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- Creator:
- University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology and CTEES
- Description:
- Reconstructed CT slices for a right calcaneum of Cantius mckennai (University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology catalog number UMMP VP 81821), as a series of TIFF images. Raw projections are not included in this dataset.
- Keyword:
- Paleontology, Fossil, CT, Primates, Notharctidae, UMMP, University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology, Eocene, and CTEES
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology and CTEES
- Description:
- Reconstructed CT slices for a right astragalar [astragalus] body of Cantius mckennai (University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology catalog number UMMP VP 81827), as a series of TIFF images. Raw projections are not included in this dataset.
- Keyword:
- Paleontology, Fossil, CT, Primates, Notharctidae, UMMP, University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology, Eocene, and CTEES
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology and CTEES
- Description:
- Reconstructed CT slices for a right navicular of Cantius mckennai (University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology catalog number UMMP VP 81831), as a series of TIFF images. Raw projections are not included in this dataset.
- Keyword:
- Paleontology, Fossil, CT, Primates, Notharctidae, UMMP, University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology, Eocene, and CTEES
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology and CTEES
- Description:
- Reconstructed CT slices for a left dentary of Carpodaptes stonleyi (University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology catalog number UMMP VP 85286) as a series of TIFF images. Raw projections are not included in this dataset.
- Keyword:
- Paleontology, Fossil, CT, Carpolestidae, UMMP, University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology, Paleocene, CTEES, and ed7da511-d04c-fd32-09ef-0ea552966545
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology and CTEES
- Description:
- Reconstructed CT slices for navicular of Cantius trigonodus (University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology catalog number UMMP 87973) as a series of TIFF images. Raw projections are not included in this dataset. The reconstructed slice data from the scan are offered here as a series of unsigned 16-bit integer TIFF images. The upper left corner of the first image (*_0000.tif) is the XYZ origin.
- Keyword:
- Paleontology, Fossil, CT, Notharctidae, UMMP, University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology, Eocene, and a537f0d8-6185-9562-9b9a-a233468bf8e1
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology and CTEES
- Description:
- Reconstructed CT slices for postcrania (cervical vertebrae, L+R humerus, R scapula, R coracoid, L femur) of Stylemys nebrascensis (University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology catalog number UMMP VP 9318) as a series of TIFF images. Raw projections are not included in this dataset. The reconstructed slice data from the scan are offered here as a series of unsigned 16-bit integer TIFF images. The upper left corner of the first image (*_0000.tif) is the XYZ origin.
- Keyword:
- Paleontology, Fossil, CT, Testudinidae, UMMP, University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology, Oligocene, CTEES, and c38728f5-6f38-d862-7bcf-9745e69db222
- Citation to related publication:
- University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology, CTEES. (2022). CT Data of UMMP VP 9318, Stylemys nebrascensis skull [Data set], University of Michigan - Deep Blue Data. https://doi.org/10.7302/74pd-kb09
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology and CTEES
- Description:
- Reconstructed CT slices for skull of Stylemys nebrascensis (University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology catalog number UMMP VP 9318) as a series of TIFF images. Raw projections are not included in this dataset. The reconstructed slice data from the scan are offered here as a series of unsigned 16-bit integer TIFF images. The upper left corner of the first image (*_0000.tif) is the XYZ origin.
- Keyword:
- Paleontology, Fossil, CT, Testudinidae, UMMP, University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology, Oligocene, CTEES, and c38728f5-6f38-d862-7bcf-9745e69db222
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology and CTEES
- Description:
- Reconstructed CT slices for vertebrae of Phenacolemur (University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology catalog number UMMP VP 94723) as a series of TIFF images. Raw projections are not included in this dataset. The reconstructed slice data from the scan are offered here as a series of unsigned 16-bit integer TIFF images. The upper left corner of the first image (*_0000.tif) is the XYZ origin.
- Keyword:
- Paleontology, Fossil, CT, Paromomyidae, UMMP, University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology, Eocene, CTEES, and 31cf6e4a-86dd-9452-49f4-c5ce0d946613
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- Documentation of Dogon fox-track divination, a Dogon memorial altar, and a Bozo boat race. Credits are at the end of videos. Additional documentaries from Mali may be added later.
- Keyword:
- Mali, Dogon, Bozo, fox-track divination, and boatrace
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Cuyler, Antonio, Carruthers, Matthew, and Imbesi, Jason
- Description:
- we conducted an emergent qualitative systematic content analysis of scholarship published in Cultural Trends, the International Journal of Cultural Policy, and the Journal of Arts Management, Law, and Society since the peer-reviewed journals’ inceptions.
- Keyword:
- content analysis, cultural policy, and oppression
- Discipline:
- Humanities and Arts
-
- Creator:
- Yang, Bing and Wittkopp, Patricia J
- Description:
- Datafiles and code described in accompanying MS, currently in review
- Keyword:
- regulatory network evolution
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- 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:
- Mathieu, Johanna L, Balzano, Laura, and Ledva, Gregory S
- Description:
- This data set contains the relevant time series for constructing and testing electricity load models within the related paper. The files within are a '.mat' file that contains the data and a 'readme.txt' file detailing the contents of the data.
- Keyword:
- Output feedback, Online learning, Machine learning, Real-time filtering, and Energy disaggregation
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Attari, Ali
- Description:
- Please refer to the "README.txt" for more details., MATLAB R2018a (Mathworks, Natick, MA, USA) was used to process this data., and Excel (Microsoft Office) was used to store survey data on the comfort of both systems and also to provide absolute and relative intraobserver variablities for the DM device.
- Keyword:
- Digital Manometry
- Citation to related publication:
- Comparison of anorectal function measured using wearable digital manometry and a high resolution manometry system Attari A, Chey WD, Baker JR, Ashton-Miller JA (2020) Comparison of anorectal function measured using wearable digital manometry and a high resolution manometry system. PLOS ONE 15(9): e0228761. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0228761
- Discipline:
- Engineering, Science, and Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Benjamin Leffel
- Description:
- Data were gathered to test three hypotheses on the impact economic growth has on environmental conditions in urban areas. The three hypotheses are: 1. Income will be associated with reductions in PM2.5, PM10, NO2 and SO2. 2. Public Administration GVA will be associated with reductions in PM2.5, PM10, NO2 and SO2. 3. Urban density will be associated with reductions in PM2.5, PM10, NO2 and SO2. More information about the research and the data can be found in: Benjamin Leffel, Nikki Tavasoli, Brantley Liddle, Kent Henderson & Sabrina Kiernan (2021) Metropolitan air pollution abatement and industrial growth: Global urban panel analysis of PM10, PM2.5, NO2 and SO2, Environmental Sociology, DOI: 10.1080/23251042.2021.1975349.
- Keyword:
- global cities, environment, urban, air pollution, income, Urban Sustainability Research Group, and student-friendly
- Citation to related publication:
- Benjamin Leffel, Nikki Tavasoli, Brantley Liddle, Kent Henderson & Sabrina Kiernan (2021) Metropolitan air pollution abatement and industrial growth: Global urban panel analysis of PM10, PM2.5, NO2 and SO2, Environmental Sociology, DOI: 10.1080/23251042.2021.1975349
- Discipline:
- Social Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Lee, HaEun, Lori, Jody R, Sieka, Joseph, Reynolds, Christopher W, and Lockhart, Nancy
- Description:
- Mobile obstetric emergency system (MORES) is a promising intervention to enhance communication between rural health facilities and hospitals and to improve maternal and newborn outcomes.
- Keyword:
- Obstetric referral, WhatsApp, Mobile health, Referral system, and International Heath
- Citation to related publication:
- Lee, H., Dahn B., Sieka, J., Nyanplu, A., Reynolds, C., Edson, C., Lockhart, N., & Lori, J. The use of a mobile obstetric emergency system (MORES) to improve obstetric referrals in Bong County, Liberia: A pre/post study. International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics. (2023) http://doi.org/10.1002/ijgo.15175
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences and International Studies
-
- Creator:
- Zielinski, Ruth E, Kukula, Vida, Apetorgbor, Veronica, Awini, Elizabeth, Moyer, Cheryl, Badu-Gyan, Georgina, Williams, John, Lockhart, Nancy, and Lori, Jody R
- Description:
- This is a process evaluation of the RCT, Group Antenatal Care and Delivery project (GRAND) to identify and document patient, provider, and system barriers and facilitators to program implementation. Using both quantitative and qualitative methods, potential and actual influences on the quality and conduct of the program's operations, implementation, and service delivery were identified. Only the seven (7) sites randomized to the Group ANC (G-ANC) intervention were included for collection of process evaluation data since the evaluation was of G-ANC implementation. Data were collected from August 2019 to November 2020 and included both quantitative and qualitative data sources.
- Keyword:
- Group Antenatal Care, Ghana, and Process Evaluation
- Citation to related publication:
- Zielinski R, Kukula V, Apetorgbor V, Awini E, Moyer C, Badu-Gyan G, et al. (2023) “With group antenatal care, pregnant women know they are not alone”: The process evaluation of a group antenatal care intervention in Ghana. PLoS ONE 18(11): e0291855. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0291855
- Discipline:
- International Studies and Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Liemohn, Michael W, Adam, Joshua G, and Ganushkina, Natalia Y
- Description:
- Many statistical tools have been developed to aid in the assessment of a numerical model’s quality at reproducing observations. Some of these techniques focus on the identification of events within the data set, times when the observed value is beyond some threshold value that defines it as a value of keen interest. An example of this is whether it will rain, in which events are defined as any precipitation above some defined amount. A method called the sliding threshold of observation for numeric evaluation (STONE) curve sweeps the event definition threshold of both the model output and the observations, resulting in the identification of threshold intervals for which the model does well at sorting the observations into events and nonevents. An excellent data-model comparison will have a smooth STONE curve, but the STONE curve can have wiggles and ripples in it. These features reveal clusters when the model systematically overestimates or underestimates the observations. This study establishes the connection between features in the STONE curve and attributes of the data-model relationship. The method is applied to a space weather example.
- Keyword:
- space physics, statistical methods, and STONE curve
- Citation to related publication:
- Liemohn, M. W., Adam, J. G., & Ganushkina, N. Y. (2022). Analysis of features in a sliding threshold of observation for numeric evaluation (STONE) curve. Space Weather, 20, e2022SW003102. https://doi.org/10.1029/2022SW003102
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Folz, Jeff
- Description:
- Data consists largely of UV-VIs spectra, both raw and analyzed, that were used to calibrate the relevant sensor. A more detailed description of individual files' contents can be found in the ReadMe word document.
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- 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:
- Samuel, Sara M, Wilson, Diane L, and Fleming, Emily K
- Description:
- The International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) requires researchers to post individual participant data (IPD) plans for interventional clinical trials with registration in order to be eligible for publication in its member journals. This study looked at how researchers interpret the ICMJE requirements and the related prompts for information used by ClinicalTrials.gov. This data consists of the analyzed contents of the IPD plans that researchers at the University of Michigan (U-M) submitted with trial registrations for the first 27 months that the 2019 requirement was in effect.
- Keyword:
- research data sharing, research data policy, research data, clinical trials, ClinicalTrials.gov, individual participant data, IPD, data sharing plan, and compliance
- Citation to related publication:
- Samuel, S. M. & Wilson, D. L. & Fleming, E., (2023) “Evaluating individual participant data plans for ICMJE compliance: A case study at University of Michigan”, Journal of the Society for Clinical Data Management 3(4). doi: https://doi.org/10.47912/jscdm.257
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences, Social Sciences, and General Information Sources
-
- Creator:
- Dewey, Ryan M, Livi, Stefano, Lepri, Susan T, Raines, Jim M, Ploof, Keeling, and The HIS Science Team
- Description:
- The data contained within the archive are for analysis and replication of Figure 2 in Livi et al. (2023), First Results from the Solar Orbiter Heavy Ion Sensor, Astronomy & Astrophysics. The readme.txt file contains more details on the contents of the archive and its files. Livi et al. (2023) reports the first solar wind composition measurements collected from the Heavy Ion Sensor (HIS) on the Solar Orbiter spacecraft. The period of study spans January-June 2022 during with the spacecraft completed nearly a full orbit about the Sun, from 0.3 AU to 1.0 AU. The solar wind composition within this publication are the first within the inner heliosphere. This paper describes the data and its processing from raw measurements (e.g., the data contained within this archive) to derived composition data products, and examines these composition data products about an interplanetary shock and interplanetary coronal mass ejection. Finally, these composition data are examined statistically and compared to historical data sets.
- Keyword:
- Solar Orbiter, Solar wind, Heavy ions, and Heavy Ion Sensor
- Citation to related publication:
- Livi, S., et al. (2023), First Results from the Solar Orbiter Heavy Ion Sensor, Astronomy & Astrophysics. https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202346304 and Owen, C., et al. (2020), The Solar Orbiter Solar Wind Analyser (SWA) suite, Astronomy & Astrophysics, 642. https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201937259
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Malhotra, Garima and Ridley, Aaron
- Description:
- This research aims to understand the importance of lower thermospheric atomic oxygen on the upper thermosphere. O number densities between 95-100 km from WACCM-X are much closer to the observations from SABER instrument on TIMED satellite as compared to those from MSIS. We show in this study that the correction of the lower boundary atomic oxygen yields better agreement between GITM and GUVI O/N2 in the upper thermosphere .
- Keyword:
- Lower Thermosphere Atomic Oxygen, Thermospheric Dynamics, Thermospheric composition and mixing, Lower-Upper Thermosphere Vertical Coupling, GITM - WACCMX coupling, and Global Ionosphere Thermosphere Model
- Citation to related publication:
- Malhotra, G., Ridley, A. J., Marsh, D. R., Wu, C., Paxton, L. J., & Mlynczak, M. G. (2020). Impacts of Lower Thermospheric Atomic Oxygen on Thermospheric Dynamics and Composition Using the Global Ionosphere Thermosphere Model. Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, e2020JA027877. https://doi.org/10.1029/2020JA027877
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Swiger, Brian M., Liemohn, Michael W., and Ganushkina, Natalia Y.
- Description:
- We sampled the near-Earth plasma sheet using data from the NASA Time History of Events and Macroscale Interactions During Substorms mission. For the observations of the plasma sheet, we used corresponding interplanetary observations using the OMNI database. We used these data to develop a data-driven model that predicts plasma sheet electron flux from upstream solar wind variations. The model output data are included in this work, along with code for analyzing the model performance and producing figures used in the related publication. and Data files are included in hdf5 and Python pickle binary formats; scripts included are set up for use of Python 3 to access and process the pickle binary format data.
- Keyword:
- neural network, plasma sheet, solar wind, machine learning, keV electron flux, deep learning, and space weather
- Citation to related publication:
- Swiger, B. M., Liemohn, M. W., & Ganushkina, N. Y. (2020). Improvement of Plasma Sheet Neural Network Accuracy With Inclusion of Physical Information. Frontiers in Astronomy and Space Sciences, 7. https://doi.org/10.3389/fspas.2020.00042
- Discipline:
- Science and Engineering
-
Data for Macroscopic Transition Metal Dichalcogenides Monolayers with Uniformly High Optical Quality
- Creator:
- Li, Qiuyang, Alfrey, Adam, Hu, Jiaqi, Lydick, Nathanial, Paik, Eunice, Liu, Bin, Sun, Haiping, Lu, Yang, Wang, Ruoyu, Forrest, Stephen, and Deng, Hui
- Description:
- This dataset contains raw and source data for all figures generated in the manuscript "Macroscopic Transition Metal Dichalcogenides Monolayers with Uniformly High Optical Quality" The raw data files include '.spe' data, which are spectral data collected by LightField Sofware, and '.dset' and '.vms' files, which are X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) data and require CasaXPS to access. The source data files include the processed data that can be directly used for generating the corresponding figures in the manuscript.
- Keyword:
- 2D materials, Exciton-polaritons, and Photonics
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Krupka, Erin
- Description:
- The survey data used in this project is from two larger overarching projects titled the Rice Preferences Study and the Black Student Success Study. The Rice Preferences Study began with a sample of 661 entering undergraduates matriculating in August of 2016. This was 66.7% of the entering class, randomly selected. Of that sample, 553 completed the study with an 83.7% response rate. Prior to coming to campus in fall 2016 Rice students were given a battery of incentivized preference measures including risk aversion, loss aversion, altruism, in-group favoritism, time discounting, competitiveness, and so on. Over the subsequent four years that group was tested with new and repeated measures, in two to four tests per year. As a basis for comparison, each year a smaller sample (between 112 And 148) was drawn from incoming classes and tested with the same instruments. The remaining students from the Class of 2020 who had never been tested were invited in March 2020 to complete the initial study (259 of 376 completed the study). In March 2020, as Rice University closed, the team joined together to build a COVID module for the long-term Rice panel, as well as the other members of the Class of 2020. A total of 670 participated in this wave (67.1% of the graduating class). The Black Student Success Study recruited samples from PVAMU and TAMU in 2017 and again in 2019. This study aimed at understanding the effects of stereotype threat on Black student success in two different university environments in Texas: PVAMU, a historically Black university with about 9,000 students, 65% female, and 83% Black; and TAMU, a large state university with about 70,000 students, 47% female and 3.7% Black. That study was ongoing in 2020 when COVID struck. A total of 880 subjects responded to the initial survey out of a total of 3,709 who were contacted. Black subjects were over-sampled at TAMU, and constituted 37% of the TAMU sample. Respondents completed a one-hour survey that included measures of identity, non-cognitive skills, stereotype-threat vulnerability, and controls for economic preferences (survey measures) and family background. They were paid $20 for completing the study. In March 2020 additional funding was awarded through NSF to expand and follow the Rice, TAMU and PVAMU panels, focusing on the impact of COVID-19.
- Keyword:
- Norms, Preferences, Social Identity, COVID-19
- Discipline:
- Social Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Liemohn, Michael W
- Description:
- Earth’s upper atmosphere above 500 km altitude constantly loses charged particles to outer space in a process called ionospheric outflow. This outflow is important for the dynamics of the near-Earth space environment (“space weather”) yet is poorly understood on a global scale. A mission is needed to observe the global patterns of ionospheric outflow and its relation to space weather driving conditions. The science objectives of such a mission could include not only the reconstruction of global outflow patterns but also the relation of these patterns to geomagnetic activity and the spatial and temporal nature of outflow composition. A study is presented to show that four well-placed spacecraft would be sufficient for reasonable outflow reconstructions.
- Keyword:
- ionosphere, magnetosphere, satellite mission concept, and space weather
- Citation to related publication:
- Liemohn, M. W., Jörg-Micha Jahn, Raluca Ilie, Natalia Y. Ganushkina, Daniel T. Welling, Heather Elliott, Meghan Burleigh, Kaitlin Doublestein, Stephanie Colon-Rodriguez, Pauline Dredger, & Philip Valek (2024). Reconstruction analysis of global ionospheric outflow patterns. Journal of Geophysical Research Space Physics, 129, e2023JA032238. https://doi/org/10.1029/2024JA032238
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Agrawal, Mayank and Glotzer, Sharon C
- Description:
- Micron-scale robots require systems that can morph into arbitrary target configurations controlled by external agents such as heat, light, electricity, and chemical environment. Achieving this behavior using conventional approaches is challenging because the available materials at these scales are not programmable like their macroscopic counterparts. To overcome this challenge, we propose a design strategy to make a robotic machine that is both programmable and compatible with colloidal-scale physics. Our strategy uses motors in the form of active colloidal particles that constantly propel forward. We sequence these motors end-to-end in a closed chain forming a two-dimensional loop that folds under its mechanical constraints. We encode the target loop shape and its motion by regulating six design parameters, each scale-invariant and achievable at the colloidal scale. The research dataset includes simulation, visualization, and analysis scripts and results generated for the 2D chain loops of self-propelling particles. File Description:, -- arrows_folding - Contains the data for the folded chain loop shapes resembling an arrowhead., -- bending_vs_variation - Contains the data to study the stability of a particular shape in simulations as one of the segments of the shape bends and/or the distribution of propulsion on it varies., -- curved_triangle - Contains the data to study motion and bending of a triangle shape made using chain loop., -- example_shapes - Contains data for various examples of shapes that can be generated by designing the chain loops., -- nskT_vs_fakT - Contains the data for a specific shape to study the effect of scaling up the number of particles (governed by ns) and the propulsion (governed by fa) in its chain., -- stability - Contains the data and theoretical model (stability.py) to study the stability of the six different shapes., -- tuning_design_forM - Contains the data for sequential tuning the design parameters to fold the shape "M" as described in the corresponding publication., and -- two_neighboring_cds_segments_ - Contains the data to study a system of two neighboring chain segments with respect to different parameters discussed in the publication.
- Keyword:
- active particles, colloidal robotics, design, kilobots, and morphological control
- Citation to related publication:
- Agrawal, M, Glotzer SC. (2020). Scale-free, programmable design of morphable chain loops of kilobots and colloidal motors. PNAS. www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.1922635117
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- 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:
- Sergio E. Vidal-Luengo and Mark B. Moldwin
- Description:
- Multi-satellite tracking of solar wind dynamic pressure pulse observations through the Earth's magnetosphere enables us to distinguish local changes with propagation signatures.
- Keyword:
- Heliophysics, Magnetosphere, Dynamic pressure pulse, Magnetosphere, THEMIS, MMS, Cluster, SuperMag, and Heliophysics System Observatory
- Citation to related publication:
- Vidal-Luengo, S. E., & Moldwin, M. B. (2021). Global magnetosphere response to solar wind dynamic pressure pulses during northward IMF using the heliophysics system observatory. Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, 126, e2020JA028587. https://doi.org/10.1029/2020JA028587
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Hawes, Jason K, Johnson, Rebecca, Payne, Lindsey, Ley, Christian, Grady, Caitlin A., Domenech, Jennifer, Evich, Carly D., Kanach, Andrew, Koeppen, Allison, Roe, Kristen, Caprio, Audrey, Puente Castro, Jessica, LeMaster, Paige, and Blatchley, Ernest R. III
- Description:
- Global service-learning brings students, instructors, and communities together to support learning and community development across borders. In doing so, global service-learning practitioners act at the intersection of two fields: service-learning and international development. Critical scholarship in all three domains has highlighted the tensions inherent in defining and tracking “success” in community development. In response, service-learning and international development have turned considerable attention to documenting project characteristics, also known as best practices or success factors, which support equitable, sustainable community development. This database accompanies the article "Global Service-Learning - A systematic review of principle and practice," which presents a systematic synthesis of these fields’ best practices in the context of global service-learning. We propose 18 guiding principles for project design which aim to support practitioners in creating and maintaining justice-oriented, stakeholder-driven projects. This database contains the necessary reference material to trace the path of our analysis from abstract review to thematic synthesis. It also contains the final results of the thematic synthesis. To respect copyright restrictions, we have not made PDFs of all articles analyzed publicly accessible. Please contact the authors of this database or of the original article if you seek to access one of the articles we reference. For more information, see: Hawes, J. K., et al. “Global Service-Learning - A Systematic Review of Principle and Practice.” International Journal of Research on Service-Learning and Community Engagement 10, no. 1 (2022).
- Keyword:
- service-learning, international development, global service-learning, best practices, equitable development, higher education, community engagement, and student-friendly
- Citation to related publication:
- Hawes, J. K. (2021). Global Service-Learning—A systematic review of principle and practice. International Journal of Research on Service-Learning and Community Engagement, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.37333/001c.31383
- Discipline:
- International Studies and Other
-
- Creator:
- Rivera-Rivera, Luis Y., Moore, Timothy C., and Glotzer, Sharon C.
- Description:
- The dataset is organized as follows: the data for each of the three target structures is contained within a directory with the structure name (e.g., kagome, pyrocholore and snub-square). Within each structure directory, data obtained from alchemical and self-assembly simulations are separated into alchem and self-assembly directories respectively. An additional suboptimal-self-assembly directory is only present for the snub-square structure and contains the data for the pattern registration analysis discussed in the SI. For a detailed description of each file contained within each directory, please refer to the README file.
- Keyword:
- inverse design, self-assembly, triblock Janus particles, crystallization slot, and digital alchemy
- Citation to related publication:
- Rivera-Rivera, LY, Moore, TC & SC Glotzer. Inverse design of triblock Janus spheres for self-assembly of complex structures in the crystallization slot via digital alchemy. Soft Matter, 2023, 19, 2726-2736 doi: 10.1039/d2sm01593e
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Walker, Logan A, Li, Ye, McGlothlin, Maggie, and Cai, Dawen
- Description:
- These are datasets released from our manuscript "A Comparison of Lossless Compression Methods in Microscopy Data Storage Applications". Included in this data release are: `noise16.tif`: a file containing background noise collected from a 1000-frame acquisition of a ORCA-Fusion camera; `noise8.tif`: a file containing the 16-bit data collective above converted into a 8-bit form; `brainbow.tif`: This is a mouse Brainbow image originally published and described in Roossien, et al. Bioinformatics 2019; `bead.tif`: This is a 3D image of 100nm Invitrogen TetraSpeck fluorescent microspheres imaged in a blue channel using a custom microscope; `fly.tif`: This is a 3D image of a fly Bitbow brain collected as described in Li, et al. Front. Neural Circuits 2021; and `neurite.tif`: This is a 3D image of DiD-labeled mouse V1 tissue, collected using a custom microscope.
- Keyword:
- neuroscience, microscopy, and Bitbow
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- 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
- Discipline:
- 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:
- 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:
- 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:
- Bressler, Alison and Blesh, Jennifer
- Description:
- This dataset contains three data files and three corresponding metadata files used in Bressler, A., and J. Blesh. 2023. A grass-legume cover crop maintains nitrogen inputs and nitrous oxide fluxes from an organic agroecosystem. Ecosphere. The file “N2O_Flux.xls” contains daily nitrous oxide data organized by replicate block, treatment, and date. The file “Soil_N.xls” contains nitrate and ammonium data organized by replicate block, treatment, and date. The file “Cover_crop_corn_soil.xls” contains baseline soil fertility characteristics, cover crop and corn biomass, nitrogen and carbon content, legume BNF, and cumulative N2O content organized by replicate block and treatment. The corresponding metadata files: “N2O_Flux_metadata.xls”, “Soil_N_metadata.xls”, and “Cover_crop_corn_soil_metadata.xls” provide detailed descriptions of all variables in each data set and any abbreviations used.
- Keyword:
- cover crops, nitrous oxide, corn, biological nitrogen fixation, and legume-grass mixtures
- Citation to related publication:
- Bressler, A., and J. Blesh. 2023. A grass-legume cover crop maintains nitrogen inputs and nitrous oxide fluxes from an organic agroecosystem. Ecosphere. 14(2): e4428. https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.4428
- 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:
- Bressler, Alison and Blesh, Jennifer
- Description:
- This dataset contains three data files and three corresponding metadata files used in Bressler, A., and J. Blesh. 2022. Episodic N2O emissions following tillage of a legume-grass cover crop mixture. Biogeosciences. The file “Cover_crop_soil_N2O.xls” contains data organized by site, replicate block, and treatment for spring cover crop biomass, nitrogen and carbon content, and legume BNF; soil fertility characteristics including potentially mineralizable nitrogen, particulate organic matter stocks, concentrations, and nitrogen content; and cumulative nitrous oxide data. The file “Soil_properties.xls” contains baseline soil data organized by site and replicate block. The file “Daily_N2O.xls” contains daily nitrous oxide data organized by site, replicate block, treatment, and date. The corresponding metadata files: “Cover_crop_soil_N2O_metadata.xls”, and “Soil_properties_metadata.xls”, and “Daily_N2O_metadata.xls” provided detailed descriptions of all variables in each data set and any abbreviations used.
- Keyword:
- cover crops, legume-grass mixtures, nitrous oxide, particulate organic matter, soil organic matter.
- Citation to related publication:
- Bressler, A., and J. Blesh. 2022. Episodic N2O emissions following tillage of a legume-grass cover crop mixture. Biogeosciences.
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Surdoval, Alison, Jain, Meha, Wang, Haoyu, and Blesh, Jennifer
- Description:
- We conducted a mixed-methods study to understand how financial incentive programs impact transitions to cover cropping in Michigan. Michigan farms span a wide range of soil types, climate conditions, and cropping systems that create opportunities for cover crop adoption in the state. We tested the relationship between Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) payments for cover crops and cover crop adoption between 2008-2019, as measured by remote sensing. Panel fixed effects regressions showed that EQIP increased winter cover crop presence. Every EQIP dollar for cover crops was associated with a 0.01 hectare increase in winter cover, while each hectare enrolled in an EQIP contract for cover crops was associated with a 0.86 – 0.93 hectare increase in winter cover.
- Keyword:
- adoption, cover crop, Environmental Quality Incentives Program, financial incentive program, Michigan, remote sensing
- Citation to related publication:
- Surdoval, A., Jain, M., Blair, E., Wang, H., and J. Blesh. In press. Financial incentive programs and farm diversification with cover crops: Assessing opportunities and challenges.
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Blesh, Jennifer
- Description:
- This dataset contains three data files used in: Blesh, J. 2017. Functional traits in cover crop mixtures: biological nitrogen fixation and multifunctionality. Journal of Applied Ecology. There are also three corresponding metadata files. The file “Ecosystem_functions_soil_species.csv” contains data organized by farm, treatment, replicate block, and species combining the fall and spring sampling time points. These data include aboveground biomass, nitrogen and carbon content, and biological nitrogen fixation for the plant species. The dataset also includes measured soil characteristics for each farm site. The file “Ecosystem_functions_soil_treatment.csv” contains data organized by farm, treatment, and replicate block for the fall and spring sampling time points combined. These data include aboveground biomass, nitrogen and carbon content, and biological nitrogen fixation aggregated by treatment. The dataset also includes measured soil characteristics for each farm site. The file “Traits_unstandardized.csv” contains individual plant trait data, a subset of which were used to calculate an index of functional diversity after they were standardized to have zero mean and unit variance. These data are organized by farm, treatment, replicate block, and species. The corresponding metadata files: “Ecosystem_functions_soil_species_metadata.csv”, “Ecosystem_functions_soil_treatment_metadata.csv”, and “Traits_unstandardized_metadata.csv” provide a detailed description of all variables in each dataset and any abbreviations used. Note: On Dec 19th 2017, the format of the files was changed to csv to aid preservation. The following information was added to the three metadata files: the name of the data file the metadata refers to, an explanation as to the meaning of blank cells in the data file, a full citation to the paper where the author describes her findings and contact information for the author.
- Keyword:
- agroecology, biological nitrogen fixation, functional diversity, and cover crop
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Flanner, Mark
- Description:
- Greenhouse gas (GHG) additions to Earth’s atmosphere initially reduce global outgoing longwave radiation (OLR), thereby warming the planet. In select environments with temperature inversions, however, increased GHG concentrations can actually increase local OLR. Negative top-of-atmosphere and effective radiative forcing (ERF) from this situation give the impression that local surface temperatures could cool in response to GHG increases. Here we consider an extreme scenario in which GHG concentrations are increased only within the warmest layers of winter near-surface inversions of the Arctic and Antarctic. We find, using a fully coupled Earth system model, that the underlying surface warms despite the GHG addition exerting negative ERF and cooling the troposphere in the vicinity of the GHG increase. This unique radiative forcing and thermal response is facilitated by the high stability of the polar winter atmosphere, which inhibits thermal mixing and amplifies the impact of surface radiative forcing on surface temperature. These findings also suggest that strategies to exploit negative ERF via injections of short-lived GHGs into inversion layers would likely be unsuccessful in cooling the planetary surface. and Note: A revised data description file was added to this work on April 11, 2018 containing additional information about the data set than was provided in the original description. Additional keywords and a full citation to the related article were added as well.
- Keyword:
- climate, greenhouse gas, polar inversion layers, radiative forcing (and/or effective radiative forcing), and MODTRAN simulation
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Ward, Jamie L ., Flanner, Mark G., Bergin, Mike, Dibb, Jack E., Polashenski, Chris M., Soja, Amber J., and Thomas, Jennie L.
- Description:
- Biomass burning produces smoke aerosols that are emitted into the atmosphere. Some smoke constituents, notably black carbon (BC), are highly effective light-absorbing aerosols (LAA). Emitted LAA can be transported to high albedo regions like the Greenland Ice Sheet (GrIS) and affect local snowmelt. In the summer, the effects of LAA in Greenland are uncertain. To explore how LAA affect GrIS snowmelt and surface energy flux in the summer, we conduct idealized global climate model simulations with perturbed aerosol amounts and properties in the GrIS snow and overlying atmosphere. The in-snow and atmospheric aerosol burdens we select range from background values measured on the GrIS to unrealistically high values. This helps us explore the linearity of snowmelt response and to achieve high signal-to-noise ratios. With LAA operating only in the atmosphere, we find no significant change in snowmelt due to the competing effects of surface dimming and tropospheric warming. Regardless of atmospheric LAA presence, in-snow BC-equivalent mixing ratios greater than ~60 ng/g produce statistically significant snowmelt increases over much of the GrIS. We find that net surface energy flux changes correspond well to snowmelt changes for all cases. The dominant component of surface energy flux change is solar energy flux, but sensible and longwave energy fluxes respond to temperature changes. Atmospheric LAA dampen the magnitude of solar radiation absorbed by in-snow LAA when both varieties are simulated. In general, the significant melt and surface energy flux changes we simulate occur with LAA quantities that have never been recorded in Greenland.
- Keyword:
- climate, Greenland Ice Sheet, black carbon, biomass burning, snowmelt, and surface energy balance
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Carlson, Jake
- Description:
- This data set is my analysis of data management plans (DMPs) that were written by researchers at the University of Michigan for awards made between March 2020 and February 2021. I conducted this analysis to explore the potential utility of DMPs as a tool to aid data curators in understanding and working with the associated data set. Variables collected include: the types and formats of the expected data sets, information about the metadata and documentation to be generated, the anticipated methods for making the data set publicly available, references to Intellectual Property allowances or concerns, and the stated duration for preserving the data sets.
- Keyword:
- Data management plans, Data curation, Data sharing, and Content Analysis
- Citation to related publication:
- Carlson, J. (2023) Untapped Potential: A Critical Analysis of the Utility of Data Management Plans in Facilitating Data Sharing. Journal of Research Administration. Fall 2023. Forthcoming.
- Discipline:
- Social Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Su, Xue, Zhang, Youxue, Liu, Yang, and Holder, Robert M.
- Description:
- It is commonly thought that volcanic glass only records volatile loss during the eruptions in the Moon. However, our recent work shows that Na, K and Cu (moderately volatile elements) in lunar 74220 orange glass beads are enriched near the bead surfaces and depleted in the bead interiors, forming an overall “U-shaped” profile. The “U-shaped” profile means that rather than being “lost” into space, Na, K and Cu were “gained” into the volcanic glass during the eruption, which is contrary to the “volatile loss” story. Three different instruments (EMP, SIMS and LA-ICP-MS) were used to verify the discovery. We propose that such U-shaped Na, K and Cu profiles were formed by initial outgassing and subsequent in-gassing of Na, K and Cu when the beads were flying from the vent onto the surface through the cooling volcanic gas plume. Hence, in-gassing and the formation of surface coatings are two processes that are genetically linked during the pyroclastic eruption and evolution of the gas cloud. To quantify the processes that formed the U-shaped profiles, we developed a diffusion and surface-equilibrium model using available literature data on Na and Cu diffusivity in basaltic melts. The model reproduced U-shaped Na and Cu concentration profiles with outgassing at high temperature and subsequent in-gassing as beads cooled. By fitting the measured Na and Cu profiles, we found that the cooling time scales of individual orange glass beads range from 48 to 179 s. This is the first time that both outgassing and in-gassing were modeled and the cooling time scales of individual 74220 volcanic orange glass beads were estimated. The discovery of the U-shaped profiles of moderately volatile elements inside volcanic beads provides significant constraints on partial pressures of relevant volcanic gas species in the eruption plume.
- Keyword:
- Moon, Volcanic orange glass beads, Moderately volatile elements, Outgassing and in-gassing, and Cooling time scales
- Citation to related publication:
- Su, X., Zhang, Y., Liu, Y. and Holder, R.M. (2023) Outgassing and in-gassing of Na, K and Cu in lunar 74220 orange glass beads. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 602. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2022.117924
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Su, Xue and Zhang, Youxue
- Description:
- The H2O concentration and H2O/Ce ratio in olivine-hosted melt inclusions are high (H2O up to 1410 ppm; H2O/Ce up to 77) in lunar sample 74220 but lower (H2O up to 430 ppm; H2O/Ce up to 9.4) in all other lunar samples studied before this work. This difference is absent for other volatiles (F, S, and Cl) in melt inclusions in 74220 and other lunar samples. Because H2O (or H) is a critical volatile component with significant ramifications on the origin and evolution of the Moon, it is important to understand what causes such a large gap in H2O/Ce ratio between 74220 and other lunar samples. Two explanations have been advanced. One is that volcanic product in sample 74220 has the highest cooling rate and thus best preserved H2O in melt inclusions compared to melt inclusions in other samples. The other explanation is that sample 74220 is a localized heterogeneity enriched in some volatiles. To distinguish the two possibilities, here we present new data from three rapidly cooled lunar samples: olivine-hosted glassy melt inclusions (OHMIs) in 74220 regolith and 79135 regolith breccia, and pyroxene-hosted glassy melt inclusions (PHMIs) in 15597 pigeonite basalts. If the gap is due to the difference in cooling rates, samples with cooling rates between 74220 and other studied lunar samples should have preserved intermediate H2O concentrations and H2O/Ce ratios. Our results show that melt inclusions in 79135 and 15597 contain high H2O concentrations (up to 969 ppm in 79135 and up to 793 ppm in 15597) and high H2O/Ce ratios (up to 21 in 79135 and up to 13 in 15997). Combined with literature data, we confirm that H2O/Ce ratios of different lunar samples are positively correlated to the cooling rates and independent of the type of mare basalts. Our work bridges the big gap in H2O/Ce ratio among 74220 and other lunar samples. We hence reinforce the interpretation that the lunar sample with the highest cooling rate best represents pre-eruptive volatiles in lunar basalts due to the least degassing. H2O, F, P, S and Cl concentrations in the lunar primitive mantle are also estimated in this work. and *** 2024-03-19: In addition to the files in the previous version, this updated deposit contains more data files as the supplementary files of the paper. For example, we added a summary excel file containing data that are used for figures in the paper, and an excel file contains data in the tables of the paper for easy use by readers. See ReadMe.txt for changes.
- Keyword:
- Water in the Moon, volatiles in the Moon, olivine-hosted melt inclusions, pyroxene-hosted melt inclusions, F/P ratio, S/Dy ratio, Cl/Ba ratio
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Xu, Ying and Bradford, Nora
- Description:
- The data was collected from a survey study using Qualtrics described above. The data are in .csv format along with a codebook also in .csv format.
- Keyword:
- social chatbot, perception, and artificial intelligence
- Discipline:
- Social Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Batterman, Stuart; University of Michigan
- Description:
- We evaluated PM levels at the Agbogbloshie e-waste and scrap yard site in Accra, Ghana, and at upwind and downwind locations. This monitoring forms part of the West Africa-Michigan Charter II for GEOHealth cohort study, which is analyzing occupational exposures and health risks at this site.
- Keyword:
- Air pollution, particulate matter, e-waste, Fires, and monitoring
- Citation to related publication:
- Kwarteng, L., Baiden, E. A., Fobil, J., Arko-Mensah, J., Robins, T., & Batterman, S. (2020). Air Quality Impacts at an E-Waste Site in Ghana Using Flexible, Moderate-Cost and Quality-Assured Measurements. GeoHealth, 4(8), e2020GH000247. https://doi.org/10.1029/2020GH000247
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences and Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Mukhopadhyay, Agnit, Daniel T Welling, Michael W Liemohn, Aaron J Ridley, Shibaji Chakrabarty, and Brian J Anderson
- Description:
- An updated auroral conductance module is built for global models, using nonlinear regression & empirical adjustments to span extreme events., Expanded dataset raises the ceiling of conductance values, impacting the ionospheric potential dB/dt & dB predictions during extreme events., and Application of the expanded model with empirical adjustments refines the conductance pattern, and improves dB/dt predictions significantly.
- Keyword:
- Space Weather Forecasting, Extreme Weather, Ionosphere, Magnetosphere, MI Coupling, Ionospheric Conductance, Auroral Conductance, Aurora, SWMF, SWPC, Nonlinear Regression, and dB/dt
- Citation to related publication:
- Mukhopadhyay, A., Welling, D. T., Liemohn, M. W., Ridley, A. J., Chakraborty, S., & Anderson, B. J. (2020). Conductance Model for Extreme Events: Impact of Auroral Conductance on Space Weather Forecasts. Space Weather, 18(11), e2020SW002551. https://doi.org/10.1029/2020SW002551
- Discipline:
- Engineering and Science
-
- Creator:
- Penner-Hahn, James, Sension, Roseanne, McClain, Taylor, Lamb, Ryan, Alonso-Mori, Roberto, Lima, Frederico, Ardana-Lamas, Fernando, Biednov, Mykola, Chollet, Matthieu, Chung, Taewon, Deb, Aniruddha, Dewan, Paul, Gee, Leland, Huang, Joel, Yifeng, Khakhulin, Dmitry, Li, Jianhao, Michocki, Lindsay, Miller, Nicholas, Otte, Florian, Uemura, Yohei, and van Driel, Tim
- Description:
- UV-visible, X-ray absorption, and X-ray emission data used to characterize the dynamics of aquo and hydroxo cobalamin. Details of data collection and reduction are provided in the associated manuscript. Data files are all text files which contain tab-delimited columns of data corresponding to each figure in the manuscript.
- Keyword:
- Ultrafast, X-ray, Transient absorption, cobalamin, vitamin B12, XAS, XES, and XANES
- Citation to related publication:
- Sension, R.J., et al. (2023). Watching Excited State Dynamics with Optical and X-ray Probes: The Excited State Dynamics of Aquocobalamin and Hydroxocobalamin. J. Am. Chem. Soc. in press. and https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.3c04099
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Sergio E. Vidal-Luengo
- Description:
- This database contains spacecraft and ground-based magnetic field observations made to study the propagation of the preliminary impulse triggered by interplanetary shocks with different inclinations in the XZ plane.
- Keyword:
- Cluster, Dynamic pressure pulse, THEMIS, SuperMag, Magnetosphere, MMS, and Intermagnet
- Citation to related publication:
- (to be submitted) Vidal-Luengo, S. E., Moldwin, M. B. (2021). Shock Inclination Effects in Preliminary Impulse Propagation Observed by Ground-Based Magnetometers and the Heliophysics System Observatory
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Wellman, Michael P.
- Description:
- For each game: - file in JSON format with raw payoff data - text file with game-theoretic analysis results
- Discipline:
- Social Sciences
-
- Creator:
- George De la Rosa, Mery Vet, Patel, Dipali, McCann, Marc R., Stringer, Kathleen A., and Rosania, Gus R.
- Description:
- These data were produced from a study that employed a database strategy to identify candidate mitochondrial metabolites that could be clinically useful to identify individuals at increased risk of mitochondrial-related ADRs. The main candidate metabolite identified by the database strategy was evaluated using a mouse model of mitochondrial drug toxicity. These findings are described in our manuscript: Database Screening as a Strategy to Identify Endogenous Candidate Metabolites to Probe and Assess Mitochondrial Drug Toxicity. Data reported was supported by funding from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) under award numbers R01GM127787 (GRR) & R35GM136312 (KAS).
- Keyword:
- mitochondrial-realted metabolites, adverse drug reactions, and mitochondrial drug toxicity
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Chatterjee, Tanmay, Knappik, Achim, Sandford, Erin, Tewari, Muneesh, Choi, Sung Won, Strong, William B., Thrush, Evan P., Oh, Kenneth J., Liu, Ning, Walter, Nils G., and Johnson-Buck, Alexander
- Description:
- The sensitive measurement of specific protein biomarkers is important for medical diagnostics and research. However, existing methods for quantifying proteins use antibody probes that cannot distinguish between specific and nonspecific binding, limiting their sensitivity and specificity. This work establishes a method for distinguishing between specific binding to the target protein and nonspecific binding to assay surfaces using single-molecule kinetic measurements with dynamically binding probes. This is significant because it permits extremely sensitive protein measurements without requiring a high-affinity detection antibody or any washing steps, enabling streamlined and sensitive quantification of proteins even when no pair of high-quality, tightly binding antibodies is available.
- Keyword:
- biomarker detection, single molecule fluorescence, kinetic fingerprinting, total internal reflection microscopy, and super resolution microscopy
- Citation to related publication:
- Chatterjee, T., et al. Direct kinetic fingerprinting and digital counting of single protein molecules. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA, In Press.
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Pedde, Meredith
- Description:
- In this study, we took advantage of the randomized allocation of the US EPA's funding for school bus replacements and retrofits to causally assess the impacts of upgrading buses on student attendance through the EPA’s national School Bus Rebate Program. Specifically, we used classical intent-to-treat analyses for randomized controlled trials to compare the change in school district level attendance rates after vs before the 2012 through 2017 lotteries by funding selection status . We used overall district attendance rates since rates were not available for only school-bus riders.
- Keyword:
- School Bus Emissions, Diesel Air Pollution, and School Attendance
- Citation to related publication:
- Pedde, M., Szpiro, A., Hirth, R. et al. Randomized design evidence of the attendance benefits of the EPA School Bus Rebate Program. Nat Sustain (2023). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41893-023-01088-7
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Agnit Mukhopadhyay
- Description:
- Conducting quantitative metrics-based performance analysis of first-principles-based global magnetosphere models is an essential step in understanding their capabilities and limitations, and providing scope for improvements in order to enhance their space weather prediction capabilities for a range of solar conditions. In this study, a detailed comparison of the performance of three global magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) models in predicting the Earth’s magnetopause location and ionospheric cross polar cap potential (CPCP) has been presented. Using the Community Coordinated Modeling Center’s Run-on-Request system and extensive database on results from various magnetospheric scenarios simulated for a variety of solar wind conditions, the aforementioned model predictions have been compared for magnetopause standoff distance estimations obtained from six empirical models, and with cross polar cap potential estimations obtained from the Assimmilative Mapping of Ionospheric Electrodynamics (AMIE) Model and the Super Dual Auroral Radar Network (SuperDARN) observations. We have considered a range of events spanning different space weather activity to analyze the performance of these models. Using a fit performance metric analysis for each event, we have quantified the models’ reproducibility of magnetopause standoff distances and CPCP against empirically-predicted observations, and identified salient features that govern the performance characteristics of the modeled magnetospheric and ionospheric quantities.
- Citation to related publication:
- Mukhopadhyay, A., Jia, X., Welling, D. T., & Liemohn, M. W. (2021). Global Magnetohydrodynamic Simulations: Performance Quantification of Magnetopause Distances and Convection Potential Predictions. Frontiers in Astronomy and Space Sciences, 8. https://doi.org/10.3389/fspas.2021.637197
- Discipline:
- Engineering and Science
-
- Creator:
- Kue, Jessie and Meurer, William
- Description:
- NHAMCS is an annual survey of emergency department visits. and SAS programs are required to read this data.
- Keyword:
- emergency department and hypertension
- Citation to related publication:
- Kue, J., & Meurer, W. (2020). Association between blood pressure, race, ethnicity and likelihood of admission to the hospital from United States emergency departments – A cross sectional study. F1000Research, 9, 1116. https://doi.org/10.12688/f1000research.24757.1
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Fuller, Jennifer, Rowan, Erin, Landgraf, Ava, Alofs, Karen, Foufopoulos, Johannes, and Gronewold, Andrew
- Description:
- This study investigates the rapid decline of black tern (Chlidonias niger) over eight years in one of Michigan’s largest colonies, Lake St. Clair. 1. Nesting Success Model: A multiple logistic regression with a binomial (logit-link) fit using the glm() function from the ‘stats’ package in R (55) to determine the influence of habitat and biological predictors on nesting survival. 2. ArcMap visualization of Nesting Success: To visualize the geographic extent of the habitat’s potential to predispose nests’ vulnerability, the coefficients and intercept from our selected GLM were applied to raster layers in ArcMap using the Raster Calculator Tool. 3. Population Change & Habitat Extent: To quantify sub-colony breeding pair population size and their response to changes in sub-colony habitat in the geospatial model, we applied a general linear mixed model (GLMM) using the lmer() function from the ‘lme4’ package in R (55). Predictor variables were chosen a priori, and included the area of open water, uninhabitable vegetation (NDVI>0.72), any habitable area, and area with >50% hatch success.
- Keyword:
- black terns, wetlands, ecology, climate change, lake levels, Great Lakes, waterbirds, ornithology, general linear model, geospatial, GIS, nesting success, avian, and breeding
- Citation to related publication:
- Fuller, J., Rowan, E., Landgraf, A., Alofs, K., Foufopoulos, J., Gronewold, A., (2021). Collapse of a Black Tern Colony (Chlidonias niger) as a Result of Climate Change Driven Lake-Level Extremes and Anthropogenic Habitat Alteration [Data set]. University of Michigan - Deep Blue. and Fuller, J., et al. (2021). Shorebird colony collapses under climate driven lake-level rise and anthropogenic stressors. Forthcoming.
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- 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:
- Swiger, Brian M, Liemohn, Liemohn W, Ganushkina, Natalia Y, and Dubyagin, Stepan V
- Description:
- The data included are those that were used in the creation of a model described in the manuscript titled "Predictions of Electron Flux in the near-Earth Plasma Sheet from Solar Wind Driving" by Swiger et al., 2022, published in the Space Weather Journal. doi: pending, TBD and The manuscript describes the development and assessment of a model that predicts electron flux (from 83 eV to 93 keV energies) in a region of Earth's magnetosphere called the plasma sheet. The model uses inputs of solar wind parameters including, but not limited, to solar wind speed and the interplanetary magnetic field.
- Keyword:
- magnetosphere plasma, machine learning, neural network, space weather forecasting, electrons in space, Earth's plasma sheet, and solar wind driving of magnetosphere
- Citation to related publication:
- Swiger, B. M., Liemohn, M. W., Ganushkina, N. Y., & Dubyagin, S. V. (2022). Energetic electron flux predictions in the near-Earth plasma sheet from solar wind driving. Space Weather, 20, e2022SW003150. https://doi.org/10.1029/2022SW003150
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Wallace, Dylan M, Benyamini, Miri, Nason-Tomaszewski, Samuel R, Costello, Joseph T, Cubillos, Luis H, Mender, Matthew J, Temmar, Hisham, Willsey, Matthew S, Patil, Parag P, Chestek, Cynthia A, and Zacksenhouse, Miriam
- Description:
- This is data from Wallace, Benyamini et al., 2023, Journal of Neural Engineering. There are two sets of data included: 1. Neural features and error labels used to train error classifiers for each day used in the study 2. Trial data from an example experiment day (Monkey N, Day 6), with runs for offline calibration, online brain control, error monitoring, and error correction. The purpose of this study was to investigate the use of error signals in motor cortex to improve brain-machine interface (BMI) performance for control of two finger groups. All data is contained in .mat files, which can be opened using MATLAB or the Python SciPy library.
- Keyword:
- Brain-machine interface (BMI), Error detection, and Neural recording
- Citation to related publication:
- Wallace, D. M., Benyamini, M., Nason-Tomaszewski, S. R., Costello, J. T., Cubillos, L. H., Mender, M. J., Temmar, H., Willsey, M. S., Patil, P. G., Chestek, C. A., & Zacksenhouse, M. (2023). Error detection and correction in intracortical brain–machine interfaces controlling two finger groups. Journal of Neural Engineering, 20(4), 046037. https://doi.org/10.1088/1741-2552/acef95
- Discipline:
- Engineering, Science, and Health Sciences
-
- 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:
- 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:
- Zelditch, Miriam L. and Swiderski, Donald L.
- Description:
- Each row in the file contains the museum ID (museum where the specimen is located and the accession number), the species name, and the values for centroid size, followed by the x,y coordinates for each landmark. Any program that can read in a csv file can read this file.
- Keyword:
- Shape, Sciuridae, mandibles
- Citation to related publication:
- Zelditch, M.L., Swiderski, D.L. The Predictable Complexity of Evolutionary Allometry. Evol Biol (2022). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11692-022-09581-1
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Cole, Shannon L
- Description:
- The nucleus accumbens (NAc) contains multiple subpopulations of medium spiny neurons (MSNs): one subpopulation expresses D1-type dopamine receptors, another expresses D2-type receptors, and a third expresses both. The relative roles in NAc of D1 neurons versus D2 neurons in appetitive motivation were assessed here. Specifically, we asked whether D1-Cre mice or D2-Cre mice would instrumentally seek optogenetic self-stimulation of those respective subpopulations in NAc, or instead avoid NAc laser stimulation. and Some statistical forms have been exported from SPSS for the purposes of accessibility to viewers. Please see the "readme" text for descriptions of each individual excel file.
- Keyword:
- Motivation Striatum Optogenetics
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Zhang, Kaihua and Collette, Matthew D.
- Description:
- This Ph.D. research focuses on two subject areas: experimental and numerical model, which serves as two essential parts of a digital twin. A digital twin contains models of real-world structures and fuses data from observations of the structures and scale experiment to pull the models into better agreement with the real world. Digital twin models have the promise of representing complex marine structures and providing enhanced lifecycle performance and risk forecasts. Experimentally verifying the updating approaches is necessary but rarely performed. Thus, the proposed work is designing an experiment and developing a numerical model updated by the experimental data. The dataset contains all the data collected in the experiment of a four-crack hexagon- shaped specimen is presented, designed to mimic many of the properties of complex degrading marine structural systems, such as crack interaction, component inter- dependence, redundant load path, and non-binary failure.
- Keyword:
- System Reliability, Dynamic Bayesian Networks, Fatigue Experiment, Crack Length Measurement, Experimental Validation, Reliability Prediction
- Citation to related publication:
- "Evaluating Crack Growth Prediction in Structural Systems with Dynamic Bayesian Networks", submitted to Computers and Structure and Zhang, K., & Collette, M. (2021). Experimental investigation of structural system capacity with multiple fatigue cracks. Marine Structures, 78, 102943. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marstruc.2021.102943
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Meurer, William
- Description:
- Full analytical dataset with labels in SPSS
- Keyword:
- Diagnostic testing
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Moldwin, Mark B
- Description:
- The database was constructed by using the archived monthly newsletters of SPA and SPD. Duplicate job ads (those in both data sets and those posted over multiple months) were eliminated. The comma delimited raw data files of the job postings and the compilation of the numbers by year and job type and provided. A summary of the results is deposited in Deep Blue Documents.
- Keyword:
- Workforce, Decadal Survey, and Job Ad
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Chung, Taewon , McClain, Taylor P. , Alonso-Mori, Roberto , Chollet, Matthieu , Deb, Aniruddha , Garcia-Esparza, Angel T. , Huang, Joel Ze En , Lamb, Ryan M. , Michocki, Lindsay B. , Reinhard, Marco , van Driel, Tim B. , Penner-Hahn, James E. , and Sension, Roseanne J.
- Description:
- UV-visible, X-ray absorption, and X-ray emission data used to characterize the dynamics of methyl cobalamin at low pH, so called "base off" configuration. Details of data collection and reduction are provided in the associated manuscript. Data files are all text files which contain tab-delimited columns of data corresponding to each figure in the manuscript
- Keyword:
- Ultrafast, X-ray, Transient absorption, cobalamin, vitamin B12, XAS, and XANES
- Citation to related publication:
- Chung, T., et al. (2024). "Ultrafast X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy Reveals Excited State Dynamics of B12 Coenzymes Controlled by the Axial Base". J. Phys. Chem. B. 2024, in press https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.jpcb.3c07779
- 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:
- Umberfield, Elizabeth, Ford, Kathleen, Stansbury, Cooper, and Harris, Marcelline R.
- Description:
- Research Overview: This dataset is clinical consent forms, collected as part of Dr. Elizabeth Umberfield's dissertation research of at the University of Michigan. 134 consent forms are used in the analysis, 102 of which are shared here (not all are shared due to data protection agreements with participating sites). The research aimed to enable representation of clinical consent forms and their permissions within the Informed Consent Ontology. These efforts were supported by the Rackham Graduate Student Research Grant, and Dr. Umberfield's doctoral training was supported by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Future of Nursing Scholars Program.
- Keyword:
- Consent, Consent Form, Informed Consent, Health Care, and Healthcare
- Citation to related publication:
- Umberfield, E., Jiang, Y., Fenton, S., Stansbury, C., Ford, K., Crist, K., Kardia, S., Thomer, A., & Harris, M. R. (In Press). Lessons Learned for Identifying and Annotating Permissions in Clinical Consents. Applied Clinical Informatics. and Umberfield, E., Stansbury, C., Ford, K., Jiang, Y., Kardia, S. L. R., Thomer, A., & Harris, M. R. (Under Review). Evaluating and Extending the Informed Consent Ontology for Representing Permissions from the Clinical Domain.
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Auteri, Giorgia G., Knowles, L. Lacey, Marchán-Rivadeneira, Raquel M., and Olson, Deanna H.
- Description:
- This data was collected as part of a study to study population dynamics of coastal giant salamanders in Oregon. The study uses genetics to answer questions related to conservation concerns including population connectivity, sensitivity to habitat disturbances (such as logging and fires), and genetic diversity of populations.
- Keyword:
- salamander, Dicamptodon tenebrosus, conservation genetics, microsatellite , landscape genetics, population connectivity, and bottleneck
- Citation to related publication:
- Auteri, Giorgia G., M. Raquel Marchán-Rivadeneira, Deanna H. Olson, L. Lacey Knowles. Connectivity in coastal giant salamanders (Dicamptodon tenebrosus) shows no association with land-use, fire frequency, or river drainage but does not offset negative consequences of locally unstable population sizes. PLoS ONE. In review.
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Yuan, Ye, Currie, William S., Sharp, Sean J. , Martina, Jason P. , and Elgersma, Kenneth J.
- Description:
- This archived dataset includes all of the input files that were used to run the model for all the runs in this set, including files containing model parameters and drivers. This dataset also includes all of the model output files from model runs in this set.
- Keyword:
- wetland, Great Lakes, greenhouse gas, climate change, and ecosystem model
- Citation to related publication:
- Yuan, Y., S. J. Sharp, J. P. Martina, K. J. Elgersma, and W. S. Currie. Sustained-flux global warming potential driven by nitrogen inflow and hydroperiod in a model of Great Lakes coastal wetlands. JGR Biogeosciences in review.
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Bradshaw, Lisa, Vernon, Julianne, Schmidt, Thomas, James, Timothy, Zhang, Jianzhi, Archbold, Hilary, Cadigan, Ken, Wolfe, John P., and Goldberg, Deborah E.
- Description:
- This is the experimental data referenced in our manuscript entitled "Influence of CUREs on STEM retention depends on demographic identities." The dataset comprises csv files with results from student surveys given to students enrolled in Biology 173 from Fall 2015 through Fall 2019 as well as institutional data of their course grades and cumulative GPA at the time they enrolled in Biology 173, and graduation and major data for student who had graduated by 2021. The survey questions used in the analysis and the IRB consent form are also included as pdfs.
- Keyword:
- undergraduate research, STEM retention, CURE, introductory biology laboratory, and education research
- Citation to related publication:
- Bradshaw, L., Vernon J., Schmidt T., James T., Zhang J., Archbold H., Cadigan K., Wolfe J.P. & Goldberg D. 2023. Research article: Influence of CUREs on STEM retention depends on demographic identities. J Microbiol Biol Educ (accepted)
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- 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:
- Martin, Tara L, Young, LR, Goldsteen, D, Nunamaker, EA, Reynolds, P, Thompson-Iritani, S, Thurston, SE, and LaFollette, MR
- Description:
- This dataset contains the results of a survey of mouse handling methods by personnel working with laboratory mice. The survey included questions about preferred handling methods, barriers to use of refined handling methods, and a knowledge quiz about refined mouse handling. Data was collected via Qualtrics survey as described in the methodology section. This dataset is associated with the following publication, accepted by PLOS One: PONE-D-23-01633R1 Title: Using refined methods to pick up mice: A survey benchmarking prevalence & beliefs about tunnel and cup handling Authors: Lauren Young, Donna Goldsteen, Elizabeth A. Nunamaker, Mark J. Prescott, Penny Reynolds, Sally Thompson-Iritani, Sarah E. Thurston, Tara L. Martin, Megan R. LaFollette
- Keyword:
- Mouse, Refined Handling, Tunnel Handling, Cup Handling, Laboratory Animal, and Animal Care
- Citation to related publication:
- Young LR, Goldsteen D, Nunamaker EA, Prescott MJ, Reynolds P, Thompson-Iritani S, Thurston SE, Martin TL, LaFollette MR. Using refined methods to pick up mice: A survey benchmarking prevalence & beliefs about tunnel and cup handling. PLOS ONE. 2023. In Press.
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- 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
-
Dataset: Models generated for the bioinformatic analysis of MPER/protein fusions binding to antibody
- Creator:
- Bylund, Tatsiana, Chuang, Gwo-Yu, Kwong, Peter, Lai, Yen-Ting, McIlwain, Benjamin, and Stockbridge, Randy B.
- Description:
- This project evaluated the binding of antibody fragments to membrane proteins fused to a short epitope sequence (“MPER”). This dataset includes atomic coordinates (.pdb files) for bioinformatic models of antibody fragment binding to an MPER epitope – membrane protein fusion.
- Keyword:
- MPER, cryo-EM fiducial, crystallography chaperone, and small membrane protein
- Citation to related publication:
- McIlwain, B. C., Erwin, A. L., Davis, A. R., Ben Koff, B., Chang, L., Bylund, T., Chuang, G.-Y., Kwong, P. D., Ohi, M. D., Lai, Y.-T., & Stockbridge, R. B. (2021). N-terminal Transmembrane-Helix Epitope Tag for X-ray Crystallography and Electron Microscopy of Small Membrane Proteins. Journal of Molecular Biology, 166909. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2021.166909
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Dariya, Malyarenko, Tariq, Humera, Kushwaha, Aman, Mourad, Rami, Heist, Kevin, Chenevert, Thomas L, Ross, Brian D, Chen, Heang-Ping, and Hadjiiski, Lubomir
- Description:
- The 3D GRE MRI data for murine model of myelofbifrosis with expert segmentations of mouse tibia was used to train Attention UNET model to automate bone marrow segmentation for measurements of imaging biomarkers. This dataset consists of three archives: (1) containing the source MRI images in Meta-image-header (MHD) format with resulting segmentation labels by two experts and four UNET models with different training scenarios; (2) corresponding training models; and (3) deep-learning (DL)-based segmentation tools for application to future murine tibia MRI data. and The MHD images are an ITK compatible format that can be viewed in standard image viewer, like 3D Slicer. The image archive is structured with a directory tree that contains \"mouseID"\"scan-date"\"segmentaion-scenario"\. The "training model" archive containes DL-model labeled by the data subset, and "deployment" archive containes the DL-segmentation software.
- Keyword:
- deep-learning segmentation, preclinical MRI, murine tibia, and mouse model of myelofibrosis
- Citation to related publication:
- Kushwaha A, Mourad RF, Heist K, Tariq H, Chan HP, Ross BD, Chenevert TL, Malyarenko D, Hadjiiski LM. Improved Repeatability of Mouse Tibia Volume Segmentation in Murine Myelofibrosis Model Using Deep Learning. Tomography. 2023 Mar 7;9(2):589-602. doi: 10.3390/tomography9020048. PMID: 36961007; PMCID: PMC10037585. and https://github.com/dumichgh/MFJK1_Segmentation_MHDs
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- 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:
- de Oliveira, Stephanie and Nisbett, Richard E.
- Description:
- These studies assess the effect of social identity on judgement and are described in "Demographically diverse crowds are typically not much wiser than homogeneous crowds" (de Oliveira, S., & Nisbett, R. E. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2018) and the article’s Supporting Information appendix. Some studies use a variety of questions to assess multiple social identity factors; the other studies are narrowed to particular social identity variables. Each study includes some type of estimation or prediction task, collects social identity variables, and asks participants to indicate their answer strategies. Study 1 is a trivia and prediction task based on football team fan identity. Study 2 reports on demographics plus political and religious identity and asks participants to predict vote percentages in presidential primaries. Study 3 participants estimate the percentage of Americans that support statements on various polarizing political views and give likelihood ratings for presidential candidates to win the Iowa caucus; a variety of identity questions are asked including political and religious identity. Study 4 includes demographics plus political and religious identity questions and asks participants to predict how the candidates would perform in the 2016 United States presidential election. Study 5 asks participants to guess the popularity rating of books that had either gender-specific or gender-neutral appeal, and also to rate their own interest in the books. Demographic-based social identity variables such as sex are included. Study 6 includes a wide variety of social identity variables and asks participants to estimate the likelihood of events occurring in the near future. Study 7 participants are from diverse national backgrounds and completed judgement tasks that predicted stock prices, Olympic performance, and news events outcomes. The data are generally interpretable when examined in conjunction with the target article. A new data file for Study 6 was uploaded on April 4, 2018 to include variables that were inadvertently left out of the original Study 6 file. A new data file for Study 7 was uploaded on April 6, 2018 to include variables that were inadvertently left out of the original Study 7 file. A codebook for this data set was added on April 6, 2018.
- Keyword:
- Judgment/Decision Making and Estimate aggregation
- Discipline:
- Social Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Gradwohl, Kelsey M.
- Description:
- The data set includes one file: Dermatology Clerkship Chalk Talks Raw Dataset which is the raw data collected from the surveys. This raw data was then coded and scored with the following analysis. Objective knowledge questions were asked for each chalk talk which was scored by authors. A knowledge assessment score was calculated by adding the total number of points accumulated by the student, dividing it by the total number of points possible, and summarizing the score as a percentage. Pre- and post-talk knowledge assessment scores were compared for each chalk talk and for the entire curriculum using 2-tailed paired sample t-tests with statistical significance if p<0.05., Before and after each talk, students were asked how confident they felt differentiating conditions within each disease group. For the erythroderma and immunobullous talks, students were also asked how confident they felt working up the conditions. Answer choices were on a Likert scale ranging from 1 (not at all confident) to 5 (extremely confident). Pre- and post-chalk talk scores were summarized as means with standard deviations and compared using 2-tailed paired sample t-tests with statistical significance if p<0.05. , After each talk, students were asked about its efficacy in terms of enhancing their understanding of the diseases, providing a framework or approach to work-up, and facilitating interaction between student and teacher. Answer choices were on a Likert scale ranging from 1 (not at all effective) to 5 (extremely effective), and summarized as means with standard deviations. Students were asked for written feedback regarding what they liked about the talk and suggestions for improvement. Qualitative data were sorted into categories and scored by two independent raters (cohen's kappa =0.8)., and In the response Likert scale, "Not at all"=1, "Not so (much)"=2, "Somewhat"=3, "Very"=4, and "Extremely"=5.
- Keyword:
- Chalk talk, Dermatology clerkship, Dermatology education, Virtual learning, and Online learning
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Dillahunt, Tawanna R., Lam, Jason, Lu, Alex, and Wheeler, Earnest
- Description:
- Today’s Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) support job searches, resume creation and the ability to highlight employment skills on social media. However, these technological tools are often tailored to high-income, highly educated users, and white-collar professionals. It is unclear what interventions address the needs of job seekers who have limited resources, education, or who may be underserved in other ways. We gathered insights from past literature and generated ten tangible design concepts to address the needs of underserved job seekers. We then conducted a needs validation and speed dating study to understand which concepts were most viable among our population. We found that the three most preferred concepts immediately addressed job seekers’ most practical needs. and Per reviewer feedback, we aim to improve the utility of this publication to other scholars by including our research materials here. This dataset includes the interview script, storyboards that were used in the needs validation study, the demographics survey/questionnaire, and the consent form.
- Keyword:
- Design, Underserved job seekers, Storyboards, Speed dating, Employment, and Needs Validation
- Discipline:
- Other
-
- 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:
- 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:
- Berlin, Nicholas and MacEachern, Mark
- Description:
- This systematic review and meta-analysis assesses decision aids in the context of patients considering post-mastectomy breast reconstruction. and NOTE: An updated Read Me file was added to this data set on May 24, 2018 replacing the original.
- Keyword:
- Post-mastectomy, Decision-making, Systematic review, Decision aids, Meta-analysis, and Breast reconstruction
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Pearce, Alexa L.
- Description:
- This dataset accompanies a study that seeks to contribute to a clearer understanding of the discovery ecosystem in academic research libraries. Using historical literature as a case study, extensive citation analysis is employed to both reveal characteristics of secondary historical literature as well as to test a broad disciplinary discovery environment that includes six specific search platforms. By enhancing our understanding of where and how specific types of resources are –or are not—discoverable, as the case may be, this study can provide evidence to better inform the appropriate role and placement of various search platforms in a user’s process. This citation analysis drew upon all secondary literature that was cited in the American Historical Review (AHR) during a six-year period, from 2010 through 2015. The AHR is the official publication of the American Historical Association (AHA) and, as stated on its website, has served as “the journal of record for the historical profession in the United States since 1895.” Additionally, the AHR represents all subfields of history in its research articles and reviews of new scholarship. For this study, the author gathered citations from research articles only, excluding reviews. For the purposes of testing the library discovery environment, the author aimed to include citations that a researcher would be likely to identify by using library research tools, as opposed to archival finding aids. Recognizing that some tools included in this study, such as JSTOR and Historical Abstracts, do not index archival sources, the author decided to focus on published and secondary materials. All citations to archival sources, government information, and other unpublished manuscript materials were excluded. Additionally, citations to newspaper and general or popular press articles published prior to 1900 were excluded. Citations to entire periodicals, as opposed to articles, were also excluded. Books from all date ranges were included. Citations to non-scholarly newspaper and magazine articles published after 1900 were included. Citations to published primary sources were also included in the population of citations, as one may reasonably expect to locate them in a research library setting. The resulting population comprised 22,572 citations. After separating out duplicate citations, the total number was 19,937. Using a random number generator, the de-duplicated list of citations was re-ordered in order to select a random sample of 400, which affords a confidence level of 95% and a confidence interval of 5. The first step in analysis was to characterize each citation according to format, publication date, and language. Secondly, the author searched for all citations in the sample in the 6 different search platforms listed above. The primary question for each database included in the study was how comprehensively it represented the population of AHR citations, as represented by the random sample selected for this study. In order for a given citation to count as present in a particular database, it had to be represented in the format in which it was cited. For example, if a search for a cited book turned up only a dissertation, with the same author and very similar title, the analysis found that the citation was not present. For book chapters cited with authors and titles, it was not necessary for chapters to have their own records in order to be counted as present but it was necessary for them to be discernible among search results as chapters, such as in a table of contents listing. In order to expedite the search process, the author searched Historical Abstracts and America: History and Life simultaneously on the EBSCO platform. For all of the platforms except Google Scholar, the author performed advanced searches, entering both title and author information for each citation. All searching took place between February and May of 2017. The results presented here reflect the content available to search in each platform at the time of investigation.
- Keyword:
- discovery, history, secondary literature, information retrieval, reference analysis, citation analysis, library science, university libraries, and research libraries
- Discipline:
- Social Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Galaty, Michael L. and Bejko, Lorenc
- Description:
- This work contains documentation for the entire Projekti Arkeologjik i Shkodrës (PASH) data set, which has been organized into a series of collections and works in the Deep Blue Data repository to facilitate access and navigation. The data presented here accompany a two-volume research report, published by the University of Michigan Museum of Anthropological Archaeology Press (Galaty and Bejko 2023--see below).
- Keyword:
- archaeology
- Citation to related publication:
- Galaty, M. L., & Bejko, L. (Eds.). (2023). Archaeological Investigations in a Northern Albanian Province: Results of the Projekti Arkeologjik i Shkodrës (PASH) (Vol. 1). University of Michigan Press. https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.12201317 and Galaty, M. L., & Bejko, L. (2023). Archaeological Investigations in a Northern Albanian Province: Results of the Projekti Arkeologjik i Shkodrës (PASH) (Vol. 2). University of Michigan Press. https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.12208577
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- The spreadsheets (in csv and xlsx formats) have columns for botanical family, genus-species binomials, synonymy (outdated binomials) on the left, folllowed by columns with native terms in several Dogon languages and in Bangime. Dogon languages included are Toro Tegu, Ben Tey, Bankan Tey, Nanga, Jamsay (main dialect), Perge Tegu (Jamsay of Pergé village), Gourou (aberrant variety of Jamsay), Togo Kan, Yorno So and Ibi So (in Toro So dialect complex), Donno So, Tomo Kan (of Segué and of Diangassagou), Tomo Kan, Dogul Dom, Tebul Ure, Yanda Dom, Najamba, Tiranige, Mombo, Ampari, Bunoge, and Penange. JH in column headings indicates that the material is from Dr. Heath's fieldwork. and For images of many of these plants, see the collection "Mali flora images" in Deep Blue Data ( https://doi.org/10.7302/aef4-fk26). For a practical guide to these plants, click on the link below in "related items in Deep Blue Documents".
- Keyword:
- Dogon, Bangime, and flora
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- Bankan Tey is a Dogon language spoken in the village complex Walo (also spelled Oualo) near Douentza in central Mali. It is closely related to Ben Tey within Dogon. As of May 2018, Bankan Tey remains on my “to do” list in terms of grammatical description and texts. These recordings were made in Walo in 2011 and have not yet been transcribed although there is a fair chance I will be able to work on them in the next few years. If nothing materializes before 2022, I authorize other linguists to transcribe, translate, and/or analyse the texts. 2011 side A 2011 side B
- Keyword:
- Bankan Tey , Dogon, Recording, Audio, and Walo
- 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:
- Bunoge is a Dogon language spoken in Boudou and two neighboring villages in central Mali. These texts were recorded in the original Boudou village (perched on a peak) in 2015. The content of the texts is: 2015-01 greetings and initial conversations; 2015-02 history of Boudou, part 1; 2015-03 history of Boudou, part 2; 2015-04 farming methods; 2015-05 carts and gardening; 2015-06 farming; 2015-07 wells, road, and school; 2015-08 tale; 2015-09 tale. Heath, A grammar of Bunoge, is electronically published (2017) at Language Description Heritage Library http://ldh.clld.org/2017/03/01/escidoc2417511/ with backup copy at Deep Blue documents. http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/139023 DOI is 10.17617/2.2417511 At the end of the grammar are formatted transcriptions/translations of 2015-02, 2015-03, 2015-05, 2015-08, and 2015-09. The remaining texts (2015-01, 2015-04, 2015-06, and 2015-07) have not been transcribed as of May 2018. I grant permission to other scholars to transcribe, translate, and/or analyse these texts.
- Keyword:
- Bunoge Boudou, Dogon, Mali, Audio, and Recording
- 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 and Heath, Jeffrey. 2017. A grammar of Bunoge (Dogon, Mali). [Ann Arbor]: Univ. of Michigan. Available at https://doi.org/10.17617/2.2417511 and https://ldh.clld.org/sources/item_2417511
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- Dogul Dom is a Dogon language spoken over a broad area on the Dogon (Bandiagara) plateau, mainly north(-west) of Bandiagara. A grammar was published electronically at Language Description Heritage Library in 2016. https://ldh.clld.org/sources/item_2326691 It is backed up at Deep Blue documents. http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/123061 Dogul Dom texts were recorded digitally at Nantanga village in 2015. Portions were transcribed and presented in the grammar as Text T01 and Text T02 Dogul Dom Nantanga 2015-01 (about 9:30 minutes), Text T01 in grammar Dogul Dom Nantanga 2015-02 (about 4:30 minutes), Text T02 in grammar
- Keyword:
- Dogul Dom, Dogon, Audio, and Recording
- 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 and Heath, Jeffrey. 2016. A grammar of Dogul Dom (Dogon language family, Mali). Ann Arbor: Univ. of Michigan. Available at https://doi.org/10.17617/2.2326691 and https://ldh.clld.org/sources/item_2326691
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- Donno So is a Dogon language spoken over a wide area on the Dogon (Bandiagara) plateau, mainly between Bandiagara and the eastern edge of the plateau. It is also called Kamma So. A grammar was published electronically at Language Description Heritage Library in 2016: and https://ldh.clld.org/sources/item_2491630 This is backed up at Deep Blue documents. http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/123062 Thirteen texts were recorded digitally in Wendekele village south of Bandiagara in approximately 2015. Because of equipment problems the texts are rather faint and difficult to transcribe. Five texts were transcribed and translated, and presented at the end of the grammar volume. The correspondences are these: Published volume: text 1, Recording: DS 02, title: hare and other animals (tale); text 2, DS 09, report on trip to Burkina; text 3, DS 10, blacksmith; text 4, DS 03, squirrel and hare (tale); text 5, DS 11, Fulbe herders. Recordings DS 01(tale of stepmother), 04 (farming), 05 (construction),06 (animals), 07 (hunting), 08 (herding), 12 (marriage), and 13 (korobasinging) are not transcribed as of May 2018. I grant permission to other linguists to transcribe, translate, and/or analyse them.
- Keyword:
- Donno So, Dogon, Audio, and Recording
- 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 and Heath, Jeffrey. 2016. A grammar of Donno So or Kamma So. Ann Arbor: Univ. of Michigan. Available at https://doi.org/10.17617/2.2491630 and https://ldh.clld.org/sources/item_2491630
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- Najamba is spoken chiefly in villages on the edges of low cliffs flanking a long valley near Douentza in central Mali. It belongs to a cluster of languages/dialects including Kindige, spoken mostly along the main Douentza-Sevare highway, and the varieties around Borko on the (very) high plateau on the northwestern edge of the Dogon (Bandiagara) plateau. These varieties are often collectively called Bondu So, but this is an exonym. A grammar of Najamba was published electronically by Language Description Heritage Library in 2017 http://ldh.clld.org/2017/02/01/escidoc2397771/ It is backed up at Deep Blue documents. http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/139022 One cassette was recorded (on one side only) in Kubewel village in 2004. Two cassettes were recorded in Adia village in 2005 in a single long session. These have been digitized. The inventory is: Kubewel: 2004-01 side A; Adia 2005-01 side A; 2005-01 side B; 2005-02 side A; 2005-02 side B. The 2004 tape had poor sound quality and was not transcribed. A substantial part of 2005-01 side A and 2005-02 side A was transcribed and translated in unpublished keyboarded documents in 2009 (see below). The material from 2005-01 side A was further edited and appeared as a single long text at the end of the published grammar. The unpublished documents included in this work are: transcriptions: Dogon Najamba 2005_01_A Adia text transcribed 2009; Dogon Najamba 2005_02_A Adia text transcribed 2009. translations: Dogon Najamba 2005_01_A Adia text translated 2009; Dogon Najamba 2005_02_A Adia text translated 2009
- Keyword:
- Najamba, Dogon, Douenzta, Mali, Audio, and Recording
- 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:
- Tebul Ure is a Dogon language spoken on the heights in a horseshoe valley between Bamba and Yanda on the eastern edge of the Dogon (Bandiagara) plateau in central Mali. A grammar is drafted but incomplete as of May 2018. Texts were transcribed from dictation in 2012 in the Tebul area, and others were recorded digitally in 2015 at a nearby town on the plateau. Six of the 2015 texts have been transcribed. The texts are included at the end of the grammar. I grant permission to other linguists to transcribe, translate, or analyse any texts that remain untranscribed beginning 2022.
- Keyword:
- Tebul Ure, Dogon, Mali, Audio, and Recording
- 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:
- Tiranige is a Dogon language spoken in villages on the high plateau near the western edge of the Dogon (Bandiagara) plateau, and in villages at the base of the cliffs and slopes leading down from the plateau to the sandy plains. As of May 2018 I am still working on a drafted Tiranige grammar which I hope to complete in 2019. The grammar draft currently ends with six short texts transcribed from dictation. The only audio recording is therefore labeled Text 07. The speakers are Amadou Toloba and Boubacar Toloba. Most but not all of it (17.5 minutes out of about 22) has been partially transcribed. The plan is to complete the grammar and to transcribe and translate at least Text 07.
- Keyword:
- Tiranige, Dogon, Mali, Audio, and Recording
- 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:
- Columns from left to right (omitting blanks) are: Tiranige (transcription) finder (English finder list, i.e. usually one-word glosses) recherche (finder list in French) English (full English gloss) français (full French gloss) code (for certain lexical categories: fauna, flora, body, kinship) order/family (for flora-fauna terms) species (for flora-fauna terms) synonymy (alternative or former species binomials)
- Keyword:
- Dogon and Tiranige
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- Yorno So is the variety of the Toro So subgroup of the Dogon language family. It is spoken in the Yendouma village cluster along the base of cliffs on the eastern side of the Dogon (Bandiagara) plateau in east-central Mali. It is not yet completely clear whether it is best described as a dialect of Toro So (which also includes Sangha So, Ibi So, and other varieties), or as a separate language. As of May 2018 my opinion is that it is a dialect. A grammar of Yorno So was published electronically at Language Description Heritage Library in 2017. http://ldh.clld.org/2017/09/01/escidoc2326768-2/ This is backed up at Deep Blue documents. http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/139021. An excerpt of this document that includes a transcription and an English translation of audio files texts 1-6 is included in this dataset. Texts 07, 08, and 09 have not yet been transcribed. I give permission to other linguists to transcribe, translate, and/or analyze those texts.
- Keyword:
- Toro So, Yorno So, Dogon, Audio, and Recording
- 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