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- Creator:
- Malik, Hafiz and Khan, Muhammad Khurran, King Saud University
- Description:
- Details of the microphone used for data collection, acoustic environment in which data was collected, and naming convention used are provided here. 1 - Microphones Used: The microphones used to collect this dataset belong to 7 different trademarks. Table (1) illustrates the number of used Mics of different trademarks and models. Table 1: Trademarks and models of Mics Mic Trademark Mic Model # of Mics Shure SM-58 3 Electro-Voice RE-20 2 Sennheiser MD-421 3 AKG C 451 2 AKG C 3000 B 2 Neumann KM184 2 Coles 4038 2 The t.bone MB88U 6 Total 22 2- Environment Description: A brief description of the 6 environments in which the dataset was collected is presented here: (i) Soundproof room: a small room (nearly 1.5m × 1.5m × 2m), which is closed and completely isolated. With an exception of a small window in the front side of the room which is made of glass, all the walls of the room are made of wood and covered by a layer of sponge from the inner side, and the floor is covered by carpet. (ii) Class room: standard class room (6m × 5m × 3m). (iii) Lab: small lab (4m × 4m × 3m). All the walls are made of glasses and the floor is covered by carpet. The lab contains 9 computers. (iv) Stairs: is in the second floor. The place of recording is 3m × 5m (v) Parking: is the college parking. (vi) Garden: is an open space outside the buildings. 3- Naming Convention: This set of rules were followed as a naming convention to give each file in the dataset a unique name: (i) The file name is 19 characters long, and consists of 5 sections separated by underscores. (ii) The first section is of 3 characters indicates the Microphone trademark. (iii) The second section of 4 characters indicates the microphone model as in table (2). (iv) The third section of 2 characters indicates a specific microphone within a set of microphones of the same trademark and model, since we have more than one microphone of the same trademark and model. (v) The fourth section of 2 characters indicates the environment, where Soundproof room --> 01 Class room --> 02 Lab --> 03 Stairs --> 04 Parking --> 05 Garden --> 06 (vi) The fifth section of 2 characters indicates the language, where Arabic --> 01 English --> 02 Chinese --> 03 Indonesian --> 04 (vii) The sixth section of 2 characters indicates the speaker. Table 2: Microphones Naming Criteria Original Mic Trademark and model --> Naming Convenient Shure SM-58 --> SHU_0058 Electro-Voice RE-20 --> ELE_0020 Sennheiser MD-421 --> SEN_0421 AKG C 451 --> AKG_0451 AKG C 3000 B --> AKG_3000 Neumann KM184 --> NEU_0184 Coles 4038 --> COL_4038 The t.bone MB88U --> TBO_0088 For example: SEN_0421_02_01_02_03 is an English file recorded by speaker number 3 in the soundproof room using microphone number 2 of Sennheiser MD-421
- Keyword:
- audio forensic, multimedia forensics, microphone identification, tamper detection, splicing detection, and codec identification
- Citation to related publication:
- Muhammad Khurram Khan, Mohammed Zakariah, Hafiz Malik & Kim-Kwang Raymond Choo (2018). A novel audio forensic data-set for digital multimedia forensics, Australian Journal of Forensic Sciences, 50:5, 525-542, http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00450618.2017.1296186
- Discipline:
- Engineering, Government, Politics and Law, and Science
-
- Creator:
- Steiner, Allison and Bryan, Alex
- Description:
- Included are RegCM simulations driven by three different types of boundary conditions 1. ERA - present day only (1979-2005) 2. GFDL - present day (1978-2005) and future (2041-2065) 3. HadGEM - present day (1978-2005) and future (2041-2065) Each directory has three files with monthly averaged values: ATM: includes 4D (t,z,y,x) atmospheric fields (pressure, winds, temperature, specific humidity, cloud water) and some 3D fields (t,y,x) precipitation, soil temperature, soil water SRF: includes 3D (t,y,x) surface variables (surface pressure, 10m winds, drag coefficient, surface temperature, 2m air temperature, soil moisture, precipitation, runoff, snow, sensible heat flux, latent heat flux, surface radiation components (SW, LW), PBL height, albedo, sunshine duration) RAD: includes 4D radiative transfer variables (SW and LW heating, TOA fluxes, cloud fraction, ice water content) clm_h0 files: CLM land surface files, includes canopy variables, surface fluxes, soil moisture by layers, etc. "
- Keyword:
- climate
- Citation to related publication:
- Bryan, A. M., A. L. Steiner, and D. J. Posselt (2015), Regional modeling of surface-atmosphere interactions and their impact on Great Lakes hydroclimate, J. Geophys. Res. Atmos., 120, 1044–1064. https://doi.org/10.1002/2014JD022316
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Regoli, Leonardo H.
- Description:
- The data corresponds to outputs from the Mars Global Ionosphere Thermosphere Model (M-GITM), the multi-species magnetohydrodynamics (MS-MHD) and multi-fluid magnetohydrodynamics (MF-MHD) codes used during the study presented in "Multi-species and multi-fluid MHD approaches for the study of ionospheric escape at Mars" by Regoli et al. and Dataset citation: Regoli, L.H. (2018). Model outputs for "Multi-species and multi-fluid MHD approaches for the study of ionospheric escape at Mars" [Data set]. University of Michigan Deep Blue Data Repository. https://doi.org/10.7302/Z2GH9G49
- Keyword:
- GCM, MHD, and Mars
- Citation to related publication:
- Regoli, L.H., Dong, C., Ma, Y.J., Dubinin, E., Manchester, W.B., Bougher, S.W., & Welling, D.T. (2018). Multispecies and multifluid MHD approaches for the study of ionospheric escape at Mars. Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, 123. https://doi.org/10.1029/2017JA025117
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Hayward, Stephen L. , Lund, Paul E., Kang, Qing, Johnson-Buck, Alexander , Tewari, Muneesh, and Walter, Nils G.
- Description:
- This work contains the experimental data and associated analysis that are described in the research publication entitled "Ultra-specific and Amplification-free Quantification of Mutant DNA by Single-molecule Kinetic Fingerprinting". This work contains multiple zip files, each of which represents one of the principal experiment groups presented in the publication. Each experiment group contains movie and analysis files corresponding to various experimental conditions related to that experiment group.
- Keyword:
- Single Molecule Fluorescence, Super-Resolution Microscopy, Nucleic Acid Hybridization, T790M Mutation, Cytosine Deamination, SiMREPS, and single molecule kinetic fingerprinting
- Citation to related publication:
- https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/jacs.8b06685
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Ozturk, Dogacan S
- Description:
- The modeling research conducted to produce this dataset focuses on the solar wind dynamic pressure drop events and how they affect the Earth's intrinsically coupled Magnetosphere, Ionosphere and Thermosphere systems. This study specifically focuses on the 11 June 2017 event, where the solar wind dynamic pressure dropped significantly following a period of higher pressure. We model the response to this pressure drop using University of Michigan Space Weather Modeling Framework ( http://csem.engin.umich.edu/tools/swmf/). The simulation results were created using BATS-R-US and GITM models. The observational data required for model comparisons were taken from OMNI ( https://omniweb.gsfc.nasa.gov) and CDAWeb ( https://cdaweb.gsfc.nasa.gov/sp_phys/) Databases.
- Keyword:
- GITM, BATS-R-US, Solar wind dynamic pressure, Magnetosphere-Ionosphere-Thermosphere, and MHD
- Citation to related publication:
- Ozturk, D. S., Zou, S., Slavin, J. A., & Ridley, A. J. ( 2019). Response of the geospace system to the solar wind dynamic pressure decrease on 11 June 2017: Numerical models and observations. Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, 124, 2613– 2627. https://doi.org/10.1029/2018JA026315
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Wang, Qi, Elvati, Paolo, Kim, Doohyun, Johansson, K. Olof, Schrader, Paul E., Michelsen, Hope A., and Violi, Angela
- Description:
- Datasets for article in CARBON: Spatial dependence of the growth of polycyclic aromatic compounds in an ethylene counterflow flame. The experiment VUV-AMS measurements ("VUV_AMS_C2H4_Counterflow.txt") consists aerosol mass spectra data from an atmospheric-pressure ethylene/oxygen/argon counterflow diffusion flame described in Johansson et al., Proc. Combust. Inst. 36, 799-806 (2017) doi:10.1016/j.proci.2016.07.130., The experiment VUV-MBMS measurements ("VUV_MBMS_C2H4_Counterflow.txt") consists gas-phase data from an atmospheric-pressure ethylene/oxygen/argon counterflow diffusion flame described in Johansson et al., Proc. Combust. Inst. 36, 799-806 (2017) doi:10.1016/j.proci.2016.07.130., 2D CFD simulation results by KAUST mechanism II ("CFD_KM2_results.xlsx") consists stabilized CFD gas-phase species profiles along different x,y,z coordinates. Species are given by mole fractions., The SNapS2 simulation results ("SNapS2_results.zip") consist streamline I (from fuel side), i (from oxidizer side), and middle (DFFO = 5.0mm) for producing results in Fig. 5, Fig. 6, and Table 1. Three folders under each streamline ("C5H6", "C6H5CH3", and "C6H6") represent simulations by using different seeds (cyclopentadiene, toluene, and benzene respectively). The text files inside each folder are a single trace (time-history) for one SNapS2 simulation. Text file name consists "starting time"+"."+"simulation number"+".txt". For example 0.041.25.txt meaning the 25th simulation starting at 0.041s. Four columns inside the text files represent time, molecular mass, reaction index, and SMILES (Simplified molecular-input line-entry system) of the molecule., and Data citation: Wang, Q., Elvati, P., Kim, D., Johansson, K.O., Schrader, P.E., Michelsen, H.A., Violi, A. (2019). Spatial dependence of the growth of polycyclic aromatic compounds in an ethylene counterflow flame: experimental measurements and simulation results [Data set]. University of Michigan Deep Blue Data Repository. https://doi.org/10.7302/69e6-cd20
- Citation to related publication:
- Wang, Q., Elvati, P., Kim, D., Johansson, K.O., Schrader, P.E., Michelsen, H.A., Violi, A., 2019. Spatial dependence of the growth of polycyclic aromatic compounds in an ethylene counterflow flame. Carbon 149, 328–335. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.carbon.2019.03.017
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Bougher, Stephen W. (CLaSP Department, U. of Michigan) and Roeten, Kali J. (CLaSP Department, U. of Michigan)
- Description:
- The NASA MAVEN (Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution) spacecraft, which is currently in orbit around Mars, has been taking monthly measurements of the speed and direction of the winds in the upper atmosphere of Mars between about 140 to 240 km above the surface. The observed wind speeds and directions change with time and location, and sometimes fluctuate quickly. These measurements are compared to simulations from a computer model of the Mars atmosphere called M-GITM (Mars Global Ionosphere-Thermosphere Model), developed at U. of Michigan. This is the first comparison between direct measurements of the winds in the upper atmosphere of Mars and simulated winds and is important because it can help to inform us what physical processes are acting on the observed winds. Some wind measurements have similar wind speeds or directions to those predicted by the M-GITM model, but sometimes, there are large differences between the simulated and measured winds. The disagreements between wind observations and model simulations suggest that processes other than normal solar forcing may become relatively more important during these observations and alter the expected circulation pattern. Since the global circulation plays a role in the structure, variability, and evolution of the atmosphere, understanding the processes that drive the winds in the upper atmosphere of Mars provides key context for understanding how the atmosphere behaves as a whole system. A basic version of the M-GITM code can be found on Github as follows: https:/github.com/dpawlows/MGITM and About 30 Neutral Gas and Ion Mass Spectrometer (NGIMS) wind campaigns (of 5 to 10 orbits each) have been conducted by the MAVEN team (Benna et al., 2019). Five of these campaigns are selected for detailed study (Roeten et al. 2019). The Mars conditions for these five campaigns have been used to launch corresponding M-GITM code simulations, yielding 3-D neutral wind fields for comparison to these NGIMS wind observations. The M-GITM datacubes used to extract the zonal and meridional neutral winds, along the trajectory of each orbit path between 140 and 240 km, are provided in this Deep Blue Data archive. README files are provided for each datacube, detailing the contents of each file. A general README file is also provided that summarizes the inputs and outputs of the M-GITM code simulations for this study.
- Keyword:
- Mars, MAVEN spacecraft, Mars thermosphere, and Mars global upper atmosphere winds
- Citation to related publication:
- Roeten, K. J., Bougher, S. W., Benna, M., Mahaffy, P. R., Lee, Y., Pawlowski, D., et al. (2019). MAVEN/NGIMS thermospheric neutral wind observations: Interpretation using the M‐GITM general circulation model. Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets, 124, 3283– 3303. https://doi.org/10.1029/2019JE005957
- Discipline:
- Science and Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Ingrid L. Hendy and Yi Wang
- Description:
- This dataset contains photo of the box core SPR0901-04BC (34.2816°N, 120.0415°W, 588 m water depth) retrieved from 2009.1 on the R/V Sproul. The study is funded by OCE-0752093. and Data citation: Hendy, I.L., Wang, Y. (2019). Core photo for SPR0901-04BC [Data set]. University of Michigan Deep Blue Data Repository. https://doi.org/10.7302/9nxx-hd15
- Keyword:
- core photo, Santa Barbara Basin, and SPR0901-04BC
- Citation to related publication:
- "Recover MT Receivers offshore Morro Bay/Deploy and Recover EM Sensor in the San Diego Trough." Cruise ID: SP0901. 2009. Accessible at Rolling Deck to Repository at https://doi.org/10.7284/901085
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Ingrid L. Hendy and Yi Wang
- Description:
- This dataset include core photos for the Kasten core SPR0901-03KC (34.2832°N, 120.0401°W, 586 m water depth) retrieved in 2009.1 on R/V Sproul off Southern California. SPR0901-03KC contains two cores (core 1 and core 2), with each core cut into two sections (section 1 and section 2). The study is funded by NSF OCE-0752093. and Data citation: Hendy, I.L., Wang, Y. (2019). Core photos for SPR0901-03KC [Data set]. University of Michigan Deep Blue Data Repository. https://doi.org/10.7302/3jrg-1m86
- Keyword:
- core photos, Santa Barbara Basin, and SPR0901-03KC
- Citation to related publication:
- "Recover MT Receivers offshore Morro Bay/Deploy and Recover EM Sensor in the San Diego Trough." Cruise ID: SP0901. 2009. Accessible at Rolling Deck to Repository at https://doi.org/10.7284/901085
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Ingrid L. Hendy and Yi Wang
- Description:
- This dataset contains core photos for the jumbo piston core MV0811-14JC (34.2818°N 120.0360°W, water depth: 582 m) retrieved in 2008.11 on R/V Melville off Southern California. MV0811-14JC contains 10 sections (section 1-10). Sections 1-3 were scanned at the LacCore Facility (National Lacustrine Core Facility) at University of Minnesota, while photos for section 4-10 were taken at Marine Geology Repository at Oregon State University. The study is funded by NSF-OCE 1304327. and Data citation: Hendy, I.L., Wang, Y. (2019). Core photos for MV0811-14JC [Data set]. University of Michigan Deep Blue Data Repository. https://doi.org/10.7302/3m31-yb44
- Keyword:
- core photos, Santa Barbara Basin, and MV0811-14JC
- Citation to related publication:
- "BOLT Expedition, Leg 2/A Test for Extending the High-Resolution Climate Record Back to 1.2 Ma." Cruise ID: BOLT02MV. 2008. Accessible at Rolling Deck to Repository at https://doi.org/10.7284/903459
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Ingrid L. Hendy and Yi Wang
- Description:
- This dataset contains the core photo for the box core SPR0901-unnamed (34.2816°N, 120.0415°W, 588 m water depth) off Southern California, retrieved in 2009.1 on R/V Sproul. The research is funded by NSF OCE-0752093. and Data citation: Hendy, I.L., Wang, Y. (2019). Core photo for SPR-unnamed [Data set]. University of Michigan Deep Blue Data Repository. https://doi.org/10.7302/z0mn-cv27
- Keyword:
- core photo, Santa Barbara Basin, and SPR0901-unnamed
- Citation to related publication:
- "Recover MT Receivers offshore Morro Bay/Deploy and Recover EM Sensor in the San Diego Trough." Cruise ID: SP0901. 2009. Accessible at Rolling Deck to Repository at https://doi.org/10.7284/901085
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Ingrid L. Hendy and Yi Wang
- Description:
- This dataset includes core physical properties (e.g., bulk density, porosity, P-wave velocity) and magnetic susceptibility data for Kasten core SPR0901-03KC (34.2832°N, 120.0401°W, 586 m water depth) measured on the multisensor track (MST). SPR0901-03KC was collected by the research vessel R/V Sproul off Southern California in 2009.1. The study is supported by NSF OCE-0752093.
- Keyword:
- physical properties, magnetic susceptibility, Santa Barbara Basin, and SPR0901-03KC
- Citation to related publication:
- "Recover MT Receivers offshore Morro Bay/Deploy and Recover EM Sensor in the San Diego Trough." Cruise ID: SP0901. 2009. Accessible at Rolling Deck to Repository at https://doi.org/10.7284/901085
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Ingrid L. Hendy and Yi Wang
- Description:
- This dataset includes core physical properties (e.g., bulk density, porosity, P-wave velocity) and magnetic susceptibility data for the jumbo piston core MV0811-14JC (34.2818°N 120.0360°W, water depth: 582 m) measured on the multisensor track (MST). MV0811-14JC was collected by the research vessel R/V Melville off Southern California in 2008.11. The study is supported by NSF OCE-1304327.
- Keyword:
- physical properties, magnetic susceptibility, Santa Barbara Basin, and MV0811-14JC
- Citation to related publication:
- "BOLT Expedition, Leg 2/A Test for Extending the High-Resolution Climate Record Back to 1.2 Ma." Cruise ID: BOLT02MV. 2008. Accessible at Rolling Deck to Repository at https://doi.org/10.7284/903459
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Ingrid L. Hendy and Yi Wang
- Description:
- This dataset includes core physical properties (e.g., bulk density, porosity, P-wave velocity) and magnetic susceptibility data for the box core SPR0901-unnamed (34.2816°N, 120.0415°W, 588 m water depth) measured on the multisensor track (MST). SPR0901-unnamed was collected by the research vessel R/V Sproul off Southern California in 2009.1.
- Keyword:
- physical properties, magnetic susceptibility, Santa Barbara Basin, and SPR0901-unnamed
- Citation to related publication:
- "Recover MT Receivers offshore Morro Bay/Deploy and Recover EM Sensor in the San Diego Trough." Cruise ID: SP0901. 2009. Accessible at Rolling Deck to Repository at https://doi.org/10.7284/901085
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Ingrid L. Hendy and Yi Wang
- Description:
- This dataset includes scanning X-ray fluorescence (XRF) data for the core SPR0901-04BC (34.2816°N, 120.0415°W, 588 m water depth). SPR0901-04BC was collected by the research vessel R/V Sproul off Southern California in 2009.1. This research is funded by NSF OCE-0752093.
- Keyword:
- scanning X-ray fluorescence, XRF, Santa Barbara Basin, and SPR0901-04BC
- Citation to related publication:
- "Recover MT Receivers offshore Morro Bay/Deploy and Recover EM Sensor in the San Diego Trough." Cruise ID: SP0901. 2009. Accessible at Rolling Deck to Repository at https://doi.org/10.7284/901085
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Ingrid L. Hendy and Yi Wang
- Description:
- This dataset includes scanning X-ray fluorescence (XRF) data for the core SPR0901-03KC (34.2832°N, 120.0401°W, 586 m water depth). SPR0901-03KC was collected by the research vessel R/V Sproul off Southern California in 2009.1. The research is funded by NSF OCE-0752093.
- Keyword:
- scanning X-ray fluorescence, XRF, Santa Barbara Basin, and SPR0901-03KC
- Citation to related publication:
- "Recover MT Receivers offshore Morro Bay/Deploy and Recover EM Sensor in the San Diego Trough." Cruise ID: SP0901. 2009. Accessible at Rolling Deck to Repository at https://doi.org/10.7284/901085
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Ingrid L. Hendy and Yi Wang
- Description:
- This dataset includes scanning X-ray fluorescence (XRF) data for the core MV0811-14JC (34.2818°N 120.0360°W, water depth: 582 m), which was collected by the research vessel R/V Melville off Southern California in 2008.11. The research is funded by NSF OCE-1304327.
- Keyword:
- scanning X-ray fluorescence, XRF, Santa Barbara Basin, and MV0811-14JC
- Citation to related publication:
- "BOLT Expedition, Leg 2/A Test for Extending the High-Resolution Climate Record Back to 1.2 Ma." Cruise ID: BOLT02MV. 2008. Accessible at Rolling Deck to Repository at https://doi.org/10.7284/903459
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Cotton, Jennifer M. and Sheldon, Nathan D.
- Description:
- These spreadsheets contain all data and data by diet type, meat consumption, gender, and British comparison for the classroom activity described in the accompanying paper.
- Keyword:
- Sustainable agriculture , Active learning, Stable isotopes, and Large enrollment
- Citation to related publication:
- Cotton, J.M., and Sheldon, N.D., 2013, Using stable carbon and nitrogen isotopes of hair to teach about sustainable agriculture through active learning: Journal of Geoscience Education 61, 59–67. https://doi.org/10.5408/12-309.1
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Mitchell, R.L. and Sheldon, Nathan D.
- Description:
- Samples from a road cut section were analyzed. New paleosols were discovered.
- Keyword:
- Paleosols, Precambrian, Keweenawan, Paleoenvironments, and Midcontinental Rift
- Citation to related publication:
- Mitchell, R.L., Sheldon, N.D., 2009, Weathering and paleosol formation in the 1.1. Ga Keweenawan Rift: Precambrian Research 168, p. 271–283. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.precamres.2008.09.013
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Crisp, Dakota N., Saggio, Maria L., Scott, Jared, Stacey, William C., Nakatani, Mitsuyoshi, Gliske, Stephen V., and Lin, Jack
- Description:
- This data and scripts are meant to test and show seizure differentiation based on bifurcation theory. A zip file is included which contains real and simulated seizure waveforms, Matlab scripts, and metadata. The matlab scripts allow for visual review validation and objective feature analysis. The file “README.txt” provides more detail about each individual file within the zip file. and Data citation: Crisp, D.N., Saggio, M.L., Scott, J., Stacey, W.C., Nakatani, M., Gliske, S.F., Lin, J. (2019). Epidynamics: Navigating the map of seizure dynamics - Code & Data [Data set]. University of Michigan Deep Blue Data Repository. https://doi.org/10.7302/ejhy-5h41
- Keyword:
- Bifurcation, Epilepsy, Seizure, and Divergence
- Citation to related publication:
- Saggio, M.L., Crisp, D., Scott, J., Karoly, P.J., Kuhlmann, L., Nakatani, M., Murai, T., Dümpelmann, M., Schulze-Bonhage, A., Ikeda, A., Cook, M., Gliske, S.V., Lin, J., Bernard, C., Jirsa, V., Stacey, W., 2020. In pre-print. Epidynamics characterize and navigate the map of seizure dynamics. bioRxiv 2020.02.08.940072. https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.02.08.940072
- Discipline:
- Engineering, Science, and Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Ingrid L. Hendy and Yi Wang
- Description:
- This dataset includes core physical properties (e.g., bulk density, porosity, P-wave velocity) and magnetic susceptibility data for SPR0901-04BC (34.2816°N, 120.0415°W, 588 m water depth) measured on the multisensor track (MST). SPR0901-04BC was collected by the research vessel R/V Sproul off Southern California in 2009.1. The study is supported by NSF OCE-0752093.
- Keyword:
- physical properties, magnetic susceptibility, Santa Barbara Basin, and SPR0901-04BC
- Citation to related publication:
- "Recover MT Receivers offshore Morro Bay/Deploy and Recover EM Sensor in the San Diego Trough." Cruise ID: SP0901. 2009. Accessible at Rolling Deck to Repository at https://doi.org/10.7284/901085
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Hongyang Zhou
- Description:
- The outputs include the steady state solutions for all Galileo flybys, the particle information for plotting the distribution functions near the reconnection site, the particle and field data for mapping the energetic flux densities, and 3D files for visualizing the whole simulation domain. More details can be found in Readme.txt.
- Keyword:
- MHD and PIC
- Citation to related publication:
- Zhou, H., Tóth, G., Jia, X., Chen, Y., & Markidis, S. (2019). Embedded kinetic simulation of Ganymede's magnetosphere: Improvements and inferences. Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, 124, 5441– 5460. https://doi.org/10.1029/2019JA026643
- 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
-
- Creator:
- Zhu, Jialei and Penner, Joyce E.
- Description:
- The dataset contains the Fortran programs applied in the latest CESM/IMPACT model as well as the data created from this model, which are used in the referenced paper.
- Keyword:
- Organic nucleation, CESM/IMPACT, and SOA
- Citation to related publication:
- Zhu, J. and Penner, J. E.: Global modelling of secondary organic aerosol (SOA) with organic nucleation, (2019), Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, 124, 8260– 8286, https://doi.org/10.1029/2019JD030414
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Basile, Samantha, Lin, Xin, and Keppel-Aleks, Gretchen
- Description:
- Files contain the atmospheric CO2 mole fraction responses to land flux type (HRcasa, HRcorpse, HRmimics) and land flux region (latband variable). Land flux regions are categorized as: Northern Hemisphere high latitudes (NHL; 61 to 90°N), midlatitudes (NML; 24 to 60°N), tropics (NT; 1 to 23°N), Southern Hemisphere tropics (ST; 0 to 23°S), and extratropics (SE; 24 to 90°S). See the README file for how these land flux region definitions relate to the file's latband variable. and To cite dataset: Basile, S., Lin, X., Keppel-Aleks, G. (2019). Simulated CO2 dataset using the atmospheric transport model GEOSChem v12.0.0: Response to regional land carbon fluxes [Data set]. University of Michigan - Deep Blue. https://doi.org/10.7302/xjzc-xy05
- Keyword:
- carbon dioxide, soil heterotrophic respiration, GEOSChem, HR, CO2, CASA-CNP, CORPSE, and MIMICS
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Huang, Yihe (University of Michigan); De Barros, Louis (Université Côte d’Azur)
- Description:
- Numerous small and moderate injection-induced earthquakes have been recorded in North America, Europe and Asia. Here we present a detailed analysis about microearthquakes in an in-situ injection-induced earthquake experiment, which provides an unprecedented opportunity to investigate the mechanisms of induced earthquakes. Our analysis illuminates meter-scale earthquake sources distributed in a network of preexisting rock fractures. The majority of induced earthquakes in our analysis happened when injection pressure reached a peak, indicating a direct response of rock fractures to fluid pressure perturbation. But the relatively low ratio of stress drop to crustal strength reveals that a very small fraction of the crustal shear strength is released by earthquakes, supporting the previous notion that fluid injection induces large aseismic deformation during the experiment. and Citation for dataset: Huang, Y., De Barros, L. (2019). Seismograms of earthquake pairs in the injection experiment [Data set]. University of Michigan - Deep Blue.
- Keyword:
- Induced seismicity
- Citation to related publication:
- Huang, Y., De Barros, L., Cappa, F. (2019). Illuminating the Rupturing of Microseismic Sources in an Injection‐Induced Earthquake Experiment. Geophysical Research Letters, 46(16), 9563-9572. https://doi.org/10.1029/2019GL083856
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Jialei Zhu and Joyce E. Penner
- Description:
- The dataset contains the Fortran programs applied in the latest CESM/IMPACT model as well as the data created from this model, which are used in the referenced paper.
- Keyword:
- Second organic aerosol, Radiative effect, and Cirrus cloud
- Citation to related publication:
- Zhu, J and Penner, J. E.: Indirect effects of secondary organic aerosol on cirrus clouds, (2019), Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, https://doi.org/10.1029/2019JD032233
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Wang, Yi and Hendy, Ingrid L.
- Description:
- The dataset contains bulk sedimentary d15N, TOC, and TN data measured every 2 mm on the core SPR0901-03KC. Flood and turbidite layers are shaded with blue and orange in the files. and This work is supported by NSF OCE-1304327.
- Keyword:
- d15N, total organic carbon, nitrogen isotopes, SPR0901-03KC, and Santa Barbara Basin
- Citation to related publication:
- Wang, Y. , Hendy, I. L. and Thunell, R. (2019), Local and remote forcing of denitrification in the Northeast Pacific for the last 2000 years. Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology. Volume 34, issue 8, pages 1517-1533. https://doi.org/10.1029/2019PA003577
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Abid, Chaima, Kessentini, Marouane, Alizadeh, Vahid, Dhaouadi, Mouna, and Kazman, Rick
- Description:
- Data about the evaluation of the refactorings impact on security.
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Hall, Ryan J. and Larson, Ronald G.
- Description:
- This is data is a large assortment of over 50 1,4-polybutadiene star-linear blends that can be used for assessing and developing predictive models. The data are presented in CSV files.
- Keyword:
- polymers, rheology, star-linear polymer blends, and shear rheology
- Citation to related publication:
- Hall, R., Desai, P. S., Kang, B.-G., Huang, Q., Lee, S., Chang, T., Venerus, D. C., Mays, J., Ntetsikas, K., Polymeropoulos, G., Hadjichristidis, N., & Larson, R. G. (2019). Assessing the Range of Validity of Current Tube Models through Analysis of a Comprehensive Set of Star–Linear 1,4-Polybutadiene Polymer Blends. Macromolecules, 52(20), 7831–7846. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.macromol.9b00642
- Discipline:
- Science and Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Wang, Zihan
- Description:
- SWMF is used to study the segmentation of SED plume into polar cap patches during the geomagnetic storm on Sep 7, 2017. The database includes the 3D output in the upper atmosphere from GITM, the 2D output from Ionospheric Electrodynamics (IE) and 3D output from BATSRUS. The output from GITM can be read with thermo_batch_new.pro. The output from IE can be opened with Spacepy at https://pythonhosted.org/SpacePy/. The output from BATSRUS can be opened with tecplot. More details can be found in Readme.txt.
- Keyword:
- MHD and Ionosphere
- Citation to related publication:
- Wang, Z., Zou, S., Coppeans, T., Ren, J., Ridley, A., & Gombosi, T. (2019). Segmentation of SED by Boundary Flows Associated With Westward Drifting Partial Ring current. Geophysical Research Letters, 46(14), 7920–7928. https://doi.org/10.1029/2019GL084041
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Wittkopp, Patricia J and Metzger, Brian P H
- Description:
- .zip file includes data files and R code used for analysis.
- Citation to related publication:
- Metzger, B. P. H., & Wittkopp, P. J. (2019). Compensatory trans-regulatory alleles minimizing variation in TDH3 expression are common within Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Evolution Letters, 3(5), 448–461. https://doi.org/10.1002/evl3.137 and http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/566653v1
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Folz, Jeff
- Description:
- This data set includes four zipped files each containing unprocessed cell images from a single cell line collected as raw data, the scripts used to process these images and tabular files with the processed data outputs. This data set supports the PLOS ONE publication, "Cell-morphodynamic phenotype classification with application to cancer metastasis using cell magnetorotation and machine-learning."
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Dr. Francis C. Evans
- Description:
- The Evans Old Field Plant Database contains FileMaker and Excel files of data collected by Dr. Francis C. Evans during a 50-year study on successional change on Evans Old Field on the Edwin S. George Reserve. Data include plant phenology, location, and abundances observed from 1948 to 1997.
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Zurbuchen, Thomas H.
- Description:
- Audification Routines in MATLAB and IDL
- Citation to related publication:
- Alexander, Robert L., Sile O’Modhrain, D. Aaron Roberts, Jason A. Gilbert, and Thomas H. Zurbuchen. “The Bird’s Ear View of Space Physics: Audification as a Tool for the Spectral Analysis of Time Series Data.” Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics 119, no. 7 (2014): 5259–71. https://doi.org/10.1002/2014JA020025
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Carson IV, William F.
- Description:
- Raw data and analysis files for the figures corresponding to the manuscript submission entitled "CCL2 enhances macrophage inflammatory responses via miR-9 mediated downregulation of the ERK1/2 phosphatase Dusp6"
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Ozturk, Dogacan Su
- Description:
- The rapid increases in solar wind dynamic pressure, termed sudden impulses (SIs), compress Earth’s dayside magnetosphere and strongly perturb the coupled Magnetosphere-Ionosphere (M-I) system. The compression of the dayside magnetosphere launches magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) waves, which propagate down to the ionosphere, changing the Auroral Field Aligned Currents (FACs), and into nightside magnetosphere. The global response to the compression front sweeping through the coupled system is not yet fully understood due to the sparseness of the measurements, especially those with the necessary time resolution to resolve the propagating disturbances. That’s why a study including modeling is necessary. On 15 August 2015 at 7.44 UT, Advanced Composition Explorer measured a sudden increase in the solar wind dynamic pressure from 1.11 nPa to 2.55 nPa as shown in Figure-1. We use the magnetospheric spacecraft in the equatorial magnetosphere to identify the signatures of magnetosphere response to this SI event and examine the interaction of the propagating disturbances with the M-I system. With the increased time resolution of Active Magnetosphere and Polar Electrodynamics Response Experiment (AMPERE), the FAC pattern and intensity change due to SI can also be studied in more depth. We further use measurements from ground based magnetometer stations to increase our tracking capability for the disturbances in the ionosphere and to improve our understanding of their propagation characteristics. This is the first step in a comprehensive multi-point observation and a global magnetohydrodynamic simulation based investigation of the response of the coupled M-I system to sudden impulses.
- Citation to related publication:
- Ozturk, Doga & Zou, Shasha & Slavin, James. (2016). The Response of the Coupled Magnetosphere-Ionosphere System to the 15 August 2015 Solar Wind Dynamic Pressure Enhancement. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/300020219
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Stoev, Stilian and Hu, Weifeng
- Description:
- Many data sets come as point patterns of the form (longitude, latitude, time, magnitude). The examples of data sets in this format includes tornado events, origins/destination of internet flows, earthquakes, terrorist attacks and etc. It is difficult to visualize the data with simple plotting. This research project studies and implements non-parametric kernel smoothing in Python as a way of visualizing the intensity of point patterns in space and time. A two-dimensional grid M with size mx, my is used to store the calculation result for the kernel smoothing of each grid points. The heat-map in Python then uses the grid to plot the resulting images on a map where the resolution is determined by mx and my. The resulting images also depend on a spatial and a temporal smoothing parameters, which control the resolution (smoothness) of the figure. The Python code is applied to visualize over 56,000 tornado landings in the continental U.S. from the period 1950 - 2014. The magnitudes of the tornado are based on Fujita scale.
- Citation to related publication:
- Hu, Weifeng. “Kernel-based Visualization of Point Patterns in Python with Application to Tornado Landing Data.” (2016). At https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/Kernel-based-Visualization-of-Point-Patterns-in-to-Hu/0de06a6db39da54fe28f8d0cb47c0d3270f2f831
- Discipline:
- Engineering and Science
-
- Creator:
- Atwell, Jon
- Description:
- The data file is json formatted and all fields are named descriptively. The code is written in Python 2.7 and is heavily commented.
- Keyword:
- inequality and coadaptation
- Citation to related publication:
- Atwell J, Savit R (2016) The Emergence of Groups and Inequality through Co-Adaptation. PLoS ONE 11(6): e0158144. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0158144
- Discipline:
- Social Sciences and Science
-
- Creator:
- Carson, William F., IV
- Description:
- Transcriptional accessibility of chromatin is central to guiding CD4+ T cell function through regulation of lineage specific gene expression. Myst1 is a histone acetyltransferase responsible for acetylation of the protein tail of histone 4 at lysine residue 16 (H416ac), resulting in increased transcriptional accessibility and activation of gene transcription. Previous studies have described a role for Myst1 in governing lymphocyte development in the thymus, however the role of Myst1 and H4K16ac in guiding activation of peripheral CD4+ T cells has not been studied. Activation of human and murine CD4+ T cells resulted in upregulation of Myst1 expression, and deletion of Myst1 resulted in changes in proliferative responses to both polyclonal stimulus and exogenous cytokines. Myst1-deficient T cells also exhibited modulations in lineage commitment, with decreased function in TH1/TH2 skewing conditions and increased function in response to TH17-promoting conditions. Regulation of Myst1 function in CD4+ T cells appears governed at least in part by STAT5, as Myst1 expression is regulated by STAT5 expression and DNA binding, and modulations in H4K16ac in Myst1-deficient CD4+ T cells is observable at sites in the promoter regions of lineage specific genes following skewing to the TH1 or TH2 lineage in vitro. Taken together, these results indicate an important role for the STAT5-Myst1 epigenetic axis in governing the activation and effector function of CD4+ T cells.
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Sifuentes, Christopher J
- Description:
- Differential expression data from zebrafish regeneration and mouse degeneration models.
- Keyword:
- regeneration, stem cells, photoreceptor, zebrafish, and Müller glia
- Citation to related publication:
- Sifuentes, C. J. (2016). Regulation of Müller glial stem cell properties: Insights from a zebrafish model (Doctoral dissertation). Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/135939
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Sifuentes, Christopher J
- Description:
- Gene ontology data from zebrafish regeneration and mouse degeneration models.
- Keyword:
- Müller glia, stem cells, photoreceptors, zebrafish, and regeneration
- Citation to related publication:
- Sifuentes, C. J. (2016). Regulation of Müller glial stem cell properties: Insights from a zebrafish model (Doctoral dissertation). Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/135939
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Sifuentes, Christopher J
- Description:
- Pathway data for zebrafish regeneration and mouse degeneration models.
- Keyword:
- regeneration, stem cells, photoreceptor, zebrafish, and Müller glia
- Citation to related publication:
- Sifuentes, C. J. (2016). Regulation of Müller glial stem cell properties: Insights from a zebrafish model (Doctoral dissertation). Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/135939
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Sifuentes, Christopher J
- Description:
- Differential expression data and genes in linked peaks in mi2004 mutants.
- Keyword:
- Müller glia, stem cells, photoreceptor, zebrafish, and regeneration
- Citation to related publication:
- Sifuentes, C. J. (2016). Regulation of Müller glial stem cell properties: Insights from a zebrafish model (Doctoral dissertation). Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/135939
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Sifuentes, Christopher J
- Description:
- Gene ontology data from mi2004 mutants
- Keyword:
- Müller glia, stem cells, photoreceptor, zebrafish, and regeneration
- Citation to related publication:
- Sifuentes, C. J. (2016). Regulation of Müller glial stem cell properties: Insights from a zebrafish model (Doctoral dissertation). Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/135939
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Sifuentes, Christopher J
- Description:
- Pathway data from mi2004 mutants.
- Keyword:
- Müller glia, stem cells, photoreceptor, zebrafish, and regeneration
- Citation to related publication:
- Sifuentes, C. J. (2016). Regulation of Müller glial stem cell properties: Insights from a zebrafish model (Doctoral dissertation). Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/135939
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Sifuentes, Christopher J
- Description:
- Linkage plots and data for mi2004 mutants.
- Keyword:
- Müller glia, stem cells, photoreceptor, zebrafish, and regeneration
- Citation to related publication:
- Sifuentes, C. J. (2016). Regulation of Müller glial stem cell properties: Insights from a zebrafish model (Doctoral dissertation). Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/135939
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Sifuentes, Christopher J
- Description:
- Inverse PCR and genome-walking data.
- Keyword:
- regeneration, stem cells, photoreceptor, zebrafish, and Müller glia
- Citation to related publication:
- Sifuentes, C. J. (2016). Regulation of Müller glial stem cell properties: Insights from a zebrafish model (Doctoral dissertation). Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/135939
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- 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:
- Larson, Ronald G., Wen, Fei, Huang, Wenjun, and Huang, Ming
- Description:
- We provide the parameters used in Umbrella Sampling simulations reported in our study "Efficient Estimation of Binding Free Energies between Peptides and an MHC Class II Molecule Using Coarse-Grained Molecular Dynamics Simulations with a Weighted Histogram Analysis Method", namely the set positions and spring constants for each window in simulations. Two tables are provided. Table 1 lists the names of the peptides and their corresponding sequences. Table 2 lists the parameters. The abstract of our work is the following: We estimate the binding free energy between peptides and an MHC class II molecule using molecular dynamics (MD) simulations with Weighted Histogram Analysis Method (WHAM). We show that, owing to its more thorough sampling in the available computational time, the binding free energy obtained by pulling the whole peptide using a coarse-grained (CG) force field (MARTINI) is less prone to significant error induced by biased-sampling than using an atomistic force field (AMBER). We further demonstrate that using CG MD to pull 3-4 residue peptide segments while leaving the remain-ing peptide segments in the binding groove and adding up the binding free energies of all peptide segments gives robust binding free energy estimations, which are in good agreement with the experimentally measured binding affinities for the peptide sequences studied. Our approach thus provides a promising and computationally efficient way to rapidly and relia-bly estimate the binding free energy between an arbitrary peptide and an MHC class II molecule.
- Keyword:
- Molecular Dynamics, Binding Free Energy, Protein, MHC, and Coarse-Grained
- Citation to related publication:
- M. Huang, W. Huang, F. Wen, R. G. Larson. J. Comput. Chem. 2017, 38, 2007–2019. https://doi.org/10.1002/jcc.24845
- Discipline:
- Science and Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Okullo, Dolorence, Gomez-Lopez, Iris N., Goodspeed, Robert, Reddy, Shruthi, Veinot, Tiffany C, Clarke, Phillipa J., and Data Driven Detroit
- Description:
- The information and education environment refers to: 1) the presence of information infrastructures such as broadband Internet access and public libraries in a location; 2) a person’s proximity to information infrastructures and sources; 3) the distribution of information infrastructures, sources and in a specific location; and 4) exposure to specific messages (information content) within a specific location. Coverage for all data: 10-county Detroit-Warren-Ann Arbor Combined Statistical Area.
- Keyword:
- Residential Broadband Data Adoption Rates, Census tract level, Broadband Internet Access and Speed, Colleges and Universities, Public Libraries, Spatial Measures, and Schools
- Discipline:
- Science, Social Sciences, and Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Steiner, A.L. and Kawecki, S.
- Description:
- Kansas City, MO emissions can affect a severe weather system by altering the number of CCN, which drives changes in the hydrometeor development. The hydrometeor changes affect cold pool strength, size, and propagation which ultimately determine the strength of the squall line that crosses Kansas City, MO.
- Keyword:
- Great Plains, aerosols, mesoscale convective systems, and weather
- Citation to related publication:
- Kawecki, S., G.M. Henebry, and A.L. Steiner, 2016: Effects of Urban Plume Aerosols on a Mesoscale Convective System. J. Atmos. Sci., 73, 4641–4660, https://doi.org/10.1175/JAS-D-16-0084.1
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Keppel-Aleks, Gretchen and Liptak, Jessica
- Description:
- -CESM_bdrd _NEP_pulse_response_CO2.nc contains time series from the ‘FullyCoupled’ simulation -CESM_bdrcs_NEP_pulse_response_CO2.nc contains time series from the ‘NoRad’ simulation -CESM_bdrd_pftcon_NEP_pulse_response_CO2.nc contains data from the ‘NoLUC’ simulation -CESM_bdrd_Regional_Fluxes_NEP.nc contains NEP time series for each terrestrial source region from the FullyCoupled simulation - CESM_bdrcs_Regional_Fluxes_NEP.nc contains NEP time series for each terrestrial source region from the CESM ‘NoRad’ simulation - CESM_bdrd_pftcon_Regional_Fluxes_NEP.nc contains NEP time series for each terrestrial source region from the CESM ‘NoLUC’ simulation The 3-letter station IDs, latitudes, and longitudes of the sample locations are: ID Latitude (ºN) Longitude (ºE) 1. BRW 71.3 203.4 2. ZEP 78.9 11.9 3. SHM 52.7 174.1 4. THD 41.1 235.8 5. TAP 36.7 126.1 6. BMW 32.3 295.1 7. MLO 19.5 204.4 8. POCN15 15.0 215.0 9. ALT 82.5 297.5 10. BHD -41.4 174.9 11. EIC -27.2 250.6 12. GMI 13.4 144.7 13. HUN 47.0 16.7 14. IZO 28.3 343.5 15. LLN 23.5 120.9 16. NAT -5.8 324.7 17. WLG 36.3 100.9 18. HBA -75.6 333.8 19. BKT -0.20 100.3 20. UUM 44.5 111.1 21. CGO -40.7 144.5 22. SDZ 40.7 117.1 23. ASC -8.0 345.6 24. SEY -4.7 55.5 25. POCS20 -20.0 186.0 26. POCS35 -35.0 180.0 27. PSA -64.9 296.0 28. SYO -69.0 39.6 29. CHR 1.7 202.8 30. KEY 25.7 279.8 31. BAL 55.4 17.2 32. HPB 47.8 11.0 33. LMP 35.5 12.6 34. NMB -23.6 15.0 35. RPB 13.2 300.2 36. WIS 30.0 35.1 37. POCS10 -10.0 199.0 38. POCN10 10.0 211.0 39. MID 28.2 182.6 40. SMO -14.2 189.4 41. SPO -90.0 335.2 The terrestrial CO2 source region abbreviations are: 1. NBNA 2. SBNA 3. ETNA 4. WTNA 5. CNAM 6. AMZN 7. EASA 8. WESA 9. EURO 10. SAME 11. MDAF 12. AFRF 13. SOAF 14. EABA 15. WEBA 16. SOBA 17. CNAS 18. SEAS 19. EQAS 20. AUST 21. GNLD 22. ATCA
- Keyword:
- atmospheric CO2 annual cycle amplitude and CESM extended concentration pathway
- Citation to related publication:
- Hornick, T., Bach, L. T., Crawfurd, K. J., Spilling, K., Achterberg, E. P., Woodhouse, J. N., Schulz, K. G., Brussaard, C. P. D., Riebesell, U., & Grossart, H.-P. (2017). Ocean acidification impacts bacteria–phytoplankton coupling at low-nutrient conditions. Biogeosciences, 14(1), 1–15. https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-14-1-2017
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Singh, Deepak
- Description:
- This includes data for all the plots and maps I created for my paper publication entitled "Improvement of Mars surface snow albedo modeling in LMD Mars GCM with SNICAR".
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Jarvey, Julie C
- Description:
- This includes data used for analysis for the publication: "Graminivory and fallback foods: Annual diet profile of geladas (Theropithecus gelada) living in the Simien Mountains National Park, Ethiopia". A revised version of the "foraging.scans.xlsx" file was uploaded as a csv file on Dec 13, 2017 to include the addition of the "crop" as category in the "Diet.Item" column. Previously "crop" was included in the "other" category. An updated version of the "readme_foraging.scans.txt" was uploaded on Dec 13, 2017 to account for this change, provide additional information on variables in the "season" column and to include contact information for the creator of the data set. Revised versions of two other files "readme_rainfall.txt" and "readme_underground.samples.txt" were also uploaded on Dec 13, 2017. Both revisions include additional information to account for missing variables and contact information for the creator of the data set. The original files are retained in this data set and are marked as being the originals in the file name. Note: A citation to the related article was added to the metadata on March 12, 2018.
- Keyword:
- fallback foods, Theropithecus , underground storage organs, and dietary flexibility
- Citation to related publication:
- Jarvey, J.C., Low, B.S., Pappano, D.J. et al. Int J Primatol (2018). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10764-018-0018-x
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Moldwin, Mark B
- Description:
- Tab delimited file containing the records of all papers published in JGR-Space Physics in 2012. The records were pulled from Thomsen-Reuters ISI-Web-of-Science on June 3, 2016 including citations. Gender was identified independently by the creator of the file.
- Keyword:
- Gender and Nationality Bias, Space Physics, and Bibliometrics
- Citation to related publication:
- Moldwin, M. B., & Liemohn, M. W. (2018). High‐citation papers in space physics: examination of gender, country, and paper characteristics. Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, 123. https://doi.org/10.1002/2018JA025291
- 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
- Citation to related publication:
- Blesh J. Functional traits in cover crop mixtures: Biological nitrogen fixation and multifunctionality. J Appl Ecol. 2018;55:38–48. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.13011
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Engel, Daniel D. , Evans, Mary Anne, Low, Bobbi S., and Schaeffer, Jeff
- Description:
- This dataset was compiled as an attempt to understand how natural resource managers and research ecologists in the Great Lakes region integrate the ecosystem services (ES) paradigm into their work. The following text is the adapted abstract from a thesis associated with this data. Ecosystem services, or the benefits people obtain from ecosystems, have gained much momentum in natural resource management in recent decades as a relatively comprehensive approach to provide quantitative tools for improving decision-making and policy design. However, to date we know little about whether and how natural resource practitioners, from natural resource managers to research ecologists (hereafter managers and ecologists respectively), have adopted the ES paradigm into their respective work. Here, we addressed this knowledge gap by asking managers and ecologists about whether and how they have adopted the ES paradigm into their respective work. First, we surveyed federal, state, provincial and tribal managers in the Great Lakes region about their perception and use of ES as well as the relevance of specific services to their work. Although results indicate that fewer than 31% of the managers said they currently consider economic values of ES, 79% of managers said they would use economic information on ES if they had access to it. Additionally, managers reported that ES-related information was generally inadequate for their resource management needs. We also assessed managers by dividing them into identifiable groups (e.g. managers working in different types of government agencies or administrative levels) to evaluate differential ES integration. Overall, results suggest a desire among managers to transition from considering ES concepts in their management practices to quantifying economic metrics, indicating a need for practical and accessible valuation techniques. Due to a sample of opportunity at the USGS Great Lakes Science Center (GLSC), we also evaluated GLSC research ecologists’ integration of the ES paradigm because they play an important role by contributing requisite ecological knowledge for ES models. Managers and ecologists almost unanimously agreed that it was appropriate to consider ES in resource management and also showed convergence on the high priority ES. However, ecologists appeared to overestimate the adequacy of ES-related information they provide as managers reported the information was inadequate for their needs. This divergence may reflect an underrepresentation of ecological economists in this system who can aid in translating ecological models into estimates of human well-being. As a note, the dataset for the research ecologists has had some data removed as it could be considered personally identifiable information due to the small sample size in that population. The surveys associated with both datasets have also been included in PDF format. Curation Notes: Three files were added to the data set on Dec 21, 2017. Two csv files: "Ecosystem services and Research Ecologists - Data Index.csv" and "Ecosystem services and Research Managers - Data Index.csv" and one text file: "Ecosystem Services Adoption Readme.txt". The file names of the original four files were altered to replace an ampersand with the word "and".
- Keyword:
- Research Ecologist, Decision-Making, Ecosystem Services, Natural Resource Management, Paradigm Adoption, and Ecological Economics
- Citation to related publication:
- Engel, D.D., Evans, M.A., Low, B.S., Schaeffer, J. (2017) “Understanding Ecosystem Services Adoption by Natural Resource Managers and Research Ecologists.” Journal of Great Lakes Research, 43(3), 169-179. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jglr.2017.01.005
- Discipline:
- Science and Social Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Steiner, Allison and Li, Yang
- Description:
- Case 1: A fair weather condition; Case 2: A convective event; Case 3: A polluted event with high temperature and convection
- Keyword:
- LES, boundary layer, turbulence, and BVOC Chemistry
- Citation to related publication:
- Li, Y., M. C. Barth, G. Chen, E. G. Patton, S.-W. Kim, A. Wisthaler, T. Mikoviny, A. Fried, R. Clark, and A. L. Steiner (2016), Large-eddy simulation of biogenic VOC chemistry during the DISCOVER-AQ 2011 campaign, J. Geophys. Res. Atmos., 121, 8083–8105. https://doi.org/10.1002/2016JD024942
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Steiner, Allison and Li, Yang
- Description:
- Case 2 of Li et al. (2016) LES simulations for the DISCOVER-AQ 11 campaign, including three different grid resolutions (96, 197 and 320 grid cell resolutions), plus simulations at the 192 grid resolution with and without aqueous chemistry
- Citation to related publication:
- Li, Y., M. C. Barth, E.G. Patton and A.L. Steiner, Impact of in-cloud aqueous processes on the chemistry and transport of biogenic volatile organic compounds, Journal of Geophysical Research – Atmospheres, 2017. https://doi.org/10.1002/2017JD026688
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Steiner, Allison and Kawecki, Stacey
- Description:
- WRF-Chem model
- Keyword:
- aerosols and weather
- Citation to related publication:
- Kawecki, S., Steiner, A.L., 2018. The Influence of Aerosol Hygroscopicity on Precipitation Intensity During a Mesoscale Convective Event. Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres 123, 424–442. https://doi.org/10.1002/2017JD026535
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Blesh, Jennifer and King, Alison E.
- Description:
- This dataset contains three data files used in: King, A.E. and J. Blesh, 2017. Crop rotations for increased soil carbon: perenniality as a guiding principle. Ecological Applications. There are also three corresponding metadata files. The file “CRMA 2017 Main.csv” contains data for the control and treatment rotations used to construct pairwise comparisons for meta-analysis, response ratios calculated for soil organic carbon concentration, and change in carbon input. The dataset also includes management, soil, and other environmental characteristics for each site. The file “CRMA 2017 Diversity x Nitrogen.csv” contains data used to test whether N fertilizer inputs mediated the effect of functional diversity on SOC concentrations. The file “CRMA Annual grain.csv” contains data used to test for effects of crop rotation species diversity (one vs. two species, or two vs. three species) on SOC concentrations and C input (i.e., for the “grain-only” rotations). The dataset also includes management, soil, and other environmental characteristics for each site. The corresponding metadata files: “CRMA 2017 Main_metadata.csv”, “CRMA 2017 Diversity x Nitrogen_metadata.csv”, and “CRMA Annual grain _metadata.csv” provide a detailed description of all variables in each dataset. Note: On Jan 12, 2018 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:
- soil carbon, functional diversity, meta-analysis, cropping system, and student-friendly
- Citation to related publication:
- King, A. E. and Blesh, J. (2018), Crop rotations for increased soil carbon: perenniality as a guiding principle. Ecol Appl, 28: 249–261. https://doi.org/10.1002/eap.1648
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Forrest, Stephen R., Panda, Anurag, Qu, Yue, Che, Xiaozhou, Coburn, Caleb, and Burlingame, Quinn
- Description:
- Mathematica Diffusion Simulation: Programmed by Coburn, Caleb. Simulation of diffusion in organic heterostructures, including least square fits and statistical goodness of fit analysis. Used to calculate fits to transient data in Fig 1, 3 and Extended Data Fig.2. Example data file included for download Matlab Montecarlo simulation: Programmed by Coburn, Caleb. Montecarlo simulation of charge diffusion on a cubic lattice to determine lateral diffusion length as a function of barrier height, assuming thermionic emission over the barrier. Matlab 2D Diffusion Simulation:Programmed by Coburn, Caleb. Modified from BYU Physics 430 Course Manual. Simulates diffusion around a film discontinuity, such a cut. Used to generate fits to Extended Data Fig. 1
- Keyword:
- Organic semiconductors and Charge diffusion
- Citation to related publication:
- Burlingame, Q., Coburn, C., Che, X., Panda, A., Qu, Y., & Forrest, S. R. (2018). Centimetre-scale electron diffusion in photoactive organic heterostructures. Nature, 554(7690), 77-80. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature25148
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Ridley, Aaron
- Description:
- These files (2010_gitm_input_files.tgz) were used to run GITM for 2010 for each month. GITM paper is here: (10.1016/j.jastp.2006.01.008 < http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jastp.2006.01.008>) GITM code is in file gitm_170809.tgz
- Citation to related publication:
- Perlongo, N. J., Ridley, A. J., Cnossen, I., & Wu, C. (2018). A year-long comparison of GPS TEC and global ionosphere-thermosphere models. Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics , 123 , 1410–1428. https://doi.org/10.1002/2017JA024411
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Mathews, Elizabeth and Verhoff, Frank
- Description:
- Each pdf is an electronic version of the paper output for each experiment. Each text file is the electronic version of the data on the computer cards for each experiment. These text files are directly readable by Excel. Once in Excel, the data can be manipulated as desired. Additional information is in the theses.
- Keyword:
- Two Liquid Phase Processes, Droplet Size and Concentration, Population Balances, and Dispersed Phase Mixing
- Citation to related publication:
- Ross, S. L. (1971). Measurements and models of the dispersed phase mixing process (Doctoral dissertation). Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/136886 and Verhoff, F. H. (1969). A study of the bivariate analysis of dispersed phase mixing (Doctoral dissertation). Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/137651
- Discipline:
- Science and Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Geng, Yina, Van Anders, Greg, and Glotzer, Sharon C.
- Description:
- The data are the 13 target structures used in developing our model for predicting colloidal crystal structures from the geometries of particular shapes. The target structures are: simple cubic (SC), body-centered cubic (BCC), face-centered cubic (FCC), simple chiral cubic (SCC), hexagonal (HEX-1-0.6), diamond (D), graphite (G), honeycomb (H), body-centered tetragonal (BCT-1-1-2.4), high-pressure Lithium (Li), Manganese (beta-Mn), Uranium (beta-U), Tungsten (beta-W). At least nine simulations were run on each of the target structures. All of the data are formatted as .pos files.
- Keyword:
- Inverse Design and Machine Learning
- Citation to related publication:
- " Yina Geng, Greg van Anders, Sharon C. Glotzer, ""Predicting colloidal crystals from shapes via inverse design and machine learning [pre-print]"" https://arxiv.org/pdf/1801.06219.pdf"
- 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
- Citation to related publication:
- Flanner, M. G., Huang, X., Chen, X.,& Krinner, G. (2018). Climate response to negative greenhouse gas radiative forcing in polar winter. Geophysical Research Letters, 45, 1997–2004. https://doi.org/10.1002/2017GL076668
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Johnson, Jena E.
- Description:
- Note: The "Readme_Metadata" file was updated on March 15, 2018 to include a citation to the related article making use of this data and was reformatted to be presented as a pdf file rather than as a docx file. and This data set is comprised of synchrotron-based X-ray transmission and absorption spectroscopy data as well as X-ray diffraction patterns that were performed to characterize the best-preserved examples of nanoscale iron silicate mineral inclusions from 2.5 billion-year-old Banded Iron Formations (BIFs) and ferruginous cherts.
- Keyword:
- Precambrian banded iron formations and nanoparticle inclusions of iron silicates in chert
- Citation to related publication:
- Johnson, J. E., Muhling, J. R., Cosmidis, J., Rasmussen, B. & Templeton, A. S. (2018). Low-Fe(III) Greenalite Was a Primary Mineral from Neoarchean Oceans. Geophysical Research Letters, 45. https://doi.org/10.1002/2017GL076311
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Ozturk, Dogacan
- Description:
- The global magnetosphere-ionosphere-thermosphere (M-I-T) system is intrinsically coupled and susceptible to external drivers such as solar wind dynamic pressure enhancements. In order to understand the large-scale dynamic processes in the M-I-T system due to the compression from the solar wind, the 17 March 2015 sudden commencement was studied in detail using global numerical models. This data set is comprised of the simulation data generated from these models. and NOTE: The following changes were made to this dataset on March 28, 2018. First, two mp4 files were added. Second, the symbol representing "degree" was not rendering properly in the README file. The symbols were removed and replaced with the word "degree". Third, the metadata in the "methodology" and "description" fields were revised for content and clarity. On April 16, 2018 a citation to the corresponding article was added to the metadata record.
- Keyword:
- MHD model, BATS'R'US, and GITM
- Citation to related publication:
- Ozturk, D. S., Zou, S., Ridley, A. J., & Slavin, J. A. (2018). Modeling study of the geospace system response to the solar wind dynamic pressure enhancement on 17 March 2015. Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, 123, 2974–2989. https://doi.org/10.1002/2017JA025099
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Tye, Alexander R, Wolf, Aaron S, and Niemi, Nathan A
- Description:
- Detrital zircon age distributions provide robust insights into past sedimentary systems, but these age distributions are often complex and multi-peaked, with sample sizes too small to confidently resolve population distributions. This limited sampling hinders existing quantitative methods for comparing detrital zircon age distributions, which show systematic dependence on the sizes of compared samples. The proliferation of detrital zircon studies motivates the development of more robust quantitative methods. We present the first attempt, to our knowledge, to infer probability model ensembles (PMEs) for samples of detrital zircon ages using a Bayesian method. Our method infers the parent population age distribution from which a sample is drawn, using a Monte Carlo approach to aggregate a representative set of probability models that is consistent with the constraints that the sample data provide. Using the PMEs inferred from sample data, we develop a new estimate of correspondence between detrital zircon populations called Bayesian Population Correlation (BPC). Tests of BPC on synthetic and real detrital zircon age data show that it is nearly independent from sample size bias, unlike existing correspondence metrics. Robust BPC uncertainties can be readily estimated, enhancing interpretive value. When comparing two partially overlapping zircon age populations where the shared proportion of each population is independently varied, BPC results conform almost perfectly to expected values derived analytically from probability theory. This conformity of experimental and analytical results permits direct inference of the shared proportions of two detrital zircon age populations from BPC. We provide MATLAB scripts to facilitate the procedures we describe.
- Keyword:
- provenance, statistics, zircon, Bayesian, detrital, and density estimation
- Citation to related publication:
- A.R. Tye, A.S. Wolf, N.A. Niemi, Bayesian population correlation: A probabilistic approach to inferring and comparing population distributions for detrital zircon ages, Chemical Geology, Volume 518, 2019, Pages 67-78, ISSN 0009-2541, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemgeo.2019.03.039
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Azari, A. R.
- Description:
- ABSTRACT: We present a statistical study of interchange injections in Saturn's inner and middle magnetosphere focusing on the dependence of occurrence rate and properties on radial distance, partial pressure, and local time distribution. Events are evaluated from over the entirety of the Cassini mission’s equatorial orbits between 2005 and 2016. We identified interchange events from CHarge Energy Mass Spectrometer (CHEMS) H+ data using a trained and tested automated algorithm, which has been compared with manual event identification for optimization. We provide estimates of interchange based on intensity, which we use to investigate current inconsistencies in local time occurrence rates. This represents the first automated detection method of interchange, estimation of injection event intensity, and comparison between interchange injection survey results. We find the peak rates of interchange occur between 7 - 9 Saturn radii and that this range coincides with the most intense events as defined by H+ partial particle pressure. We determine that nightside occurrence dominates as compared to the dayside injection rate, supporting the hypothesis of an inversely dependent instability growth rate on local Pedersen ionospheric conductivity. Additionally, we observe a slight preference for intense events on the dawn side, supporting a triggering mechanism related to large-scale injections from downtail reconnection. Our observed local time dependence paints a dynamic picture of interchange triggering due to both the large-scale injection driven process and ionospheric conductivity. Within this repository we provide a readme file (description of data file and usage) and the event list provided as a .txt file. The event list includes start and stop times, comparison to previous surveys, and the average location of events identified. Additional formats are available on request. , Further details on this method can be found in "Interchange Injections at Saturn: Statistical Survey of Energetic H+ Sudden Flux Intensifications" by Azari et al., 2018 in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics. https://doi.org/10.1029/2018JA025391. , and Curation notes: The files 'events_CORRECTED.txt' and 'readme_UPDATED.rtf' were added to this record July 31 and August 7, 2018 and supersede the previous data file 'events.txt' and readme file 'readme.rtf'. The file 'events.txt' uploaded May 9, 2018 should not be used, as this file contains a duplication error where the last column, InAllSurveys, is incorrectly presented as a duplicate of the column InAnySurvey. 'readme_UPDATED.rtf' contains additional context and updated references to the new data file.
- Keyword:
- Planetary Science, Automated Event Detection, Space Physics, Magnetospheric Physics, Interchange Injections, and Saturn
- Citation to related publication:
- Azari, A. R., Liemohn, M. W., Jia, X., Thomsen, M. F., Mitchell, D. G., Sergis, N., Rymer, A. M., Hospodarsky, G. B., Paranicas, C. , and Vandegriff, J. (2018). Interchange Injections at Saturn: Statistical Survey of Energetic H+ Sudden Flux Intensifications. Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, 123. https://doi.org/10.1029/2018JA025391
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Mason, Lacey A., Riseng, Catherine M., Layman, Andrew J., and Jensen, Robert
- Description:
- Wind exposure is a key physical driver of coastal systems in aquatic environments influencing circulation and wave dynamics. A measure of wind exposure is fetch, the distance over which wind can travel across open water. In large lake systems, such as the Laurentian Great Lakes, estimating fetch has proved to be difficult due to their vast size and complex topobathymetry. Here we describe the development of two spatially discrete indicators of exposure to provide a more accurate indicator of influence of wind exposure in the nearshore of the Laurentian Great Lakes. We summarized wind data from offshore buoys and leveraged existing tools to calculate effective fetch and relative exposure index (effective fetch scaled by mean wind speed) at a 30 m grid cell resolution. We validated these models by comparing our exposure maps to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Wave Information Studies models and found general agreement. These exposure maps are available for public download for the years 2004-2014.
- Keyword:
- GLAHF, Great Lakes, waves, fetch, REI, wind exposure, and geospatial
- Citation to related publication:
- Mason, L., Riseng, C., Layman, A. et al. Effective fetch and relative exposure index maps for the Laurentian Great Lakes. Sci Data 5, 180295 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1038/sdata.2018.295
- 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
- Citation to related publication:
- Cole, S. L., Robinson, M. J. F., & Berridge, K. C. (2018). Optogenetic self-stimulation in the nucleus accumbens: D1 reward versus D2 ambivalence. PLOS ONE, 13(11), e0207694. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207694
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Gliske, Stephen V and Stacey, William C
- Description:
- This data is part of a large program to translate detection and interpretation of HFOs into clinical use. A zip file is included which contains hfo detections, metadata, and Matlab scripts. The matlab scripts analyze this input data and produce figures as in the referenced paper (note: the blind source separation method is stochastic, and so the figures may not be exactly the same). A file "README.txt" provides more detail about each individual file within the zip file.
- Keyword:
- hfo, high frequency oscillation, ripple, fast ripple, blind source separation, non-negative matrix factorization, and temporal variability
- Citation to related publication:
- Stephen V. Gliske, Zachary T. Irwin, Cynthia Chestek, Garnett L. Hegeman, Benjamin Brinkmann, Oren Sagher, Hugh J. L. Garton, Greg A. Worrell, William C. Stacey. "Variability in the location of High Frequency Oscillations during prolonged intracranial EEG recordings." Nature Communications. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-04549-2
- Discipline:
- Science, Engineering, and Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Wozniak, Matthew C., Steiner, Allison L., and Solmon, Fabien
- Description:
- Pollen grains emitted from vegetation can rupture, releasing subpollen particles (SPPs) as fine atmospheric particulates. Previous laboratory research demonstrates potential for SPPs as efficient cloud condensation nuclei (CCN). We develop the first model of atmospheric pollen grain rupture, and implement the mechanism in regional climate model simulations over spring pollen season in the United States with a CCN-dependent moisture scheme. The source of SPPs (surface or in-atmosphere) depends on region and sometimes season, due to the distribution of relative humidity and rain. Simulated concentrations of SPPs are approximately 1-10 or 1-1,000 cm-3, depending on the number of SPPs produced per pollen grain (nspg). Lower nspg (103) produces a negligible effect on precipitation, but high nspg (106) in clean continental CCN background concentrations (100 CCN cm-3) shows SPPs suppress average seasonal precipitation by 32% and shift rates from heavy to light while increasing dry days. This effect is likely smaller for polluted air. pollen_rupture_precipitation_BASE_ensemble_daily.nc - data for BASE ensemble average pollen_rupture_precipitation_SPPHIGH_ensemble_daily.nc - data for SPPHIGH ensemble average pollen_rupture_precipitation_SPPLIT_ensemble_daily.nc - data for SPPLIT ensemble average
- Citation to related publication:
- Wozniak, M. C., Solmon, F., Steiner, A. L. (2018). Pollen Rupture and Its Impact on Precipitation in Clean Continental Conditions. Geophysical Research Letters, 45(14), 7156-7164. https://doi.org/10.1029/2018GL077692
- 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
- Citation to related publication:
- Ward, J.L., et al. (2018). Modeled Response of Greenland Snowmelt to the Presence of Biomass Burning-Based Absorbing Aerosols in the Atmosphere and Snow. Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres. 123, 6122– 6141. https://doi.org/10.1029/2017JD027878
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Welling, Daniel and Walsh, Brian
- Description:
- The goal of this simulation was to examine the spread of magnetic reconnection across the dayside magnetopause upon the arrival of a tangential discontinuity of the interplanetary magnetic field from a purely northward to southward configuration. Simple solar wind conditions were used to give us input into the system. A very high resolution grid setup was used in BATS-R-US.
- Keyword:
- space science, magnetosphere, magnetohydrodynamics, magnetopause, and magnetic reconnection
- Citation to related publication:
- Walsh, B. M., Welling, D. T.,Zou, Y., & Nishimura, Y. (2018). A maximum spreading speed for magnetopause reconnection. Geophysical Research Letters, 45, 5268–5273. https://doi.org/10.1029/2018GL078230
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Bemmels, Jordan B. and Dick, Christopher W.
- Description:
- Raw SNP genotypes are provided in STRUCTURE format, with a maximum of one SNP reported per ddRAD locus. The files "caryco_SNP.str" and "caryov_SNP.str" are genotypes for Carya cordiformis and Carya ovata, respectively. The first column of each file is the individual name, the second column is the population (see original publication for information on population locations), and the remaining columns are genotypes of individual SNPs. Rows represent individuals, with the diploid genotypes contained on two lines per individual. Missing data are entered as "0" (zero). The first row is a header with a unique identifier for each SNP. and Occurrence records for each species are provided in the file "occs_carya.csv" and contain the latitude and longitude of each record.
- Keyword:
- eastern North America, glacial refugia, phylogeography, temperate trees, and single nucleotide polymorphisms
- Citation to related publication:
- Bemmels, J.B., and C.W. Dick. 2018. Genomic evidence of a widespread southern distribution during the Last Glacial Maximum for two North American hickory species. Journal of Biogeography, 45: 1739– 1750. https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.13358
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Nguyen, Thanh H., Wright, Mason, Wellman, Michael P., and Singh, Satinder
- Description:
- In this work , we study the problem of allocating limited security countermeasures to protect network data from cyber-attacks, for scenarios modeled by Bayesian attack graphs. We consider multi-stage interactions between a network administrator and cybercriminals, formulated as a security game. We propose parameterized heuristic strategies for the attacker and defender and provide detailed analysis of their time complexity. Our heuristics exploit the topological structure of attack graphs and employ sampling methods to overcome the computational complexity in predicting opponent actions. Due to the complexity of the game, we employ a simulation-based approach and perform empirical game analysis over an enumerated set of heuristic strategies. Finally, we conduct experiments in various game settings to evaluate the performance of our heuristics in defending networks, in a manner that is robust to uncertainty about the security environment.
- Keyword:
- Empirical Game-Theoretic Analysis, Multi-stage Security Games, Attack Graph, Game Theory, and Moving Target Defense
- Citation to related publication:
- Nguyen, T. H., Wright, M., Wellman, M. P., & Singh, S. (2017). Multi-stage attack graph security games: Heuristic strategies, with empirical game-theoretic analysis. In MTD 2017 - Proceedings of the 2017 Workshop on Moving Target Defense, co-located with CCS 2017 (Vol. 2017-January, pp. 87-97). Association for Computing Machinery, Inc. https://doi.org/10.1145/3140549.3140562
- Discipline:
- Science and Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Mirshams Shahshahani, Payam
- Description:
- Investigating minimum human reaction times is often confounded by the motivation, training, and state of arousal of the subjects. We used the reaction times of athletes competing in the shorter sprint events in the Athletics competitions in recent Olympics (2004-2016) to determine minimum human reaction times because there's little question as to their motivation, training, or state of arousal. The reaction times of sprinters however are only available on the IAAF web page for each individual heat, in each event, at each Olympic. Therefore we compiled all these data into two separate excel sheets which can be used for further analyses.
- Keyword:
- minimum reaction time, sprinter, Olympics, Athletics, sex difference, starting block, and false start
- Citation to related publication:
- Mirshams Shahshahani P, Lipps DB, Galecki AT, Ashton-Miller JA (2018) On the apparent decrease in Olympic sprinter reaction times. PLoS ONE 13(6): e0198633. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0198633
- Discipline:
- Engineering, Health Sciences, Science, Other, and General Information Sources
-
- Creator:
- Penner, Joyce E., Zhou, Cheng, Garnier, Anne, and Mitchell, David
- Description:
- This data set contains the scripts and data sets needed to create the 9 figures in the referenced publication.
- Keyword:
- Anthropogenic Aerosol indirect effects, cirrus clouds, and ice nucleation
- Citation to related publication:
- Penner, J. E., Zhou, C., Garnier, A., & Mitchell, D. L. (2018). Anthropogenic aerosol indirect effects in cirrus clouds. Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres,123, 11,652–11,677. https://doi.org/10.1029/2018JD029204
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Huang, Yihe
- Description:
- Geological and geophysical observations reveal along-strike fault zone heterogeneity on major strike-slip faults, which can play a significant role in earthquake rupture propagation and termination. I present 2D dynamic rupture simulations to demonstrate rupture characteristics in such heterogeneous fault zone structure. The modeled rupture is nucleated in a damaged fault zone and propagates on a preexisting fault towards the zone of intact rocks. There is an intermediate range of nucleation lengths that only allow rupture to spontaneously propagate in the damaged fault zone but not in a homogeneous medium. I find that rupture with an intermediate nucleation length tends to stop when it reaches the zone of intact rocks, especially when the rupture propagation distance in the damaged fault zone is relatively short and when the damaged fault zone is relatively narrow or smooth in the fault-normal direction. Pronounced small-scale heterogeneity within the damaged fault zone also contributes to such early rupture termination. In asymmetric fault zones bisected by a bimaterial fault, rupture moving in the direction of slip of faster rocks tends to terminate under the same conditions as in symmetric fault zones, whereas rupture moving in the direction of slip of slower rocks can penetrate into the zone of intact rocks. Break-through rupture is allowed when a sufficiently-large asperity is located at the edge of the zone of intact rocks. The results suggest the along-strike fault zone heterogeneity can play a critical role in seismicity distribution. The data set contains multiple folders of simulation results from the SEM2DPACK that demonstrate the above findings. The folder name includes the model parameters in each simulation as explained in the README file. The Flt01_sem2d.data file in the folder documents the slip, slip rate and stresses from each simulation. The files are also explained in the manual of SEM2DPACK ( http://web.gps.caltech.edu/~ampuero/soft/users_guide_sem2dpack.pdf). Please refer to section 4.6 in the manual and use “sem2d_read_fault.m” in the POST folder of SEM2DPACK to plot the results.
- Keyword:
- Damaged fault zone, fault zone heterogeneity, earthquake rupture termination, and seismicity distribution
- Citation to related publication:
- Huang, Y. Along-strike variation of fault zone structure induces earthquake rupture termination. Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, in review.
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Adam Schneider and Mark Flanner
- Description:
- This dataset contains all data used to generate the figures in The Cryosphere manuscript “Measuring Snow Specific Surface Area with 1.30 and 1.55 micro-meter Bidirectional Reflectance Factors,” by Adam Schneider, Mark Flanner, and Roger De Roo. These data support the theory, calibration, and application of the Near-Infrared Emitting and Reflectance Monitoring Dome (NERD), an instrument engineered to rapidly retrieve surface snow specific surface area in the field. Note that this deposit includes a microCT scan database for natural snowfall samples collected in New Hampshire during 2015-2017, comprised of raw tiff files as well as reconstructions, binarized reconstructions, and some 3D model reconstructions. and Running python scripts generally require that the following packages are installed: NumPy, SciPy, Matplotlib, Pandas, and ipdb (for debugging).
- Keyword:
- Snow specific surface area, Monte Carlo, X-ray micro-computed tomography, SNICAR, Near-Infrared Emitting and Reflectance-Monitoring Dome, Bidirectional reflectance factor, Cryosphere, and 3D
- Citation to related publication:
- Schneider, Adam & Flanner, Mark & De Roo, Roger. (2018). Measuring Snow Specific Surface Area with 1.30 and 1.55 μm Bidirectional Reflectance Factors. The Cryosphere Discussions. https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-2018-198
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Alsip, Peter
- Description:
- Percent Weight Change Data: The model was run continuously on a daily time step for seasonal intervals (Spring: March thru May; Summer: June thru August; Fall: September thru November) as well as contiguously from Spring to Fall to assess total growth over the likely growing season (March thru November). CSV files represent the simulated weight change (%) of Bighead and Silver Carp for the respective time periods associated with the file name. Initial fish mass for each seasonal interval and growing season was 4350 g for Silver Carp and 5480 g for Bighead Carp. Maximum and mean total weight change (%) was determined for three depth ranges (near surface depths [NS]: 0 – 10 m; deep chlorophyll layer depths [DCL]: 10 - 50 m; and whole water column [WC]). Coordinates are in decimal degrees. File naming convention: speciesSeasonWtChange (e.g. bigheadFallWtChange = % weight change of Bighead Carp from September through November) , Monthly Habitat Quality Data: Rdata files contain matrices of Bighead or Silver carp growth rate potential as represented as a mass-proportional growth rate (gram of carp/gram of carp/day [g/g/d]) for the 15th day of each month. Habitats with growth rate potential >= 0 g/g/d were deemed suitable. Matrix attributes: Rows: Row numbers refer to the spatial node with 20 equally-spaced vertical layers. Columns: Columns 1-20 refer to the growth rate potential value for each vertical layer of each node. Vertical layers are evenly spaced based on the total depth of the water column for each node. Depth for each node can be found in the grid attributes data file. Columns 21 ("meanG") and 22 ("Gmax") represent the average and maximum growth rate potential, respectively, of the fish across the whole water column for the corresponding node. File naming convention: species_MonthNumber (e.g. silver_06 = Silver carp growth rate potential in June) Spatial coordinates for each node can be found in the grid attributes data files., Grid attributes data: This Rdata file provides the spatial reference data and other grid attributes. Coordinates are provided in UTM (x & y) and latitude and longitude (decimal degrees). Depth (meters) for each node is listed in this file. , GRP Model code: Details bioenergetics equations, foraging equation, functions for running the model on a monthly time-step and daily time step, and functions for basic analyses. Model is coded in R., and The simulated input data (prey and temperature) used to run our model is not included in this data set. Instead we provide the model code, grid attributes, and outputs of the model. The readRDS() function (R Base Package v.3.5.1) is required to read in .Rdata files in R.
- Keyword:
- Asian Carp, Laurentian Great Lakes, Habitat Suitability, Invasive Species, Lake Michigan, and Ecological Modeling
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Thomaz, Andréa T. (UMICH) and Knowles, L. Lacey (UMICH)
- Description:
- The eastern coastal basins of Brazil are a series of small and isolated rivers that drain directly into the Atlantic Ocean. During the Pleistocene, sea-level retreat caused by glaciations exposed the continental shelf, resulting in enlarged paleodrainages that connected rivers that are isolated today. Using Geographic Information System (GIS), we infer the distribution of these paleodrainages, and their properties for the east Brazilian coast. Here, we publicly make available the shapefiles that demonstrate the paleodrainage structure along the Brazilian coast during the largest sea-level retreats in the Pleistocene, the riverine vectors during the same period and the coastal line for a drop of -125m in the sea.
- Keyword:
- Paleodrainages, Glaciations, Pleistocene, Brazil, Neotropical, and Sea-level retreat
- Citation to related publication:
- Thomaz Andréa T., Knowles L. Lacey. Flowing into the unknown: inferred paleodrainages for studying the ichthyofauna of Brazilian coastal rivers. Neotrop. ichthyol. [Internet]. 2018; 16(3): e180019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1982-0224-20180019
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Isaacoff, Benjamin P., Li, Yilai, Lee, Stephen A., and Biteen, Julie S.
- Description:
- This is the experimental data referenced in our manuscript entitled “SMALL-LABS: An algorithm for measuring single molecule intensity and position in the presence of obscuring backgrounds .” These live-cell single-molecule imaging movies were used as a test of the SMALL-LABS single-molecule image analysis algorithm. The dataset comprises two movies; each one is provided both as a .tif stack and as an .avi file. The movie called “low_bg” has a standard low background, and the movie called “high_bg” includes a high fluorescent background produced by an external 488-nm laser.
- Keyword:
- single-molecule, microscopy, image analysis, mirobiology, and bacteria
- Citation to related publication:
- B.P. Isaacoff, Y. Li, S.A. Lee, J.S. Biteen, "SMALL-LABS: Measuring Single-Molecule Intensity and Position in Obscuring Backgrounds." Biophysical Journal, 975-982, 116, 2019. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bpj.2019.02.006
- Discipline:
- Engineering and Science
-
- Creator:
- Kort, EA, Gvakharia, A, Smith, ML, and Conley, S
- Description:
- Data is collected from research flights based in West Memphis, Arkansas, covering the Mississippi River Valley. The data file contains all merged flight data from each flight day.
- Keyword:
- Greenhouse gas
- Citation to related publication:
- Gvakharia, A., Kort, E.A., Smith, M.L., Conley, S., 2018. Testing and evaluation of a new airborne system for continuous N2O, CO2, CO, and H2O measurements: the Frequent Calibration High-performance Airborne Observation System (FCHAOS). Atmospheric Measurement Techniques; Katlenburg-Lindau 11, 6059. https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-11-6059-2018
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Liemohn, Michael W, McCollough, James P, Engel, Miles A, Jordanova, Vania K, and Morley, Steven K
- Description:
- There is a directory tree inside this zipped file. The main directory has the Adobe Illustrator plots of the figures in the paper, Space Weather journal manuscript # 2018SW002067, "Model evaluation guidelines for geomagnetic index predictions" by M. W. Liemohn and coauthors. The three subdirectories have the files for the individual models, the data to which they are compared, and the IDL code used to create the figure plots and metrics calculations. and Date coverage is specific to each model. The RAMSCB model covers January 2005, the WINDMI model all of 2014, and the UPOS model 1.5 solar cycles, from 1 October 2001 through 29 July 2013.
- Keyword:
- space weather, model assessment, time series metrics, and geomagnetic indices
- Citation to related publication:
- Liemohn, M. W., et al. (2018). Model evaluation guidelines for geomagnetic index predictions. Space Weather, 16. https://doi.org/10.1029/2018SW002067
- 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
- Citation to related publication:
- R.P. Drake, F.W. Doss, R.G. McClarren, M.L. Adams, N. Amato, D.Bingham, C.C. Chou, C. DiStefano, K. Fidkowsky, B. Fryxell, T.I.Gombosi, M.J. Grosskopf, J.P. Holloway, B. van der Holst, C.M.Huntington, S. Karni, C.M. Krauland, C.C. Kuranz, E. Larsen, B. vanLeer, B. Mallick, D. Marion, W. Martin, J.E. Morel, E.S. Myra, V. Nair, K.G. Powell, L. Raushberger, P. Roe, E. Rutter, I.V. Sokolov, Q. Stout, B.R. Torralva, G. Toth, K. Thornton, A.J. Visco, “Radiative Effects in Radiative Shocks in Shock Tubes”, High Energy Density Physics 7, 130-140 (2011) https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hedp.2011.03.005
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Ramasubramani, Vyas
- Description:
- The goal of the work is to elucidate the stability of a complex experimentally observed structure of proteins. We found that supercharged GFP molecules spontaneously assemble into a complex 16-mer structure that we term a protomer, and that under the right conditions an even larger assembly is observed. The protomer structure is very well defined, and we performed simulations to try and understand the mechanics underlying its behavior. In particular, we focused on understanding the role of electrostatics in this system and how varying salt concentrations would alter the stability of the structure, with the ultimate goal of predicting the effects of various mutations on the stability of the structure. There are two separate projects included in this repository, but the two are closely linked. One, the candidate_structures folder, contains the atomistic outputs used to generate coarse-grained configurations. The actual coarse-grained simulations are in the rigid_protein folder, which pulls the atomistic coordinates from the other folder. All data is managed by signac and lives in the workspace directories, which contain various folders corresponding to different parameter combinations. The parameters associated with a given folder are stored in the signac_statepoint.json files within each subdirectory. The atomistic data uses experimentally determined protein structures as a starting point; all of these are stored in the ConfigFiles folder. The primary output is the topology files generated from the PDBs by GROMACS; these topologies are then used to parametrize the Monte Carlo simulations. In some cases, atomistic simulations were actually run as well, and the outputs are stored alongside the topology files. In the rigid_protein folder, the ConfigFiles folder contains MSMS, the software used to generate polyhedral representations of proteins from the PDBs in the candidate_structures folder. All of the actual polyhedral structures are also stored in the ConfigFiles folder. The actual simulation trajectories are stored as general simulation data (GSD) files within each subdirectory of the workspace, along with a single .pos file that contains the shape definition of the (nonconvex) polyhedron used to represent a protein. The logged quantities, such as energies and MC move sizes, are stored in .log files. The logic for the simulations in the candidate_structures project is in the Python scripts project.py, operations.py, and scripts/init.py. The rigid_protein folder also includes the notebooks directory, which contains Jupyter notebooks used to perform analyses, as well as the Python scripts used to actually perform the simulations and manage the data space. In particular, the project.py, operations.py and scripts/init.py scripts contain most of the logic associated with the simulations.
- Keyword:
- Protein assembly, Cryo TEM, Hierarchical Assembly, Monte Carlo simulation, and Coarse-grained simulation
- Citation to related publication:
- Anna J Simon, Vyas Ramasubramani, Jens Glaser, Arti Pothukuchy, Jillian Gerberich, Janelle Leggere, Barrett R Morrow, Jimmy Golihar, Cheulhee Jung, Sharon C Glotzer, David W Taylor, Andrew D Ellington,"Supercharging enables organized assembly of synthetic biomolecules," bioRxiv 323261; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/323261
- Discipline:
- Science and Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Singer, Kanakadurga
- Description:
- Supplementary Figure 1. Tissue weights in response to HFD feeding and CL treatment. (A) GWAT weight as % of body weight (B) IWAT weight as % of body weight (C) BAT weight as % of body weight (D) Liver weight as % of body weight. N=7-12 /group; *p<0.05, **p<0.01, ***p<0.005, ****p<0.0001; error bars are SEM. Comparisons of M ND PBS vs F ND PBS are shown as #p<0.05, ##p<0.01, ###p<0.005 and M HFD PBS vs F HFD PBS are shown as &p<0.05, &&p<0.01, &&&p<0.005, &&&&p<0.0001., Supplementary Figure 2. Free glycerol estimation in lean and obese male and female WAT and BAT depot explants with ADRB3 stimulated lipolysis. Free glycerol estimation in lean and obese (A) GWAT (B) IWAT (C) BAT explant tissues. Free glycerol released calculated as fold change over basal conditions in lean and obese (D) GWAT (E) IWAT (F) BAT explant tissues. N=8 /group; *p<0.05, **p<0.01, ***p<0.005, ****p<0.0001; error bars are SEM. Comparisons of M ND PBS vs F ND PBS are shown as #p<0.05, ##p<0.01, ###p<0.005 and M HFD PBS vs F HFD PBS are shown as &p<0.05, &&p<0.01, &&&p<0.005, &&&&p<0.0001., Supplementary Figure 3. Gene expression (A) Akt1 and (B) Glut4 gene expression in obese male and female GWAT with and without ADRB3 stimulation. A.U., arbitrary units, N=5-8; *p<0.05, **p<0.01, ***p<0.005, ****p<0.0001., Supplementary Figure 4. Flow cytometry assessment of ATMs in lean and obese IWAT SVF. Quantitation of (A) IWAT percent ATMs (B) IWAT CD11c+ ATMs (C) IWAT CD11c-ATMs (D) IWAT dendritic cells (DC) numbers, N=7-12/group; *p<0.05, **p<0.01, ***p<0.005, ****p<0.0001. , Supplementary Figure 5. Lipidomic assessment of lipid mediators in obese male and female GWAT. (A) Relative hydroxy fatty acids (FAHFA) (B) Phosphatidylserine (PS) (C) Phosphatidylcholine (PC) (D) Lyso-PC (E) Phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) (F) Phosphatidylglycerol (PG) (G) Phosphatidylinositol (PI) content in obese male and female GWAT with and without CL treatment. N=6/group; *p<0.05, **p<0.01, ***p<0.005, ****p<0.0001., and Curation note: Title of deposit changed from "Supplementary Materials Lipolysis Paper" Dec. 20, 2018 to more closely reflect association with the paper these materials support.
- Citation to related publication:
- Mita Varghese, Cameron Griffin, Kaitlin McKernan, Leila Eter, Nicholas Lanzetta, Devyani Agarwal, Simin Abrishami, Kanakadurga Singer, Sex Differences in Inflammatory Responses to Adipose Tissue Lipolysis in Diet-Induced Obesity, Endocrinology, Volume 160, Issue 2, February 2019, Pages 293–312, https://doi.org/10.1210/en.2018-00797
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Liang, Jun and Wang, Zihan
- Description:
- The aim of the research to study the temporal evolution of the Sub-Auroral Polarizations Streams (SAPS) with multiple instruments. Aurora images are important to identify the electrodynamics in the high latitude ionosphere. Data used in this research were collected and provided by Dr. Jun Liang at University of Calgary, and analyzed by Zihan Wang for the article accompanying this deposit. The data was collected from all sky imagers (ASI) located in Saskatoon, Canada. and saskrainbow01.sav contains the rgb channels from ASI. It can be opened using IDL. saskasiskymap.gm5 contains the sky map of the ASI. It shows the geographic location of the figure pixels. aurora_diff.pro is the procedure to recover the data from saskrainbow01.sav and make plots. draw_colorbar.pro is the procedure to add a colorbar to the plot. mlon_smp_towang.pro and rebinsmpkeo_towang.pro can together make keogram plots. Run mlon_smp_towang.pro first and then rebinsmpkeo_towang.pro.
- Keyword:
- All Sky Imager
- Citation to related publication:
- Wang, Z., Zou, S., Shepherd, S. G., Liang, J., Gjerloev, J. W., Ruohoniemi, J. M., et al. ( 2019). Multi‐instrument observations of mesoscale enhancement of subauroral polarization stream associated with an injection.Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, 124, 1770– 1784. https://doi.org/10.1029/2019JA026535
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Thomaz, Andréa T. (UMICH), Carvalho, Tiago P. (UFRGS), Malabarba, Luiz R. (UFRGS), and Knowles, L. Lacey (UMICH)
- Description:
- Estimated phylogenetic relationships based on more than 18,000 loci in 93 individuals (full data) or 21 individuals (subset data) representing 19 described species and two putative undescribed species. Nine files are part of this dataset, including all input files to infer the phylogenetic reconstructions and the outputs obtained, in addition to a pruned tree used to infer the ancestral state reconstructions.
- Keyword:
- dusky millions poeciliids, sexual selection, South America, and ddRADseq
- Citation to related publication:
- Andréa T. Thomaz, Tiago P. Carvalho, Luiz R. Malabarba, L. Lacey Knowles, Geographic distributions, phenotypes, and phylogenetic relationships of Phalloceros (Cyprinodontiformes: Poeciliidae): insights about diversification among sympatric species pools, Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 2018, ISSN 1055-7903, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2018.12.008
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Xiantong Wang
- Description:
- We perform a geomagnetic event simulation using a newly developed magnetohydrodynamic with adaptively embedded particle-in-cell (MHD-AEPIC) model. We have developed effective criteria to identify reconnection sites in the magnetotail and cover them with the PIC model. The MHD-AEPIC simulation results are compared with Hall MHD and ideal MHD simulations to study the impacts of kinetic reconnection at multiple physical scales. At the global scale, the three models produce very similar SYM-H and SuperMag Electrojet (SME) indexes, which indicates that the global magnetic field configurations from the three models are very close to each other. At the mesoscale we compare the simulations with in situ Geotail observations in the tail. All three models produce reasonable agreement with the Geotail observations. The MHD-AEPIC and Hall MHD models produce tailward and earthward propagating fluxropes, while the ideal MHD simulation does not generate flux ropes in the near-earth current sheet. At the kinetic scales, the MHD-AEPIC simulation can produce a crescent shape distribution of the electron velocity space at the electron diffusion region which agrees very well with MMS observations near a tail reconnection site. These electron scale kinetic features are not available in either the Hall MHD or ideal MHD models. Overall, the MHD-AEPIC model compares well with observations at all scales, it works robustly, and the computational cost is acceptable due to the adaptive adjustment of the PIC domain.
- Keyword:
- MHD, PIC, and Magnetosphere
- Discipline:
- Science
-
Video data of predation and parasitism by arthropods on small vertebrates in lowland Peruvian Amazon
- Creator:
- Grundler, Michael C, Grundler, Maggie G, and Herrera, V.
- Description:
- Nighttime and diurnal surveys in the lowland Peruvian Amazon of Los Amigos Biological Station were conducted in order to describe herpetological diversity at this site. As a result of these surveys, the predation event between a Pamphobeteus sp. and Marmosops sp. and the myiasis of Ranitomeye uakarii were observed. The video footage was recorded in order to document these interesting interactions between arthropod predators and parasites and vertebrate prey and hosts, and are included for publication in the short communication "Ecological interactions between arthropods and small vertebrates in a lowland Amazon rainforest" in the journal Amphibian and Reptile Conservation.
- Keyword:
- Amazonia, predator-prey, spiders, opposums, frogs, and myiasis
- Citation to related publication:
- von May R, Biggi E, Cárdenas H, Diaz MI, Alarcón C, Herrera V, Santa-Cruz R, Tomasinelli F, Westeen E, Sánchez-Paredes CM, Larson JG, Title PO, Grundler MR, Grundler MC, Davis Rabosky AR, Rabosky DL (2019) Ecological interactions between arthropods and small vertebrates in a lowland Amazon rainforest. Amphibian and Reptile Conservation 13(1): 65–77. http://amphibian-reptile-conservation.org/pdfs/Volume/Vol_13_no_1/ARC_13_1_[General_Section]_65-77_e169_high_res.pdf
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Roeten, K. J. and Bougher, S. W.
- Description:
- In order to better understand the large-scale impacts of smaller-scale gravity waves in the upper atmosphere of Mars, a modern whole atmosphere, nonlinear, non-orographic, spectral gravity wave parameterization scheme (Yigit et al., 2008) has been added to the ground-to-exosphere 3-D general circulation model, M-GITM (Bougher et al., 2015), which previously did not account for the effects of this physical process. New atmospheric simulations have been run for cases which did and did not utilize this gravity wave parameterization as well as for cases designed to test the sensitivity of certain adjustable parameters within the scheme. After including the gravity wave parameterization scheme into M-GITM, large impacts are found on the simulated mean thermospheric horizontal velocities and temperature structure, especially within the altitude range of 90-170 km (Roeten et al., 2022). The most notable of these impacts include a reduction in speed of the thermospheric easterlies in the summer hemisphere as well as overall cooling, on average, at altitudes above 120 km., Simulations were run for two different seasons at Mars, a solstice (Ls=270) and an equinox (Ls=180). The output from these simulations have been averaged over all local times over a 15-day time period, starting on the day of the solstice or equinox. The output has also been zonally averaged over all longitudes. Files containing these zonally and temporally averaged files are named starting with “MGITM_ZonalAvg”. Both solstice and equinox cases have been simulated once without including the gravity wave parameterization (“nogw”) and once with the gravity wave parameterization included (“withgw”). Additional simulations of the Ls=270 solstice have been done individually adjusting the horizontal wavelength and maximum source flux parameters within the gravity wave scheme. , and Other M-GITM simulations have also been provided in a different format. These M-GITM simulations are ‘flythroughs’ of model output, extracted along the same trajectory path of the MAVEN spacecraft, which allows for better data-model comparisons with in-situ MAVEN/NGIMS (Neutral Gas and Ion Mass Spectrometer) observations. These simulations have been done for three different NGIMS observational campaigns, both for cases that include and do not include the effects of gravity waves. Output from these simulations has NOT been averaged; instead, output from each simulated MAVEN orbit is included within the file. These files are named starting with “MGITM_TempExtraction” or “MGITM_WindExtraction” based on whether the MGITM flythrough was designed to be compared to MAVEN/NGIMS temperature or wind profiles, respectively.
- Keyword:
- Mars, M-GITM, MAVEN, and Mars upper atmosphere
- Citation to related publication:
- Roeten, K. J., Bougher, S. W., Yigit, E., Medvedev, A. S., Benna, M., Elrod, M. K. (2022). Impacts of gravity waves in the Martian thermosphere: The Mars Global Ionosphere- Thermosphere Model coupled with a whole atmosphere gravity wave scheme. Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets. In preparation.
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Yang, Emily G, Kort, Eric A, Wu, Dien, Lin, John C, Oda, Tomohiro, Ye, Xinxin, and Lauvaux, Thomas
- Description:
- This data set supports a study that seeks to evaluate global fossil fuel CO2 emissions inventory representations of CO2 emissions of five cities in the Middle East, and assess the ability of satellite observations to inform this evaluation. Improved observational understanding of urban CO2 emissions, a large and dynamic global source of fossil CO2, can provide essential insights for both carbon cycle science and mitigation decision making. In this study we compare three distinct global CO2 emissions inventory representations of urban CO2 emissions for five Middle Eastern cities (Riyadh, Mecca, Tabuk, Jeddah, and Baghdad) and use independent satellite observations from the Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2 (OCO-2) satellite to evaluate the inventory representations of afternoon emissions. We use the column version of the Stochastic Time-Inverted Lagrangian Transport (X-STILT) model to account for atmospheric transport and link emissions to observations. We compare XCO2 simulations with observations to determine optimum inventory scaling factors. Applying these factors, we find that the average summed emissions for all five cities are 100 MtC/y (50-151, 90% CI), which is 2.0 (1.0, 3.0) times the average prior inventory magnitudes. The total adjustment of the emissions of these cities comes out to ~7% (0%, 14%) of total Middle Eastern emissions (~700 MtC/y). We find our results to be insensitive to the prior spatial distributions in inventories of the cities’ emissions, facilitating robust quantitative assessments of urban emission magnitudes without accurate high-resolution gridded inventories. and There are three files included in this data set, and all data are in tab-delimited form. The first file, xco2_lat.zip, contains 26 separate text files, each named by the city and date of the corresponding OCO-2 overpass. Each of these 26 files includes overpass-specific data, with modeled and observed XCO2 values binned by 0.1 degree of latitude. The file overpass_scaling_factors.txt provides the scaling factors for each overpass used in this study. The file city_estimates.txt provides the scaled emissions estimates for each city (or sum of cities) as well as the lower and upper bounds of the 90% confidence intervals, for each inventory.
- Keyword:
- greenhouse gases, carbon dioxide, urban, cities, satellite, remote sensing, Lagrangian modeling, emissions inventories, carbon cycle, and climate
- Citation to related publication:
- Yang, E. G., Kort, E. A., Wu, D., Lin, J. C., Oda, T., Ye, X., & Lauvaux, T. (2020). Using space‐based observations and Lagrangian modeling to evaluate urban carbon dioxide emissions in the Middle East. Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, 125, e2019JD031922. https://doi.org/10.1029/2019JD031922
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Holmes, Iris A, Monagan Jr., Ivan V, Westphal, Michael F, and Davis Rabosky, Alison R
- Description:
- We generated these data from desert night lizards, Xantusia vigilis, from populations in central California. We performed phylogeographic analyses based on these data.
- Keyword:
- ddRADseq, phylogeography, Xantusia vigilis, lizard, and genome-scale sequencing
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Surajit Chatterjee, Adrien Chauvier, Shiba S. Dandpat, Irina Artsimovitch, and Nils G. Walter
- Description:
- These data were generated to study the dynamics of RNAP-ribosome interactions on a nascent mRNA with a preQ1-sensing translational riboswitch in its 5’ untranslated region (UTR). Using single-molecule fluorescence co-localization, we monitored direct transient binding of 30S ribosomal subunit to the individual nascent mRNA molecules in surface-immobilized paused elongation complexes (PECs). Also, using a novel protein-induced fluorescence enhancement assay we monitored the real-time transcription rate of RNA polymerase (RNAP) under different experimental conditions. The DNA template including the preQ1 riboswitch from B. anthracis under the control of the T7A1 promoter was cloned into pUC19 plasmid. Transcription templates for in vitro transcription were generated by PCR.
- Citation to related publication:
- Chatterjee, S., Chauvier, A., Dandpat, S.S., Artsimovitch, I., & Walter, N.G. (2021). A translational riboswitch coordinates nascent transcription-translation coupling. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci., 118 (16), e2023426118; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2023426118
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Nunley, Hayden, Nagashima, Mikiko, Martin, Kamirah, Lorenzo Gonzalez, Alcides, Suzuki, Sachihiro C., Norton, Declan A., Wong, Rachel O. L., Raymond, Pamela A., and Lubensky, David K.
- Description:
- This dataset contains images of UV cone nuclei (labelled by transgenic expression of a photoconvertible fluorescent protein) near the retinal margin in live fish. The most important images in the dataset are the following: 1. Images (at 4X magnification) of UV cones immediately after photoconversion of a patch near the retinal margin 2. Images (at 4X magnification) of UV cones 2-4 days after photoconversion of a patch near the retinal margin Also, included is code for calculating triangulations (which connect UV cone nuclei which are nearest neighbors). This code allows us to check for motion of UV cones relative to each other between the time of photoconversion and subsequent imaging.
- Keyword:
- zebrafish cone mosaic, topological defects, tissue patterning, grain boundaries, photoconversion, and defect motion
- Citation to related publication:
- Nunley, H., Nagashima, M., Martin, K., Gonzalez, A. L., Suzuki, S. C., Norton, D. A., Wong, R. O. L., Raymond, P. A., & Lubensky, D. K. (2020). Defect patterns on the curved surface of fish retinae suggest a mechanism of cone mosaic formation. PLOS Computational Biology, 16(12), e1008437. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1008437 and Hayden Nunley, Mikiko Nagashima, Kamirah Martin, Alcides Lorenzo Gonzalez, Sachihiro C. Suzuki, Declan Norton, Rachel O. L. Wong, Pamela A. Raymond, David K. Lubensky. Defect patterns on the curved surface of fish retinae suggest mechanism of cone mosaic formation. bioRxiv 806679; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/806679
- Discipline:
- Science