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- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- These videos were shot in Dogon villages. They show how wild foods (insects and plants) are obtained and consumed. Most are presented here in three video formats.
- Keyword:
- Mali, Dogon, honey, edible insects, and water lilies
- Citation to related publication:
- Moran, Steven & Forkel, Robert & Heath, Jeffrey (eds.) 2016. Dogon and Bangime Linguistics. Jena: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History. http://dogonlanguages.org
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- Videos done in the course of linguistic fieldwork in Central Mali. They are presented here in two or three video formats. The videos show how Dogon villagers press oil from nuts and fruit pits, make liquid soda ash (French potasse), and make soap. Some are in standard documentary form, some early ones ("compendiums") are sequences of brief clips. Most were made in Beni village or in the Douentza area.
- Keyword:
- Mali, Dogon, vegetable oils, soapmaking, and soda ash
- Citation to related publication:
- Moran, Steven & Forkel, Robert & Heath, Jeffrey (eds.) 2016. Dogon and Bangime Linguistics. Jena: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History. http://dogonlanguages.org
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- Videos made in the course of linguistic fieldwork. Includes blacksmithing, hide tanning, weaving, cotton spinning, weaving, reed flute making, pottery making, and construction in Dogon villages, and exotic traditional hair styling in Hombori (Songhay). Some of the videos are "compilations" of many short clips, others are in standard documentary form.
- Keyword:
- Mali, Dogon, Hombori, weaving, pottery, spinning, reed flute making, tanning, and coiffure
- Citation to related publication:
- Moran, Steven & Forkel, Robert & Heath, Jeffrey (eds.) 2016. Dogon and Bangime Linguistics. Jena: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History. http://dogonlanguages.org
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- Documentary-style videos about villages and social relations in Dogon country. Documentaries are given in two or three video formats each.
- Keyword:
- Mali, Dogon, and villages
- Citation to related publication:
- Moran, Steven & Forkel, Robert & Heath, Jeffrey (eds.) 2016. Dogon and Bangime Linguistics. Jena: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History. http://dogonlanguages.org
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Yakel, Elizabeth, Suzuka, Kara, and Frank, Rebecca
- Description:
- These data collection and analysis protocols and the attribute list are part of a larger research project, the Institute of Museum and Library Services # LG-06-14-0122-14. funded "Qualitative Data Reuse: Records of Practice in Educational Research and Teacher Development." As such, our research questions concern data reuse and data curation: 1. Data Reuse: What are the dynamics of the data reuse lifecycle (from selection of data through the reuse of data) in a qualitative digital educational archive? 2. Data curation: What special issues are involved in curating digital qualitative data for reuse? • How can qualitative data archives best support data reusers throughout the data reuse lifecycle? • What aspects of this experience are informative for other types of qualitative data archives? The overall project employed mixed methods and collected interview, observational, and trace data from data reusers of video records of practice in education and repositories holding video records of practice. The interview protocol and interview codeset relate to the 44 interviews conducted with researchers and teacher-educators who have reused digital video records of practice as qualitative data for research and/or teaching.
- Keyword:
- Data curation, Data reuse, and Digital records of practice in education
- Discipline:
- Other
-
- Creator:
- Bemmels, Jordan B. and Dick, Christopher W.
- Description:
- Raw SNP genotypes are provided in STRUCTURE format, with a maximum of one SNP reported per ddRAD locus. The files "caryco_SNP.str" and "caryov_SNP.str" are genotypes for Carya cordiformis and Carya ovata, respectively. The first column of each file is the individual name, the second column is the population (see original publication for information on population locations), and the remaining columns are genotypes of individual SNPs. Rows represent individuals, with the diploid genotypes contained on two lines per individual. Missing data are entered as "0" (zero). The first row is a header with a unique identifier for each SNP. and Occurrence records for each species are provided in the file "occs_carya.csv" and contain the latitude and longitude of each record.
- Keyword:
- eastern North America, glacial refugia, phylogeography, temperate trees, and single nucleotide polymorphisms
- Citation to related publication:
- Bemmels, J.B., and C.W. Dick. 2018. Genomic evidence of a widespread southern distribution during the Last Glacial Maximum for two North American hickory species. Journal of Biogeography, 45: 1739– 1750. https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.13358
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Mirshams Shahshahani, Payam
- Description:
- Investigating minimum human reaction times is often confounded by the motivation, training, and state of arousal of the subjects. We used the reaction times of athletes competing in the shorter sprint events in the Athletics competitions in recent Olympics (2004-2016) to determine minimum human reaction times because there's little question as to their motivation, training, or state of arousal. The reaction times of sprinters however are only available on the IAAF web page for each individual heat, in each event, at each Olympic. Therefore we compiled all these data into two separate excel sheets which can be used for further analyses.
- Keyword:
- minimum reaction time, sprinter, Olympics, Athletics, sex difference, starting block, and false start
- Citation to related publication:
- Mirshams Shahshahani P, Lipps DB, Galecki AT, Ashton-Miller JA (2018) On the apparent decrease in Olympic sprinter reaction times. PLoS ONE 13(6): e0198633. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0198633
- Discipline:
- Engineering, Health Sciences, Science, Other, and General Information Sources
-
- Creator:
- York, Jeremy, Gutmann, Myron, and Berman, Francine
- Description:
- The data were collected as part of the Stewardship Gap project, an 18-month study to investigate how research data and creative outputs supported by public or non-profit funding in the United States are being stewarded. These data were collected as part of a literature search of sources about research data stewardship and relate most directly to work describing “What We Know About the Stewardship Gap.” In this work, we categorized “gaps” in stewardship identified in the literature, how the gaps were related to one another, and efforts to measure and develop metrics for the gaps.
- Keyword:
- digital curation, digital preservation, research data, data stewardship, and data sustainability
- Discipline:
- Other
-
- Creator:
- Adam Schneider and Mark Flanner
- Description:
- This dataset contains all data used to generate the figures in The Cryosphere manuscript “Measuring Snow Specific Surface Area with 1.30 and 1.55 micro-meter Bidirectional Reflectance Factors,” by Adam Schneider, Mark Flanner, and Roger De Roo. These data support the theory, calibration, and application of the Near-Infrared Emitting and Reflectance Monitoring Dome (NERD), an instrument engineered to rapidly retrieve surface snow specific surface area in the field. Note that this deposit includes a microCT scan database for natural snowfall samples collected in New Hampshire during 2015-2017, comprised of raw tiff files as well as reconstructions, binarized reconstructions, and some 3D model reconstructions. and Running python scripts generally require that the following packages are installed: NumPy, SciPy, Matplotlib, Pandas, and ipdb (for debugging).
- Keyword:
- Snow specific surface area, Monte Carlo, X-ray micro-computed tomography, SNICAR, Near-Infrared Emitting and Reflectance-Monitoring Dome, Bidirectional reflectance factor, Cryosphere, and 3D
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Hayward, Stephen L. , Lund, Paul E., Kang, Qing, Johnson-Buck, Alexander , Tewari, Muneesh, and Walter, Nils G.
- Description:
- This work contains the experimental data and associated analysis that are described in the research publication entitled "Ultra-specific and Amplification-free Quantification of Mutant DNA by Single-molecule Kinetic Fingerprinting". This work contains multiple zip files, each of which represents one of the principal experiment groups presented in the publication. Each experiment group contains movie and analysis files corresponding to various experimental conditions related to that experiment group.
- Keyword:
- Single Molecule Fluorescence, Super-Resolution Microscopy, Nucleic Acid Hybridization, T790M Mutation, Cytosine Deamination, SiMREPS, and single molecule kinetic fingerprinting
- Citation to related publication:
- https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/jacs.8b06685
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Alsip, Peter
- Description:
- Percent Weight Change Data: The model was run continuously on a daily time step for seasonal intervals (Spring: March thru May; Summer: June thru August; Fall: September thru November) as well as contiguously from Spring to Fall to assess total growth over the likely growing season (March thru November). CSV files represent the simulated weight change (%) of Bighead and Silver Carp for the respective time periods associated with the file name. Initial fish mass for each seasonal interval and growing season was 4350 g for Silver Carp and 5480 g for Bighead Carp. Maximum and mean total weight change (%) was determined for three depth ranges (near surface depths [NS]: 0 – 10 m; deep chlorophyll layer depths [DCL]: 10 - 50 m; and whole water column [WC]). Coordinates are in decimal degrees. File naming convention: speciesSeasonWtChange (e.g. bigheadFallWtChange = % weight change of Bighead Carp from September through November) , Monthly Habitat Quality Data: Rdata files contain matrices of Bighead or Silver carp growth rate potential as represented as a mass-proportional growth rate (gram of carp/gram of carp/day [g/g/d]) for the 15th day of each month. Habitats with growth rate potential >= 0 g/g/d were deemed suitable. Matrix attributes: Rows: Row numbers refer to the spatial node with 20 equally-spaced vertical layers. Columns: Columns 1-20 refer to the growth rate potential value for each vertical layer of each node. Vertical layers are evenly spaced based on the total depth of the water column for each node. Depth for each node can be found in the grid attributes data file. Columns 21 ("meanG") and 22 ("Gmax") represent the average and maximum growth rate potential, respectively, of the fish across the whole water column for the corresponding node. File naming convention: species_MonthNumber (e.g. silver_06 = Silver carp growth rate potential in June) Spatial coordinates for each node can be found in the grid attributes data files., Grid attributes data: This Rdata file provides the spatial reference data and other grid attributes. Coordinates are provided in UTM (x & y) and latitude and longitude (decimal degrees). Depth (meters) for each node is listed in this file. , GRP Model code: Details bioenergetics equations, foraging equation, functions for running the model on a monthly time-step and daily time step, and functions for basic analyses. Model is coded in R., and The simulated input data (prey and temperature) used to run our model is not included in this data set. Instead we provide the model code, grid attributes, and outputs of the model. The readRDS() function (R Base Package v.3.5.1) is required to read in .Rdata files in R.
- Keyword:
- Asian Carp, Laurentian Great Lakes, Habitat Suitability, Invasive Species, Lake Michigan, and Ecological Modeling
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Thomaz, Andréa T. (UMICH) and Knowles, L. Lacey (UMICH)
- Description:
- The eastern coastal basins of Brazil are a series of small and isolated rivers that drain directly into the Atlantic Ocean. During the Pleistocene, sea-level retreat caused by glaciations exposed the continental shelf, resulting in enlarged paleodrainages that connected rivers that are isolated today. Using Geographic Information System (GIS), we infer the distribution of these paleodrainages, and their properties for the east Brazilian coast. Here, we publicly make available the shapefiles that demonstrate the paleodrainage structure along the Brazilian coast during the largest sea-level retreats in the Pleistocene, the riverine vectors during the same period and the coastal line for a drop of -125m in the sea.
- Keyword:
- Paleodrainages, Glaciations, Pleistocene, Brazil, Neotropical, and Sea-level retreat
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Reed, Matthew P., Boyle, K.
- Description:
- This is the first physical anthropomorphic test device to be based both on statistical body shape models as well as 3D printing.
- Keyword:
- Child Belt Fit Manikin
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Lee, Kyu Han, Foxman, Betsy, and Gordon, Aubree
- Description:
- Data include variables used to run mixed effects models examining the association between the nose/throat microbiome and influenza virus infection. Certain individual participant data have been excluded due to identifiability concerns. Data also include the oligotype count table and taxonomic classifications. and Curation Notes: Readme updated Nov. 29, 2018 with context for oligotype and taxonomy files, and citation to associated article.
- Keyword:
- Influenza and Microbiome
- Citation to related publication:
- Lee KH, Gordon A, Shedden K, Kuan G, Ng S, Balmaseda A, Foxman B. The respiratory microbiome and susceptibility to influenza virus infection. PloS One. 2019;14:e0207898. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207898
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Lee, Kyu Han
- Description:
- Data include variables used to run accelerated failure time models examining the association between the nose/throat microbiome and 1) symptom duration, 2) shedding duration, and 3) time to infection. Certain individual participant data have been excluded due to identifiability concerns. Data also include the oligotype count table and taxonomic classifications.
- Keyword:
- Influenza and Microbiome
- Citation to related publication:
- Lee KH, Gordon A, Shedden K, Kuan G, Ng S, Balmaseda A, Foxman B. The respiratory microbiome and susceptibility to influenza virus infection. PloS One. 2019;14:e0207898. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207898
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Kort, EA, Gvakharia, A, Smith, ML, and Conley, S
- Description:
- Data is collected from research flights based in West Memphis, Arkansas, covering the Mississippi River Valley. The data file contains all merged flight data from each flight day.
- Keyword:
- Greenhouse gas
- Citation to related publication:
- Gvakharia, A., Kort, E.A., Smith, M.L., Conley, S., 2018. Testing and evaluation of a new airborne system for continuous N2O, CO2, CO, and H2O measurements: the Frequent Calibration High-performance Airborne Observation System (FCHAOS). Atmospheric Measurement Techniques; Katlenburg-Lindau 11, 6059. https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-11-6059-2018
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Liemohn, Michael W, McCollough, James P, Engel, Miles A, Jordanova, Vania K, and Morley, Steven K
- Description:
- There is a directory tree inside this zipped file. The main directory has the Adobe Illustrator plots of the figures in the paper, Space Weather journal manuscript # 2018SW002067, "Model evaluation guidelines for geomagnetic index predictions" by M. W. Liemohn and coauthors. The three subdirectories have the files for the individual models, the data to which they are compared, and the IDL code used to create the figure plots and metrics calculations. and Date coverage is specific to each model. The RAMSCB model covers January 2005, the WINDMI model all of 2014, and the UPOS model 1.5 solar cycles, from 1 October 2001 through 29 July 2013.
- Keyword:
- space weather, model assessment, time series metrics, and geomagnetic indices
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Adams, Julia
- Description:
- This eportfolio was created for the Gateway course of the Sweetland Minor in Writing to provide an opportunity for students to reflect on their growing identities as writers, as captured in their text-based and multimodal compositions produced over the Gateway semester. The title of the work contains the pseudonym created for the study while the creator field lists the student's given name to allow proper attribution for their work. The eportfolio is collected here as an artifact in the Sweetland Writing Development Study, which has been published as Developing Writers in Higher Education: A Longitudinal Study (University of Michigan Press, 2019). To learn more about this study, please see the epublication https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890, and to learn more about the Minor in Writing program and the eportfolio prompts, please see Appendix 2a - https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890.cmp.1 to the publication.
- Keyword:
- eportfolio , gateway, sitesucker, website, and file directory
- Citation to related publication:
- Gere, A.R., Editor. Developing Writers in Higher Education: A Longitudinal Study, fulcrum.org. University of Michigan Press. https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- R Paul Drake
- Description:
- The specific focus of the project was radiative shocks, which develop when shock waves become so fast and hot that the radiation from the shocked matter dominates the energy transport. This in turn leads to changes in the shock structure. Radiative shocks are challenging to simulate, as they include phenomena on a range of spatial and temporal scales and involve two types of nonlinear physics Ð- hydrodynamics and radiation transport. Even so, the range of physics involved is narrow enough that one can hope to model all of it with sufficient fidelity to reproduce the data. CRASH was focused on developing predictions for a sequence of experiments performed in Project Year 5, in which those experiments represented an extrapolation from all previously available data. The previous data involved driving radiative shocks within cylindrical structures, and mainly straight tubes. The Year 5 experiments drove a radiative shock down an elliptical tube. Our long-stated goal for these predictions was that the distribution of predicted values would overlap significantly with the observed distribution. We achieved this goal. Achieving our goal required the conversion of an established space-weather code to model radiative shocks at high energy density. To obtain reasonable fidelity with respect to the experimental data required implementing a laser absorption package, in addition to a hydrodynamic solver, electron physics and heat conduction, and multigroup diffusive radiation transport. The dedicated experiments provided evidence of experimental variability, validation of the calculation of initial shock wave behavior, and validation data at many observation times using cylindrical shock tubes. Following this were preparatory experiments for and finally the execution of the Year 5 experiments. The predictive science research included a wide range of sensitivity studies to determine which variables were important and a sequence of predictive studies focused on specific issues and sets of data. This led ultimately to predictions of shock location for the Year 5 experiments. A conclusion from this project is that the serious quantification of uncertainty in simulations is a dauntingly difficult and expensive prospect. Pre-existing codes are unlikely to have been built with attention to what will be needed to quantify their uncertainty. Pre-existing experimental results are even more unlikely to include a sufficiently detailed analysis of the experimental uncertainties. And this will also be true of most experiments that might be used to validate components of the simulation. The analysis of uncertainty in any one of the physical processes (and related physical constants) is a major effort. And addressing model form uncertainty is an even bigger challenge, that may in principle require development of complete, alternative simulation models. We made a start at all of this, and completed almost none of it. But by the end of a project, we finally had all the pieces in place and working that would have enabled a range of important studies and advances in relatively near-term years. But the sponsor terminated the program after only five years. For most of the participants this was a relatively minor development, although for a few of them it proved to be enormously disruptive. We believe that the cost to the nation, in work that was ready be done but now will not be, was much much larger. The sketch of the target was produced using a drawing program based on the experimental dimensions. The annotated photograph of the target was obtained using a visible-light camera. The colorized radiographs were obtained via backilit-pinhole radiography of a radiative shock propagating down an elliptical tube, at 26 ns after the lasers driving the shock tube fired. The graph showing lines and circles was produced by running many computer models, analyzing their statistical distribution, and measuring actual shock positions in the experiment.
- Keyword:
- Radiative shock
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Ramasubramani, Vyas
- Description:
- The goal of the work is to elucidate the stability of a complex experimentally observed structure of proteins. We found that supercharged GFP molecules spontaneously assemble into a complex 16-mer structure that we term a protomer, and that under the right conditions an even larger assembly is observed. The protomer structure is very well defined, and we performed simulations to try and understand the mechanics underlying its behavior. In particular, we focused on understanding the role of electrostatics in this system and how varying salt concentrations would alter the stability of the structure, with the ultimate goal of predicting the effects of various mutations on the stability of the structure. There are two separate projects included in this repository, but the two are closely linked. One, the candidate_structures folder, contains the atomistic outputs used to generate coarse-grained configurations. The actual coarse-grained simulations are in the rigid_protein folder, which pulls the atomistic coordinates from the other folder. All data is managed by signac and lives in the workspace directories, which contain various folders corresponding to different parameter combinations. The parameters associated with a given folder are stored in the signac_statepoint.json files within each subdirectory. The atomistic data uses experimentally determined protein structures as a starting point; all of these are stored in the ConfigFiles folder. The primary output is the topology files generated from the PDBs by GROMACS; these topologies are then used to parametrize the Monte Carlo simulations. In some cases, atomistic simulations were actually run as well, and the outputs are stored alongside the topology files. In the rigid_protein folder, the ConfigFiles folder contains MSMS, the software used to generate polyhedral representations of proteins from the PDBs in the candidate_structures folder. All of the actual polyhedral structures are also stored in the ConfigFiles folder. The actual simulation trajectories are stored as general simulation data (GSD) files within each subdirectory of the workspace, along with a single .pos file that contains the shape definition of the (nonconvex) polyhedron used to represent a protein. The logged quantities, such as energies and MC move sizes, are stored in .log files. The logic for the simulations in the candidate_structures project is in the Python scripts project.py, operations.py, and scripts/init.py. The rigid_protein folder also includes the notebooks directory, which contains Jupyter notebooks used to perform analyses, as well as the Python scripts used to actually perform the simulations and manage the data space. In particular, the project.py, operations.py and scripts/init.py scripts contain most of the logic associated with the simulations.
- Keyword:
- Protein assembly, Cryo TEM, Hierarchical Assembly, Monte Carlo simulation, and Coarse-grained simulation
- Discipline:
- Science and Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Brennan, Jonathan R.
- Description:
- These files contain the raw data and processing parameters to go with the paper "Hierarchical structure guides rapid linguistic predictions during naturalistic listening" by Jonathan R. Brennan and John T. Hale. These files include the stimulus (wav files), raw data (matlab format for the Fieldtrip toolbox), data processing paramters (matlab), and variables used to align the stimuli with the EEG data and for the statistical analyses reported in the paper.
- Keyword:
- linguistics, syntax, language, and eeg
- Citation to related publication:
- Brennan JR, Hale JT (2019) Hierarchical structure guides rapid linguistic predictions during naturalistic listening. PLoS ONE 14(1): e0207741. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207741
- Discipline:
- Social Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Avesian, Erica
- Description:
- This eportfolio was created for the Gateway course of the Sweetland Minor in Writing to provide an opportunity for students to reflect on their growing identities as writers, as captured in their text-based and multimodal compositions produced over the Gateway semester. The title of the work contains the pseudonym created for the study while the creator field lists the student's given name to allow proper attribution for their work. The eportfolio is collected here as an artifact in the Sweetland Writing Development Study, which has been published as Developing Writers in Higher Education: A Longitudinal Study (University of Michigan Press, 2019). To learn more about this study, please see the epublication: https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890), and to learn more about the Minor in Writing program and the eportfolio prompts, please see Appendix 2a ( https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890.cmp.1) to the publication.
- Keyword:
- eportfolio , capstone, sitesucker, website , and file directory
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Lisner, Emily
- Description:
- This eportfolio was created for the Gateway course of the Sweetland Minor in Writing to provide an opportunity for students to reflect on their growing identities as writers, as captured in their text-based and multimodal compositions produced over the Gateway semester. The title of the work contains the pseudonym created for the study while the creator field lists the student's given name to allow proper attribution for their work. The eportfolio is collected here as an artifact in the Sweetland Writing Development Study, which has been published as Developing Writers in Higher Education: A Longitudinal Study (University of Michigan Press, 2019). To learn more about this study, please see the epublication: https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890), and to learn more about the Minor in Writing program and the eportfolio prompts, please see Appendix 2a ( https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890.cmp.1) to the publication.
- Keyword:
- eportfolio , gateway , sitesucker , website , and file directory
- Citation to related publication:
- GERE, A. R. (Ed.). (2019). DEVELOPING WRITERS IN HIGHER EDUCATION: A longitudinal study. S.l.: UNIV OF MICHIGAN PRESS. https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Garno, Gregory
- Description:
- This eportfolio was created for the Gateway course of the Sweetland Minor in Writing to provide an opportunity for students to reflect on their growing identities as writers, as captured in their text-based and multimodal compositions produced over the Gateway semester. The title of the work contains the pseudonym created for the study while the creator field lists the student's given name to allow proper attribution for their work. The eportfolio is collected here as an artifact in the Sweetland Writing Development Study, which has been published as Developing Writers in Higher Education: A Longitudinal Study (University of Michigan Press, 2019). To learn more about this study, please see the epublication: https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890), and to learn more about the Minor in Writing program and the eportfolio prompts, please see Appendix 2a ( https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890.cmp.1) to the publication.
- Keyword:
- eportfolio , gateway , sitesucker, website , and file directory
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Adams, Julia
- Description:
- This eportfolio was created for the Gateway course of the Sweetland Minor in Writing to provide an opportunity for students to reflect on their growing identities as writers, as captured in their text-based and multimodal compositions produced over the Gateway semester. The title of the work contains the pseudonym created for the study while the creator field lists the student's given name to allow proper attribution for their work. The eportfolio is collected here as an artifact in the Sweetland Writing Development Study, which has been published as Developing Writers in Higher Education: A Longitudinal Study (University of Michigan Press, 2019). To learn more about this study, please see the epublication: https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890), and to learn more about the Minor in Writing program and the eportfolio prompts, please see Appendix 2a ( https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890.cmp.1) to the publication.
- Keyword:
- eportfolio , gateway , sitesucker , website , and file directory
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Brown, Kathryn
- Description:
- This eportfolio was created for the Gateway course of the Sweetland Minor in Writing to provide an opportunity for students to reflect on their growing identities as writers, as captured in their text-based and multimodal compositions produced over the Gateway semester. The title of the work contains the pseudonym created for the study while the creator field lists the student's given name to allow proper attribution for their work. The eportfolio is collected here as an artifact in the Sweetland Writing Development Study, which has been published as Developing Writers in Higher Education: A Longitudinal Study (University of Michigan Press, 2019). To learn more about this study, please see the epublication: https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890), and to learn more about the Minor in Writing program and the eportfolio prompts, please see Appendix 2a ( https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890.cmp.1) to the publication.
- Keyword:
- eportfolio , capstone , sitesucker , website , and file directory
- Citation to related publication:
- GERE, A. R. (Ed.). (2019). DEVELOPING WRITERS IN HIGHER EDUCATION: A longitudinal study. S.l.: UNIV OF MICHIGAN PRESS. https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Brown, Kathryn
- Description:
- This eportfolio was created for the Gateway course of the Sweetland Minor in Writing to provide an opportunity for students to reflect on their growing identities as writers, as captured in their text-based and multimodal compositions produced over the Gateway semester. The title of the work contains the pseudonym created for the study while the creator field lists the student's given name to allow proper attribution for their work. The eportfolio is collected here as an artifact in the Sweetland Writing Development Study, which has been published as Developing Writers in Higher Education: A Longitudinal Study (University of Michigan Press, 2019). To learn more about this study, please see the epublication: https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890), and to learn more about the Minor in Writing program and the eportfolio prompts, please see Appendix 2a ( https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890.cmp.1) to the publication.
- Keyword:
- eportfolio , gateway , sitesucker , website, and file directory
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Cockrum, Kayla
- Description:
- This eportfolio was created for the Gateway course of the Sweetland Minor in Writing to provide an opportunity for students to reflect on their growing identities as writers, as captured in their text-based and multimodal compositions produced over the Gateway semester. The title of the work contains the pseudonym created for the study while the creator field lists the student's given name to allow proper attribution for their work. The eportfolio is collected here as an artifact in the Sweetland Writing Development Study, which has been published as Developing Writers in Higher Education: A Longitudinal Study (University of Michigan Press, 2019). To learn more about this study, please see the epublication: https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890), and to learn more about the Minor in Writing program and the eportfolio prompts, please see Appendix 2a ( https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890.cmp.1) to the publication.
- Keyword:
- eportfolio , capstone , sitesucker , website , and file directory
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Schuler, Kaitlin
- Description:
- This eportfolio was created for the Gateway course of the Sweetland Minor in Writing to provide an opportunity for students to reflect on their growing identities as writers, as captured in their text-based and multimodal compositions produced over the Gateway semester. The title of the work contains the pseudonym created for the study while the creator field lists the student's given name to allow proper attribution for their work. The eportfolio is collected here as an artifact in the Sweetland Writing Development Study, which has been published as Developing Writers in Higher Education: A Longitudinal Study (University of Michigan Press, 2019). To learn more about this study, please see the epublication: https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890), and to learn more about the Minor in Writing program and the eportfolio prompts, please see Appendix 2a ( https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890.cmp.1) to the publication.
- Keyword:
- eportfolio , gateway , sitesucker , website , and file directory
- Citation to related publication:
- GERE, A. R. (Ed.). (2019). DEVELOPING WRITERS IN HIGHER EDUCATION: A longitudinal study. S.l.: UNIV OF MICHIGAN PRESS. https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Danko, Melissa
- Description:
- This eportfolio was created for the Gateway course of the Sweetland Minor in Writing to provide an opportunity for students to reflect on their growing identities as writers, as captured in their text-based and multimodal compositions produced over the Gateway semester. The title of the work contains the pseudonym created for the study while the creator field lists the student's given name to allow proper attribution for their work. The eportfolio is collected here as an artifact in the Sweetland Writing Development Study, which has been published as Developing Writers in Higher Education: A Longitudinal Study (University of Michigan Press, 2019). To learn more about this study, please see the epublication: https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890), and to learn more about the Minor in Writing program and the eportfolio prompts, please see Appendix 2a ( https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890.cmp.1) to the publication.
- Keyword:
- eportfolio , capstone , sitesucker , website , and file directory
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Danko, Melissa
- Description:
- This eportfolio was created for the Gateway course of the Sweetland Minor in Writing to provide an opportunity for students to reflect on their growing identities as writers, as captured in their text-based and multimodal compositions produced over the Gateway semester. The title of the work contains the pseudonym created for the study while the creator field lists the student's given name to allow proper attribution for their work. The eportfolio is collected here as an artifact in the Sweetland Writing Development Study, which has been published as Developing Writers in Higher Education: A Longitudinal Study (University of Michigan Press, 2019). To learn more about this study, please see the epublication: https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890), and to learn more about the Minor in Writing program and the eportfolio prompts, please see Appendix 2a ( https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890.cmp.1) to the publication.
- Keyword:
- eportfolio , gateway, sitesucker , website, and file directory
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Mitchell, Michael
- Description:
- This eportfolio was created for the Gateway course of the Sweetland Minor in Writing to provide an opportunity for students to reflect on their growing identities as writers, as captured in their text-based and multimodal compositions produced over the Gateway semester. The title of the work contains the pseudonym created for the study while the creator field lists the student's given name to allow proper attribution for their work. The eportfolio is collected here as an artifact in the Sweetland Writing Development Study, which has been published as Developing Writers in Higher Education: A Longitudinal Study (University of Michigan Press, 2019). To learn more about this study, please see the epublication https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890, and to learn more about the Minor in Writing program and the eportfolio prompts, please see Appendix 2a ( https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890.cmp.1) to the publication.
- Keyword:
- eportfolio , gateway , sitesucker , website , and file directory
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Yan, Xiang (Jacob), Clarke, Phillipa J., Okullo, Dolorence, Goodspeed, Robert, Data Driven Detroit, Gomez-Lopez, Iris N., and Veinot, Tiffany C
- Description:
- This collection was produced as part of the project, “A ‘Big Data’ Approach to Understanding Neighborhood Effects in Chronic Illness Disparities.” The Investigators for the project are Tiffany Veinot, Veronica Berrocal, Phillipa Clarke, Robert Goodspeed, Daniel Romero, and VG Vinod Vydiswaran from the University of Michigan. The study took place from 2015-2016, with funding from the University of Michigan’s Social Sciences Annual Institute, MCubed, and the Sloan and Moore Foundations. Contact: Tiffany Veinot, MLS, PhD Office: 3443 North Quad Phone: 734/615-8281 Email: tveinot@umich.edu MCubed project page: https://mcubed.umich.edu/projects/%E2%80%9Cbig-data%E2%80%9D-approach-understanding-neighborhood-effects-chronic-illness-disparities
- Keyword:
- Food Environment, Health Status, Employment, Health Care Resources, Neighborhood Safety, Healthcare Utilization, Transportation, Census tract level, Information and Education Environment, Spatial Measures, Detroit, Active Living Resources, Social Environment, Demographics, Community Health, Housing, and student-friendly
- Discipline:
- Social Sciences
6Works -
Central Mali geography photos
User Collection- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey G.
- Description:
- This is a collection of photos of villages located primarily in Central Mali. These photos are primarily of Dogon villages, but there are village photos of other nearby ethnicities, including Bangande, Fulbe, Tuareg, Songay, and Bozo.These photos were taken to document the villages Professor Jeffrey Heath worked in and people he worked with while documenting languages throughout the region. For interactive geographical maps involving these villages see: http://dogonlanguages.org/geography.cfm.
- Keyword:
- Jamsay, Bangime, Tamashek, Ampari, Bannkan Tey, Ben Tey, Atlantic Fulfulde, Bunoge, Dogul Dom, Donno So, Mombo, Najamba-Kindige, Nanga, Penange, Tebul Ure, Tengou-Togo, Tiranige, Tommo So, Toro So, Tomo Kan, Toro Tegu, Yanda Dom, Moore, Bozo Jenama, Manding Bambara, Fulankiriya, Humburi Senni, Dogon, Fulbe, Bozo, Songhay, Tuareg, and Bangande
- Citation to related publication:
- www.dogonlanguages.org, http://dogonlanguages.org/geography.cfm, and http://dogonlanguages.org/sources/gpsdogonspreadsheetforllmap
- Discipline:
- Humanities
27Works -
Central Mali documentary videos
User Collection- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey G.
- Description:
- Short documentary videos of practical activities and cultural events of Dogon, Fulbe, Songhay, and Bangande ethnic groups of eastern Central Mali. The videos were byproducts of linguistic research on the local language. They are presented here in three formats: wmv, avi, and either qt or mov. See the "readme" files in each work for a summary of the videos in it. and The footage was shot with various digital cameras. The oldest videos (2010 and one or two from 2011) were edited using iMovie. The later videos were edited using AVS editing software. Several of the 2010 videos, referred to as "compilations," are simple sequences of short clips that combine to illustrate a complex activity such as extracting oil from nuts. The later videos are in more flowing documentary form with overlaid titles in English. In some cases, vocabulary from the relevant native language is included in the titles.
- Keyword:
- Mali and Dogon
- Citation to related publication:
- www.dogonlanguages.org
- Discipline:
- Humanities
7Works -
Transmission of Oral microbiome and Sequencing
User Collection- Creator:
- Lee, Kyu Han
- Description:
- De-identified participant data from household transmission study of influenza in Nicaragua Oligotype count table and taxonomic classifications
- Keyword:
- Influenza and Microbiome
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
2Works -
- Creator:
- Thomaz, Andréa T. (UMICH), Carvalho, Tiago P. (UFRGS), Malabarba, Luiz R. (UFRGS), and Knowles, L. Lacey (UMICH)
- Description:
- Estimated phylogenetic relationships based on more than 18,000 loci in 93 individuals (full data) or 21 individuals (subset data) representing 19 described species and two putative undescribed species. Nine files are part of this dataset, including all input files to infer the phylogenetic reconstructions and the outputs obtained, in addition to a pruned tree used to infer the ancestral state reconstructions.
- Keyword:
- dusky millions poeciliids, sexual selection, South America, and ddRADseq
- Citation to related publication:
- Andréa T. Thomaz, Tiago P. Carvalho, Luiz R. Malabarba, L. Lacey Knowles, Geographic distributions, phenotypes, and phylogenetic relationships of Phalloceros (Cyprinodontiformes: Poeciliidae): insights about diversification among sympatric species pools, Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 2018, ISSN 1055-7903, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2018.12.008
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Gharzai, Laila A, Green, Michael D, Griffith, Kent A, and Jolly, Shruti
- Description:
- Three sensitivity analyses were performed. First, a second matching step was performed in which two controls were selected for each case, where possible using a nearest neighbor and caliper metric. Controls needed to have propensity scores within 0.1 of the case to be selected. Thirty-eight of the 39 cases had at least one control using this method and for 36 cases two controls could be selected. The average difference between case and control propensity adjuvant RT was 0.008 (range 0.00003-0.095). A second sensitivity analysis was performed to guard against immortal time bias. In order to mitigate the possibility of this effect, cases known not to have undergone adjuvant RT have been screened for suitable follow-up without a recurrence (local or regional recurrence, metastatic failure, and/or death) to ensure that if adjuvant RT had been prescribed as part of the multi-modality treatment regimen, that it would have been initiated. Three months was selected as the mandatory follow-up time. One to one matching was carried out and all 39 cases were matched to a control. A third sensitivity analysis was performed to account for stage migration seen in control patients that presented to the University of Michigan with more advanced disease. Patients that underwent adjuvant radiation were matched one to one with control group patients who did not receive adjuvant radiation, and who had the same stage at diagnosis as compared to stage at University of Michigan presentation.
- Keyword:
- adenocortical carcinoma and English
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- MacEachern, Mark
- Description:
- The search data supports a literature review project on lifestyle therapies for the management of atrial fibrillation. The data included in the dataset are the reproducible search strategies (in docx) and the exported results of all citations from all databases (txt and ris files). These searches and exported result files contain all citations originating from the database searches that were considered for inclusion.
- Keyword:
- literature searches, atrial fibrillation, lifestyle therapy, and lifestyle therapies
- Citation to related publication:
- Abdul-Aziz AA, Altawil M, Lyon A, MacEachern M, Richardson CR, Rubenfire M, Pelosi F Jr, Jackson EA. Lifestyle Therapy for the Management of Atrial Fibrillation. Am J Cardiol. 2018 May 1;121(9):1112-1117. doi: 10.1016/j.amjcard.2018.01.023. PubMed PMID: 29650239., https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29650239, and https://doi.org/10.1016/j.amjcard.2018.01.023
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Haydar, Bishr and MacEachern, Mark
- Description:
- The research adheres to PRISMA-HARM recommendations for systematic reviews. The reproducible search strategies for all databases, the citation export files from all databases, and the eligibility screening decisions are included in the dataset.
- Keyword:
- Systematic review, Patient transportation, intrahospital, intra-hospital, and Critically ill patients
- Citation to related publication:
- Haydar B, Baetzel A, Elliott A, MacEachern M, Kamal A, Christensen R. Adverse Events During Intrahospital Transport of Critically Ill Children: A Systematic Review. Anesth Analg. 2019. http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.1213/ANE.0000000000004585
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- Holistic linguistic fieldwork carried out on location in central-eastern Mali.
- Keyword:
- Lexicon, Mali, and Dogon
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- Jalkunan is an endangered language of the Mande family, spoken in the village cluster of Blédougou in southwestern Burkina Faso. The lexical work complements a published grammar with texts. See the readme for further information.
- Keyword:
- Jalkunan, Burkina Faso, Mande languages, and Lexicon
- Citation to related publication:
- Heath, Jeffrey. A grammar of Jalkunan (Mande, Burkina Faso). 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/139025
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey, Hantgan, Abbie , and Elders, Stefan
- Description:
- The work on the Bangime language, spoken by the Bangande people, was carried out as part of a larger linguistic fieldwork project focused on Dogon languages. Bangime is confirmed as a language isolate with no demonstrable linguistic relatives—possibly the only such isolate in West Africa.
- Keyword:
- Bangime, Mali, and Lexicon
- Citation to related publication:
- Heath & Hantgan. A grammar of Bangime. Berlin: de Gruyter, 2018. ISBN 978-3-11-055749-7
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey , Ouattara, Aminata , and Hantgan, Abbie
- Description:
- Our project, mainly on Dogon languages of Mali, has branched out to Burkina Faso with emphasis on documentation of the most endangered languages. Tiefo-N was studied on an emergency basis since it was down to two aging competent speakers. For additional comments and links to a reference grammar, see the readme file.
- Keyword:
- Gur languages, Tiefo, Tiefo-N language, and Lexicon
- Citation to related publication:
- Jeffrey Heath, Aminata Ouattara & Abbie Hantgan. Short grammar of Tiefo-N of Nyafogo (Gur, Burkina Faso). Language Description Heritage Library (MPI). http://ldh.clld.org/2017/01/01/escidoc2378140/ and A copy of this publication is also available in Deep Blue: http://dx.doi.org/10.17617/2.2378140
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- This is the flora-fauna lexical material obtained in the course of more general lexical and grammatical fieldwork on languages of central-eastern Mali (Dogon, Songhay, Bangime, Bozo). The spreadsheets in this work, duplicated in xlsx and csv formants, present our flora-fauna lexicons as of early 2019 for many languages of central-eastern Mali, and certain languages of southwestern Burkina Faso. The Malian data is in two spreadsheets (flora, fauna), while the Burkina data is in separate spreadsheets for flora, birds, fish, insects, lizards and snakes, and mammals. Please begin with the “readme” document.
- Keyword:
- flora,, fauna, lexicon, Mali, and Burkina Faso
- Citation to related publication:
- Moran, Steven & Forkel, Robert & Heath, Jeffrey (eds.) 2016. Dogon and Bangime Linguistics. Jena: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History. https://dogonlanguages.org and Christfried Naumann & Tom Güldemann & Steven Moran & Guillaume Segerer & Robert Forkel (eds.) 2015. Tsammalex: A lexical database on plants and animals. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology. https://tsammalex.clld.org
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Johnson, JE and Molnar, PH
- Description:
- This IF compilation was assembled from the existing literature to understand if preservation biases affected the record of iron formations.
- Keyword:
- Archean ocean chemistry, temporal record of iron formations, and early Earth iron cycle
- Citation to related publication:
- Johnson, J. E., & Molnar, P. H. ( 2019). Widespread and persistent deposition of iron formations for two billion years. Geophysical Research Letters, 46, 3327– 3339. https://doi.org/10.1029/2019GL081970
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Bougher, Stephen W. (CLaSP Department, U. of Michigan) and Roeten, Kali J. (CLaSP Department, U. of Michigan)
- Description:
- The NASA MAVEN (Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution) spacecraft, which is currently in orbit around Mars, has been taking monthly measurements of the speed and direction of the winds in the upper atmosphere of Mars between about 140 to 240 km above the surface. The observed wind speeds and directions change with time and location, and sometimes fluctuate quickly. These measurements are compared to simulations from a computer model of the Mars atmosphere called M-GITM (Mars Global Ionosphere-Thermosphere Model), developed at U. of Michigan. This is the first comparison between direct measurements of the winds in the upper atmosphere of Mars and simulated winds and is important because it can help to inform us what physical processes are acting on the observed winds. Some wind measurements have similar wind speeds or directions to those predicted by the M-GITM model, but sometimes, there are large differences between the simulated and measured winds. The disagreements between wind observations and model simulations suggest that processes other than normal solar forcing may become relatively more important during these observations and alter the expected circulation pattern. Since the global circulation plays a role in the structure, variability, and evolution of the atmosphere, understanding the processes that drive the winds in the upper atmosphere of Mars provides key context for understanding how the atmosphere behaves as a whole system. A basic version of the M-GITM code can be found on Github as follows: https:/github.com/dpawlows/MGITM and About 30 Neutral Gas and Ion Mass Spectrometer (NGIMS) wind campaigns (of 5 to 10 orbits each) have been conducted by the MAVEN team (Benna et al., 2019). Five of these campaigns are selected for detailed study (Roeten et al. 2019). The Mars conditions for these five campaigns have been used to launch corresponding M-GITM code simulations, yielding 3-D neutral wind fields for comparison to these NGIMS wind observations. The M-GITM datacubes used to extract the zonal and meridional neutral winds, along the trajectory of each orbit path between 140 and 240 km, are provided in this Deep Blue Data archive. README files are provided for each datacube, detailing the contents of each file. A general README file is also provided that summarizes the inputs and outputs of the M-GITM code simulations for this study.
- Keyword:
- Mars, MAVEN spacecraft, Mars thermosphere, and Mars global upper atmosphere winds
- Citation to related publication:
- Roeten, K. J., Bougher, S. W., Benna, M., Mahaffy, P. R., Lee, Y., Pawlowski, D., et al. (2019). MAVEN/NGIMS thermospheric neutral wind observations: Interpretation using the M‐GITM general circulation model. Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets, 124, 3283– 3303. https://doi.org/10.1029/2019JE005957
- Discipline:
- Science and Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Wang, Yi and Hendy, Ingrid
- Description:
- This collection represents various raw data and analysis of cores extracted during the January 2009 mission of the research vessel Sproul in the Santa Barbara Basin., Cores included: box core SPR0901-04BC, box core SPR0901-unnamed, and Kasten core SPR0901-03KC. Core photos, physical properties and magnetic susceptibility from the multisensor track (MST), and the scanning X-ray fluorescence (XRF) data are included in the collection., and Cruise DOI: 10.7284/901089 This research is funded by NSF-OCE 0752093.
- Keyword:
- Santa Barbara Basin, Southern California, core photos, physical properties, scanning XRF, SPR0901, and Earth Science
- Discipline:
- Science
8Works -
- Creator:
- Crisp, Dakota N., Saggio, Maria L., Scott, Jared, Stacey, William C., Nakatani, Mitsuyoshi, Gliske, Stephen V., and Lin, Jack
- Description:
- This data and scripts are meant to test and show seizure differentiation based on bifurcation theory. A zip file is included which contains real and simulated seizure waveforms, Matlab scripts, and metadata. The matlab scripts allow for visual review validation and objective feature analysis. The file “README.txt” provides more detail about each individual file within the zip file. and Data citation: Crisp, D.N., Saggio, M.L., Scott, J., Stacey, W.C., Nakatani, M., Gliske, S.F., Lin, J. (2019). Epidynamics: Navigating the map of seizure dynamics - Code & Data [Data set]. University of Michigan Deep Blue Data Repository. https://doi.org/10.7302/ejhy-5h41
- Keyword:
- Bifurcation, Epilepsy, Seizure, and Divergence
- Citation to related publication:
- Saggio, M.L., Crisp, D., Scott, J., Karoly, P.J., Kuhlmann, L., Nakatani, M., Murai, T., Dümpelmann, M., Schulze-Bonhage, A., Ikeda, A., Cook, M., Gliske, S.V., Lin, J., Bernard, C., Jirsa, V., Stacey, W., 2020. In pre-print. Epidynamics characterize and navigate the map of seizure dynamics. bioRxiv 2020.02.08.940072. https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.02.08.940072
- Discipline:
- Engineering, Science, and Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Crisp, Dakota N., Cheung, Warwick, Gliske, Stephen V., Lai, Alan, Freestone, Dean R., Grayden, David B., Cook, Mark J., and Stacey, William C.
- Description:
- The data and the scripts are to show that seizure onset dynamics and evoked responses change over the progression of epileptogenesis defined in this intrahippocampal tetanus toxin rat model. All tests explored in this study can be repeated with the data and scripts included in this repository. and Dataset citation: Crisp, D.N., Cheung, W., Gliske, S.V., Lai, A., Freestone, D.R., Grayden, D.B., Cook, MJ., Stacey, W.C. (2019). Epileptogenesis modulates spontaneous and responsive brain state dynamics [Data set]. University of Michigan Deep Blue Data Repository. https://doi.org/10.7302/r6vg-9658
- Keyword:
- evoked response, stimulation, bifurcation, epilepsy, seizure, divergence, and dynamics
- Citation to related publication:
- Crisp, D. N., Cheung, W., Gliske, S. V., Lai, A., Freestone, D. R., Grayden, D. B., Cook, M. J., & Stacey, W. C. (2020). Quantifying epileptogenesis in rats with spontaneous and responsive brain state dynamics. Brain Communications, 2(1). https://doi.org/10.1093/braincomms/fcaa048
- Discipline:
- Science, Engineering, and Health Sciences
-
R/V Melville Core Retrieval Campaign (MV0811), November 2008
User Collection- Creator:
- Wang, Yi and Hendy, Ingrid
- Description:
- This collection represents various raw data and analysis of cores extracted during the November 2008 mission of R/V Melville in the Santa Barbara Basin., The core included is the jumbo piston core MV0811-14JC. Core photos, physical properties and magnetic susceptibility from the multisensor track (MST), and the scanning X-ray fluorescence (XRF) data are included in the collection., and Cruise DOI: 10.7284/903459 The research is funded by NSF OCE-1304327.
- Keyword:
- Santa Barbara Basin, Southern California, core photos, physical properties, scanning XRF, MV0811, and Earth Science
- Discipline:
- Science
3Works -
- Creator:
- Nasser, Ahmad and Gumise, Wonder
- Description:
- The work on accelerating authenticated boot for embedded system resulted in designing an algorithm in python to perform the random address generation and cryptographic MAC calculation. The Sampled Boot schemes implemented in this package allow a significant reduction of the time needed to authenticate firmware images during startup, while still retaining a high degree of trust. This is particularly useful for automotive applications in which startup time constraints make secure boot a time prohibitive process. and Citation for this dataset: Nasser, A., Gumise, W. (2019). Authenticated Boot Acceleration Algorithm [Code and data]. University of Michigan Deep Blue Data Repository. https://doi.org/10.7302/yeh1-1x17
- Keyword:
- Trusted Computing, IOT security, Embedded Security, and Cyber Physical Systems
- Citation to related publication:
- Nasser, A., Gumise, W., and Ma, D., "Accelerated Secure Boot for Real-Time Embedded Safety Systems," SAE Int. J. Transp. Cyber. & Privacy 2(1) : 35-48, 2019, https://doi.org/10.4271/11-02-01-0003
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Meurer, William
- Description:
- SPSS is required to access processed dataset in .sav format. Model output is provided as a word document, and Qualtrics survey instrument is included as PDF and .docx, where .docx version contains survey logic and question numbers.
- Keyword:
- Diagnostic Testing, Emergency Medicine, and Financial Incentives
- Citation to related publication:
- Iyengar, R., Winkels, J., Smith, C. M., Meka, A. P., MD, Porath, J. D., MD, & Meurer, W. J., MD, MS. (2019, January 21). The Effect of Financial Incentives on Patient Decisions to Undergo Low-Value Head CT Scans. https://doi.org/10.31219/osf.io/4mdfw
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Ruas, Terry, Grosky, William, and Aizawa, Akiko
- Description:
- This data set is a collection of word similarity benchmarks (RG65, MEN3K, Wordsim 353, simlex999, SCWS, yp130, simverb3500) in their original format and converted into a cosine similarity scale. In addition, we have two Wikpedia Dumps from 2010 (April) and 2018 (January) in which we provide the original format (raw words), converted using the techniques described in the paper (MSSA, MSSA-D and MSSA-NR) (title in this repository), and also the word embeddings models for 300d and 1000d using a word2vec implementation. A readme.txt is provided with more details for each file.
- Keyword:
- multi-sense embeddings, MSSA, word2vec, wikipedia dump, synset, and natural language processing
- Citation to related publication:
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eswa.2019.06.026
- Discipline:
- Other
-
- Creator:
- Sweetland Center for Writing
- Description:
- The interviews included in this folder were conducted as part of a longitudinal study in writing development published in Developing Writers in Higher Education: A Longitudinal Study (University of Michigan Press, 2019). Interviews were conducted upon students' entry into the study (files labelled "entry") and exit from the study (files labelled "exit"). To learn more about this study, please see the epublication https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890 and the website https://www.developingwritersbook.org/pages/about/about-the-study/.
- Keyword:
- interview, transcript, and developing writers
- Citation to related publication:
- GERE, A. R. (Ed.). (2019). DEVELOPING WRITERS IN HIGHER EDUCATION: A longitudinal study. S.l.: UNIV OF MICHIGAN PRESS. https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890 and This data set is related to "Developing Writers: Writing Samples" available at: https://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/data/concern/data_sets/r207tp36h?locale=en
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Sweetland Center for Writing
- Description:
- The writing samples included in this folder were collected as part of a longitudinal study in writing development published in Developing Writers in Higher Education: A Longitudinal Study (University of Michigan Press, 2019). Writing samples were chosen and uploaded by students as part of the study and come from lower and upper level courses. To learn more about this study, please see the epublication https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890.
- Keyword:
- writing, writing sample, and developing writers
- Citation to related publication:
- GERE, A. R. (Ed.). (2019). DEVELOPING WRITERS IN HIGHER EDUCATION: A longitudinal study. S.l.: UNIV OF MICHIGAN PRESS. https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890 and This data set is related to "Developing Writers: Interview Transcripts" available at: https://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/data/concern/data_sets/sn009x784?locale=en
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Ruas, Terry, Ferreira, Charles H. P., Grosky, William, França, Fabrício O., and Medeiros, Débora M. R,
- Description:
- The relationship between words in a sentence often tell us more about the underlying semantic content of a document than its actual words, individually. Recent publications in the natural language processing arena, more specifically using word embeddings, try to incorporate semantic aspects into their word vector representation by considering the context of words and how they are distributed in a document collection. In this work, we propose two novel algorithms, called Flexible Lexical Chain II and Fixed Lexical Chain II that combine the semantic relations derived from lexical chains, prior knowledge from lexical databases, and the robustness of the distributional hypothesis in word embeddings into a single decoupled system. In short, our approach has three main contributions: (i) unsupervised techniques that fully integrate word embeddings and lexical chains; (ii) a more solid semantic representation that considers the latent relation between words in a document; and (iii) lightweight word embeddings models that can be extended to any natural language task. Knowledge-based systems that use natural language text can benefit from our approach to mitigate ambiguous semantic representations provided by traditional statistical approaches. The proposed techniques are tested against seven word embeddings algorithms using five different machine learning classifiers over six scenarios in the document classification task. Our results show that the integration between lexical chains and word embeddings representations sustain state-of-the-art results, even against more complex systems. Github: https://github.com/truas/LexicalChain_Builder
- Keyword:
- document classification, lexical chains, word embeddings, synset embeddings, chain2vec, and natural language processing
- Citation to related publication:
- Terry Ruas, Charles Henrique Porto Ferreira, William Grosky, Fabrício Olivetti de França, Débora Maria Rossi de Medeiros, "Enhanced word embeddings using multi-semantic representation through lexical chains", Information Sciences, 2020, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ins.2020.04.048
- Discipline:
- Other, Science, and Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Johnson, Jena E., Webb, Samuel M., Condit, Cailey B., Beukes, Nicolas J., and Fischer, Woodward W.
- Description:
- Manganese in the sedimentary record has been interpreted by many as a powerful redox proxy for paleoenvironments, and yet very little work has been done to ensure that the manganese-rich minerals in the rock record are actually recording primary signals. In the accompanying manuscript, we present an in-depth characterization of the manganese mineralogy from two correlated regions recording the Transvaal Supergroup in South Africa with markedly different alteration histories to investigate if there can be post-depositional emplacement of manganese-rich minerals. The data uploaded here are X-ray absorption spectra of (1) manganese standard minerals that were useful in our analyses and (2) minerals from an important well-characterized sample that may be useful as comparative standards in future studies.
- Keyword:
- manganese and X-ray absorption spectroscopy
- Citation to related publication:
- J.E. Johnson, S.M. Webb, C.B. Condit, N.J. Beukes, W.W. Fischer; Effects of metamorphism and metasomatism on manganese mineralogy: Examples from the Transvaal Supergroup. South African Journal of Geology doi: https://doi.org/10.25131/sajg.122.0034
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Yao, Mengqi, Mathieu, Johanna L., Hiskens, Ian A., Molzahn, Daniel K., Koorehdavoudi, Kasra , and Roy, Sandip
- Description:
- The files include all the published paper and presentation source codes. Please install Matpower before running the code. The Matpower version is 5.1, which can be found in https://matpower.org/download/ Talks, papers, and poster in Deep Blue: http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/150104
- Keyword:
- Demand response, Optimal power flow, Power system voltage stability, and Power system small signal stability L
- Citation to related publication:
- Yao, M., Molzahn, D. K., & Mathieu, J. L. (2019). An Optimal Power-Flow Approach to Improve Power System Voltage Stability Using Demand Response. IEEE Transactions on Control of Network Systems, 6(3), 1015–1025. https://doi.org/10.1109/TCNS.2019.2910455, Yao, M., Mathieu, J. L., & Molzahn, D. K. (2017). Using demand response to improve power system voltage stability margins. 2017 IEEE Manchester PowerTech, 1–6. https://doi.org/10.1109/PTC.2017.7980798 , Koorehdavoudi, K., Yao, M., & Mathieu, J. (2017). Using Demand Response to Shape the Fast Dynamics of the Bulk Power Network. https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/Using-Demand-Response-to-Shape-the-Fast-Dynamics-of-Koorehdavoudi-Yao/6799c161744c29e7603e3601daa284ecc84788a8, Yao, M., Hiskens, I. A., & Mathieu, J. L. (2018). Improving Power System Voltage Stability by Using Demand Response to Maximize the Distance to the Closest Saddle-Node Bifurcation. 2018 IEEE Conference on Decision and Control (CDC), 2390–2395. https://doi.org/10.1109/CDC.2018.8619091 , and Yao, M., Molzahn, D. K., & Mathieu, J. L. (2017). The impact of load models in an algorithm for improving voltage stability via demand response. 2017 55th Annual Allerton Conference on Communication, Control, and Computing (Allerton), 149–156. https://doi.org/10.1109/ALLERTON.2017.8262731
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Burgin, Tucker and Mayes, Heather B.
- Description:
- This project aimed to discover and analyze the molecular mechanism of synthesis of two particular fucosylated oligosaccharide products in a mutant enzyme, Thermatoga maratima Alpha-L-Fucosidase D224G, whose wild type performs the opposite reaction (cleavage of fucosyl glycosidic bonds). Discovery of the mechanism was performed using an unbiased simulations method known as aimless shooting, whereas analysis of the mechanism in terms of the energy profile was performed using a separate method known as equilibrium path sampling. The data here concerns the latter method. and The contents of the atesa_master.zip are the ATESA GitHub project. A Python program for automating transition path sampling with aimless shooting using Amber. https://github.com/team-mayes/atesa
- Keyword:
- Equilibrium Path Sampling, Transition Path Sampling, Enzymatic Mechanism, and GH29
- Citation to related publication:
- Burgin, T., & Mayes, H. B. (2019). Mechanism of oligosaccharide synthesis via a mutant GH29 fucosidase. Reaction Chemistry & Engineering, 4(2), 402–409. https://doi.org/10.1039/C8RE00240A
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Hall, Ryan J. and Larson, Ronald G.
- Description:
- This is data is a large assortment of over 50 1,4-polybutadiene star-linear blends that can be used for assessing and developing predictive models. The data are presented in CSV files.
- Keyword:
- polymers, rheology, star-linear polymer blends, and shear rheology
- Citation to related publication:
- Hall, R., Desai, P. S., Kang, B.-G., Huang, Q., Lee, S., Chang, T., Venerus, D. C., Mays, J., Ntetsikas, K., Polymeropoulos, G., Hadjichristidis, N., & Larson, R. G. (2019). Assessing the Range of Validity of Current Tube Models through Analysis of a Comprehensive Set of Star–Linear 1,4-Polybutadiene Polymer Blends. Macromolecules, 52(20), 7831–7846. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.macromol.9b00642
- Discipline:
- Science and Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Linyan, Xiang and Oleg, Zikanov
- Description:
- The Liquid Metal Battery (LMB), a promising energy-storage device that contains liquid-metal interior, is studied numerically in the paper. The metal pad roll instability was modeled based on the open-source CFD software, OpenFOAM. It's based on the solver for simulations of incompressible multiphase flows multiphaseInterFoam modified to include the electromagnetic fields and account for the sharp variations of the electrical conductivity.
- Keyword:
- Liquid metal battery, Interfacial waves, Instability, and OpenFOAM
- Citation to related publication:
- Linyan Xiang (相林言) and Oleg Zikanov, “Numerical simulation of rolling pad instability in cuboid liquid metal batteries,” Physics of Fluids, vol. 31, no. 12, p. 124104, 2019, https://doi.org/10.1063/1.5123170 and Oleg Zikanov, "Shallow water modeling of rolling pad instability in liquid metal batteries." Theoretical and Computational Fluid Dynamics, 32, 325–347, 2018, https://doi.org/10.1007/s00162-018-0456-2
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Tronson, Natalie C and Tchessalova, Daria
- Description:
- The main goal of this research was to identify potential molecular pathways that contribute to memory dysregulation and decline that persists long after illness or inflammation. We have previously established a subchronic immune challenge model that results in memory impairments months after the inflammatory challenge. This project aimed to determine whether memory impairments were accompanied by transcriptional dysregulation in memory related brain region (the hippocampus). These data show the differential gene expression as log2fold change (and p-value) in males and females 3 months after immune challenge (Supp Tables 1 and 2); after a subsequent immune challenge (Supp Tables 3 and 4); the differential regulation of genes in males and females (Supp Table 5); genes differentially expressed in the hippocampus of males and females at baseline (Supp Table 6) and the differential regulation of those genes in males and females after immune challenge (Supp Tables 7,8).
- Keyword:
- hippocampus, lipopolysaccharide, differential gene expression, RNA sequencing, neuroimmune, sex differences, learning and memory, and inflammation
- Citation to related publication:
- Tchessalova, D., & Tronson, N. C. (2019). Enduring and sex-specific changes in hippocampal gene expression after a subchronic immune challenge. BioRxiv, 566570. https://doi.org/10.1101/566570
- Discipline:
- Science and Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Hodgins-Davis, Andrea, Duveau, Fabien, Walker, Elizabeth, and Wittkopp, Patricia J
- Description:
- Understanding how phenotypes evolve requires disentangling the effects of mutation generating new variation from the effects of selection filtering it. Tests for selection frequently assume that mutation introduces phenotypic variation symmetrically around the population mean, yet few studies have tested this assumption by deeply sampling the distributions of mutational effects for particular traits. Here, we examine distributions of mutational effects for gene expression in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae by measuring the effects of thousands of point mutations introduced randomly throughout the genome. We find that the distributions of mutational effects differ for the ten genes surveyed and are inconsistent with normality. For example, all ten distributions of mutational effects included more mutations with large effects than expected for normally distributed phenotypes. In addition, some genes also showed asymmetries in their distribution of mutational effects, with new mutations more likely to increase than decrease the gene’s expression or vice versa. Neutral models of regulatory evolution that take these empirically determined distributions into account suggest that neutral processes may explain more expression variation within natural populations than currently appreciated.
- Keyword:
- gene expression, evolution, mutation, mutagenesis, regulatory evolution, YFP, reporter construct, yeast, TDH1, TDH2, TDH3, GPD1, OST1, PFY1, STM1, RNR1, and RNR2
- Citation to related publication:
- Hodgins-Davis, A., Duveau, F., Walker, E. A., & Wittkopp, P. J. (2019). Empirical measures of mutational effects define neutral models of regulatory evolution in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. BioRxiv, 551804. https://doi.org/10.1101/551804
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Moore, Talia Y., Danforth, Shannon M., Larson, Joanna G., and Davis Rabosky, Alison R.
- Description:
- Warning signals in chemically defended organisms are critical components of predator-prey interactions, often requiring multiple coordinated display components for a signal to be effective. When threatened by a predator, venomous coral snakes (genus Micrurus) display a vigorous, non-locomotory thrashing behaviour that has been only qualitatively described. Given the high-contrast and often colourful banding patterns of these snakes, this thrashing display is hypothesized to be a key component of a complex aposematic signal under strong stabilizing selection across species in a mimicry system. By experimentally testing snake response across simulated predator cues, we analysed variation in the presence and expression of a thrashing display across five species of South American coral snakes. Although the major features of the thrash display were conserved across species, we found significant variation in the propensity to perform a display at all, the duration of thrashing, and the curvature of snake bodies that was mediated by predator cue type, snake body size, and species identity. We also found an interaction between curve magnitude and body location that clearly shows which parts of the display vary most across individuals and species. Our results suggest that contrary to the assumption in the literature that all species and individuals perform the same display, a high degree of variation persists in thrashing behaviour exhibited by Micrurus coral snakes despite presumably strong selection to converge on a common signal. This quantitative behavioural characterization presents a new framework for analysing the non-locomotory motions displayed by snakes in a broader ecological context, especially for signalling systems with complex interaction across multiple modalities.
- Keyword:
- aposematism, biomechanics, coral snake mimicry, curvature, Elapidae, non-locomotory motion, Peruvian Amazon, and snake behaviour
- Citation to related publication:
- Moore, T. Y., Danforth, S. M., Larson, J. G., & Davis Rabosky, A. R. (2020). A Quantitative Analysis of Micrurus Coral Snakes Reveals Unexpected Variation in Stereotyped Anti-Predator Displays Within a Mimicry System. Integrative Organismal Biology, 2(1). https://doi.org/10.1093/iob/obaa006
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Dulka, Eden A
- Description:
- This data is a subset of that originally produced as part of an effort to characterize GnRH neuron activity during prepubertal development in control and PNA mice and investigate the potential influences of sex and PNA treatment on this process (1). It was later used in (2) to further investigate the firing patterns of GnRH neurons in these categories of mice and determine how these patterns might differ based on age and treatment condition. The data files can be opened and examined using Wavemetric's Igor Pro software. Code used to further examine and visualize the data can be found at https://gitlab.com/um-mip/mc-project-code. This research was supported by National Institute of Health/Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development R01 HD34860 and P50 HD28934. (1) Dulka EA, Moenter SM. Prepubertal development of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) neuron activity is altered by sex, age and prenatal androgen exposure. Endocrinology 2017; 158:3941-3953 (2) Penix JJ, DeFazio RA, Dulka EA, Schnell S, Moenter SM. Firing patterns of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) neurons are sculpted by their biology. Pending.
- Keyword:
- action potential, Monte Carlo, polycystic ovary syndrome, puberty, and androgen
- Citation to related publication:
- Dulka EA, Moenter SM. Prepubertal development of gonadotropin-releasing hormone neuron activity is altered by sex, age and prenatal androgen exposure. Endocrinology 2017; 158:3943-3953. https://dx.doi.org/10.1210%2Fen.2017-00768 and Penix JJ, DeFazio RA, Dulka EA, Schnell S, Moenter SM. Firing patterns of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) neurons are sculpted by their biology. Pending.
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Bougher, S. W. (CLaSP Department, U. of Michigan), Roeten, K. J. (CLaSP Department, U. of Michigan), and Sharrar, R. (Astronomy Department, U. of Michigan)
- Description:
- The NASA MAVEN (Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution) spacecraft, which is currently in orbit around Mars, has been taking daily (systematic) measurements of the densities and temperatures in the upper atmosphere of Mars between about 140 to 240 km above the surface. Wind measurement campaigns are also conducted once per month for 5-10 orbits. These densities, temperatures and winds change with time (e.g. season, local time) and location, and sometimes fluctuate quickly. Global dust storm events are also known to significantly impact these density, temperature and wind fields in the Mars thermosphere. Such global dust storm period measurements can be compared to simulations from a computer model of the Mars atmosphere called M-GITM (Mars Global Ionosphere-Thermosphere Model), developed at U. of Michigan. This is the first detailed comparison between direct global dust storm period measurements in the upper atmosphere of Mars and simulated MGITM fields and is important because it can help to inform us what physical processes are acting on the upper atmosphere during such large dust events. Since the global circulation plays a role in the structure, variability, and evolution of the atmosphere, understanding the processes that drive the winds in the upper atmosphere of Mars also provides key context for understanding how the atmosphere behaves as a whole system. A basic version of the M-GITM code can be found on Github as follows: https:/github.com/dpawlows/MGITM and About 4 months of Neutral Gas and Ion Mass Spectrometer (NGIMS) measurements of densities and winds have been made by the MAVEN team during the summer of 2018 (Elrod et al., 2019). Nine reference measurement intervals during this global dust storm (1-June through 30-August 2018) are selected for detailed study (Elrod et al. 2019). The Mars conditions for these nine intervals have been used to launch corresponding M-GITM code simulations, yielding 3-D neutral density, temperature and wind fields for comparison to these NGIMS measurements. The M-GITM datacubes used to extract the density, temperature and neutral winds, along the trajectory of each orbit path between 140 and 240 km, are provided in this Deep Blue Data archive. README files are provided for each datacube, detailing the contents of each file. A general README file is also provided that summarizes the inputs and outputs of the M-GITM code simulations for this study.
- Keyword:
- Mars, MAVEN Spacecraft, Mars Thermosphere, and Mars Global Dust Storm of 2018
- Citation to related publication:
- Elrod, M. K., S. W. Bougher, K. Roeten, R. Sharrar, J. Murphy, Structural and Compositional Changes in the Upper Atmosphere related to the PEDE-2018 Dust Event on Mars as Observed by MAVEN NGIMS, Geophys. Res. Lett., (2019). doi: 10.1029/2019GL084378. and Jain, S. K., Bougher, S. W., Deighan, J., Schneider, N. M., Gonzalez‐Galindo, F., Stewart, A. I. F., et al. ( 2020). Martian thermospheric warming associated with the Planet Encircling Dust Event of 2018. Geophysical Research Letters, 47, e2019GL085302. https://doi.org/10.1029/2019GL085302
- Discipline:
- Engineering and Science
-
- Creator:
- Liemohn, Michael W and Wooden, Paige
- Description:
- Journals sometimes focus the attention of the research community by having a special collection, sometimes an entire special issue, devoted to a single topic. A reasonable question to ask is whether the extra effort of organizing, promoting, and maintaining the special collection is worthwhile. The paper that this data set accompanies examines paper impact in the Journal of Geophysical Research Space Physics, separating the special collection papers from the non-special-collection submissions. The conclusion is that special collections are worth the extra work.
- Keyword:
- journal special collections, bibliometrics, citations, and downloads
- Citation to related publication:
- Liemohn, M. W., & Wooden, P. (2019). Editorial: Impact of special collections in JGR Space Physics. Journal of Geophysical Research Space Physics. https://doi.org/10.1002/essoar.10501036.2
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Gebarski, Benjamin B. and Becker, Udo
- Description:
- Files are uploaded as crystallographic information files (.cif), the standard text file format for representing crystallographic information. These files contain the optimized molecular models for pentavalent plutonium incorporation reactions into/onto barite, anglesite, celestine, anhydrite, aragonite, and calcite host minerals.
- Keyword:
- actinide, quantum mechanics, molecular model, plutonium, incorporation, surface, radioactive, contamination, and nuclear waste
- Citation to related publication:
- Gebarski, B. B. and Becker, U. Quantum-Mechanical Determination of the Incorporation of Pentavalent Plutonium into Carbonate and Sulfate Minerals. (2019) Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2019.10.015
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Tan, Meng H, Iyengar, Ravi, Mizokami-Stout, Kara, Yentz, Sarah, MacEachern, Mark P, Shen, Li Yan, Redman, Bruce, and Gianchandani, Roma
- Description:
- The dataset includes most citations considered for inclusion in the scoping review. The citations are accessible in the Endnote file, as well as the primary citation export files from each database. The literature search strategies are included for reproducibility and transparency purposes.
- Keyword:
- Literature search, Scoping review, and Endocrinopathies
- Citation to related publication:
- Tan MH, Iyengar R, Mizokami-Stout K, et al. Spectrum of immune checkpoint inhibitors-induced endocrinopathies in cancer patients: a scoping review of case reports. Clin Diabetes Endocrinol. 2019;5:1. Published 2019 Jan 22. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40842-018-0073-4
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- MacEachern, Mark P, Marti, Kyriaki C, Mylonas, Anastassios I, and Gruppen, Larry
- Description:
- The dataset includes most citations considered for inclusion in the scoping review. The citations are accessible in the Endnote (enlx) file, as well as the primary citation export files from each database. The literature search strategies are included for reproducibility and transparency purposes. See the methods of the article for more information.
- Keyword:
- Dental Education, Dentistry, Education, Humanities, and Scoping Review
- Citation to related publication:
- Marti KC, Mylonas AI, MacEachern M, Gruppen L. (2019). Humanities in predoctoral dental education: A scoping review. Journal of Dental Education, 83(10), 1174-1198. DOI: 10.21815/JDE.019.126, http://www.jdentaled.org/content/83/10/1174.long, and https://doi.org/10.21815/JDE.019.126
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Muzyk, Andrew, Smothers, Zachary, Akrobetu, Dennis, Ruiz Veve, Jennifer, MacEachern, Mark P, Tetrault, Jeanette M, and Gruppen, Larry
- Description:
- The dataset includes all citations considered for inclusion in the scoping review. The citations are accessible in Endnote (enlx) and Microsoft Excel (xlsx), as well as the primary citation export files from each database. The literature search strategies are included for reproducibility and transparency purposes. See the published methods for more information.
- Keyword:
- Medical Education, Substance Use Disorders, and Scoping Review
- Citation to related publication:
- Muzyk A, Smothers ZPW, Akrobetu D, Ruiz Veve J, MacEachern M, Tetrault JM, Grupen L. (2019). Substance use disorder education in medical schools: A scoping review of the literature. Academic Medicine. PMID: 31348067. and https://doi.org/10.1097/ACM.0000000000002883
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Lee, Joyce Y, Knauer, Heather A, Lee, Shawna J, MacEachern, Mark P, and Garfield, Craig F
- Description:
- The dataset includes all citations considered for inclusion in the systematic review. The citations are accessible in Endnote (enlx), as well as through the primary citation export files from each database. The literature search strategies are included for reproducibility and transparency purposes. See the published methods for more information.
- Keyword:
- Systematic Review, Fathers, Education, and Perinatal
- Citation to related publication:
- Lee JY, Knauer HA, Lee SJ, MacEachern MP, Garfield CF. (2018). Father-inclusive perinatal parent education programs: A systematic review. Pediatrics, 142(1). PMID: 29903835. and https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2018-0437
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- DeLong, Michael R, Tandon, Vickram J, Farajzadeh, Matthew, Berlin, Nicholas L, MacEachern, Mark P, Rudkin, George H, Da Lio, Andrew L, and Cederna, Paul S
- Description:
- The dataset includes all citations considered for inclusion in the systematic review. The citations are accessible in Endnote (enlx), as well as through the primary citation export files from each database. The literature search strategies are included for reproducibility and transparency purposes. See the published methods for more information.
- Keyword:
- Systematic Review, Acellular Dermal Matrix, Breast Reconstructions, and Tissue Expanders
- Citation to related publication:
- DeLong MR, Tandon VJ, Farajzadeh M, Berlin NL, MacEachern MP, Rudkin GH, Da Lio AL, Cederna PS. (2019). Systematic review of the impact of acellular dermal matrix on aesthetics and patient satisfaction in tissue expander-to-implant breast reconstructions. Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. and https://doi.org/10.1097/PRS.0000000000006212
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Horsley, Timothy J. and Sampson, Christina P.
- Description:
- The data (raw data, composite files [processed], and some images) can be read by the program TerraSurveyor. Version 3.0.34.10 of the software was used to create the composite files in this deposit. and The magnetometer data was the second step in a geophysical survey program that began with magnetic susceptibility survey of a portion of the Weedon Island Preserve in St. Petersburg, Florida. Geophysical survey was used to map human occupation of the study area and to guide subsequent archaeological excavations.
- Keyword:
- magnetometry, geophysical survey, remote sensing, Florida archaeology, and coastal archaeology
- Citation to related publication:
- Sampson, C. P. (2019) Safety Harbor at the Weeden Island Site: Late Pre-Columbian Craft, Community, and Complexity on Florida's Gulf Coast. PhD Dissertation, University of Michigan. and Sampson, Christina Perry and Timothy J. Horsley. Using Multi-Staged Magnetic Survey and Excavation to Assess Community Settlement Organization: A Case Study from the Central Peninsular Gulf Coast of Florida. Advances in Archaeological Practice. Cambridge University Press: 18 December 2019. https://doi.org/10.1017/aap.2019.45
- Discipline:
- Science and Social Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Tye, Alexander R, Niemi, Nathan A, Safarov, Rafig T, Kadirov, Fakhraddin A, Babayev, Gulam R
- Description:
- The dataset contains U-Pb radiometric ages of zircon grains from sedimentary rocks and modern river sands from the Caucasus region of western Asia. The data were collected as part of a research project investigating the effects of continental collision in the Caucasus region on regional erosion and sedimentary systems. The data are presented using the standard quantities reported for zircon U-Pb age analyses at the University of Arizona Laserchron Center.
- Keyword:
- detrital zircon, provenance, and U-Pb
- Citation to related publication:
- Tye, A. R., Niemi, N. A., Safarov, R. T., Kadirov, F. A., & Babayev, G. R. (2021). Sedimentary response to a collision orogeny recorded in detrital zircon provenance of Greater Caucasus foreland basin sediments. Basin Research, 33(2), 933–967. https://doi.org/10.1111/bre.12499
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Tye, Alexander R, Niemi, Nathan A, Safarov, Rafig T, Kadirov, Fakhraddin A, Babayev, Gulam R
- Description:
- The Eastern Greater Caucasus is a mountain belt in western Asia that formed as an accretionary prism above an active subduction zone. Because of the bedrock exposure in the range, it offers a unique opportunity to research deformation processes in accretionary prisms, which are ubiquitous above the Earth's many subduction zones but are typically submarine and difficult to investigate. The data presented here result from field geologic mapping in several swaths roughly perpendicular to the mountain range that together span the entire range across strike. The data serve will serve as the basis for inference of the deep structural architecture of the range and characterization of the styles of deformation present in the range.
- Keyword:
- structural geology, Greater Caucasus, tectonics, geologic mapping, and accretionary prism
- Citation to related publication:
- Tye, A. R., Niemi, N. A., Safarov, R. T., Kadirov, F. A., & Babayev, G. R. (2021). Sedimentary response to a collision orogeny recorded in detrital zircon provenance of Greater Caucasus foreland basin sediments. Basin Research, 33(2), 933–967. https://doi.org/10.1111/bre.12499
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Liu, Meichen
- Description:
- We intend to figure out the difference of stress drops, which is a characteristic source parameter, between shallow and deep-focus earthquakes. Significant stress drop difference may shed light on the difference of physical mechanisms of shallow and deep-focus earthquakes, which has been a elusive question. We select from deep-focus earthquakes (> 400 km) in 2000-2018 and obtain their stress drops using P and S waves. We find that stress drops of deep-focus earthquakes are about one order of magnitude higher than that of shallow earthquakes, indicating about one order of magnitude higher shear strength of shallow faults than faults in the mantle. The wide range of stress drops further suggests coexistence of phase transformation and shear-induced melting mechanisms of deep-focus earthquakes.
- Citation to related publication:
- Liu, M., Huang, Y., & Ritsema, J. (2020, March 4). Stress drop variation of deep-focus earthquakes based on empirical Green's function [preprint]. Submitted to Geophysical Research Letters. https://doi.org/10.31223/osf.io/8jx6p and Liu, M., Huang, Y., & Ritsema, J. (2020). Stress Drop Variation of Deep-Focus Earthquakes Based on Empirical Green’s Functions. Geophysical Research Letters, 47(9), e2019GL086055. https://doi.org/10.1029/2019GL086055
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Tye, Alexander R, Niemi, Nathan A, Safarov, Rafig T, Kadirov, Fakhraddin A, Babayev, Gulam R
- Description:
- Apatite fission track thermochronometry data were collected from the Eastern Greater Caucasus orogen, Azerbaijan. Thermochronometry data constrain the history of exhumation and deformation of rocks within the orogen, which is an active accretionary prism. Thermochronometry data record the timing of cooling of a rock sample beneath a given closure temperature. Given an assumed or inferred geothermal gradient, thermochronometric ages can be used to infer exhumation rates and make interpretations about rates of deformation in orogens. The apatite fission track data presented here are analyzed in concert with apatite (U-Th)/He and zircon (U-Th)/He ages reported in Tye et al., in prep., to characterize the exhumation history of the Eastern Greater Caucasus.
- Keyword:
- thermochronometry, apatite fission track, Caucasus
- Citation to related publication:
- Tye, A. R., Niemi, N. A., Safarov, R. T., Kadirov, F. A., & Babayev, G. R. (2021). Sedimentary response to a collision orogeny recorded in detrital zircon provenance of Greater Caucasus foreland basin sediments. Basin Research, 33(2), 933–967. https://doi.org/10.1111/bre.12499
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Smith, Joeseph P., Gronewold, Andrew D., Read, Laura, Crooks, James L., School for Environment and Sustainability, University of Michigan, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Michigan, and Cooperative Institute for Great Lakes Research, University of Michigan
- Description:
- Using the statistical programming package R ( https://cran.r-project.org/), and JAGS (Just Another Gibbs Sampler, http://mcmc-jags.sourceforge.net/), we processed multiple estimates of the Laurentian Great Lakes water balance components -- over-lake precipitation, evaporation, lateral tributary runoff, connecting channel flows, and diversions -- feeding them into prior distributions (using data from 1950 through 1979), and likelihood functions. The Bayesian Network is coded in the BUGS language. Water balance computations assume that monthly change in storage for a given lake is the difference between beginning of month water levels surrounding each month. For example, the change in storage for June 2015 is the difference between the beginning of month water level for July 2015 and that for June 2015., More details on the model can be found in the following summary report for the International Watersheds Initiative of the International Joint Commission, where the model was used to generate a new water balance historical record from 1950 through 2015: https://www.glerl.noaa.gov/pubs/fulltext/2018/20180021.pdf. Large Lake Statistical Water Balance Model (L2SWBM): https://www.glerl.noaa.gov/data/WaterBalanceModel/, and This data set has a shorter timespan to accommodate a prior which uses data not used in the likelihood functions.
- Keyword:
- Water, Balance, Great Lakes, Laurentian, Machine Learning, Machine, Learning, Lakes, Bayesian, and Network
- Citation to related publication:
- Smith, J., Gronewald, A. et al. Summary Report: Development of the Large Lake Statistical Water Balance Model for Constructing a New Historical Record of the Great Lakes Water Balance. Submitted to: The International Watersheds Initiative of the International Joint Commission. Accessible at https://www.glerl.noaa.gov/pubs/fulltext/2018/20180021.pdf, Large Lake Statistical Water Balance Model (L2SWBM). https://www.glerl.noaa.gov/data/WaterBalanceModel/, and Gronewold, A.D., Smith, J.P., Read, L. and Crooks, J.L., 2020. Reconciling the water balance of large lake systems. Advances in Water Resources, p.103505.
- Discipline:
- Science and Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Davis Rabosky, Alison R., Moore, Talia Y., Sánchez-Paredes, Ciara M., Westeen, Erin P., Larson, Joanna G., Sealey, Briana A., and Balinski, Bailey A.
- Description:
- Animals in nature use diverse strategies to evade or deter their predators, including many vivid behavioural displays only qualitatively described from field encounters with natural predators or humans. Within venomous snake mimicry, stereotyped anti-predator displays are suggested to be a critical component of the warning signal given by toxic models and thus under strong selection for independent convergence in mimetic species. However, no studies have systematically quantified variation in snake anti-predator displays across taxonomically broad clades to test how these behaviours evolve across species within a phylogenetic comparative methods framework. Here we describe a new, high-throughput approach for collecting and scoring snake anti-predator displays in the field that demonstrates both low observer bias and infinite extension across any species. Then, we show our method's utility in quantitatively comparing the behaviour of 20 highly-divergent snake species from the Amazonian lowlands of Peru. We found that a simple experimental setup varying simulated predator cues was very successful in eliciting anti-predator displays across species and that high-speed videography captured a greater diversity of behavioural responses than described in the literature. We also found that although different display components evolve at different rates with complicated patterns of covariance, there is clear evidence of evolutionary convergence in anti-predator displays among distantly related elapid coral snakes and their colubrid mimics. We conclude that our approach significantly advances opportunity for future analyses of snake behaviour, kinematics, and the evolution of anti-predator signals more generally, especially macroevolutionary analyses across clades with similarly intractable behavioural diversity.
- Keyword:
- Batesian mimicry, phylogenetic comparative methods, signal evolution, aposematism, simulated predator cues, coral snakes, and Peruvian Amazon
- Citation to related publication:
- Alison R. Davis Rabosky, Talia Y. Moore, Ciara M. Sanchez-Paredes, Erin P. Westeen, Joanna G. Larson, Briana A. Sealey, Bailey A. Balinski (2020) Convergence and divergence in anti-predator displays: A novel approach to quantitative behavioural comparison in snakes. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/biolinnean/blaa222
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Niemi, Nathan A. and Abbey, Alyssa L.
- Description:
- These data were produced in the scope of research into the timing, rate, and magnitude of extensional exhumation along the length of the Rio Grande Rift in Colorado and New Mexico. The low-temperature (apatite and zircon (U-Th)/He) thermochronometric ages presented in this data set are sensitive to near-surface temperatures (~80C and 180C, respectively) and record the progressive exhumation of the rock mass from which the samples were collected towards the Earth's surface. These thermochronometric ages, and the differences between them, provide insight into the absolute timing, exhumation rate and total magnitude of exhumation on the normal faults that bound the Rio Grande Rift. and The QTQt program mentioned (Version QTQt64R5.6.2a was used for the data presented in this deposit) is not openly available for download, but is described in the Gallagher 2012 publication referenced, and can be requested from its author. For more information on the request process and a user guide, see http://www.iearth.org.au/codes/QTQt/
- Keyword:
- thermochronology, helium dating, (U-Th)/He, Rio Grande Rift, New Mexico, Colorado, and extensional tectonics
- Citation to related publication:
- Abbey, A. L., & Niemi, N. A. (2020). Perspectives on Continental Rifting Processes From Spatiotemporal Patterns of Faulting and Magmatism in the Rio Grande Rift, USA. Tectonics, 39(1), e2019TC005635. https://doi.org/10.1029/2019TC005635
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Bustamante, Angela C., Opron, Kristopher, Ehlenbach, William J., Crane, Paul K., Keene, Dirk, Standiford, Theodore J., and Singer, Benjamin H.
- Description:
- This study was conducted to detect and analyze modules, or clusters of genes, associated with sepsis, using RNAseq data obtained from 12 participants who died of sepsis and 12 participants who died of non-infectious critical illness while hospitalized. This deposit contains the input data and parameters needed to reproduce the weighted gene co-expression network analysis (WGCNA) and gene enrichment analysis performed on this data. This analysis requires the R packages "WGCNA" version 1.68 and "DESeq2" version 1.22.2 available for download from bioconductor ( http://bioconductor.org). The external bioinformatics tool DAVID version 6.8 ( https://david.ncifcrf.gov/) was used as an additional gene enrichment analysis. Please see the supplemental methods document within this deposit and published research letter for more detailed information.
- Keyword:
- Sepsis, RNAseq, Transcriptomics, Human, and Brain
- Citation to related publication:
- Bustamante, A.C., Opron, K., Ehlenbach, W.J., Larson, E.B., Crane, P.K., Keene, C.D., Standiford, T.J., Singer, B.H., 2020. Transcriptomic Profiles of Sepsis in the Human Brain. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. https://doi.org/10.1164/rccm.201909-1713LE
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Smith, Joeseph P., Gronewold, Andrew D., Read, Laura, Crooks, James L., School for Environment and Sustainability, University of Michigan, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Michigan, and Cooperative Institute for Great Lakes Research
- Description:
- Using the statistical programming package R ( https://cran.r-project.org/), and JAGS (Just Another Gibbs Sampler, http://mcmc-jags.sourceforge.net/), we processed multiple estimates of the Laurentian Great Lakes water balance components -- over-lake precipitation, evaporation, lateral tributary runoff, connecting channel flows, and diversions -- feeding them into prior distributions (using data from 1950 through 1979), and likelihood functions. The Bayesian Network is coded in the BUGS language. Water balance computations assume that monthly change in storage for a given lake is the difference between beginning of month water levels surrounding each month. For example, the change in storage for June 2015 is the difference between the beginning of month water level for July 2015 and that for June 2015., More details on the model can be found in the following summary report for the International Watersheds Initiative of the International Joint Commission, where the model was used to generate a new water balance historical record from 1950 through 2015: https://www.glerl.noaa.gov/pubs/fulltext/2018/20180021.pdf. Large Lake Statistical Water Balance Model (L2SWBM): https://www.glerl.noaa.gov/data/WaterBalanceModel/ , and This data set has a shorter timespan to accommodate a prior which uses data not used in the likelihood functions.
- Keyword:
- Water, Balance, Great Lakes, Laurentian, Machine, Learning, Lakes, Bayesian, and Network
- Citation to related publication:
- Smith, J., Gronewald, A. et al. Summary Report: Development of the Large Lake Statistical Water Balance Model for Constructing a New Historical Record of the Great Lakes Water Balance. Submitted to: The International Watersheds Initiative of the International Joint Commission. Accessible at https://www.glerl.noaa.gov/pubs/fulltext/2018/20180021.pdf, Large Lake Statistical Water Balance Model (L2SWBM). https://www.glerl.noaa.gov/data/WaterBalanceModel/, and Gronewold, A.D., Smith, J.P., Read, L. and Crooks, J.L., 2020. Reconciling the water balance of large lake systems. Advances in Water Resources, p.103505.
- Discipline:
- Science and Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Smith, Joeseph P., Gronewold, Andrew D., Read, Laura, Crooks, James L., School for Environment and Sustainability, University of Michigan, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Michigan, and Cooperative Institute for Great Lakes Research
- Description:
- Using the statistical programming package R ( https://cran.r-project.org/), and JAGS (Just Another Gibbs Sampler, http://mcmc-jags.sourceforge.net/), we processed multiple estimates of the Laurentian Great Lakes water balance components -- over-lake precipitation, evaporation, lateral tributary runoff, connecting channel flows, and diversions -- feeding them into prior distributions (using data from 1950 through 1979), and likelihood functions. The Bayesian Network is coded in the BUGS language. Water balance computations assume that monthly change in storage for a given lake is the difference between beginning of month water levels surrounding each month. For example, the change in storage for June 2015 is the difference between the beginning of month water level for July 2015 and that for June 2015., More details on the model can be found in the following summary report for the International Watersheds Initiative of the International Joint Commission, where the model was used to generate a new water balance historical record from 1950 through 2015: https://www.glerl.noaa.gov/pubs/fulltext/2018/20180021.pdf. Large Lake Statistical Water Balance Model (L2SWBM): https://www.glerl.noaa.gov/data/WaterBalanceModel/, and This data set has a shorter timespan to accommodate a prior which uses data not used in the likelihood functions.
- Keyword:
- Water, Balance, Great Lakes, Laurentian, Machine, Learning, Lakes, Bayesian, and Network
- Citation to related publication:
- Smith, J., Gronewald, A. et al. Summary Report: Development of the Large Lake Statistical Water Balance Model for Constructing a New Historical Record of the Great Lakes Water Balance. Submitted to: The International Watersheds Initiative of the International Joint Commission. Accessible at https://www.glerl.noaa.gov/pubs/fulltext/2018/20180021.pdf, Large Lake Statistical Water Balance Model (L2SWBM). https://www.glerl.noaa.gov/data/WaterBalanceModel/, and Gronewold, A.D., Smith, J.P., Read, L. and Crooks, J.L., 2020. Reconciling the water balance of large lake systems. Advances in Water Resources, p.103505.
- Discipline:
- Science and Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Foltynek, Tomas, Ruas, Terry, Scharpf, Philipp , Meuschke, Norman, Schubotz, Moritz , Grosky, William , and Gipp, Bela
- Description:
- This data set is comprised of multiple folders. The corpus folder contains raw text used for training and testing in two splits, "document" and "paragraph". The Spun documents and paragraphs are generated using the SpinBot tool ( https://spinbot.com/API). The paragraph split is generated by only selecting paragraphs with 3 or more sentences in the document split. Each folder is divided in mg (i.e., machine generated through SpinBot) and og (i.e., original generated file), The human judgement folder contains the human evaluation between original and spun documents (sample). It also contains the answers (keys) and survey results. , The models folder contains the machine learning classifier models for each word embedding technique used (only for document split training). The models were exported using pickle (Python 3.6). The grid search for hyperparameter adjustments is described in the paper. , and The vector folders (train and test) contains the average of all word vectors for each document and paragraph. Each line has the number of dimensions of the word embeddings technique used (see paper for more details) followed by its respective class (i.e, label mg or og). Each file belong to one class, either "mg" or "og". The values are comma-separated (.csv). The extension is .arff can be read as a normal .txt file.
- Keyword:
- paraphrase detection, plagiarism detection, document classification, and word embeddings
- Citation to related publication:
- Foltýnek, T. & Ruas, T. & Scharpf, P. & Meuschke, N. & Schubotz, M. & Grosky, W. & Gipp, B., “Detecting Machine-obfuscated Plagiarism,” in Sustainable Digital Communities, vol. 12051 LNCS, Springer, 2020, pp. 816–827. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-43687-2_68
- Discipline:
- General Information Sources
-
- Creator:
- Hegedus, Alexander M
- Description:
- This is the README for the LunarSynchrotronArray package, maintained by Dr. Alex Hegedus alexhege@umich.edu This code repository corresponds to the Hegedus et al. 2020 (accepted) Radio Science paper, "Measuring the Earth's Synchrotron Emission from Radiation Belts with a Lunar Near Side Radio Array". The arxiv link for the paper is https://arxiv.org/abs/1912.04482. The DOI link is https://doi.org/10.1029/2019RS006891 , The Earth's Ionosphere is home to a large population of energetic electrons that live in the balance of many factors including input from the Solar wind, and the influence of the Earth's magnetic field. These energetic electrons emit radio waves as they traverse Earth's magnetosphere, leading to short‐lived, strong radio emissions from local regions, as well as persistent weaker emissions that act as a global signature of the population breakdown of all the energetic electrons. Characterizing this weaker emission (Synchrotron Emission) would lead to a greater understanding of the energetic electron populations on a day to day level. A radio array on the near side of the Moon would always be facing the Earth, and would well suited for measuring its low frequency radio emissions. In this work we simulate such a radio array on the lunar near side, to image this weaker synchrotron emission. The specific geometry and location of the test array were made using the most recent lunar maps made by the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter. This array would give us unprecedented day to day knowledge of the electron environment around our planet, providing reports of Earth's strong and weak radio emissions, giving both local and global information. , This set of codes should guide you through making the figures in the paper, as well as hopefully being accessible enough for changing the code for your own array. I would encourage you to please reach out to collaborate if that is the case! Requirements: , and CASA 4.7.1 (or greater?) built on python 2.7 Example link for Red Hat 7 https://casa.nrao.edu/download/distro/casa/release/el7/casa-release-4.7.1-el7.tar.gz Users may follow this guide to download and install the correct version of CASA for their system https://casa.nrao.edu/casadocs/casa-5.5.0/introduction/obtaining-and-installing CASA executables should be fairly straightforward to extract from the untarred files. gcc 4.8.5 or above (or below?) GCC installation instructions can be found here: https://gcc.gnu.org/install/ SPICE (I use cspice here) https://naif.jpl.nasa.gov/naif/toolkit_C.html As seen in lunar_furnsh.txt which loads the SPICE kernels, you also must download KERNELS_TO_LOAD = ( '/home/alexhege/SPICE/LunarEph/moon_pa_de421_1900-2050.bpc' '/home/alexhege/SPICE/LunarEph/moon_080317.tf' '/home/alexhege/SPICE/LunarEph/moon_assoc_me.tf' '/home/alexhege/SPICE/LunarEph/pck00010.tpc' '/home/alexhege/SPICE/LunarEph/naif0008.tls' '/home/alexhege/SPICE/LunarEph/de430.bsp' ) All of which can be found at https://naif.jpl.nasa.gov/pub/naif/generic_kernels/ SLDEM2015_128_60S_60N_000_360_FLOAT.IMG for the lunar surface data by LRO LOLA found at http://imbrium.mit.edu/DATA/SLDEM2015/GLOBAL/FLOAT_IMG/
- Citation to related publication:
- Hegedus, A., Nenon, Q., Brunet, A., Kasper, J., Sicard, A., Cecconi, B., MacDowall, R., & Baker, D. (2019). Measuring the Earth's Synchrotron Emission from Radiation Belts with a Lunar Near Side Radio Array. https://arxiv.org/abs/1912.04482 and Hegedus, A., Nenon, Q., Brunet, A., Kasper, J., Sicard, A., Cecconi, B., MacDowall, R., & Baker, D. (2020). Radio Science. https://doi.org/10.1029/2019RS006891
- Discipline:
- Engineering and Science
-
- Creator:
- Hatch, Nan E.
- Description:
- Crouzon FGFR2-C342Y/+ and wild type littermate pups on a C57BL/6 congenic background were injected with lentivirus expressing recombinant TNAP enzyme or phosphate buffered saline shortly after birth. Mice were euthanized 3 weeks after birth for analyses.
- Keyword:
- craniofacial, bone, craniosynotosis, FGFR2, TNAP tissue nonspecific alkaline phosphatase, mouse model, and development
- Citation to related publication:
- Nam, H. K., Vesela, I., Schutte, S. D., & Hatch, N. E. (2020). Viral delivery of tissue nonspecific alkaline phosphatase diminishes craniosynostosis in one of two FGFR2C342Y/+ mouse models of Crouzon syndrome. PLOS ONE, 15(5), e0234073. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0234073
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Ahluwalia, Vinayak S., Steimle, Lauren N., and Denton, Brian T.
- Description:
- This repository includes test instances of infinite-horizon Markov decision processes with multiple models of parameters (i.e., "Multi-model Markov decision processes"). We generated each test instance in the dataset using a Python script. The test instances can be read in using the provided C++ and Python script. See the README for details.
- Keyword:
- Markov decision processes, mixed-integer programming, stochastic programming, and dynamic programming
- Citation to related publication:
- Ahluwalia, Steimle, and Denton. "Policy-based branch-and-bound for infinite-horizon Multi-model Markov decision processes". 2020.
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Huffaker, Jordan S., Kummerfeld, Jonathan K., Lasecki, Walter S., and Ackerman, Mark S.
- Description:
- The following files include supplementary materials for our CHI 2020 paper "Crowdsourced Detection of Emotionally Manipulative Language". Namely, these materials include the dataset that was used in the evaluation. See the paper for more details.
- Keyword:
- Crowdsourcing, Media Manipulation, Rhetoric, and Emotion
- Citation to related publication:
- J.S. Huffaker, J.K. Kummerfeld, W.S. Lasecki, M.S. Ackerman. Crowdsourced Detection of Emotionally Manipulative Language. In Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI 2020). Honolulu, HI. 2020.
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Hatch, Nan E.
- Description:
- Craniosynostosis is the premature fusion of cranial bones. The goal of this study was to determine if delivery of recombinant tissue nonspecific alkaline phosphatase (TNAP) could prevent or diminish the severity of craniosynostosis in a C57BL/6 FGFR2C342Y/+ model of neonatal onset craniosynostosis or a BALB/c FGFR2C342Y/+ model of postnatal onset craniosynostosis. Mice were injected with a lentivirus encoding a mineral targeted form of TNAP immediately after birth. Cranial bone fusion as well as cranial bone volume, mineral content and density were assessed by micro computed tomography. Craniofacial shape was measured with calipers., Alkaline phosphatase, alanine amino transferase (ALT) and aspartate amino transferase (AST) activity levels were measured in serum. Neonatal delivery of TNAP diminished craniosynostosis severity from 94% suture obliteration in vehicle treated mice to 67% suture obliteration in treated mice, p<0.02) and the incidence of malocclusion from 82.4% to 34.7% (p<0.03), with no effect on cranial bone in C57BL/6 FGFR2C342Y/+ mice. In contrast, treatment with TNAP improved cranial bone volume (p< 0.01), density (p< 0.01) and mineral content (p< 0.01) but had no effect on craniosynostosis or malocclusion in BALB/c FGFR2C342Y/+ mice. , These results indicate that post-natal recombinant TNAP enzyme therapy diminishes craniosynostosis severity in the C57BL/6 FGFR2C342Y/+ neonatal onset mouse model of Crouzon syndrome, and that effects of exogenous TNAP are genetic background dependent., and Included in this collection is one set of images representing the C57BL/6 FGFR2C342Y/+ model of neonatal onset craniosynostosis, and one for the BALB/c FGFR2C342Y/+ model of postnatal onset craniosynostosis
- Keyword:
- craniofacial, bone, craniosynostosis, FGFR2, TNAP, mouse model, and development
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
2Works -
- Creator:
- van Velden, Grace and Reddy, Raghav
- Description:
- A household survey was developed to capture household perceptions and behaviors around drinking water use. It consisted of several modules: key informant and household demographics, household assets and consumption, water use behaviors in the dry season, water use behaviors during the rest of the year, and water supply maintenance and repair. Intervention and safe water device surveys were also developed; the household and intervention surveys were administered via Qualtrics. and This record consists of several survey instruments, exported where appropriate from Qualtrics into PDF and .qsf.
- Keyword:
- Bangladesh, arsenic, sustainability, survey
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Liemohn, Michael W
- Description:
- The editorial decision process for the Journal of Geophysics Research Space Physics is assisted by over 1,000 scientists every year, providing over 3,000 reviews per year. These statistics are presented for the years 2013 through 2018, showing some fluctuations but, overall, consistency in the response of the space physics research community to requests to serve as manuscript reviewers. Over half of these reviews are submitted on time, and the average time to review actually dropped as the load increased. This is greatly appreciated and the community is to be commended and thanked for their willingness to help make this journal thrive and remain a premiere publication in the field.
- Keyword:
- Editorial and reviewer statistics
- Citation to related publication:
- Liemohn, M. W. (2020). Editorial: Multiyear analysis of JGR Space Physics reviewing statistics. Journal of Geophysical Research Space Physics, 125, e2019JA027719. https://doi.org/10.1029/2019JA027719
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Liemohn, Michael W, Azari, Abigail R, Ganushkina, Natalia Yu, and Rastätter, Lutz
- Description:
- Scientists often try to reproduce observations with a model, helping them explain the observations by adjusting known and controllable features within the model. They then use a large variety of metrics for assessing the ability of a model to reproduce the observations. One such metric is called the relative operating characteristic (ROC) curve, a tool that assesses a model’s ability to predict events within the data. The ROC curve is made by sliding the event-definition threshold in the model output, calculating certain metrics and making a graph of the results. Here, a new model assessment tool is introduced, called the sliding threshold of observation for numeric evaluation (STONE) curve. The STONE curve is created by sliding the event definition threshold not only for the model output but also simultaneously for the data values. This is applicable when the model output is trying to reproduce the exact values of a particular data set. While the ROC curve is still a highly valuable tool for optimizing the prediction of known and pre-classified events, it is argued here that the STONE curve is better for assessing model prediction of a continuous-valued data set. and Data and code were created using IDL, but can also be accessed with the open-source Gnu Data Language (GDL; see https://github.com/gnudatalanguage/gdl)
- Keyword:
- ROC curve, STONE curve, data-model comparison, model validation, forecasting, and statistical methods
- Citation to related publication:
- Liemohn, M. W., Azari, A. R., Ganushkina, N. Yu., & Rastätter, L. (2020). The STONE curve: A ROC-derived model performance assessment tool. Earth and Space Science, 7, e2020EA001106. https://doi.org/10.2019/2020EA001106
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Wang, Yeqing, Gao, Jianrong, Ren, Yang, De Andrade, Vincent, and Shahani, Ashwin J
- Description:
- The data file contains (1) the grayscale images of the nano-tomography experiments that can be segmented into binary images and visualized to show the 3D morphology of three-phase spiral eutectics; and (2) Scanning electron micro of solidified sample.
- Keyword:
- Zinc alloys, spiral structure, thermodynamic calculations, synchrotron X-ray diffraction, and synchrotron X-ray nano-tomography
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- University of Michigan Museum of Zoology
- Description:
- Scan of specimen ummz:mammals:111984 (Handleyomys ALFAROI ALFAROI) - WholeBody. Raw Dataset includes 1601 TIF images (each 815 x 1310 x 1 voxel at 0.0421497172804555 mm resolution, derived from 1601 scan projections), xtek and vgi files for volume reconstruction. and Scan of specimen ummz:mammals:111984 (Handleyomys ALFAROI ALFAROI) - WholeBody. Reconstructed Dataset includes 2000 TIF images (each 815 x 1310 x 1 voxel at 0.042150 mm resolution, derived from 1601 scan projections), xtek and vgi files for volume reconstruction.
- Keyword:
- Animalia, Chordata, Mammalia, Rodentia, Cricetidae, Handleyomys ALFAROI ALFAROI, 1987286466, computed tomography, X-ray, and 3D
- Citation to related publication:
- For more information on the original UMMZ specimen, see: https://www.gbif.org/occurrence/1987286466
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- University of Michigan Museum of Zoology
- Description:
- Scan of specimen ummz:mammals:123037 (Tscherskia TRITON) - WholeBody. Raw Dataset includes 1601 TIF images (each 715 x 1288 x 1 voxel at 0.0493711582967448 mm resolution, derived from 1601 scan projections), xtek and vgi files for volume reconstruction. and Scan of specimen ummz:mammals:123037 (Tscherskia TRITON) - WholeBody. Reconstructed Dataset includes 2000 TIF images (each 715 x 1288 x 1 voxel at 0.049371 mm resolution, derived from 1601 scan projections), xtek and vgi files for volume reconstruction.
- Keyword:
- Animalia, Chordata, Mammalia, Rodentia, Cricetidae, Tscherskia TRITON, 1987305166, computed tomography, X-ray, and 3D
- Citation to related publication:
- For more information on the original UMMZ specimen, see: https://www.gbif.org/occurrence/1987305166
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Moniri, Saman, Xiao, Xianghui, and Shahani, Ashwin J.
- Description:
- The data is comprised of 22 directories, each housing a .hdf file of the X-ray projections recorded during solidification of Al-Si-Cu-Sr. The flat and dark projections are also included as two separate .hdf files (total file count: 24). The raw data file is in .hdf format and can be reconstructed into .tiff, e.g., by using the TomoPy toolbox in Python.
- Keyword:
- Crystallization, growth modifiers, silicon, in situ, X-ray tomography
- Citation to related publication:
- Wang, Y., Gao, J., Ren, Y., De Andrade, V., & Shahani, A. J. (2020). Formation of a Three-Phase Spiral Structure Due to Competitive Growth of a Peritectic Phase with a Metastable Eutectic. JOM, 72(8), 2965–2973. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11837-020-04237-x
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Moser, Carol, Schoenebeck, Sarita , and Resnick, Paul
- Description:
- These data, survey instruments (including informed consent) and analysis scripts come from Carol Moser's dissertation titled, Impulse Buying: Designing for Self-Control with E-commerce.
- Keyword:
- Impulse Buying, Self-control, and Experimental Design
- Discipline:
- Social Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Lee, Dahee, Panicker, Veena, and Landis-Lewis, Zach
- Description:
- We use the term “performance summary display” (PSD) to mean a kind of visualization that relates performance levels to other types of information. In the context of healthcare organizations, PSDs are intended to be communicated to a healthcare professional, team, or organization. and Displays were identified, classified, and elements counted and coded. The performance summary display ontology provides a set of descriptions of components of displays that have been used to annotate performance feedback visualizations.
- Keyword:
- Performance
- Citation to related publication:
- Lee, D., Panicker, V., Gross, C., Zhang, J., & Landis-Lewis, Z. (2020). What was visualized? A method for describing content of performance summary displays in feedback interventions. BMC medical research methodology, 20(1), 90. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12874-020-00951-x
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences and Science