Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Preprint (561)
- Article (341)
- Doctoral Thesis (1)
Has Fulltext
- yes (903)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (903)
Keywords
- Heavy Ion Experiments (21)
- Hadron-Hadron scattering (experiments) (11)
- Hadron-Hadron Scattering (10)
- Heavy-ion collision (5)
- Jets (5)
- Collective Flow (4)
- Quark-Gluon Plasma (4)
- Heavy Quark Production (3)
- Jets and Jet Substructure (3)
- Atmospheric science (2)
- Climate change (2)
- Experimental nuclear physics (2)
- Experimental particle physics (2)
- Lepton-Nucleon Scattering (experiments) (2)
- Particle Correlations and Fluctuations (2)
- Particle and resonance production (2)
- Particle correlations and fluctuations (2)
- QCD (2)
- Quark Gluon Plasma (2)
- Quarkonium (2)
- Relativistic heavy-ion collisions (2)
- ALICE detector (1)
- ALK (1)
- Analysis and statistical methods (1)
- Anti-nuclei (1)
- Atmospheric chemistry (1)
- Bayern (1)
- Bipolar disorder (1)
- Boosted Jets (1)
- Calorimeters (1)
- Canonical suppression (1)
- Cape Verde Islands (1)
- Central European lichen pine forests (1)
- Cetacea (1)
- Circadian (1)
- Cladonio-Pinetum (1)
- Collective Flow, (1)
- Communicable diseases (1)
- Critical pathway (1)
- Data processing methods (1)
- Data sharing (1)
- Diagnostic techniques and procedures (1)
- Electron-pion identification (1)
- Electroweak interaction (1)
- European Union (1)
- FGFR (1)
- Fibre/foam sandwich radiator (1)
- Flechten (1)
- Hadron-Hadron Scattering Heavy (1)
- Hadron-hadron interactions (1)
- Hard Scattering (1)
- Heavy Ion Experiment (1)
- Heavy Ions (1)
- Heavy-Ion Collision (1)
- Hedgehog pathway (1)
- Hypertext (1)
- Infection control (1)
- Internet (1)
- Ionisation energy loss (1)
- Jet Physics (1)
- Jet Substructure (1)
- Kiefernwald (1)
- LHC (1)
- MYCN amplification (1)
- Material budget (1)
- Multi-Parton Interactions (1)
- Multi-wire proportional drift chamber (1)
- Neural network (1)
- Nuclear Physics (1)
- Nährstoffeintrag (1)
- Onlinejournalismus (1)
- Particle and Resonance Production (1)
- Particle production (1)
- Patient isolation (1)
- Pb–Pb collisions (1)
- Performance of High Energy Physics Detectors (1)
- Properties of Hadrons (1)
- Psychiatry (1)
- Quark Deconfinement (1)
- Quark Production (1)
- Quark gluon plasma (1)
- Quark–gluon plasma (1)
- RAS pathway (1)
- Resonances (1)
- Seasonal variation (1)
- Solar insolation (1)
- Strangeness enhancement (1)
- Suicide (1)
- Sunlight (1)
- TR (1)
- Teaser (1)
- Tracking (1)
- Transition radiation detector (1)
- Trigger (1)
- Vector Boson Production (1)
- Websprache (1)
- Xenon-based gas mixture (1)
- alleles (1)
- autism spectrum disorder (1)
- autistic disorder (1)
- cilia (1)
- conservation (1)
- copy number polymorphism (1)
- dE/dx (1)
- detector (1)
- distribution (1)
- dolphins (1)
- ectosomes (1)
- endangerment (1)
- exosomes (1)
- experimental results (1)
- extracellular vesicles (1)
- genes (1)
- genetics (1)
- genome (1)
- genotype (1)
- genotype determination (1)
- global change (1)
- guidelines (1)
- habitat destruction (1)
- heavy ion experiments (1)
- high-risk neuroblastoma (1)
- kinase inhibitor (1)
- land use (1)
- microparticles (1)
- microvesicles (1)
- minimal information requirements (1)
- onlinejournalism (1)
- p53 pathway (1)
- phenotype (1)
- quark gluon plasma (1)
- reproducibility (1)
- resectability (1)
- resistance (1)
- rigor (1)
- single nucleotide polymorphism (1)
- standardization (1)
- teaser (1)
- whales (1)
Institute
- Physik (874)
- Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies (FIAS) (792)
- Informatik (757)
- Medizin (11)
- Biodiversität und Klima Forschungszentrum (BiK-F) (4)
- Senckenbergische Naturforschende Gesellschaft (4)
- Biowissenschaften (3)
- Geowissenschaften / Geographie (3)
- Informatik und Mathematik (3)
- Institut für Ökologie, Evolution und Diversität (3)
Die Arbeit untersucht die für den Online-Journalismus typischen, kurzen Ankündungstexte auf den Startseiten ausgewählter, deutschen Online-Zeitungen. Außerdem wird die Ankündigung als mediales Prinzip untersucht, der Teaser in seinen Funktionen beschrieben. Schließlich wird ein Korpus von Teasern unter syntaktischen und stilistischen Aspekten untersucht. Im Ergebnis wird die Textsorte als ausgereift und variantenreich bewertet. Die verschiedenen Textfunktionen wie Orientierung, Information, Lesemotivation werden sprach- stilistisch gezielt unterstützt: lexikalisch z.B durch Eigennamen oder Augenblickskomposita. Syntaktisch konnten interessante Einzelphänomene wie die Steigerung der Satz-Rhythmik durch Ellipsen oder die Ausgliederung von Satzteilen beobachtet werden.
Background: The treatment of high-risk neuroblastoma patients consists of multimodal induction therapy to achieve remission followed by consolidation therapy to prevent relapses. However, the type of consolidation therapy is still discussed controversial. We applied metronomic chemotherapy in the prospective NB90 trial and monoclonal anti-GD2-antibody (MAB) ch14.18 in the NB97 trial. Here, we present the long term outcome data of the patient cohort. Methods: A total of 334 stage 4 neuroblastoma patients one year or older were included. All patients successfully completed the induction therapy. In the NB90 trial, 99 patients received at least one cycle of the oral maintenance chemotherapy (NB90 MT, 12 alternating cycles of oral melphalan/etoposide and vincristine/cyclophosphamide). In the NB97 trial, 166 patients commenced the MAB ch14.18 consolidation therapy (six cycles over 12 months). Patients who received no maintenance therapy according to the NB90 protocol or by refusal in NB97 (n = 69) served as controls. Results: The median observation time was 11.11 years. The nine-year event-free survival rates were 41 ± 4%, 31 ± 5%, and 32 ± 6% for MAB ch14.18, NB90 MT, and no consolidation, respectively (p = 0.098). In contrast to earlier reports, MAB ch14.18 treatment improved the long-term outcome compared to no additional therapy (p = 0.038). The overall survival was better in the MAB ch14.18-treated group (9-y-OS 46 ± 4%) compared to NB90 MT (34 ± 5%, p = 0.026) and to no consolidation (35 ± 6%, p = 0.019). Multivariable Cox regression analysis revealed ch14.18 consolidation to improve outcome compared to no consolidation, however, no difference between NB90 MT and MAB ch14.18-treated patients was found. Conclusions: Follow-up analysis of the patient cohort indicated that immunotherapy with MAB ch14.18 may prevent late relapses. Finally, metronomic oral maintenance chemotherapy also appeared effective.
Background: Bipolar disorder is associated with circadian disruption and a high risk of suicidal behavior. In a previous exploratory study of patients with bipolar I disorder, we found that a history of suicide attempts was associated with differences between winter and summer levels of solar insolation. The purpose of this study was to confirm this finding using international data from 42% more collection sites and 25% more countries. Methods: Data analyzed were from 71 prior and new collection sites in 40 countries at a wide range of latitudes. The analysis included 4876 patients with bipolar I disorder, 45% more data than previously analyzed. Of the patients, 1496 (30.7%) had a history of suicide attempt. Solar insolation data, the amount of the sun’s electromagnetic energy striking the surface of the earth, was obtained for each onset location (479 locations in 64 countries). Results: This analysis confirmed the results of the exploratory study with the same best model and slightly better statistical significance. There was a significant inverse association between a history of suicide attempts and the ratio of mean winter insolation to mean summer insolation (mean winter insolation/mean summer insolation). This ratio is largest near the equator which has little change in solar insolation over the year, and smallest near the poles where the winter insolation is very small compared to the summer insolation. Other variables in the model associated with an increased risk of suicide attempts were a history of alcohol or substance abuse, female gender, and younger birth cohort. The winter/summer insolation ratio was also replaced with the ratio of minimum mean monthly insolation to the maximum mean monthly insolation to accommodate insolation patterns in the tropics, and nearly identical results were found. All estimated coefficients were significant at p < 0.01. Conclusion: A large change in solar insolation, both between winter and summer and between the minimum and maximum monthly values, may increase the risk of suicide attempts in bipolar I disorder. With frequent circadian rhythm dysfunction and suicidal behavior in bipolar disorder, greater understanding of the optimal roles of daylight and electric lighting in circadian entrainment is needed.
Rare copy-number variation (CNV) is an important source of risk for autism spectrum disorders (ASDs). We analyzed 2,446 ASD-affected families and confirmed an excess of genic deletions and duplications in affected versus control groups (1.41-fold, p = 1.0 × 10(-5)) and an increase in affected subjects carrying exonic pathogenic CNVs overlapping known loci associated with dominant or X-linked ASD and intellectual disability (odds ratio = 12.62, p = 2.7 × 10(-15), ∼3% of ASD subjects). Pathogenic CNVs, often showing variable expressivity, included rare de novo and inherited events at 36 loci, implicating ASD-associated genes (CHD2, HDAC4, and GDI1) previously linked to other neurodevelopmental disorders, as well as other genes such as SETD5, MIR137, and HDAC9. Consistent with hypothesized gender-specific modulators, females with ASD were more likely to have highly penetrant CNVs (p = 0.017) and were also overrepresented among subjects with fragile X syndrome protein targets (p = 0.02). Genes affected by de novo CNVs and/or loss-of-function single-nucleotide variants converged on networks related to neuronal signaling and development, synapse function, and chromatin regulation.
The results from the STAR Collaboration on directed flow (v1), elliptic flow (v2), and the fourth harmonic (v4) in the anisotropic azimuthal distribution of particles from Au+Au collisions at sqrt[sNN]=200GeV are summarized and compared with results from other experiments and theoretical models. Results for identified particles are presented and fit with a blast-wave model. Different anisotropic flow analysis methods are compared and nonflow effects are extracted from the data. For v2, scaling with the number of constituent quarks and parton coalescence are discussed. For v4, scaling with v22 and quark coalescence are discussed.
We present a systematic analysis of two-pion interferometry in Au+Au collisions at sqrt[sNN]=200GeV using the STAR detector at Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider. We extract the Hanbury-Brown and Twiss radii and study their multiplicity, transverse momentum, and azimuthal angle dependence. The Gaussianness of the correlation function is studied. Estimates of the geometrical and dynamical structure of the freeze-out source are extracted by fits with blast-wave parametrizations. The expansion of the source and its relation with the initial energy density distribution is studied.
Background: Highly infectious diseases (HIDs) are defined as being transmissible from person to person, causing life-threatening illnesses and presenting a serious public health hazard. The sampling, handling and transport of specimens from patients with HIDs present specific bio-safety concerns. Findings The European Network for HID project aimed to record, in a cross-sectional study, the infection control capabilities of referral centers for HIDs across Europe and assesses the level of achievement to previously published guidelines. In this paper, we report the current diagnostic capabilities and bio-safety measures applied to diagnostic procedures in these referral centers. Overall, 48 isolation facilities in 16 European countries were evaluated. Although 81% of these referral centers are located near a biosafety level 3 laboratory, 11% and 31% of them still performed their microbiological and routine diagnostic analyses, respectively, without bio-safety measures.
Conclusions: The discrepancies among the referral centers surveyed between the level of practices and the European Network of Infectious Diseases (EUNID) recommendations have multiple reasons of which the interest of the individuals in charge and the investment they put in preparedness to emerging outbreaks. Despite the fact that the less prepared centers can improve by just updating their practice and policies any support to help them to achieve an acceptable level of biosecurity is welcome.
Molluscs are the second most species-rich phylum in the animal kingdom, yet only eleven genomes of this group have been published so far. Here, we present the draft genome sequence of the pulmonate freshwater snail Radix auricularia. Six whole genome shotgun libraries with different layouts were sequenced. The resulting assembly comprises 4,823 scaffolds with a cumulative length of 910 Mb and an overall read coverage of 72x. The assembly contains 94.6 % of a metazoan core gene collection, indicating an almost complete coverage of the coding fraction. The discrepancy of ~690 Mb compared to the estimated genome size of R. auricularia (1.6 Gb) results from a high repeat content of 70 % mainly comprising DNA transposons. The annotation of 17,338 protein coding genes was supported by the use of publicly-available transcriptome data. This draft will serve as starting point for further genomic and population genetic research in this scientifically important phylum.
Using combined data from the Relativistic Heavy Ion and Large Hadron Colliders, we constrain the shear and bulk viscosities of quark-gluon plasma (QGP) at temperatures of ∼150–350 MeV. We use Bayesian inference to translate experimental and theoretical uncertainties into probabilistic constraints for the viscosities. With Bayesian model averaging we propagate an estimate of the model uncertainty generated by the transition from hydrodynamics to hadron transport in the plasma’s final evolution stage, providing the most reliable phenomenological constraints to date on the QGP viscosities.
White matter abnormalities across different epilepsy syndromes in adults: an ENIGMA Epilepsy study
(2019)
The epilepsies are commonly accompanied by widespread abnormalities in cerebral white matter. ENIGMA-Epilepsy is a large quantitative brain imaging consortium, aggregating data to investigate patterns of neuroimaging abnormalities in common epilepsy syndromes, including temporal lobe epilepsy, extratemporal epilepsy, and genetic generalized epilepsy. Our goal was to rank the most robust white matter microstructural differences across and within syndromes in a multicentre sample of adult epilepsy patients. Diffusion-weighted MRI data were analyzed from 1,069 non-epileptic controls and 1,249 patients: temporal lobe epilepsy with hippocampal sclerosis (N=599), temporal lobe epilepsy with normal MRI (N=275), genetic generalized epilepsy (N=182) and nonlesional extratemporal epilepsy (N=193). A harmonized protocol using tract-based spatial statistics was used to derive skeletonized maps of fractional anisotropy and mean diffusivity for each participant, and fiber tracts were segmented using a diffusion MRI atlas. Data were harmonized to correct for scanner-specific variations in diffusion measures using a batch-effect correction tool (ComBat). Analyses of covariance, adjusting for age and sex, examined differences between each epilepsy syndrome and controls for each white matter tract (Bonferroni corrected at p<0.001). Across “all epilepsies” lower fractional anisotropy was observed in most fiber tracts with small to medium effect sizes, especially in the corpus callosum, cingulum and external capsule. Less robust effects were seen with mean diffusivity. Syndrome-specific fractional anisotropy and mean diffusivity differences were most pronounced in patients with hippocampal sclerosis in the ipsilateral parahippocampal cingulum and external capsule, with smaller effects across most other tracts. Those with temporal lobe epilepsy and normal MRI showed a similar pattern of greater ipsilateral than contralateral abnormalities, but less marked than those in patients with hippocampal sclerosis. Patients with generalized and extratemporal epilepsies had pronounced differences in fractional anisotropy in the corpus callosum, corona radiata and external capsule, and in mean diffusivity of the anterior corona radiata. Earlier age of seizure onset and longer disease duration were associated with a greater extent of microstructural abnormalities in patients with hippocampal sclerosis. We demonstrate microstructural abnormalities across major association, commissural, and projection fibers in a large multicentre study of epilepsy. Overall, epilepsy patients showed white matter abnormalities in the corpus callosum, cingulum and external capsule, with differing severity across epilepsy syndromes. These data further define the spectrum of white matter abnormalities in common epilepsy syndromes, yielding new insights into pathological substrates that may be used to guide future therapeutic and genetic studies.