Search Constraints
« Previous |
1 - 100 of 642
|
Next »
Number of results to display per page
View results as:
Search Results
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- Images of villages in Mali in which Yanda Dom (Dogon family) is the primary language. Each file name contains important information about the photos, and are structured thus: LanguageFamily_Language_IdentificationNumber_GeographicCoordinate_Description_Date_InitialsOfThePhotographer
- Keyword:
- villages, Dogon, Yanda Dom, and Mali
- Citation to related publication:
- Moran, Steven & Forkel, Robert & Heath, Jeffrey (eds.) 2016. Dogon and Bangime Linguistics. Jena: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History. http://dogonlanguages.org
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Van, Benjamin J. and Dewaraja, Yuni K.
- Description:
- Interest in quantitative imaging of Y-90 is growing because transarterial radioembolization (RE) with Y-90 loaded microspheres is a promising and minimally invasive treatment that is FDA approved for unresectable primary and metastatic liver tumors. These cancers are a leading cause of cancer mortality and morbidity. Radioembolization is a therapy that irradiates liver tumors with radioactive microspheres administered through a microcatheter placed in the hepatic arterial vasculature. Radioembolization is based on the principle that healthy liver and tumor are mainly vascularized by the portal vein and the hepatic artery respectively. As a result, radioactive microspheres are preferentially located in the lesions after they are administered via the hepatic artery.
- Keyword:
- Y-90, PET, SPECT, CT, Segmentation, Organ, Tumor, Label, Microsphere, Radioembolization, and SIRT
- Citation to related publication:
- Van, B. J., Dewaraja, Y. K., Sangogo, M. L., & Mikell, J. K. (2021). Y-90 SIRT: Evaluation of TCP variation across dosimetric models. EJNMMI Physics, 8(1), 45. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40658-021-00391-6
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Lim, Hongki and Dewaraja, Yuni K.
- Description:
- Interest in quantitative imaging of Y-90 is growing because transarterial radioembolization (RE) with Y-90 loaded microspheres is a promising and minimally invasive treatment that is FDA approved for unresectable primary and metastatic liver tumors. These cancers are a leading cause of cancer mortality and morbidity. Radioembolization is a therapy that irradiates liver tumors with radioactive microspheres administered through a microcatheter placed in the hepatic arterial vasculature. Radioembolization is based on the principle that healthy liver and tumor are mainly vascularized by the portal vein and the hepatic artery respectively. As a result, radioactive microspheres are preferentially located in the lesions after they are administered via the hepatic artery.
- Keyword:
- Y-90, PET, SPECT, CT, Segmentation, Organ, Tumor, Label
- Citation to related publication:
- Van, B. J., Dewaraja, Y. K., Sangogo, M. L., & Mikell, J. K. (2021). Y-90 SIRT: Evaluation of TCP variation across dosimetric models. EJNMMI Physics, 8(1), 45. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40658-021-00391-6
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- 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:
- Moniri, Saman, Xiao, Xianghui, and Shahani, Ashwin J.
- Description:
- The data file is comprised of 22,500 X-ray projections (15 scans of 1500 projections each) recorded during solidification of Al-Ge-Na. The raw data file is in .hdf format and can be reconstructed into .tiff, e.g., by using the TomoPy toolbox in Python.
- Keyword:
- X-ray microtomography, synchrotron, in situ, 4D materials science, irregular eutectic, growth, and solidification
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Modey, Christine A., Cheatle, Joseph, and Giaimo, Genie N.
- Description:
- Data includes information regarding session notes from sixty-three institutions, including blank session note forms, data sets of completed session notes, and survey data about how sessions notes are conceived of, and used, in writing centers.
- Keyword:
- session note, client report form, tutor notes, writing center, writing, and tutor
- Citation to related publication:
- Christine Modey, Genie Giaimo, and Joseph Cheatle. “Session Notes: Preliminary Results from a Cross-Institutional Survey.” Praxis: A Writing Center Journal 18.3 (2021): 52-75. https://issuu.com/titospanks/docs/18.3_summer_2021_full_issue_2._pdf
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- 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
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Steiner, Allison and Kawecki, Stacey
- Description:
- WRF-Chem model
- Keyword:
- aerosols and weather
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Cody H. Pham, Jason M. Tallant, J. Jordan Price, and David N. Karowe
- Description:
- Anthropogenic climate change will dramatically alter species distributions. The rate and magnitude of range shifts, however, will differ among taxa, resulting in altered patterns of co-occurrence and interspecific interactions. We examined potential climate-mediated breeding range shifts among North American wood-warblers (Parulidae), a speciose avian family likely to be especially impacted by such changes. We used publicly available species distribution model (SDM) range outputs to compare current ranges and patterns of sympatry among warbler species to future ranges and sympatry under 1.5 °C, 2.0 °C, and 3.0 °C of average global warming. We used these outputs to calculate average breeding range area, range overlap among species, number of sympatric species, and distances of breeding range shifts. We additionally calculated the number gained and lost sympatric interactions under each warming scenario.
- Keyword:
- wood-warbler, University of Michigan Biological Station (UMBS), Research Experience for Undergraduates (REU), climate change, interspecific, range shift, species distribution models, sympatric, and student-friendly
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Johnson, JE and Molnar, PH
- Description:
- This IF compilation was assembled from the existing literature to understand if preservation biases affected the record of iron formations.
- Keyword:
- Archean ocean chemistry, temporal record of iron formations, and early Earth iron cycle
- Citation to related publication:
- Johnson, J. E., & Molnar, P. H. ( 2019). Widespread and persistent deposition of iron formations for two billion years. Geophysical Research Letters, 46, 3327– 3339. https://doi.org/10.1029/2019GL081970
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- This is the flora-fauna lexical material obtained in the course of more general lexical and grammatical fieldwork on languages of central-eastern Mali (Dogon, Songhay, Bangime, Bozo). The spreadsheets in this work, duplicated in xlsx and csv formants, present our flora-fauna lexicons as of early 2019 for many languages of central-eastern Mali, and certain languages of southwestern Burkina Faso. The Malian data is in two spreadsheets (flora, fauna), while the Burkina data is in separate spreadsheets for flora, birds, fish, insects, lizards and snakes, and mammals. Please begin with the “readme” document.
- Keyword:
- flora,, fauna, lexicon, Mali, and Burkina Faso
- Citation to related publication:
- Moran, Steven & Forkel, Robert & Heath, Jeffrey (eds.) 2016. Dogon and Bangime Linguistics. Jena: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History. https://dogonlanguages.org and Christfried Naumann & Tom Güldemann & Steven Moran & Guillaume Segerer & Robert Forkel (eds.) 2015. Tsammalex: A lexical database on plants and animals. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology. https://tsammalex.clld.org
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Revzen, Shai
- Description:
- This repository contains both the data and python3 code that reads this data and reproduces the relevant figures. The code depends on NumPy >1.17 and matplotlib >3.1 and was tested on python 3.8
- Keyword:
- locomotion, slipping, low Reynolds number, walking, and slithering
- Discipline:
- Science and Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Sun, Hu, Ren, Jiaen, Chen, Yang, and Zou, Shasha
- Description:
- Our research focuses on providing a fully-imputed map of the worldwide total electron content with high resolution and spatial-temporal smoothness. We fill in the missing values of the original Madrigal TEC maps via estimating the latent feature of each latitude and local time along the 2-D grid and give initial guess of the missing regions based on pre-computed spherical harmonics map. The resulting TEC map has high imputation accuracy and the ease of reproducing. and All data are in HDF5 format and are easy to read using the h5py package in Python. The TEC map is grouped in folders based on years and each file contains a single-day data of 5-min cadence. Each individual TEC map is of size 181*361.
- Keyword:
- Total Electron Content, Matrix Completion, VISTA, Spherical Harmonics, and Spatial-Temporal Smoothing
- Citation to related publication:
- Sun, H., Hua, Z., Ren, J., Zou, S., Sun, Y., & Chen, Y. (2020). Matrix Completion Methods for the Total Electron Content Video Reconstruction. arXiv preprint arXiv:2012.01618. and Zou, S., Ren, J., Wang, Z., Sun, H., & Chen, Y. (2021). Impact of Storm-Enhanced Density (SED) on Ion Upflow Fluxes During Geomagnetic Storm. Frontiers in Astronomy and Space Sciences, 162.
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Zongyu Li, Yuni K. Dewaraja, and Jeffrey A. Fessler
- Description:
- Current methods for patient-specific voxel-level dosimetry in radionuclide therapy suffer from a trade-off between accuracy and computational efficiency. Monte Carlo (MC) radiation transport algorithms are considered the gold standard for voxel-level dosimetry but can be computationally expensive, whereas faster dose voxel kernel (DVK) convolution can be sub-optimal in the presence of tissue heterogeneities. Furthermore, the accuracies of both these methods are limited by the spatial resolution of the reconstructed emission image. To overcome these limitations, this paper considers a single deep convolutional neural network (CNN) with residual learning (named DblurDoseNet) that learns to produce dose-rate maps while compensating for the limited resolution of SPECT images. We took the novel approach of constructing a convolutional neural network with residual learning to handle the accuracy-efficiency tradeoff while compensating for the limited resolution of SPECT images. We then test our CNN on clinically relevant phantoms and patients undergoing Lu-177 DOTATATE therapy in our clinic. Our network demonstrated superior results than Monte Carlo, the current gold standard for voxel dosimetry, but only takes a fraction of time. Thus, the DblurDoseNet has the potential for real-time patient-specific dosimetry in clinical treatment planning due to its demonstrated improvement in accuracy, resolution, noise and speed over the DVK/MC approaches. Matlab is needed to access the phantoms and Python (with Numpy package installed) is needed to access the DVKs.
- Keyword:
- Deep learning, Voxel-level dosimetry, Lu-177 therapy, SPECT resolution effects
- Citation to related publication:
- "DblurDoseNet: A Deep Residual Learning Network for Voxel Radionuclide Dosimetry Compensating for SPECT Imaging Resolution" by Zongyu Li, Jeffrey A. Fessler, Justin K. Mikell, Scott J. Wilderman and Yuni K. Dewaraja. Accepted by Medical Physics, 2021. DOI: 10.1002/mp.15397
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Walsh, Lisa L
- Description:
- Stable isotope values of carbon (δ13C) and nitrogen (δ15N) from Virginia opossum (Didelphis virginiana) guard hairs were analyzed to evaluate the ecology and winter adaptations in opossums by Dr. Lisa L. Walsh as part of her Ph.D. thesis in the Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Department. The collection of stable isotope data took place from 2017 to 2019. Guard hair was processed at the University of Michigan and analyzed by the University of New Mexico Center for Stable Isotopes (UNM-CSI, USA). Captive and wild opossums were evaluated for evidence of biannual or incomplete biannual molting, a mammalian adaptation to harsh winters. Results suggest opossums do not exhibit either winter molting strategy and that guard hairs capture the opossum’s lifetime diet (Walsh and Tucker 2021). The stable isotope values were used to test the hypothesis that a Type A generalist’s niche is positively correlated with habitat heterogeneity and to evaluate which climate variables best explained isotope values. There was a positive correlation between isotopic niche size and habitat-diversity indexes (Walsh and Tucker 2020). The δ13C values from opossums in the Midwest and Northeast to test whether opossums rely on anthropogenic trash to survive extreme winters. There was no significant relationship between δ13C and winter variables, but there was a significant increase in variance of Midwest opossums’ δ13C after the 1970 corn agricultural boom (Walsh and Tucker 2023).
- Keyword:
- stable isotope, Virginia opossum, mesopredator, ecology, and mammal
- Citation to related publication:
- Walsh, L.L. and P.K. Tucker. 2020. Habitat heterogeneity is correlated with isotopic niche breadth across the range of a mammalian generalist mesopredator. Ecosphere, 11(12): e03314. https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.3314, Walsh, L.L. and P.K. Tucker. 2021. Stable isotope values suggest opossums (Didelphis virginiana) at their northern edge do not seasonally molt. Northeastern Naturalist, 28(1): 1-8. https://doi.org/10.1656/045.028.0101, and Walsh, L.L., and P.K. Tucker. 2023. Evaluating anthropogenic influence on a mesopredator: Opossum (Didelphis virginiana) isotope values influenced by corn agriculture more than urbanization. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 101: https://doi.org/10.1139/cjz-2021-0172.
- 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:
- Bougher, S. W. and Parkinson, C. D.
- Description:
- Understanding the state and composition of an exoplanetary atmosphere depends upon several parameters such as heating, cooling, mixing and reactions between constituent chemical species. Only a few types of atmospheric species can be detected remotely spectroscopically and only if their abundance is large enough to be detectable. In this initial study, we model the atmosphere of a Venus-like planet orbiting the M-type star GJ 436 to determine the global neutral temperature structure, winds, and energy balance as the radial distance of the planet from the star decreases.
- Keyword:
- Venus-like exoplanet, upper atmospheres , and heat balances
- Citation to related publication:
- C. D. Parkinson, S. W. Bougher, F. P. Mills, R. Hu, G. Gronoff, J. Li, A. Brecht, D. Adams, and Y. L. Yung. Venus as an Exoplanet: I. An Initial Exploration of the 3-D Energy Balance for a CO2 Exoplanetary Atmosphere Around an M-Dwarf Star, J. Geophysical Research, X, (2022). doi:....
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Billings, Gideon H and Johnson-Roberson, Matthew
- Description:
- UWslam is a dataset for underwater stereo and hybrid monocular fisheye + stereo SLAM in natural seafloor environments. The dataset includes a spiral survey of a shallow reef captured with a diver operated stereo rig and 4 hybrid image sequences captured with a deep ocean ROV in different deep ocean environments. Ground truth pose estimates for the spiral stereo trajectory were obtained by processing the image sequence through COLMAP. Ground truth pose estimates for the hybrid sequences were obtained by distributing fiducials on the seafloor before capturing an image sequence and processing the image sequences with the ROS based TagSLAM package.
- Keyword:
- SLAM, Simultaneous Localization and Mapping, Visual Reconstruction, and Underwater
- Citation to related publication:
- G. Billings, R. Camilli and M. Johnson-Roberson, "Hybrid Visual SLAM for Underwater Vehicle Manipulator Systems," in IEEE Robotics and Automation Letters, vol. 7, no. 3, pp. 6798-6805, July 2022, doi: 10.1109/LRA.2022.3176448.
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Billings, Gideon H and Johnson-Roberson, Matthew
- Description:
- UWHandles is a dataset for 6D object pose estimation in underwater fisheye images. It provides 6D pose and 2D bounding box annotations for 3 different graspable handle objects used for ROV manipulation. The dataset consists of 28 image sequences collected in natural seafloor environments with a total of 20,427 annotated frames. and Meta repository for the dataset https://github.com/gidobot/UWHandles
- Keyword:
- Deep Learning, Pose Estimation, and Underwater Vision
- Citation to related publication:
- Billings, G., & Johnson-Roberson, M. (2020). SilhoNet-fisheye: Adaptation of a ROI based object pose estimation network to monocular fisheye images. IEEE Robotics and Automation Letters, 5(3), 4241-4248.
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Mohtat, Peyman, Siegel, Jason B., and Stefanopoulou, Anna G.
- Description:
- The goal here is to study the voltage and expansion response of lithium-ion batteries at different charging rates. Specifically, the goal is to capture the observation of the smoothing of the peaks in dV/dQ and retention of the peaks in d^2 \delta/dQ^2 at higher C-rates. The retention of the peaks at higher charging rates enables better estimation of the cell capacity. To achieve this goal a reduced order electrochemical and mechanical model with multiple particles with a size distribution is developed. This allows us to capture the smoothing and preservation of the phase transitions in the voltage and expansion measurements at high C-rates, respectively. The model is written in Matlab software.
- Keyword:
- Lithium-ion batteries, Modeling, Multiparticle, Mechanical response, and Electrochemical
- Citation to related publication:
- Mohtat, P., Lee, S., Sulzer, V., Siegel, J. B., & Stefanopoulou, A. G. (2020). Differential Expansion and Voltage Model for Li-ion Batteries at Practical Charging Rates. Journal of The Electrochemical Society, 167(11), 110561. https://doi.org/10.1149/1945-7111/aba5d1
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Mohtat, Peyman, Siegel, Jason B., Stefanopoulou, Anna G., and Lee, Suhak
- Description:
- The focus of this research effort is to systematically study the capability of aging diagnostics using cell expansion under variety of aging conditions and states. The data collection campaign is very important to cover various degradation modes to extract the degradation features that will be used to inform, parameterize, and validate the models developed earlier. In the data collection campaign, we are documenting the evolution of the electrical and mechanical characteristics and especially the reversible mechanical measurement. It is important to note that we collect data using newly developed fixtures that enables the simultaneous measurement of mechanical and electrical response under pseudo-constant pressure.
- Keyword:
- Lithium-ion batteries, Mechanical response, Aging, NMC, and Pouch cells
- Citation to related publication:
- Peyman Mohtat et al. (2021). Reversible and Irreversible Expansion of Lithium-ion Batteries Under a Wide Range of Stress Factors. J. Electrochem. Soc. 168 100520 https://doi.org/10.1149/1945-7111/ac2d3e
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Skerlos, Steven J.
- Description:
- Supporting Information for research article "Life cycle comparison of environmental emissions from three disposal options for unused pharmaceutical". This spreadsheet provides the calculations and values used for this study; please refer to the manuscript and supporting information (as text) available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/es203987b for details about how to use this spreadsheet. We use life cycle assessment methodology to compare three disposal options for unused pharmaceuticals: (i) incineration after take-back to a pharmacy, (ii) wastewater treatment after toilet disposal, and (iii) landfilling or incineration after trash disposal. For each option, emissions of active pharmaceutical ingredients to the environment (API emissions) are estimated along with nine other types of emissions to air and water (non-API emissions). Under a scenario with 50% take-back to a pharmacy and 50% trash disposal, current API emissions are expected to be reduced by 93%. This is within 6% of a 100% trash disposal scenario, which achieves an 88% reduction. The 50% take-back scenario achieves a modest reduction in API emissions over a 100% trash scenario while increasing most non-API emissions by over 300%. If the 50% of unused pharmaceuticals not taken-back are toileted instead of trashed, all emissions increase relative to 100% trash disposal. Evidence suggests that 50% participation in take-back programs could be an upper bound. As a result, we recommend trash disposal for unused pharmaceuticals. A 100% trash disposal program would have similar API emissions to a take-back program with 50% participation, while also having significantly lower non-API emissions, lower financial costs, higher convenience, and higher compliance rates.
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Reynolds, Mack B., Hong, Hanna S., Zhang, Li, Lyssiotis, Costas A., and O'Riordan, Mary X.
- Description:
- Untargeted lipidomics (Data S1) and targeted metabolomics (Data S2) analysis from in vitro culture of a murine macrophage cell line expressing shRNA targeted to Cardiolipin synthase (CRLS1), referred to as CRLS1 knockdown (KD), or a paired non-target shRNA-expressing (NT-Control). CRLS1 KD and NT-Control macrophages were either directly analyzed (untargeted lipidomics) or stimulated with lipopolysaccharide for a variety of timepoints and then analyzed (targeted metabolomics). Datasets are available as .csv files.
- Keyword:
- Lipidomics, Metabolomics, Cardiolipin, Macrophage, CRLS1, lipopolysaccharide, and LPS
- Citation to related publication:
- Reynolds M.B. et al. (2023). Cardiolipin coordinates inflammatory metabolic reprogramming through regulation of Complex II disassembly and degradation. Science Advances, 9(5). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.ade8701
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- 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
- Discipline:
- Science and Social Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Song, Siliang and Zhang, Jianzhi
- Description:
- Fitness landscapes map genotypes to their corresponding fitness under given environments and allow explaining and predicting evolutionary trajectories. Of particular interest is the landscape ruggedness or the unevenness of the landscape, because it impacts many aspects of evolution such as the likelihood that a population is trapped in a local fitness peak. Although the ruggedness has been inferred from a number of empirically mapped fitness landscapes, it is unclear to what extent this inference is affected by fitness estimation error, which is inevitable in the experimental determination of fitness landscapes. Here we address this question by simulating fitness landscapes under various theoretical models, with or without fitness estimation error. We find that all eight examined measures of landscape ruggedness are overestimated due to imprecise fitness quantification, but different measures are affected to different degrees. We devise a method to use replicate fitness measures to correct this bias and show that our method performs well under realistic conditions. We conclude that previously reported fitness landscape ruggedness is likely upward biased owing to the negligence of fitness estimation error and advise that future fitness landscape mapping should include at least three biological replicates to permit an unbiased inference of the ruggedness.
- Keyword:
- adaptation, estimation error, evolution, NK model, Rough Mount Fuji model, and polynomial model
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Towne, Aaron S. and Brès, Guillaume
- Description:
- This dataset contains data from a large eddy simulation of a turbulent jet at Mach number 0.9. The dataset contains 10000 time-resolved snapshots of three-dimensional velocity, density, and pressure fields spanning 2000 acoustic time units and also includes pre-processed azimuthal Fourier modes for each snapshot and the mean flow. All data are stored within hdf5 files, and a Matlab script showing how the data can be read and manipulated is provided. Please see the ‘jet_README.pdf’ file for more information. We recommend using the ‘jet_example.zip’ file as an entry point to the dataset. and The dataset is part of “A database for reduced-complexity modeling of fluid flows” (see references below) and is intended to aid in the conception, training, demonstration, evaluation, and comparison of reduced-complexity models for fluid mechanics. The paper introduces the flow setup and computational methods, describes the available data, and provides two examples of how these data can be used for reduced-complexity modeling. Users of these data should cite the two papers listed below.
- Keyword:
- fluid mechanics, jets, and turbulence
- Citation to related publication:
- Towne, A., Dawson, S., Brès, G. A., Lozano-Durán, A., Saxton-Fox, T., Parthasarthy, A., Biler, H., Jones, A. R., Yeh, C.-A., Patel, H., Taira, K. (2022). A database for reduced-complexity modeling of fluid flows. arXiv:2206.11801. and Brès, G. A., Jordan, P., Jaunet, V., Le Rallic, M., Cavalieri, A. V. G., Towne, A., Lele, S. K., Colonius, T., Schmidt, O. T. (2018) Importance of the nozzle-exit boundary-layer state in subsonic turbulent jets. J. Fluid Mech., 851:83–124.
- Discipline:
- Engineering and Science
-
- Creator:
- Towne, Aaron, Saxton-Fox, Theresa, and Parthasarthy, Aadhy
- Description:
- This dataset contains experimental measurements of a zero-pressure-gradient flat-plate boundary layer at five different Reynolds numbers collected using particle image velocimetry. For each Reynolds number, the dataset contains approximately 6000 snapshots of planar velocity fields as well as raw particle image pairs. All data are stored within hdf5 files, and a Matlab script showing how the data can be read and manipulated is provided. Please see the ‘BLexp_README.pdf’ file for more information. We recommend using the ‘BLexp_example.zip’ file as an entry point to the dataset. and The dataset is part of “A database for reduced-complexity modeling of fluid flows” (see references below) and is intended to aid in the conception, training, demonstration, evaluation, and comparison of reduced-complexity models for fluid mechanics. The paper introduces the flow setup and computational methods, describes the available data, and provides an example of how these data can be used for reduced-complexity modeling. Users of these data should cite the papers listed below.
- Keyword:
- fluid mechanics
- Citation to related publication:
- Towne, A., Dawson, S., Brès, G. A., Lozano-Durán, A., Saxton-Fox, T., Parthasarthy, A., Biler, H., Jones, A. R., Yeh, C.-A., Patel, H., Taira, K. (2022). A database for reduced-complexity modeling of fluid flows. arXiv:2206.11801.
- Discipline:
- Engineering and Science
-
- Creator:
- Towne, Aaron S. and Lozano-Durán, Adrián
- Description:
- This dataset contains data from two direct numerical simulations of a turbulent zero-pressure-gradient flat-plate boundary layer spanning friction Reynolds numbers from 292 to 728 (BL1) and 488 to 1024 (BL2). The dataset contains time-resolved snapshots of the three-dimensional velocity field for both cases: roughly 10,000 snapshots spanning 20 eddy-turnover times for BL1 and 7,500 snapshots spanning 7 eddy-turnover times for BL2 . Also included for both cases are pre-processed correlations at several wall-normal distances, mean and root-mean-squared velocity and vorticity profiles, several boundary-layer metrics, and time-resolved velocity data in the streamwise-wall-normal plane. All data are stored within hdf5 files, and a Matlab script showing how the data can be read and manipulated is provided. Please see the ‘BLdns_README.pdf’ file for more information. We recommend using the ‘BLdns_example.zip’ file as an entry point to the dataset. and The dataset is part of “A database for reduced-complexity modeling of fluid flows” (see references below) and is intended to aid in the conception, training, demonstration, evaluation, and comparison of reduced-complexity models for fluid mechanics. The paper introduces the flow setup and computational methods, describes the available data, and provides an example of how these data can be used for reduced-complexity modeling. Users of these data should cite the paper listed below.
- Keyword:
- fluid mechanics, boundary layer, and turbulence
- Citation to related publication:
- Towne, A., Dawson, S., Brès, G. A., Lozano-Durán, A., Saxton-Fox, T., Parthasarthy, A., Biler, H., Jones, A. R., Yeh, C.-A., Patel, H., Taira, K. (2022). A database for reduced-complexity modeling of fluid flows. arXiv:2206.11801.
- Discipline:
- Engineering and Science
-
- Creator:
- Towne, Aaron, Yeh, Chi-An., Patel, Het, and Taira, Kunihiko
- Description:
- This dataset contains data from a three-dimensional large eddy simulation of Mach 0.3 flow over a NACA 0012 airfoil at Reynolds number 23,000, which features a transitional boundary layer, separation over a recirculation bubble, and a turbulent wake. The dataset contains 16,000 time-resolved snapshots of the mid-span and spanwise-averaged velocity fields. All data are stored within hdf5 files, and a Matlab script showing how the data can be read and manipulated is provided. Please see the ‘airfoilLES_README.pdf’ file for more information. We recommend using the ‘airfoilLES_example.zip’ file as an entry point to the dataset. and The dataset is part of “A database for reduced-complexity modeling of fluid flows” (see references below) and is intended to aid in the conception, training, demonstration, evaluation, and comparison of reduced-complexity models for fluid mechanics. The paper introduces the flow setup and computational methods, describes the available data, and provides an example of how these data can be used for reduced-complexity modeling. Users of these data should cite the papers listed below.
- Citation to related publication:
- Towne, A., Dawson, S., Brès, G. A., Lozano-Durán, A., Saxton-Fox, T., Parthasarthy, A., Biler, H., Jones, A. R., Yeh, C.-A., Patel, H., Taira, K. (2022). A database for reduced-complexity modeling of fluid flows. arXiv:2206.11801. and Yeh, C.-A. and Taira, K. (2019) Resolvent-analysis-based design of airfoil separation control. Journal of Fluid Mechanics, 867:572–610.
- Discipline:
- Science and Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Goodrich, Jaclyn M., Tang, Lu, Rodríguez-Carmona, Yanelli, Meijer, J L., Perng, Wei, Watkins, Deborah J., Meeker, John D. , Mercado-García, Adriana, Cantoral, Alejandra, Song, Peter X. , Téllez-Rojo, Martha M. , and Peterson, Karen E.
- Description:
- Phthalates are chemicals found in many products that humans are exposed to. Prenatal exposure to phthalates has been associated with adverse outcomes that are detected in childhood, adolescence, and even adulthood. In this study, we sought to identify subtle biological changes in the metabolome of children that were exposed to phthalates during gestation. We hypothesized that prenatal phthalate exposures would alter metabolic pathways related to adiposity and cardiometabolic health. The article is under review (citation to be added when paper is published). The data included here encompass all exposure, demographic, and untargeted metabolomics data needed for the analysis described in the manuscript.
- Keyword:
- Phthalates , Prenatal, and Metabolomics
- Citation to related publication:
- Goodrich J.M., Tang L.,Rodríguez-Carmona Y., Meijer J.L, Perng W., Watkins D.J., Meeker J.D., Mercado-García A., Cantoral A., Song P.X., Téllez-Rojo M.M., Peterson K.E. Trimester-specific phthalate exposures in pregnancy are associated with circulating metabolites in children. PLoS One. (Under revision – forthcoming.)
- Discipline:
- Other and Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Lee, Kyu Han
- Description:
- Data include variables used to run accelerated failure time models examining the association between the nose/throat microbiome and 1) symptom duration, 2) shedding duration, and 3) time to infection. Certain individual participant data have been excluded due to identifiability concerns. Data also include the oligotype count table and taxonomic classifications.
- Keyword:
- Influenza and Microbiome
- Citation to related publication:
- Lee KH, Gordon A, Shedden K, Kuan G, Ng S, Balmaseda A, Foxman B. The respiratory microbiome and susceptibility to influenza virus infection. PloS One. 2019;14:e0207898. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207898
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Lee, Kyu Han, Foxman, Betsy, and Gordon, Aubree
- Description:
- Data include variables used to run mixed effects models examining the association between the nose/throat microbiome and influenza virus infection. Certain individual participant data have been excluded due to identifiability concerns. Data also include the oligotype count table and taxonomic classifications. and Curation Notes: Readme updated Nov. 29, 2018 with context for oligotype and taxonomy files, and citation to associated article.
- Keyword:
- Influenza and Microbiome
- Citation to related publication:
- Lee KH, Gordon A, Shedden K, Kuan G, Ng S, Balmaseda A, Foxman B. The respiratory microbiome and susceptibility to influenza virus infection. PloS One. 2019;14:e0207898. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0207898
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- McCuen, Brett A.
- Description:
- These data are TLA events identified in MACCS magnetometer data throughout 2015. These events are short-timescale (< 60 s), large -amplitude (> 6 nT/s) magnetic disturbances measured at Earth's surface that are analyzed for space weather research purposes. and The events were identified in a year's worth of magnetic field data using an algorithm developed in the MATLAB platform. The algorithm dBdt_main.m can be run using the associated scripts (clean_maccs.m, simple_dbdt.m, extremes1.m, newdbdt.m) to return the events in the 2015_AllEvents.csv file. The substorm onset delays of each event are determined with the onset_delays.m script and the substorm event list 20191127-15-56-substorms.csv (both included).
- Keyword:
- space weather impacts, geomagnetically induced currents, GIC, transient induced currents, transient large amplitude, dB/dt search algorithm, and TLA
- Citation to related publication:
- Engebretson, M. J., Pilipenko, V. A., Ahmed, L. Y., Posch, J. L., Steinmetz, E. S., Moldwin, M. B., … Vorobev, A. V. (2019). Nighttime Magnetic Perturbation Events Observed in Arctic Canada: 1. Survey and Statistical Analysis. Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics, 124(9), 7442–7458. https://doi.org/10.1029/2019JA026794
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Bustamante, Angela C., Opron, Kristopher, Ehlenbach, William J., Crane, Paul K., Keene, Dirk, Standiford, Theodore J., and Singer, Benjamin H.
- Description:
- This study was conducted to detect and analyze modules, or clusters of genes, associated with sepsis, using RNAseq data obtained from 12 participants who died of sepsis and 12 participants who died of non-infectious critical illness while hospitalized. This deposit contains the input data and parameters needed to reproduce the weighted gene co-expression network analysis (WGCNA) and gene enrichment analysis performed on this data. This analysis requires the R packages "WGCNA" version 1.68 and "DESeq2" version 1.22.2 available for download from bioconductor ( http://bioconductor.org). The external bioinformatics tool DAVID version 6.8 ( https://david.ncifcrf.gov/) was used as an additional gene enrichment analysis. Please see the supplemental methods document within this deposit and published research letter for more detailed information.
- Keyword:
- Sepsis, RNAseq, Transcriptomics, Human, and Brain
- Citation to related publication:
- Bustamante, A.C., Opron, K., Ehlenbach, W.J., Larson, E.B., Crane, P.K., Keene, C.D., Standiford, T.J., Singer, B.H., 2020. Transcriptomic Profiles of Sepsis in the Human Brain. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. https://doi.org/10.1164/rccm.201909-1713LE
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Butterfield, Zachary, Muccio, Daniel, and Keppel-Aleks, Gretchen
- Description:
- Solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence (SIF) is an emission of photons during photosynthesis that can be used to make inferences about gross primary productivity (GPP) and carbon uptake of vegetation. With a recent proliferation of available satellite-based observations of SIF, there is much interest in assessing how SIF relates to GPP across multiple temporal and spatial scales. Tower-based observations of SIF at high temporal resolution provide a key link between satellite data and local surface-based observations of ecosystem productivity. We collected tower-based observations of SIF and several vegetation indices using a PhotoSpec spectrometer system deployed on the AmeriFlux tower at UMBS (US-UMB). As the data were collected alongside concurrent eddy flux observations of carbon exchange, they provide a unique opportunity to explore how SIF and other vegetation signals relate to GPP in a temperate deciduous forest and better inform the interpretation of satellite observations.
- Keyword:
- Solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence, gross primary production, temperate deciduous forest, remote sensing, flux observations, forest productivity
- Citation to related publication:
- Butterfield, Z., Magney, T. S., Grossmann, K., Bohrer, G., Vogel, C. S., Barr, S., & Keppel-Aleks, G. (2022). Accounting for Changes in Radiation Improves the Ability of SIF to Track Water Stress-Induced Losses in Summer GPP in a Temperate Deciduous Forest. Authorea. https://doi.org/10.22541/essoar.167252705.51393201/v1
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- Images of villages in Mali in which Toro Tegu (Dogon family) is the primary language. Each file name contains important information about the photos, and are structured thus: LanguageFamily_Language_IdentificationNumber_GeographicCoordinate_Description_Date_InitialsOfThePhotographer
- Keyword:
- villages, Dogon, Toro Tegu, and Mali
- Citation to related publication:
- Moran, Steven & Forkel, Robert & Heath, Jeffrey (eds.) 2016. Dogon and Bangime Linguistics. Jena: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History. http://dogonlanguages.org
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- Images of villages in Mali in which Toro So (Dogon family) is the primary language. Each file name contains important information about the photos, and are structured thus: LanguageFamily_Language_IdentificationNumber_GeographicCoordinate_Description_Date_InitialsOfThePhotographer
- Keyword:
- villages, Dogon, Toro So, and Mali
- Citation to related publication:
- Moran, Steven & Forkel, Robert & Heath, Jeffrey (eds.) 2016. Dogon and Bangime Linguistics. Jena: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History. http://dogonlanguages.org
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Moniri, Saman and Shahani, Ashwin J.
- Description:
- The data is comprised of 20 .hdf files of the X-ray projections recorded during isothermal annealing of Zn-Mg samples, at discrete time-steps shown below for files names ending in ‘...30141’ to ‘…30161’: 30141: prior to annealing; 30142: 1 min annealing; 30143: 3 min; 30144: 5 min; 30145: 7 min; 30146: 10 min; 30147: 15 min; 30148: 20 min; 30150: 31 min; 30151: 1 hr; 30152: 2 hr; 30153: 3 hr; 30154: 4 hr; 30155: 5 hr; 30156: 6 hr; 30157:7 hr; 30158: 8 hr; 30159:9 hr; 30160: 9 hr, 10 min; 30161: 10 hr The raw data file is in .hdf format and can be reconstructed into .tiff, e.g., by using the TomoPy toolbox in Python.
- Keyword:
- Spiral eutectics
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- Images of villages in Mali in which Tomo Kan(Dogon family) is the primary language. Each file name contains important information about the photos, and are structured thus: LanguageFamily_Language_IdentificationNumber_GeographicCoordinate_Description_Date_InitialsOfThePhotographer
- Keyword:
- villages, Dogon, Tomo Kan, and Mali
- Citation to related publication:
- Moran, Steven & Forkel, Robert & Heath, Jeffrey (eds.) 2016. Dogon and Bangime Linguistics. Jena: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History. http://dogonlanguages.org
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- Images of villages in Mali in which Tommo So (Dogon family) is the primary language. Each file name contains important information about the photos, and are structured thus: LanguageFamily_Language_IdentificationNumber_GeographicCoordinate_Description_Date_InitialsOfThePhotographer
- Keyword:
- villages, Dogon, Tommo So, and Mali
- Citation to related publication:
- Moran, Steven & Forkel, Robert & Heath, Jeffrey (eds.) 2016. Dogon and Bangime Linguistics. Jena: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History. http://dogonlanguages.org
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- Images of villages in Mali in which Tiranige (Dogon family) is the primary language. Each file name contains important information about the photos, and are structured thus: LanguageFamily_Language_IdentificationNumber_GeographicCoordinate_Description_Date_InitialsOfThePhotographer
- Keyword:
- villages, Dogon, Tiranige, and Mali
- Citation to related publication:
- Moran, Steven & Forkel, Robert & Heath, Jeffrey (eds.) 2016. Dogon and Bangime Linguistics. Jena: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History. http://dogonlanguages.org
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Jones, Monica L.H.
- Description:
- These manikins represent body shape models for children weighing 9 to 23 kg in a seated posture relevant to child restraint design. The design of child restraints is guided in part by anthropometric data describing the distributions of body dimensions of children. However, three-dimensional body shape data have not been available for children younger than three years of age. These manikins will be useful for assessing child accommodation in restraints. The SBSM can also provide guidance for the development of anthropomorphic test devices and computational models of child occupants. The sampled manikins were predicted for a range of torso length and body weight dimensions. The SBSM model was exercised for two torso lengths and nine body weights to obtain 18 body shapes. The 3D shape models can be downloaded in a standard mesh format (PLY). Each body shape is accompanied by predicted landmark locations and standard anthropometric variables.
- Keyword:
- Child anthropometry, Child restraint system, Statistical body shape model, and Anthropomorphic testing device (ATD)
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Carlevaris-Bianco, Nicholas , Ushani, Arash , and Eustice, Ryan
- Description:
- This is a large scale, long-term autonomy dataset for robotics research collected on the University of Michigan’s North Campus. The dataset consists of omnidirectional imagery, 3D lidar, planar lidar, GPS, and proprioceptive sensors for odometry collected using a Segway robot. The dataset was collected to facilitate research focusing on longterm autonomous operation in changing environments. The dataset is comprised of 27 sessions spaced approximately biweekly over the course of 15 months. The sessions repeatedly explore the campus, both indoors and outdoors, on varying trajectories, and at different times of the day across all four seasons. This allows the dataset to capture many challenging elements including: moving obstacles (e.g., pedestrians, bicyclists, and cars), changing lighting, varying viewpoint, seasonal and weather changes (e.g., falling leaves and snow), and long-term structural changes caused by construction projects. To further facilitate research, we also provide ground-truth pose for all sessions in a single frame of reference. and A detailed description of the dataset and the methods used to generate it is in the document nclt.pdf. If you use this dataset in your research please cite: Carlevaris-Bianco, N., Ushani, A., Eustice, R. (2021). The University of Michigan North Campus Long-Term Vision and LIDAR Dataset [Data set]. University of Michigan - Deep Blue. https://doi.org/10.7302/7rnm-6a03
- Keyword:
- Long-term SLAM, place recognition, lidar, computer vision, and field and service robotics
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Cheng, Hao Fei, Hecht, Brent , Wheeler, Earnest, Wang, Xinyi, Zhu, Haiyi, and Dillahunt, Tawanna R
- Description:
- The sharing economy has quickly become a very prominent subject of research in the broader computing literature and the in human–computer interaction (HCI) literature more specifically. When other computing research areas have experienced similarly rapid growth (e.g. human computation, eco-feedback technology), early stage literature reviews have proved useful and influential by identifying trends and gaps in the literature of interest and by providing key directions for short- and long-term future work. In this paper, we seek to provide the same benefits with respect to computing research on the sharing economy. Specifically, following the suggested approach of prior computing literature reviews, we conducted a systematic review of sharing economy articles published in the Association for Computing Machinery Digital Library to investigate the state of sharing economy research in computing. We performed this review with two simultaneous foci: a broad focus toward the computing literature more generally and a narrow focus specifically on HCI literature. We collected a total of 112 sharing economy articles published between 2008 and 2017 and through our analysis of these papers, we make two core contributions: (1) an understanding of the computing community’s contributions to our knowledge about the sharing economy, and specifically the role of the HCI community in these contributions (i.e. what has been done) and (2) a discussion of under-explored and unexplored aspects of the sharing economy that can serve as a partial research agenda moving forward (i.e. what is next to do).
- Keyword:
- Collaborative and social computing, Human-computer interaction interaction, and Human-centered computing
- Discipline:
- Other
-
- Creator:
- Hille, Madeline M., Clark, Marin K., Gronewold, Andrew D., West, A. Joshua, Zekkos, Dimitrios , and Chamlagain, Deepak
- Description:
- This dataset supports the findings of Hille et al. (2021, in review) in Geophysical Research Letters. In this article, we present a multivariate analysis of extreme storm events that occur during the Indian summer monsoon over the Himalayan Range in central Nepal. We resolve storm events at sub daily durations by merging NASA’s Global Precipitation Mission (GPM) Integrated Multi-satellitE Retrievals for GPM (IMERG) 30-minute, gridded 0.1x0.1-degree precipitation product with local rain gauges operated by the Nepal Department of Hydrology and Meteorology (DHM) and the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD). We quantify spatial variability in extreme rainfall by isolating storms over a specific intensity threshold and pairing a principal components analysis with a K-means clustering approach to group storms of similar characteristics. and We find that frequent and intense storms occur over the forefront of the central Himalayan range and coincide with a locus of monsoon-driven landslide density. This pattern agrees with observations of elevated annual precipitation volumes near the Himalayan physiographic transition from low to high relief (Bookhagen and Burbank, 2010), and is consistent with orographically-influenced rainfall over other mountain ranges (Marra et al., 2021). In addition to presenting novel methodology to quantifying storm variability, our results highlight the strong orographic effect on precipitation intensity and duration, as well as an association of shallow bedrock landsliding frequency with intense precipitation.
- Keyword:
- orographic rainfall, multivariate analysis, extreme rainfall events, and rainfall-triggered landslides
- Citation to related publication:
- Hille et al. (2021, in review). The orographic influence on storm variability, extreme rainfall characteristics and rainfall-triggered landsliding. Geophysical Research Letters. Forthcoming
- 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.
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Gonzales, Wilkinson Daniel Wong
- Description:
- The Lannang Corpus (LanCorp) is a sociolinguistic POS-tagged 375,000-word speech-and-text corpus of Lannang languages based on audio recordings collected in metropolitan Manila between 2016 and 2020. It hopes to furnish scholars interested in Sino-Philippine (socio)linguistics with a contemporary, multilingual corpus (i.e., Hokkien, Tagalog, English, Lánnang-uè, Mandarin) compiled using recorded oral data primarily collected from a Sino-Philippine community in metropolitan Manila by the community: the Manila Lannangs. The publicly available corpus contains manual transcriptions (time-aligned to the audio), source language and part-of-speech tags derived using a mix of manual and computational methods, and a wide range of social metadata; it is also organized and stored systematically for easy data retrieval and (socio)linguistic analysis. Although there are existing sociolinguistic corpora, they are small in scale and were not released publicly due to lack of informant consent – LanCorp readily fills the gap.
- Keyword:
- Lannang, Chinese Filipino, Filipino-Chinese, Hokkien, diaspora, mixed language, recordings, oral variety, multilingual, corpus, data, dataset, databank, LanCorp, Lannang Corpus, sociolinguistics, and ELAN
- Citation to related publication:
- [1] Gonzales, Wilkinson Daniel Wong. 2021. Interactions of Sinitic languages in the Philippines: Sinicization, Filipinization, and Sino-Philippine language creation. The Palgrave handbook of Chinese language studies, ed. by Zhengdao Ye. London: Palgrave-MacMillan., [2] Gonzales, Wilkinson Daniel Wong. 2021. Filipino, Chinese, neither, or both? The Lannang identity and its relationship with language. Language & Communication 77., [3] Gonzales, Wilkinson Daniel Wong. 2022. “Truly a Language of Our Own” A Corpus-Based, Experimental, and Variationist Account of Lánnang-uè in Manila. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Ph.D. dissertation., [4] Gonzales, Wilkinson Daniel Wong. 2022. Hybridization. Philippine English: Development, Structure, and Sociology of English in the Philippines, ed. by Ariane Macalinga Borlongan. London: Routledge., and [5] Gonzales, Wilkinson Daniel Wong. in preparation. Advancing Sino-Philippine (socio)linguistics using the Lannang Corpus (LanCorp) – a multilingual, POS-tagged, and audio-textual databank.
- Discipline:
- Social Sciences
-
- 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:
- MacEachern, Mark P and Criss, Cory N
- Description:
- While collaboration with industry is paramount to innovation, the recent emphasis on industrial relationship transparency has sparked new guidelines, research studies, and standardizations focused on re-defining conflict of interest. There is limited data on defining the specific financial amount wherein a conflict of interest is relevant. This study is the first to assess the potential financial effects on high-quality clinical data, or the “indirect sponsorship”.
- Keyword:
- Sponsorship, Indirect sponsorship, Surgery, Robotic surgery, and DaVinci
- Citation to related publication:
- Criss CN, MacEachern MP, Matusko N, Dimick JB, Maggard-Gibbons M, Gadepalli SK. The Impact of Corporate Payments on Robotic Surgery Research: A Systematic Review. Ann Surg. 2019 Mar; 269 (3): 389-396. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000003000. PMID: 30067545. https://doi.org/10.1097/SLA.0000000000003000
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- MacEachern, Mark P MLIS, Bennett, Katelyn G MD, Preminger, Aviva MD, Berlin, Nicolas MD, and Vercler, Christian J MD
- Description:
- The dataset includes the reproducible search strategies for all literature databases searched during the review, the key articles used to generate relevant search terms and test the effectiveness of the searches, the Endnote library that has all citations considered for inclusion, a flow chart describing the screening process, and the screening forms used for inclusion and exclusion.
- Keyword:
- Plastic surgery, Professionalism, Surgery, and Social media
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Xian Li
- Description:
- Low-velocity accretionary wedges and sedimentary layers overlaying continental plates are widely observed in the subduction zones where historical large earthquakes have occurred. It was observed that rupture of the 2011 Mw 9.0 Tohoku-Oki earthquake propagated to the trench with large coseismic slip on the shallow fault, but what caused the huge shallow slip remains a prominent problem., Here we explore how the two low-velocity structures, accretionary wedge and sedimentary layer, affect the coseismic slip and near-fault ground motions during the 2011 Tohoku-Oki earthquake. Constrained by the observed seafloor deformation, we present a 2-D dynamic rupture model of the 2011 Tohoku-Oki earthquake with an accretionary wedge and a sedimentary layer. Compared to a homogeneous model with the same friction and stress parameters on the fault, we find that the co-existence of the accretionary wedge and sedimentary layer significantly enhances the shallow coseismic slip and amplifies ground accelerations near the accretionary wedge. We then investigate a plausible scenario of a smaller Tohoku-Oki earthquake when its rupture does not reach the accretionary wedge. The sedimentary layer slightly enhances the coseismic slip while the accretionary wedge has almost no influence for the smaller earthquake scenario, but both structures significantly amplify the ground accelerations on the overriding plate. , and By simulating a suite of earthquake scenarios, we suggest that the co-existence of an accretionary wedge and sedimentary layers tend to enhance coseismic slip, but the enhancement effect decreases as the up-dip limit of rupture zones terminates at a larger depth. The numerical simulations were solved using SEM2DPACK _2.3.8 ( http://www.sourceforge.net/projects/sem2d/), and simulation results were visualized by Matlab. This folder includes the input files to reproduce our simulation results and plot scripts.
- Keyword:
- 2011 Tohoku-Oki earthquake, Dynamic rupture simulation, Accretionary wedge, and Sedimentary layer
- Citation to related publication:
- Li, X., & Huang, Y. (2021). The enhancement of coseismic slip and ground motion due to the accretionary wedge and sedimentary layer in the 2011 Tohoku-Oki earthquake (world) [Preprint]. Earth and Space Science Open Archive. https://doi.org/10.1002/essoar.10506336.1
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Pine, Alexandra F and Love, Brian J
- Description:
- This data is from a project concerned with dehydrating samples of saturated superabsorbent polymer using a centrifuge. The goal was to consider centrifugation as an energy efficient scheme to dehydrate SAP with the notion of reusing it. The data provided contains mass fractions of solvent removed through centrifugation with varied parameters.
- Keyword:
- Superabsorbent Polymer
- Citation to related publication:
- Pine, A., Wu, C. C., Raghavan, S., & Love, B. (2021). The efficiency of dehydrating desiccants by centrifugation: An assessment of superabsorbent polymers. Drying Technology, 0(0), 1–8. https://doi.org/10.1080/07373937.2021.1939710
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Esquivel, Amanda
- Description:
- The survey questions were organized in the following categories: - demographics: age, gender identity, race, ethnicity, and country of birth - education: degree type and date earned, STEM area - employment field, employer information, title, job duties - measures of productivity including research, grant, patents and site/workplace/lab access - work/life balance: responsibilities and duties Questions regarding productivity and work/life balance queried pre and post COVID experiences. Many questions solicited optional comments and the relevant ones are presented as a table.
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Zurbuchen, Thomas H.
- Description:
- Audification Routines in MATLAB and IDL
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Keener, Alix
- Description:
- As discussion and debates on the digital humanities continue among scholars, so too does discussion about how academic libraries can and should support this scholarship. Through interviews with digital humanities scholars and academic librarians within the Center for Institutional Cooperation, this study aims to explore some points of common perspective and underlying tensions in research relationships. Qualitative interviews revealed that, while both groups are enthusiastic about the future of faculty-librarian collaboration on digital scholarship, there remain certain tensions about the role of the library and the librarian. Scholars appreciate the specialized expertise of librarians, especially in metadata and special collections, but they can take a more active stance in utilizing current library resources or vocalizing their needs for other resources. This expertise and these services can be leveraged to make the library an active and equal partner in research. Additionally, libraries should address internal issues, such as training and re-skilling librarians as necessary; better-coordinated outreach to academic departments is also needed.
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Yiwen, Mei
- Description:
- The datasets of this archive are produced for a research project on the development of an advanced hydrologic modeling system for the St. Lawrence river basin. The outputted datasets from model simulations are in Netcdf 4 format. The author recommend using the netCDF Operators (NCO) program for data processing. For visualization and plotting, the author recommend using software like MATLAB, Python or R.
- Keyword:
- Hydrologic modeling, reanalysis product, St. Lawrence river, water balance, WRF-Hydro
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- Images of villages in Mali in which Tengou-Togo (Dogon family) is the primary language. Each file name contains important information about the photos, and are structured thus: LanguageFamily_Language_IdentificationNumber_GeographicCoordinate_Description_Date_InitialsOfThePhotographer
- Keyword:
- villages, Dogon, Tengou-Togo, and Mali
- Citation to related publication:
- www.dogonlanguages.org
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- Images of villages in Mali in which Tebul Ure (Dogon family) is the primary language. Each file name contains important information about the photos, and are structured thus: LanguageFamily_Language_IdentificationNumber_GeographicCoordinate_Description_Date_InitialsOfThePhotographer
- Keyword:
- villages, Dogon, Tebul Ure, and Mali
- Citation to related publication:
- Moran, Steven & Forkel, Robert & Heath, Jeffrey (eds.) 2016. Dogon and Bangime Linguistics. Jena: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History. http://dogonlanguages.org
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Sick, Volker , Reuss, David L, and Greene, Mark L
- Description:
- This archive contains data files from spark-ignited homogeneous combustion internal combustion engine experiments. Included are high-resolution two-dimensional two-component velocity fields acquired at two 5 x 6 mm regions, one near the head and one near the piston. Crank angle resolved heat flux measurements were made at a third location in the head. The engine was operated at 40 kPa, 500 and 1300 RPM, motor and fired. Included are in-cylinder pressure measurements, external pressure and temperature data, as well as details on the geometry of the optical engine to enable setups of simulation configurations.
- Keyword:
- combustion, internal combustion engine, heat Transfer, particle image velocimetry, in-cylinder flow, TCC III engine , optical engine, CFD validation, PIV, boundary layer, and turbulence
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Schiffmann, Philipp, Sick, Volker, and Reuss, David L
- Description:
- This archive contains data files from motored internal combustion engine experiments. Included are two-dimensional two-component velocity fields from four measurement planes with maximized field of view. in-cylinder pressure measurements, external pressure and temperature data, as well as details on the geometry of the optical engine to enable setups of simulation configurations. Motored operating conditions include 40kPa and 90kPa MAP, 800 and 1300 RPM.
- Keyword:
- TCC III engine, internal combustion engine, particle image velocimetry, in-cylinder flow, turbulence in engines, CFD validation data, motored engine, optical engine, cyclic variability , and PIV
- Citation to related publication:
- http://dx.doi.org/10.2516/ogst/2015028
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Schiffmann, Philipp, Sick, Volker, and Reuss, David L
- Description:
- This archive contains data files from spark-ignited homogenous combustion internal combustion engine experiments. Included are two-dimensional two-component velocity fields acquired in a small, high-resolution field of view near the spark plug, and images of hydroxyl radical chemiluminescence recording the early flame-kernel growth. Included are in-cylinder pressure measurements, external pressure and temperature data, as well as details on the geometry of the optical engine to enable setups of simulation configurations. Included are tables of one-per-cycle parameters for each test with methane or propane at stoichiometric, dilute limit, lean limit, and rich limit, operation conducted at 40kPa and 1300 RPM.
- Keyword:
- OH* imaging, TCC III engine, internal combustion engine, particle image velocimetry, in-cylinder flow, turbulence in engines, CFD validation data, cyclic variability, early flame kernel growth, optical engine, combustion variability, ignition, and PIV
- Citation to related publication:
- dx.doi.org/10.1177/1468087417720558
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Schiffmann, Philipp, Sick, Volker, and Reuss, David L
- Description:
- This archive contains data files from spark-ignited homogenous combustion internal combustion engine experiments. Included are two-dimensional two-component velocity fields from various measurement planes with maximized field of view, in-cylinder pressure measurements, external pressure and temperature data, as well as details on the geometry of the optical engine to enable setups of simulation configurations. Fired operation was with stoichiometric propane air, 40kPa MAP, at 1300 RPM.
- Keyword:
- TCC III engine, internal combustion engine, particle image velocimetry, in-cylinder flow, turbulence in engines, CFD validation data, cyclic variability, optical engine, combustion variability, and PIV
- Citation to related publication:
- dx.doi.org/10.1177/1468087417720558
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Heath, Jeffrey
- Description:
- Images of villages in Mali in which Tamashek (Berber family) is the primary language. Each file name contains important information about the photos, and are structured thus: LanguageFamily_Language_IdentificationNumber_GeographicCoordinate_Description_Date_InitialsOfThePhotographer
- Keyword:
- Tamashek, villages, Berber, and Mali
- Citation to related publication:
- Moran, Steven & Forkel, Robert & Heath, Jeffrey (eds.) 2016. Dogon and Bangime Linguistics. Jena: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History. http://dogonlanguages.org
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Gosner, Linda R., Nowlin, Jessica, and Smith, Alexander J.
- Description:
- Included here are 1) a detailed description of each of the dataset’s components, 2) a database of finds from the survey, 3) databases of the faunal bone studied by specialist Damià Ramis, 4) notes and documentation made in the field, 5) excavation photographs 6) artifact photographs.
- Keyword:
- Sardinia, Mediterranean archaeology, archaeological survey, excavation, and Classical archaeology
- Citation to related publication:
- Dommelen, Peter van, Enrique Díes Cusí, Linda R. Gosner, Jeremy Hayne, Guillem Pérez-Jordà, Damià Ramis, Andrea Roppa, and Alfonso Stiglitz. 2018. “Un millennio di storie: nuove notizie preliminari sul Progetto S’Urachi (San Vero Milis, OR), 2016-2018.” Quaderni. Rivista di Archeologia 29: 141–65. https://www.quaderniarcheocaor.beniculturali.it/index.php/qua/article/view/46, Gosner, Linda R., and Alexander J. Smith. 2018. “Landscape Use and Local Settlement at the Nuraghe S’Urachi (West-Central Sardinia): Results from the First Two Seasons of Site Survey.” Fasti Online Documents & Research: Survey Series, no. 7: 1–27. www.fastionline.org/docs/FOLDER-sur-2018-7.pdf., Gosner, Linda R., Jeremy Hayne, Emanuele Madrigali, Jessica Nowlin. 2020. New Evidence for Local Continuity and Phoenician Influence in the Ceramic Assemblage from Iron Age Su Padrigheddu (West-Central Sardinia). Proceedings of the IX Congreso de Estudios Fenicios y Púnicos. Myrta 5: 1649-1657. https://scholars.ttu.edu/en/publications/new-evidence-for-local-continuity-and-phoenician-influence-in-the, Madrigali, Emanuele, Linda R. Gosner, Jeremy Hayne, Jessica Nowlin, and Damià Ramis. 2019. “Tradizioni e interazioni nella quotidianità dell’età del ferro. nuove evidenze da Su Padrigheddu (San Vero Milis, OR).” Quaderni. Rivista di Archeologia 30: 107–26. https://scholars.ttu.edu/en/publications/tradizioni-e-interazioni-nella-quotidianit%C3%A0-dellet%C3%A0-del-ferro-nuo, Stiglitz, Alfonso, Enrique Díes Cusí, Damià Ramis, Andrea Roppa, and Peter van Dommelen. 2015. “Intorno al nuraghe: notizie preliminari sul Progetto S’Urachi (San Vero Milis, OR).” Quaderni. Rivista di Archeologia 26: 191–218., and Gosner, Linda R., Jessica Nowlin, and Alexander J. Smith. in preparation. Ground-truthing the Site-based Survey at S’Urachi and Su Padrigheddu (West-Central Sardinia): Results of the 2016 and 2017 Seasons.
- Discipline:
- Social Sciences
-
- Creator:
- DeLong, Michael R, Tandon, Vickram J, Farajzadeh, Matthew, Berlin, Nicholas L, MacEachern, Mark P, Rudkin, George H, Da Lio, Andrew L, and Cederna, Paul S
- Description:
- The dataset includes all citations considered for inclusion in the systematic review. The citations are accessible in Endnote (enlx), as well as through the primary citation export files from each database. The literature search strategies are included for reproducibility and transparency purposes. See the published methods for more information.
- Keyword:
- Systematic Review, Acellular Dermal Matrix, Breast Reconstructions, and Tissue Expanders
- Citation to related publication:
- DeLong MR, Tandon VJ, Farajzadeh M, Berlin NL, MacEachern MP, Rudkin GH, Da Lio AL, Cederna PS. (2019). Systematic review of the impact of acellular dermal matrix on aesthetics and patient satisfaction in tissue expander-to-implant breast reconstructions. Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. and https://doi.org/10.1097/PRS.0000000000006212
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Shi, Yining
- Description:
- Statistical study of Swarm observations and two Earth magnetic field models: IGRF-12 and CHAOS-6 categorized by Kp*10 index. Data analysis done on https://viresclient.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ JupyterLab.
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Saini, Sameer D
- Description:
- See attached survey and codebook
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Xu, Xuecong, Yan, Xiang , and Dillahunt, Tawanna R.
- Description:
- We compared the response rates, cost, and the average income of participants pertaining to 6 different survey distribution methods used in an initial study about mobility-on-demand services. We used the data to identify survey and recruitment methods that are more effective in reaching hard-to-reach populations. All the raw data used for calculations and the calculations themselves can be found in the attached spreadsheets. and Initial analyses have identified in-person onsite recruitment as one of the better methods of reaching hard-to-reach populations, and is calling for continued work in improving research methods in the field of HCI.
- Keyword:
- survey
- Citation to related publication:
- Yan, X., Zhao, X., Han, Y., and Hentenryck, P. V. (2019). Mobility-on-demand versus fixed-route transit systems: an evaluation of traveler preferences in low-income communities. https://poverty.umich.edu/files/2019/02/Yan_et_al_WorkingPaper_Preference_for_mobility_on_demand.pdf , Atkinson, R., and Flint, J. Accessing Hidden and Hard-to-Reach Populations: Snowball Research Strategies. "Social Research Update" 33 (Jan 2001)., Buranyi, S. Rise of the racist robots: how ai is learning all our worst impulses, Aug 2017. Retrieved June 11, 2019 from https://www.theguardian.com/inequality/2017/aug/08/rise-of-the-racist-robots-how-ai-is-learning-all-our-worst-impulses., Dillahunt, T. R., Erete, S., Galusca, R., Israni, A., Nacu, D., and Sengers, P. Reflections on design methods for underserved communities. In Companion of the 2017 ACM Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work and Social Computing (New York, NY, USA, 2017), CSCW ’17 Companion, ACM, pp. 409–413., Erete, S., Israni, A., and Dillahunt, T. An intersectional approach to designing in the margins. Interactions 25, 3 (Apr. 2018), 66–69., Foster, A. Concerning issue with driverless cars, Mar 2019. Retrieved June 11, 2019 from https://www.news.com.au/technology/innovation/motoring/on-the-road/driverless-cars-may-be-more-likely-to-hit-darkskinned-people-study-finds/news-story/b19959d01ef865f15bb336275b8903e8., Johnston, L. G., and Sabin, K. Sampling hard-to-reach populations with respondent driven sampling. Methodological Innovations Online 5, 2 (aug 2010), 38.1–48., Macaulay, A. C., Commanda, L. E., Freeman, W. L., Gibson, N., McCabe, M. L., Robbins, C. M., and Twohig, P. L. Participatory research maximises community and lay involvement. BMJ 319, 7212 (sep 1999), 774–778., Maestre, J. F., Eikey, E. V., Warner, M., Yarosh, S., Pater, J., Jacobs, M., Marcu, G., and Shih, P. C. Conducting research with stigmatized populations: Practices, challenges, and lessons learned. In Companion of the 2018 ACM Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work and Social Computing (2018), ACM, pp. 385–392., Paterson, J. M., and Maker, Y. Why does artificial intelligence discriminate?, Jun 2019. Retrieved June 11, 2019 from https://pursuit.unimelb.edu.au/articles/why-does-artificial-intelligence-discriminate., Strohmayer, A., Laing, M., and Comber, R. Technologies and social justice outcomes in sex work charities: fighting stigma, saving lives. In Proceedings of the 2017 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (2017), ACM, pp. 3352–3364., and Sydor, A. Conducting research into hidden or hard-to-reach populations. Nurse researcher 20, 3 (2013).
- Discipline:
- General Information Sources
-
Supporting data: Domain-agnostic predictions of nanoscale interactions in proteins and nanoparticles
- Creator:
- Saldinger, Jacob, Raymond, Matt , Elvati, Paolo, and Violi, Angela
- Description:
- The accurate and rapid prediction of generic nanoscale interactions is a challenging problem with broad applications. Much of biology functions at the nanoscale, and our ability to manipulate materials and purposefully engage biological machinery requires knowledge of nano-bio interfaces. While several protein-protein interaction models are available, they leverage protein-specific information, limiting their abstraction to other structures. Here, we present NeCLAS, a general, and rapid machine learning pipeline that predicts the location of nanoscale interactions, providing human-intelligible predictions. Two key aspects distinguish NeCLAS: coarse-grained representations, and the use of environmental features to encode the chemical neighborhood. We showcase NeCLAS with challenges for protein-protein, protein-nanoparticle and nanoparticle-nanoparticle systems, demonstrating that NeCLAS replicates computationally- and experimentally-observed interactions. NeCLAS outperforms current nanoscale prediction models, and it shows cross-domain validity, qualifying as a tool for basic research, rapid prototyping, and design of nanostructures., Software: - To reproduce all-atom molecular dynamics (MD) NAMD is required (version 2.14 or later is suggested). NAMD software and documentation can be found at https://www.ks.uiuc.edu/Research/namd/, - To reproduce coarse-grained MD simulations, LAMMPS (version 29 Sep 2021 - Update 2 or later is suggested). LAMMPS software and documentation can be found at https://www.lammps.org, - To rebuild free energy profiles, the PLUMED plugin (version 2.6) was used. PLUMED software and documentation can be found at https://www.plumed.org/ , and - To generate force matching potentials, the was used the OpenMSCG software was used. OpenMSCG software and documentation can be found at https://software.rcc.uchicago.edu/mscg/
- Keyword:
- Neural Networks, Proteins, Dimensionality Reduction, Nanoparticles, and Coarse-Graining
- Citation to related publication:
- https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2022.08.09.503361v2
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Wittkopp, Patricia J and Massey, Jonathan H
- Description:
- Data provided in this record were collected in the course of studying the genetic basis of differences in wing pigmentation and wing display between Drosophila elegans and Drosophila gunungcola.
- Citation to related publication:
- Massey, J. H., Rice, G. R., Firdaus, A. S., Chen, C.-Y., Yeh, S.-D., Stern, D. L., & Wittkopp, P. J. (2020). Co-evolving wing spots and mating displays are genetically separable traits in Drosophila. Evolution, 74(6), 1098–1111. https://doi.org/10.1111/evo.13990
- 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
- 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
- Discipline:
- Science, Engineering, and Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Gliske, Stephen V and Stacey, William C
- Description:
- This data repository includes the quantitative features of high frequency, intracranial EEG along with all necessary scripts to reproduce the figures of the accompanying manuscript.
- Keyword:
- high frequency oscillation, HFO, high frequency activity, and epilepsy
- Citation to related publication:
- (under review)
- Discipline:
- Science, Engineering, and Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Sugrue, Dennis P.
- Description:
- Our work seeks to better understand the financial risks to corporate operations as a basis for exploring alternative public-private investment strategies. We applied network analysis to model financial relationships within this sector and its connectedness to primary commodities transported on the Great Lakes. The financial network maps were used to quantitatively analyze the industry risk exposure using corporate financial metrics and to query the financial interdependencies of companies relative to the Great Lakes waterway. Results demonstrate that inventory turnover ratio is a robust proxy to quantify weighted financial risks of water dependency across the entire supply chain network. All data was manually collected from the Bloomberg Terminal and FactSet which are licensed by the University of Michigan. The SPLC module in the Terminal restricts data download and information must be captured manually. All data was collected from September-November 2018.
- Keyword:
- Iron Ore, Supply Chain, Bloomberg Terminal, and Great Lakes
- Citation to related publication:
- Sugrue, Dennis, Abigail Martin, and Peter Adriaens. (under review). “Financial Network Analysis to Inform Infrastructure Investment: Great Lakes Waterway and the Steel Supply Chain.” Journal of Infrastructure Systems, American Society of Civil Engineers.
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Mark Flanner
- Description:
- This dataset includes spectrally-resolved optical properties for volcanic ash particles from the 2010 Eyjafjallajökull volcanic eruptions. These properties were used in the climate simulations described by Flanner et al. (2014, doi:10.1002/2014JD021977) to quantify ash radiative forcing from the eruptions.
- Keyword:
- ash, volcano, aerosols, Eyjafjallajökull, climate, and radiative transfer
- Citation to related publication:
- Flanner, M.G., Gardner, A.S., Eckhardt, S., Stohl, A., & Perket, J. (2014). Aerosol radiative forcing from the 2010 Eyjafjallajökull volcanic eruptions. Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres. https://doi.org/10.1002/2014JD021977
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- 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.
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Huffaker, Jordan S., Kummerfeld, Jonathan K., Lasecki, Walter S., and Ackerman, Mark S.
- Description:
- The following files include supplementary materials for our CHI 2020 paper "Crowdsourced Detection of Emotionally Manipulative Language". Namely, these materials include the dataset that was used in the evaluation. See the paper for more details.
- Keyword:
- Crowdsourcing, Media Manipulation, Rhetoric, and Emotion
- Citation to related publication:
- J.S. Huffaker, J.K. Kummerfeld, W.S. Lasecki, M.S. Ackerman. Crowdsourced Detection of Emotionally Manipulative Language. In Proceedings of the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI 2020). Honolulu, HI. 2020.
- Discipline:
- Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Yue, Min, Kim, Jae Hyun, Evans, Charles R. , Kachman, Maureen, Erb-Downward, John R., D’Souza, Jennifer , Foxman, Betsy, Adar, Sara D. , Curtis, Jeffrey L. , and Stringer, Kathleen A.
- Description:
- This was a small descriptive study to determine whether short chain fatty acids (SCFAs) are detectable in water. It is part of a larger study that assessed the utility of exhaled breath condensate (EBC) as a biofluid for microbiome assays.
- Keyword:
- microbiome, short chain fatty acids, pulmonary, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, exhaled breath condensate, and water
- Citation to related publication:
- Yue, M., Kim, J. H., Evans, C. R., Kachman, M., Erb-Downward, J. R., D’Souza, J., Foxman, B., Adar, S. D., Curtis, J. L., & Stringer, K. A. (2020). Measurement of Short-Chain Fatty Acids in Respiratory Samples: Keep Your Assay above the Water Line. American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 202(4), 610–612. https://doi.org/10.1164/rccm.201909-1840LE
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Carlson, Zachary
- Description:
- Data repository for supplemental data for manuscript. Article and data set are currently under review by publisher. Email for more information.
- Citation to related publication:
- Carlson, Z., Hafner, H., Mulcahy, M., Bullock, K., Zhu, A., Bridges, D., Bernal-Mizrachi, E., & Gregg, B. (2020). Lactational metformin exposure programs offspring white adipose tissue glucose homeostasis and resilience to metabolic stress in a sex-dependent manner. American Journal of Physiology-Endocrinology and Metabolism, 318(5), E600–E612. https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpendo.00473.2019
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Tronson, Natalie C and Tchessalova, Daria
- Description:
- The main goal of this research was to identify potential molecular pathways that contribute to memory dysregulation and decline that persists long after illness or inflammation. We have previously established a subchronic immune challenge model that results in memory impairments months after the inflammatory challenge. This project aimed to determine whether memory impairments were accompanied by transcriptional dysregulation in memory related brain region (the hippocampus). These data show the differential gene expression as log2fold change (and p-value) in males and females 3 months after immune challenge (Supp Tables 1 and 2); after a subsequent immune challenge (Supp Tables 3 and 4); the differential regulation of genes in males and females (Supp Table 5); genes differentially expressed in the hippocampus of males and females at baseline (Supp Table 6) and the differential regulation of those genes in males and females after immune challenge (Supp Tables 7,8).
- Keyword:
- hippocampus, lipopolysaccharide, differential gene expression, RNA sequencing, neuroimmune, sex differences, learning and memory, and inflammation
- Citation to related publication:
- Tchessalova, D., & Tronson, N. C. (2019). Enduring and sex-specific changes in hippocampal gene expression after a subchronic immune challenge. BioRxiv, 566570. https://doi.org/10.1101/566570
- Discipline:
- Science and Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Muzyk, Andrew, Smothers, Zachary, Akrobetu, Dennis, Ruiz Veve, Jennifer, MacEachern, Mark P, Tetrault, Jeanette M, and Gruppen, Larry
- Description:
- The dataset includes all citations considered for inclusion in the scoping review. The citations are accessible in Endnote (enlx) and Microsoft Excel (xlsx), as well as the primary citation export files from each database. The literature search strategies are included for reproducibility and transparency purposes. See the published methods for more information.
- Keyword:
- Medical Education, Substance Use Disorders, and Scoping Review
- Citation to related publication:
- Muzyk A, Smothers ZPW, Akrobetu D, Ruiz Veve J, MacEachern M, Tetrault JM, Grupen L. (2019). Substance use disorder education in medical schools: A scoping review of the literature. Academic Medicine. PMID: 31348067. and https://doi.org/10.1097/ACM.0000000000002883
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Schulte, Erica M
- Description:
- The data set supports a study investigating which foods may be most implicated in addictive-like eating by examining how nutritionally diverse foods relate to loss of control consumption and various subjective effect reports. Participants (n = 501) self-reported how likely they were to experience a loss of control over their consumption of 30 nutritionally diverse foods and rated each food on five subjective effect report questions that assess the abuse liability of substances (liking, pleasure, craving, averseness, intensity). Hierarchical cluster analytic techniques were used to examine how foods grouped together based on each question. Highly processed foods, with added fats and/or refined carbohydrates, clustered together and were associated with greater loss of control, liking, pleasure, and craving. The clusters yielded from the subjective effect reports assessing liking, pleasure, and craving were most similar to clusters formed based on loss of control over consumption, whereas the clusters yielded from averseness and intensity did not meaningfully differentiate food items. The associated study applies methodology used to assess the abuse liability of substances to understand whether foods may vary in their potential to be associated with addictive-like consumption. Highly processed foods (e.g., pizza, chocolate) appear to be most related to an indicator of addictive-like eating (loss of control) and several subjective effect reports (liking, pleasure, craving). Thus, these foods may be particularly reinforcing and capable of triggering an addictive-like response in some individuals. Future research is warranted to understand whether highly processed foods are related to these indicators of abuse liability at a similar magnitude as addictive substances. The data set is presented in both .sav format for use with SPSS software and in csv format.
- Keyword:
- Behavioral Addiction and Food Consumption
- Discipline:
- Social Sciences
-
- Creator:
- Brown, Kathryn
- Description:
- This eportfolio was created for the Gateway course of the Sweetland Minor in Writing to provide an opportunity for students to reflect on their growing identities as writers, as captured in their text-based and multimodal compositions produced over the Gateway semester. The title of the work contains the pseudonym created for the study while the creator field lists the student's given name to allow proper attribution for their work. The eportfolio is collected here as an artifact in the Sweetland Writing Development Study, which has been published as Developing Writers in Higher Education: A Longitudinal Study (University of Michigan Press, 2019). To learn more about this study, please see the epublication: https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890), and to learn more about the Minor in Writing program and the eportfolio prompts, please see Appendix 2a ( https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890.cmp.1) to the publication.
- Keyword:
- eportfolio , capstone , sitesucker , website , and file directory
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Brown, Kathryn
- Description:
- This eportfolio was created for the Gateway course of the Sweetland Minor in Writing to provide an opportunity for students to reflect on their growing identities as writers, as captured in their text-based and multimodal compositions produced over the Gateway semester. The title of the work contains the pseudonym created for the study while the creator field lists the student's given name to allow proper attribution for their work. The eportfolio is collected here as an artifact in the Sweetland Writing Development Study, which has been published as Developing Writers in Higher Education: A Longitudinal Study (University of Michigan Press, 2019). To learn more about this study, please see the epublication: https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890), and to learn more about the Minor in Writing program and the eportfolio prompts, please see Appendix 2a ( https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890.cmp.1) to the publication.
- Keyword:
- eportfolio , gateway , sitesucker , website, and file directory
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Cockrum, Kayla
- Description:
- This eportfolio was created for the Gateway course of the Sweetland Minor in Writing to provide an opportunity for students to reflect on their growing identities as writers, as captured in their text-based and multimodal compositions produced over the Gateway semester. The title of the work contains the pseudonym created for the study while the creator field lists the student's given name to allow proper attribution for their work. The eportfolio is collected here as an artifact in the Sweetland Writing Development Study, which has been published as Developing Writers in Higher Education: A Longitudinal Study (University of Michigan Press, 2019). To learn more about this study, please see the epublication: https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890), and to learn more about the Minor in Writing program and the eportfolio prompts, please see Appendix 2a ( https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890.cmp.1) to the publication.
- Keyword:
- eportfolio , capstone , sitesucker , website , and file directory
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Mitchell, Michael
- Description:
- This eportfolio was created for the Gateway course of the Sweetland Minor in Writing to provide an opportunity for students to reflect on their growing identities as writers, as captured in their text-based and multimodal compositions produced over the Gateway semester. The title of the work contains the pseudonym created for the study while the creator field lists the student's given name to allow proper attribution for their work. The eportfolio is collected here as an artifact in the Sweetland Writing Development Study, which has been published as Developing Writers in Higher Education: A Longitudinal Study (University of Michigan Press, 2019). To learn more about this study, please see the epublication https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890, and to learn more about the Minor in Writing program and the eportfolio prompts, please see Appendix 2a ( https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890.cmp.1) to the publication.
- Keyword:
- eportfolio , gateway , sitesucker , website , and file directory
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Danko, Melissa
- Description:
- This eportfolio was created for the Gateway course of the Sweetland Minor in Writing to provide an opportunity for students to reflect on their growing identities as writers, as captured in their text-based and multimodal compositions produced over the Gateway semester. The title of the work contains the pseudonym created for the study while the creator field lists the student's given name to allow proper attribution for their work. The eportfolio is collected here as an artifact in the Sweetland Writing Development Study, which has been published as Developing Writers in Higher Education: A Longitudinal Study (University of Michigan Press, 2019). To learn more about this study, please see the epublication: https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890), and to learn more about the Minor in Writing program and the eportfolio prompts, please see Appendix 2a ( https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890.cmp.1) to the publication.
- Keyword:
- eportfolio , gateway, sitesucker , website, and file directory
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Danko, Melissa
- Description:
- This eportfolio was created for the Gateway course of the Sweetland Minor in Writing to provide an opportunity for students to reflect on their growing identities as writers, as captured in their text-based and multimodal compositions produced over the Gateway semester. The title of the work contains the pseudonym created for the study while the creator field lists the student's given name to allow proper attribution for their work. The eportfolio is collected here as an artifact in the Sweetland Writing Development Study, which has been published as Developing Writers in Higher Education: A Longitudinal Study (University of Michigan Press, 2019). To learn more about this study, please see the epublication: https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890), and to learn more about the Minor in Writing program and the eportfolio prompts, please see Appendix 2a ( https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890.cmp.1) to the publication.
- Keyword:
- eportfolio , capstone , sitesucker , website , and file directory
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Lisner, Emily
- Description:
- This eportfolio was created for the Gateway course of the Sweetland Minor in Writing to provide an opportunity for students to reflect on their growing identities as writers, as captured in their text-based and multimodal compositions produced over the Gateway semester. The title of the work contains the pseudonym created for the study while the creator field lists the student's given name to allow proper attribution for their work. The eportfolio is collected here as an artifact in the Sweetland Writing Development Study, which has been published as Developing Writers in Higher Education: A Longitudinal Study (University of Michigan Press, 2019). To learn more about this study, please see the epublication: https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890), and to learn more about the Minor in Writing program and the eportfolio prompts, please see Appendix 2a ( https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890.cmp.1) to the publication.
- Keyword:
- eportfolio , gateway , sitesucker , website , and file directory
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Garno, Gregory
- Description:
- This eportfolio was created for the Gateway course of the Sweetland Minor in Writing to provide an opportunity for students to reflect on their growing identities as writers, as captured in their text-based and multimodal compositions produced over the Gateway semester. The title of the work contains the pseudonym created for the study while the creator field lists the student's given name to allow proper attribution for their work. The eportfolio is collected here as an artifact in the Sweetland Writing Development Study, which has been published as Developing Writers in Higher Education: A Longitudinal Study (University of Michigan Press, 2019). To learn more about this study, please see the epublication: https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890), and to learn more about the Minor in Writing program and the eportfolio prompts, please see Appendix 2a ( https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890.cmp.1) to the publication.
- Keyword:
- eportfolio , gateway , sitesucker, website , and file directory
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Schuler, Kaitlin
- Description:
- This eportfolio was created for the Gateway course of the Sweetland Minor in Writing to provide an opportunity for students to reflect on their growing identities as writers, as captured in their text-based and multimodal compositions produced over the Gateway semester. The title of the work contains the pseudonym created for the study while the creator field lists the student's given name to allow proper attribution for their work. The eportfolio is collected here as an artifact in the Sweetland Writing Development Study, which has been published as Developing Writers in Higher Education: A Longitudinal Study (University of Michigan Press, 2019). To learn more about this study, please see the epublication: https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890), and to learn more about the Minor in Writing program and the eportfolio prompts, please see Appendix 2a ( https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890.cmp.1) to the publication.
- Keyword:
- eportfolio , gateway , sitesucker , website , and file directory
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Adams, Julia
- Description:
- This eportfolio was created for the Gateway course of the Sweetland Minor in Writing to provide an opportunity for students to reflect on their growing identities as writers, as captured in their text-based and multimodal compositions produced over the Gateway semester. The title of the work contains the pseudonym created for the study while the creator field lists the student's given name to allow proper attribution for their work. The eportfolio is collected here as an artifact in the Sweetland Writing Development Study, which has been published as Developing Writers in Higher Education: A Longitudinal Study (University of Michigan Press, 2019). To learn more about this study, please see the epublication: https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890), and to learn more about the Minor in Writing program and the eportfolio prompts, please see Appendix 2a ( https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890.cmp.1) to the publication.
- Keyword:
- eportfolio , gateway , sitesucker , website , and file directory
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Adams, Julia
- Description:
- This eportfolio was created for the Gateway course of the Sweetland Minor in Writing to provide an opportunity for students to reflect on their growing identities as writers, as captured in their text-based and multimodal compositions produced over the Gateway semester. The title of the work contains the pseudonym created for the study while the creator field lists the student's given name to allow proper attribution for their work. The eportfolio is collected here as an artifact in the Sweetland Writing Development Study, which has been published as Developing Writers in Higher Education: A Longitudinal Study (University of Michigan Press, 2019). To learn more about this study, please see the epublication https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890, and to learn more about the Minor in Writing program and the eportfolio prompts, please see Appendix 2a - https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890.cmp.1 to the publication.
- Keyword:
- eportfolio , gateway, sitesucker, website, and file directory
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Avesian, Erica
- Description:
- This eportfolio was created for the Gateway course of the Sweetland Minor in Writing to provide an opportunity for students to reflect on their growing identities as writers, as captured in their text-based and multimodal compositions produced over the Gateway semester. The title of the work contains the pseudonym created for the study while the creator field lists the student's given name to allow proper attribution for their work. The eportfolio is collected here as an artifact in the Sweetland Writing Development Study, which has been published as Developing Writers in Higher Education: A Longitudinal Study (University of Michigan Press, 2019). To learn more about this study, please see the epublication: https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890), and to learn more about the Minor in Writing program and the eportfolio prompts, please see Appendix 2a ( https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.10079890.cmp.1) to the publication.
- Keyword:
- eportfolio , capstone, sitesucker, website , and file directory
- Discipline:
- Humanities
-
- Creator:
- Liu, Meichen
- Description:
- We intend to figure out the difference of stress drops, which is a characteristic source parameter, between shallow and deep-focus earthquakes. Significant stress drop difference may shed light on the difference of physical mechanisms of shallow and deep-focus earthquakes, which has been a elusive question. We select from deep-focus earthquakes (> 400 km) in 2000-2018 and obtain their stress drops using P and S waves. We find that stress drops of deep-focus earthquakes are about one order of magnitude higher than that of shallow earthquakes, indicating about one order of magnitude higher shear strength of shallow faults than faults in the mantle. The wide range of stress drops further suggests coexistence of phase transformation and shear-induced melting mechanisms of deep-focus earthquakes.
- Citation to related publication:
- Liu, M., Huang, Y., & Ritsema, J. (2020, March 4). Stress drop variation of deep-focus earthquakes based on empirical Green's function [preprint]. Submitted to Geophysical Research Letters. https://doi.org/10.31223/osf.io/8jx6p and Liu, M., Huang, Y., & Ritsema, J. (2020). Stress Drop Variation of Deep-Focus Earthquakes Based on Empirical Green’s Functions. Geophysical Research Letters, 47(9), e2019GL086055. https://doi.org/10.1029/2019GL086055
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- Brenner, Austin, M
- Description:
- Coupling between the solar wind and magnetosphere can be expressed in terms of energy transfer through the separating boundary known as the magnetopause. Geospace simulation is performed using the Space Weather Modeling Framework (SWMF) of a multi-ICME impact event on February 18-20, 2014 in order to study the energy transfer through the magnetopause during storm conditions. The magnetopause boundary is identified using a modified plasma $\beta$ and fully closed field line criteria to a downstream distance of $-20R_{e}$. Observations from Geotail, Themis, and Cluster are used as well as the Shue 1998 model to verify the simulation field data results and magnetopause boundary location. Once the boundary is identified, energy transfer is calculated in terms of total energy flux \textbf{K}, Poynting flux \textbf{S}, and hydrodynamic flux \textbf{H}. Surface motion effects are considered and the regional distribution of energy transfer on the magnetopause surface is explored in terms of dayside $\left(X>0\right)$, flank $\left(X<0\right)$, and tail cross section $\left(X=X_{min}\right)$ regions. It is found that total integrated energy flux over the boundary is nearly balanced between injection and escape, and flank contributions dominate the Poynting flux injection. Poynting flux dominates net energy input, while hydrodynamic flux dominates energy output. Surface fluctuations contribute significantly to net energy transfer and comparison with the Shue model reveals varying levels of cylindrical asymmetry in the magnetopause flank throughout the event. Finally existing energy coupling proxies such as the Akasofu $\epsilon$ parameter and Newell coupling function are compared with the energy transfer results.
- Keyword:
- Space plasma, Magnetosphere, MHD simulations, Magnetopause, Substorm, Energy transfer, and Poynting flux
- Citation to related publication:
- Brenner A, Pulkkinen TI, Al Shidi Q and Toth G (2021) Stormtime Energetics: Energy Transport Across the Magnetopause in a Global MHD Simulation. Front. Astron. Space Sci. 8:756732. doi: 10.3389/fspas.2021.756732
- Discipline:
- Science
-
- Creator:
- York, Jeremy, Gutmann, Myron, and Berman, Francine
- Description:
- The data were collected as part of the Stewardship Gap project, an 18-month study to investigate how research data and creative outputs supported by public or non-profit funding in the United States are being stewarded. These data were collected as part of a literature search of sources about research data stewardship and relate most directly to work describing “What We Know About the Stewardship Gap.” In this work, we categorized “gaps” in stewardship identified in the literature, how the gaps were related to one another, and efforts to measure and develop metrics for the gaps.
- Keyword:
- digital curation, digital preservation, research data, data stewardship, and data sustainability
- Discipline:
- Other
-
- Creator:
- 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.
- Discipline:
- Engineering and Science
-
- Creator:
- Brandt, Daniel, A. and Ridley, Aaron, J.
- Description:
- The research that produced this data focused on conducting a statistical comparison between horizontal winds modeled with GITM and those derived from the accelerometer aboard the GOCE satellite. The winds from GITM and GOCE were compared by constructing their respective probability densities under different levels of geomagnetic activity, and by distributing them as a function of geomagnetic activity, magnetic latitude, magnetic local time, day-of-the-year, and solar radio flux.
- Keyword:
- Thermosphere, GITM, GOCE, Neutral winds, and Thermospheric modeling
- Discipline:
- Science and Engineering
-
- Creator:
- Tan, Meng H, Iyengar, Ravi, Mizokami-Stout, Kara, Yentz, Sarah, MacEachern, Mark P, Shen, Li Yan, Redman, Bruce, and Gianchandani, Roma
- Description:
- The dataset includes most citations considered for inclusion in the scoping review. The citations are accessible in the Endnote file, as well as the primary citation export files from each database. The literature search strategies are included for reproducibility and transparency purposes.
- Keyword:
- Literature search, Scoping review, and Endocrinopathies
- Citation to related publication:
- Tan MH, Iyengar R, Mizokami-Stout K, et al. Spectrum of immune checkpoint inhibitors-induced endocrinopathies in cancer patients: a scoping review of case reports. Clin Diabetes Endocrinol. 2019;5:1. Published 2019 Jan 22. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40842-018-0073-4
- Discipline:
- Health Sciences