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Results for “"Andrew T. Smith"”

16+ results

FungalTraits: a user-friendly traits database of fungi and fungus-like stramenopiles

Verified

Sergei Põlme, Kessy Abarenkov, R. Henrik Nilsson, Björn D. Lindahl et al.

Journal: Fungal DiversityYear: 2020Citations: 1101

TEST 02 - Elsevier's Scopus, the largest abstract and citation database of peer-reviewed literature. Search and access research from the science, technology, medicine, social sciences and arts and humanities fields.

Life SciencesAgricultural and Biological SciencesPlant ScienceOpen Access
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Key Biodiversity Areas as Site Conservation Targets

Verified

Güven Eken, Leon Bennun, Thomas M. Brooks, Will Darwall et al.

Journal: BioScienceYear: 2004Citations: 539

Site conservation is among the most effective means to reduce global biodiversity loss. Therefore, it is critical to identify those sites where unique biodiversity must be conserved immediately. To this end, the concept of key biodiversity areas (KBAs) has been developed, seeking to identify and, ul...

Physical SciencesEnvironmental ScienceNature and Landscape ConservationOpen Access
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International consensus statement on allergy and rhinology: Allergic rhinitis – 2023

Verified

Sarah K. Wise, Cecelia Damask, Lauren T. Roland, Charles S. Ebert et al.

Journal: International Forum of Allergy & RhinologyYear: 2023Citations: 438

BACKGROUND: In the 5 years that have passed since the publication of the 2018 International Consensus Statement on Allergy and Rhinology: Allergic Rhinitis (ICAR-Allergic Rhinitis 2018), the literature has expanded substantially. The ICAR-Allergic Rhinitis 2023 update presents 144 individual topics ...

Health SciencesMedicineImmunology and AllergyOpen Access
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The genetics of blood pressure regulation and its target organs from association studies in 342,415 individuals

Verified

Georg Ehret, Teresa Ferreira, Daniel I. Chasman, Anne Jackson et al.

Journal: Nature GeneticsYear: 2016Citations: 437

To dissect the genetic architecture of blood pressure and assess effects on target organ damage, we analyzed 128,272 SNPs from targeted and genome-wide arrays in 201,529 individuals of European ancestry, and genotypes from an additional 140,886 individuals were used for validation. We identified 66 ...

Life SciencesBiochemistry, Genetics and Molecular BiologyGeneticsOpen Access
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Climate migration myths

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Ingrid Boas, Carol Farbotko, Helen Adams, Harald Sterly et al.

Journal: Nature Climate ChangeYear: 2019Citations: 349
Social SciencesSociology and Political ScienceClimate Change, Adaptation, MigrationOpen Access
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Diseases, Injuries, and Risk Factors in Child and Adolescent Health, 1990 to 2017

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GBD 2017 Child and Adolescent Health Collaborators, Robert C. Reiner, Helen Elizabeth Olsen, Chad Ikeda et al.

Journal: JAMA PediatricsYear: 2019Citations: 263

Importance: Understanding causes and correlates of health loss among children and adolescents can identify areas of success, stagnation, and emerging threats and thereby facilitate effective improvement strategies. Objective: To estimate mortality and morbidity in children and adolescents from 1990 ...

Health SciencesHealth ProfessionsGeneral Health ProfessionsOpen Access
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<scp>W</scp>orld <scp>H</scp>ealth <scp>O</scp>rganization infant and young child feeding indicators and their associations with child anthropometry: a synthesis of recent findings

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Andrew D. Jones, Scott Ickes, Laura E. Smith, Mduduzi N. N. Mbuya et al.

Journal: Maternal and Child NutritionYear: 2013Citations: 237

As the World Health Organization (WHO) infant and young child feeding (IYCF) indicators are increasingly adopted, a comparison of country-specific analyses of the indicators' associations with child growth is needed to examine the consistency of these relationships across contexts and to assess the ...

Health SciencesNursingNutrition and DieteticsOpen Access
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Individualized, heterologous chimpanzee adenovirus and self-amplifying mRNA neoantigen vaccine for advanced metastatic solid tumors: phase 1 trial interim results

Verified

Christine D. Palmer, Amy Rappaport, Matthew J. Davis, Meghan G. Hart et al.

Journal: Nature MedicineYear: 2022Citations: 222

Checkpoint inhibitor (CPI) therapies provide limited benefit to patients with tumors of low immune reactivity. T cell-inducing vaccines hold promise to exert long-lasting disease control in combination with CPI therapy. Safety, tolerability and recommended phase 2 dose (RP2D) of an individualized, h...

Life SciencesImmunology and MicrobiologyImmunologyOpen Access
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Additional support for schizophrenia linkage on chromosomes 6 and 8: A multicenter study

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Dieter B. Wildenauer, Sibylle G. Schwab, Margot Albus, Joachim Hallmayer et al.

Journal: American Journal of Medical GeneticsYear: 1996Citations: 186

In response to reported schizophrenia linkage findings on chromosomes 3, 6 and 8, fourteen research groups genotyped 14 microsatellite markers in an unbiased, collaborative (New) sample of 403-567 informative pedigrees per marker, and in the Original sample which produced each finding (the Johns Hop...

Life SciencesBiochemistry, Genetics and Molecular BiologyGenetics
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Whole-genome shotgun assembly and comparison of human genome assemblies

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Sorin Istrail, Granger G. Sutton, Liliana Florea, Aaron L. Halpern et al.

Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of SciencesYear: 2004Citations: 184

We report a whole-genome shotgun assembly (called WGSA) of the human genome generated at Celera in 2001. The Celera-generated shotgun data set consisted of 27 million sequencing reads organized in pairs by virtue of end-sequencing 2-kbp, 10-kbp, and 50-kbp inserts from shotgun clone libraries. The q...

Life SciencesBiochemistry, Genetics and Molecular BiologyMolecular BiologyOpen Access
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Protection by vaccination of children against typhoid fever with a Vi-tetanus toxoid conjugate vaccine in urban Bangladesh: a cluster-randomised trial

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Firdausi Qadri, Farhana Khanam, Xinxue Liu, Katherine Theiss-Nyland et al.

Journal: The LancetYear: 2021Citations: 153

BACKGROUND: Typhoid fever remains a major cause of morbidity and mortality in low-income and middle-income countries. Vi-tetanus toxoid conjugate vaccine (Vi-TT) is recommended by WHO for implementation in high-burden countries, but there is little evidence about its ability to protect against clini...

Life SciencesAgricultural and Biological SciencesFood ScienceOpen Access
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The Potential Role of Sensory Testing, Skin Biopsy, and Functional Brain Imaging as Biomarkers in Chronic Pain Clinical Trials: IMMPACT Considerations

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Shannon M. Smith, Robert H. Dworkin, Dennis C. Turk, Ralf Baron et al.

Journal: Journal of PainYear: 2017Citations: 153

Valid and reliable biomarkers can play an important role in clinical trials as indicators of biological or pathogenic processes or as a signal of treatment response. Currently, there are no biomarkers for pain qualified by the US Food and Drug Administration or the European Medicines Agency for use ...

Health SciencesMedicinePhysiologyOpen Access
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Cultures and Disasters

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Fred Krüger, Greg Bankoff, Terry Cannon, Benedikt M. Orlowski et al.

Year: 2015Citations: 143

Introduction The Editors 1 The Culture of (De-)Constructing Disasters. 1.1 Framing Disasters in the 'Global Village': Cultures of Rationality in Risk, Security, and News Kenneth Hewitt 1.2 Conversations in Catastrophe: Neoliberalism and the cultural construction of disaster risk Anthony Oliver-Smith...

Social SciencesSociology and Political ScienceDisaster Management and Resilience
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Joint environmental and social benefits from diversified agriculture

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Laura Vang Rasmussen, Ingo Graß, Zia Mehrabi, Olivia M. Smith et al.

Journal: ScienceYear: 2024Citations: 115

Agricultural simplification continues to expand at the expense of more diverse forms of agriculture. This simplification, for example, in the form of intensively managed monocultures, poses a risk to keeping the world within safe and just Earth system boundaries. Here, we estimated how agricultural ...

Life SciencesAgricultural and Biological SciencesGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesOpen Access
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The planform mobility of river channel confluences: Insights from analysis of remotely sensed imagery

Verified

Simon Dixon, Gregory H. Sambrook Smith, Jim Best, Andrew Nicholas et al.

Journal: Earth-Science ReviewsYear: 2017Citations: 114

River channel confluences are widely acknowledged as important geomorphological nodes that control the downstream routing of water and sediment, and which are locations for the preservation of thick fluvial deposits overlying a basal scour. Despite their importance, there has been little study of th...

Physical SciencesEnvironmental ScienceEcologyOpen Access
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