient Perceptions of the Provider Most Involved in Care During COVID-19 and Corresponding Effects on Patient Trust

Megan Ren, Hui Zhang, David Meltzer, Vineet M. Arora & Micah Prochaska
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-jpx-10.1177_23743735231166501 for Changes in Patient Perceptions of the Provider Most Involved in Care During COVID-19 and Corresponding Effects on Patient Trust by Megan Ren, Hui Zhang, David Meltzer, Vineet M. Arora and Micah Prochaska in Journal of Patient Experience

Changes in Patient Perceptions of the Provider Most Involved in Care During COVID-19 and Corresponding Effects on Patient Trust

Megan Ren, Hui Zhang, David Meltzer, Vineet M. Arora & Micah Prochaska
During COVID-19 routine clinical operations were disrupted, including limits on the types of providers allowed to perform in-person care and frequency of times they could enter a patient's room. Whether these changes affected patients’ trust in the care they received during hospitalization is unknown. Hospitalized patients on the general medicine service were called after discharge and asked to identify who (attending, resident, etc.) was most involved in their inpatient care, and how much trust they...

File 6. OMZ Compendium SSU rRNA Sequences

Julia Anstett, Alvaro Munoz Plominsky, Edward DeLong, Alyse K. Kiesser, Connor Morgan-Lang, Klaus Jürgens, Ramunas Stepanauskas, Frank J. Stewart, Osvaldo Ulloa, Tanja Woyke, Rex R Malmstrom & Steven Hallam
We have included all of the recovered SSU sequences. Here you will find 4 files, one containing all of the amplicon sequences, one file containing all of the whole genome sequnce derived SSUs from the JGI's workflow, one containing the SSU sequences whole genome sequence derived SSUs from the GORG dataset that were generated from Anvio, as well as a file containing all of the amplicon sequences that span the V4-V5 region from all of...

Asymmetric triplex metallohelices stabilise DNA G-quadruplexes in promoter oncogene sequences and efficiently reduce their expression in cancer cells

Jaroslav Malina, Hana Kostrhunova, Hualong Song, Peter Scott & Viktor Brabec
Some metallo-supramolecular helical assemblies with size, shape, charge and amphipathic architectures similar to short cationic α-helical peptides have been shown to target and stabilise DNA G-quadruplexes (G4s) in vitro and downregulate the expression of G4-regulated genes in human cells. To expand the library of metallohelical structures that can act as efficient DNA G4 binders and downregulate genes containing G4-forming sequences in their promoter regions, we investigated the interaction of the two enantiomeric pairs of asymmetric...

Technical Supplement - \"Arterial pulse wave modelling and analysis for vascular age studies: a review from VascAgeNet\"

Jordi Alastruey, Peter Charlton, Vasiliki Bikia, Birutė Paliakaite, Bernhard Hametner, Rosa Maria Bruno, Marijn P. Mulder, Samuel Vennin, Senol Piskin, Ashraf W. Khir, Andrea Guala, Christopher C. Mayer, JONATHAN MYNARD, Alun Hughes, Patrick Segers & Berend Westerhof
This document provides additional technical details for the article with the same title. It includes a derivation of all the biophysical models and haemodynamics-based analysis techniques covered in the article, starting from the well-known Navier-Stokes equations, and showing how different types of models and analysis techniques are related to each other.

Are Right-Wing Attitudes and Voting Associated with Having Attended Private School? An Investigation Using the 1970 British Cohort Study

Richard D Wiggins, Samantha Parsons, Francis Green, George B Ploubidis & Alice Sullivan
This article addresses the question of whether attending a private school affects voting behaviour and political attitudes in adulthood in Britain. The analysis is based upon the British Cohort Study, a nationally representative cohort of children born in one week in April 1970. The ‘effect’ of attending a private school on the tendency to vote Conservative in four consecutive General Elections, and on the expression of conservative attitudes in mid-life is assessed using path analysis....

Supplementary File 7: Information, Consent and Topic Areas for Online Delphi Round 2 Survey

Cathy Bulley, Jane Burridge, Adine Adonis, Sarah Joiner, Eleanor Curnow, Marietta van der Linden & Tamsyn Street
This file contains the survey content used for the second round of a Delphi Study relating to: “Delphi Consensus Study and Clinical Practice Guideline Development for Functional Electrical Stimulation to support mobility in people with an upper motor neuron lesion.”

'Infecting Minds' Vaccine Hesitancy Project: Resources, Materials and Outputs

Philippa Matthews, Sally Frampton, Elizabeth Burns, David Gimson, Lorna Robinson, Welcome Mbokazi, Luthando Zuma, Noma Majozi, Sean Elias, Kingsley Orievulu & Janet Seeley
This is a collection containing resources generated through the 'Infecting Minds' project.
'Infecting Minds' brings together teams in the UK and South Africa to study vaccine hesitancy, between 2022-2023. We are interested in understanding barriers to vaccination, learning how beliefs and behaviours around vaccines develop, persist and spread in different settings, and taking a view of vaccination that is informed by historical narratives to better inform current and future approaches.
Our team is...

Supplementary File 4: FES Guideline Development Delphi Round 1 Analysis 28/10/2021

Cathy Bulley, Jane Burridge, Adine Adonis, Sarah Joiner, Eleanor Curnow, Marietta van der Linden & Tamsyn Street
This file contains full analysis of all items that failed to reach consensus of over 75% of Expert Panellists indicating that they ‘Agreed’ or ‘Strongly Agreed’ to the statement within the first survey in the Delphi Consensus Study. It includes all free text data written by people who did not ‘Agree’ or ‘Strongly Agree’ to the statement. The free text data were used to refine the statements that did not reach consensus, for use in...

Open Access-ibility: a discussion of standards for openness and accessibility

Kirsty Wallis & Ben Watson
Presentation delivered at ' Accessibility and digital content: are we there yet?' webinar November 9th at 14.00pm GMT until 17.30pm

sj-docx-2-ctj-10.1177_17407745221143449 – Supplemental material for Lack of transparent reporting of trial monitoring approaches in randomised controlled trials: A systematic review of contemporary protocol papers

Shao-Fan Hsieh, Victoria Yorke-Edwards, Macey L Murray, Carlos Diaz-Montana, Sharon B Love & Matthew R Sydes
Supplemental material, sj-docx-2-ctj-10.1177_17407745221143449 for Lack of transparent reporting of trial monitoring approaches in randomised controlled trials: A systematic review of contemporary protocol papers by Shao-Fan Hsieh, Victoria Yorke-Edwards, Macey L Murray, Carlos Diaz-Montana, Sharon B Love and Matthew R Sydes in Clinical Trials

sj-docx-4-ctj-10.1177_17407745221143449 – Supplemental material for Lack of transparent reporting of trial monitoring approaches in randomised controlled trials: A systematic review of contemporary protocol papers

Shao-Fan Hsieh, Victoria Yorke-Edwards, Macey L Murray, Carlos Diaz-Montana, Sharon B Love & Matthew R Sydes
Supplemental material, sj-docx-4-ctj-10.1177_17407745221143449 for Lack of transparent reporting of trial monitoring approaches in randomised controlled trials: A systematic review of contemporary protocol papers by Shao-Fan Hsieh, Victoria Yorke-Edwards, Macey L Murray, Carlos Diaz-Montana, Sharon B Love and Matthew R Sydes in Clinical Trials

sj-pdf-5-ctj-10.1177_17407745221143449 – Supplemental material for Lack of transparent reporting of trial monitoring approaches in randomised controlled trials: A systematic review of contemporary protocol papers

Shao-Fan Hsieh, Victoria Yorke-Edwards, Macey L Murray, Carlos Diaz-Montana, Sharon B Love & Matthew R Sydes
Supplemental material, sj-pdf-5-ctj-10.1177_17407745221143449 for Lack of transparent reporting of trial monitoring approaches in randomised controlled trials: A systematic review of contemporary protocol papers by Shao-Fan Hsieh, Victoria Yorke-Edwards, Macey L Murray, Carlos Diaz-Montana, Sharon B Love and Matthew R Sydes in Clinical Trials

Data for UK evaluation of reproductive autonomy scale

Jenny Hall
Data from a UK cohort study collected in 2018-19. This dataset contains grouped socio-deomgraphics and individual reproductive autonomy scale data on 826 sexually active women (sex with a male partner) used to evaluate the scale for use in the UK. This is the dataset used in the publication (DOI to follow).

Supplemental Material—Understanding and Improving Older People’s Well-Being through Social Prescribing Involving the Cultural Sector: Interviews from a Realist Evaluation

Jordan Gorenberg, Stephanie Tierney, Geoff Wong, Amadea Turk, Sebastien Libert, Caroline Potter, Kathryn Eccles, Shona Forster, Kerryn Husk, Helen J. Chatterjee, Emma Webster, Beth McDougall, Harriet Warburton, Lucy Shaw & Kamal R. Mahtani
Supplemental Material for Understanding and Improving Older People’s Well-Being through Social Prescribing Involving the Cultural Sector: Interviews from a Realist Evaluation by Jordan Gorenberg, Stephanie Tierney, Geoff Wong, Amadea Turk, Sebastien Libert, Caroline Potter, Kathryn Eccles, Shona Forster, Kerryn Husk, Helen J. Chatterjee, Emma Webster, Beth McDougall, Harriet Warburton, Lucy Shaw, and Kamal R. Mahtani in Journal of Applied Gerontology.

Supplemental Material—Understanding and Improving Older People’s Well-Being through Social Prescribing Involving the Cultural Sector: Interviews from a Realist Evaluation

Jordan Gorenberg, Stephanie Tierney, Geoff Wong, Amadea Turk, Sebastien Libert, Caroline Potter, Kathryn Eccles, Shona Forster, Kerryn Husk, Helen J. Chatterjee, Emma Webster, Beth McDougall, Harriet Warburton, Lucy Shaw & Kamal R. Mahtani
Supplemental Material for Understanding and Improving Older People’s Well-Being through Social Prescribing Involving the Cultural Sector: Interviews from a Realist Evaluation by Jordan Gorenberg, Stephanie Tierney, Geoff Wong, Amadea Turk, Sebastien Libert, Caroline Potter, Kathryn Eccles, Shona Forster, Kerryn Husk, Helen J. Chatterjee, Emma Webster, Beth McDougall, Harriet Warburton, Lucy Shaw, and Kamal R. Mahtani in Journal of Applied Gerontology.

Understanding and Improving Older People’s Well-Being through Social Prescribing Involving the Cultural Sector: Interviews from a Realist Evaluation

Jordan Gorenberg, Stephanie Tierney, Geoff Wong, Amadea Turk, Sebastien Libert, Caroline Potter, Kathryn Eccles, Shona Forster, Kerryn Husk, Helen J. Chatterjee, Emma Webster, Beth McDougall, Harriet Warburton, Lucy Shaw & Kamal R. Mahtani
Social prescribing is a non-clinical approach to addressing social, environmental, and economic factors affecting how people feel physical and/or emotionally. It involves connecting people to “community assets” (e.g., local groups, organizations, and charities) that can contribute to positive well-being. We sought to explain in what ways, for whom, and why the cultural sector can support social prescribing with older people. We conducted semi-structured interviews with 28 older people (aged 60+) and 25 cultural sector staff....

Understanding and Improving Older People’s Well-Being through Social Prescribing Involving the Cultural Sector: Interviews from a Realist Evaluation

Jordan Gorenberg, Stephanie Tierney, Geoff Wong, Amadea Turk, Sebastien Libert, Caroline Potter, Kathryn Eccles, Shona Forster, Kerryn Husk, Helen J. Chatterjee, Emma Webster, Beth McDougall, Harriet Warburton, Lucy Shaw & Kamal R. Mahtani
Social prescribing is a non-clinical approach to addressing social, environmental, and economic factors affecting how people feel physical and/or emotionally. It involves connecting people to “community assets” (e.g., local groups, organizations, and charities) that can contribute to positive well-being. We sought to explain in what ways, for whom, and why the cultural sector can support social prescribing with older people. We conducted semi-structured interviews with 28 older people (aged 60+) and 25 cultural sector staff....

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